Day In a Page
Friday, 22 April 1994
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Post union leader's pounds 72,570 tops pay scale: Salaries of the most senior union officials are about to be made public. Barrie Clement investigates
- Patients fear 'right to choose care options'
- Nipple care 'cuts risk of breast cancer': Research shows stimulation releases protective hormone while report on victims says 70% prefer minor surgery to removal
- Vasectomy man holds nerve under hypnosis: Ian MacKinnon joins the media circus as operation goes ahead without anaesthetic
- Bacteria in dripfeed killed children: Treatment for leukaemia had lowered victims' immunity. Jonathan Foster reports
- Father walks free after killing
- Children listed as at risk of abuse fall by 16 per cent
- School buses fail checks
- Fresh bid to amend gay age of consent: Peer seeks to outlaw 'male rape'
World
- Deal sinks for Black Sea fleet
- Hata named as Japan PM
- Aristide cool on US policy
- Aid at hand for hot tortoises
- US warns N Korea of sanctions
- Athens-Tirana tension eases
- Hawke denies he offered to 'spy' for media baron
- NY police in the dock
- South African Election Guide: Election Notebook
- South African Election Guide: De Klerk set to protect 'third force' men
- South African Election Guide: KwaZulu gets crash course on how to vote
- South African Election Guide: Commentary - Civil war that never was leaves media speechless
- Hillary tries to whitewash Whitewater
- South African Election Guide: Nationalists play job card to net the Cape: In the village of Arniston, in Western Cape, Raymond Whitaker finds mixed-race voters fear the ANC more than their white bosses
- Hamas seeks alliance with PLO
- Drugs haul
- South African Election Guide: First-time voters face test of ingenuity: New constitution will reflect a tug-of-war between regions and the centre, writes John Lichfield in Johannesburg
- South African Election Guide: The candidates
- Murdered Bonn spy 'not on mission'
- N Korea bomb fuel 'imminent'
- Rwandan talks
- Touvier demand
- South African Election Guide: When a dying order faced up to the facts: Apartheid collapsed under weight of numbers but its legacy survives, says Richard Dowden in Johannesburg
- South African Election Guide: Road from Sharpeville to sanity
- South African Election Guide: Election
- South African Election Guide: Where to poll in Britain
- South African Election Guide: The Parties
- A scrap metal collector passes a European Union observer in Khayelitsha township, near Cape Town, where an unsuccessful all-party rally was organised by the Independent Electoral Commission
- South African Election Guide: Human touch averted worst horror
- South African Election Guide: National Party may capture city with a difference
- South African Election Guide: Fierce contest in prospect in the kingdom of fear
- Compensation deal
- New Opus Dei head
- Judge lashes out
- Chernobyl ruling
- Israel and PLO try to narrow their differences
- Turks 'winning', but warned over Kurd rights: Military success alone cannot end nine years of insurgency, writes Hugh Pope in Istanbul, but the colonels are determined to fight on
- HK rights plea
- Mexico inquiry
- People: Chemical reaction
- US package for crackdown on crime
- Fire-rescue plan for tortoises
- Nixon in a 'deep coma'
- Lebanese halt departure of Saddam's man
- Bangladeshi women protest against Islamic clerics
- South African Election Guide: Dawn of a brave but dangerous new age: Next week's election will set the seal on democracy, formally transferring political rights from whites to all South Africans. It is a foregone conclusion the ANC will win most of the votes and will swap being in opposition for the risky realities of being in power. Richard Dowden reports from Johannesburg
- Man tipped to be Japan's PM under scrutiny: 'Nice Guy' is going to be tested in the world of 'Big Men', Terry McCarthy writes from Tokyo
- Bob Hawke 'sought cash to spy on Keating'
- Bad blood
- Alarm triggered
People
- Service appointments
- Church appointments
- Wills
- Birthdays
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Appeals: Manchester Law Library
- Faith and Reason: Stained with the blood of suffering: This week we start a series on whether God can be held to be guilty when crimes against humanity are committed. The first article is by Paul Helm, Professor of the History and Philosophy of Religion at King's College London.
- Appeals: Parrs Wood Rural Trust
- Obituary: Abbot Dominic Gaisford
- Obituary: Elissa Aalto
- Obituary: Nakdimon Doniach
- Anniversaries
- Court Circular
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Bill Dickinson
- Obituary: Andres Aramburu Menchaca
- Obituary: Michael Carreras (CORRECTED)
- Obituary: Golo Mann (CORRECTED)
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- FOOD AND DRINK / Gastropod
- FOOD AND DRINK / Treat yourself to the taste of Bavaria
- FOOD / After the opera: a meal for a tenner: It is possible to have a night on the town and not need an overdraft, says Emily Green
- FOOD AND DRINK / Tap into a better class of water: Joanna Blythman tries a new source of purity - the mains
- FOOD / Recipe: Turning yoghurt into soup
- FOOD AND DRINK / Figures to scoff at
- DRINK / Cloudy Bay, sunnier outlook: New Zealand wines are on the up and up, despite a couple of poor harvests, says Anthony Rose, Glenfiddich Wine Writer of the Year
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedBooks
- BOOKS / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / The yeast of Irish memory: 'The House of Splendid Isolation' - Edna O'Brien: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 14.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Clawing, brutish gargoyles: 'What a Carve Up]' - Jonathan Coe: Viking' 9.99 pounds - Anthony Quinn on a furiously political state-of-the-nation novel with a twist in its tail
- BOOK REVIEW / Murder or suicide: 'Barn Blind' - Jane Smiley: Flamingo, 5.99 pounds - Jane Smiley finds big dramas in small lives. Marianne Brace met the Iowan tragedian
- Postcard from Paris: A skeleton rattles its bones: Farah Nayeri sees the French delight in a new book by Albert Camus
- BOOK REVIEW / Sharp to the touch: David V Barrett on the Arthur C Clarke award and this year's winner, Jeff Noon's hard-edged Vurt (Ringpull)
- BOOK REVIEW / Something has gone, never to return: 'Den of Lions' - Terry Anderson: Hodder & Stoughton, 9.99 pounds: Michael Sheridan finds diamonds in the memoirs of Terry Anderson and other hostages
- BOOK REVIEW / Innocence chained in a barn: 'The Rye Man' - David Park: Jonathan Cape, 14.99 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Keeping mum over the Oedipus complex: 'Baudelaire' - Joanna Richardson: John Murray, 30 pounds - Behind every genius is a woman to blame: Sue Gaisford on a biography of Baudelaire that takes his mother to task
- 1 Freedom fighters? Cannibals? The truth about Syria’s rebels
- 2 Breaking the Silence: In the reality of occupation, there are no Palestinian civilians – only potential terrorists
- 3 Special Report: US troops are stationed in Japan to protect the nation. But to sex workers in Okinawa, they bring fear, not security
- 4 Vice pulls 'breathtakingly tasteless' fashion shoot glorifying the suicides of famous female authors from Sylvia Plath to Virginia Woolf
- 5 Iran to send 4,000 troops to aid President Assad forces in Syria
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