Day In a Page
Sunday, 7 March 1993
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- Law Report: Case Summaries
- Horses attacked
- Lessons of History: The British have always been addicted to doom-mongering: Paul Johnson argues that a sense of national and moral decline is part of a long tradition of gloom during hard times and that current disenchantment is based on fears of weak leadership and a loss of sovereignty to Europe
- 'Personal video' deal in sight
- Brown calls for National Insurance payments freeze
- Styles of the Seventies settle in for next winter
- 'No smoking' sponsors for motor racing
- Prison inquiry
- Pushchair death
- Television and the Young: Lilley blames family breakdown for crime
- Maastricht rebels turn deaf ear to loyalty plea
- Boys' failure in reading blamed on the teachers
- Television and the Young: Prime Minister flunks the couch potato test: Tom Sutcliffe, Arts Editor, offers a personal view in the debate
- Asylum protest
- Television and the Young: TV chiefs call on Major to prove violence claims
- Mental health bias fears
- THE DAILY POEM / That figure with the moulting beard
- Clark seeks return to Parliament
- Major likely to face attack from Tory councillors
- International Art Market: Victorians in demand as prices soar again
- Child gets compensation for abduction by father
- Compulsory HIV tests on health staff urged
- No warning for IRA car bomb: Four police officers seriously injured by second terrorist blast in seaside town in six months
- MPs question Clarke on MI5 chief's safety
- New assistant bishop for Russian Orthodox Church
- Amid the 'nasty pieces of work' in an Eton of child crime, a glimpse of their terrible pasts: Life could not be harder for the children of the Aycliffe home, reports Linda Grant
- Country life? Wonderful - so long as you don't actually have to live there: Cal McCrystal visited a colourful rural fair in north London, and then tried monochrome reality in Wiltshire
- Welsh bombs trial man is cleared
- Lamont's 'seven wise men' fall out as professor goes on the attack: Robert Chote argues that an internal split in the panel advising the Chancellor could let others off the hook
- The orphans of Aids
- Saab owners stir new discord in Arcadia: Tom Hodgkinson finds rebellion in Lord Lever's old fiefdom
- Health rationing comes into the open after patients die: As hospitals struggle with contracts, Judy Jones argues that it is time the Government set out the limits of care
- Thieves go for the family car
- McGregor to step down as press watchdog
- Selection is back
- A fearless original who always did it his way: Charles Powell looks back with affection on the life and beliefs of Nicholas Ridley
- Scots win 'French' devolution
- Miners to strike in jobs fight
- Naked aggression
- Hanged boy was bullied, says father
- Fumes kill students
- Red faces at the market over the missed masters
- Lady Ryder left pounds 76
- Tory rebels 'threaten reforms'
- Crown leases not for sale
- Relax for a fashion trick up the sleeves
- Strangeways rioter caught
- Beaten woman dies
World
- Too close to call in Australia
- Unita wins Huambo battle
- China's youngsters see a rose-tinted future: Economic reforms have contributed to a radical change in outlook for the next generation, writes Teresa Poole in Wuhan
- Afghans sign peace plan
- ANC and Pretoria rope Inkatha into the negotiation corral
- Kanemaru questioned
- Cult holds on to six-year-old British girl
- Democrat fears for her life in Kenya
- The World This Week: Too close to call in Australian poll
- Planners turning screws on the West Bank
- Arabs ponder thinking behind US 'terror' list: Middle East Muslims are wary in the wake of the New York bombing, writes Robert Fisk in Beirut
- Face of the clown
- Cubans ready to get on their bikes for Castro: Labour MP George Galloway visited Havana to meet Fidel and found America's bogeyman stirred but not shaken
- Progress on Vance-Owen map for Bosnia
- Hostage scandal of BA149: Michael Jempson on evidence that contradicts the Government over fateful flight
- French green leader starts new revolution
- Olga stands by the ghosts of Stalin's Gulag: Andrew Higgins in the Arctic town of Vorkuta meets a woman whose Bolshevik spirit survives a white hell
- Kanemaru held
- Yeltsin 'wants end to crisis'
- The Texas Siege: Bible and bullets reign
- The Texas Siege: The Koresh gospel of sex and death: A Briton who fled the Waco sect tells Peter Kingston how its messiah prepared his followers to kill and be killed
Business
- Business and City Summary
- Business Information Service: This week
- Business Information Service: Saying of the week
- Bunhill: Figures out
- My Biggest Mistake
- Bunhill: Derivatives
- Bunhill: Increasingly sensitive
- Bunhill: What the BBC does down on the farm
- Bunhill: Real family
- Bunhill: Lording it over the presidents
- Leeds textile firm restores fabric of forgotten sector: Camouflaged khaki can't hide success in troubled times. Robert Cole reports
- Public Services Management: Community careworn: Paul Gosling on how councils will cope with new responsibilities
- Marketing: Adults hit the soft stuff and double the bubble: Fizzy drink brands are becoming more specialised as the focus shifts away from children
- Special Report on Peps and tax Planning: Best buys and special offers: There are plenty of bargains and deals to be found, if you know where to look for them, reports Christine Stopp
- Search for a gas to save data from fire
Science
- How much is a test-tube in space worth?: Spacelab is about to take off again, but pure science is beginning to run into opposition from hard-nosed economics. Peter Bond reports
- A happy ending to the tadpole's tail: An enzyme first found in frogs may lead to new drugs for cancer, arthritis and some eye diseases. Tim Cawston reports
- Starting a dialogue with your computer: As manufacturers develop machines that can respond to spoken commands, Cliff Joseph reports on a system which will cope even with different accents
- A little therapy in the appliance of science: Surveyors have landed themselves a counselling role, says John Wright
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