00:02
How We Met: 42. Roger Payne and Lisa Harrow00:02
A city in aftershock00:02
Virginia's early summer of love, books and a baby00:02
Profile / Frank Williams: The enthusiast turned realist00:02
Letter: Why the media circus should change its acts00:02
THEATRE / A strange case of swamp fever00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Tale of two handbags: 'Spoilt' - Georgina Hammick: Chatto, 13.99 pounds00:02
The only game in town: Nintendo and Sega are masters of the video games universe - including the price. Now the little guys are fighting back, Gail Counsell reports00:02
Bunhill: M&S eyes a site for sore eaters00:02
BOOK REVIEW / No charge for lost souls: 'Bailey's Cafe' - Gloria Naylor: Heinemann, 14.99 pounds00:02
FOOD / The cheese directory: Specialist cheese shops00:02
City File: Prospect Industries00:02
Competition: Manet winners00:02
New zones of illusion00:02
Bunhill: Money fron golf00:02
Vanishing trick brings house down: Maria Scott looks at insurance problems in the property market: Home owners are lodging claims against lenders for damage stemming from vacant adjacent properties00:02
Build company at taxman's expense: Individuals as well as institutions can take advantage of Business Expansion Schemes, writes Brian Friedman00:02
ART MARKET / Japanese buys00:02
More on counselling00:02
Bunhill: Bush told where to Gatt off00:02
Fishing Lines: Wayne's other world00:02
Malawi frees 1100:02
City File: Waiting Game00:02
Dispute erupts on Mirror board00:02
MacGregor to put BR stations up for sale00:02
Hi-tech poem of no lasting value00:02
Serbs set to capture key town00:02
Index00:02
Economics: Recovery needs a little home help00:02
Athletics: Elliott bows out of Games00:02
Spurs in play for government cash00:02
Farms targeted00:02
Letters: Briefly00:02
Technology: Office PCs take giant leap: Program-writing tools become more user-friendly00:02
Golf / The Open Championship 1992: Stage is set for a big entrance: Muirfield has a history of dramatic contests to live up to this week: John Hopkins looks for a new name to join the roll of honour00:02
Amber Day opens up to investors: Nick Gilbert on an attempt to restore confidence00:02
The best and worst: UK Smaller Company Unit Trusts00:02
Police face trial00:02
Sport in Short: Rugby League00:02
Sport in Short: Sailing00:02
Cricket: Cowdrey to see Intikhab as dispute simmers00:02
Then & Now00:02
FOOD / The cheese directory: Michael Bateman selects the best British and Irish hand-crafted cheeses in part two of our definitive guide00:02
Poland gets a government00:02
Cricket / Man in the Middle: Fitness fanatic happy to learn the game's hard graft00:02
Letter: Wise up, William, wear a condom00:02
Sport in Short: Cricket00:02
Home buyers pay price for that sinking feeling: Maria Scott looks at insurance problems in the property market00:02
Fraud Provencal: or, the case of the phantom gite: A poorer and wiser Dinah Hall tells a cautionary tale of the summer holiday dream-home that never was00:02
The good fighter guide . . . but do we really need one?00:02
MOTORING / Audi takes the soft option: John Fordham test drives Audi's first convertible and compares it with the latest Saab 900 soft-top, best of the older generation00:02
Letter: Come on now, gents, you know that wasn't a fair cop00:02
GARDENING / Belle epoque blooms: The Malmaison carnation was a cult 100 years ago. Mary Keen follows the scent of a revival00:02
Docklands link starts00:02
Sport in Short: Australian Rules00:02
Cycling / Tour de France: Roche returns to best form00:02
Surgeon in HIV row breaks silence: 'I have behaved as I should have done . . . I don't feel that I have got anything to feel guilty about'00:02
After Yeltsin there can only be the deluge00:02
FILM / Kerpow] that only goes Phiz00:02
Q & A: Points about the javelin . . . and Agassi the batsman00:02
SHOW PEOPLE / Something in the way he sits: 35. George Harrison00:02
Do it yourself businesses combat urban deprivation: Paul Gosling in Newcastle on the community enterprises that start at the bottom00:02
Slump casts cloud over the Costa: As the British stay away, pubs suffer pain in Spain. Michael Durham reports Michael Durham finds Fuengirola has more nostalgia than British visitors00:02
Letter: What the 'Times' failed to tell its sister about the Hitler diaries00:02
More prisoners say defence lawyers erred00:02
Sport in Short: Boxing00:02
My Biggest Mistake00:02
Letter: Wise up, William, wear a condom00:02
Sport in Short: Powerboating00:02
Sport in Short: Motorcycling00:02
Contemporary poets: 6 Fred D'Aguiar00:02
Tour firms face ruin00:02
INTERIORS / Kitchen design directory00:02
Cricket: Cricket's hierarchy plays the wrong line: Scyld Berry on Zimbabwe's untimely promotion and some other potentially costly errors of judgement00:02
Athletics: From commuter train to Barcelona: Brough Scott talks to Sally Gunnell, embodiment of the spirit of British running00:02
Bunhill: Gallery closure (CORRECTED)00:02
Sport in Short: Sumo00:02
Bunhill: In from the cold00:02
The bank that likes to say 'only on condition . . . '00:02
Golf / The Open Championship 1992: Kite the nearly man no longer: John Hopkins talks to the new US Open champion who now has his sights set on a second successive Major00:02
CHILDREN / Coping with life after death: How do you help a bereaved child to mourn when utterly broken by the pain of losing a partner? Angela Neustatter speaks to survivors of grief00:02
Lesson for parents00:02
Opinions: How bigoted are the British?00:02
Golf / Open Championship 1992: Testing times on the course with the hazard at both ends: Muirfield's first and last holes are two of the the most arduous in Open championship golf00:02
The Revenue's gift: Roy Cannon looks at the benefits of schemes for tax relief on donations00:02
Scrutator: Big Brother banks on you00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Lord Wedgy, Citizen Benn: 'Tony Benn: A Biography' - Jad Adams: Macmillan, 20 pounds00:02
Cycling / Tour de France: Champions who have to take a back saddle: Alex Harding examines big-name team tactics in the Tour de France00:02
School failures who get on famously00:02
Exit by Hafnia bosses00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
Cricket / Benson and Hedges Cup Final: Assured Smith in control00:02
East and west is Wall in the mind: Nearly two years after reunification, Berliners still lead separate lives on either side of the city, Adrian Bridge reports00:02
Free-market Africa's age of disrespect: Traditional care of the elderly is declining as Western ways take their toll. Karl Maier reports from Accra00:02
Cheaper loans00:02
TELEVISION / On holiday in Hornchurch00:02
The naked and the deadened00:02
LA police snoopers had stars in their eyes00:02
Profile: Supermarket calculator: Archie Norman must soon deliver results at Asda as well as good PR, writes Richard Thomson00:02
Zhou's widow dies00:02
Organised for relief00:02
IBM to build on alliance00:02
BCCI link missed00:02
Why Orlando and Rosalind wouldn't cut it on the Tube00:02
IMF plea00:02
BOOK REVIEW / So sneer, and yet so far: Linda Grant finds that some travel writers pack their prejudices with their luggage00:02
When life depends on pension options: Annuities from personal retirement schemes are not necessarily paid to a partner on the death of the policyholder00:02
Saying of the week00:02
Sport in Short: Baseball00:02
Athletics: Black fails US test as Jackson passes with honours: Mike Rowbottom on a night of mixed fortunes for two British runners00:02
Four gunshots create a myth: The Ordsall estate, Salford, is now seen as another potential inner-city flashpoint, but Jonathan Foster finds a different picture00:02
Sport on television00:02
Letter: Wise up, William, wear a condom00:02
Bunhill: Wine with a rosy bouquet00:02
No such thing as over the hill: Cue an endless stream of nostalgic bilge about the great old days when England used to lose 5-0 to West Indies00:02
Marketing: Coupons redeemed by hi-tech revolution: Check-out computers are enabling supermarkets to tailor discount offers to customers00:02
Letter: Europe's no use00:02
City File: Argyll upbeat00:02
Parents pay for teachers00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hell to pay for an infernal triangle: 'The Course of the Heart' - M John Harrison: Gollancz, 14.99 pounds00:02
Crying shame for the New Zealand army00:02
City: Unconvinced by President Perot00:02
Leading Article: All hole, no doughnut00:02
Screening out male fantasies: Antonia Bird argues for real women and fewer stereotypes on television00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hispanic images: 'Reflections of Spain' - Barbara Lloyd: Thames & Hudson, 18.95 pounds00:02
Racing: Eddery poised to tip the see-saw00:02
Roue who fell for the thrill of the chaste: 'The Interior Castle: A Life of Gerald Brenan' - Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy: Sinclair-Stevenson, 25 pounds00:02
Debt charge00:02
Lady bowlers face drug test00:02
Demand fails to lift 'green' farm incomes00:02
Methanol link00:02
The way the whips leave their mark00:02
'Ageing cheerleader' brings PG values to an X-rated society: Mrs Al Gore's war on sex, drugs and rock'n'roll00:02
MUSIC / Tiddly om Prom Prom: Michael White looks forward to the greatest music festival in the world00:02
Hamadi reunion00:02
Clinton aspires to glory in the Garden: Suddenly the Democrats have visions of political rebirth at this week's convention. John Lichfield in Washington on the danger of self-delusion00:02
Bunhill: Words of wisdom00:02
Letter: Come on now, gents, you know that wasn't a fair cop00:02
Sport in Short: Tennis00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Delicious Mrs David00:02
DANCE / Swanilda steals the night of the living doll00:02
The Party goes for a courtroom showdown: Most Russians want to rid themselves of the communist legacy, but the old guard refuses to be buried. Peter Pringle reports from Moscow00:02
King takes up job for life at BA00:02
'New deal' for junior doctors crumbles away00:02
Lloyd's acts to pre-empt rebels00:02
Boy free after kidnap ordeal00:02
Sport in Short: Rugby Union00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Photographs of the Ganges: 'The Ganges' - Raghibur Singh: Thames & Hudson, 30 pounds00:02
Last hangman Pierrepoint dies00:02
Sport in Short: Golf00:02
Racing: Friendly win completes an Oaks double: Robert Wright reports on a British win in the Irish Oaks00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Letter: A poor mark for the magistrates00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Abroad view of the English: Nicholas Lezard on the road from Tuscany to Tonga00:02
Shares: Hot summer adds the fizz: The climate is right for a sparkling performance from the leading soft-drinks makers, Quentin Lumsden reports00:02
BT resists Oftel over price caps: Hopes of a quick agreement recede after relations with regulator reach a new low00:02
S&L damages00:02
ROCK / He's still Boss class - just00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
2m pounds drugs charge00:02
Hockey: Superior finishing decisive00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Heavy case load: 'The Absolution Game' - Paul Sayer: Constable, 13.99 pounds; 'Tribes' - Alexander Stuart: Chatto, 13.99 pounds00:02
Mirror directors watch their backs: The question of who knew what and when about the missing millions has divided the board at MGN00:02
Howard takes greenery to market00:02
Me and my kit: 5 Sean Yates, Cyclist00:02
Anniversaries00:02
Solicitors closed after complaints00:02
Musical chairs for the editors: The executive changes at the Daily Mail could herald a reshuffle at other national newspapers. Simon Midgley investigates the likely repercussions00:02
Mystery of painting's miraculous escape00:02
North Sea platform builders facing irreversible slump: Construction yards in Scotland are set to shed hundreds of jobs over the next few months, writes Francis Shennan00:02
Golf: O'Malley steals the flower of Scotland00:02
HEALTH / Common Complaints: Jet lag00:02
Sport in Short: Rowing00:02
Round-trip record00:02
RADIO / Nobs, yobs and slobs00:02
City File: Oceans Wilson00:02
Letter: Come on now, gents, you know that wasn't a fair cop00:02
ART / Not just an immaculate conception: Michael Levey wraps up his occasional series on great paintings00:02
Motor Racing / British Grand Prix: Mansell laps up home support00:02
Premium Bond winners00:02
Your Money: Pile 'em high, sell 'em cheap00:02
MUSIC / Euro voyage going nowhere00:02
Motor Racing: Turning second fiddle into an art form: Guy Hodgson on the lot that is Riccardo Patrese's00:02
BOOKS / Writing and label lore: Current fiction is awash with designer tags. Even writers are being packaged. But such novels may be more than consumer products: brand names have a distinguished history00:02
Independent Oxford Activity Indicator: Lamont rules out option of early cut in interest rates00:02
Political Commentary: A leader in search of a direction00:02
Out of Iraq00:02
Letter: Why John Birt is not the Pol Pot of broadcasting00:02
Church vote setback for women priests00:02
Language barrier to British success00:02
Smooth returns for traveller's cheques00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Members at length: 'Life Force' - Fay Weldon: HarperCollins, 14.99 pounds00:02
City File: Carr Kitcat & Aitken00:02
Carrying the torch for Much Wenlock: Baron de Coubertin's Olympics were born after he visited a similar competition held in the Shropshire hills. Andy Martin reports on the games which still survive today00:02
Dark lining to a silver cloud: The market is wondering why so much bullion was sold so fast, and whether there is more to come00:02
RECORDS / Classical00:02
Sport in Short: Football00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Beyond the edge of darkness: Tony Barber reads dispatches from Eastern Europe00:02
Fathers' Day Out: Glyndebourne puts on the arias and graces: The fourth in a series in which Michael Fathers investigates the English social season00:02
The files Irving did not see . . .: Brian Cathcart reports on another set of long-hidden documents in the Moscow archive - recording details of the Holocaust at Auschwitz00:02
Japanese banks remain on top00:02
Leading Article: History's dirty money00:02
Sport in Short: Athletics00:02
Bankers open way for Gateway rescue00:02
Low note00:02
Is 'forever' still for ever?: Not necessarily, if you are a serial monogamist. Geraldine Bedell reports00:02
Repainting the town hall green: Proposals from the recent Earth Summit in Rio have begun filtering down to local authorities, Rebecca Renner reports00:02
The Broader Picture: Of mice and mass media00:02
Business Information Service: Last Week00:02
RECORDS / Jazz00:02
Keep the dry ice, bring back Pan's People: Top of the Pops is under fire again. William Leith works out what's wrong with it00:02
FASHION / Manipulated lady: The modern woman has pneumatic breasts, big hair, powerful heels and00:02
Cricket: One-day appeal puts Tests top of the endangered species list: Derek Hodgson reports on the grim business of cricket for profit00:02
ART MARKET / Parisian passions: Buying and selling art is more a way of life than a business in Paris, but it may never be the same after deregulation. Amid declining sales, auction houses are preparing to meet a British invasion00:02
Paper may face legal action on copyright to Goebbels diary00:02
City: Bad dog00:02
Notebook: So how much is this pain costing me?: Dentists have always been figures of fear. Now, as they leave the NHS, they're having to use new methods to bring a smile to customers' faces00:02
TRAVEL / Put out more flags . . .00:02
Take note, fakes about00:02
Deaths00:02
Interview / Sir Patrick Mayhew: For the love of the Irish: His exterior seems classically conventional but what lies beneath the upper crust? Donald Macintyre meets Ulster's new man00:02
City File: Tomkins is poised to please its fans00:02
Fishing / Competition: Game Fair quiz00:02
Sport in Short: Drugs in sport00:02
Bunhill: Meriting a meal ticket00:02
East and west is Wall in the mind: Nearly two years after reunification, Berliners still lead separate lives on either side of the city, Adrian Bridge reports00:02
Bridge