Day In a Page
Friday, 22 January 1993
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- The week in Review: Home news
- Dog reprieved
- Suicide verdict
- Judgment delay
- The Rail Debate: Sweden's example highlights need for investment
- A winner in the pipeline
- Defendants in jewellery shop 'sting' sentenced
- Leaked English tests scrapped by Patten
- The Rail Debate: Will all this create a better service?
- Cabinet support for shake-up of police widens
- The North Kent Marshes designated as Environmentally Sensitive Area
- The Rail Debate: Railways begin journey into unknown: Christian Wolmar, Transport Correspondent, explains how the network might operate after privatisation
- TV producer 'deceived prison over Nilsen film'
- Cigarette advertising report 'flawed'
- The Boyd league table
- Legal aid for smokers to sue tobacco firms refused
- Constable claims to be victim of race bias
- Murder inquiry
- Man charged
- Law Update: Profits down
- Law Update: Students in need
- Law: How to survive when a Paxman attacks: A training course for solicitors offers tips on dealing with TV and radio. Fiona Bawdon joined a class
- Law: Great British oratory or plain Euro-waffle?: Adversarial questioning is becoming established practice in the European Court - though the approach has its critics. Adam Sage reports
- Law Update: Aid incentives
- Law Report: Sensitive material need not be shown to defence: Regina v Davis and others - Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) (Lord Taylor of Gosforth, Lord Chief Justice, Mr Justice Owen and Mr Justice Curtis), 15 January 1993.
World
- PLO chief tiptoes into Israeli homes
- Court must hand back 23.5m pounds drugs cash
- Fear for HK freedom of speech
- 100-year-old lobster saved
- Cambodia 'may face partition'
- Tanker spill threatens Andaman Sea wildlife
- Sultans lose privileges
- Clinton smarts from setback over nominee
- Savimbi agrees to begin talks
- Wasting disease kills 60,000
- Cheap labour that carried a high price: Employing illegal aliens has cost Zoe Baird dearly, but many Washington families turn a blind eye to the immigration laws, writes David Usborne
- Fighting the flames on supertanker
- 'We lived in safety until the ceasefire'
- Major capitalises on opening up of India
- Out of Hong Kong: New Year gives Chinese plenty to crow about
- US fighters fire on Iraqi radar site
- Saddam's charm resisted
- Fight to trace 'lost' Sikhs in Punjab
- Burning tanker adrift off Indonesia
- A good time is had 'Jammin' with the Prez'
- First Lady puts on a presidential persona: Every US leader's wife is a force to reckon with, but the whole country will look for Hillary's hand in her husband's political decisions, writes Rupert Cornwell in Washington
- Clinton dilemma over top law post
- President in the soup
- US dustcart mystery
- Iraqis receive milk of Saddam's kindness: Reduced to rubble by the allies, Baghdad's baby milk plant has been rebuilt, to the delight of the propagandists, writes Charles Richards in Baghdad
- Japan set to lift taboo on making war
- Carey praises De Klerk's reforms
- Somalia aid widens net
- UN struggles to change Cambodia's ways
- South Africa's secret brothers set agenda for future: The Afrikaner elite society, the Broederbond, is determined to retain its substantial influence, writes John Carlin in Johannesburg
- Prisoner baits his own trap
- Palestinian deportees appeal to envoy
- Rebels pound Kabul
People
- Appointments
- Service appointments
- Wills
- Church appointments
- Obituary: Dame Janet Vaughan
- Obituary: Professor R. P. Winnington-Ingram
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Birthdays
- Appeals
- Obituary: Jude Moraes
- Obituary: Nikos Gavriil Pendzikis
- Obituary: Kobo Abe
- Obituary: Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney
- Faith and Reason: A common duty to cultivate rivalry in good works: The fourth in our series on reconciling warring faiths is by a Muslim, Dr Shabbir Akhtar. He argues for the application of single standards of international justice.
- Obituary: Jean Mayer
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Dame Janet Vaughan
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Audrey Hepburn
- Obituary: Antony Melville Ross
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Gastropod
- The new merchants of venison: What is to be done about the glut of wild red deer? Joanna Blythman reports on supermarket plans to persuade us to eat their healthy meat
- The good, the bad and the unknown in Italy: Italian food dominates modern eating in Britain yet Italian wine retains its image as plonk. In the first of a new series, Anthony Rose explains how to get beyond the bulk standard chianti, valpolicella and frascati
- RECEPI / This particular answer lies in the soil
- We grow our food, we make our famines
- Restaurants with better fish to fry: We must start insisting on line-caught fish, diver-caught scallops and wild salmon if we want to save our dwindling fish stocks. Emily Green meets the man selling the message
- RECIPE / An apple muffin a day keeps hunger away
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedBooks
- BOOK REVIEW / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / Sky-larks and stretch limo jockeys: 'Capitalist Fools' - Nicholas Von Hoffman: Chatto & Windus, 18.99 pounds: Godfrey Hodgson on a bold view of how American businessmen have changed from liberating heroes to hollow celebrities
- SECOND THOUGHTS / Quays of the kingdom: Iain Sinclair follows the river back to the source of his second novel, Downriver (Grafton pounds 5.99)
- BOOK REVIEW / Tripping out with a con artist: 'Make Believe: A True Story' - Diana Athill: Sinclair-Stevenson, 13.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / An imperial lather: Tim Blanning on two books that shed light on the grandeur and littleness of Napoleon
- BOOK REVIEW / Free and frozen music: 'The English Religious Tradition and the Genius of Anglicanism' - Ed. Geoffrey Rowell: Iken, 9.95 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Mother of all captives: 'Prisoner in Baghdad' - Daphne Parish: Chapmans, 8.99 pounds
- Harrison forward: Andrew Brown meets Tony Harrison, whose poetry goes straight to the heart and to the mind
- BOOK REVIEW / My brilliant Korea: shrapnel and snow soup: 'I am the Clay' - Chaim Potok: Heinemann, 13.99 pounds - Tim Jackson is struck by Chaim Potok's unadorned and stirring story from the Korean war
- By their fruits shall ye know them: Ziauddin Sardar on a new report that defends the world's deserving poor, and assesses the damage done by development
- 1 Exclusive: Woolwich attack suspect was known to banned terror group and security services
- 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 Ingrid Loyau-Kennett, the mother-of-two hailed as a hero for confronting Woolwich attackers, thought: 'better me than a child'
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL will seek to exploit this evil crime for their own evil ends
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