00:02
How to learn Japanese: Manufacturing: UK companies benefit from seeing how they do it in Tokyo00:02
Best and worst: Smaller companies trusts00:02
ARTS / Really bad girls: The way westerns treat women is monstrously regimented. And the latest example is hardly riding to the rescue. Which is a darned shame, given the tales that are there to be told00:02
How Blair and the new left could protect capitalism from itself00:02
Some to gain from QMH00:02
What the papers said about . . . Steffi Graf00:02
Bunhill: Instant erudition00:02
Letter00:02
Football: Caniggia quells Nigeria00:02
The Independent Management Game: Fantasy teams take losses00:02
The fading of the true blues: The Conservatives need local activists not national razzmatazz, says Patrick Seyd00:02
GARDENING / Roses with a healthy future: Black spot, rust and mildew have ravaged the English rose. Michael Leapman on the quest for a disease-proof bloom00:02
Banks reward small firms for sharpening their skills00:02
DANCE / More tales of the city00:02
Motor Racing: Unser Jnr steals Mansell's thunder00:02
Wimbledon Almanack: Do adjust your sets00:02
Bowls: England take home title00:02
Party tells Blair to redraft crime policy00:02
Imperious, intolerant but invaluable: Behind a friendly public face, 3i, the venture capital group that has invested in countless businesses, is a ruthless operator00:02
Letter: Family life is an end in itself00:02
Bunhill: Leaving Lehman on labour of love00:02
Kohl and Mitterrand slate the odd man out00:02
HEALTH / Tangles with a flexible trend: Interest in yoga is booming, but is it all it's cracked up to be? Liz Hodgkinson on a discipline that can harm as well as help00:02
CHILDRENS BOOKS / Why the dragon-slayer sucked his thumb: For the answer to this and many other questions, Candice Rodd chooses reference books that take the slog out of discovering things00:02
When a claim turns to fraud: Court ruling means that people who over-inflate losses to their insurers could end up with nothing00:02
Warm enthusiasts00:02
Energy cost 'may double'00:02
BOOKS / In brief00:02
Today's papers: Fragrant fuel, Archery and a mother-in-law00:02
Mail determined to stay out of price war: Publisher tries to prevent circulation battle between News International and Telegraph spreading to the middle newspaper market00:02
No refunds in hard times at the Hacienda: Proceeds elude sellers of Spanish homes00:02
Rugby Union: Welsh 'payments' to be investigated00:02
Property / Wooden heart of Old England: For nearly 600 years, houses have been built around timber frames. Caroline McGhie examines the ancient bones of the first middle-class homes00:02
Marching home00:02
Holliday breaks with its broker00:02
World Cup on TV / Weatherbeaten heroes, and a Law unto himself00:02
Bunhill: Prize before a fall00:02
Bunhill: Bianca made him cry00:02
Tennis: Medvedev in the right mood: Wimbledon '94: Ukrainian with a touch of arrogance earns fourth-round encounter with Becker. Owen Slot reports00:02
Letter: Schools chaos is deliberate00:02
Fishing Lines: Guilt pangs on golden pond00:02
Bunhill: A question of shorts00:02
Lease reform put to test00:02
CHILDREN'S BOOKS / Teenage fiction 200:02
Cycling: A Tour blurred by Chunnel vision: Geoffrey Nicholson looks at the wider appeal of the world's greatest bike race00:02
Bank manager hunted00:02
Herding UK firms into new pastures: Exports: the 11-year-old Food from Britain organisation has restructured itself in a concerted effort to help British food companies sell their products abroad00:02
FASHION / Small change00:02
Wimbledon Almanack: To serve with love00:02
TRIED & TESTED / It's the wheel thing: Mountain bikes have universal appeal, but how do you find one suited to your needs - and pocket? Our expert cyclists test seven00:02
Cricket: Crawley ripe for call00:02
Tennis: Wimbledon database00:02
Profile: Citizen with attitude: Laurence Marks on the abrasive writer who wants us to worry about our duties not our rights00:02
LONG RUNNERS / No 37: BAYWATCH00:02
Health advisers meet in secret over deadly smog of 199100:02
Australians find godliness in latrines and sewers of Madras00:02
Football: Fulham look for leg up from Branfoot00:02
Tory grassroots are 'old and alienated'00:02
Letter: After Maxwell00:02
Herd mentality distorts market: Economics00:02
Football: Charlton gets touchline ban00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Blood and belonging: Englishmen and Jews: Social Relations and Political Culture, 1840-1914: David Feldman, Yale, 35 pounds00:02
Football: The eagle has taken off: Richard Williams sees the host nation bask in the glow of an unexpected triumph00:02
Markets force WPP to shelve flotation00:02
Weeding out the chaff: A review of investment tips over the past year highlights the stocks to sell and takes the measure of the portfolio's performance00:02
Letter: Catholics can enjoy sex00:02
Football: Sampras performs to order: Simon O'Hagan reports on the men with the power to depose the champion00:02
Into the shadows of council reform: Local government leaders have a working blueprint to ease the transition from old county and district bodies into unitary authorities00:02
Tennis: Bates brings house down: Britain's leading player flies the flag before a nine-times champion takes over Centre Court ovations00:02
Bunhill: TV's Ruth Lea00:02
Wimbledon Almanack: In one's box00:02
Profile: Quiet man of authority: Simon O'Hagan meets the Wimbledon referee whose planning skills are tested by the elements00:02
Letter: There is only one rule in the sex game, and that's consent00:02
Dunaway 'will sue' Lloyd Webber00:02
Football: Albert's strike inspires Belgians00:02
Evolving societies: The mutual principle that underpins the mighty building societies and insurance companies is under fire. They must prove that there are still advantages for members. Richard Thomson looks at their past - and future00:02
How much does he earn?: No 34: An Yan Lim Kee Chong. World Cup '94 Referee from Mauritius (Brazil v Russia)00:02
Cricket: Smith makes bold reply00:02
Football: A new world of difference: USA '94: The faces of Maradona and Yekini symbolise a game which has rediscovered its desire in a tournament of quality00:02
It's just like the office, except for the bare breasts00:02
Football Fact File00:02
Methodist leader calls for change of government00:02
Letter: There is only one rule in the sex game, and that's consent00:02
First-Hand: 'It's bizarre - they all want a traditional toaster': Wedding list organiser Nicole Hindmarch on the vogue for modest, individualist presents00:02
Cryer estate00:02
Letter00:02
Numbers00:02
Cricket: Speight rings the alarm00:02
Rowing: Out of their sculls on the riverbank: Owen Slot examines the enduring social and sporting appeal of Britain's most historic regatta00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Love among the yak jerseys Yak jumpers, white socks: 'Mothers and other Lovers' - Joanna Briscoe: Phoenix, 14.99/8.9900:02
FOOD & DRINK / On the shelf: Pine nuts00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Ultimate class act Small life, big story: 'Last Lesson of the Afternoon' - Christopher Rush: Canongate, 9.9900:02
YORK ON ADS: No 34: SPECIAL CONSTABLES00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The progeny problem: 'The Children We Deserve' - Rosalind Miles: HarperCollins, 16.9900:02
Bunhill: From our mailbag00:02
Palace wars: the latest shot: A TV profile may prove crucial in the media war being waged by Charles and Diana. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
Soccer fans in the US fail the 'Tebbit Test': David Usborne finds national loyalties confused among the hyphenated Americans at Florida's Citrus Bowl00:02
Travel / Choosing a hotel00:02
Air crew die00:02
The mad woman has gone, but don't be shy of reform: Political Commentary00:02
Letter: Nuclear war00:02
New-age jester: one of the 80,000 visitors to this year's Glastonbury Festival which finishes tonight00:02
MoD to approve sale of Swan Hunter00:02
Smoke-free beach00:02
Cricket: Essex break cloud cover00:02
Tapie could go for the long shot: Left-wing disarray may draw populist football tycoon into a challenge for the French presidency00:02
Cricket: Cuffy's resolve pays off00:02
Major veto wrecks the summit: Britain blocks Dehaene as successor to Delors - Prime Minister 'unperturbed about the arithmetic of eleven to one'00:02
Cards levy a high price on foreign buys00:02
Soldier charged00:02
Leading Article: Inner cities fit for Tories00:02
Broadwater Farm reaps fruit of reinvention00:02
I sat in the front row at the Neuilly pantos00:02
ARTS / Show People: Casting off the rakish image: Bill Nighy00:02
Accountants face grilling: Labour MP aims attack at regulators00:02
Pylon design taxes grey cells at Grid00:02
Letter: Schools chaos is deliberate00:02
Bunhill: Whither Wiltons?00:02
Base desires fuel software battle: Marketing: three key manufacturers gear for a surge in database sales00:02
ARTS / Cries & whispers00:02
Leading Article: Small country, not many celebrities00:02
CHILDRENS BOOKS / Teenage fiction00:02
Data used for hospital tables 'not accurate'00:02
Cricket Diary: Imperfect fate for the perfect ten00:02
Two South African trusts launched00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Ford Probe 2.0 16V in 0-60 seconds00:02
City File: Electricity is up in lights00:02
Tennis: Navratilova serves up another encore: Julie Welch watches the imperious progress of a veteran relishing her farewell tour00:02
Rugby League: Mylers in step at Widnes00:02
CHILDREN'S BOOKS / Will reality bite back? Fiction: 8-12s: While Sonic is still booming, Jenny Gilbert selects from the rest of the animal world00:02
Ceasefire offer00:02
MUSIC / A midsummer night's salon drama00:02
Cricket: Middlesex move into higher gear00:02
Newspaper war leaves strong whiff of poodles00:02
Bunhill: Plastic profusion00:02
Village of Little Englanders: The Broader Picture00:02
Crude rally pumps up petrol cost: Rising prices fall on motorists00:02
Property / Houses for sale00:02
Lessons from the Asian miracles00:02
Quotes of the WeeK00:02
Safety scare on eve of mutant virus test00:02
The battle that is reshaping Margaret the Second: Labour's deputy leader is ready for them, writes Stephen Castle00:02
Olympics: Early birds enter race for 2004 Games00:02
In Siberia's last gulag: Conditions in North Korea's Russian logging camps, originally built for political prisoners, are reminiscent of the old Soviet gulag. But North Koreans fight to be sent to them, because from there they can defect00:02
THEATRE / A crazy way to make a living00:02
GARDENING / How to keep your roses healthy00:02
Hazlewood investors call for more heads00:02
Cycling: Spain's reign under threat: Robin Nicholl says a Swiss could make Miguel Indurain suffer against the clock00:02
RADIO / Faith, hope and other burning issues00:02
Post dispute ends00:02
Patten faces stress claim00:02
Britain tolls division bell: The Dehaene fiasco at the Corfu summit has repercussions for the shape of Europe to come00:02
Letter00:02
Police shoot man00:02
Wimbledon Almanack: Leg up00:02
Pressure for inquiry on newspaper prices00:02
Banks step up the battle for student clients00:02
Letter00:02
FILM / Schlesinger's massacre of 'The Innocent'00:02
Christian soldiers00:02
Prince and the Church00:02
Motorcycling: Doohan makes it four in a row00:02
Cricket: Procter is still waiting00:02
Golf: Wadsworth has victory in her sights00:02
Rear Window: Something wrong with paradise: The British in Kashmir00:02
Right wing in Rome turns back the sundial: Greenaway spectacle banned00:02
E-mail system learns to talk00:02
Make one to talk about: On excellence00:02
The list00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
CHILDREN'S BOOKS: 'Dear World: How Children Around the World Feel About Our Environment': Bodley Head, 9.9900:02
Letter: Good news for county set00:02
Major's stand built on sand00:02
Charity hones women's skills: Friends used their own money to set up a trust00:02
Bunhill: Thanks, but take a break till 200300:02
The king of broken promises: Rupert Murdoch00:02
Hockey: English women lack finish00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Peter Needham00:02
Letter: Wrong age, wage and address00:02
CHILDREN'S BOOKS / Picture books: Before the holidays begin, here are four pages of the season's best children's books to choose from. Below, Prudence Hone makes her selection for the under-7s00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
'Inept' rail managers' feud adds 24m pounds to strike bill00:02
ROCK / The what, where, when and how good: Ben Thompson listens to a new boxed set of The Who, and talks to Roger Daltrey00:02
Letter00:02
UK veto upheld as 'matter of principle'00:02
French crack down00:02
Do I not like that . . . / Hypocrisy has to end: David Hinchliffe MP explains why he has introduced a Bill to stop rugby union discriminating against the league code00:02
Ghosts of civil war stalk Beirut courts: Lebanon's police force resuscitates justice system00:02
Year-end FT-SE 100 predictions and tips for investors00:02
Fear and loathing in the classroom: Allegations of sex abuse in schools are increasing. Julia Hagedorn reports on new guidelines to protect pupils - and teachers00:02
The man with a can for the roach with attitude: Zoe Heller in America00:02
EATING OUT / Magic of the parrot house: L'Artiste Assoiffe00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Letter: The boys from Bogota00:02
Racing: Electrifying Eddery00:02
Travel / A family guide to summer Britain: The West Country00:02
Softer reality treats fears00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
ART / Manet can't buy you love: Samuel Courtauld amassed one of the great collections of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painting. So why are we reluctant to go and see it?00:02
Home Thoughts00:02
EMI chief will earn up to 7m pounds this year00:02
Flat Earth00:02
Property / Going with the grain: The Craftsmen: Caroline McGhie finds that timber is back in the frame, thanks to a West Country firm00:02
Football: The meltdown at high noon: Eamon Dunphy in Orlando analyses the tactical reasons for a debilitating defeat00:02
Athletics: Christie sees the light00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Michael Jackson's guide to British bottled beer00:02
Master of the art of staying afloat: Profile: Iskandar Safa: The likely new owner of Swan Hunter is an international dealer with visions of a world empire. David Bowen hears his plans00:02
Frigate launched00:02
ARTS / RECORDS00:02
TELEVISION / Everywhere you look: balls00:02
The future is virtually here: We'll soon be on the information superhighway, wondering how we lived without it, says David Bowen00:02
RAC puts patrols on the data highway00:02
Advantage police over ticket touts00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
United States Air Force B-52 training bomber crashes at Fairchild airbase, Washington, killing all four crew members00:02
Q&A / Amiss heads drive for cover00:02
Read any good playwrights recently?00:02
Pubs feel draught of change00:02
IoS writer wins award00:02
BOOKS / Paperbacks00:02
Football: Solari turns on the heat00:02
Letter: Professional foul00:02
Words: Lads00:02
Cricket: Loye leads the fight00:02
Bunhill: By 'eck, the passion00:02
Letter00:02
Reformist Japanese PM Hata resigns00:02
World Cup Diary: Turn-on for the home supporters00:02
Hong Kong clans fight land rights for women00:02
Labour offers industry fresh menu in Brussels00:02
An orientalist in Manhattan: He lives in a 20-room New York apartment and is the world's richest dealer in Chinese art. But how did Robert Ellsworth get there?00:02
Why the fans deserve a round of applause00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Sirens and sensibilities: 'London's Burning: Life, Death and Art in the Second World War' - Peter Stansky and William Abrahams: Constable, 18.9500:02
Tennis: Bruguera's base rate rises with interest: Simon O'Hagan looks for a champion among players who prefer the back of the court00:02
Letter: Portrait of the art critic00:02
Russian freight takes the suburban route00:02
Riddle of the red screens: As the gilts market has suffered arguably its steepest fall since the First World War, shares have been sucked down as well. Rupert Bruce explains why this occurred in a rising economy00:02
Opinions? Are you a slave?00:02
Defrauded pensioners sue life company00:02
Letter: Let the poor go to pot00:02
Cricket: Cork constructs confident case: All-round prospect returns from injury to help Derbyshire rebuild to prosperity as New Zealand border on the prosaic00:02
Dollar rattles share dealers00:02
Bunhill: The boy Blair00:02
Letter: Schools chaos is deliberate00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Best beer in Britain, probably: Forget fancy foreign imports. Traditional British bottled beers are making a comeback, says Graham Coster00:02
How we met: Doug Hayward and Terry O'Neill00:02
DANCE / Go wild in the Black Country: Just when it seemed that his skills might be lost to Britain, David Bintley landed the plum job at Birmingham Royal Ballet. Anne Sacks met him00:02
ROCK / The Lemonheads give punk a whole new meaning00:02
Screw turns on pensions: Personal Finance00:02
Role models? Who needs 'em?: Setting heroes on pedestals is courting disappointment, says Geraldine Bedell00:02
UK nuclear chemist 'killed by Mossad'