Day In a Page
Friday, 20 May 1994
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Law Update: Scoble succeeds
- Law Update: Lynx wins award
- Law: Raising a few eyebrows at the Bar: A female American lawyer as director of chambers? Sharon Wallach meets Andrea Kennedy
- Law Update: Firms merge
- Law Update: Chester conference
- Law Report: Lords can determine appeal grounds: Regina v Mandair. House of Lords (Lord Mackay of Clashfern, Lord Chancellor, Lord Templeman, Lord Goff of Chieveley, Lord Browne-Wilkinson and Lord Mustill), 19 May 1994
- Law Update: Contract winners
- Law Update: Guide for elderly
- Law Update: Increase in partners
- Ban on explorer
- Review ordered
- Bulger brothers cleared of attack
- Doctors' concern
- Record drug haul
- Poverty 'not linked to crime': Police Federation annual conference
World
- Singer killed
- Dismay in Israel as US envoy goes home
- Solzhenitsyn trek
- Ukraine confronts rebellious Crimea
- No end to the tide of human misery that afflicts Rwanda
- Setback for ex-PM
- Tapie swoop
- Violations mark 100 days of ceasefire
- Clinton may be protected from law suit
- Yemen truce called by North
- Killings by militants test Palestinian authority
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: In memory of eternal images: Her life was marred by tragedy but her style and elegance in the White House renewed confidence in a nation enchanted by her story - Peter Pringle in New York tells what gave Jackie that sure touch of Royalty
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: Jackie O - gilded icon and the last real Kennedy: Reggie Nadelson looks back to what lay behind the Manhattan myth
- SA ministers clear the air for a new style of government
- Out of Russia: Lure of money brought the music to a close
- N Korea sets off nuclear alarm
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: The first lady of fashion set her own style: Although betrayed by her marriage to Onassis, the public was unable to end its love affair with America's undisputed queen of fashion - She was modern, ice-cool and always elegant, recalls Alison Veness Fashion Correspondent
- US threat
- Berlusconi wins
- Out of Greece: Monastic calm conceals furious struggle
- Crimea tense
- Aden blasts
- Craxi in hospital
- Bombs found as Prince tours St Petersburg
- Aideed returns
- Arafat keeps his ministers under wraps
- Beats offer their dignities to the Nineties: Peter Pringle hangs out with a spruce Allen Ginsberg, now 67, at a New York revival
- Clinton sees no way of avoiding draft register
- Ash blankets towns as Andes volcano awakes
- Rambo's heroics turned to ashes
- Mortar kills 30 at hospital in Rwanda capital
- People: No picnic for cabinet as Yitzhak's cafe closes
- Portuguese parasols provide cover against unseasonal weather
- Congress leader plea bargains to keep job
- Romania's get-rich-quick pyramid fails
- British have domestic agenda in European elections
- Russians killed
- Ramaphosa alert
- Spanish banker granted bail
- Dictator accepts defeat in Malawi
- Britain and France clash over Bosnia
- Africa File: Banda doffs his Homburg
- Dublin dithers over man for top Europe job
- Election lead
- Turkish Kurds flee to divided brethren in Iraq
People
- Obituary: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Birthdays
- Obituary: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Anniversaries
- Church appointments
- Court Circular
- Wills
- Service appointments
- Obituary: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Faith and Reason: A case for taking the long view: In a further article in our series on whether God can be held to be guilty when crimes against humanity are committed, Sara Maitland argues that a fair verdict is one of 'not proven'.
- Appeals: The Opera Company
- Appeals: The Norfolk Churches Trust
- Appeals: Arnhem Bells Appeal
- Court Circular
- Obituary: Professor Alec Nove
- Obituary: Professor Alec Nove
- Obituary: Noel Moffett
- Obituary: John Newick
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Cookery Competition: The last chance to taste success
- FOOD / Wrapping up the world of pastries: To conclude a two-part series on small savouries, we sample the flamboyant flavours of Mexico, China and India
- FOOD AND DRINK / In which we are catered into submission
- DRINK / Versatile crowd-pleaser charms new audiences: Far from falling out of favour, chardonnay continues to expand, says Anthony Rose
- FOOD AND DRINK / Gastropod
- FOOD / Corky cat is no flash in the pan: Emily Green is served pizza with pizazz by an Irish American, and wakes up to the big, big breakfast
- FOOD / The cream of early peaches: Joanna Blythman meets a specialist grower who supplies delectable fruit to the British market
- DRINK / The local down in your pint: When the French wanted to learn about the different styles of British beer, they consulted the expert. This is what Michael Jackson told them
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedBooks
- BOOKS / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / Barefoot in the desert: 'Far from Medina' - Assia Djebar Tr. Dorothy S Blair: Quartet, 16.95 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / More than a media magician: Godfrey Hodgson has his mind changed by Henry Kissinger's forthright new book: 'Diplomacy' - Henry Kissinger: Simon & Schuster, 25 pounds
- BOOK REVIEW / Dogma in the bordello: 'The Republic of Whores' - Josef Skvorecky Tr. Paul Wilson: Faber & Faber, 14.99 pounds
- Hay Festival: Very in tents: books on Wye: The Hay Festival has begun: John Walsh remembers previous delights
- BOOK REVIEW / Something to hurroosh for: 'John Betjeman: Letters Vol I (1926-51)' Ed. Candida Lycett Green: Methuen, 20 pounds
- Hay Festival: 24-carat diva in a mews, with grace: The Hay Festival has begun: John Walsh remembers previous delights and Helen Birch talks to Maya Angelou, who leads today's events
- BOOK REVIEW / The unruly swamps: Natasha Walter on the brilliant career of a remarkable American poet, Adrienne Rich
- 1 Heading for America? Prepare for the longest US immigration queues ever
- 2 Notes from a small island: Is Sealand an independent 'micronation' or an illegal fortress?
- 3 You thought Ryanair's attendants had it bad? Wait 'til you hear about their pilots
- 4 'Swivel-gate': David Cameron goes to war with the press over 'swivel-eyed loons' slur
- 5 It’s official: thanks to Stephen Hawking's Israel boycott, anti-Semitism is no more
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