Day In a Page
Monday, 9 May 1994
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- 'Government threat to wildlife' challenged: Exclusion of mudflats from special protection order breaches European law, says RSPB
- Abortion case man pleads guilty
- Secret tapes fuel anti-hunt dispute: Nicholas Roe reports on a 'Kafkaesque' leadership conflict threatening to create a damaging split within the League Against Cruel Sports
- Scots heroin addicts 'should get substitute': MPs say dispensing methadone can reduce almost uncontainable drug problem in Scottish inner-cities. John Arlidge reports
- Taxi deaths arrest
- Slow lane coaches
- Dog breeder 'cruel'
- Search moves on
- 'Panorama' date set
- Windermere is focus of fight for tranquillity
- Farm secretly bought for rubbish dump: Plans to create tip on unspoiled landscape likened to vandalism as calm and beauty of countryside comes under pressure on three fronts
- Calls for brake on mountain biking
- The Daily Poem: My Orcha'd in Linden Lea
- Academy to banish cars in favour of art: David Lister finds support is growing for the Independent's campaign on pavement cafes
- Computer mistakes bill 'runs to pounds 125m': Loss at social security systems agency is one of highest in public sector
- Targets urged to bring more pensioners into education: Ministers face call to double numbers of older people on courses as poll shows fewer than 1 in 10 take learning option after retirement
- Workers 'fear losing jobs'
- Contemporary Art Market: Exile who fled Stalin makes artistic comeback
- Anger over teaching changes
- Woman's longing to learn overcomes sight handicap: Ministers face call to double numbers of older people on courses as poll shows fewer than 1 in 10 take learning option after retirement
- Mother and son found dead in wood: Search for missing priest, artist and three-year-old son ends in triple murder inquiry. Alan Murdoch reports
- 'Body' trap
- Carey ordains his first women priests
- 'I don't want my husband's death to be for nothing': Tom Wilkie reports on a lack of official responsibility or award for compensation in the case of Britain's most irradiated man
- London night flights to soar: Airport anti-noise campaigners angered by timing of controversial announcement
- MP wins support over sex allegation
- Labour sets mortgage relief target
- Polly lingual
- Industrial X-ray workers at greater risk than nuclear staff
- 750,000 pounds blaze
- Doctors 'fail to ask for organs'
- Tobacco firm 'suppressed data on smoking dangers'
- Boy crushed (CORRECTED)
- Microlight crash
- Eclipse predicted
- March stopped
- Yard in on 'Scream'
- Scientist wins racism claim
- Eggs kept safe
- Portillo campaign linked to former Thatcher aide
- Push for Heseltine to be chairman: Machinations over possible challenge to Major's leadership gain momentum as claim of further scandal afflicts the Tories
World
- Berlusconi to unveil cabinet
- Actor George Peppard dies
- Lebanon PM stages stay-away
- Mafia hitman 'killed 90'
- Saudis 'tortured refugees'
- Chinese dissidents held
- Tehran seeks IRA aid
- People: The importance of being Ernesto
- Yemeni PM sacked
- Yemen conflict turns into contradictory war of words
- Japan's missing plutonium
- New German threat to beef
- Europe defence ties expand
- French hold Algerian 'terrorist'
- Jewish settler shoots Palestinian in Gaza
- Kigali shelling halts UN flights
- South Africa sees its law-breakers become law-makers: Mandela: 'The task at hand will not be easy, to change South Africa from a land in which the majority lived with little hope to one in which they can live with dignity and self-esteem'
- Generals bring peaceful handover closer for Gaza
- Panamanians look to future
- War buries Yemen's fading dream of unity: States' rocky marriage founders on altered balance of oil power, writes Charles Richards
- The Week Ahead: Leaders to seal sauna rapport
- Unity boost
- Palestine police held up at Allenby Bridge
- Dan dares to go back into orbit
- Pilot blamed
- Out of Japan: When you've baseball hysteria, who needs tranquillisers?
- Clinton relaxes rules on Haiti asylum-seekers
- French citizens killed in Algiers
- Panama vote
- Mandela's new 'brain-dead minister' spoils the party: ANC loyalists are dismayed that Alfred Nzo is in the cabinet, writes John Carlin in Johannesburg
- Clinton bill
- Camels beat ban
- Fight for Kigali continues
- Silent rebel bears Rwanda's tragic burden
- Change of heart
Science
- Science: Hellfire in the belly of a green machine: Garbage in, clean power out - that's the promise of a generating plant that burns domestic waste. But do its environmental claims pass the test? Nicholas Schoon reports
- Science: Prelude to assuring future?: Lynne Curry reports on the launch of a software package that looks set to have a big impact on the financial services industry
- Science: Deep-frozen clues to a warmer world: John Wright explains how Greenland's glaciers could help to reveal secrets of climatic change
- Science: The Black Baron is bent on sabotage: Two new, highly destructive viruses that can change their appearance may have been created by someone in the software industry. Susan Watts reports
- Science: Growing older before our eyes: Missing people can be found with the help of computerised images. Bernadine Coverley reports
- 1 Diary of Second World War German teenager reveals young lives untroubled by Nazi Holocaust in wartime Berlin
- 2 'Jail reckless bankers': Report urges the Government to introduce new criminal offence for reckless management
- 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
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