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00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
RADIO / Gloria Hunniford Talks to the animals00:02
TELEVISION / York on Ads: No 40: Woman magazine00:02
Almanack: Deep throat pulls the plug00:02
Football: Gunners lean on safe Seaman: Ian Ridley at Highbury sees Arsenal and Napoli progress to today's Makita final00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on Oddbins' best buys00:02
Bunhill: Ominous signal00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
The golden scenario of restrained inflation and high growth could play for three more years00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Rock00:02
More loss of face for SFO: All defendants cleared in Seil fraud trial00:02
RADIO / Gloria Hunniford Talks to the animals00:02
Mixed jails 'will corrupt young'00:02
Words: Robbers00:02
Bunhill: Another office T'ai00:02
Surfers can catch a magnetic wave00:02
A light in the dark for smokers00:02
Captain Moonlight: Funky Phil is a right royal raver00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
How We Met: Janet Street-Porter and Zandra Rhodes00:02
Cricket: England run riot00:02
Abduction case00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: A Separate Cinema by John Kisch and Edward Mapp, Orion pounds 9.9900:02
French hold imam00:02
Where hast tha bin?00:02
Death crash girls00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Cinema00:02
Fairground ride tested hours before girl fell00:02
Calluna goes to market: Broker's third technology flotation aims for valuation of pounds 50m00:02
Sailing: Cowes cowed by lack of breeze00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Shylock: Four Hundred Years in the Life of a Legend by John Gross, Vintage pounds 6.9900:02
FOOD & DRINK / Daily Bread: Anton Edelmann: What the master chef ate one day last week00:02
Sour end for Rugby Union: Springboks00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Cinema00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: A Separate Cinema by John Kisch and Edward Mapp, Orion pounds 9.9900:02
Sport on TV: One small step for darts, one leap back by Gooch00:02
Queen urged to sell Buckingham Palace00:02
TELEVISION / Innocent until proven famous00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The haunting history of home: Moving house and Other Stories - Pawel Huelle: Bloomsbury, pounds 13.9900:02
Letter: Car policies should be local00:02
Nightmare on Wall Street: The life of financier Wardell Lazard inspired a generation of upwardly mobile black Americans. His death has encouraged the worst racist prejudices of the white business establishment00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Just a little something he prepared earlier: How to travel with a salmon & Other Essays - Umberto Eco: Secker & Warburg, pounds 9.9900:02
Where hast tha bin?00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Theatre: Official00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Without any word of mouth00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Art00:02
Fairground ride tested hours before girl fell00:02
Opinions: What do you do on Sunday?00:02
If the face fits . . . it's probably by computer00:02
Racing: Piggott just out of picture: Old master returns to the saddle but is denied in a photo-finish00:02
Dad pays more if his wife re-weds: Legal quirk ends tax relief for divorced fathers who pay child support to ex-spouse00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: John Smith: A Life by Andy McSmith, Mandarin 4.9900:02
Spare the rod and spoil the catch: Fleets of hi-tech vessels armed with vast nets are wrecking a way of life and threatening world fish stocks00:02
FASHION / The pleasures and perils of a French country garden00:02
Letter: Mystery of woodlands sell-off00:02
Flat Earth: Two thirty?00:02
Football: The faithful fall for Klinsmann: Julie Welch joins a full house to greet the arrival of Spurs' German recruit00:02
Contest to remember00:02
Political Commentary: A leaking roof is bond to make a politician tetchy00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: John Smith: A Life by Andy McSmith, Mandarin 4.9900:02
Bunhill: Another office T'ai00:02
Firm cuts costs of strategic change00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Life-affirming malice: If you're talking to me your career must be in trouble - Joe Queenan: Picador, pounds 5.9900:02
Letter: Poor parents save on angst00:02
JAZZ / LAdy Day to last Friday00:02
Economics: A difficult time to ask for a rise00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Why I could get no satisfaction in the Sixties00:02
Football: The knight of the deep pockets: As a new Endsleigh League season opens, Ian Ridley meets a fervent benefactor who has put Wolves at the door of the Premiership00:02
City File: Cycle to undermine RTZ price00:02
Letter: Free market in mental health00:02
Football: Gunners lean on safe Seaman: Ian Ridley at Highbury sees Arsenal and Napoli progress to today's Makita final00:02
Drip disaster00:02
Big baseball pay battle threatens one strike and all out for summer00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Just a little something he prepared earlier: How to travel with a salmon & Other Essays - Umberto Eco: Secker & Warburg, pounds 9.9900:02
MUSIC / Watchmaker Goehr flexes his muscles00:02
Juggling trick with a shopping bag: The Retail Price Index is measured by a list of some 600 items. How reliable a guide to inflation is it?00:02
Sugar and the season with extra spice00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
Muslim rally angers Jews: Islamic body accused of racism00:02
Letter: Steely anger00:02
The List00:02
Bunhill: Undercover man who went out in the cold00:02
Letter: Export dive00:02
BOOKS / But whose life is it?: Writers and artists have always dreaded being accused of plagiarism, but now they risk legal threats from those who would like to own fact as well as fiction. A playwright answers back00:02
Calluna goes to market: Broker's third technology flotation aims for valuation of pounds 50m00:02
Golf: O'Connor is armed00:02
Wallabies pulverise Western Samoa: Rugby union00:02
Karadzic mobilises Serbs into work units: Serbia's President finds war no longer works to his advantage - His allies in Bosnia begin to hand back seized weapons00:02
Profile: Is he icon or demon?: Peter Victor reports on a man vilified by the 'Daily Mail' but lionised as a victim by the left00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
Football: Burns will find it hot: James Traynor explains why a giant shadow hangs over Celtic's new manager00:02
Opportunity to take cover in the garden: Move against loophole in home insurance00:02
Today's papers00:02
Britain's crumbling ruling class is losing the accent of authority00:02
Fishing Lines: Twin dangers of the crays00:02
Equestrianism: Briton whips up a storm00:02
Letter: No sex, no god, just good sense00:02
Rising Starr00:02
Best and worst: Unity trusts00:02
BOOK REVIEW / How Winnie begat Maggie: Eminent Churchillians - Andrew Roberts: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, pounds 2000:02
Letter: Steely anger00:02
Leading Article: Let a thousand backyards bloom00:02
Cricket: Sussex surge on00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Rock00:02
Best and worst: Unity trusts00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Football: Daley seeks break as a shooting star: Owen Slot watches a supreme athlete attempt to conquer a fresh field00:02
Database00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Under concerted attack00:02
Abiola still jailed00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Under concerted attack00:02
Sugar and the season with extra spice00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
The most dangerous pub in Britain?: Just last week, a customer was shot in the face with a sawn-off shotgun. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
Do I not like that . . . Why I'm sick as a Canary: Nick Patrick, producer of BBC Radio 5's Sporting Profiles, bemoans the garish dress sense of today's football clubs00:02
Cricket: Lewis leads revival after cutting loose00:02
Cricket: Curtis in slow torture00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Garden of Earthly Delights by Nicholas Salaman, Flamingo pounds 6.9900:02
Nasa man called in over ball-tampering00:02
It's a man's life in the Army: While the top brass splash out, rank-and-file wives struggle to get by, finds Sarah Lonsdale00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
The Dinner Party Guide to Unbelief: Confused by the disbelieving-vicar debate? Alex Spillius investigates the alternatives to God00:02
Portillo met top Heseltine aide00:02
Bunhill00:02
MOTORING / Roadcraft for the older model: The number of drivers over 65 is rising rapidly, and that could prove dangerous. Jeremy Hart joins a course that boosts the confidence - and skills - of elderly drivers00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: And so to behead . . .00:02
My gang has a showdown at the Mars Bar saloon: Zoe Heller in America00:02
Firestorms darken our past: Those who defend 'Bomber' Harris's destruction of German cities are wrong, Geoffrey Wheatcroft argues00:02
Cricket Diary: Piper catches a rare following00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: OM: An India Pilgrimage by Geoffrey Moorhouse, Sceptre pounds 6.9900:02
Sour end for Rugby Union: Springboks00:02
Athletics / European Championships: The golden age for a chosen few: British seek new inspiration from old crusaders Christie, Jackson and Gunnell: Norman Fox in Helsinki predicts a smaller treasure chest of medals for Britain00:02
Surfers can catch a magnetic wave00:02
Arena: Pioneers with grand ambition: 16 Edgbaston: Derek Pringle traces the history of a county and Test cricket ground which is laced with controversy00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Art00:02
Marketing: Retailers rolling in the aisles: The Cargo warehouse club floats a UK challenge in a cut-price sector made in the US00:02
Nightmare on Wall Street: The life of financier Wardell Lazard inspired a generation of upwardly mobile black Americans. His death has encouraged the worst racist prejudices of the white business establishment00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: The show starts here: Nice city, but who are all these strange people coming to stay? John Shuttleworth offers his personal guide to the festival00:02
Golf: O'Connor is armed00:02
Flat Earth: Two thirty?00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Travellers sacrificed to the tourist game: The No Man's Land - An Investigative Journey through Kenya and Tanzania - George Monbiot: Macmillan, pounds 17.99 (CORRECTED)00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Swan on scent of work00:02
Any other business: The banker's horseplay: Richard Heley00:02
What's in a name? Quite a lot actually: Changing your maiden name is traumatic - and the politically correct simply don't bother. Hester Lacey (nee Matthewman) reports00:02
Football: Daley seeks break as a shooting star: Owen Slot watches a supreme athlete attempt to conquer a fresh field00:02
Letter: Rear Window: The long, hot summer of drought and hosepipe bans: The heatwave of '7600:02
Letter: Rear Window: The long, hot summer of drought and hosepipe bans: The heatwave of '7600:02
City & Business: Learning new lingo00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Global policeman's ball00:02
Further push to end rail strike00:02
Letter: Generation X: know it of old00:02
Bruguera through on the hour: Tennis00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: OM: An India Pilgrimage by Geoffrey Moorhouse, Sceptre pounds 6.9900:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Theatre: Fringe00:02
Happy Azinger misses cut: Golf00:02
Letter: Fed up with regional bias00:02
BOOK REVIEW / On the secretive side: The Partisan - Benjamin Cheever: Hamish Hamilton, pounds 15.9900:02
BOOK REVIEW / How Winnie begat Maggie: Eminent Churchillians - Andrew Roberts: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, pounds 2000:02
Bunhill00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Blue Afternoon by William Boyd, Penguin pounds 4.9900:02
What makes a ball swing?: Atherton had the answer, but didn't know it, William Bown and Rabi Mehta reveal00:02
City & Business: Drugs trio grit teeth as others bite the tablet00:02
Fear of a 'Ripper' haunts detective: One police officer thinks the murders of four women in the Midlands can be linked. But his colleagues are not convinced. Charles Oulton reports00:02
City & Business: Learning new lingo00:02
Marketing: Retailers rolling in the aisles: The Cargo warehouse club floats a UK challenge in a cut-price sector made in the US00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Without any word of mouth00:02
Flat Earth: Iran's finest00:02
The golden scenario of restrained inflation and high growth could play for three more years00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Few win as rail strike runs on: Commuter cut-off takes the bloom off business for station retailers00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Dance00:02
Castro threatens US with immigrant flood00:02
Death crash girls00:02
On excellence: How to play for power00:02
JAZZ / LAdy Day to last Friday00:02
Almanack: Postscript00:02
Today's papers00:02
Athletics / European Championships: Four aiming for the forefront00:02
What's in a name? Quite a lot actually: Changing your maiden name is traumatic - and the politically correct simply don't bother. Hester Lacey (nee Matthewman) reports00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Gaby Taberani00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Mayhem in Unhappy Valley: Drastic poverty denies myths of a Kenyan paradise00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Sailing: Cowes cowed by lack of breeze00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
GARDENING / Slugging it out in earnest: The slimy pests have met their Waterloo, in a small slab of clay. Michael Leapman sows nemesis by nematode on his allotment00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Theatre: Fringe00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
FILM / Sleeping with the enemy: The Last Seduction (18); We Don't Want to Talk about It (PG); Getting Even With Dad (PG); Zero Patience (18)00:02
Flat Earth: Iran's finest00:02
Damascus strives to block the Bulldozer of Peace00:02
The most dangerous pub in Britain?: Just last week, a customer was shot in the face with a sawn-off shotgun. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
Cricket: Malcolm excels00:02
Do I not like that . . . Why I'm sick as a Canary: Nick Patrick, producer of BBC Radio 5's Sporting Profiles, bemoans the garish dress sense of today's football clubs00:02
Rugby Union: Chris Rea says there is no going back in rugby's move towards professionalism00:02
Pop star 'overdose'00:02
Haiti regime taunts US over invasion delay00:02
Captain Moonlight: Funky Phil is a right royal raver00:02
Athletics / European Championships: The golden age for a chosen few: British seek new inspiration from old crusaders Christie, Jackson and Gunnell: Norman Fox in Helsinki predicts a smaller treasure chest of medals for Britain00:02
Athletics / European Championships: Four aiming for the forefront00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Cold Comfort Food: Robin Weir is dedicated to ice-cream, the real thing not the frozen froth we're often sold. Michael Bateman meets him00:02
If the face fits . . . it's probably by computer00:02
No prize money at Olympics: Athletics00:02
What the papers said about . . . Klinsmann00:02
BOOKS / But whose life is it?: Writers and artists have always dreaded being accused of plagiarism, but now they risk legal threats from those who would like to own fact as well as fiction. A playwright answers back00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Hot on a Scottish trail00:02
Chicken drug still used despite risk of cancer00:02
Football: The knight of the deep pockets: As a new Endsleigh League season opens, Ian Ridley meets a fervent benefactor who has put Wolves at the door of the Premiership00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Auld Alliance renewed00:02
Juggling trick with a shopping bag: The Retail Price Index is measured by a list of some 600 items. How reliable a guide to inflation is it?00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Cold Comfort Food: Robin Weir is dedicated to ice-cream, the real thing not the frozen froth we're often sold. Michael Bateman meets him00:02
How much does he earn?: No 40: Jimmy Knapp, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union.00:02
Car ad campaigns find way to make their marque00:02
Contest to remember00:02
Football: Cantona sees the red mist again: James Traynor watches as United's volatile Frenchman is sent off in the defeat at Ibrox00:02
Captain Moonlight: The Captain's Catch-up Service00:02
Betke on a roll: Bowls00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Comedy & Cabaret00:02
Sugar guarantees pounds 10m Spurs loan00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Auld Alliance renewed00:02
Any other business: The banker's horseplay: Richard Heley00:02
Management: Employee schemes need to talk louder: The success of wider share ownership by the workers may rest on consultation as well as motivation00:02
City & Business: Drugs trio grit teeth as others bite the tablet00:02
City File: Cycle to undermine RTZ price00:02
MUSIC / Watchmaker Goehr flexes his muscles00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Life-affirming malice: If you're talking to me your career must be in trouble - Joe Queenan: Picador, pounds 5.9900:02
Almanack: Super ends and tacky grips00:02
Almanack: Deep throat pulls the plug00:02
Further push to end rail strike00:02
How much does he earn?: No 40: Jimmy Knapp, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union.00:02
BBC trounced00:02
Cricket / Second Test: Kirsten leads rearguard: England claim early wickets but veteran South African provides pocket of resistance00:02
French attack 'Rainbow Warrior' again00:02
No peace now and for a generation: The blood spilled in Rwanda and Burundi, and the racial roots of conflict between Hutus and Tutsis, leave no room for reconciliation00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Frank's Fantasy Fringe00:02
On excellence: How to play for power00:02
MOTORING / Roadcraft for the older model: The number of drivers over 65 is rising rapidly, and that could prove dangerous. Jeremy Hart joins a course that boosts the confidence - and skills - of elderly drivers00:02
Cricket / Second Test: Kirsten leads rearguard: England claim early wickets but veteran South African provides pocket of resistance00:02
FILM / Sleeping with the enemy: The Last Seduction (18); We Don't Want to Talk about It (PG); Getting Even With Dad (PG); Zero Patience (18)00:02
Letter: Generation X: know it of old00:02
Mixed jails 'will corrupt young'00:02
Muslim rally angers Jews: Islamic body accused of racism00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Jazz00:02
Sugar guarantees pounds 10m Spurs loan00:02
First Hand: She was like a mirror image of myself: Lord Archer has found he had a family he never knew: John recalls the shock of discovering three new siblings00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Garden of Earthly Delights by Nicholas Salaman, Flamingo pounds 6.9900:02
Profile: Remote king of cable who flies by wire: John Malone: As America's latest multimedia mogul plugs into the QVC takeover, Phil Reeves tracks his stealthy empire-building00:02
Letter: Mystery of woodlands sell-off00:02
Future of WPP arm in doubt00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Theatre: Official00:02
Cricket: Haynes steps into the breach00:02
Cricket: Seventh Ealham00:02
FASHION / The pleasures and perils of a French country garden00:02
TRAVEL / In time for a quick getaway: Still unsure where to go? Jill Crawshaw completes her choice of last-minute holidays with island surprises, rural hideaways and uncrowded beaches, some at bargain prices00:02
Croatian cashes in with Bulls: Basketball00:02
A light in the dark for smokers00:02
No peace now and for a generation: The blood spilled in Rwanda and Burundi, and the racial roots of conflict between Hutus and Tutsis, leave no room for reconciliation00:02
Letter: Free market in mental health00:02
Cricket Diary: Piper catches a rare following00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Naked body found00:02
PROPERTY / If I could live anywhere: Shirley Conran, writer00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
TELEVISION / York on Ads: No 40: Woman magazine00:02
Chicken drug still used despite risk of cancer00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Travellers sacrificed to the tourist game: The No Man's Land - An Investigative Journey through Kenya and Tanzania - George Monbiot: Macmillan, pounds 17.99 (CORRECTED)00:02
Letter: Free market in mental health00:02
Drip disaster00:02
Profile: Mr Irresistible's big job: Ian Ridley analyses the qualities of the new Middlesbrough manager and the scale of his task00:02
Golf: USPGA Championship: Faldo can stir a melting pot: Who will stay cool to rise above the challenge of 72 holes in Tulsa? Robert Green reports00:02
It's a man's life in the Army: While the top brass splash out, rank-and-file wives struggle to get by, finds Sarah Lonsdale00:02
The professionals who prefer McJobs: Salary and status are small sacrifices for those determined to quit the rat race. Sue Webster reports00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Opera & Concerts00:02
Deposit hope for Lloyd's names00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Smooth operators: Watch out Haagen-Dazs, with an ice-cream maker anyone can do it. Our panel compares five00:02
Alert as man dies of legion disease00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Power price curbs urged00:02
Pop star 'overdose'00:02
Mayhem in Unhappy Valley: Drastic poverty denies myths of a Kenyan paradise00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A case of middle-age spread: When the world was steady - Claire Messud: Granta, pounds 14.9900:02
Letter: Why a local chemist would damage this country practice00:02
Bunhill: Ominous signal00:02
Letter: Pier group and the enemy00:02
Sex-and-shopping row: sequel looms: Legal action over authorship of Lace 2 is likely to be renewed (CORRECTED)00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Lenders busk the car-purchase queues00:02
Rugby Union: Chris Rea says there is no going back in rugby's move towards professionalism00:02
Bunhill00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on Oddbins' best buys00:02
Take a virtual number: System rings changes in areas without telephones00:02
Football: Cantona sees the red mist again: James Traynor watches as United's volatile Frenchman is sent off in the defeat at Ibrox00:02
Union leader in hotel minibar shock]00:02
TELEVISION / Innocent until proven famous00:02
Pension sold to man in sixties00:02
Glider Club's birthday00:02
Pension sold to man in sixties00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Hot on a Scottish trail00:02
Jubilee line's plan to prop neighbours00:02
Wallabies pulverise Western Samoa: Rugby union00:02
Alert as man dies of legion disease00:02
Profile: Is he icon or demon?: Peter Victor reports on a man vilified by the 'Daily Mail' but lionised as a victim by the left00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Daily Bread: Anton Edelmann: What the master chef ate one day last week00:02
Fishing Lines: Twin dangers of the crays00:02
Cricket: Sussex surge on00:02
Personal Finance: Who guards guardians?00:02
How MacKenzie met his match: A New Zealander known as 'James Cagney' proved to be the immovable object for the notorious tabloid king in his new job00:02
Damascus strives to block the Bulldozer of Peace00:02
Big baseball pay battle threatens one strike and all out for summer00:02
First Hand: She was like a mirror image of myself: Lord Archer has found he had a family he never knew: John recalls the shock of discovering three new siblings00:02
Haiti regime taunts US over invasion delay00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Island of Dreams by Tony Williams, Signet pounds 4.9900:02
Letter: Export dive00:02
Words: Robbers00:02
Swan on scent of work00:02
GARDENING / Caverns of the mind: Correction00:02
De las Cuevas defeats Indurain: Cycling00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Personal Finance: Who guards guardians?00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
French attack 'Rainbow Warrior' again00:02
Can the centre hold?: The Lib Dems are tumbling in the polls as Tony Blair steals their clothes. Stephen Castle and John Curtice report00:02
De las Cuevas defeats Indurain: Cycling00:02
Leading Article: Let a thousand backyards bloom00:02
Golf: USPGA Championship: Faldo can stir a melting pot: Who will stay cool to rise above the challenge of 72 holes in Tulsa? Robert Green reports00:02
Power price curbs urged00:02
French hold imam00:02
Database00:02
City & Business: Diller down if not out00:02
Football: Burns will find it hot: James Traynor explains why a giant shadow hangs over Celtic's new manager00:02
Bunhill: Undercover man who went out in the cold00:02
DANCE / Foxy end to a poor season00:02
TRAVEL / In time for a quick getaway: Still unsure where to go? Jill Crawshaw completes her choice of last-minute holidays with island surprises, rural hideaways and uncrowded beaches, some at bargain prices00:02
The Dinner Party Guide to Unbelief: Confused by the disbelieving-vicar debate? Alex Spillius investigates the alternatives to God00:02
No prize money at Olympics: Athletics00:02
Happy Azinger misses cut: Golf00:02
Naked body found00:02
Rising Starr00:02
Portillo met top Heseltine aide00:02
Abiola still jailed00:02
Economics: A difficult time to ask for a rise00:02
Lenders busk the car-purchase queues00:02
Car ad campaigns find way to make their marque00:02
Bruguera through on the hour: Tennis00:02
Profile: Mr Irresistible's big job: Ian Ridley analyses the qualities of the new Middlesbrough manager and the scale of his task00:02
Glider Club's birthday00:02
How We Met: Janet Street-Porter and Zandra Rhodes00:02
Britain's crumbling ruling class is losing the accent of authority00:02
More loss of face for SFO: All defendants cleared in Seil fraud trial00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: A Miami state of mind00:02
Opinions: What do you do on Sunday?00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Why I could get no satisfaction in the Sixties00:02
Almanack: Strife in the end zone00:02
Opportunity to take cover in the garden: Move against loophole in home insurance00:02
Football: The faithful fall for Klinsmann: Julie Welch joins a full house to greet the arrival of Spurs' German recruit00:02
Dad pays more if his wife re-weds: Legal quirk ends tax relief for divorced fathers who pay child support to ex-spouse00:02
Future of WPP arm in doubt00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: A Rough Guide to Surviving in Edinburgh: It's 4am and you need a cab. You're new to the city and you need somewhere to stay. Where do you buy tickets? Look no further . . .00:02
Q & A: Nine out of ten for dismissals00:02
Problems widen with trade pacts00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Nicholas II: Emperor of all the Russians by Dominic Lieven, Pimlico pounds 1000:02
Problems widen with trade pacts00:02
BBC trounced00:02
Captain Moonlight: Opportunity knocks for a hard worker00:02
Racing: Piggott just out of picture: Old master returns to the saddle but is denied in a photo-finish00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Gaby Taberani00:02
Deposit hope for Lloyd's names00:02
Jubilee line's plan to prop neighbours00:02
Limits of brotherly love00:02
Cricket / Second Test: Faded memory of a stain on the game: Richard Williams feels that Darren Gough should not be deprived of a legitimate weapon00:02
Edinburgh Festival00:02
Captain Moonlight: The Captain's Catch-up Service00:02
Management: Employee schemes need to talk louder: The success of wider share ownership by the workers may rest on consultation as well as motivation00:02
Cricket: England run riot00:02
Arena: Pioneers with grand ambition: 16 Edgbaston: Derek Pringle traces the history of a county and Test cricket ground which is laced with controversy00:02
Letter: Why a local chemist would damage this country practice00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Past perfect: Appearing at Edinburgh needn't be a nightmare. Here, Fringe veterans remember the best of times00:02
Firestorms darken our past: Those who defend 'Bomber' Harris's destruction of German cities are wrong, Geoffrey Wheatcroft argues00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A prophet in our own country: Hayek on Hayek: An Autobiographical Dialogue, ed Stephen Kresge & Leif Wenar: Routledge, pounds 19.9900:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Opera & Concerts00:02
Almanack: Strife in the end zone00:02
Firm cuts costs of strategic change00:02
Cricket: Essex fall foul of Fairbrother00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: The show starts here: Nice city, but who are all these strange people coming to stay? John Shuttleworth offers his personal guide to the festival00:02
GARDENING / Slugging it out in earnest: The slimy pests have met their Waterloo, in a small slab of clay. Michael Leapman sows nemesis by nematode on his allotment00:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Frank's Fantasy Fringe00:02
Cricket: Essex fall foul of Fairbrother00:02
Company pockets 50p from every Rwanda donation00:02
Political Commentary: A leaking roof is bond to make a politician tetchy00:02
Shares: Glittering prospects: South African platinum producers promise high returns00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Sex-and-shopping row: sequel looms: Legal action over authorship of Lace 2 is likely to be renewed (CORRECTED)00:02
Milosevic risks all for redemption: Serbia's President finds war no longer works to his advantage - His allies in Bosnia begin to hand back seized weapons00:02
Letter: Fed up with regional bias00:02
The professionals who prefer McJobs: Salary and status are small sacrifices for those determined to quit the rat race. Sue Webster reports00:02
GARDENING / Caverns of the mind: Correction00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A prophet in our own country: Hayek on Hayek: An Autobiographical Dialogue, ed Stephen Kresge & Leif Wenar: Routledge, pounds 19.9900:02
The Edinburgh Festival 1994: Comedy & Cabaret00:02
My gang has a showdown at the Mars Bar saloon: Zoe Heller in America00:02
City & Business: Diller down if not out00:02
Bunhill00:02
The List00:02
Cricket: Haynes steps into the breach00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Smooth operators: Watch out Haagen-Dazs, with an ice-cream maker anyone can do it. Our panel compares five00:02
Cricket: Curtis in slow torture00:02
Cricket: Lewis leads revival after cutting loose00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: And so to behead . . .00:02
Flat Earth: Romanian leave00:02
Can the centre hold?: The Lib Dems are tumbling in the polls as Tony Blair steals their clothes. Stephen Castle and John Curtice report00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Shylock: Four Hundred Years in the Life of a Legend by John Gross, Vintage pounds 6.9900:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: A Miami state of mind00:02
Leading Article: West must now hold fire00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Cricket: Seventh Ealham00:02
Company pockets 50p from every Rwanda donation00:02
THEATRE / Age has not withered him: Broken Glass - Lyttelton; The Wives' Excuse - Swan, Stratford; A Midsummer Night's Dream - Royal Shakespeare, Stratford00:02
Profile: Remote king of cable who flies by wire: John Malone: As America's latest multimedia mogul plugs into the QVC takeover, Phil Reeves tracks his stealthy empire-building00:02
PROPERTY / If I could live anywhere: Shirley Conran, writer00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: A Rough Guide to Surviving in Edinburgh: It's 4am and you need a cab. You're new to the city and you need somewhere to stay. Where do you buy tickets? Look no further . . .00:02
Letter: Poor parents save on angst00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Past perfect: Appearing at Edinburgh needn't be a nightmare. Here, Fringe veterans remember the best of times00:02
Letter: Car policies should be local00:02
Shares: Glittering prospects: South African platinum producers promise high returns00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Jazz00:02
Union leader in hotel minibar shock]00:02
Letter: Free market in mental health00:02
How MacKenzie met his match: A New Zealander known as 'James Cagney' proved to be the immovable object for the notorious tabloid king in his new job00:02
Take a virtual number: System rings changes in areas without telephones00:02
Athletics / European Championships: Technical mastery that breaks down the barriers: Owen Slot studies the tactics which have put Britain's top hurdlers on a high plane00:02
BOOK REVIEW / On the secretive side: The Partisan - Benjamin Cheever: Hamish Hamilton, pounds 15.9900:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Blue Afternoon by William Boyd, Penguin pounds 4.9900:02
Spare the rod and spoil the catch: Fleets of hi-tech vessels armed with vast nets are wrecking a way of life and threatening world fish stocks00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Flat Earth: Romanian leave00:02
Almanack: Super ends and tacky grips00:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Global policeman's ball00:02
Letter: Pier group and the enemy00:02
Captain Moonlight: Opportunity knocks for a hard worker00:02
DANCE / Foxy end to a poor season00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Equestrianism: Briton whips up a storm00:02
Croatian cashes in with Bulls: Basketball00:02
THEATRE / Age has not withered him: Broken Glass - Lyttelton; The Wives' Excuse - Swan, Stratford; A Midsummer Night's Dream - Royal Shakespeare, Stratford00:02
Queen urged to sell Buckingham Palace00:02
What makes a ball swing?: Atherton had the answer, but didn't know it, William Bown and Rabi Mehta reveal00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Nicholas II: Emperor of all the Russians by Dominic Lieven, Pimlico pounds 1000:02
Almanack: Postscript00:02
Cricket: Malcolm excels00:02
Letter: No sex, no god, just good sense00:02
Karadzic mobilises Serbs into work units: Serbia's President finds war no longer works to his advantage - His allies in Bosnia begin to hand back seized weapons00:02
Q & A: Nine out of ten for dismissals00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
Edinburgh Festival00:02
Abduction case00:02
Milosevic risks all for redemption: Serbia's President finds war no longer works to his advantage - His allies in Bosnia begin to hand back seized weapons00:02
Limits of brotherly love00:02
Few win as rail strike runs on: Commuter cut-off takes the bloom off business for station retailers00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Island of Dreams by Tony Williams, Signet pounds 4.9900:02
Betke on a roll: Bowls00:02
Castro threatens US with immigrant flood00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A case of middle-age spread: When the world was steady - Claire Messud: Granta, pounds 14.9900:02
Cricket / Second Test: Faded memory of a stain on the game: Richard Williams feels that Darren Gough should not be deprived of a legitimate weapon00:02
Sport on TV: One small step for darts, one leap back by Gooch00:02
What the papers said about . . . Klinsmann00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The haunting history of home: Moving house and Other Stories - Pawel Huelle: Bloomsbury, pounds 13.9900:02
Edinburgh Festival 1994: Dance00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Leading Article: West must now hold fire00:02
Fear of a 'Ripper' haunts detective: One police officer thinks the murders of four women in the Midlands can be linked. But his colleagues are not convinced. Charles Oulton reports00:02
Nasa man called in over ball-tampering00:02
Athletics / European Championships: Technical mastery that breaks down the barriers: Owen Slot studies the tactics which have put Britain's top hurdlers on a high planePlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in