00:02
Rugby Union: Victory turns on Lewis00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Yes, it's funny, but just tell us when to laugh00:02
Arts: Gone to ground: In the Sixties he was a superstar - the Hamlet of his generation, a dark and dangerous presence. But he has not been seen on stage in Britain for 15 years. Whatever happened to Nicol Williamson?00:02
Cricket: Skill stifled by soulless tamperers: Simon Hughes exposes the damaging obsessions of the county cricket coach00:02
Profile: Private man of honour: John Profumo: When the scandal broke 30 years ago, he resigned; they do things differently now. Geraldine Bedell looks at an exemplary life00:02
Letter: Children need specialist nurses00:02
Army sends women into front line00:02
Sport in short: Basketball00:02
Cricket: Relentless Boon thwarts England00:02
Bunhill: Dunne in00:02
Racing: Roberts' intrepid swoop00:02
Interiors: Where vases go to die: No cowardly monochrome for a designer brought up in Africa who loves British turn-of-the-century pottery. Dinah Hall explores a curious mix of exotic and traditional - and wonders about the dusting00:02
Some why oh whys for 'Who's Who'00:02
Summer blood sport for all - by courtesy of the mink00:02
Invesco defies regulators: SIB orders group to pay millions into Maxwell fund after it broke the rules (CORRECTED)00:02
Leading Article: John the Unsteady00:02
The Sunday Preview: The five best exhibitions00:02
Cricket: Glamorgan take charge00:02
Letter: We don't need more roads00:02
Art Market: Up for sale00:02
Part time workers set the trend: Paul Gosling on the changing employee patterns in the EC00:02
Captain Moonlight's notebook00:02
Fishing Lines: Hooked and gift trapped00:02
RADIO / Pass the hashish fudge, please00:02
Losses force Trafalgar to explore new cash call00:02
Sport in short: Tennis00:02
BOOK REVIEW / When a silent minority finds a voice . . .: Sleeping on a wire - by David Grossman, trs Haim Watzman: Cape pounds 17.9900:02
Coal sale puts heat on Hanson adviser00:02
Lloyd's managers face no-confidence vote00:02
CINEMA / Confused, meaningless, racist and dangerous00:02
Sport in short: Football00:02
The Sunday Preview: Art00:02
Tennis: Martina pockets loose change00:02
Football: It's the way we make 'em: The system, as much as Graham Taylor, should be blamed. Norman Fox reports00:02
You work it out, you get it wrong00:02
Capital show by split funds00:02
England, our England, the edge moves ever nearer: A hotel and a Test match: metaphors on the brink00:02
Football: Awaiting a grand entrance: Jasper Rees on alternatives to Taylor00:02
Letter: Students are not to blame for poor written English00:02
Letter: Students are not to blame for poor written English00:02
Country singer Conway Twitty dies in hospital00:02
TELEVISION: A crowning glory, even now00:02
Fashion: Simple Colour00:02
EXHIBITIONS / A touch of middle class: The recent work of Tony Bevan, hard man of new British art, reveals a soft underbelly00:02
Making a play for success00:02
No Fiona appeal00:02
Paperbacks00:02
Modernism has melted at the edges: the gallery grows out of the cliffside: Jan Dalley reports on the new Tate due to open in St Ives and the colony of 20th-century artists who inspired it00:02
Football: Cautious Yorath fighting shy of counting too many sheep: Trevor Haylett reports from Torshavn on Wales' attempt to save British face00:02
Classical Music / Forty years on, a hit: It was the official opera of the Coronation, but the record label was chicken. Michael White explains00:02
Cries & Whispers00:02
Yeltsin decree00:02
Public Services Management: The tender problem of buying in services: Competitive bids can lower costs but may not guarantee that people are served. Paul Gosling reports00:02
Letter00:02
Trading Standards: Will customer now shop for fair play?: Group plans to flag products that are Third World-friendly00:02
Letter00:02
City File: Countrywide is drain on Hambros00:02
Penalty charges cast a chill over friendly overdraft00:02
Letter: Communication problems in the dolphinarium00:02
Fowler rallies support for Major00:02
Hartstone suspends executive00:02
Science: Dammed to destruction: For thousands of years the Nile fertilised Egypt. No longer. Fred Pearce on a catastrophe in the making00:02
Sport in short: Cycling00:02
Overheard00:02
Opinions: How important is personal grooming?00:02
'Pay as you learn' shock for students00:02
Business Information Service: This week00:02
Fishermen net drugs00:02
ROCK / Digging it all again00:02
Cricket: Lathwell's vain heroics00:02
He just didn't give a damn: Alan Clark's unattractive self-portrait masks a complex nature, writes Michael Cockerell00:02
Postel warning00:02
Immigration: Solingen: Hate fuelled boy who loved fire: Associated Press00:02
Cricket: Terry slows Hants slide00:02
Tenants stuck with tax collection: If your landlord is abroad, you are liable for the levy on his rent. Sue Fieldman reports00:02
A policeman 'stamped on me'00:02
Property: Bargains leave the basement: Time was when pounds 65,000 wouldn't buy the humblest of hovels, let alone a place in the country. Until the recession, that is. Caroline McGhie reports00:02
Rate for top-up mortgage goes through the ceiling: Sue Fieldman on a borrower resisting a 'discretionary' interest rise00:02
Letter: Cholera victim deserves dignity00:02
Cricket: Northants hit hold-up00:02
Security plans00:02
Rugby Union: McGeechan looks for the loopholes: Chris Rea in Dunedin finds both protagonists facing problems before the first Test next week00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The camera obscurer: Robinson - by Christopher Petit, Cape pounds 8.9900:02
Cricket: Hooper fills Kent's void00:02
Index00:02
Sport in short: Badminton00:02
Letter: Increasingly angry strains of a new Skye Boat Song00:02
How to keep calm the natural way - or not: Herbal tranquillisers are sold as a healthy answer to stress. But do they work? Callum Murray finds out00:02
Sport in short: Baseball00:02
Era of compromise is dawning in Spain: It was a campaign where issues such as the economy were hardly contested00:02
Secret life of the VAT number: Finding out whether a company is registered to collect excise tax proves to be far from simple, writes Mary Wilson00:02
Shares: Think small to rake in big gains00:02
Bunhill: Harris tester00:02
Cricket: Botham in the mood00:02
The Sunday Preview: Theatre00:02
Last-gasp stand of smoking die-hards: Patrick Cockburn in Washington on America's burning obsession00:02
The Sunday Preview: The five best plays00:02
Manufacturing: Design team names its own game: Chris Arnot on the couple who made their mark with personalised golf products00:02
Hollywood's violent end00:02
Bunhill: Portrait of Asil as an art collector00:02
Tennis: Brittle Graf still too strong for Fernandez00:02
Letter: 'Relentless flow' figures accurate00:02
BOOK REVIEW / One degree under in the family triangle: Sacheverell Sitwell: Splendours and Miseries by Sarah Bradford, Sinclair-Stevenson pounds 2000:02
BOOK REVIEW / Adrift with a vocal hero: Touch and go by Sam McAughtry, Blackstaff pounds 6.9500:02
Marketing: Cider sales keep bubbling with trend-setting ideas: Smart young things swap bottled lagers for a thoroughly English brew00:02
Names? I could call them a few00:02
How we met: Neil Kinnock and Barbara Castle00:02
What can they do when the fish are gone?: James Cusick on the crisis facing Scottish villages00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Unacceptable faces of a Tiny empire: Tiny Rowland: A Rebel Tycoon by Tom Bower, Heinemann pounds 16.9900:02
Leading Article: Poor pay as a right00:02
Athletics: Christie back in form00:02
Sport in short: Speedway00:02
Murder hunt00:02
Taxpayers get their independent referee00:02
Raiding the multinationals00:02
Cricket: In search of the secrets of the underworld: Richard Williams discovers what has made the Old Trafford pitch turn00:02
Bunhill: Raw deal00:02
Show People 80: Small but perfectly formed: Dudley Moore00:02
Bunhill: Wong Sing Jones00:02
Sport in short: Rugby League00:02
Newspapers press Brooke for free hand in ITV bids00:02
Profile: Go-getter of Grub Street: Tim Hely Hutchinson has gone from young fogey to publishing giant. Patrick Hosking reports on the man behind Headline Hodder00:02
Cycling: Mattan's win is a relief for Banana00:02
Bunhill: Rank legend00:02
Chaos at Yeltsin's Kremlin debate00:02
Immigration: France: Fraternity and an insidious fear of foreigners00:02
Letter: Increasingly angry strains of a new Skye Boat Song00:02
Mighty mouse turns ten and shows more muscle00:02
Economics: Public sector must change its culture00:02
Cricket: Waqar hits fiery form00:02
Football: Taylor hints at Gascoigne's problems00:02
On sale: Burton's unknown art00:02
Art Market: Victorian values: Official objections and a disastrous fire ended an American millionaire's plans for a museum here to show his splendid 19th-century paintings. Now he is giving - and selling - up. Geraldine Norman reports00:02
Arts-goers are mainly old and rich00:02
Heseltine raised 'some concern' on Nadir case00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The ghostly view from the summit: The worm and the star - by John Fuller, Chatto pounds 9.9900:02
Bridge00:02
Harris pledge on dual role00:02
BAA accused00:02
Saying of the week00:02
Gardening: Keen on fruit: Cherries, plums and peaches00:02
City terror insurance to cost firms 300% more00:02
BOOK REVIEW / . . . is anyone listening?: May the Lord in his mercy be kind to Belfast - by Tony Parker, Cape pounds 16.9900:02
Travel: Paradises regained: Many Fifties dream holidays have been nightmares for years. But even the Costa Brava still has idyllic spots. Over the next three weeks, Jill Crawshaw reviews old favourites00:02
Immigration: Europe's United Front: Citizens of the thirteenth country: EC unanimous on restrictions - Hidden cost of cheap labour - German law less anti-foreign than Britain's - Racist violence00:02
A dodgy system, but it brought home the pasta00:02
The Sunday Preview: Dance00:02
Cricket: Such entering pressure zone: Glenn Moore reports on the tests and challenges which are lying in wait for England's latest spin-bowling hero00:02
Labour vote clash00:02
Hats off as BA bows in dispute00:02
Then & Now: Last orders00:02
Letter: Cholera victim deserves dignity00:02
Citibank faces hacking charge: Court to hear claim that detectives hired by US giant delved into British banks' computers for data on a client, writes Jason Nisse00:02
Parents shun school testing00:02
Real Life: When Jackie was a man called Gordon: Linda Grant on the life - and death - of the greatest teen magazine of them all00:02
Taking the international call: BT's deal with MCI deal seems a high price to pay for furthering global ambitions, writes Mary Fagan00:02
Rugby Union: Lions are shaken in defeat00:02
Plutonium 'could double nuclear disposal cost'00:02
Records00:02
INTERVIEW / Cambridge man who led the Russian race for the bomb: In an interview with Andrew Higgins in Moscow, the man who built Stalin's atom bomb reveals the secret history of the Soviet nuclear effort00:02
Bid to avert relocation tax blow: Industry warns that restricting relief will cost jobs. Russell Hotten reports00:02
Labour rift over plea for Thorp00:02
Firms seek a way to skirt tax clamp on car perks: Many drivers might be better off in taking the cash and switching to private ownership. Brian Friedman reports00:02
Letter00:02
Sport in short: Rallying00:02
THEATRE / Restyled Sweeney is a cut above00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Rootless in Academe: The passion of Michel Foucault by James Miller, HarperCollins pounds 18: The lives of Michel Foucault by David Macey, Hutchinson pounds 2000:02
In Brief00:02
Your Money: Societies have room to rent00:02
Books: A party animal: He is devious, snobbish, lecherous and disloyal, but his diaries make compelling reading: Alan Clark has thrown caution to the wind in his revelations on the Great Game00:02
Bosses neglect staff for systems00:02
Immigration: Germany: Hand of welcome keeps visitors at arm's length00:02
Ethical bank updates its homespun style00:02
Golf: The rewards of putting it right: Bernhard Langer has three times cured the putting 'yips'. Paul Trow outlines his strong-arm tactics00:02
White-knuckle ride on the Soros express: The Wall Street wizard is having to take more and more risks to maintain the huge returns for investors00:02
Political Commentary: A PM with his position in peril00:02
Common Complaints: The Guillain-Barre syndrome00:02
An academic row turns personal00:02
Chess00:02
Sport in short: Golf00:02
Something to take your mind off the IRA00:02
Motoring: Auto biography: The Citroen ZX Volcane in 0-60 seconds by John Fordham00:02
Anniversaries00:02
Inside Story: Hollywood: when the killing had to stop: This summer, family entertainment takes the place of celluloid gore. Have we seen the last of the action hero? Phil Reeves reports from Los Angeles00:02
Sport in short: Athletics00:02
Accountancy: Mysteries of the audit revealed: A survey shows that the prejudices of small firms don't add up00:02
CINEMA / Farewell serenade to the queen of silents00:02
Attali fighting for his life: Ernie Stern of the World Bank is sounded out about taking the top job at the EBRD00:02
The Sunday Preview: Jazz00:02
Travel: Peaceful pottering in Portugal: The rape of the once-Arcadian southern coast has been halted, and aficionados are being enticed back by its modest charms00:02
City: Bold BT makes the right connection00:02
Cricket: Man in the middle: Folland's career move proves a minor miracle: Nick Folland00:02
Sport in short: Rugby Union00:02
Letter: The secret ballot should be used in Parliament00:02
Charity to change the shape of the world: Gail Counsell examines the generosity of a politically motivated market shaker00:02
Riot police on alert after council estate rampage00:02
Sport in short: Hockey00:02
Student stress levels worry advice centres00:02
Sport in short: American Football00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Daddy's girl: Eating Children by Jill Tweedie; Viking pounds 15.9900:02
Letter: Most Northern Irish want peace00:02
The Broader Picture: Genesis of a party headache00:02
Q & A: Polysyllabic performers . . . . . and an amateur ode to Joy00:02
Letter: Students are not to blame for poor written English00:02
Immigration: Latest attacks: Clashes disrupt peace demonstration as right-wing arsonists strike again: Agencies00:02
Letter: Students are not to blame for poor written English00:02
Tennis: Courier's forehand ready for business as usual: Guy Hodgson reports from Paris on a quiet American's bid for a third title00:02
Deaths00:02
DANCE / Little acorns in the shadow of one mighty oak00:02
Media queens battle for ears of the sisters who tune in for themselves00:02
My Biggest Mistake00:02
The Sunday Preview: Rock00:02
Motor Racing: Mansell seventh on grid00:02
'Poll tax effect' distorts boundary review00:02
The Agreeable world of Wallace Arnold: As I remember it . . .00:02
Golf: Mason tries for control on his cruise00:02
Letter00:02
Boxing: Duff's dealing leaves McKenzie eclipsed by Bruno: Jonathan Rendall on a champion who loses out in the business of boxing00:02
Sport in short: Motor Cycling00:02
Innocents trapped by deadly red tape00:02
Man held over Katrina killing00:02
Sport in short: Australian Rules00:02
Lloyd's counts cost of keeping 'The Espresso Machine' sweet: Jay Thompson on more dents in a battered institution00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The magical mythology tour: The marriage of Cadmus and harmony by Roberto Calasso trs Tim Parks, Cape pounds 19.99