Day In a Page
Saturday, 1 May 1993
Jump to:
News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Brussels boost for treaty 'no' vote (CORRECTED)
- Kidnap remand
- Designer mouse may help diabetics
- They'll sweat it out at the Palace
- Black and white unite in grief: As a racially mixed group protests at the killing of a black teenager in south-east London, Cal McCrystal finds an area keen to rebut its reputation
- The other side of the record companies' disc story
- Gunshot killed Briton at Waco
- Cast hit back as the sun sets on Eldorado: The screen stars and crew of television's most battered soap pour out their hearts to Ian MacKinnon
- Faith, hope and justice please
- Mayday] Things are radically different: These days, says Alex Renton, only their optimism unites groups of the Marxist Left
- The recession is over . . . but you might not notice: Richard Thomson examines the history of our biggest post-war slump - and the snags that could slow the recovery
- Hume steers for peace in risky waters
- Newbury's divas lead charge to Lib-Dems
- Plane strikes aerial
- When obsessive adoration turns into hate: Nick Cohen on the sinister haunting of the famous
- Patten aims to break boycott
- Rome 'open' for dissident Anglicans - Widdecombe
- Five hundred years of eating disorders 'reflect women's lack of power': Liz Hunt reports that anorexia and bulimia are not just creations of the 20th century but have roots in history
- Seles stabbing heightens fears over fans who stalk players: Brian Cathcart reports on the anxiety gripping tournament organisers following the attack
- Gatwick flights hit
- Longleat fortune
- Pollution capital to process Iraqi N-waste: The UN aims to get rid of Saddam's war materials at a Russian city dubbed the earth's most contaminated place, reports Steve Boggan
- Andrew Neil sued
- School gang stabbing
- Loyalists kill man in error
- Man held over fatal shootings
- Anti-terror laws to be tightened
- Aids vaccine is brought a step closer: Injecting HIV genes into patients' cells aims to stimulate body's immune system
- Porn TV 'faces defeat'
- Proms fans reject morning overture
- Inquiry at BNFL led to suicide
- Private eyes spy a rising market in the gold-digging male: Successful women are asking detectives to check on their boyfriends'
- Abuse case review rejected
- Ewe-turn at the festival of dance: A sheep is sharing the stage to give an arts event a 'taste of the outdoors'. Louise Levene reports
- Holiday starts with rain forecast and flights threatened
- Bookmakers tighten security
- Solicitors lose battle over payment of fees
- Britain 'knew of Iraq arms route': Jordan warns against being made 'scapegoat'
- Labour attacks BBC governors
- 'Historic' tower is set for demolition: Lead shot works attracts city's support
- Video pictures show bombers leaving Bishopsgate lorry
- First Night: The Festival of Fashion: Dream package is short on content
- Whistleblower faces murder plot charge: Man who exposed price fixing by international drugs firm 'tried to arrange murder of wife'
- 'Green Man' returns with help from a gang of five: The environmental group Common Ground today celebrates 10 years of campaigning
- Computer car park offers answer to crime and concrete: John Arlidge reports on a pounds 250,000 pilot project for automatic parking whose designers claim machines will put an end to a city centre 'cancer'
- No charges against Ward case scientists
- Soldier, 19, is cleared of murder
World
- King trial jurors confront guilty policeman on TV
- Smoked out
- Bombing amnesty
- US reports decline in terrorism
- Serbs' brave face fails to disguise the pain of war
- Why this man murdered the president: Raymond Whitaker on the latest atrocity to stain the turbulent history of Sri Lanka
- Owen confident peace is close
- The workers of the world unite in May Day protests
- Even if they have to beat schoolboys senseless the rulers of Sudan will have their new society: Julie Flint in Khartoum on the reign of terror that is isolating a dictatorship bent on the total control of the people
- Politician killed
- Apartheid's fanatic in a polka-dot frock: John Carlin investigates what lies behind the English-style respectability exuded by some of South Africa's far-right
- Outrage and disbelief greet an Italian night of shame: Patricia Clough in Rome on the reaction to Bettino Craxi's escape from prosecution
- Spain discovers El Factor Hillary: All eyes are on the candidates' wives in the run-up to the election. Phil Davison in Madrid on the pretenders to the throne of Second Lady
- Iraq denies plot
- 40 years of Hussein
- Texas bully-girl tactics hand the first round to Clinton's wimp: Patrick Cockburn in Houston on a woman whose clout could swing a Senate race
- Deportees given heroes' welcome: Supporters greet first group of long-term Palestinian exiles to return to occupied territories
- Unfocused Clinton sees his popularity plummet: After 100 days in office, the President's rating hovers around 55 per cent
- Court kidnappers suffer liver failure: Ex-policeman wanted money for surgery
- White woman linked to Hani assassination: Right-wing politician's wife charged as SA peace talks stumble
- Out of Georgia: Coming in on a wing and a pair - of Mausers
People
- Appeals
- Appointments
- Birthdays
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Service appointments
- Obituaries
- Obituary: Professor Hugh Hunt
- Faith and Reason: Saints, bombs and civilian casualties: Bruce Kent's article last week on the morality of bombing civilians is attacked this week by Commander DJ Childs, of the World Memorial Fund, founded by Leonard Cheshire.
- Obituary: Ronald Gow
- Obituary: Cesar Chavez
- May diary
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Gastropod
- Recipe: Hearty soup hot from China
- Food and Drink: First taste of spring, killed off by the cat: The sharp, green flavour of sorrel makes it a splendid partner for fish and eggs; it also produces an invigorating soup
- Wines of the Week: Good buys
- Food and Drink: Would you like to try the beer of the day, sir?: A change in the law has led to 'guest draughts' in pubs and now a flood of appetising innovations. Michael Jackson approves
- Food and Drink: Not quite south of the Park: Chelsea and South Kensingston may have the right image, but their restaurants can have difficulty living up to it, says Emily Green
- Food and Drink: Celebrity chefs should stay at home
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedBooks
- Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / Pet hates and monkey business: The imaginary monkey - Sean French: Granta Books pounds 12.99
- Second Thoughts: In search of Wilde enthusiasm: Neil Bartlett on the inspiration behind Who Was That Man? (Penguin, pounds 6.99)
- BOOK REVIEW / A great Dane in a savage world: Brother Jacob Henrik Stangerup Tr. Anne Born Marion Boyars, pounds 15.95
- BOOK REVIEW / The Butterfly is the hardest stroke: A snail in my prime: New and Selected Poems Paul Durcan Harvill / Blackstaff Press pounds 16 / pounds 7.95
- BOOK REVIEW / Blockbusters at dawn: the Ludlum trademark: Peter Guttridge meets Robert Ludlum, whose tough novels have sold 195 million copies
- INTERVIEW / Heat, dust and a woman with a New York view: Jonathan Freedland meets Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, novelist, Oscar winner and exile
- BOOK REVIEW / In the private jet with Angel lust: Sabine Durrant on the alcohol-drenched new novel by Jackie Collins, which goes straight for the jugular: American Star - Jackie Collins: Heinemann pounds 14.99
- BOOK REVIEW / Gulf between the Arabian knights: Modern Arabic literature ed. M M Badawi - Cambridge University Press pounds 75
- Letter from Jerusalem: Life swapping in Israel
- 1 Diary of Second World War German teenager reveals young lives untroubled by Nazi Holocaust in wartime Berlin
- 2 Bosses of collapsed banks should be sent to jail, banking standards commission tells George Osborne
- 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
Get your summer started with British Military Fitness
BMF is the UK’s biggest and best loved outdoor fitness classes
How will you make today delicious?
Tell us how you plan to make today delicious and you could win a £50 M&S gift card.
Learn a new language
Add another string to your bow with Rosetta Stone, whether it's Spanish, Italian or Mandarin...
Making reading fun for kids
Nook is donating eReaders to volunteers at high-need schools and participating in exclusive events throughout the campaign.
Introducing the 'Get Reading' campaign
Get the latest on The Evening Standard's campaign to get London's children reading.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.




