Day In a Page
Thursday, 15 October 1992
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- Sentence increased
- Radio 3 'goes live' to win listeners in battle with classical rival: Nick Kenyon defends the much-criticised changes he has made to the BBC's drama and music station. David Lister reports
- McGregor defends regulation of press
- Flamboyant Galliano showing wins acclaim
- Tory MP's libel award cut
- Shutter speeds
- Growing concern over Britain's disappearing land
- Cost of Docklands road tops 340m pounds: Geological difficulty and noise controls have pushed the tunnel bill way over estimate. Christian Wolmar reports
- Rescuer dies
- Tamil loses final appeal for refuge
- Instructor drowns in underground rescue
- Study confirms effectiveness of abortion drug
- Evidence on M25 gang 'was seriously flawed'
- Law Report: Press can be heard before restriction of reporting: Regina v Clerkenwell Stipendiary Magistrate, Ex parte The Telegraph plc and others. Queen's Bench Divisional Court (Lord Justice Mann and Mr Justice Leonard). 15 October 1992
- Law: Practice that is strictly a family business: Two solicitors aim to corner a part of the market in a field greatly changed by the year-old Children Act, says Sharon Wallach
- Madonna book is referred to CPS
- Crisis in the mines: High Court to rule on speed of shut-downs
- Fischer moves on toilet time
- Crisis in the mines: UDM leader stages sit-in at mine
- Christie appeal ruling reserved
- Doctor fined over abortions
- Crisis in the mines: Jobs budget could bear brunt of cost
- Crisis in the mines: British Coal denies more on hit-list
- 'Difficult' sale pays off
- Crisis in the mines: Scargill delays a strike vote and asks public for support
- Industry in Crisis: The Mines: Remaining deep coal mines may close by 2000
- Clarke to examine juvenile crime
- Industry in Crisis: The Mines: Private firm offers to buy pit marked for closure
- Industry in crisis: The Mines: Tunnels will cave in within days
- Forgers go 'green' to avoid detection
- Damages award for cancer death
- Guardsman killed for gun killing
- Salvage sale raises pounds 1.8m
- Talks offered over Lockerbie suspects
- Wife killed four days after wedding
- Boy, 7, used his fathers's cheque book
- Iraq sanctions hit exporters
- Nobel prize winners for science named
- Mother dumped baby in lake after birth in lavatory
- Law Report: Boys' places in grant-maintained school relevant: Regina v Birmingham City Council, Ex parte Equal Opportunities Commission. Court of Appeal (Lord Justice Neill, Lord Justice Woolf and Lord Justice Butler-Sloss). 14 October 1992
- Working mothers are 'less ambitious'
- Triads victim 'foiled murder attempt'
- Strategy for arts comes under fire from regions
- Smokers could face higher premiums
- Industry in Crisis: Unemployment: Grim forecast of total climbing to 15 million
- Georgian lake re-emerges
- Man abducted from train and raped
- Industry in crisis: Unemployment: Spectre of decline that haunts Britain
- Church may advertise vacancies in press
- Doctor guilty of carrying out illegal abortions
- Seaman awarded war pension after 24 years
- 'Coronation Street' accused of failing to reflect reality
- Industry in Crisis: Unemployment: Major's support begins to wane in the establishment heartlands: Some former allies are becoming increasingly critical of the Government's economic record, Stephen Ward reports
- Industry in Crisis: Unemployment: The victim: 'Job for life' ends with humiliation and pessimism
- Industry in crisis: The mines: Radioactive material lost at closed pit
- Industry in crisis: The mines: Profitable collieries on list for closure
- Industry in crisis: The Mines: British Coal to increase imports
- Industry in Crisis: The Mines: Militants prepare for a battle: NUM delegates are being urged to vote for strike action today. Barrie Clement analyses the debate
- Industry in Crisis: The Mines: Mining cuts could lead to 100,000 job losses: Labour agrees with Scargill that pit closures could cost taxpayer pounds 2.5bn over three years
World
- Gorbachev in tirade against Yeltsin 'plot'
- EC resists Bush over deal on subsidies
- A Bangladeshi police officer lends a guiding hand as a colleague halts traffic to allow a group of blind people to cross a road in Dhaka during a march in the city to mark World White Cane Day yesterday
- Radioactive leak in Lithuania
- Malawi charges
- Plans grounded
- Foreign affairs put Clinton to test
- 'Rostov Ripper' to be shot
- 160 die in Sri Lanka massacre
- French fight shy of an 'October surprise'
- Chief who lives under the shadow of death: Conflict in KwaZulu is reaching into the rural township of Mondlo, writes John Carlin
- Tokyo's troops tiptoe into Phnom Penh: Japan is in turmoil as its political kingmaker quits and its troops begin their first foreign mission since the war. Terry McCarthy reports
- Kanemaru is forced out by cash scandal
- FBI chief is target of criminal investigation
- Congo coalition partner defects
- Greenpeace tows Russian line
- Angola moves toward acccord
- Italy freezes new EFA work
- Quake puts new cracks in lives of Cairo's poor
- The US Presidential Elections: US advertising blitz goes down the tubes: Television has lost its punch in the election battle, writes David Usborne
- The US Presidential Elections: Gore wins on points in play-off to be Veep
- The US Presidential Elections: Row over Clinton 'witch hunt'
People
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Qin Mu
- Obituary: Professor J. B. Skemp
- Obituary: Robert de Vernejoul
- Obituary: Rigoberto Losada
- Obituary: Noah Bee
- Obituary: Edward Warburg
- Obituary: Mark Miller
- Obituary: Willie Waddell
- Obituary: Barry Shenker
- Birthdays
- Anniversaries
- Obituary: Harold Truscott
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Froelich Rainey
- Obituary: Ulysses Guimaraes
- Obituary: Jacob Bean
- 1 What, let gays get married? We must be bonkers
- 2 Rocky Horror star Tim Curry 'suffers major stroke'
- 3 Exclusive: How MI5 blackmails British Muslims
- 4 EDL marches on Newcastle as attacks on Muslims increase tenfold in the wake of Woolwich machete attack which killed Drummer Lee Rigby
- 5 Farewell, Shameless. Your heirs have work to do
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