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Thursday, 21 July 1994
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- Pay talks fail
- Rape charges
- Law Report: Involuntary intoxication rejected: Regina v Kingston - House of Lords (Lord Keith of Kinkel, Lord Goff of Chieveley, Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Lord Mustill and Lord Slynn of Hadley), 21 July 1994.
- Law Update: Speak in tongues
- Law report: Compensation for shock of discovering murdered body: Regina v Criminal Injuries Compensation Board, Ex parte Johnson - Queen's Bench Divisional Court (Lord Justice Steyn and Mr Justice Kay), 20 July 1994.
- Law: Waiting for the letter to arrive: The Law Society council last week voted to leave the decision on joining the Legal Aid Board's franchising scheme up to individual firms. Sharon Wallach reports
- Law Update: New consultant
- Law Update: Most highly rated
- Law Update: No wigs allowed
- Astronomers baffled by biggest comet's lack of impact: Collision with the planet Jupiter causes burst of light and heat, but soon recedes compared to previous impacts, writes Susan Watts
- Taxi driver 'caught petrol bomber'
- Child abuse father jailed
- Scientists quit over NHS cash changes: Cancer expert bemoans 'big blow' to crucial medical research
- Complaints over foul language on TV up 60%
- The Daily Poem: Out Whistling
- London newspaper monopoly is broken
- EU helps rebuild folly
- The Labour Leadership: 'Labour is the party of the majority': Extracts from Tony Blair's acceptance speech: mission to lift spirit of the nation demanded as party is told it must inspire as well as govern
- The Labour Leadership: Deputy claims victor 'scares life out of Tories': Extracts from John Prescott's acceptance speech yesterday
- The Labour Leadership: Prescott wins respect as 'honest socialist': Colin Brown reports on changing perceptions of the MP who was a favourite target of Tory ridicule
- The Labour Leadership: Number two left feeling down by the riverside: Leader prefers media circus to beer and sandwiches on floating pub
- The Labour Leadership: Blair wins with 60% of votes from MPs and MEPs
- The Labour Leadership: Voters satisfied as public image marries passion: Jonathan Foster visits the grassroots in Sheffield and finds activists glowing with pride and hope, but wondering about the 'hows'
- The Labour Leadership: 'Crusader' rejects chains of tradition: Nicholas Timmins looks at how Tony Blair as leader is aiming to take his party on a drive for social justice.
- The Daily Poem
- Chocolate sugars art drawn from the bowels
- MPs seek inquiry over saga of new British Library: Shambles led to 'one of ugliest buildings in world'
- Redwood confirms plan to divert M4
- Embryo authority opposes use of eggs from foetuses
- NHS drug controls demanded
- MPs attack aid-for-arms deal with Malaysia: Whitehall 'liaison failure' highlighted
- 'Threats to Silcott witnesses feared'
- Judges get guidelines on 'bad' behaviour
- New ban on 'modified' foodstuffs
- Acas seeks fresh talks to halt rail disruption
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: New chairman has popular appeal: Jeremy Hanley seems to lack only experience in his posting, reports Patricia Wynn Davies
- Benefits agency review
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Peer's role to keep Tory rebels at bay: Viscount Cranborne is set to be powerbroker in the Lords, Patricia Wynn Davies reports
- 'Illegal adoption' trial
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Former rebel's new cause: Stephen Dorrell has been known as 'Mr Privatisation', writes Nicholas Timmins
- Patients died in 'rush' move
- Blackburn body
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Pragmatist for transport job: Brian Mawhinney is likely to take a tough line on the rail strike. Colin Brown reports
- Cannon raised from rare Elizabethan wreck off Alderney: New museum on Channel Island will be devoted to artefacts from Armada supply ship. Bill Brown reports
- The Cabinet Resuffle: Major takes pains to soften the axe's blow: Colin Brown reports on the Prime Minister's efforts to spare the feelings of Cabinet losers
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Ministers make their last farewells: Full text of letters to Prime Minister from the outgoing ministers
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Right advances in middle ranks as women miss out: Patricia Wynn Davies looks at the effects of the reshuffle among the junior posts
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Junior Ministers appointed yesterday
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Showbiz and style in revamp at Tory HQ: Selection of armed forces minister and a writer of popular television dramas gives unexpected gloss to new appointments at Smith Square
- The Cabinet Reshuffle: Right-winger with liberal leanings: Donald Macintyre looks at the varied career of Jonathan Aitken, who becomes Chief Secretary
World
- Aid effort overwhelmed by Rwanda's dying
- US urges 'yes' to Haiti invasion
- People: Fresh insight on HK wrangle
- West Bank history against Palestinians: Amid trumpet-calls of peace, Robert Fisk in Amman finds cause for concern that the Palestinians may lose the little they have won
- Journalist killed
- Simpson's lawyer takes off his gloves: Even before the start of the O J murder trial, the police are taking a hammering, writes Phil Reeves from Los Angeles
- Brazilian custom
- Strike talks fail
- VIP visit falls flat for 'President' Arafat
- Belgium en fete
- 'Footballer arrested to hide faked moonwalk'
- Back to normal
- Africa File: Jonas Savimbi finds that diamond fields are not for ever
- Chess
- Japan's Socialists ditch 40 years of anti-militarism
- Bridge: A case of what might have been
- Silly Questions: Teaspoons are all washed up
- N Koreans switch from tears to praise
- Law Report: Housing authority's legal duty to homeless was discharged: Regina v Northavon District Council, Ex parte Smith. House of Lords (Lord Templeman, Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle, Lord Mustill, Lord Slynn of Hadley and Lord Nolan). 14 July 1994.
- Top Chinese envoy quits in Rome
- Pressure mounts for feminist writer
- Rwanda appeal
- Russia and Estonia at loggerheads
- Guns for peace: Hussein reaps strange reward
- OJ offers dollars 500,000 reward
- Yemen frees 12 journalists
- Cedras fights war of nerves
- Clinton wobbles on radical health reform
- Bomb caused crash of Panama plane
- Inside File: Brazil's fancy footwork may all be in vain
- Cholera fear for Rwanda refugees
- Joy as S Africa rejoins the Club
- Surrealist Delvaux dies at 96
- Belarus swears in first president
- 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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