Day In a Page
Tuesday, 13 September 1994
Jump to:
News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- The Daily Poem: Shroud
- British Association for the Advancement of Science: Computer link to watches; Products small enough to wear are offering owners vast amounts of information: Correction
- Labour renews call for local crime plans
- Beggars yearn to live 'normal' lives: The charity Crisis has carried out the first detailed survey of people who beg in London. Simon Midgley reports
- Measuring out life in punches and beer cans
- Lawyers 'put silicone use at risk'
- Decline in school sport 'not cricket'
- Ulysses passes south pole of Sun
- Pensions gap between the rich and poor widened in Eighties up 37% in decade
- Payments in cases of sex bias at work rise sevenfold: Average award is now almost pounds 22,000
- Meat losing appeal for the young
- Vice-chancellors snub Shephard over speech
- BBC plans digital broadcasts
- Gloom and doom grips true blues: Steve Boggan finds Newbury's declining Tory membership in a disillusioned state
- Beer grant
- Jails chief says his job is safe
- Frigate aground
- Award for Hoyle
- Lion man 'stable'
- Irish shootings
- Minister attacks couples who cohabit rather than marry
- Strikes scupper early sell-off of Railtrack
- Soldier 'confesses to murdering woman': Britons held over attack on Danish tour guide in Cyprus
- Court ruling likely to end battle for statue: 'Three Graces' set to stay in UK
- No charges over fair ride death
- Bridge protest divides border communities: An unofficial opening of a road link has led to hopes of economic growth and loyalist fears about security.
- Bones of 5 people dug up at home
- Major orders building costs scrutiny
- Blair will use big poll lead to warn party not to relax
- Gangs target families as 'soft option': Jason Bennetto looks at a growing trend among criminals of seeking to bypass sophisticated security
- Revenue 'should pay for any error'
- Courtroom clashes spill on to Belfast streets
- Complains against unjust councils soar: 'Poor communication' singled out as key problem
- BBC complaint case
- Tories lose votes over tax and NHS: Free-market rhetoric upsets 'defectors'. Donald Macintyre and Colin Brown report
- Backing for nurse
- The Daily Poem
- Woman hit by train
- Victim gave drug warning: Singer who died at rave had expressed concern about the use of Ecstasy at clubs
- Porn video man given custody of children: Council faces further allegations
- Tory health appointees 'show bias to business'
- Threat to rare stone landscape
- Disabled workers to strike
- Bar accountability: Key measures to help smooth legal process
- Smugglers jailed
- County pressure
- Nurse backed
- Heads attack law on daily worship: Rules on school assemblies 'unworkable'
- Car meter aims to cut cost of road pricing systems: Low-tech device could reduce investment needed for congestion charging
- Human bones found
- Barristers set to face compensation claims over shoddy work: Review group recommends making Bar more accountable
- Gas deaths inquiry
- Interest Rates: Big lenders move quickly to raise cost of borrowing
- Interest Rates: Six City experts who got their predictions wrong
- VAT on fuel disturbs the Tory grassroots: Conservative chairman remains in spotlight to launch agenda for Bournemouth conference with selected constituency motions
- Kidnapped manager is found dead after kidnap
- BBC report on single mothers 'simplistic': Broadcasting watchdog rules complaint by one-parent council inappropriate. Maggie Brown reports
- Interest Rates: Clarke predicts tough public spending round after rate rise
World
- Mrs Fujimori to run for president
- Japan prepares troops for Rwanda
- Out of America: When the home of Yankee democracy was set ablaze
- UN Population Conference: Vatican enters spirit of give and take: Holy See accepts most of 20-year plan to limit world numbers
- UN Population Conference: Iran surprises the West with liberal line on birth control
- Frail abiola back in court
- Separatists win Quebec against tide: The narrow margin of victory for the Parti Quebecois suggests that the province's enthusiasm for declaring full independence from Canada is on the wane, writes Hugh Winsor from Ottawa
- NY tourist shot
- Algeria tries to halt strife by Islamist leaders
- Pilot wanted to end it all in style: Frank Corder always talked of a White House crash. His family thought he was joking
- UN row stifles Rwanda genocide inquiry: Frustration has driven a top UN investigator to resign, write Craig Nelson in Kigali and Richard Dowden
- Huge drugs haul in Iran desert
- Clinton fights to win US over to Haiti action
- Russia 'regrets' killing fishermen
- Fishy coup scare
- Law Report: Headstone words not permitted: Re Holy Trinity, Freckleton; Consistory Court of the Diocese of Blackburn (Chancellor Judge John Bullimore), 28 July 1994.
- Drugs-bust mayor heads for poll win
- Law Report: Receivers adopted contracts: Re Leyland Daf Ltd; Re Ferranti International plc - Chancery Division (Mr Justice Lightman) 26 July 1994
- Damascus seeks perfect time to make its peace: President Assad knows he has no option but to come to terms with Israel. The question is when, writes Charles Richards
- Nigerian minister fired by military
- UN Population Conference: Vatican set to hold back from accord on abortion
- Ankara moves to throttle media's access to Kurds: The ban on foreigners visiting Iraqi Kurdistan reflects growing Turkish nationalism, writes Hugh Pope in Ankara
- Peking wins support from Carey
- UN Population Conference: Operation on TV enrages Egypt
- Air assault punctures President's defences
- US adds the final touch to plans for Haiti invasion
- Jeb Bush's way open to contest Florida
- 1 Exclusive: Woolwich attack suspect was known to banned terror group and security services
- 2 'Sickening, deluded and unforgivable': Horrific attack brings terror to London’s streets
- 3 Grace Dent: I’m not sure how these people can avoid being called ‘bigots’. And the more ‘civilised’, the worse they are
- 4 Ingrid Loyau-Kennett, the mother-of-two hailed as a hero for confronting Woolwich attackers, thought: 'better me than a child'
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL will seek to exploit this evil crime for their own evil ends
Get your summer started with British Military Fitness
BMF is the UK’s biggest and best loved outdoor fitness classes
Visit York
Find out what The Independent's resident travel expert has to say about one of the most beautiful small cities in the world
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.







