00:02
Football: Sublime subtlety of Giggs00:02
Battling duo lift BAe to the sky: William Kay on the pair who saved a struggling giant00:02
BOOKS / Rip van Winkle wakes in Albuquerque: Henry Roth wrote a powerful novel of 1930s New York, then fell silent for 60 years. Now 87, he is back. Jason Cowley reports00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Sarajevo yesterday: 'People were torn apart. Limbs were ripped off bodies': Western reaction00:02
TELEVISION / Struck dumb by little Genie00:02
Football: Sheffield steel puts Spurs out of shape00:02
Almanack: That's all, folks00:02
Tip of the cap to good service: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
Sarajevo yesterday: 'People were torn apart. Limbs were ripped off bodies': War to intensify00:02
Profile: Jolly Roger is flying high: Roger Luard: The head of Flextech tells Patrick Hosking of blue skies ahead00:02
Bunhill: Publisher hits brakes for train-spotter bores00:02
Beckwith guilty of Medgar Evers killing00:02
Economics: Strong pound will cut rates further00:02
EXHIBITIONS / If you go down to the woods today: Susan Lipper's sympathetic photographs show a society in decline. Candida Hofer's go even further, taking the people out altogether00:02
RECORDS / The IoS Playlist: The five best sounds of the moment00:02
Letter: No nerds in this fantasy00:02
O'Reilly seeks break in the cloud: Stephen Brenkley meets the Olympian whose ideal survives a terrible ordeal00:02
Letter: Prozac is not addictive00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
ART MARKET / Trapped in a Blue Period: Not even a hugely discounted Picasso can find a buyer today in recession-hit Tokyo, and the Japanese art world has been rocked by scandals. Geraldine Norman reports00:02
Letter: Nuclear waste in safe hands00:02
Racing: Dunwoody closing on Maguire00:02
First Hand: I was under 3ft of snow - it completely covered me: Last week's skiing tragedy reminded Alasdair Scobbie of the avalanche that could have killed him00:02
DANCE / Where there's a wheel: Mayerling00:02
Grief for skater00:02
TELEVISION / York on ads: No 14: GM's credit card00:02
THEATRE / The skull beneath the farce: Government Inspector - Tricycle; Dead Funny - Hampstead; Communicating Doors - Stephen Joseph, Scarborough; April in Paris - Ambassadors00:02
US opposes Lawson's OECD bid00:02
Odinga funeral00:02
TRAVEL / A Writer's Britain: Iron in the soul of the North: Not even a century and a half of industrial frenzy could spoil Cleveland for Jane Gardam. With its dramatic sea and long blue hills it is her ideal of beauty00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A toweringly infernal concept: The First Church of the New Millennium - Bryan Appleyard: Doubleday, pounds 14.9900:02
Homeowner's victory lost in the fine print: A leaseholder who won a court fight for his flat risks losing it under legal aid rules. Andrew Bibby reports00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Being bad by any other name: A History of Sin - Oliver Thomson: Canongate pounds 17.9,900:02
Letter: New benefits for employees00:02
Expanding markets: Eastern promise that may not deliver: Western businesses looking for opportunities in Russia could find it fraught with problems they did not expect00:02
Couple's accident policy dumped00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Graham Bell - Alpine skiing00:02
Leading Article: Inside Portillo's phrasebook . . .00:02
Letter: Foul play00:02
Football: Norman to be put on the spot00:02
BOOK REVIEW / High spirits again: An imaginative experience - Mary Wesley: Bantam, pounds 14.9900:02
Dirty Dogs Campaign: Poop-scoop offer and competition00:02
City & Business: Granada's final bid battle00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Faber Book of Vernacular Verse - ed Tom Paulin, pounds 9.9900:02
Overseas Football Round-up: A tale of two cities as Milanese face Romans00:02
Stores firebombed00:02
Film claims stir Lockerbie row00:02
Our world in their hands: The Rover takeover shows that businessmen, not politicians, pull the strings, says David Nicholson-Lord00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Parliament razed after day of riots over fish prices: Brittany stunned as historic building is destroyed00:02
Major on ropes over 'colossal' Portillo blunder00:02
Nuclear Fuels plans 'son of Thorp'00:02
Why fatherhood means never having to buy an Armani suit00:02
Dirty Dogs Campaign: Support for our campaign00:02
Flying Schneider's Cup triumph: Skiing00:02
Show People: Latest thing at the ballet: a jump-jet: Teddy Kumakawa00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations Championship: Jenkins points up the injustice for Ireland: England break Scottish spirit at the death as a wily fly-half saves Wales00:02
Rugby League Preview: Newlove's labours lost00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Torvill and Dean - Ice dancing00:02
Hedge funds bloom in City00:02
Captain Moonlight: Makeover for the men in eyeshades00:02
Pounds 1 Sunday Times00:02
Falt Earth: Broad sheep appeal00:02
Gas explosion suspected00:02
Family seeks pounds 75,000 in life insurance row: A widower was refused the pay-out because his wife missed several final premiums. Nic Cicutti reports00:02
US to invade Vietnam again00:02
Profile: Fiction with friction: Geraldine Bedell on how art imitates life for the former political profiler turned novelist00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Taking a crack at it: We sample seven nutcrackers. The hard shell won when it came to the crunch00:02
To bobbitt: short for to depenistrate00:02
Mob demands man00:02
Falt Earth: A lot of bottle00:02
Southgate ignited by Welch strikes: Hockey00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Mark Tout - Four-man bobsleigh00:02
What the papers said about . . . the Super Bowl00:02
The crazy sound of Gerry and the pause-makers00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Before and After - Rosellen Brown: Sceptre, pounds 5.9900:02
Football: Gunn goes off for Evans era: Richard Williams sees something of the old Liverpool in a turbulent game00:02
PROPERTY / On the slippery slope: Caroline McGhie explains why subsidence insurance is hard to come by in some areas00:02
BR depot was plagued by race and sex harassment00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations Championship: Callard the hero with cool to boot: England break Scottish spirit at the death as a wily fly-half saves Wales00:02
Football: Rovers' rich vein00:02
Rugby Union / Five Nations Championship: Cracks in the facade of the fortress: Clem Thomas comments00:02
Bunhill: Genesis to Exodus00:02
Demonstration over age of consent00:02
ROCK / Tres bien ensemble, tres bien ensemble00:02
Database00:02
ETCETERA / Design Dinosaurs: 2 The Cagoule00:02
RECORDS / New Release: St Etienne: Tiger Bay (Heavenly, CD/LP/tape)00:02
Blazer boy spurns Israel's blue-rinse benefactors00:02
FASHION / Secondhand seditionaries: High fashion rediscovered punk this year, but for some devotees the original designs never lost their appeal. Simon Dudfield reports on the collectors who will pay a fortune for secondhand clothes00:02
Best and worst: Unit Trust Performance00:02
Three die in house fire00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Worth their salt: Fresh, cured or marinated: there's no fish so versatile as the diminutive silver anchovy. Geraldene Holt investigates00:02
Defiant Muslims keep faith with shattered mosques: In the ruins of Banja Luka, Robert Block finds a community clinging on00:02
SCIENCE / There ain't no such animal: The American prairie vole is a doting father, a great lover and utterly faithful to his mate. The clue to his behaviour lies in a hormone also present in humans. Paul Simons reports00:02
Words00:02
The life and tragic death of Ulli Maier: The grief-stricken world of skiing is united in mourning for the heroine it lost: Simon O'Hagan shares the sense of loss as a nation weeps for its idol of the slopes00:02
The List00:02
Do they have what IT takes?00:02
My Biggest Mistake: James Dyson00:02
City & Business: No need for panic over US increase in interest rates00:02
Fishing Lines: China's good grub guide00:02
Sri Lankans opt for batting practice: Cricket00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Shares: When the boat comes in: Prospects of a global boom could transform the shipping and building industries When the boat comes in00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Audi S2 Estate in 0-60 seconds00:02
Taylor topples the new arrival: Tennis00:02
Expertise: Country cuteness catches a master: A fine art department pays dividends in Shrewsbury00:02
Football: Hearts hold on to their nerve00:02
Political Commentary: Westminster warms to the charms of the Older Man00:02
Paris plan lifts hopes on Euro Disney's empty streets00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Daily Bread: What the romantic novelist and socialite ate one day last week: Dame Barbara Cartland00:02
Dirty Dogs Campaign: Wanted: a solution that can really work: Readers call for registration, legislation, education (and in some cases - retaliation)00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: The gentleman on the Paddington payphone00:02
Taxpayers funded schools plan00:02
The villages of Kent have more to lament than the Channel rail link00:02
Bond winners00:02
Captain Moonlight: An unpopular pop picker00:02
CHILDREN / Developing step by step: Grandparents now face complex issues, says Brenda Houghton00:02
Captain Moonlight: The bare necessities00:02
Letter: Questions that scientists must answer on mad cow disease00:02
Letter: Hope for children with cancer00:02
Forgotten Beatle who will live again: Marianne Macdonald reports on the background to Backbeat, a film about the late guitarist Stuart Sutcliffe00:02
Football Round-up: Gordon gives Palace a tonic00:02
City & Business: BMW less than brutal00:02
Venetian tale of one city - or two?: La Serenissima votes on split00:02
Q & A: Keegan passes German test . . . and the down side of black00:02
Almanack: Cash the spoke in British wheels00:02
Cricket / West Indies Tour: Caddick acclaim all round: Ambrose lies in wait while England show familiar middle-order frailty00:02
Big Six edge out smaller audit firms: Sainsbury switch symptomatic of trend00:02
The Sharon Stone of agony aunts: Ruth Picardie meets Karen Krizanovich, adviser to the gay, young, and troubled00:02
Patten 'fury' at Malaysia dam deal: Minister 'thought Pergau not proper use of aid'00:02
Golf: Ailing Faldo left in Norman's slipstream00:02
Government by columnist: Geoffrey Wheatcroft on how an unelected press got to call the political shots00:02
Private eyes who are up to the mark00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Letter: Questions that scientists must answer on mad cow disease00:02
Letter: Lack of religious knowledge00:02
Sick cows 'worn out at two'00:02
Irish eyes on milers: Athletics00:02
Bunhill: Kelways blooms00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Chatto Book of Love Poetry - ed John Fuller, pounds 8.9900:02
BOOKS / Picasso's own poetry: Picasso: Collected Writings: Aurum Press, pounds 9000:02
Innovation: Researchers cotton on to dry printing process00:02
Letter: Questions that scientists must answer on mad cow disease00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Jilly Curry - Freestyle skiing00:02
O'Reilly seeks talks with editor of 'Independent'00:02
BMW to unravel Rover-Honda tie00:02
Cool Redwood ruffles the Welsh dragon00:02
New gay style mag chases pink pound00:02
Mandela takes fight to last Boer frontier: Afrikaner diehards beat the war drums00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Greyhound on the wrong side of the tracks: The Great American Bus Ride - Irma Kurtz: 4th Estate, pounds 6.9900:02
Comment: The cost of commitment00:02
Rugby League: Britain left in sevens limbo00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter picks some sherries and white burgundies00:02
Bunhill: Midem00:02
Exclusive: 'Aids' alert in British dairy herd00:02
Shares to dive on US rate rise: Fall won't amount to a crash, analysts say00:02
The Broader Picture: Shattering the City of Angels00:02
Was it really so bad?: While Britain was outraged by Gerry Adams in New York, the IRA's opponents in the US and Dublin take a different view00:02
Rugby League: Carling the disbeliever: Andrew Baker gathers opinion from the leading men of Murrayfield00:02
FILM / From Wayne's World to the olde worlde: Wayne's World 2 (PG); Les Visiteurs (15); Bodies, Rest and Motion (15); The Blue Kite (nc); The Conformist (18)00:02
Harding faces hearing but can compete: Figure Skating00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Peerless Flats - Esther Freud: Penguin, pounds 5.9900:02
John Kobal Photographic Portrait Award 1994: Sponsored by the Independent on Sunday and the Finnemore & Field group of companies00:02
Banks walk tightrope: Return to big profits could backfire in competition changes00:02
Public Services Management: Noise on the health front: Environmental officers are taking a higher profile, writes Mike George00:02
As others see us00:02
Motor racing ace's firm warned over car ads00:02
Opinions: How would you say: 'It's over'?: Durham cricketer Graeme Fowler: sent a fax to his wife saying he wanted a divorce00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Road to 1945 - Paul Addison: Pimlico, pounds 1000:02
Bunhill00:02
Christians caught in the crossfire: Members of Syriac sect driven from homes00:02
Rugby Union: From Wallaby to wannabe: Robert Low meets the Aussie who has designs on an England shirt00:02
Snow snow thick thick snow: Olympics00:02
Innovation: Brewers' health warning00:02
FASHION / Style Notes00:02
City File: Good news from Reuters00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Michael Dixon - Biathlon00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Nicky Gooch - Speed skating00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Quack quack: Affliction - Fay Weldon: HarperCollins, pounds 12.9900:02
Almanack: Burden of beasts00:02
Football: Flitcroft makes Lee feel at home00:02
Management: When a corporate resolution becomes mission impossible: A stated vision of the company may just be an illusion00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Pandemonium and the healing power of love: The rest of life - Mary Gordon: Bloomsbury, pounds 15.9900:02
How Honda let Rover go to strangers: Belief in its partner's independence was only one reason that the Japanese giant failed to acquire it. BMW also had the cash00:02
Quotes of the week00:02
Letter: Punishment can redeem00:02
Whinge: the oldest farm pest: Incomes have doubled in two years but the agricultural compulsion to moan remains irresistible00:02
BR's child care on the right lines: Helen Hague on the commercial arguments for nurseries in the workplace00:02
TRAVEL / Getting down to rock bottom: You may be seriously strapped for cash but you can still take a break, says Jill Crawshaw00:02
Murder raises pirate perils00:02
The prince, the trucker, and the Kwik-Fit fitter00:02
Captain Moonlight: A special relationship00:02
SIB surrender terms under fire00:02
Lomas laid low again: Table Tennis00:02
MOTORING / A clean pair of wheels: Martin Wright on persuading the car-loving public to take the healthy, green option00:02
Now money can grow on trees00:02
Football: Oldham show survival spirit00:02
Rear Window: Happy motoring in your home sweet home on wheels: The demise of the Dormobile00:02
BOOKS / W H Smith / IoS Family Book Quiz: Winners & Answers00:02
Husband charged00:02
NHS faces timebomb: An ombudsman's ruling has serious implications for the care of the elderly00:02
TRAVEL / Hobby Holidays: Gardening00:02
Heroin remands00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Swans, geese and ugly ducklings: The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century English Poetry, ed Ian Hamilton, pounds 2500:02
Football: Overson steals Blades' edge00:02
Rest of British: Who else can lead the world a dance at the Winter Games?: Martin Bell - Alpine skiing00:02
Sarajevo atrocity turns market into bloodbath00:02
Schroder alters buyout deadline00:02
Letter: Gridlocked00:02
It's a virtual revolution: Virtual reality, the technology that puts users in a digital universe, is emerging from Wonderland into a new world of computer-aided design - led by British firms. David Bowen on a strange journey00:02
Risky business as Toshack steps in buffer zone00:02
EATING OUT / A grave approach to grub: Fox and Goose, Fressingfield, Suffolk IP21 5PB. Tel: 037 986 247. Open Wednesday to Sunday for lunch and dinner. Average pounds 30 a head, set two-course lunch pounds 9.95. No credit cards accepted00:02
The Art of Theatre: Nicholas Wright's Masterclass: 14 Beginnings00:02
Dirty Dogs Campaign: Threats corner00:02
Home seller left whistling by solicitor complaint referee00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Impossible Vacation - Spalding Grey: Picador, pounds 5.9900:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Contemplating Adultery - Lotte & Joseph Hamburger: Pan, pounds 6.9900:02
Charity trustees win helpline00:02
Naked glider did it before00:02
Letter: Lack of religious knowledge00:02
How much does he earn?: No 16: Bernd Pischetsrieder, chairman of BMW.00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Miller picks a thorny rose: Rosenkavalier; Schumann & Friends00:02
Football: Rideout spells out the gulf00:02
Bunhill: Champagne sale00:02
Almanack00:02
Falt Earth: Off the party line00:02
Enter the bearded Bernd: John Eisenhammer in Frankfurt charts the rise of BMW's understated boss00:02
Personal Finance: M&S aims to remove sleaze from pensions00:02
How We Met: Helen Suzman and Sue MacGregor00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
Tories seek bank's help over party deficit00:02
Letter: Life in the old prison dogs yet00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: T S Eliot and Prejudice - Christopher Ricks: Faber, pounds 7.9900:02
Sport on TV: The Nolans and a game of better halves00:02
Blind Date wedding00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
CHILDREN / A second parenthood: The powerful emotions evoked by her first grandson took Leni O'Connell by surprise: looking after baby has all the pleasure and none of the pain when you are a grandma00:02
Days of prats, parties and panel games: Are you watching on the box? Julie Welch traces the history of punditry in the light of the Jimmy Hill-Alex Ferguson row00:02
Profile: Legends among the boots: The Boot Room00:02
Football: The age of Fjortoft00:02
Innovation: Paperwork at a standstill when cheques go digital00:02
Pounds 100,000 runaway00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Lives of the Great Songs: Soul with plenty of body: Take Me to the River: Some songs are born great, and some have greatness thrust upon them by clever art-school graduates. Tim de Lisle follows the path of an elastic classic00:02
RADIO / Short, but truly sweet00:02
Child assault case00:02
Letter: Lack of religious knowledge00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Outplacement: Recruitment specialists feel the pinch: Correction: Pauline Hyde00:02
Falt Earth: Do English roots lie in potatoes?00:02
Cricket / West Indies Tour: Curtly casts a giant shadow: Derek Pringle assesses the main weapon in the West Indians' armoury00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Faber Book of Contemporary Canadian Short Stories - ed Michael Ondaatje, pounds 7.9900:02
Teacher accuses bank of hard sell: NatWest is looking into a complaint that a customer was pressured to opt out of her pension scheme00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
Stock Exchange looks into Flextech share dealings00:02
Leading Article: A dam waste of money00:02
Bunhill: Fair weather friend00:02
Letter: No accounting for ideals00:02
Gould hits at party silence00:02
TELEVISION / Long Runners: No 17: Blind Date