Day In a Page
Wednesday, 21 October 1992
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- Law Report: Mental element for murder in joint-venture crime: Regina v Roberts: Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) (Lord Taylor of Gosforth, Lord Chief Justice, Mr Justice Hutchison and Mr Justice Holland)
- Surgeons criticise neonatal provision
- Nuclear waste dump delayed for tests: UK Nirex plans an underground laboratory to check safety of site. Tom Wilkie reports
- Sellafield plant faces new public inquiry
- Aspinall loses casino fight
- Awards for recruitment advertising
- RAF bases to lose helicopters
- Scientists act against tobacco
- Children 'accept crime as part of everyday life': Most young people in all social classes experience crime - as victim or offender. Heather Mills reports
- Bailiffs 'breaking the law' to settle debts
- Hospitals that face a fight for survival
- 'Lost' tapestries returned home
- Smaller charities facing closure
- Drunken wren 'bit man's nose'
- Confusion remains on status of pit review
- Police batons 'too small'
- Thatcherites blamed for Major crack-up 'smear'
- Industrial leaders call for action on economy
- 'Value-added' test results for schools to be published
- Rally becomes crusade against economic policies
- Arthur's army laments its loss of clout: Jonathan Foster joins Yorkshire miners for yesterday's protest march in London
- Spectators' applause evokes terrible nostalgia: Andrew Brown travels to London with miners from Trentham, where 1,500 jobs are at stake
- Experts call for energy review
- Prime Minister changes his economic line: Anthony Bevins finds that comments by John Major and his Chancellor show an apparent shift in policy
- Government in crisis: Wakeham promises a full and open review
- Government in crisis: Adviser puts case for coal
- Government in crisis: UDM leader reflects on road to dole queue: Barrie Clement looks at why Roy Lynk is standing down from his post as union president and returning his OBE
- Government in crisis: Banks confident buy-outs are viable Yorkshire miners plan to buy out pits
- Government in crisis: Doomed pits made profit, TUC says
- Government in crisis: Textbook business that is rewarded with closure: Martin Whitfield on a Staffordshire colliery which faces closure despite its economic viability
- Government in crisis: Uncertainty over contracts puts more pits at risk
- Government in crisis: Hearing on legality of closures is adjourned
- Government in crisis: Miners find new hero in Tory maverick: A Tory woman MP is at the forefront of the battle against closures. Jonathan Foster reports
- Government in crisis: Tory whips launch charm offensive to subdue rebels
- Government in crisis: Heseltine granted a stay of execution by backbenchers: Michael Heseltine was fighting for his political life yesterday. Nicholas Timmins and Patricia Wynn Davies report
- Amnesty urged for asylum seekers
- Extravagant TV scientist dies aged 83
- Sex offender given job as youth leader
- Zoo adopts breeding plan as key to future
- Advisers to shadow wartime generals
- M25 gang evidence will not be heard
- First death in new Irish regiment
- Wiper dispute
- Driver 'may have been murdered'
- DNA testing helps convict hawk keeper
- Axeman detained for killing parents
- Glass in trifles
- Albert Hall to offer arena dance for arrival of Bolshoi
- Shingle prospectors to scour sea-bed in search for lost beach
- Patten to regulate GCSE standards
World
- The US Presidential Elections: Campaign Diary
- Russians free Greenpeace ship
- Deadlock for Patten in China
- Japan's political fixer replaced
- Telephone companies resent EC price attack
- Dutch crash prompts US to test Boeing 747s
- Yeltsin move blocked
- Privatisation ties Moscow up in red tape
- News ban after Malawi jail death
- De Klerk set on ploy to pass amnesty bill
- Judge who inspired 'JFK' dies
- Assad freezes his brother out: The President's sibling is back from exile but his former friends in high places are ignoring him, Robert Fisk writes from Damascus
- Deadline nears for Rabin's autonomy plan: Hopes for a swift deal between Israel and the Palestinians have receded, Sarah Helm writes from Jerusalem
- The US Presidential Elections: Ulster back on agenda if Clinton wins: A new occupant in the White House could put Anglo-US ties under some strain, Leonard Doyle writes from New York
- The US Presidential Elections: Democrats show magic touch
- Scandal report rocks Keating
- Amnesty names child-killers
- The US Presidential Elections: Polls point to Democrat victory in home stretch
- Out of the west: A jaundiced electorate rediscovers its voice
- Tough time for Patten on first China visit
- US finds photographs of Vietnam casualties
- Arafat allies die in shooying
- Angolan poll 'free and fair'
- Kanemaru's heirs feud in war of succession: Terry McCarthy in Tokyo finds a cynical power struggle in progress over the legacy of Japan's political kingmaker
- Bush blocks UN relief accord with Iraq
- The US Presidential Elections: Clinton acquires aura of a winner
People
- Anniversaries
- Royal Engagements
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Magnus Pyke
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Orton Chirwa
- Obituary: Shirley Booth
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Royal engagements
- Obituaries
- Obituary: Petra Kelly
- Obituary: Petra Kelly
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Oliver Ford
- Obituary: Jim McCallum
- Obituary: John Benn
- Obituary: Petra Kelly
Media
- Media: Talk of the Trade: The radical option: leave well alone
- Media: Talk of the Trade: Relaxed over race
- Media: Talk of the Trade: Moore on Sunday
- Media: Talk of the Trade: A desperate Bragg?
- Media: Appealing to catholic tastes: A former PR executive and 'Times' diarist is preparing to bring controversy to a traditional newspaper. Liz Hunt reports
- Media: The adman's hard sell (just to get a job): These days, advertising is no glamorous, get-rich-quick profession. Only the toughest aspirants find work, says Meg Carter
- 1 Man and woman arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to murder victim of Woolwich machete attack, named as Drummer Lee Rigby
- 2 'Sickening, deluded and unforgivable': Horrific attack brings terror to London’s streets
- 3 Grace Dent: I’m not sure how these people can avoid being called ‘bigots’. And the more ‘civilised’, the worse they are
- 4 Woolwich murder: They killed, then they performed - these men should be starved of our attention
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL will seek to exploit this evil crime for their own evil ends
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