The replay was attended by a large crowd (it was claimed that all three semi-finals had record attendances for this stage but records are incomplete) and finished Cork 5-4 to 3-10 before 20 minutes of extra time was required to separate the sides.
Three first half goals by helped Cork draw with Kilkenny, for whom scored 1-10 and equalised from a sideline ball 25 yards from the left corner flag three minutes from the end, the third draw in the championship between the teams since 1974.Ĭathy Landers had to score a point from midfield to give Cork victory, just as Helena O'Neill had been faced with a similar free to equalise in 1974.
Professional regulation Cork recommended that private insolvency practitioners should be professionally regulated to ensure adequate standards of competence and integrity. Floating charges It also said there was no place for automatic crystallisation of ‘in modern insolvency law’, on the basis that it would adversely affect other creditors and that the charge did not need to be registered. Cork advocated that the law should encourage a 'rescue culture', to restore companies back to profitability, which would be in the longer term interests of creditors. ” Recommendations Rescue culture The central argument of the report was that too many companies were simply left to die, when they could be revived, saved or brought to a close in a more orderly way.
Report of the Review Committee on Insolvency Law and Practice (1982) Cmnd 8558, also known as the 'Cork Report' was an investigation and.
Recently been made explicit in the Cork Report (1982).
North-Holland EMPIRICAL MODELS FOR THE MONITORING OF UK CORPORATIONS.