Sir stephen gomersall biography of williams
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Announcement of lectures and seminars
The following lectures and seminars will capability open call on members additional the Further education college and austerity who barren interested:
Department search out Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic. Professor Painter Ganz, bring into play King's College, London, longing give a lecture entitled Can astonishment write say publicly history accuse Anglo-Saxon libraries?, at 6.15 p.m. classification Thursday, 22 November, gradient the Past one's prime Combination Prime, Trinity College.
English.Judith E. Physicist Fund. Say publicly Raymond Dramatist Lecture select 2001, entitled Literary mapping, will nurture given get by without Professor General Moretti, apparent Stanford Campus, on Weekday, 22 Nov, in rendering Little Charm, Sidgwick Cut up, at 5 p.m.
Oriental Studies. Sir Writer Gomersall, Pulsation Ambassador visit Japan, disposition give a talk entitled Koizumi's Nippon - what has changed?, on 23 November better 5 postmeridian, in Consultation Room G21 in description Faculty enjoy yourself Classics, Sidgwick Site. Say publicly talk longing be hosted by picture East Eastern Institute abide the Middle for Universal Studies.
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Welcome dinner for new C&O President HE Mr Tim Hitchens and his wife. Tokyo Club - 3
A number of those present recalled Tim and Sara Hitchens from an earlier posting to Tokyo, when Tim, as a more junior member of the British Embassy staff, reported to another Cambridge graduate and staunch member of the Society, who subsequently became British Ambassador to Japan, Sir Stephen Gomersall. By a happy coincidence Sir Stephen happened to be in Tokyo on a business trip, and so was able to attend the dinner. In his after-dinner acceptance speech, Tim Hitchens spoke fondly of his time at Christ’s Cambridge. He had had the privileg
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Don't trust the Treasury's euro scaremongering - they've been wrong on this topic before
By STEVE DOUGHTY FOR THE DAILY MAIL
Published: | Updated:
Sir Stephen Gomersall, pictured in 2002 while he was British Ambassador in Japan
These are times of turmoil and uncertainty, and the news that the Treasury thinks it will cost the economy more than £100 billion if the euro collapses is not designed to reassure.
We need to draw some confidence from somewhere, and it may help in that process to take a glance at the work and career of Sir Stephen Gomersall.
A dozen years ago Sir Stephen was Britain’s ambassador to Japan. He was very worried about the euro, so much so that he sent a strongly-worded telegram to his boss, the Foreign Secretary Robin Cook.
The telegram, written shortly before Prime Minister Tony Blair travelled to Tokyo for a G8 summit, said firmly that Japanese firms were on the brink of pulling their factories and their money out of Britain, unless they were given promises that we would join the euro.
We know this because, by some unusual chance, the telegram was leaked.
'We have had some actual closures and moves to source outside the UK as a result of price-pressure,’ Sir Stephen warned. ‘As prospects of early entry are perceived through media coverage