Day In a Page
Monday, 1 March 1993
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- The daily poem
- Murder charge
- Unions highlight 'hypocrisy' faced by freelance staff
- Bottomley dismisses 'opt-out' organ plan
- Chevening sells contents to survive
- Crime warning
- Law Report: Child of 11 could not remove Official Solicitor: Re S (a minor) - Court of Appeal (Sir Thomas Bingham, Master of the Rolls, Lord Justice Rose and Lord Justice Waite), 26 February 1993
- Book sales rise as fewer borrow from libraries
- MP met Gaddafi on Lockerbie
- Couple 'abused foster children for 24 years'
- Government seeks strike ban in civil service
- Birt's company could face tax demand: Inland Revenue is likely to review new director-general's consultancy agreement as BBC's tally of 'own goals' rises
- Lamont urged to close tax loophole
- Call conviction
- Outcry renews interest in role of governors
- Police cleared
- Wife jailed
- Seal of approval
- Four killed
- Child hijacked
- Danish poll
- Lorries blocked
- Benefit ruling
- Ukraine rebuffs Yeltsin
- Star performer
- Polish PM looks for vote of confidence from Britain: Hanna Suchocka arrives in London today on a trade mission. Before leaving Warsaw she spoke to Adrian Bridge
- Council 'failing to pay for children at risk'
- On the rocks
- Anger at 'private passport controls'
- Unemployment in Europe: Brussels chafes over recession crisis: In the first of a series, Sarah Lambert reports on the growing frustration in the European Commission at its limited powers to bring relief to areas suffering from high unemployment
- 'Mafia chief' says he is just a poor farmer
- Hurd disguises the deadlock in Gibraltar talks
- Net descends on Naples
- Worms fail
- Arctic miners stake claim for power: Andrew Higgins in Vorkuta meets rival 'directors' of Russia's biggest coal mine whose bitter fight for control is helping to tear the country apart
- Legal study calls for safeguard on confessions
- Mother tells of friendship with nurse in murder case
- Unemployment fears 'force down pay'
- Police theft trap ruled legitimate
- Three accused of bombing
- Army officer wins award for bravery
- Law Report: Case Summaries
World
- Agents besiege Texan cult leader
- Brazilian minister resigns
- Angolan talks collapse as Unita rebels stay away
- 'Torture' in Algeria
- Watchdog attacks UN profligacy
- Denjanjuk starts hunger strike
- Strike threat in Nicaragua
- Algeria arrests Muslim militant
- Suharto calls for more democracy
- US supports China on Gatt
- Roll up for final US visa lottery
- Islamic Jihad admits to Tel Aviv stabbings
- 'Godzilla' films creator dies
- Kohl courts Japanese firms
- Hewson in hustings 'jobs for all' pledge
- Clinton unveils 'community corps'
- Out of South Africa: A hard way to learn the price of happiness
- Rubble reveals clues to NY bomb
- Cairo blast kills bomber
- America's black-white divide 'has got worse'
- Turkish murders
- Somalia fighting
- Tents for Cubans
- Boutros-Ghali extols a special relationship: The Secretary-General praised Bill Clinton for his 'positive signals' and commitment to the UN after the two men met last week, writes Adel Darwish in New York
- 60 die in Kabul
- Tanks on streets
- Troops 'use torture' in Kashmir
- India reveals plans to float rupee
- Angola setback
- Militant Sikh leader shot dead
- 60 people killed in Kabul attack
- Five die in Feds battle with cult
- The World This Week: Britain stands firm on Gibraltar
- Election choice taxes Australia: After 10 years in power the Labor Party may have run out of steam, but voters are not impressed by the alternative. With voting less than two weeks away, Robert Milliken in Sydney profiles the Prime Minister, Paul Keating, and his conservative challenger, John Hewson - Political animal who refuses to be underdog
- Election choice taxes Australia: After 10 years in power the Labor Party may have run out of steam, but voters are not impressed by the alternative. With voting less than two weeks away, Robert Milliken in Sydney profiles the Prime Minister, Paul Keating, and his conservative challenger, John Hewson - Single-minded economist aims for the top job
- Airport blasts
- Lawyers grab spotlight in King case: A battle for media exposure has been joined by those defending four policemen accused of beating a black motorist. Phil Reeves reports from Los Angeles
People
- Birthdays
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Eddie Constantine
- Obituary: Giuseppe Pampiglione
- Obituary: Jean Thompson
- Obituary: Lillian Gish: Correction
- Obituary: Lillian Gish
- Obituary: Sir Joseph Cleary
- Birthdays
- Obituary: David Gow
- Obituary: Christopher Morris
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Obituary: Lillian Gish (CORRECTED)
- Obituary: Ruby Keeler
- Diary: 1-7 March
Science
- Science: Angry worms mean hungry slugs: Winter crops have a new ally, says Oliver Gillie
- Science: Rich pickings for a chosen few: Kim Wilson looks at the winners among personal computers
- Science: Nothing but trouble in the nuclear pipeline: Sellafield's Thorp plant may never operate, a victim of market and political forces. Tom Wilkie explains
- Science: Satellites that go fishing: Surveillance from on high will be used to enforce EC quotas, writes Steve Homer
- 1 Disability campaigners celebrate 'victory' after government rethink over plans to make it more difficult to claim disability benefits
- 2 'Jail reckless bankers': Report urges the Government to introduce new criminal offence for reckless management
- 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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