Day In a Page
Tuesday, 3 August 1993
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- Paris Post War: Art and Existentialism 1945-55
- Benefits targeted for radical shake-Up: Imperfect system with options for change: Groups from across the political spectrum highlight areas of concern and offer suggestions on how current arrangements might be improved (CORRECTED)
- Law Report: No limit to discrimination award: Marshall v Southampton and South West Hampshire Area Health Authority. European Court of Justice, Luxembourg, 2 August 1993
- The Daily Poem: Eco-System
- US seeks to deport British 'SS guard'
- Coal sale 'in six parts'
- Ale drinkers with a real thirst: Beer devotees gather for Camra's annual extravaganza to celebrate the best of British brewing
- Thatcher leads BBC 1 schedule: A series on the former PM has proved provocative, writes Michael Leapman
- Diseases laboratory prosecuted
- Contraceptive implant faces debate over use: A long-term birth control aid is allegedly being targeted on poor women in the US
- Lorry weight limit to be raised to 44 tons: Proposal for heavier vehicles aims to switch freight off roads and on to the rails. Simon Midgley reports
- Tories 'moved Labour voters'
- Battery recharger device is launched
- Halifax says price of houses up 0.9%
- Cameras plan for City 'ring of steel'
- Benefits targeted for radical shake-up: Social Security spending review could pave way for restructuring welfare state. Rosie Waterhouse and Rhys Williams report
- Teachers 'relieved' by reduction in tests: Fran Abrams found a classroom which welcomed Dearing's curriculum review
- Catholics 'treated unfairly over job'
- Exercise 'can help to clear blood fat'
- Vandals attack Jewish graves
- Tories' financial chiefs named
- Unions ready to fight 'Mum's Army' plan
- Thugs 'use football as cover for crime': Hard core of hooligans recruited to make trouble at other clubs
- Stolen ivory miniatures attract pounds 15,000 reward
- Mother to appeal over prison term: Charity attacks sentence on woman who left two-year-old at home during the day
- Paris Post War: Art and Existentialism 1945-55
- Rail union vote
- The Daily Poem: Vivat
- Police accused of brutality: Simon Midgley reports on the growing clamour for an inquiry into the death of Jamaican woman in deportation case
- Mother jailed for leaving girl on her own child alone: You would not do this to dog, judge says
- Press chief stays
- Highway robbery
- Major seeks injunction
- Tree lovers go down to the woods for a birthday stroll
- Agency inquiry
- Road protests
- Hope on captives
- Sentence on sex offender must stand: Attorney General powerless to intervene after persistent molester given probation
- Backbench rebels may force rail defeat
- Mixed reaction to Dearing: Curriculum review fails to resolve split on league tables of school
- Zoo workshops offer animal imitations as an escapist cure for stress
- Nationwide reports fifth monthly house price rise
- Inquiry on Ulster collusion reopens
- Excavation reveals ancient site of slaughter: David Keys reports on gruesome discoveries under a Roman arena used for blood sports
- Commercial radio wins record audience: BBC denies independents have 'stranglehold' in London
- Catholics braced for moral crackdown: The Pope is expected to take hard line over church doctrine
- Tory right aims for abolition of most benefits: Paper calls for single payment
- Ceiling lifted on sex bias awards
- Law Report: Maastricht Treaty may be ratified: Regina v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Ex parte Rees-Mogg - Queen's Bench Divisional Court (Lord Justice Lloyd, Lord Justice Mann and Mr Justice Auld), 30 July 1993
World
- Move to change Italy's 'state secrets' law
- Ginsburg joins Supreme Court
- Queen to lead mourners
- Pilgrims killed
- Appeal for peace-keepers
- Rafsanjani's new term
- Out of America: At last: a ripe, genetically engineered tomato?
- FBI breaks off hunt
- 'Missing' Israeli scientist was jailed as spy: The hunt for a chemical warfare expert has ended with an official admission, writes Peter Pringle
- US asks who has right to choose: Courtroom battles over custody of children highlight country's confusion
- Satellite programme setback as rocket explodes
- Christopher in cautious mood
- Israeli 'understandings' run into difficulties: Beirut government prepares to send troops to UN zone in south
- UN veteran undaunted by Iraqis: Annika Savill meets the man who has to deal with Saddam's henchmen
- Criminals face caning
- Clinton steps up pressure for cuts
- US rethink on Demjanjuk
- Kashmiris defy curfew
- Japanese prepare to apologise for war: Shinsei leader calls for admission of guilt after decades of evasion
- Lahore bomb attacks
- Indian truckers gain ground
- Israeli attack 'a warning of regional risks'
- SA leaders stand by as death marches on: John Carlin in Johannesburg detects a mood of deep despair over the worsening violence
- Robber gets lift out of HK high life
- Jessica leaves to start life with parents: Trauma as childless couple fight to last minute to keep the toddler they have raised from birth
- Death and destruction as torrential rains hit southern Japan
- US seeks to reassure its squabbling Asian allies: Regional tension will make it hard for Washington to disengage, writes Raymond Whitaker, Asia Editor
People
- Obituary: Kashiko Kawakita
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Max Jones
- Obituary: Sir Keith Sinclair
- Obituary: The Rev George Golding
- Obituary: Noel Whitcomb
- Court Circular
- Anniversaries
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Professor Sir Theo Crawford
- Obituary: Hugh Macandrew
- Obituary: Donald Alexander
- Obituary: Patrick McMahon
- Obituary: Muriel Pemberton
Media
- Media: UPS and DOWNS: Mixed fortunes on the media roller-coaster.
- Media: Face to face with the television inquisitors: BBC governors have urged interviewers to be polite. David Steel has duelled with the toughest of them and thinks democracy is well-served by their robust techniques
- Media: No quick cure for newspapers suffering from poor circulation: As the Times tries to win readers with a lower price, Richard Woods looks at the social factors behind declining broadsheet sales
- Media: Will football be brought down in an overcrowded box?: As BSkyB warms up for its second season, Robin Hunt highlights rival attempts to win the armchair fan
- 1 ‘Hello, NME? I’d like to complain about your Tom Odell review. Why? I’m his dad’
- 2 Richard Nieuwenhuizen death: Six teenagers and 50-year-old father convicted of manslaughter in shocking case of referee killed over a game of football
- 3 Exclusive: Newcastle United's star talent-spotter Graham Carr on brink as Joe Kinnear sparks walkout at St James' Park
- 4 Vast methane 'plumes' seen in Arctic ocean as sea ice retreats
- 5 From charmer to bully: My encounter with Charles Saatchi
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