00:02
Specialist leaves Royal College in maternity row00:02
Football: United prosper as they go back to the basics00:02
One in three 14-year-olds has taken illegal drugs00:02
Pavarotti: nice voice, shame about the knees00:02
Letter00:02
Letter00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers: At the Mercury Music Prize00:02
Opinions: Should 'outdated' children's books be re-written?00:02
Bunhill: Echoes of the Raj at V&A: A vestige of empire rides into London in a display of historic Indian art00:02
RADIO / Ho hum for Classic FM00:02
Football: Celtic let lead slip00:02
Mitterrand in final appeal for 'Yes' vote on Maastricht00:02
Boxing: Hodkinson retains title00:02
TSB judgement is set aside00:02
Flexible friends for small investors: Regular savings accounts enable depositors to grow their funds without making a long-term commitment. Conal Gregory reports00:02
Owners 'are in for a shock': With the replacement for the discredited poll tax due next April, at least a million appeals against the new banded valuations are predicted00:02
Letter: Angels aren't so down to earth00:02
City File: Legal & General unlikely to announce interim results00:02
Parkin resigns from the Greens00:02
Booming chronicle of stolen art: An editor joins the fight to halt the theft of 60,000 works a year. Paul Rambali reports00:02
4m pounds left to lifeboats00:02
Equestrianism: Big heart of a Cool Customer00:02
The tales of a blind eyewitness: Leni Riefenstahl00:02
Red Flag flies in the face of Japan's riches: Terry McCarthy in Tokyo reports on an unlikely base for communist ideals00:02
Uninsured motorists drive up premiums: As many as one in 10 drivers may be on the road illegally. Maria Scott hears how the rest of us are paying00:02
PROPERTY / Classic of the city: 2 The Georgian house: The elegant 18th-century houses of Bath, Edinburgh and London reflected classical ideals. Some East End owners are so keen on authenticity they use candles - and chamber pots00:02
French vote draws dealers to desks for bloody Sunday00:02
FOOD & DRINK / An A-Z of healthy dishes from around the world: W00:02
Bimbos good for business00:02
DANCE / Awful by design00:02
BOOK REVIEW / One was human, wasn't one?: 'Serenity House' - Christopher Hope: Macmillan, 14.9900:02
Fishing Lines: No chance for shark practice00:02
Football: Stockwell steals show00:02
Sinking along in the trough of a wave00:02
Overpaid or undervalued?: The pay and working practices of consultants in Britain are under fire. Mary Braid and Ian MacKinnon report00:02
Station closed in skinhead battle00:02
Was Marx for real?: Simon Carr tests the sense of 'from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs'00:02
Letter00:02
Buy-Outs: Capital still ready for a little venture: There is still money available for management which decides to take the step to ownership00:02
Football: The XI00:02
Business Information Service: This week00:02
When giving just isn't enough: Charities want money but people want to go out and do something, writes Barbara Gunnell00:02
Letter: League tables that should be turned00:02
Racing: Top-class Kooyonga00:02
THEATRE / New spin for Priestley's old copper: An Inspector Calls - Lyttelton; Gamblers - Tricyle; June Moon - Hampstead; Women Laughing - Royal Court Theatre Upstairs; The Thebans - Barbican00:02
Pressure on Invesco: Writ alleges senior staff were aware of doubts about shift of MGN pension shares00:02
ITV plans satellite challenge to BSkyB00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Grazed anatomy: 'Written On the Body' -Jeanette Winterson: Cape, 13.9900:02
Cricket: No flair please, we're British00:02
Can the centre hold?: Maastricht and the EMS are at break point. Europe is under unprecedented strain. Andrew Marshall asks . . .00:02
Rugby Union: Davies sinks Pontypridd: Round-up00:02
Cricket: Walsh lays down the challenge for Essex00:02
Audits defence00:02
Business Information Service: Last week00:02
Football: Eagles are encouraged00:02
Sport in short: Table Tennis00:02
The dirt is piling up around Brazil's macho Mr Clean: President Collor is young, dashing and in deep trouble. Phil Davison reports00:02
Courses Guide: Chance to try a working life00:02
Football: On the move00:02
Football: Newcastle stir memories with spectacular display00:02
IPLO admit killing00:02
Tennis: Weary Becker in danger of losing the mind game: Guy Hodgson reports from Flushing Meadow on the downward slide of a former world No 100:02
Bunhill: Razor wit00:02
Political Commentary: Ashdown seeks Classic FM voters00:02
Notebook: An Englishman's home is no castle: In house swaps as in life there are winners and losers. Unlike in life, Americans are usually the losers00:02
MUSIC / British fail to rise to the occasion of genius00:02
Sport in short: Bowls00:02
Officer suspended00:02
Motor Racing: Mansell fuels growing speculation00:02
Economics: Borrowing is not always a blunder00:02
Guilt-ridden German left fails to seize the hour00:02
Swedish drive is stuck in neutral: Annika Savill goes home to Stockholm and sees some big changes - but she mustn't grumble00:02
Rugby Union: Guide to First Division00:02
Ministers told GCSE needs more levels00:02
Digital cassettes to sell at high prices00:02
Chess high-life comes to pieces: William Hartston on the West's top players for whom perestroika has meant hard times00:02
Lend me a Merc and expect no favours00:02
BOOKS / Paperbacks00:02
Anniversaries00:02
Cricket: Ward goes on the offensive00:02
Would you buy a timeshare from Dave?: The promise of a shiny new Peugeot lures an unsuspecting Hester Matthewman into a hard sell - but she is rewarded00:02
BOOKS / Contemporary Poets: 14 Wendy Cope00:02
Sport in short: Athletics00:02
Cricket: Salisbury vents his spleen: Round-up00:02
Me and My Kit: Stu Grimson, Ice hockey player00:02
Business Information Service: Saying of the week00:02
Letter: Suspect use of schoolgirl's photograph00:02
Kabul on the edge of tragedy: Afghanistan is set to oust the Balkans and Somalia as the world's next disaster area, reports Raymond Whitaker00:02
Bunhill: Corporate detectives on the case00:02
Rugby Union: Stephens casts spell on ragged Bridgend00:02
America's artful draft dodgers: John Lichfield in Washington on the loyal servants who did not serve in Vietnam00:02
Patients need better care00:02
Football: County take points home00:02
Darwin's theory is still the fittest: Steve Connor asks why we still find natural selection so difficult to come to terms with00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Into the heart of the human brain: 'Bright Air, Brilliant fire: On The Matter of the Mind' - Gerald Edelman: Viking, 20 pounds00:02
A curious alliance pushes Mellor close to 'meltdown': Michael Fathers looks ahead to an autumn full of obstacles for the Minister of Fun00:02
Rail complaint00:02
Letter00:02
Opting-out for Jesus: Jonathan Foster visits a school where the Cross is central but the rod - or rather bat - survives00:02
City File: Going Forth00:02
Football: Boro break away duck00:02
Savings total00:02
Letter00:02
Fischer draws level00:02
Football: It's so hard to shed tears for Taylor00:02
Golf: Faldo fashions a model round00:02
Capital question haunts US boardrooms00:02
Rare trees found in Neasden00:02
Football: Littlejohn's big moment00:02
TELEVISION / Witness at the killing field00:02
Secrets in the Garden: Forever looks a bad bet for the closed world of the diamond industry in London's Hatton Garden, undercut by recession, smugglers and the Ratner row. Gail Counsell investigates00:02
ARTS / Show People: 43. Stephen Rea: A star in another language00:02
Letter00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
Football: Brave face in land of the free: Guy Hodgson reports from New York on American readiness for the 1994 World Cup00:02
Rugby Union: Parry and Lloyd outstrip Orrell00:02
Smith heads for clash on Europe00:02
Hurd resisted on EC water laws00:02
BOOK REIVEW / Quiet man too noisy for a lord: 'Trollope' - Victoria Glendinning: Hutchinson, 20 pounds00:02
Bunhill: Allen at Granada00:02
Fees on the rise as houses subside00:02
Letter: A bank-basher's overdrawn account00:02
AA likely to bid for BT alarms business00:02
Football: Robins leads another Norwich fightback00:02
Letter: League tables that should be turned00:02
TRAVEL / Entranced by the dance of Brazil: A mystery taxi ride through the backstreets of Salvador da Bahia ended at a voodoo ceremony. David Presswell lived to tell the tale of a city of samba, carnival and crime00:02
ROCK / Sinead sings Evita00:02
Employment: Part-timers climb without safety net: A growing army of flexible workers lacks protection00:02
Sometimes it pays to stay private: A survey of Britain's 2,000 fastest-growing non-quoted companies shows that they are outstripping their stock market rivals00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A sentence beyond words: 'The Heather Blazing' - Colm Toibn: Picador, 14.9900:02
Sport in short: Cricket00:02
Rugby Union: New laws face up to old habits: Revised regulations and team sheets should bring flair and fair play in the English season. Chris Rea examines the chances00:02
Letter: We're much more in tune with the Philharmonic00:02
Hurricane hits Hawaii00:02
British Airways offloads baggage security arm00:02
The best and worst: With-profit surrender values of endowment policies00:02
Quiet days for Croatia-on-sea: Tony Barber, on the Adriatic coast, found that what Zagreb gained in pride it is losing in revenue00:02
BP may sell Duckhams00:02
City File: DIY truce00:02
Battle is on for crucial homeland votes: Chris McGreal in Johannesburg on the scheme to squeeze ANC support00:02
Football: Channing returns in style00:02
Profile: The random choice: Publisher Gail Rebuck doesn't play by Bloomsbury rules, but she has routed her critics00:02
Fight to stay in the picture: Commercial TV stations face a survival struggle that will reshape the industry. Patrick Hosking reports00:02
Football: Bright shines as Forest lose their way in the gloom00:02
BOOK REVIEW / An ear for the ordinary art of noise: 'The Roaring Silence: John Cage - A Life' - David Revill: Bloomsbury, 22.5000:02
BOOK REVIEW / Diary of an average moron: 'Fever Pitch: A Fan's Life' - Nick Hornby: Gollancz, 13.9900:02
Letter: We're much more in tune with the Philharmonic00:02
Courses Guide: How to get the best from a year's gap: Karen Gold looks at the benefits and pitfalls of taking time off before study00:02
Letter: Suspect use of schoolgirl's photograph00:02
Ways of making your money last00:02
Sir Geraint ill00:02
ART MARKET / The Groombridge inheritance: The contents of the house in The Draughtsman's Contract, some in place since Stuart times, are for sale. Leslie Geddes-Brown reports00:02
A vision in the mirror of sex: Prostitution00:02
A familiar face in the crowd, and the fans chant 'Throw us your shirt David . .00:02
Democrats put grand inquisitor on rack: The Clarence Thomas debacle haunts Arlen Specter, says Patrick Cockburn00:02
Near miss00:02
Of demons and democracy: President Mitterrand gives Julian Nundy his final word before France votes on ratification of the Maastricht treaty00:02
Letter: The other UN00:02
Deaths00:02
How We Met: 51. Josephine Hart and Iris Murdoch00:02
The Broader Picture: Burning butter for the gods00:02
Owen persuades EC ministers to pin hopes on Panic00:02
Profile: A leader by remote control00:02
Q & A: Ferrari's numbers game . . . and new jobs for the boys00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Laughter as a foreign language: 'Doctor Criminale' - Malcolm Bradbury: Secker, 13.9900:02
Insider folly00:02
High-flyer's high standards: The Government is aiming to stretch brighter pupils as curriculum chief says majority of teachers are doing a good job00:02
Bunhill: A sweet sensation?00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Visions of the kitchen sink: 'Daughters of the House' - Michele Roberts: Virago, 14.9900:02
Leading Article: Ministers are failing our children00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Bunhill: Revolution revisited00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Tim King00:02
Death of an English socialist: Moscow has helped solve the mystery of William Wheeldon, who fled to the Soviet Union in 1921 to escape persecution, reports Michael Durham00:02
Tennis: US dream faces up to Edberg00:02
City File: Shares in WPP00:02
Uproar predicted over council tax00:02
ART / Let galleries go hang: It's 'New Contemporaries' time again. And time for our young artists to strike out on their own00:02
Bunhill: Certain to keep Royal engagement00:02
Letter: Bill Clinton has a Puritan streak00:02
1.8 million Britons 'disappear'00:02
Racing: Friendly proves a class act: St Leger / Champion filly proves her credentials for assault on the Arc by putting colts in their place in the final Classic of the season00:02
FILM / That Michael Dukakis feeling00:02
Shares: Tiny acorns ready to grow: Quentin Lumsden looks at barely traded bargain shares00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Not just for keeping vampires at bay: Anglo-Saxons were once repulsed by garlic, but now they can't get enough of it. Geraldene Holt sniffs out a trend00:02
City File: Goodhead Group shares00:02
Scrutator: Another wheel rolls off00:02
Calls for inquiry into 'collusion by gay judges'00:02
Letter: Naive or not ?00:02
Then & Now: Unpromised Land00:02
GARDENING / Generation games: Jan Dalley suggests some ploys to make sure your well-loved garden withstands the battering of tiny feet00:02
Football: Arsenal's double downer00:02
Ice Hockey: Canadiens on top: Hester Matthewman sees the wild men of the NHL collide at Wembley Arena00:02
Second boy's body in quarry00:02
Letter: Holy smoke ]00:02
Interview: Messing with the Messiah: William Leith meets A N Wilson, the man of letters who upset the Queen Mother and is now set to upset others with his biography of Christ00:02
City File: Boots stepping out on the offensive00:02
Letter: Backing Bart's00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Pensions that fuel the firm00:02
New life of the lease: A new Bill aims to give tenants a better deal and bring wayward freeholders under control. Ian Hunter reports00:02
City: Major likely to rue sterling stand00:02
Treasury rejects call for 2bn pounds bail-out00:02
Sport in short: Paralympics00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge