Day In a Page
Sunday, 18 October 1992
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- Law Report: Case summaries
- Tests at 14 were 'too stressful'
- New-born body found in woods
- Up to 2 million people join miners' 'lights out' protest
- Treasury battle for training funds
- Cost of power from gas 'twice coal-fired price'
- Major's figure for pit losses deemed absurd
- Tories line up to sign Church's petition
- Ulster MPs likely to side with Labour
- Misery remains after steelworks closure: Shotton has still not recovered from the closure of its steel plant in 1980, despite John Major's recent claims. Barrie Clement and Anthony Bevins report
- Minister receives unsolicited tip from miners
- Friends turn foe as press is forced to eat its words
- A miner sitting in the NUM office at Markham Main Colliery, South Yorkshire
- Final job loss tally 'could reach 125,000'
- Man beaten in sex attack
- Eight held in ferry rampage
- Man on murder charge
- Playground abductor is foiled
- Victory in sight for Fischer
- Heseltine to meet UDM men angry at 'betrayal'
- Gap between rich and poor 'growing'
- Shephard angry over handling of pits package
- Labour could lose 13 seats under boundary review: Changes to the political map may aid the Tories. Rosie Waterhouse reports Rosie Waterhouse considers the effects of planned boundary changes
- Patten faces legal problem over plan for student unions
- Villagers protest over water rights
- Call for brewing inquiry
- Designer puts faith in innovation
- Contemporary Art Market: Old Master faker fails to show a style of his own
- BBC demands end to Ulster ban
- Two killed in crash
- No-go areas of motorway life
- The price of survival in a divided land
- Nirex speeds up plan for underground laboratory
- Hesketh to sell off meadows to Safeway
- Britain in Crisis: Vortex of debt and despair
- Britain in Crisis: Who killed King Coal?
- Britain in Crisis: The real costs the closures
- Calvi 'was murdered', tests find
- A patent mystery: Who invented the portable personal stereo?
- The dying art of anatomical dissection
- Edinburgh moves out
- Gang rape of men 'seldom by gays'
- Radio 4 fans claim victory
- Backbench revolt over pits spells danger for Major
- 'Grandest mansion' for sale
- Tory papers print the unprintable
- Poll tax 'cost Labour seats'
- Pilot feared dead
- Britain in Crisis: The lustre of darkness
- Britain in Crisis: Many hearts with coal are charred
- Dental care under threat
- Five guilty of pounds 35m gold plot
- Big freeze continues
- Lynk 'lights out' protest plea
- Peter Jenkins
- UVF admit bar death
- Fischer moves ahead
World
- The Nobel Peace Prize winner, Rigoberta Menchu, addresses a celebration rally in Guatemala City. The 33-year-old Guatemalan Indian activist, whose parents were killed by the security forces, was named as the winner last Friday
- China congress dumps 'princelings' and hardliners
- Sikhs defy police to mourn killers
- Critics claim De Klerk has lost his way: John Carlin in Cape Town detects signs of a party on the defensive
- Dog eats dog as Iraqgate dispute grows
- Canadian poll offers no end to quarrels
- Malawi vote
- Out of Cambodia: Hot tempers rise on the seamier side
- Somalia woes
- Babangida says democracy remains goal
- Mubarak urges quake victims not to protest
- Bill Clinton, the Democratic presidential candidate, presses the flesh in a black area of Philadelphia
- Deadly feud
- Turks attack Kurdish rebels in north Iraq
- Israel's censors under scrutiny
- Unita 'planning partition'
- 'Raw deal' for UN in Angola
- The US Presidential Elections
- The US Presidential Elections: The Veep that the President deserves
- Egypt jolted into future shock
- Yeltsin's enemies organise a private undercover army
- Spears on view in Zulu march
- Swiss army routed
- West Bank blast
- Gun law claims a rich recluse
- Party sets out gospel according to Deng
- US Baptists corner a Muslim market
- Sad-eyed lady of the Garden
- Al-Sabahs rule
Science
- Ugly Apples with a rosy future: The big manufacturer has taken a gamble, replacing popular lines with a notebook-cum-desktop and a CD-ROM option, writes Kim Wilson
- Science Update: Royal omission
- Black looks over a burning issue: Government delays in implementing an anti-pollution package for power stations are encouraging use of the world's dirtiest fuel, says Nicholas Schoon
- Face to face with the first Europeans: Marek Kohn looks at an exhibition that will challenge established ideas on the evolution of human beings
- Science Update: Global connections
- Molecule of the Month: A pinch of salt is a matter of life and death: Potassium chloride is essential to all living things, says John Emsley. But, as recent events have demonstrated, a large dose can be fatal
- Science Update: Dear Sir or Computer . . .
- 1 'Sickening, deluded and unforgivable': Bloody attack brings terror to capital’s streets
- 2 Mothers' diets may harm IQs in two-thirds of babies
- 3 Far-right French historian, 78-year-old Dominique Venner, commits suicide in Notre Dame in protest against gay marriage
- 4 Eyewitness gives extraordinary account of her confrontation with Woolwich attackers
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL might have a sinister plan as a soldier is murdered in suspected Islamic terrorist attack
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