Day In a Page
Monday, 28 December 1992
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- Heads' opposition threatens English tests
- Riggers' plunge
- Judge dies
- Hotels warned
- Scruffy squad
- Boy saves family on mountain
- Worker therapy services prove good business: Free advice lines for employees in need of counselling are helping employers and their staff. Celia Hall reports
- Street beating
- Seized drugs wealth pays for addicts' support: A pounds 30,000 bus equipped with methadone - and alarms to deter thieves - is going to build bridges with drug users who fight shy of seeking treatment for their addiction. John Arlidge reports
- Airgun attack
- Youngest grandmaster puts older chess rivals on edge
- Beak season
- Fishermen blockade Lossiemouth
- Mine yields evidence of ancient industry
- 'Green estate' developers fight planning rejection
- Expanding rented sector 'will not help homeless'
- Trawlermen fear ruin as EC tightens the net: The fishermen of Whitby can talk of little but the grim days that lie ahead, Malcolm Pithers reports
- Enthusiast finds kernels of excellence in the nation's jails: Philippa Drew, Director of Custody with the Prison Department, tells Heather Mills why she is optimistic about the service's future - despite last weekend's Reading riot
- Experts quote a price for family treasures: Recession and high insurance premiums have encouraged people to seek a valuation of their heirlooms. Dalya Alberge reports
- NHS to act on unequal service to minorities
- Ireland prepares for a gold rush as legal case ends
- Tories to report on Scotland
- Mother of murdered girl's plea to parents
- Stabbed PC victim of four attacks
- Battlefield roadworks
- Doubts over Aids drugs first expressed in 1985
- Photofit builds picture of crime cars: Police in three forces are testing a system that could help trace vehicles used in crimes. Terry Kirby reports
- Hospitals adopt 'nimby' stance to radical changes: Judy Jones talks to Brian Mawhinney, who is at the eye of the storm brewed by the Tomlinson report
- Equality campaign for women falters
- Financial restrictions 'put 5,700 teaching jobs at risk'
- Future of 'Queen Mary' liner lies in Long Beach harbour
- IRA prison spy dies of cancer
- Fishermen in harbour protest over restrictions
- Unions plan offensive on privatised services
- Ruling opens way for tighter radiation limit
- Third of jobless people will be under 25 in 1993
- Rapist may have stalked papergirl a week earlier
- Child health inquiry starts with tests on 1,000 babies
World
- Whaling ship attacked
- Gunter Grass quits SPD
- 'Vampires' captured
- Record blast moves mountain
- Somali warlords pledge peace
- Black eye for Bush
- Bush 'threatens force against Serbia'
- UN troops in Macedonia
- Keeping score in the world of human rights abuses : It is the time of year for cataloguing official misdeeds, writes Caroline Moorehead
- Border robbery frustrates TV's dissenting voice
- Russian drinker
- Old and sick suffer as Bosnian winter claims first victims
- Peru's Congress bows to Japanese
- 100-year-old expelled
- Last-ditch drive for Start-2 treaty
- UN will guard relief convoys for Iraqi Kurds: Supplies for winter will resume after a 'concession' by Baghdad. Hugh Pope reports from Istanbul
- Lebanon blocks UN visit to deportees
- An early lesson in South Africa's despair: After a year away, Benjamin Pogrund returns to Johannesburg and sees evidence of anarchy and decay in a land still dominated by the effects of more than 40 years of apartheid
- Out of India: An epic tale distorted for political ends
- Israel to allow ten deportees back
- Kenya poll turns on cash and crookery: In a country without opinion polls holding its first multi- party election for more than a decade, it is difficult to predict the outcome of today's vote. But two British academics, David Throup, an African specialist at Keele University, and Charles Hornsby, an expert on Kenyan voting, have studied the election campaign. This is their report
- Saddam's deadly aim in the marshes
- US aircraft carrier to defend no-fly zone
- Mubarak strives to hold back Islamist tide: The threat from Muslim extremists has damaged Egypt's vital tourist trade. But Cairo has been slow to recognise a challenge to the whole of society, writes Charles Richards
- Violence mars poll in Kenya
- Bush accused of 'covering up a cover-up'
- US operation in Somalia short on hope
- Smuggled food gives hope to deportees
- Out of Japan: Toyota teaches the British its fighting philosophy
- Caught between a rock and a hard place: Charles Richards, Middle East Editor, says there is little to choose between the indifference of the Israelis and the Lebanese to the Palestinian deportees
- Peace plan for Ayodhya seeks balance
- Christmas massacre
- Dogs explode in Lima
- Unholy row splits Bulgaria's church
- Leaders inch towards accord on Bosnia map
- 'Police officer spied for Mafia'
- Clinton 'Man of the Year'
- Signing of Start-2 treaty in sight
- Australia's 'Mr 25 per cent' takes a lead in the polls
- Independence strikes wrong notes in hungry Armenia: A bitter conflict with Azerbaijan is sapping a new nation's resources, and confusing its people, Hugh Pope writes from Yerevan
- Niger backs free elections
People
- Anniversaries
- Changing of the Guard
- Birthdays
- Meanings of Christmas: A strange, persistent and defiant light: Kenneth Leech, for the Church of England, and John Kennedy, of the Methodist Church, continue our series of articles reflecting on the implications of Christmas
- Obituary: Cardew Robinson
- Obituary: Peyo
- Obituary: Ted Croker
- Meanings of Christmas: A strange, persistent and defiant light: Kenneth Leech, for the Church of England, and John Kennedy, of the Methodist Church, continue our series of articles reflecting on the implications of Christmas
- Obituary: Blanchette Rockefeller
- Obituaries
- Obituary: Nikita Magaloff
- Court circular
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Sybil Andrews
- Obituary: Harold Truscott
- Obituary: Helen Joseph
- Meanings of Christmas: Waiting in silence to see God's face: Today's contributors to our series for Christmas are Janet Martin Soskice, offering a Roman Catholic view, and James Weatherhead, for the Church of Scotland.
Science
- Italians know how to express it so well: A revolution is brewing in the way the British make and drink coffee, writes Chris Long
- All eyes on the Red Planet: Mars steals the show in January's night sky. Heather Couper and Nigel Henbest report on efforts to investigate the planet
- For Earth's sake, don't get rid of the tree line: Recent research has shown how important the forests are in stabilising the world's climate, says Bill Burroughs
- 1 Heading for the States? Prepare for the longest US immigration queues ever
- 2 Amir Khan interview: 'One second could end my boxing career'
- 3 Boxing: Purdy set to join long list of British fighters who take the money – and then the beating
- 4 Dan Stevens after Downton Abbey: The erstwhile Matthew Crawley is back in period costume
- 5 Join Ryanair! See the world! But we'll only pay you for nine months a year
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