Day In a Page
Friday, 9 July 1993
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Rapist detained
- Library move
- Paris Post War: Art and Existentialism 1945-55
- Law Update: Atlantic crossing
- Labour victory
- Suicide verdict
- Law Update: Proposed fee rise
- Keenan honoured
- 3,000 coal jobs to go
- Son of a toy gun
- Crossbow man jailed
- Archer jailed
- Teenage arsonists
- Fewer road deaths
- G7 Summit: Clarke ssys G7 must cut pension and health costs
- Judge to decide fate of orchestras: The arts face their most severe cuts for years. David Lister reports
- Art Market: Waterloo general's desk fetches pounds 1.7m: Regency masterpiece sets new auction record for English furniture
- British Coal aims to shed 3,000 white-collar jobs
- Two killed in frigate fire
- Chicken eggs could be source of drugs: First genetically engineered cockerel raises hopes for cheap medicine
- The Daily Poem: Elegiac
World
- A rare ray of light amid the SA gloom: A meeting on post-apartheid economic growth was refreshingly harmonious, writes John Carlin from Johannesburg
- Vermont set to fight the megastore predators: A whole state has been declared 'endangered'. David Usborne went to the dream-town of Woodstock to find out why
- Islamic radicals try to force foe to divorce: Militants file apostasy case against Cairo lecturer who defended Rushdie
- Arms sell-off by US police may backfire
- Hurd detects thaw in China's stance on Hong Kong: Poor still need convincing that participation in elections is worthwhile
- G7 Summit: President rattles sabre at Baghdad
- Brush with death
- Ireland relents on EC aid
- G7 Summit: The summiteers come down to earth: Cautious hope replaces euphoria - Warnings of cuts in welfare spending - US President at odds with Tokyo
- G7 Summit: 'Criminal' Clinton enrages Japanese
- G7 Summit: Honest John hankers for less magnificent 7
- Mystery body
- Sheikh loses
- Gonzalez again
- General blasts off
- Deng operation
- Militants hanged
- Ukraine clash
- Israeli shot dead
- G7 Summit: Britain starts to bow towards the inevitable: Hurd and Major give first signs of accepting German and Japanese claims to seats on UN Security Council
- Hussein check-up
- Sink and swim
- Serbs and Croats unite to drive Muslims back: Christopher Bellamy reports from Vitez on the new allies' latest attacks and successes in Bosnia
- China's army storms Hong Kong with goods for sale: The military is keen to sell its new civilian products, Teresa Poole writes from Hong Kong
- Far East republic
- G7 Summit: Japanese win right to nuclear weapons
- Socialist quits
- People: Miyazawa puts the squeeze on Kohl
- Kosovo exiles carry on the fight in Tirana: Albanian-language paper that was closed by Serbs finds an unlikely new home
- Worst war in the world claims 1,000 lives a day: UN is pressing Jonas Savimbi to negotiate as Angolan conflict plumbs new depths, writes Richard Dowden
- UN plans to seal Iraqi sites
- G7 Summit: Hazards remain in quest for growth
- Marines' mission
- Storm kills 32
- G7 Summit: Russia offered pounds 2bn to help its industry go private
- Generals still call the shots in Nigeria
- Old man river just keeps on rising and rising: Patrick Cockburn in West Alton, near St Louis, sees the Mississippi take its toll
- Japan clings to the wreckage: Next week's polls portend great change but a widespread paralysis grips the country
People
- Wills
- Half-yearly Service promotions
- Church appointments
- Birthdays
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Ralph Johnson
- Obituary: Joe De Rita
- Faith and Reason: As free to hold as not to hold beliefs: Our series on what sense it makes to discuss Catholicism without Rome is continued this week by the Right Rev Hugh Montefiore, retired Anglican Bishop of Birmingham.
- Appeals: The Friends of St James' Mission & School
- Obituary: Etienne Borne
- Appeals: The Pankhurst Trust
- Obituary: Ralph Johnson
- Obituary: Shuson Kato
- Birthdays
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Obituary: Michael Rothenstein
- Obituary: Professor Anthony Rose
- Obituary: Trevor Thomas
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Gastropod
- Food and Drink: How the East gets the most from the least: Keith Botsford in China
- Food and Drink: Squeeze the fruit until the pith squeaks: The best lemons are heavy, bumpy and blemished. Turn them into drinks, garnishes and nursery puddings or even chew them raw
- Food and Drink: Where the ale is good enough to eat: Michael Jackson offers a beer-hunter's guide to the great brews of Belgium
- Food and Drink: Bottling up your holiday memories: Anthony Rose provides tips on buying wine from the vineyard in France
- Recipe: Put some mussel into your pasta
- Food and Drink: Good sauces and service; shame about the fish: Emily Green finds a dash of the bad old days in a seafood menu that makes a little stretch too far
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedMusic
- OPERA / Three rounds of wry: Nick Kimberley finds wit if not brevity in Julian Grant's new work, A Family Affair, at the Almeida Opera
- OPERA / And now, a word for our sponsors: Ellen Kent is flying an entire East European opera company over for a single night's performance - and almost for free. Mark Pappenheim reports
Books
- BOOK REVIEW / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / As shocking as a shower in formaldehyde: Amanda Craig talks to Patricia Cornwell about violence on and off the page
- BOOK REVIEW / Nice tie, how about the newspaper?: Godfrey Hodgson on a lively but limited survey of the world's newspaper tycoons: 'Paper Tigers' - Nicholas Coleridge: Heinemann, 17.99 pounds
- Letter from Strega: An exuberant feast for voyeurs
- BOOK REVIEW / A prig in need of a conscience: 'A Family Romance' - Anita Brookner: Jonathan Cape, 14.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Getting to the art of the matter: 'House of Moons' - Susan Moody: Hodder & Stoughton, 15.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Daddy's girl in love: Natasha Walter on the mixture of amazing candour and sly indulgence in the taboo-breaking work of Anais Nin: 'Incest' - Anais Nin: Peter Owen, 25 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / The lady of Hell Corner Farm: Andrew Marr on Barbara Castle's memoirs, full of rough and tough struggles, battling speeches and confrontations: 'Fighting All The Way' - Barbara Castle: Macmillan, 20 pounds
- 1 Breaking: Soldier killed in Woolwich machete attack named as Drummer Lee Rigby
- 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 Woolwich murder: They killed, then they performed - these men should be starved of our attention
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL will seek to exploit this evil crime for their own evil ends
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