00:02
Cricket: Glamorgan in control00:02
Norway awaits the saboteurs00:02
Rail plans attacked in BR report00:02
Train death plunge00:02
Letter: Glimpses of the moon, but not as we see it00:02
Sport in Short: Australian Rules00:02
Political Commentry: Clarke may excite the Two Ferrets00:02
Nurse guilty on new charge00:02
Football / FA Cup Final: Mam-for-Man Marking00:02
HEALTH / Common Complaints: Cramp00:02
Cricket: Border smiles at last00:02
Police rescue girls and kill gunman: Lightning raid by commandos ends hours of torture for parents00:02
2m pounds forgery charges00:02
Bothered and bewildered: Gerald Kaufman encounters the different reality of the people who set CD prices00:02
How We Met: Harriet Walter and Patsy Rodenburg00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: And one for Raine's mum00:02
RECORDS / New Releases00:02
Software system takes the measure of clerical tasks00:02
Cricket: Silverwood adds sparkle00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: Damned busters00:02
City File: Allied-Lyons00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The I and ear of Ireland: 'A Snail in my Prime: New and Selected Poems' - Paul Durcan: Harvill, pounds 16/ pounds 7.99; 'Selected Poems 1972-1990' - Tom Paulin: Faber, 5.99 pounds00:02
Economics: Something to learn from a Paris model00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Mafia terrorist campaign feared00:02
Independent Oxford Economic Forecast: Danger in racing ahead of Europe: The UK will be the only EC country to register growth in 1993 but this could put pressure on sterling00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Songs for happy campers: 'The Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality and the Mystery of Desire' - Wayne Kostenbaum: Gay Men's Press, 16.95 pounds00:02
Q & A: Steam's worldwide legacy . . . and streaking in history00:02
DANCE / Up, up and away00:02
Taxing procedure to recover money: Reorganisation has made it harder to secure refunds from the Revenue, writes Andrew Bibby00:02
Cricket: A run-machine aiming to get back into production: Mark Taylor enjoyed a prolific Ashes series in 1989. Will he make England suffer again? Glenn Moore reports00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: No Marx for Hess00:02
Troops shoot 57 in Gaza clashes00:02
A big star, but shrinking: For a while, Robbie Coltrane put on a stone a year. The comedy and the fat seemed inseparable. Now he's got a new wife, baby, house, diet, are we going to see the emergence of a sensitive soul?00:02
Mirror five get own pensions00:02
A monumental crisis as the Germans in Poland pay homage to the Fatherland00:02
Property taken for a fast ride: Ouvah Highfields took millions from developers and went bust inside a year. Chris Blackhurst reports00:02
Lebanon's dispossessed come home: Robert Fisk in Damour on the scars of an orgy of ethnic cleansing00:02
The American Military Coup of 201200:02
On Mount Longdon: Parachute Regiment came back from the Falklands with their reputation for bravery reinforced. But two years ago, they were accused of atrocities by one of their own. Now others are speaking out00:02
Sport in Short: Skiing00:02
DRINK / From wine bluff to wine buff: Matthew Gwyther joins an evening class for the aspiring wine know-all00:02
Deficits could bring toll roads and wider VAT00:02
Hospital escape00:02
This man is 40. He wants to run a mile in four minutes. Shouldn't he know better?: David Moorcroft wants to be the first 40-year-old to emulate Roger Bannister. Chris Arnot reports00:02
Not prepared to play the Revenue's role: Theatrical actors are challenging a decision to tax them at source00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Getting their kicks on Route 66: 'Coast to Coast: A Rock Fan's US Tour' - Andy Bull, Black Swan 5.99 pounds; 'American Heartbeat: Travels from Woodstock to San Jose by Song Title' - Mick Brown: Michael Joseph, 15.99 pounds00:02
Letters Briefly00:02
Football / FA Cup Final: Bottom mark and a must-do-better: Richard Williams laments the paucity of ideas shown by both teams00:02
Trying not to talk about suicide00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: Say what you like about . . .00:02
Sport in Short: Baseball00:02
Commercial Property: Primrose path to liquidation: Inducements offered by shopping mall developers have often backfired00:02
Bunhill: In the dark00:02
Royals bugged: not so exclusive00:02
CP picks leader00:02
Icahn in bid00:02
Opinions: Who would you like to bug?00:02
Sport in Short: Basketball00:02
The new proletariat: Soon most British employees will be women. But their pay, already low, could fall further, report Nick Cohen and Rachel Borrill00:02
Sport in Short: Athletics00:02
The Broader Picture: The ploughwomen's lunch00:02
Referendum haunted by fear00:02
Letter: Anti-male bias won't help our children00:02
Moscow-bound00:02
A price for going bust00:02
Cricket: Bicknell takes Surrey to safety00:02
Sport in Short: Cycling00:02
'Murder' doubts00:02
Bunhill: Public eye00:02
Sport in Short: Boxing00:02
Letter: Put to the test00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: With a nice ring to it00:02
Deaths00:02
RECORDS / The price of silver: Almost everyone now thinks CDs are too expensive - except those who issue them, so good value is still hard to find. Rosanna de Lisle offers some tips00:02
Angry young man shakes the scenery00:02
Sport in Short: Golf00:02
Ireland on song00:02
Letter: Vital role of busybodies00:02
Minister seeks 'open' MI500:02
BOOK REVIEW / Repro Gothic, all mod cons: 'Dr Haggard's Disease' - Patrick McGrath: Viking, 14.99 pounds00:02
Sport in Short: Rugby Union00:02
'Immortal cell' will save millions of lab animals00:02
Cricket: A love as boundless as his wealth: John Paul Getty, billionaire philanthropist and the new owner of Wisden, is one of cricket's most extraordinary and elusive characters. Frances Edmonds met him00:02
A legendary RAF bomber takes to the skies to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Dambusters raid00:02
Letter: Anti-male bias won't help our children00:02
MoD 'told about Falklands crime'00:02
Saudi detained00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Samoa the merrier: 'Robert Louis Stevenson' - Frank McLynn: Hutchinson, 20 pounds00:02
Asian men say no to the misery of arranged marriage00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Children of the ever-rolling stream: 'Crossing the River' - Caryl Phillips: Bloomsbury, 15.99 pounds00:02
Cricket: Notts suffer in silence00:02
City File: Put your shirt on Marks & Spencer00:02
Woman to try Everest today00:02
Football: Taylor warns clubs00:02
Disc battle00:02
Life-raft rescue00:02
Start-up matchmaker forges firm relations00:02
Major faces rebellion on rail sell-off00:02
Premium Bond winners00:02
Sport in Short: Motorcycling00:02
Sport in Short: Rallying00:02
MUSIC / A loser with moral integrity00:02
Boxing: Lewis still searching for a Stateside hit: American viewing figures suggest the world heavyweight champion has an image problem. Jonathan Rendall reports00:02
Profile: Coal's champ of the pit stop: Richard Budge, who once got his kicks from racing cars, is running against a clock again as he floats a company in a bid to save 11 marginal mines. David Bowen reports00:02
Sport in Short: Ice Hockey00:02
Sport in Short: Equestrianism00:02
Airlines' loss00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In brief00:02
Saying of the week00:02
France honours teacher heroine in nursery siege: Julian Nundy reports from Paris on the dramatic climax to a 46-hour hostage ordeal for schoolchildren as police kill 'human bomb' gunman00:02
Sport in Short: Rugby League00:02
Golf: Faldo stays in sight of lead00:02
Fetishist demands shoes for a kick00:02
Shares: Trio with blue-sky horizons00:02
Sport in Short: Tennis00:02
Bunhill: Driven by the joys of men and toys00:02
Cricket: Hard times for Durham00:02
Sport in Short: Table Tennis00:02
Letter: Vital role of busybodies00:02
Leading Article: Give over? Indeed00:02
Adams's appeal to Unionists00:02
Directors' pay rises anger Arjo investors00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
Letter: Jump bail and boost Britain00:02
Seminars on data protection legislation00:02
Letter: People power in Guatemala00:02
Your Money: Brokers find a scapegoat00:02
Shareholders revolt over Spring Ram accounts00:02
Letter: Mummy knows a few things, too00:02
SHOW PEOPLE / Secret life of a French mouse: 77. Isabelle Huppert00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Mitsubishi Galant in 0-60 seconds00:02
Sport in Short: Squash00:02
Profile: Decent gets you nowhere: Demi Moore - She sought fame. But notoriety served her purposes equally well. Michael Pye on a woman who knows where she wants to be00:02
Bunhill: Firework display00:02
No flights, no booze no hotels - and guess who's in charge?: For years Gaddafi was an international pariah. Now he seeks tourist dollars to solve his economic problems00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Parts of the Kit: Christopher Marlowe died in a pub brawl 400 years ago. His life and murder were as lurid as any fiction. Four new novels flesh out the poet but not the poetry00:02
In the burglar's wake: Tenants should check damage cover for break-ins, warns Mary Wilson00:02
The kids think Mr Patten's wrong, too: Pupils should be facing new tests. Yet many still do not know what they will sit. Geraldine Bedell reports00:02
Savings run for shelter: A tougher attitude over tax has led some societies to stop gross payments, writes Vincent Duggleby00:02
Apathy still prevails in poll on pensions00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
RECORDS / The IoS Playlist00:02
City: Green arrow pierces Warburgs' image00:02
ROCK / Back to life with a blast from the rocket man00:02
Sport in Short: Sumo00:02
Tracker assesses fund volatility00:02
Sport in Short: Motor Racing00:02
Football: Resolute Venables vows to carry on the fight00:02
Sugar may buy out Spurs to end feud with Venables00:02
The American military coup of 2012: The President is dead, disaster looms after the humiliating defeat suffered in the second Gulf war. Lt Col Charles J Dunlap describes the events that bring down the government of the US00:02
Letter: No prizes for catch-22 diplomacy00:02
Letter: Way forward is to stand back00:02
Better peaceful separation than forced tolerance00:02
Late payment a problem right across Europe00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Uncovering the heart's tattoo: Art v polemic: Eva Salzman on four new collections by women00:02
TRAVEL / Great Civilisations of the World - Moorish Spain: Where to go and what to see00:02
Boxing: Eubank clings to title00:02
Leading Article: The heavens open00:02
Anniversaries00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hunter with a wolf in the stomach: 'Haughey: His Life and Unlucky Deeds' - Bruce Arnold: HarperCollins, 17.50 pounds00:02
TELEVISION / Non-stop smile gives them all the Hebe jeebies00:02
CHILDREN / Just counting their toes: Tony Mooney on new evidence of numeracy at five months old00:02
Football: Venables both coach and cult00:02
Competition Results00:02
Do's and don'ts for a small business00:02
Rugby Union: Testing time for the Lions: The British Isles tour to New Zealand promises to be the most arduous yet. Chris Rea reports, and picks three players to watch from each side00:02
Mugs with millions are back in the market-place00:02
Football / FA Cup Final: In the net00:02
Insolvency springs a trap on the spendthrift professionals: The miracle became a nightmare for many partners. Robin Tutty reports00:02
Timex protest00:02
Spinning debts into gold: Recession has been the renaissance of Garry Klesch, who thrives on others' troubles. Jason Nisse reports00:02
TRAVEL / Great Civilisations of the World - Moorish Spain: Conquered by a nation of bookkeepers: Paper, civil servants and good government were the colonisers' weapons, writes David Keys00:02
Racing: Successful raid for Barathea00:02
City File: Erskine alert00:02
Twinkle, twinkle, little star: Correction00:02
Changes at Co-op vex cardholders00:02
Bunhill: Firework display00:02
Tennis: Tears for fears take their toll: Guy Hodgson in Berlin on how women's tennis is coping after the Seles stabbing00:02
Independent on Sunday / Poetry Library Quiz00:02
Fishing Lines: Irish rise up against bureaucracy00:02
City: Wrong track00:02
Letter: Serbs have simply learnt from bitter experience00:02
DTI urged to probe Ouvah00:02
Cricket: When boldness was the only option left: Gambling on youth was not what England's cricket selectors were known for - until last week. Simon Hughes reports00:02
All in a day's Raid for boys in black00:02
Cricket: Kent enjoy purple patch00:02
Stonehenge visitor plan is ditched00:02
Desperate bid to claim PPI assets: Polly Peck administrator flies out to Turkey in attempt to revive collapsed sale00:02
City File: Hanson00:02
Yes or no Britons rally the Danish00:02
FOOD / A-Z of treats: Eclairs00:02
PROPERTY / There's no time like the present: Houses are coming on to the market at half their value three years ago. Is this the right time to buy? Caroline McGhie finds out00:02
Some things you can't explain00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Richard Austin00:02
Marketing men launch symbolic bid to conquer space00:02
MacGregor trip heralds tolls for motorway users00:02
Sport in Short: Football00:02
Policeman killed00:02
The Best and Worst: When managers are mystified: Investment Trusts00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
Lib-Lab duo write joint welfare plan00:02
CHILDREN / Boys will be boys: They turn household objects into weapons of war and believe they will grow up to be the boss. Do we blame their parents or is it in their make-up? Deborah Holder on the latest findings00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
Rugby League: Monie's legacy a monument not millstone for Dorahy: Dave Hadfield reports on the coach entrusted with ensuring Wigan's rugby league pre-eminence00:02
ART EXHIBITIONS / A trip round the wonders of Davieworld: In the Fifties and Sixties, Alan Davie was famous and influential. A new gallery in Brighton reminds us why00:02
Chinese issue00:02
Police keep tabs on the travellers00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: Propaganda war00:02
Turning again to the banks: Steps to plug the cash gap00:02
Sport in Short: Olympic Games00:02
City File: Warming up00:02
THEATRE / Two into one won't go00:02
Innovation: Can't burn or bury it? Zap it]: Transportable linear accelerator is designed to break down toxic waste00:02
Press complaint rejected00:02
Communications: First class growth for mail shop: Post, fax and other office needs are obtainable under one roof00:02
Bunhill: Looking at success00:02
Captain Moonlight's Notebook: UN Ambassador to Tunbridge Wells00:02
Football / FA Cup Final: Blame put on fatigue00:02
Bugging: who knows what about it00:02
US ruling could trigger tax war00:02
Tennis: Graf finds resilience to beat Fernandez when she needs to00:02
Gulp] A nation mourns last episode of Cheers00:02
RADIO / Too much of a good thing00:02
Nadir surety home00:02
ART MARKET / What's hot in Manhattan: Sex and race are the dominant themes in New York's galleries and salerooms. Geraldine Norman takes the temperature of contemporary art this spring00:02
Tennis: Ivanisevic's relish for the rally erodes Sampras' resistance00:02
Spy arrests loom00:02
Football / FA Cup Final: Hirst keeps Wednesday in the hunt: Arsenal fail to follow Wright path to victory as fatigue brings a disappointing stalemate00:02
BA plans massive rights issue to shore up its balance sheet: Shareholders face cash call as investments in rival airlines take big carrier's debts to more than pounds 2bn00:02
Casino probe may take in Swiss bank: Correction00:02
The price of a miracle: The Peto method of treating handicapped children was hailed as a breakthrough, and the Government has poured money into it. But where was the00:02
FILM / For a few dollars, Moore00:02
BOOKS / The state of the heart: The Mind Book of the Year Award may be a little-known prize, but it lets the voiceless speak volumes about the society we live in. Fay Weldon, one of its judges, explains00:02
The special relationship is knowing when to say you're sorry: Caught in a jam of would-be advisers, this US president needs time to think about Europe, says Professor Donald Cameron Watt00:02
Then & Now: Science fiction00:02
Tide of history turns on river of steel: The fall of Swan Hunter seems to signal the end of Tyneside's long and famous shipbuilding tradition