Day In a Page
Sunday, 24 July 1994
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- The Daily Poem: Autumn
- Grant Ford, a Sotheby's painting specialist, holding Free Range Christmas Poultry, one of three watercolours by the cartoonist Norman Thelwell, 71, which are being auctioned in Billingshurst, West Sussex, tomorrow. They are expected to fetch between pounds 5,000- pounds 6,500
- Topless photos of murdered woman cause outrage: Victim's MP reports 'Sun' to press watchdog
- Comet may have caused catastrophe on Earth: Collision of celestial body gaining support as likely reason behind string of disasters in the sixth century
- Cobblers add sole to recycling campaign
- Bottomley urged to regulate 'New Age' alternative healers: MP wants code of practice to protect vulnerable patients
- Cardinal Martini of Milan, the Jesuit who is the liberals' favourite to become the next Pope, arriving at Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr George Carey.
- Exam body to check English standards
- Special needs experts occupy education office: Protester collapses during eviction
- Church 'ready to root out racism'
- 17m pounds cannabis raid
- Gang link to killing
- Fatal exercise
- Football-ground body
- Nurse's record award
- Shot woman had asked for help
- Beach party crash
- Blair urged to bring back supertax: The new Labour leader faces pressure from the grassroots and senior MPs to give a clearer commitment on taxing the rich. Colin Brown reports
- Twenty-six hurt in oil refinery blasts: Storms and heatwaves take their toll
- Portillo counters 'arrogance' accusation
- Changing weather claims victims
- Protest at Justice Bill turns violent: Small group tries to storm Downing Street gates as environmentalists, ramblers and ravers demonstrate in carnival spirit
- Minimum wage for farm workers to be abolished: Waldegrave to ignore report that finds no threat to jobs
- Shift workers lack help with child care
- The moment I knew my baby had been stolen: Marianne Macdonald on the ordeal endured by kidnapped Abbie's parents
- Maze cells unlocked in easier regime
- Wildlife experts are baffled by deaths of seal pups
- Railtrack hopes for drift back to work
- Surgeon in plea for organ donors
- Constable to be sent on tour of regions
- Man who stole bomb kit fears retaliation by IRA
- Warning over wild ponies
- Contemporary Art Market: Student sculptors pick up on Pop
- Another Himalayan first for Bonington
World
- Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the pro-Iranian Hizbollah, rails against Israel at a rally in Beirut to mark the anniversary of an Israeli attack on southern Lebanon.
- Israel and Jordan come out into the open
- Computer crime
- Manhattan moggies take the air
- Pressures mount on Serbs for peace deal
- The Week Ahead: Jihad threat over backing for Bangladeshi feminist
- Berlusconi staff are sought in new graft inquiry
- Islamists offer to spare foreigners
- Republicans smell blood as Clinton sinks deeper
- Colourful German politics take on new complexion
- King Hussein back in favour as Yasser Arafat's star declines: In Nablus, Sarah Helm finds that many Palestinians believe peace might only come through Jordan
- Critic of West named for top Turkish post
- Mandela last hope for dogs of war in Angola
- Quebec debate
- Ousted Jawara flees on US warship
- New home
- Soyinka throws away medal in disgust as strike hardens
- Now is the winter of labour discontent in South Africa
- Erotic mystery
- Aid effort reeling as 1,200 Rwandan refugees die a day
- Indians bundle up and save what they can
- Church bombers
- New havens for Haitian refugees
- Out of Japan: Love crime-free streets but miss roundabouts
- Favourite for papacy in talks with Carey: Liberal Catholics back Martini
- Rwanda: Wolves lie down with the lambs: Killers are on the loose among the refugee camps in Zaire. The chances of bringing them to justice are slim
- Rwanda: Letter from Goma, 1991: Goma was not always a place of despair. This is how Oliver Woolley, a British visitor, described the town before the catastrophe:
- Rwanda: Relief in sight for Goma chaos as airlift takes off
- Rwanda: Question Time: How could it happen?: Rebellion, slaughter, exodus, cholera: the catastrophe in Rwanda is beyond our worst imaginings. Who is to blame? Who are the Hutus and Tutsis? Can peace ever be restored? Some answers . . .
- Back to Earth
- Israeli kidnap
- Flat Earth: Nature nurtures kith and Kim
- More arrests in Italian inquiry
- O J case threatens to tear open US racial wounds
- Asian World Cup hopefuls clash: Japan and South Korea have pride to lose in bid to host the 2002 tournament
- Haitians welcome
- Peace but no reconciliation for the people of Mostar
- Flat Earth: Wolf whistle
- Bomb at church
- Flat Earth: TV coverage
- Soldiers take over in Gambia: 2,000 UK tourists trapped
- Europe's teenagers throw a tantrum: The Strasbourg parliament, long dismissed as a talking shop, is starting to find ways of exerting real authority
- Rights suspended
Business
- Business and City in Brief
- Nuggets in the network: Tom Peters On excellence
- My Biggest Mistake: James Robson
- City & Business: Brakes fail on the company roller
- Warburg on carpet over Lasmo: Early ruling upholds investors' complaint that merchant bank mishandled share raid at oil company
- City File: CU in shape for cash call
- Bank halts Far East listing
- New theme at Flextech: Indoor parks could yield pounds 25m
- Oyston declines sell-out
- Slow market for fallen ministers
- Innovation: IBM wins wings
- City & Business: Smoking Gunn
- Innovation: Intelligent wipers
Science
- Science: With no strings attached?: Lynne Curry looks at the benefits and problems for contract agencies in the information technology market arising from the role of 'preferred supplier'
- Science: Flashed by a little green man: Heather Couper and Nigel Henbest look at those rapidly spinning stars called pulsars
- Science: The ultimate weather forecast: Armed with a new supercomputer, scientists are trying to answer a critical question - is it getting warmer? Nicholas Schoon 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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