Day In a Page
Friday, 4 July 1997
Jump to:
News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedWorld
- Mugabe stands aside as Banana is hounded with gay rape charge
- Kidnap king falls out with Lebanese hosts
- Drug links bedevil Mexican democracy
- Hong Kong handover: Taiwan stays in tune with HK
- PARIS DAYS: Monsieur Guignol makes a rainy day grand
- Hong Kong handover: `If it gets bad, I hope people like me will be around to scream'
- Khmer Rouge accuses PM of coup plot
- Clinton issues denial of sexual harassment
- Forces' gay ruling challenged
- Bosnian Serb president dissolves parliament
- Jospin targets rich for emergency tax
- Countdown begins to handover of China's next outpost
- Taiwan repulses motherland's grasp
- Dushanbe Days: Thank God for O-level history and Russian nostalgia
- The Principles people pull out of Burma
- New problem for Mir
- US storms back to the last frontier
- Blind find little to laugh at in myopic Magoo
Business
- Trade war looms as Brussels vetos Boeing merger
- Mirror up after pounds 297m MIN deal
- Gold slumps to fresh low
- Pound set to reach DM3
- Budget clampdown is behind market frenzy
- Oftel orders BT to raise chargecard price
- pounds 240m bid for property group
- BT at new high despite pounds 500m windfall tax blow
- The markets bonkers? Don't you believe it, guv!
- PGA European Tour delivers shock warning on profits
- HK share rally fails to show
- Germany the key to softer criteria
- Market Report: Taking Stock
- Thames chairman given 64% pay rise
- Utility shares bounce back
- BAA pays pounds 406m for US duty-free giant
- Companies may go abroad to avoid double taxation hit
- Rate rise expected as pound soars further
- Holiday is over for companies' pension schemes
- Electricity bills to drop by 12 per cent
- Another executive quits Murdoch
- pounds 5bn Lockheed deal creates defence goliath
- Comment: Market-makers have reason to rue the Budget
- Arbitrator may review Railtrack's charges
- Market Report: Footsie swings wildly amid reports of futures losses
- The Investment Column: Property sector a Budget winner
- People & Business: An armadillo has taken control of the economy
- The Investment Column: Prism on track for profits
- Prism to shed another 600 jobs
- The Investment Column: RM cashes in on IT revolution
- Panic as investment banks face pounds 1bn loss
Money
Money RSS Feed - click to grab the feed- loose change
- Reasons to be disappointed
- Frustrated? Blame the Chancellor
- Retirement plans
- Premiums can be sickeningly high
- In the driving seat
- Many things that were floated or threatened didn't happen in the Budget
- SUMMER SALES GUIDE
- The posthumous stunt
- Lock stock and barrel
- BBQ essentials...
- Nasal warfare
- Cheap chic
- Degrees of debt
- Long-term future impossible to predict
- A charter for home-buyers
- Bone up on the chain saw market
- Home-made Budget
- 1 Disability campaigners celebrate 'victory' after government rethink over plans to make it more difficult to claim disability benefits
- 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
How will you make today delicious?
Tell us how you plan to make today delicious and you could win a £50 M&S gift card.
Win a Nook® Simple Touch eReader
Find out how Nook® is supporting the Evening Standard's Get Reading campaign - and your chance to win one.
Free reading festival for families
Follow The Standard's campaign to get London's children reading - and experience this unique event at Trafalgar Square on 13 July.
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.




