00:02
Cable giant rides out of the West: Flotation should value TV company at pounds 1.5bn00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Rayer gives Wales ray of hope: Two-try replacement has the Scottish reeling Elwood stands alone as Ireland are swamped00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Grave and muffled beats: Dante's drum-kit by Douglas Dunn: Faber, pounds 12.99/pounds 6.9900:02
BOOKS / Lithuanian Modernist00:02
Meter that goes with the flow: Oil pipelines may now be monitored without halting the process00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Arsenal dim the City lights00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Pointless to bash Japan00:02
Sport on TV: Blokes and banality on fantasy island00:02
Political Commentary: Back to hysteria, back to hypocrisy, back to the Sixties00:02
City & Business: Eurotunnel will not be another grande folie00:02
Almanack00:02
Bunhill: Ruddock off to Dublin00:02
Coma death00:02
Hockey: Hounslow lean on Crutchley00:02
Major's Woes: Adulterers should go: The Archbishop00:02
City File: Game for a Waddington offer00:02
Shares: Hitch a ride on a nice little runner: Profits and sales are gearing up for the climb back as car distributors turn the corner00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / A festival, but not of Britain00:02
Consultancy: Dividends or divorce: keeping it in the family: Efficient management meets its match in dynastic drama00:02
Icing on the cake for quality control: A computer system that memorises the way a product should look promises to streamline food inspection00:02
Racing: Maguire and Dunwoody mix it00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
Black power conquers the heart of apartheid00:02
Meter that goes with the flow: Oil pipelines may now be monitored without halting the process00:02
Romanians storm city as scam ruins millions00:02
Ferry fares00:02
Ferry fares00:02
Major's Woes: Poison of a new British Disease: Michael Portillo: The speech00:02
Fishing Lines: Why the purists are carping about Alien 400:02
THEATRE / Third time Lucie: The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol - Oxford Playhouse; Suicide and Manipulation - Finborough; Breaking the Bank - Lyric Hammersmith; Kit and the Widow - Vaudeville00:02
So lonely. . .Sting strands accountants00:02
German store stake00:02
Letter: We 'grow out' of religion only to become moral pygmies00:02
Rare tannery takes our pounds 30,000 award00:02
Personal Finance: Taxing initiative00:02
If Russians could eat fine speeches, all would be well00:02
Major's Woes: Poison of a new British Disease: Michael Portillo: The speech00:02
Captain Moonlight: It's for you00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Winning Combinations: Can you be stylish and warm? Our panel tests the latest thermal underwear00:02
Major's Woes: Chief hijacker piles on misery: The Right00:02
Snooker: Rex still a regal presence: Time is running out for a silver-haired relic of snooker's golden age to make an impact on the world: Guy Hodgson meets the elegant cue master braving the bravado of youth00:02
Big business grabs for the winning ticket: Jason Nisse assesses the chances of the bidders for the National Lottery00:02
Profile: Hunter of the truth: Lord justice Scott: With the Government rattled, Paul Routledge looks at the man John Major now has to face00:02
Rugby round-up: Elbow grief00:02
ART / Exhibitions: Anyone could do it, and often they did: Modigliani is one of history's most easily forged artists. But the RA's new show is guaranteed genuine. Tim Hilton investigates00:02
Guard accuses skater of plot to cripple rival00:02
Sinn Fein to tell of peace talks00:02
BOOKS / Lithuanian Modernist00:02
Chunnel link forced underground00:02
Words: Tabloid00:02
Rugby league preview: Tunks in a bind00:02
Letter: How to pay for the Tube00:02
SIB looks at Texan oil company's claims00:02
The Yuk factor: Correction00:02
Guard accuses skater of plot to cripple rival00:02
Letter: How to pay for the Tube00:02
TRAVEL / Playtime in Paris: It's renowned as the city of romance, but the French capital offers plenty for les enfants too. Madeleine Marsh reports00:02
An Englishman's home is his council house00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Shearer's final say00:02
Flat Earth: Clearing his name00:02
Hockey: Hounslow lean on Crutchley00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Smoke signals: Cigarettes are sublime by Richard Klein: Duke University Press, pounds 19.9500:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Tory MPs with whom I've shared a bed00:02
Investors recover over pounds 22m00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Rear Window: The Merry Protestant who died a Catholic: A royal conversion00:02
Cricket: Derek Pringle selects six men on whom the Test series may turn00:02
Flat Earth: Loss of face at the US Postal Service00:02
No scandals, we're French: Patrick Marnham on a privacy law that protects politicians who misbehave00:02
Coma death00:02
Financial stress test for German industry: Banks fall out as conglomerate pays price for futures dealing00:02
Ladbroke 'in discussions' over sell-offs00:02
Sex attack charges00:02
Fighting the tide00:02
Car insurance aftershock: Victim of City bombing faced battle over damage claim00:02
Major's Woes: Wandsworth next, claims Hain: Flagships falter00:02
The dangers of memory: Jane's story00:02
BOOKS / Same old story, a fight for love and glory: William Scammell admires the rising new wave of poetry coming out of Ireland, both north and south00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Deadly Lacroix drums up a storm00:02
Campaign on overpaid tax00:02
WEW expansion00:02
Romanians storm city as scam ruins millions00:02
Cricket: Tall order for a new order: Derek Pringle believes that England's young side can give the West Indies a close run00:02
Bunhill: Balls to Sir Richard00:02
Labour calls for murder inquiry00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / A festival, but not of Britain00:02
Chunnel link forced underground00:02
First-Hand: I still grieve for my mother's suicide: When a mother kills herself, as it seems the Countess of Caithness did, the pain for her children can be unbearable. Jenny Danks tells her own story00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Fighting the tide00:02
A will does not always mean there is a way: Even a simple note about your estate needs a legal eye00:02
Gateway plans to lose its name00:02
Q&A: Rugby league's Nazi business . . . and the ping-pong flipper00:02
Major's Woes: Wandsworth next, claims Hain: Flagships falter00:02
Almanack: Torch diplomacy00:02
Rugby Union / Courage League: Swift soars after midfield magic: Bath regain footing on the high ground while Harlequins sew it up with a no-frills pattern00:02
ART / Exhibitions: Anyone could do it, and often they did: Modigliani is one of history's most easily forged artists. But the RA's new show is guaranteed genuine. Tim Hilton investigates00:02
Helicopter death00:02
OFT to limit ad sales in TV mergers00:02
ARTS / Show People: An unexpected source of success: The Cranberries00:02
New wildlife chief00:02
Football: Keen edge to Wolves00:02
Pounds 2.5bn CrossRail plan in jeopardy00:02
Football: Keen edge to Wolves00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: Pepper by Tristan Hawkins: Flamingo, pounds 5.9900:02
Football / FA Premiership: Villa make capital00:02
Political Commentary: Back to hysteria, back to hypocrisy, back to the Sixties00:02
Song man Nilsson dies at 5200:02
Tailored courses favoured00:02
As others see it00:02
Ladbroke 'in discussions' over sell-offs00:02
US opens its ghoulish Cold War closet: Nation shocked by revelations of secret radiation experiments on vulnerable people - including pregnant women00:02
Labour calls for murder inquiry00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Shearer's final say00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Winning Combinations: Can you be stylish and warm? Our panel tests the latest thermal underwear00:02
Captain Moonlight: Maxwell00:02
Leadership: The secrets of the master class: The seminar where tomorrow's chief executives learn from today's bosses00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Squash: Jackman given the boot00:02
City fears rising pound00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on fine New Zealand Sauvignons00:02
Words: Tabloid00:02
TELEVISION / York on ads: No 11: InterCity00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Cardiff acclaims a feast after the famine: Clem Thomas comments00:02
Leading Article: Our tolerance wears thinner00:02
Almanack00:02
Bridge falters over troubled waters: Fears of an ecological disaster ground plans for a 10-mile road link between Sweden and Denmark00:02
Friendly fungus00:02
Letter: The cavaliers of Westminster00:02
Bunhill: MCC committee00:02
Bolivian justices face Senate trial00:02
City & Business: A TV dog's dinner00:02
Are you in the top 100?00:02
ART / Exhibitions: Life, the universe and everything: The Hulton Deutsch Collection contains 15 million photographs. Out of it the Barbican has made the first unmissable show of 199400:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Letter: Private schools answer the needs of parents not children00:02
Almanack: Snub for Jacks00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Sweet harmony of a poor boy's tale: Body and soul by Frank Conroy: Hamish Hamilton, pounds 14.9900:02
Sailing: Conner gets his second wind00:02
Bond winners00:02
If Russians could eat fine speeches, all would be well00:02
Almanack: Gala's day is lost in a Highland fling00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
Captain Moonlight: It's for you00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Ipswich prove a basic point00:02
Profile: Hunter of the truth: Lord justice Scott: With the Government rattled, Paul Routledge looks at the man John Major now has to face00:02
Opinions: What is your favourite poem?00:02
Table tennis: Chen and then nothing00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In the front line, not the boardroom: Battling for the news: The Rise of the Woman Reporter by Anne Sebba: John Curtis/Hodder, pounds 19.9900:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Deadly Lacroix drums up a storm00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Drudges in nice dresses: A woman's view: How Hollywood Spoke to Women 1930-1960 by Jeanine Basinger: Chatto, pounds 14.9900:02
Major's Woes: Adulterers should go: The Archbishop00:02
The Broader Picture: A nation of record-breakers00:02
Economics: The full impact of a half-measure00:02
Letter: Sperm kits put profit first00:02
TRAVEL / Hobby Holidays: Singing & dancing00:02
Almanack: Gala's day is lost in a Highland fling00:02
Letter: Private schools answer the needs of parents not children00:02
Personal Finance: Taxing initiative00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
GARDENING / All things white and beautiful: In the clear light of winter the beauty of a garden's design is revealed, writes Mary Keen (CORRECTED)00:02
Charities bow to culture where efficiency is not voluntary00:02
The Yuk factor: Correction00:02
Cricket: Malcolm can win test of the fast men: Wayward son of the islands allies accuracy to pace as he tries to match the threat of Ambrose and co: Stephen Brenkley talks to the speed merchant who is also a fast learner00:02
Captain Moonlight: Is sharing a bed suspicious, Stan? It certainly isn't, Ollie00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
What do you do if it floods?: Torrential rain has disrupted the lives of people around Chichester. We follow one couple battling to save their home00:02
Captain Moonlight: Left-footers are back]00:02
CDU picks Herzog00:02
Bunhill: Garnetts shine in limelight00:02
Computer generates Beirut's noble past00:02
Football: Good sport on a learning curve: Simon O'Hagan hears how Karren Brady, Birmingham City's managing director, is fighting the flak00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
Sun signs00:02
BNP clash00:02
PROPERTY / Cut-price council houses: Fancy a mansion? Local authorities have large houses they must sell. Caroline McGhie finds big bargains00:02
Football: Celtic are lost in the fog00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Cardiff acclaims a feast after the famine: Clem Thomas comments00:02
Rugby Union: Leicester investors show return: Chris Rea assesses the coach who has made the Tigers burn bright00:02
Bunhill: Ruddock off to Dublin00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Visiting Professor by Robert Littell: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
The Independent on Sunday Bestsellers List00:02
Skating: Witt suppresses her worries00:02
Firebomb damage00:02
As others see it00:02
City & Business: Eurotunnel will not be another grande folie00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Captain Moonlight: Memoirs of a train-robbing man00:02
Almanack: Snub for Jacks00:02
THE ART OF THEATRE / Nicholas Wright's Masterclass: 11 Anagnorisis00:02
Desperate people in the insurance jungle: Fred Redwood only sold cover for a short time, but he saw quite enough of a murky world00:02
Bunhill: Allied to Zen00:02
No handicap for insurance00:02
Boat-buyers who get that sinking feeling: Sellers can hide unpaid debts behind lax registration rules00:02
Mr Blobby bounces in from Peking: Fair shows the decline of British toys00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Ipswich prove a basic point00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
ART / Exhibitions: Life, the universe and everything: The Hulton Deutsch Collection contains 15 million photographs. Out of it the Barbican has made the first unmissable show of 199400:02
Wars loom in world of J R Hartley: All is not tranquil on the river bank00:02
We have always been a grey land, but once we believed in something00:02
Bond winners00:02
Song man Nilsson dies at 5200:02
Letter: Aids was not 'hidden agenda'00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In the front line, not the boardroom: Battling for the news: The Rise of the Woman Reporter by Anne Sebba: John Curtis/Hodder, pounds 19.9900:02
What a way to treat a child: Is our government wilfully disregarding the needs of children? Peter Newell examines an abysmal record00:02
Israel tries to soften up Syria on eve of talks00:02
TELEVISION / York on ads: No 11: InterCity00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Blacks-only housing brings ghetto fears00:02
Blacks-only housing brings ghetto fears00:02
RADIO / Safety in numbers00:02
ROCK / Some of the little things he does are still magic00:02
TRAVEL / Hobby Holidays: Singing & dancing00:02
Skiing: Bell claims higher ground: Ortlieb tames the Hahnenkamm but British flag flies high in ultimate challenge00:02
Rare tannery takes our pounds 30,000 award00:02
Bunhill: Leigh delivers broadside to successors00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Now the reindeer have moved on: The Peopling of London - ed Nick Merriman: Museum of London, pounds 9.9500:02
Fishing Lines: Why the purists are carping about Alien 400:02
Cricket: Javed's omission sparks revolt00:02
TELEVISION / By George, I think they've got it00:02
Firebomb damage00:02
Golf: Mist closes in on Clark00:02
Tennis: The great barrier: Guy Hodgson discusses the causes and effects of a lost Australian generation00:02
Flat Earth: Loss of face at the US Postal Service00:02
GARDENING / All things white and beautiful: In the clear light of winter the beauty of a garden's design is revealed, writes Mary Keen (CORRECTED)00:02
Bunhill: Balls to Sir Richard00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Undercover with a guide leader: 'The Good Food Guide' is famous for the acerbity of its judgements. Its new editor, says Michael Bateman, is the most genial of men. So will his guide still have teeth?00:02
BOOK REVIEW / And even a populist prat must have his pratfall: The Book of Guys by Garrison Keillor: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
Profile: Legend with the right stuff: Joe Montana00:02
Style Revivals: From the light house: Correction00:02
Football round-up: Dons gain revenge in rematch00:02
Bunhill: Allied to Zen00:02
Rugby Union / Courage League: Bray capitalises on indiscretion: Bath regain footing on the high ground while Harlequins sew it up with a no-frills pattern00:02
EATING OUT / At home with Pino and Anna00:02
Financial stress test for German industry: Banks fall out as conglomerate pays price for futures dealing00:02
Helicopter death00:02
Investors recover over pounds 22m00:02
We have always been a grey land, but once we believed in something00:02
Profile: Legend with the right stuff: Joe Montana00:02
Rugby Union / Courage League: Bray capitalises on indiscretion: Bath regain footing on the high ground while Harlequins sew it up with a no-frills pattern00:02
Economics: The full impact of a half-measure00:02
Golf: Davies drives to victory after bogey00:02
Whatever you pay adds up to pounds 19200:02
Letter: Auditors were not writing a dream ticket, just a first draft00:02
Screen secrets: an office user's guide: Helen Fielding on 'Netiquette': the new social codes of the computerised workplace00:02
New wildlife chief00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Old Man Who Read Love Stories by Luis Sepulveda, trs Peter Bush: Souvenir, pounds 10.9900:02
Sailing: Conner gets his second wind00:02
TELEVISION / By George, I think they've got it00:02
The dangers of memory: Can 'regression therapy' by hypnosis produce false recollections of sexual abuse? Hester Lacey reports00:02
Insurers feel the heat from the high street: Banks and building societies aiming for half of pounds 17bn market00:02
BP planning oil project west of the Shetlands00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
FILM / No crock of gold at the end of this rainbow alliance00:02
Sex attack charges00:02
BP planning oil project west of the Shetlands00:02
US opens its ghoulish Cold War closet: Nation shocked by revelations of secret radiation experiments on vulnerable people - including pregnant women00:02
Cable giant rides out of the West: Flotation should value TV company at pounds 1.5bn00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A city that beggars the imagination: The Faber Book of London - ed A N Wilson, pounds 17.5000:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: Et Tu Babe by Mark Leyner: Flamingo, pounds 5.9900:02
TRAVEL / A Writer's Britain: On England's roof: Among the lowering crags, heather-clad moors and still waters of Wharfedale, Keith Waterhouse recalls a youth that wasn't quite misspent; though he tried00:02
Boxing: Hide, hype and the hotheads: Jonathan Rendall traces the long and colourful history of pre-fight hysteria00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Walker is lifted by Cottee's industry00:02
Boxing: Hide, hype and the hotheads: Jonathan Rendall traces the long and colourful history of pre-fight hysteria00:02
Football: Good sport on a learning curve: Simon O'Hagan hears how Karren Brady, Birmingham City's managing director, is fighting the flak00:02
What a way to treat a child: Is our government wilfully disregarding the needs of children? Peter Newell examines an abysmal record00:02
Israel tries to soften up Syria on eve of talks00:02
Captain Moonlight: Is sharing a bed suspicious, Stan? It certainly isn't, Ollie00:02
Dumping the poor: Nick Cohen unravels the homes-for-votes scandal engulfing Dame Shirley Porter and reveals that her successors on Westminster council are still . . .00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Visiting Professor by Robert Littell: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Letter: Dirty tricks by the busload00:02
Are you in the top 100?00:02
Tailored courses favoured00:02
Rugby round-up: Elbow grief00:02
Database00:02
German store stake00:02
The List00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Tory MPs with whom I've shared a bed00:02
THEATRE / Third time Lucie: The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol - Oxford Playhouse; Suicide and Manipulation - Finborough; Breaking the Bank - Lyric Hammersmith; Kit and the Widow - Vaudeville00:02
The disembodied corporation: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on fine New Zealand Sauvignons00:02
Leading Article: We shall not see their light again00:02
BOOKS / Same old story, a fight for love and glory: William Scammell admires the rising new wave of poetry coming out of Ireland, both north and south00:02
Campaign on overpaid tax00:02
The List00:02
Stalinism lives00:02
Bifu plea to Major00:02
Information: Service that's a credit to Big Brother: CCN's databases provide a good living from selling other people's business - but not all of it is bad news00:02
Topless but not dishless00:02
Car insurance aftershock: Victim of City bombing faced battle over damage claim00:02
Football round-up: Dons gain revenge in rematch00:02
The dangers of memory: Doris Sheppard's story00:02
Dumping the poor: Nick Cohen unravels the homes-for-votes scandal engulfing Dame Shirley Porter and reveals that her successors on Westminster council are still . . .00:02
How We Met: Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod00:02
The Broader Picture: A nation of record-breakers00:02
The disembodied corporation: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
Letter: We 'grow out' of religion only to become moral pygmies00:02
Captain Moonlight: Left-footers are back]00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Adultery - not as common as you might think00:02
Letter: No fee for entering the spirit00:02
BES investors angry as fees add to losses00:02
Sarajevo shelling eases00:02
Adultery - not as common as you might think00:02
Cycling: Moser misses the mark00:02
Letter: Dirty tricks by the busload00:02
Major's Woes: Gorman tries to sweep scandal off her doorstep: Housing difficulties00:02
Cycling: Moser misses the mark00:02
What do you do if it floods?: Torrential rain has disrupted the lives of people around Chichester. We follow one couple battling to save their home00:02
FILM / No crock of gold at the end of this rainbow alliance00:02
Bifu plea to Major00:02
Stalinism lives00:02
She's just a girl who won't cry rape: Katie Roiphe, enfant terrible of feminism, flies in00:02
How Much Do They Earn?: No 13: Bank Clerk00:02
So lonely. . .Sting strands accountants00:02
Letter: Sperm kits put profit first00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Table tennis: Chen and then nothing00:02
No scandals, we're French: Patrick Marnham on a privacy law that protects politicians who misbehave00:02
Cricket: Derek Pringle selects six men on whom the Test series may turn00:02
Style Revivals: From the light house: Correction00:02
Cricket: Malcolm can win test of the fast men: Wayward son of the islands allies accuracy to pace as he tries to match the threat of Ambrose and co: Stephen Brenkley talks to the speed merchant who is also a fast learner00:02
Sun signs00:02
Leadership: The secrets of the master class: The seminar where tomorrow's chief executives learn from today's bosses00:02
Football: Celtic are lost in the fog00:02
Bunhill: Leigh delivers broadside to successors00:02
Whatever you pay adds up to pounds 19200:02
Skating: Witt suppresses her worries00:02
Football: Cantona has United back at full cry: Hughes provides the decisive touch as Tottenham succumb to Frenchman's inimitable flair00:02
Public Services Management: Public benefits from leaner and fitter agency00:02
Letter: Private schools answer the needs of parents not children00:02
Information: Service that's a credit to Big Brother: CCN's databases provide a good living from selling other people's business - but not all of it is bad news00:02
TELEVISION / Long Runners: No 14: Neighbours00:02
How We Met: Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod00:02
The dangers of memory: Doris Sheppard's story00:02
Football: On the move00:02
A class less education00:02
Kooky or what?: Tori Amos, rock-babe-at-her-piano, was an overnight sensation: cute, talented and a little bit weird. But we've seen girls with sorrowful songs like her before. Will she outlast them?00:02
Stress 'led to suicide': Call for inquiry into athletics boss over claims that journalist harassed track star00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Grave and muffled beats: Dante's drum-kit by Douglas Dunn: Faber, pounds 12.99/pounds 6.9900:02
Major's Woes: Gorman tries to sweep scandal off her doorstep: Housing difficulties00:02
City & Business: A TV dog's dinner00:02
WEW expansion00:02
Rugby Union / Courage League: Swift soars after midfield magic: Bath regain footing on the high ground while Harlequins sew it up with a no-frills pattern00:02
Is Eurotunnel in too deep?: The pounds 10bn venture needs half the Channel traffic by 1996. A price war is just one of the likely snags. Patrick Hosking reports00:02
Sinn Fein to tell of peace talks00:02
Big business grabs for the winning ticket: Jason Nisse assesses the chances of the bidders for the National Lottery00:02
THE ART OF THEATRE / Nicholas Wright's Masterclass: 11 Anagnorisis00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Louise White00:02
Cricket: Tall order for a new order: Derek Pringle believes that England's young side can give the West Indies a close run00:02
Golf: Mist closes in on Clark00:02
Sport on TV: Blokes and banality on fantasy island00:02
Insurers feel the heat from the high street: Banks and building societies aiming for half of pounds 17bn market00:02
Letter: Private schools answer the needs of parents not children00:02
Cricket: Bat to basics as tour sags00:02
What the papers said about . . . T & D00:02
Stress 'led to suicide': Call for inquiry into athletics boss over claims that journalist harassed track star00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Sweet harmony of a poor boy's tale: Body and soul by Frank Conroy: Hamish Hamilton, pounds 14.9900:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Renault Espace V6 in 0-60 seconds00:02
What the papers said about . . . T & D00:02
TRAVEL / Playtime in Paris: It's renowned as the city of romance, but the French capital offers plenty for les enfants too. Madeleine Marsh reports00:02
Best and worst: Unit Trust Sectors00:02
Flat Earth: Publicity grab00:02
The dangers of memory: Jane's story00:02
Boat-buyers who get that sinking feeling: Sellers can hide unpaid debts behind lax registration rules00:02
Topless but not dishless00:02
Skiing: Bell claims higher ground: Ortlieb tames the Hahnenkamm but British flag flies high in ultimate challenge00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Villa make capital00:02
Best and worst: Unit Trust Sectors00:02
A will does not always mean there is a way: Even a simple note about your estate needs a legal eye00:02
Cricket: Javed's omission sparks revolt00:02
Tennis: Courier at home in heat: Bud Collins reports from Melbourne on the defending champion hoping to end a bad run00:02
A class less education00:02
No handicap for insurance00:02
Captain Moonlight: Memoirs of a train-robbing man00:02
ROCK / Some of the little things he does are still magic00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
Major's Woes: Chief hijacker piles on misery: The Right00:02
Friendly fungus00:02
Gateway plans to lose its name00:02
Q&A: Rugby league's Nazi business . . . and the ping-pong flipper00:02
Fair Trading: Ethical coffee full of beans: Cafe Direct has shown it can pay to do right by growers00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: Pepper by Tristan Hawkins: Flamingo, pounds 5.9900:02
EATING OUT / At home with Pino and Anna00:02
Captain Moonlight: Maxwell00:02
City File: Game for a Waddington offer00:02
Bolivian justices face Senate trial00:02
Snooker: Rex still a regal presence: Time is running out for a silver-haired relic of snooker's golden age to make an impact on the world: Guy Hodgson meets the elegant cue master braving the bravado of youth00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Drudges in nice dresses: A woman's view: How Hollywood Spoke to Women 1930-1960 by Jeanine Basinger: Chatto, pounds 14.9900:02
City fears rising pound00:02
Captain Moonlight: Who's Who00:02
Golf: Davies drives to victory after bogey00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Walker is lifted by Cottee's industry00:02
Is Eurotunnel in too deep?: The pounds 10bn venture needs half the Channel traffic by 1996. A price war is just one of the likely snags. Patrick Hosking reports00:02
BOOK REVIEW / And even a populist prat must have his pratfall: The Book of Guys by Garrison Keillor: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
Football / FA Premiership: Saints spark a revival00:02
Rear Window: The Merry Protestant who died a Catholic: A royal conversion00:02
Bridge falters over troubled waters: Fears of an ecological disaster ground plans for a 10-mile road link between Sweden and Denmark00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Smoke signals: Cigarettes are sublime by Richard Klein: Duke University Press, pounds 19.9500:02
Flat Earth: Publicity grab00:02
Captain Moonlight: Who's Who00:02
First-Hand: I still grieve for my mother's suicide: When a mother kills herself, as it seems the Countess of Caithness did, the pain for her children can be unbearable. Jenny Danks tells her own story00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
The dangers of memory: Can 'regression therapy' by hypnosis produce false recollections of sexual abuse? Hester Lacey reports00:02
Tennis: Courier at home in heat: Bud Collins reports from Melbourne on the defending champion hoping to end a bad run00:02
Tennis: The great barrier: Guy Hodgson discusses the causes and effects of a lost Australian generation00:02
SIB looks at Texan oil company's claims00:02
Letter: Auditors were not writing a dream ticket, just a first draft00:02
Consultancy: Dividends or divorce: keeping it in the family: Efficient management meets its match in dynastic drama00:02
Flat Earth: Clearing his name00:02
Shares: Hitch a ride on a nice little runner: Profits and sales are gearing up for the climb back as car distributors turn the corner00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Fowler set on a fair course00:02
BES investors angry as fees add to losses00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
ARTS / Show People: An unexpected source of success: The Cranberries00:02
Profile: Hollywood blockbuster: Sumner Redstone: A grumpy billionaire is loose in the entertainment world. Phil Reeves reports00:02
CDU picks Herzog00:02
The Independent on Sunday Bestsellers List00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Ekoku saves day for Deehan00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
TELEVISION / Long Runners: No 14: Neighbours00:02
Charities bow to culture where efficiency is not voluntary00:02
TRAVEL / A Writer's Britain: On England's roof: Among the lowering crags, heather-clad moors and still waters of Wharfedale, Keith Waterhouse recalls a youth that wasn't quite misspent; though he tried00:02
Computer generates Beirut's noble past00:02
Rugby league preview: Tunks in a bind00:02
Letter: Aids was not 'hidden agenda'00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations' Championship: Rayer gives Wales ray of hope: Two-try replacement has the Scottish reeling Elwood stands alone as Ireland are swamped00:02
Letter: No fee for entering the spirit00:02
Public Services Management: Public benefits from leaner and fitter agency00:02
Squash: Jackman given the boot00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Ekoku saves day for Deehan00:02
Letter: The cavaliers of Westminster00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Mr Blobby bounces in from Peking: Fair shows the decline of British toys00:02
BNP clash00:02
Leading Article: Our tolerance wears thinner00:02
'Neighbours' theme learned in the womb00:02
'Neighbours' theme learned in the womb00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Undercover with a guide leader: 'The Good Food Guide' is famous for the acerbity of its judgements. Its new editor, says Michael Bateman, is the most genial of men. So will his guide still have teeth?00:02
Pointless to bash Japan00:02
OFT to limit ad sales in TV mergers00:02
Leading Article: We shall not see their light again00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A city that beggars the imagination: The Faber Book of London - ed A N Wilson, pounds 17.5000:02
Bunhill: Troubled banker00:02
Almanack: Torch diplomacy00:02
Icing on the cake for quality control: A computer system that memorises the way a product should look promises to streamline food inspection00:02
Cricket: Bat to basics as tour sags00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Renault Espace V6 in 0-60 seconds00:02
Football: On the move00:02
Pounds 2.5bn CrossRail plan in jeopardy00:02
An Englishman's home is his council house00:02
Sarajevo shelling eases00:02
Comment: Worldly, but not wise00:02
Opinions: What is your favourite poem?00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: Et Tu Babe by Mark Leyner: Flamingo, pounds 5.9900:02
Letter: We 'grow out' of religion only to become moral pygmies00:02
Screen secrets: an office user's guide: Helen Fielding on 'Netiquette': the new social codes of the computerised workplace00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Saints spark a revival00:02
Right hails Portillo as next prime minister: Major at war with Tory press - Iraqgate ordeal looms - Council homes scandal spreads00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Louise White00:02
Bunhill: MCC committee00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Now the reindeer have moved on: The Peopling of London - ed Nick Merriman: Museum of London, pounds 9.9500:02
Black power conquers the heart of apartheid00:02
Letter: We 'grow out' of religion only to become moral pygmies00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
RADIO / Safety in numbers00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Fowler set on a fair course00:02
Racing: Maguire and Dunwoody mix it00:02
Bunhill: Troubled banker00:02
Football / FA Premiership: Arsenal dim the City lights00:02
Comment: Worldly, but not wise00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Old Man Who Read Love Stories by Luis Sepulveda, trs Peter Bush: Souvenir, pounds 10.9900:02
Profile: Hollywood blockbuster: Sumner Redstone: A grumpy billionaire is loose in the entertainment world. Phil Reeves reports00:02
Fair Trading: Ethical coffee full of beans: Cafe Direct has shown it can pay to do right by growers00:02
She's just a girl who won't cry rape: Katie Roiphe, enfant terrible of feminism, flies in00:02
Right hails Portillo as next prime minister: Major at war with Tory press - Iraqgate ordeal looms - Council homes scandal spreads00:02
Rugby Union: Leicester investors show return: Chris Rea assesses the coach who has made the Tigers burn bright00:02
Kooky or what?: Tori Amos, rock-babe-at-her-piano, was an overnight sensation: cute, talented and a little bit weird. But we've seen girls with sorrowful songs like her before. Will she outlast them?00:02
Football: Cantona has United back at full cry: Hughes provides the decisive touch as Tottenham succumb to Frenchman's inimitable flair00:02
Database00:02
Bunhill: Garnetts shine in limelight00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
How Much Do They Earn?: No 13: Bank Clerk00:02
Wars loom in world of J R Hartley: All is not tranquil on the river bank00:02
Desperate people in the insurance jungle: Fred Redwood only sold cover for a short time, but he saw quite enough of a murky world00:02
PROPERTY / Cut-price council houses: Fancy a mansion? Local authorities have large houses they must sell. Caroline McGhie finds big bargains