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European Football Super League
A survey for KPMGs European Football Unit has revealed that by the year 2002, football experts believe a European Super League (ESL) will have been established.
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Reality Of Homelessness Close To Home For Britain's Youth
A MORI poll has revealed one in five (19%) adults personally knows or has known someone who has experienced homelessness. The survey, commissioned by the national charity for homeless people, Crisis, to mark its 30th anniversary finds this figure rises to nearly three in ten (28%) of young people, 15-24 years.
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Public Support For British Shipping
Results of a recent MORI survey gives new impetus to the Government's Working Group on Shipping, established by Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and involving six Government departments. The survey shows that nearly 9 out of 10 people (87%) agree that it is important for Britain to have a strong and competitive shipping industry.
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The People's Painting
When it comes to taste in visual art, the British public does not like sharp angles, religious icons or the colours grey, white and fuchsia. Most people like wild animals but hardly anyone wants a naked woman. The favoured size of painting is as large as a dishwasher - and preferably the colour blue. Can these views, generated by an opinion poll especially for "Close Up", create a work of art?
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for January 1998
Research study conducted for The Times Newspaper - published 29 January 1998
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 1,870 adults aged 18+ at 161 sampling points across Great Britain between 23-26 January 1998. -
Increasing Support for the Single Currency
Over two-thirds of Britains' leading industrialists think Britain should join the European single currency. Support is substantially up since 1996, when half approved.
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Internet Usage Set to Slow
Until technology and transport providers offer speedier access, growth of Internet usage in Western Europe and the US will slow, according to a survey conducted by MORI International and Response Analysis Corporation USA. Most additional growth is due to come from outside the Western world.
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Stick or carrot: what does it take to get today's children to eat their greens?
Children would rather forfeit hobbies such as reading, playing with computer games and listening to music than eat up their vegetables, according to a MORI poll commissioned by the Cancer Research Campaign and frozen food giants Iceland. But the poll also shows that the majority of 7-12 year-olds will accept a bribe to get them to eat their greens if the stakes are high enough.