Day In a Page
Wednesday, 28 October 1992
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- Law Report: BBC camera crew invaded subject's privacy: Regina v Broadcasting Complaints Commission, ex parte British Broadcasting Corporation - Queen's Bench Division (Mr Justice Macpherson), 9 October 1992
- Graduates of the Institute of Personnel Management: The following, having satisfied the examiners, have qualified for graduate membership of the IPM between October 1991 and October 1992
- Public Services Management: A rational response in Unison: Alan Jinkinson, Nalgo's leader, is set to head what will be Britain's largest trade union. He describes the challenges ahead to Paul Gosling
- The Government in Crisis: Scientists seek to take the drama out of a crisis: Comparing Tory backbenchers to cornered dogs may help science to predict how the Government's present crisis will end. William Hartston reports
- The Government in Crisis: Cosy chats soften up backbench rebels: Tory waverers faced a top-level charm assault. Colin Brown reports
- One-woman vigil alerts shoppers to wheel-clamps
- The Government in Crisis: Hurd increases confusion
- Brooke to widen range of governors at the BBC
- Judge forced to grant release of child molester
- True crime level may be triple police figure
- Low speeds for boats on the Norfolk Broads
- Police cells man 'died after drugs overdose'
- Growing cost of feet credibility: Trainers are 'too dear' but teenagers still pay. Kathy Marks reports
- Britons spend pounds 2.4bn on pets
- Man tells of Triad initiation
- Parking death man is fined
- Boxing promoter 'lied over fighter's epilepsy'
- The Government in Crisis: Howard aims to curb commission's powers
- Fischer extends chess lead
- Negus antiques draw a crowd
- Ronay becomes fashion victim
- Paula Yates fined over TV licence
- The Government in Crisis: Labour dismisses proposal by Danes
- Extension in social work training delayed
- Pollution takes heavy toll: Britain's landscape is being ravaged by acid rain and misguided planting policies. Susan Watts reports
- Wood conservation pays off: Britain's landscape is being ravaged by acid rain and misguided planting policies. Susan Watts reports
- Freed loyalist life prisoner is ordered back to jail
- Native Scottish forests face fight to survive: Britain's landscape is being ravaged by acid rain and misguided planting policies. Susan Watts reports
- Admiralty 'ignorance led to loss of Falklands warship'
- Tobacco adverts ban 'would mean fewer smokers'
- Tunnel rail service set to begin in mid-1994
- English Heritage splits over plan for disposals
- The Government in Crisis: Danish move adds to Major's woes: Foreign Office warns that Maastricht memorandum may make ratification process in Britain more difficult
- 'Oktoberfest' not a brew that travels easily
- Law Report: Worker entitled to time off for union duties: London Ambulance Service v Charlton and others - Employment Appeal Tribunal (Mr Justice Wood, Miss JW Collerson and Mr JD Daly), 1 September 1992.
- The Government in Crisis: Discontent grows in sceptical Luton: Mike Durham met some Tory grassroots critics of an 'indecisive' government
- The Government in Crisis: Tory outcry hinges on calls for leadership: As John Major and his government come under increasing criticism of their policies from once stalwart voters, Anthony Bevins gauges the mood of Conservative MPs
- The Government in Crisis: Officials talk publicly of grassroots fears: Tory activists are uneasy about the infighting. Martin Whitfield reports
- The Government in Crisis: Angry voters write: what is going on?: These are extracts from the postbag of a loyalist, pro-Maastricht Conservative member of Parliament. The sentiments are typical of those found among the hundreds of letters being received by every backbencher, every week
World
- Escobar's aide killed in raid
- Arrows zing to targets aided by wizard spells: Bhutanese take their archery competitions seriously, and using sorcerers to whip up hexes against opponents is part of the game, Tim McGirk finds on a visit to Thimphu
- The US Presidential Elections: Right-wing puritan bucks trend in polling
- Blue-beret UK troops arrive 'to open' Split
- Escobar's aide killed in raid
- The US Presidential Election: Campaign Diary
- Peace plan urges single Bosnia state
- 'Ceasefire' in S Lebanon
- Yeltsin puts a ban on his rival's army
- Hong Kong documents widen rift
- Anti-drug agents crack pet ruse of the drugs cartel
- SA diplomacy
- Artillery duels rock Monrovia
- Australian massacre charge
- Yeltsin at war with hardline critics
- Italy's old guard seeks salvation through reform
- Hopes of trade deal rise as US agrees to talk
- Serbian rout of Bosnian forces
- Report set to fuel single-market row
- Turkey sends tanks into Iraq
- UN Somalia aid envoy resigns over criticism
- Priest struggles against modern slavery in Brazil
- Japan reels as sumo king hooks sex idol
- Baghdad insider joins Saddam coup plotters: A former ally of the President is part of a coalition to overthrow his regime, writes Hugh Pope in Salahuddin
- Clinton rallies the white South
- '1,500 political prisoners held'
- Senator admits he is an alien
- Out of the West: Balls come out as candidates play the macho game
- Civilians die as Israel takes on Hizbollah men
- ANC Zulu leader assassinated
- Mass suicides feared in Seoul
- China 'will fight Patten to end'
- Europe 'needs Maastricht to fend off past'
- Off the rails
- Canada's 'no' voters humiliate Mulroney and anger Indians
- Motion defeated
- Lithuania poll
- All saved
- Poles bid farewell to troops
- Gorbachev to pay
- Yale backs a new old boy
People
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Appointments
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Paul Eisler
- Obituary: Professor Adelino da Palma Carlos
- Obituary: Paul Frankel
- Obituary: Peter Rice
- Obituary: Lord Ashby
- Obituary: Lord Ashby
- Birthdays
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Lord Ashby
- Obituary: Roy Marshall
- Obituary: David Baxandall
Media
- Media: Did you see the TV revolution?: Channel 4 is 10 years old. Its one-time dreamers are now cash-flow experts. Sue Summers wonders whether grown-up means sold-out
- Unlikely face at the 'Mirror': Michael Leapman looks at the adaptable David Montgomery
- Media: Did you see the TV revolution?: Channel 4 is 10 years old. Its one-time dreamers are now cash-flow experts. Sue Summers wonders whether grown-up means sold-out
- Media: Did you see the TV revolution?: Points of view: four prominent TV gurus say what they think of the Channel 4 show so far
- 1 Breaking the Silence: In the reality of occupation, there are no Palestinian civilians – only potential terrorists
- 2 Mike Ashley wants blood after last season's trauma at Newcastle - and it won't stop with Derek Llambias
- 3 Richard Nieuwenhuizen death: Six teenagers and 50-year-old father convicted of manslaughter in shocking case of referee killed over a game of football
- 4 Exclusive: Newcastle's star talent-spotter on brink as Joe Kinnear sparks walkout
- 5 Vast methane 'plumes' seen in Arctic ocean as sea ice retreats
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