Day In a Page
Saturday, 20 November 1993
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Bastards vs The Rest: From the highest to the lowest, the Conservatives are bitterly divided. Stephen Castle and Paul Routledge report
- Rolling over the past: Three years after the demise of Coloroll, David Bowen picks through the rubble and finds strength among the survivors
- Breakthrough in search for boy
- Police seize 20m pounds of heroin on M1: Record haul found hidden in tomato lorry
- Rare book reveals Potter priorities: Peter Rabbit resumes career in ballet as first edition goes under hammer
- Extra cost of NHS changes challenged: Nicholas Timmins reports that 30,000 new posts have brought no obvious care benefits
- Terrorists jailed
- Accused boys 'must have killed James Bulger together'
- Child couriers
- Howard tries softer line on prison staff
- Baby food fears
- Rapist warning
- Report urges more open Civil Service
- Hume relaxes entry terms for Anglicans
- Political rhetoric infuriates mothers: Women bringing up children alone respond to recent criticisms. Jojo Moyes reports
World
- Aids child dies
- Iraqi protest
- Arabian leopard in fight for survival
- Flat Earth: Baked in a pie?
- Police 'innocent'
- Welcome to Cascadia: US and Canadian states plan to redraw north-west border to create corridor of prosperity
- Roll up for ritual abuse of rights: Chinese province makes a horror show of drive against crime
- Flat Earth: Soaring sauerkraut
- Divide that fuels world's 'worst war': Country-city struggles ravage Angola
- Bodyguard shot
- Scud-busters were duds
- General Winter takes command in Bosnia: Snowbound warriors must use horses and sledges
- Flat Earth: Greens gauge
- Nothing settled in Seattle talks: Presidents fail to break the deadlock in Sino-American relations
- Flat Earth: Forbidden fruits of the cherry orchard
- Question: who'd want to spend the rest of their lives clubbing rats to death? Answer: 20,000 Bombay graduates
- Clinton's victories at home belie his image as a bungler abroad
- Summit backs Gatt deadline
- Whites face tough game on a level playing field
- Labour of love
- Israel 'would welcome Assad'
- Talks No. 16 for Britain and China
- Vatican threatens to cast out the exorcists of Goa: The Church is worried about the unconventional zeal with which some members have been pursuing the Evil One, Tim McGirk writes from Nuvem
- Jordan hangs female killer
- US lifts ban on sale of computer: Asia-Pacific nations put pressure on Europe over trade and Washington makes concessions to improve relations with China
- Apec urges speedy end to Gatt talks: Asia-Pacific nations put pressure on Europe over trade and Washington makes concessions to improve relations with China
- UN team in Iraq to check 'poison' bombs
- Africa creates its own dollars 1m peace fund
- Nigerians defy curbs by army: Police in clashes with demonstrators
- Snip wife's holiday plea
- Packwood 'may resign'
- Stiff fine for parrot stuff
- Fire sweeps Shenzhen plant
- Ivory Coast's ruler returns
- Cracks open up in S African right wing: ANC and government in talks with conservatives aimed at exploiting divisions before April elections
People
- Birthdays
- Wills
- Painter-Stainers' Company
- Carmen's Company
- Feltmakers' Company
- Church appointments
- Service appointments
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Obituary: Sir Anthony Lincoln
- Obituary: Graham Needham
- Faith & Reason: Calling cards left as a sign of hope: Our series on the implication of belief in miracles, and whether they prove anything, is resumed by Clive Calver, General Secretary of the Evangelical Alliance, UK
- Obituary: B. S. Page
- Obituary: Alberto Breccia
- Appeals: The Ruth Hayman Trust
- Obituary: Antonia Booth
- Appeals: The Kirkgate Centre Trust
- Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
- Royal Institute of Navigation
Voices
Voices RSS Feed - click to grab the feedLetters
- Letter: Arts Council pays the piper but doesn't call the tune
- Letter: How to spot career potential
- Letter: Arts Council pays the piper but doesn't call the tune
- Rear Window: Free Trade: An idea made in Lancashire that came home to roost
- Letter: Jill: a columnist without spite
- Letter: HIV is not a death sentence
- Letter: Safety laws are not a luxury
- Letter: Some jobless boys do grow up
- Letter: CSA warnings were ignored
- Letter: Thorp is a safe and profitable nuclear reprocessing plant
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Gastropod
- Food and Drink: Make room for the winter squash: Roasted, fried, buttered or baked, squashes are sweet and satisfying cold-weather fare
- Food and Drink: There are no winners in the beaujolais race: Old-fashioned price-cutting is the 'new' way of getting the juices flowing, says Anthony Rose
- Food and Drink: Roll out the Christmas beer barrel
- READER RECIPE / Great balls of fire
- Food and Drink: Can you afford such good taste?: Marco Pierre White's newest restaurant is extremely expensive, but food and service are close to perfection, says Emily Green
- Food and Drink: I smell reasonably healthy
Motoring
- Motoring: The 1963 vintage won't lie down: Roger Bell is full of admiration for the new, improved version of the 30-year-old Porsche 911, 'the world's most practical supercar'
- Motoring: Every car mechanic's favourite publisher: John Haynes has made a fortune from workshop manuals, and he has spent it on old cars. Report by Phil Llewellin
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedMusic
- MUSIC / Discs: A few notes between friends: Stephen Johnson and Edward Seckerson on songs and a 'Swedish Schumann'
- MUSIC / Touring: Scale models: Stephen Johnson on microtonality
- MUSIC / From outside in: They called him Fred the Red, but his god was Beethoven. Annette Morreau meets the composer Frederic Rzewski
Books
- Bookshop Window
- Books: Witches, beauties and mennyms: Maureen Owen on the best of this year's children's fiction
- Books: He is indeed a very altered Toad: Christina Hardyment talks to William Horwood, recreator of The Wind in the Willows
- Books: Farewell to those oily types: Nicholas Tucker on the rise and fall of the jingoistic tradition of adventure stories
- BOOK REVIEW / Dead soldiers, broken hearts: 'A Very Long Engagement' - Sebastien Japrisot Tr. Linda Coverdale: Harvill, 9.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Visionary dreams of a vindictive sneak: 'Franco' - Paul Preston: HarperCollins, 25 pounds
- Second Thoughts: Too close a call: D J Taylor recalls Real Life (Flamingo pounds 5.99) and the real trouble it caused
- Books: The biggest man by a million chalks: Anthony Lane on Auguste Rodin, the sculptor who created heavy drama day after day
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