Day In a Page
Saturday, 19 September 1992
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News
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- Murder charge
- Bonds
- Inside Story: Making sense out of the muddle
- Inside Story: Lamont's silver lining: The Chancellor may have lost a burden but he will not throw caution to the winds, writes Donald Macintyre
- Inside Story: The breaking of the pound: The long plunge into crisis is chronicled by Christopher Huhne, Donald Macintyre and John Eisenhammer
- Labour faces split over Europe
- Pollution pact at risk
- Sterling and the Oxford Street view
- Draw in 67 moves
- British blame German bankers
- Boom and bust for sea-race balloons
- 'Don't knows' hold the key: As the French vote today on the Maastricht treaty, 'fault-lines' and fears of German power have turned the British public against closer unity
- A David among the legal Goliaths: William Leith went to hear the libel case brought by the daughter of a PLO man and found someone else's name echoing throughout the court
- Press bill pressure on media
- Vote puts strain on brains
- Tilbury staff 'flouted law' on stowaways
- Voyages that begin in desperation and end in despair: An estimated 6,000 people a year risk their lives to seek a free passage to the West. Edward Pilkington investigates an increasing and worrying problem
- Thefts-to-order hit botanic gardens
- Inquiry into sex abuse of mentally ill
- School talk by Irving is cancelled
- Britain shunned wartime volunteers: Amos Ford says there has been a cover-up over the shabby treatment of British Hondurans who came to help us out, reports Martin Hennessey
- Is Covent Garden worth saving?: The Royal Opera House is pounds 4m in debt and under attack from many quarters. David Lister looks at the choices it faces for the future
- Geldofs try to spice up breakfast TV
- Experts hail discovery of rare frescos
- Travel firm crashes
- 600 on rampage
- Rape remand
- Pilot's medals sold
- Rachel suspect: 36 hours more
- Murder remand
- Sex attack arrest
- The Sterling Crisis: Gould may be forced to quit over Maastricht: Shadow cabinet discord
- Race equality body disowns complaint over ape advert
- The Sterling Crisis: Dealers' attention turns to the franc: French response
- Former Beirut hostages attack TV dramatisation
- Tabloid editor calls for review of press code
- Medal convention
- Dirty tricks claim over paper boy murder case
- The Sterling Crisis: Lamont facing Bundesbank clash: Group of Seven
- The Sterling Crisis: Estate agents carry on twiddling their thumbs: The housing market: Hopes of a housing market revival are rising with predictions of a cut in interest rates. Yet still there is uncertainty. David Lawson reports
- Five women hurt in gun attack on guard
- The Sterling Crisis: Salary increases outstrip inflation: Pay rises
- English authorities blamed for blocking war crimes case
- Jury in injection trial told to set aside emotions
- Lancaster Prison
- The Sterling Crisis: Interest rate hopes fuel share price rise: The financial markets
- The Sterling Crisis: Exhausting week of confusion ends on high note: Record trading
- Family separated as court supports deportation order
- Staff pledge support for crisis-hit school
- Faith in Nature Conference
World
- Deadly legacy of shabby guerrilla: Peru's euphoria at the fall of the 'people's war' leader may be premature. Colin Harding explains the potency of Abimael Guzman's ideas
- Kiwis reject 'first past post' voting
- One-armed bandits and the two-bit soldiers: They believe in guns, guts and the flag. But these are lean times for the weekend warriors who met in Las Vegas. Phil Reeves joined them
- Judge murdered
- Somali warlord says 'no' to UN
- Democrats hear a Dixie melody: Clinton is the party's first candidate since Carter to sway vital voters in the South. John Lichfield reports from Charlotte, North Carolina
- 'Bar Serbia'
- Floods expose the politicians: Islamabad's response to the disaster has not been heroic, writes Tim McGirk in Sukkur
- Collor protest
- Six compete to wear Romania's crown of thorns: Iliescu has lost his grip. His opponents are gaining ground. As the election looms, Tony Barber weighs up the voters' choices
- Tax dodgers' dolce vita: Patricia Clough in Rome describes the Italians' other national pastime
- Saddam tightens noose on hungry Kurds: As winter and an economic blockade close in, Phil Davison predicts a new catastrophe in northern Iraq
- Stasi orgies
- 25 dead in Haiti explosion
- Kurds shot in 'act of revenge'
- Russian troops in Tajik move
- Gunmen kill 'Mafia link man'
- NZ voters feel put upon once too often: David Barber in Wellington finds people thoroughly confused about an unusual referendum on electoral reform
- 'Rabbit-hutch nation' yearns in vain for more room: Prospective house-buyers are being priced out of the market, Terry McCarthy writes from Tokyo
- Bush begs as cash flows in to Clinton
- Rawlings leaves armed forces
- Gunfire hits Somalia aid plane
- Oil fuels the struggle for a would-be Kuwait: Cabindan rebels believe they can wrest their independence from Angola, but this is just a futile dream, Karl Maier writes from Bofo
- ANC buries Ciskei victims
- Senate votes to curb nuclear tests
- US plays 'positive' role in Middle East talks
- Russian troops in Tajik move
- 25 dead in Haiti explosion
- Kurds shot in 'act of revenge'
- Pakistan counts cost as force of the flood eases
- Gunmen kill 'Mafia link man'
People
- Fulbright Commission
- Service appointments
- Appointments
- Wills
- Birthdays
- Schools: New Hall School
- Church appointments
- Appeals: LINK
- Appeals: National Art Collections Fund
- Appeals: The People's Dispensary for Sick Animals
- Faith and Reason: Savagery is alive in the heart of Europe: The Rev John Kennedy, of the Methodist Division of Social Responsibility, argues in a personal capacity against the Habsburg model of European union and all other empires.
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Food and Drink: Wine Box
- Food and Drink: Gastropod
- Food and Drink: Bigger and better: Safeway's innovative wine range has won it a Supermarket of the Year award. Anthony Rose reports
- Food and drink: The leanest times, the fattest times . . . and all the suppers in-between: 'I dreamt I served up goldfish'
- Food and Drink: Go for the ones with nibble marks: Recipe
- Food and drink: The leanest times, the fattest times . . . and all the suppers in-between: 'Roasted flour and water: you try it sometime'
- 1 Diary of Second World War German teenager reveals young lives untroubled by Nazi Holocaust in wartime Berlin
- 2 Bosses of collapsed banks should be sent to jail, banking standards commission tells George Osborne
- 3 Breaking the Silence: In the reality of occupation, there are no Palestinian civilians – only potential terrorists
- 4 Uri Geller psychic spy? The spoon-bender's secret life as a Mossad and CIA agent revealed
- 5 Vice pulls 'breathtakingly tasteless' fashion shoot glorifying the suicides of famous female authors from Sylvia Plath to Virginia Woolf
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