Day In a Page
Saturday, 5 September 1992
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News
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- Glider crash
- Bonds
- Yachtsmen rescued
- Have you got this one in polyurethane, please?: Sixties 'kinky boots' were followed by Seventies 'bondage gear'. Now a full range of quaint clothing in unlikely materials is about to invade the fashion mainstream
- BR may set trend with drink and drug tests
- New clue in hunt for Orkney seal killers
- Is the telly going down the tube?: The golden age of television is over, people complain, fondly remembering the past. But when Tim Kelsey looked back at Saturday nights in the autumns of 1972 and 1982 he found little has changed in 20 years
- 'Blue Peter' star dies of cancer
- A Scottish view from the Tardis
- Dissidents win stay on deportation
- Prince 'meddled to aid orchestra'
- Dilettanti Ball
- The TUC: Old horse eludes the knacker: Barrie Clement ponders the fate of a declining institution
- I'm no saint, says 'fanatic' who saved 150: John Arlidge talks to the retired teacher who hired buses to rescue refugees from Bosnia
- I'm king - Fischer
- Drugs cash switched from banks
- Ashdown to renew attempt at realignment
- Second holiday firm collapses
- Life is no longer black and white for girls in pearls: Charles Oulton finds 'Country Life' has ruffled feathers by dispensing with engagement photos
- Ecstasy charges
- Labour split on fees
- Mortgage tax relief 'must go'
- Dead man accuses N-plant
- Russians wrong about Briton who 'died in Stalin camp'
- A burning issue
- Shoppers fly to buy with fistfuls of dollars: As the United States currency takes a battering, Rachel Borrill in London and Jim Gallagher in New York report on the tourists who know how far the buck goes
- Bouncers go to charm school
- Three rescue plans for zoo
- 'Job for life' to end?
- Perjury charge
- Stirling inquest
- Chess rest day leaves time for arguments
World
- Standing firm
- Failure again
- Iraq holds Swedes
- Deadly irony
- Russian press goes West: Phillip Knightley in Moscow for a probe into the state of fearless reporting
- France bans toxic imports
- Township killings
- And it's so long, Frank Lloyd Wright: More than 30 years on, the Guggenheim Museum is again embroiled in controversy. Ultan Guilfoyle explains why
- Rise of the hardliners forces Yeltsin to attempt a dangerous balancing act
- Rebel who says no to Mitterrand
- Armies of peace patrol a world ravaged by war: Who pays and who benefits from the attempts by the UN to prevent conflict in 15 countries? Leonard Doyle gives the answers
- Rupert plays the Hollywood heavy: The media mogul takes his tough-guy technique to the town of sweet dreams and sweet deals. Phil Reeves reports
- At last the disaster is dawning on America: Ten days after Hurricane Andrew struck, relief is still trying to catch up with chaos in Florida. Patrick Cockburn reports from Homestead
- Turks kill 25 Kurdish rebels
- Summit makes slow progress
- Bad news on jobs adds to Bush's woes
- Killer floods
- Passenger takes flight in mid-air
- Hurd says world aid too late for Somalia
- Peking replaces finance minister
- Gulf boycott
- Tajik MPs fail to oust president
- Arafat prays
- Israel and Syria inch towards deal on Golan
People
- Barbers' Company
- Coachmakers' and Coach Harness Makers' Company
- Wills
- Church appointments
- Appointments
- Birthdays
- Service appointments
- Territorial Army promotions
- Obituary: John Sturges
- Obituaries
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Obituary: John Marsh
- Faith and Reason: The moral case for a holy war in Bosnia: The Muslim theologian and writer Shabbir Akhtar argues that the ill-treatment of Muslims is justification for armed intervention to secure peace in the Bosnian crisis.
- Appeals: Babies in Prison
- Ministry of Defence
- Appeals: The Lily Davis Special Playgroup
- Appeals: London Conservation Area Conference
- IWEM
- Obituary: Vernon Lambert
- Obituary: The Very Rev John Wild
- Obituary: Johnnie Mortimer
- Obituary: D. Tecwyn Lloyd
- Obituary: Davinder Singh Parmar
- Carpenters' Company
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Food and Drink: Wines of the Week
- Food and Drink: Gastropod
- Food and Drink: Crumbs from my table
- Food and Drink: A new broom that respects old Soho dust: One of London's best-known pubs now has a promising new restaurant, says Emily Green
- Food and Drink: Who's been eating the baby's dinner?: Joanna Blythman hails Baby Organix, a new and modestly priced range whose fresh and vivid flavours are going down a treat with parents and children alike
- Food and Drink: The magic that gives Marston's its Pedigree: Heath Robinson would have been proud of the 'Burton Union', a yeast cultivating system that gives a complex, fruity, dryness to Michael Jackson's beer of the month
- Food and Drink / Recipes: Better ripe and red than dead: Determined to salvage this year's tomatoes from the compost heap, Emily Green harvests a selection of new and old recipes from a bumper crop
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedBooks
- BOOKS / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / Travels round human oddity: The collected shorter fiction - Anthony Trollope, Ed. Julian Thompson: Robinson Publishing, pounds 25
- BOOK REVIEW / A 16th-century sexual soap opera called dynasty: The six wives of Henry VIII - Antonia Fraser: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, pounds 20
- BOOK REVIEW / The gaol keeper's fear of the penalty: Michel Foucault - Didier Eribon, Tr. Betsy Wing: Faber, pounds 25
- BOOK REVIEW / Pariah who nearly became a gentleman: Trollope - Victoria Glendinning: Hutchinson, pounds 20
- BOOK REVIEW / A poor thinner: Life-size - Jenefer Shute: Secker & Warburg, pounds 7.99
- BOOK REVIEW / Return of the Barm man: John Worthen admires the restoration of D H Lawrence's Sons and Lovers
- BOOK REVIEW / A dog's view of fat cats: Walking my mistress in Deauville - Ronald Frame: Hodder & Stoughton, pounds 14.99
- BOOKS / Moments when the pain begins to tell: Tom Shone meets Paul Watkins, a youthful novelist with an unflinching view of hardship
- BOOKS / The Independent Foreign Fiction Award: A romantic pseudonym on the loose in Lisbon
- 1 Notes from a small island: Is Sealand an independent 'micronation' or an illegal fortress?
- 2 British business: We need to stay in the European Union - or risk losing up to £92bn a year
- 3 The moral case on tax avoidance is overwhelming - and we all know Google wants to do the right thing
- 4 Sam Wallace: The second coming of Jose Mourinho at Chelsea will be a reunion that can only end in tears
- 5 It’s official: thanks to Stephen Hawking's Israel boycott, anti-Semitism is no more
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