00:02
Sport Briefly / Motorcycling: Doohan the man to chase00:02
RCs fight over college: Patten orders inquiry into religious battle for control of school founded by Newman. Fran Abrams reports00:02
EATING OUT / Grapevine: Samples wines with an Antipodean flavour00:02
TELEVISION / New Broomfield doesn't sweep clean00:02
Truck case remand00:02
Letter: 'Recovered' memories of sex abuse may be old nightmares00:02
Public Services Management: Sharing a toehold in Europe: Tyne and Wear hopes its office in Hamburg will help local business make the leap00:02
Dutch monopoly delivers mixed message00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Sweet Dream, sour looks00:02
Cricket: Longley's stand lights up Durham00:02
BOOK REVIEW / High minds, low deeds: 'Walking Possession: Essays and Reviews 1968-1993' - Ian Hamilton: Bloomsbury, 20 pounds00:02
First-Hand: We shouldn't begrudge Diana the odd pedicure: Marilyn Galsworthy, owner of an SW1 boutique, defends the Princess of Wales's pounds 3,000-a-week grooming bill00:02
Cricket: Patel makes splash00:02
Innovation: Pumping iron to clean air00:02
The Agreeable World Of Wallace Arnold: The princess's public image is safe in my hands00:02
Lift the ban, save the whale: Campaigners must concede that the minke is not endangered, argues Geoffrey Lean00:02
Football / FA Trophy Final: Steele has edge for Woking00:02
Living with it: Their farms straddle north and south, their activities are monitored by security towers that listen and look. But people who live on the border would rather stay than go (CORRECTED)00:02
Profile: Grand plan of a stylist: Bud Collins finds the unstoppable Pete Sampras eager to achieve his place in tennis history00:02
Football: March of a liberation movement: England produce a five-star performance to reward the enlightened approach of Terry Venables. Ian Ridley applauds the fluid system being successfully fostered by the new coach00:02
CHILDREN / Tall tales and short stories: Teenagers can suffer agonies because of their height, says Annabel Ferriman. But attempts at cure can be worse00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Slow shuffle down a dark and shady path: 'Watergate: The Corruption and Fall of Richard Nixon' - Fred Emery: Cape, 20 pounds00:02
ETCETERA / Competition: Details No 18600:02
In search of this week's high: A dangerous new recreational drug - so new that possessing it is not yet illegal - has found its way from the clubs of Los Angeles to some of the quietest streets in Britain00:02
Sport Briefly / Snooker: Fisher lands another world title00:02
Prison death00:02
Almanack: Postscript00:02
Kite flight grounded00:02
Virgin victory00:02
Positive moves: Mortgage lenders are finding ways around negative equity00:02
JAZZ / Highly recommended00:02
Football / Scottish Cup: Golac's day of glory00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Skirting round the globe: 'Unsuitable for Ladies: An Anthology of Women Travellers' - Jane Robinson: OUP, 17.95 pounds00:02
Mentors who help women manage00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Whiskey, rape and the river to hell: 'Green River Rising' - Tim Willocks: Cape, 14.99 pounds00:02
Kigali airport truce rejected00:02
Sport Briefly / Rowing: Lightweight display by heavyweights00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Opinions: Could you give the kiss of life?00:02
EATING OUT / A little taste of Anjou: Les Plantagenets, 15 Dormer Place, Leamington Spa00:02
Portrait of Wordsworth00:02
Letters Briefly00:02
Two die in crash00:02
Political Commentary: Labour's ballot plan looks suspiciously like a fix00:02
Captain Moonlight: At BT, it's just one long round of parties00:02
Flat Earth: Fitting acronyms00:02
Advertising: Brands with bold strokes: From golf holes to the floor you shop on, no space is sacred to hard-driving agencies00:02
Car bomb riddle00:02
'News at Ten' takes a turn towards the tabloids00:02
ALF's Belfast blaze00:02
Leading Article: Final credits for a telly addict00:02
Cricket: Lara lies in wait00:02
BOOK REVIEW / That Egyptian mummy: 'Oleander, Jacaranda' - Penelope Lively: Viking, 14 pounds00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
Innovation: BT unveils data kiosk00:02
ARTS / Anonymous at the Barbican00:02
Best and worst: Japanese Unit Trusts00:02
Putting the boot in00:02
Economics: A woman's work is rarely equal00:02
MUSIC / Records00:02
Reuters hurt as Liffe deal falls through00:02
Cricket: Ormrod lifts spirits00:02
Personal Finance: Not such a mutual gain00:02
'Wrong breast' error inquiry launched00:02
Water 'blackmail'00:02
Blunkett meeting with NHS chief to go ahead00:02
Golf: Hope springs eternal for Eales00:02
Letter: The ghost of Marx laid to rest00:02
Letter: A meaningful slip00:02
Captain Moonlight: Real news starts here00:02
LONG RUNNERS / 32: The Food Programme00:02
GOING OUT / Free film screening: Join us for a little psychological warfare00:02
Shares: Hard-time performers promise better days00:02
FASHION / On the Eve00:02
Portals chief in hidden rent deal: Chairman sitting pretty in company's 4,000-acre 'tied cottage'00:02
Cricket Diary: Turner's tall story suits Somerset00:02
Battle over not so friendly levy00:02
Arena: Musketeer memories to the fore: 6. Roland Garros: Chris Bowers savours the special atmosphere of the home of a golden age as the French Open beckons00:02
The Broader Picture: Portraits of a Sexual Nature: The John Kobal Foundation Photographic Portrait Award00:02
Ethical dry cleaning: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
Signet pressed to restructure00:02
Football: The most beautiful game: Majestic Milan put flair to the fore and turn the European Cup final into a parade of their riches: Richard Williams in Athens sees a display rich in eloquence from the European champions00:02
New Church begins00:02
Heavy rain hits sport and roads00:02
Lack of interest in stranded savers: Building societies may be saving pounds 800m a year in interest by failing to alert investors to obsolete accounts00:02
Muluzi sworn in00:02
Counting the cost of a one-night stand: The CSA can act, whether a relationship lasts 20 minutes or 20 years. Paula Webb reports00:02
Nuclear cloud00:02
Business Information Service: Saying of the Week00:02
Football / FA Trophy Final: Boxing: Tears of the young Tyson: Owen Slot views a TV account of the life and strife of a vulnerable champion00:02
Letter: No excuse for brutality00:02
The great pensions scandal: When you get to their age, you may not have enough to live on. Nick Cicutti investigates. . .00:02
THEATRE / Drinking and drying with Jack: Williamson and his subject are bound together by the belief that nothing matches acting (CORRECTED)00:02
Q & A: A good laugh at misfortune00:02
Silent running backfires as GM spooks VW rivals: For the first time in the bitter 14-month dispute with its US counterpart, Germany's biggest car manufacturer is claiming the moral high ground. John Eisenhammer reports from Frankfurt00:02
Business integrity is here00:02
Sport Briefly / Golf: Faldo loses his Village voice00:02
'I won't quit,' says Nicholas Scott00:02
Letter: 'Recovered' memories of sex abuse may be old nightmares00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Close encounters of a psychological kind: 'Abduction: Human Encounters with Aliens' - John E Mack: Simon & Schuster 16.99 pounds00:02
Students found safe00:02
ETCETERA / Design Dinosaurs: 17 The Gob-Stopper00:02
Computers: Handsome rewards for keeping virus at bay: Software that can quickly detect any risk of sabotage on floppy disks is proving to be a highly successful offshoot for a program-copying company00:02
Bunhill: Out of office00:02
BOOK REVIEW / American mouse who roared: 'What is Found There: Notebooks on poetry and politics' - Adrienne Rich: W W Norton, 14.95 pounds00:02
Labour rivals jostle over jobs00:02
York on Ads: No 29: Hyundai00:02
Letter: It's a manager's job to manage00:02
Haitians take to boats: Sanctions will cost 8,000 jobs but are unlikely to force military regime from power00:02
Boxing: Eubank survives Close encounter00:02
City & Business: Nice house but a pity the doors are closed00:02
Football: Venables chooses Wise route: Ian Ridley reports on England's reward for a reformed character on the wing00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Warm welcome to the pleasure tome: 'Under the Vulcania' - Maureen Freely: Bloomsbury, 4.99 pounds00:02
Parcel post comes under threat of VAT00:02
Black may escape further trials00:02
Whitehall to tighten dole rules, says Hunt00:02
First lease law test: Tribunal cases focus on the extension of leaseholders' rights00:02
DTI given muscle to help industry: White Paper to put focus back on manufacturing00:02
The sex life of the office: The job is irrelevant. Helen Fielding on the workplace as dating agency00:02
What became of all the passion?00:02
Cricket: Records00:02
Football: What the papers said about . . . England00:02
Sport on TV: Lady sang the Blues when Barry met Karren00:02
British Gas to be split00:02
Sport Briefly / Equestrianism: Connors captures third Irish success00:02
Court challenge to Pergau aid decision00:02
Cricket: Best men00:02
Israel braced for reprisals after daring kidnap raid00:02
Companies and councils forge vision of the city00:02
ROCK / Thin dark dukes of Goth00:02
City & Business: Sticky question00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Racing: Mehthaaf best00:02
Flat Earth: Toying with guilt00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Fishing Lines: The piranha eyes have it00:02
Rugby League: Big man shapes up for a big future: Dave Hadfield assesses Wigan's Andy Farrell, the most prodigious forward in rugby league00:02
Without all the effing it's just not the same00:02
How much does he earn?: No 29: TV technician00:02
ART MARKET / Collecting on a monumental scale: Thirty years ago, a Canadian couple began to buy unfashionable 19th-century sculptures of smooth marble nymphs and fierce bronze animals; now their gamble looks like paying off00:02
City & Business: Chunnel fog00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A man with no past: V S Naipaul's new book - 'not quite a novel and not quite autobiography' - is a project which perhaps no other writer could tackle00:02
Words: Backlash00:02
Cricket: Grey day robs White00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
Bunhill: Healthy toil among the pollution eating plants00:02
Gun raid on home00:02
Football: Fact File00:02
Profile: Andrew Cohen: For better and worse: Helen Kay takes a walk in Mr Betterware's doorstep empire00:02
Letter: A classic lesson in populism00:02
Missing prostitute found dead on hillside00:02
Labour revives faith in Christian Socialism00:02
Crude prices boost oil shares00:02
Fear of the strangers who live in darkness at the edge of town00:02
Miliband dies00:02
Bunhill: Champs Cola00:02
RADIO / Lenny plays the blues00:02
Our House is a very very very nice House00:02
Letter: The root of the matter00:02
Tax Freedom token00:02
The List00:02
Innovation: Buses on the super highway: Southampton hopes its traffic data system will coax commuters out of their cars00:02
Almanack: Magic mix of shale and pace00:02
Letter: Short cuts to bottle feeding00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In brief00:02
Captain Moonlight: Legend in his own Tipp-Ex00:02
TRAVEL / A logbook and a gull called Henry: Ascerbic remarks by former guests and a local character entertained Michael Leapman on a Landmark Trust holiday in Penzance00:02
Second round for postman: Privatisation could open the lines to a hi-tech reunion of the mail service with British Telecom00:02
Cries & Whispers00:02
Scott to stay00:02
Welcome to Quangoland: Now there is a quango for every 10,000 people in this country. Nick Cohen and Stuart Weir on the growth of unaccountable government00:02
BOOK REVIEw / Lazy losels and luskish youths: 'Adolescence and Youth in Early Modern England' - Ilana Krausman Ben-Amos: Yale, 25 pounds00:02
Letter: Nature's cure for melancholy00:02
Bunhill: Bulgarian wine promotion00:02
Public Schools lure rich Russians: Gordonstoun is among the private educators laying out their stall in Moscow - but not for children of the mafia00:02
Bunhill: Spreading it wide00:02
Athletics: McColgan down again but not out: Norman Fox reports on the protracted fight for fitness that faces a former champion00:02
Cricket: Surrey's mind games pay an early dividend00:02
So has the Mary Whitehouse experience been worth it?: Simon Midgley explores the legacy of the campaigner, who is retiring at the age of 8300:02
Those mild, mild days of youth: Tony Blair was only 'slightly rebellious' in his college days. Cal McCrystal talks to those who knew him then00:02
Captain Moonlight: Snookered White00:02
Tories fear voters are 'on strike'00:02
Chunnel backers get tough: Underwriters demand 30 per cent discount00:02
STAYING IN / Video00:02
Events00:02
CINEMA / No monsters and not half dark enough: A recurring image that seems a portent of a terrible evil that the film doesn't deliver on00:02
Flat Earth: New faces in the same old places00:02
SHOW PEOPLE / Wife in the fast lane: Caroline Quentin00:02
Kiss of life for drowned lake: Greens seek revenge over loss of Tasmanian natural wonder, writes Robert Milliken in Sidney00:02
Sport: Database00:02
Captain Moonlight: A princely new wardrobe? Walk this way00:02
Motor Racing: Coulthard in crucial test00:02
Why Sunday racing is thin end of wedge00:02
Imperial lather00:02
Numbers00:02
Breast inquiry00:02
Exclusive: Boy killers of Bulger to appeal: US campaigners urge 'treatment not punishment'00:02
Rear Window: The First Englishman: Everybody fell for Mr Piltdown00:02
Almanack: Fitness tips for the lazy00:02
Mercury plans to expand services00:02
When the ample Catalan sings: Callas is no more; Kiri Te Kanawa is making television commercials, but Montserrat Caballe, the 61-year-old soprano with the old-fashioned style, is still the people's diva of choice00:02
BOOKS / Paperbacks00:02
Today's papers00:02
Sport Briefly / Football: Villa and Liverpool players witness riot00:02
Nice for mice00:02
Captain Moonlight: No vole-au-vent on the menu at Boxgrove00:02
Vital to ensure succession in the family firm00:02
Quangos drain a third of all public money00:02
New South Africa sees UK sales of wine and fruit soar00:02
Family mourns its third Ulster victim00:02
Canal celebrations00:02
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: A mystery even to herself: She was caught between innocence and worldliness, writes Edna O'Brien of her friend who died on Friday00:02
Wanted - a Keynes for the Nineties00:02
Door dilemma00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
Rugby Union: Wales reign over Spain00:02
Letter: Hirsute yourself00:02
Sport Briefly / Tennis: Sampras suffers rare defeat00:02
Motor Racing: The hazards of quick fixes: David Tremayne says Max Mosley's plans to make Formula One safer are unworkable00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Sport Briefly / Hockey: Bamfield gives Ipswich a lift00:02
Going for broke: Lloyd's results have raised doubts about its very solvency00:02
Vegan sex offender's pounds 101 shoes00:02
Racing: A champion times his run: Jamie Reid sees Richard Dunwoody edge further in front in the race for the jump jockeys' championship00:02
Full measure for sponsors00:02
Letter: Media's 'fictional' Liverpool00:02
Leading Article: The sale of Sir Humphrey00:02
Do I not like that . . .: Rooting out the racists: Herman Ouseley, chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, is disturbed by the Millwall disturbances00:02
TRAVEL / Isle of conflicts - The place next door: Twenty years ago the Turkish invasion of Cyprus sliced the north from the south. Simon Calder visits the neglected Narnia of the Mediterranean00:02
THEATRE / It's only a part of love: The word is that 'Passion', the new Sondheim musical, marks a departure. Robert Cushman saw it in New York00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Jaguar XJ6 4.0.S in 0-60 seconds00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The hands-on history woman: 'Away' - Jane Urquhart: Bloomsbury, 15.99 pounds00:02
GOING OUT / The Sunday picture00:02
Bunhill: Simple beginnings (CORRECTED)00:02
Two are seen as lottery leaders00:02
Policy sale option urged00:02
'Mud races' attack racist immigrant00:02
Profile: Michael Barrymore: Funny man, sad story: Talent, wealth, fame . . . drink and drugs. David Lister on an up and down life00:02
Step backward, Camcorder Man: He will video anything that moves - and plenty that doesn't, writes Hester Lacey00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Absolutely mad about barking: 'The Hidden Life of Dogs' Elizabeth Marshall Thomas: Weidenfeld, 12.50 pounds00:02
Almanack: Penned by the Hand of God?00:02
Letter: No blessing for the Italians00:02
Greece marks out limits of tolerance: Despite pressure from EU partners and others, Athens is reluctant to dismantle laws curbing activities of the non-Orthodox00:02
Who's the prat in the white tuxedo?: Isabel Wolff at the Rock Circus, London's fastest growing tourist trap00:02
Letter: Why Galileo got off lightly00:02
County lives in fear of sore throat bug00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
My Biggest Mistake00:02
Noose tightens00:02
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: Burial to take place tomorrow00:02
Old friends gather for the final farewell00:02
TRIED & TESTED / White Power: Do electric toothbrushes make your teeth gleam brighter? Our panel puts five models to the test00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Cold facts about the profit motive: 'The Arctic: A History' - Richard Vaughan: Alan Sutton, 20 pounds00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Rugby Union: England take a battering: Tour goes from bad to worse as injury to Pears compounds a lame defeat at the hands of Natal00:02
Letter: Media's 'fictional' Liverpool00:02
City File: Colourcare is cut loose00:02
Rugby Union: Best counts on the Super Ten factor: Chris Rea in Durban salutes a rugby event which can improve standards00:02
EXHIBITIONS / More than met the eye: Ruskin couldn't see it, but in some ways Raphael was a better painter than Leonardo00:02
Sailing: Intrum leads tack pack00:02
Cricket: Problems pour down on tourists: England's hopes of confirming their one-day supremacy dampened as New Zealand's injury worries grow00:02
Cricket: Such enjoys turn of luck: Derek Pringle meets a revived spin bowler eager to win back his Test place00:02
Finance: Quick fix slows down UK firms: An aversion to loans may be threatening the growth of small and medium sized companies00:02
How We Met: James Blades and Evelyn Glennie00:00
Boy killers of Bulger to appeal: US campaigners urge 'treatment not punishment'