00:02
Rugby Union: Pontypool's sweet revenge00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Void between celebrities: 'Educating William' - William Cash: Simon & Schuster, 16.9900:02
Get your sperm to hospital - quick: Home testing kit for male fertility00:02
Leading Article: Lessons in egg-sucking00:02
THEATRE / Hello, hello, it's good to be back00:02
Bunhill: Sex and Lloyd's00:02
Today's papers00:02
Football: A world sold on United: Simon O'Hagan studies the unrivalled sales pitch of a club with global appeal00:02
Duchess of York changes her name00:02
Bus pass00:02
Football: Purdie has answer00:02
Off to work they go: The panto season is in full swing, but the only jobs for small actors tend to come in groups of seven. Robert Butler meets one set who are spending another year as stage Dwarfs00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Sail on the sale boards as housing rebounds: Quoted residential estate agents expect London prices and activity to lead the long-awaited recovery of the property sector00:02
Almanack: Return to sender00:02
Rising tide of scandal renews risk to Major: Yeo: another child - Tory quits over house deal - Wife 'blames split on MP's male friend'00:02
BOOK REVIEW / From here to maternity: 'The Virago Book of Birth Poetry' - ed Charlotte Otten, 6.9900:02
BOOK REVIEW / Death, decay and hairdos: 'The Matisse Stories' - A S Byatt: Chatto, 9.9900:02
Opinions? Do you love your neighbour?00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Nato is bungling its last chance to create security amid disorder00:02
The theorem that whacked Patten00:02
BOOK REVIEW / From here to maternity: 'The Virago Book of Birth Poetry' - ed Charlotte Otten, 6.9900:02
Letter: Give the workers a break00:02
Cost of breaking cover: A motor policy cancelled over extra charges led to more fees00:02
Getty family takes stake in UK acquisition venture00:02
Football: Dozzell's strike keeps Spurs alive00:02
Disposal of Tiphook container arm stalls00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Judgement Day nears on Waco Apocalypse00:02
The List00:02
A camera trained on hell: Can any feature film portray the Holocaust? Neal Ascherson is moved by 'Schindler's List' but doubts the achievement is possible00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Of moles and grasses: 'The Faber Book of Espionage' - Nigel West: Faber, 17.5000:02
THEATRE / The notebook's the thing: A new Brecht opens next week. He might not approve. Irving Wardle explains00:02
Innovation: Easy riders00:02
Football: Purdie has answer00:02
Pay increases00:02
Cricket: Richards returns from retirement00:02
Innovation: Prawnography00:02
Clarification: Richard Dawkins00:02
The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
Innovation: Prawnography00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Bunhill: Kelway's Nurseries00:02
Cricket: England driven to distraction00:02
Almanack: Bonfire of the profanities00:02
Rugby Union: The dying of the light: Richard Williams traces the declining fortunes of Wales, a nation with a proud rugby heritage00:02
Why Sky's the limit00:02
Torvill and Dean's perfect comeback00:02
TRAVEL / First steps on the slippery slopes: When a family wants to take to the snow, what about the kids? Jill Crawshaw has some suggestions for how, when and where00:02
RADIO / Brian Johnston00:02
Rugby Union: Chalmers stakes a timely claim00:02
Football: Cooper makes amends00:02
Darts: George whitewashed, Part satisfied00:02
Almanack: Grantham's example at head of the table00:02
ART / Year of the living dead: Hard times, cautious management, Old Masters keeping new talent out of the picture: our art critic on what to expect in 1994 (CORRECTED)00:02
Today's papers00:02
Letter: Curbs on Jews in Poland00:02
RADIO / Brian Johnston00:02
Innovation: Robots eye up tower blocks00:02
Long Runners / No 13: The Bill00:02
ETCETERA / Angst: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Resort lenders consider debt for equity swap00:02
Statement likely from Kingfisher00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Mark of bad taste00:02
Tories engulfed in shame: 'I had another illegitimate child' - Yeo00:02
How we met: Kitty Aldridge and Esther Freud00:02
Killer jailed00:02
I'll never have it so good00:02
Letter: Things are better in Sweden00:02
Letter: Samuel Smiles is innocent00:02
Some kinds of fidelity are not worth having00:02
How and Why: A 3-3 draw at Anfield was a showcase for English football at its best00:02
FOOD & DRINK / A-Z of treats: Upside-down pudding00:02
Personal Finance: Bonuses look on bright side00:02
City & Business: Singular standards00:02
Final respects00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
JP Morgan caught up in a Spanish inquisition: The American vlue-chip bank prides itself on making sound investments, but its role in the Banesto crisis may blow its credibility00:02
American Football: Montana is the Chief architect00:02
Football: Tear-jerker for Bromsgrove00:02
City File: Rank chief faces a grilling00:02
Arch enemy of the critics stings back: The art world is calling for Brian Sewell's head. He is unfazed00:02
Captain Moonlight: Chief whip00:02
Arch enemy of the critics stings back: The art world is calling for Brian Sewell's head. He is unfazed00:02
Cost of breaking cover: A motor policy cancelled over extra charges led to more fees00:02
FOOD & DRINK / DAILY BREAD: Anton Mosimann: What the master chef ate one day last week00:02
Rear Window: The sun sets on an unloved outpost: The British in Belize00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
Racing: Atone foils Satin gamble00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Golf: Oxford the masters of high society: Robert Green reports from Rye on a reunion for the President's men00:02
WINE / Grapevine00:02
Duchess of York changes her name00:02
Football: Barnet find a Ray of light00:02
THEATRE / Losing their way down memory lane00:02
Bunhill: Women don't worry00:02
MSF launches cross-industry pension plan00:02
Morgan Grenfell banned from MGN pension role00:02
Tennis: Dehydrated Maleeva quits championship00:02
City & Business: Media shares scream down the superhighway00:02
Innovation: Spot check00:02
Football: Everton cling on for Walker00:02
Dance / Dance that passes the screen test00:02
Letter00:02
US to Supermac: we shoot: Newly released records reveal that CND protesters were marching into the firing line00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Captain Moonlight: Teledon at war with the world00:02
What the papers said about . . . Brian Johnston00:02
The rat children of Romania: Winter bites, and the street urchins head for the sewers00:02
Leading Article: The mother and father of a mess00:02
EATING OUT / A Thai of the best school00:02
Judgement Day nears on Waco Apocalypse00:02
MUCIS / Cheap tricks on the road to High Wycombe00:02
Weasel words in the bathroom: Fiammetta Rocco investigates the 'no animal testing' claims made on the labels of cosmetics00:02
There's still no break after 59 years: Hester Lacey on the mature appeal of Kit Kat - the bestselling sweet in Britain00:02
First Direct fees that clients didn't count on00:02
Tories engulfed in shame: Right winger with fatal Midas touch00:02
Football: Sutton's case for Deehan00:02
The intimate who turned inmate: A financial horror story of a couple who trusted their investments to a friend00:02
Ice-dancing: Return to perfection: Six of the best: Torvill and Dean make a powerful impression as they warm up for Olympic glory00:02
FASHION / The fickle skirt: Up we go again00:02
Sarajevo shelled00:02
Rugby Union: How the tide was turned: Geoffrey Nicholson meets Dudley Wood, the man who engineered a quiet revolution while Twickenham stands as a monument to power of the English game00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Badminton: Hard-working Hall brings rival to a halt00:02
Paperbacks00:02
Rugby Union: Harris points way for Leicester00:02
Football: Predator with an enduring talent: James Traynor analyses the striking qualities of Mark Hateley, whose goals have kept Rangers on course for the title00:02
Some kinds of fidelity are not worth having00:02
France discovers a favourite son: Balladur looks credible Mitterrand successor00:02
Hockey: Gisborne rides to Southgate's rescue00:02
The intimate who turned inmate: A financial horror story of a couple who trusted their investments to a friend00:02
SHOW PEOPLE: Sex'n'drugs'n' ..art: Modigliani00:02
Hockey: Gisborne rides to Southgate's rescue00:02
Bock stake mortgaged: Lonrho delves into own director's finances00:02
Jewels' new setting00:02
Leading Article: The mother and father of a mess00:02
Football: Villa weather Devon storm00:02
Profile: An underclass warrior: Geraldine Bedell on the American brains behind the Government's morality campaign00:02
The simple majority of one: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
Captain Moonlight: Chief whip00:02
Media magnates await their cue: Overhaul of the rules on cross-ownership would be a boon to TV moguls, publishers and video game firms. Jason Nisse explains00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A rare talent to abuse: 'Hotel 167' - Jane Solomon: Picador, 4.9900:02
Assad gains the upper hand in the peace stakes: As the PLO deal turns sour, Syria's wily president is playing for bigger prizes. Robert Fisk reports from Beirut00:02
Letter: Don't blame the messenger00:02
Fraley dies00:02
The revenge of the Moral Majority: The Yeo Affair: Traditional values saved John Major's career at last year's party conference. Now he is paying the price.00:02
THEATRE / The notebook's the thing: A new Brecht opens next week. He might not approve. Irving Wardle explains00:02
Long Runners / No 13: The Bill00:02
Profile: The impatient mariner: Lawrie Smith00:02
Why Sky's the limit00:02
When the captain's support leads to an early bath: Political Commentary00:02
Alternative to USM sought00:02
Letter: Samuel Smiles is innocent00:02
Flat Earth: The other side of a Bosnian coin00:02
Captain Moonlight: Spy scoop00:02
Distance Learning: Companies cash in as employees sharpen skills in the workplace00:02
ETCETERA / Index00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A dark down under: 'The House of Strife' - Maurice Shadbolt: Bloomsbury, 16.9900:02
Prepare for a long Middlemarch: The BBC hopes it has a TV blockbuster with George Eliot's monument of English literature00:02
Rugby Union: How the tide was turned: Geoffrey Nicholson meets Dudley Wood, the man who engineered a quiet revolution while Twickenham stands as a monument to power of the English game00:02
WINE / Grapevine00:02
The curse of river blindness: The river Sewa in Sierra Leone can make a man rich or take away his sight. Though a pill can now prevent it, the river people still put their blindness down to witchcraft00:02
Profile: The impatient mariner: Lawrie Smith00:02
Innovation: Surgery enters a new dimension at Guy's: Software creates 3D images to help guide the hands of doctors00:02
Golf: Mickelson makes most of mixed fortunes00:02
Database00:02
Q & A:The ultimate Danish football experience . . . and golf's prejudices00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Parts that taste forgot: Baby gannet, tripe, boiled pigs' snouts. One region's delicacy is another's culinary nightmare, as Michael Bateman finds out00:02
Letter00:02
Tories engulfed in shame: 'I had another illegitimate child' - Yeo00:02
Football: FA Cup third round: County scale the heights00:02
Envoys leave Kabul00:02
Words: Love child00:02
As others see it00:02
Widow murdered at bus station00:02
City & Business: Cadbury's mouthful00:02
Golf: Oxford the masters of high society: Robert Green reports from Rye on a reunion for the President's men00:02
Bernard Silver00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Sydney's wealthy flee fires by yacht00:02
Best and worst: Interest rates on Tessas00:02
The List00:02
Jewels' new setting00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hung over but not hangdog: 'Patrick Hamilton: a life' - Sean French: Faber, 20 pounds00:02
Personal Finance: Bonuses look on bright side00:02
Hume puts pressure on Major over peace process00:02
Rugby Union: Harris points way for Leicester00:02
ART MARKET / A poseur on a truly lavish scale: The last great role of tycoon Peter Sharp was as art connoisseur. The sale of his collection should be interesting, reports Geraldine Norman00:02
Football: Predator with an enduring talent: James Traynor analyses the striking qualities of Mark Hateley, whose goals have kept Rangers on course for the title00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Economics: Is golden age tied to a lead balloon?00:02
Best and worst: Interest rates on Tessas00:02
Rugby League: Wigan taken to the limit: Regal display from spirited Salford but Mather's last-minute try makes final difference for the holders00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
YORK ON ADS / No 10: TOYOTA LEXUS00:02
Football: Rangers hit a purple patch00:02
US health industry seeks cost-effective cure00:02
ART MARKET / A poseur on a truly lavish scale: The last great role of tycoon Peter Sharp was as art connoisseur. The sale of his collection should be interesting, reports Geraldine Norman00:02
Rugby Union: Andrew's boot sinks Gloucester00:02
Why Alice will go private00:02
Lung cancer stalks women00:02
ETCETERA / Angst: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Torvill and Dean's perfect comeback00:02
Blood will out in peasant revolt: In the 50 years since Graham Greene wrote of hunger and hopelessness in Mexico, little had changed - until now00:02
Athletics: Radcliffe pulls clear in the rain00:02
Sport on TV: Grace and generosity on Planet Darts00:02
Speed skating: Ritsma goes for broke to take record00:02
SCIENCE / Beware bolts from the blue: Your chances of being killed by a meteorite may be higher than you think, reports Philip Ball00:02
Letter00:02
Holes in red carpet for foreign staff: Britain aims to import investment as well as skills00:02
British workers still trail in share ownership00:02
Calling the shots: The book of the film of the book? Dinosaurs on everything? Tie-ins are now big business, but what are they doing to children's reading habits?00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Football: Barnet find a Ray of light00:02
Sail on the sale boards as housing rebounds: Quoted residential estate agents expect London prices and activity to lead the long-awaited recovery of the property sector00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Parts that taste forgot: Baby gannet, tripe, boiled pigs' snouts. One region's delicacy is another's culinary nightmare, as Michael Bateman finds out00:02
Innovation: Spot check00:02
Cable companies prepare for flotation00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A rare talent to abuse: 'Hotel 167' - Jane Solomon: Picador, 4.9900:02
Letter: Things are better in Sweden00:02
Rugby Union: Five Nations Championship: Ireland may halt the juggernauts: Chris Rea weighs up prospects for a championship likely to be dominated by size00:02
QVC says rival bid is invalid00:02
Letter: Don't blame the messenger00:02
Rugby Union: Barnes exerts a quiet control00:02
Mud hits village00:02
A camera trained on hell: Can any feature film portray the Holocaust? Neal Ascherson is moved by 'Schindler's List' but doubts the achievement is possible00:02
Best Practice: Benchmarking moves on to bench-testing: Old methods are being pulled into the light00:02
Resort lenders consider debt for equity swap00:02
Ulster University took grant from fund backing whites00:02
Paper accused of Aids 'distortion'00:02
Letter: Two ways to count as jobless00:02
Rugby League: Leeds look to young ones00:02
Distance Learning: Companies cash in as employees sharpen skills in the workplace00:02
Style Revivals: From the light house: 3 Bloomsbury: The bright, breezy look created by the Bloomsbury Group is making a comeback. The message, says Caroline McGhie, is throw away the stencils and paint from the heart (CORRECTED)00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Death, decay and hairdos: 'The Matisse Stories' - A S Byatt: Chatto, 9.9900:02
Nato Summit: The Americans00:02
Blunders helped psychopath kill: Woman to sue Home Office over daughter who was brutally murdered by a prisoner granted home leave00:02
Letter: Give the workers a break00:02
Lives of the great songs / Cheatin' meeting of minds: The Dark End of the Street00:02
Hopes of early rate cut dim00:02
Gamsakhurdia killed himself - official00:02
MSF launches cross-industry pension plan00:02
Envoys leave Kabul00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
The curse of river blindness: The river Sewa in Sierra Leone can make a man rich or take away his sight. Though a pill can now prevent it, the river people still put their blindness down to witchcraft00:02
Innovation: Fresh effort00:02
Opinions? Do you love your neighbour?00:02
County sunk in a slough of despond: The Yeo Affair: What made the loyal Conservatives of South Suffolk turn on their MP? They are anxious, fed up and angry. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
First Direct fees that clients didn't count on00:02
Cricket: Confident Crawley is ready to graduate: Glenn Moore in South Africa assesses a batsman revelling in his further education00:02
Blood will out in peasant revolt: In the 50 years since Graham Greene wrote of hunger and hopelessness in Mexico, little had changed - until now00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Void between celebrities: 'Educating William' - William Cash: Simon & Schuster, 16.9900:02
Football: A world sold on United: Simon O'Hagan studies the unrivalled sales pitch of a club with global appeal00:02
Employment: Niche services prove the key to survival: While most firms are still looking ahead nervously, the head of one computer company is planning to create more jobs00:02
Disposal of Tiphook container arm stalls00:02
RADIO / A low blow for women00:02
County sunk in a slough of despond: The Yeo Affair: What made the loyal Conservatives of South Suffolk turn on their MP? They are anxious, fed up and angry. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
Captain Moonlight: Garrick Club news00:02
TELEVISION / Mummies, Daddies, Auntie and Esther00:02
Bunhill: A brief flutter at the lottery00:02
Rugby League: Wigan taken to the limit: Regal display from spirited Salford but Mather's last-minute try makes final difference for the holders00:02
Football: On the move: Transfers00:02
RADIO / A low blow for women00:02
Credit Lyonnais counts the cost of Dutch courage00:02
Football: Reds suffer black-out00:02
Darts: George whitewashed, Part satisfied00:02
Rugby Union: Andrew's boot sinks Gloucester00:02
Advisers lay debtors' options on the line00:02
Rugby Union: Chalmers stakes a timely claim00:02
The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
When the captain's support leads to an early bath: Political Commentary00:02
Bus pass00:02
TRAVEL / First steps on the slippery slopes: When a family wants to take to the snow, what about the kids? Jill Crawshaw has some suggestions for how, when and where00:02
Bunhill: Horsing around at Lloyds00:02
Credit Lyonnais counts the cost of Dutch courage00:02
Database00:02
Football: Cooper makes amends00:02
JP Morgan caught up in a Spanish inquisition: The American vlue-chip bank prides itself on making sound investments, but its role in the Banesto crisis may blow its credibility00:02
CRIES & WHISPERS00:02
Hopes of early rate cut dim00:02
Letter00:02
Football: On the move: Transfers00:02
Rugby union round-up: Carling returns in triumph00:02
QVC says rival bid is invalid00:02
Tennis: Dehydrated Maleeva quits championship00:02
Soho Soho to dine on the stock market as Chez Gerard goes public00:02
Letter00:02
US to Supermac: we shoot: Newly released records reveal that CND protesters were marching into the firing line00:02
Words: Love child00:02
France discovers a favourite son: Balladur looks credible Mitterrand successor00:02
City File: Rank chief faces a grilling00:02
Style Revivals: From the light house: 3 Bloomsbury: The bright, breezy look created by the Bloomsbury Group is making a comeback. The message, says Caroline McGhie, is throw away the stencils and paint from the heart (CORRECTED)00:02
Business Information Service: Saying of the week00:02
As others see it00:02
Bunhill: A brief flutter at the lottery00:02
Statement likely from Kingfisher00:02
Pay increases00:02
Profile: An underclass warrior: Geraldine Bedell on the American brains behind the Government's morality campaign00:02
Innovation: Surgery enters a new dimension at Guy's: Software creates 3D images to help guide the hands of doctors00:02
Mud hits village00:02
Skiing: Nyberg nips in for a World Cup victory00:02
Rear Window: The sun sets on an unloved outpost: The British in Belize00:02
Get your sperm to hospital - quick: Home testing kit for male fertility00:02
Fishing Lines: Sturgeon feeding on the Loch Ness legend00:02
Dance / Dance that passes the screen test00:02
Rugby Union: Pontypool's sweet revenge00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
What the papers said about . . . Brian Johnston00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Mark of bad taste00:02
Widow murdered at bus station00:02
Comment: A question of loyalty00:02
Floods stiffen upper lips as Britain fights the elements00:02
Football: Villa weather Devon storm00:02
Letter00:02
Skiing: Nyberg nips in for a World Cup victory00:02
Letter: Samuel Smiles is innocent00:02
Standards I expect from a Tory minister: The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold00:02
Almanack: Return to sender00:02
Paperbacks00:02
Cable companies prepare for flotation00:02
Leading Article: Lessons in egg-sucking00:02
FOOD & DRINK / DAILY BREAD: Anton Mosimann: What the master chef ate one day last week00:02
Prepare for a long Middlemarch: The BBC hopes it has a TV blockbuster with George Eliot's monument of English literature00:02
Rugby Union: Five Nations Championship: Ireland may halt the juggernauts: Chris Rea weighs up prospects for a championship likely to be dominated by size00:02
Clarification: Richard Dawkins00:02
Captain Moonlight: Royal Mail gets black marks as stamps flood the nation00:02
Sport on TV: Grace and generosity on Planet Darts00:02
Morgan Grenfell banned from MGN pension role00:02
A French chief or Eurotunnel00:02
Hume puts pressure on Major over peace process00:02
Economics: Is golden age tied to a lead balloon?00:02
Bock stake mortgaged: Lonrho delves into own director's finances00:02
Bunhill: Women don't worry00:02
Q & A:The ultimate Danish football experience . . . and golf's prejudices00:02
Football: Rangers hit a purple patch00:02
As others see it00:02
TELEVISION / Mummies, Daddies, Auntie and Esther00:02
Cricket: Slow torture for the fast men: Fraser is fit again to shoot from the hip but England must guard against being bowled out before their time00:02
Gamsakhurdia killed himself - official00:02
What Does He Earn?: Mike Walker00:02
Tories engulfed in shame: Right winger with fatal Midas touch00:02
Business Information Service: Saying of the week00:02
Badminton: Hard-working Hall brings rival to a halt00:02
Why Alice will go private00:02
Rugby League: Leeds look to young ones00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Alan Brazier00:02
Football: Walker draws on Everton's spirit00:02
Nato is bungling its last chance to create security amid disorder00:02
Football: Dozzell's strike keeps Spurs alive00:02
First-Hand: Memories of a tug-of-love child: Anna's father snatched her away from her mother at the age of four. He then snatched her brother. His reason, she says, was not love but selfishness00:02
Calling the shots: The book of the film of the book? Dinosaurs on everything? Tie-ins are now big business, but what are they doing to children's reading habits?00:02
City & Business: Singular standards00:02
Rising tide of scandal renews risk to Major: Yeo: another child - Tory quits over house deal - Wife 'blames split on MP's male friend'00:02
A French chief or Eurotunnel00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hung over but not hangdog: 'Patrick Hamilton: a life' - Sean French: Faber, 20 pounds00:02
Letter: Samuel Smiles is innocent00:02
Mission to Mir00:02
The theorem that whacked Patten00:02
As others see it00:02
Sydney's wealthy flee fires by yacht00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Bunhill: Horsing around at Lloyds00:02
FILM / History with a touch of soap00:02
How we met: Kitty Aldridge and Esther Freud00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Tales from a river prank: 'Two and a half men in a boat' - Nigel Williams: Hodder, 14.99 pounds00:02
Football: Campbell turns on full power: Norman Fox meets the striker at last beginning to establish himself00:02
L&Y seeks to retrieve pounds 10m loss00:02
Holes in red carpet for foreign staff: Britain aims to import investment as well as skills00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Of moles and grasses: 'The Faber Book of Espionage' - Nigel West: Faber, 17.5000:02
Football: Walker draws on Everton's spirit00:02
The revenge of the Moral Majority: The Yeo Affair: Traditional values saved John Major's career at last year's party conference. Now he is paying the price.00:02
Captain Moonlight: Teledon at war with the world00:02
Media magnates await their cue: Overhaul of the rules on cross-ownership would be a boon to TV moguls, publishers and video game firms. Jason Nisse explains00:02
Almanack: Save the Wales00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A dark down under: 'The House of Strife' - Maurice Shadbolt: Bloomsbury, 16.9900:02
Letter00:02
YORK ON ADS / No 10: TOYOTA LEXUS00:02
City & Business: Cadbury's mouthful00:02
The simple majority of one: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
Letter: Curbs on Jews in Poland00:02
There's still no break after 59 years: Hester Lacey on the mature appeal of Kit Kat - the bestselling sweet in Britain00:02
Soho Soho to dine on the stock market as Chez Gerard goes public00:02
What Does He Earn?: Mike Walker00:02
British workers still trail in share ownership00:02
Almanack: Save the Wales00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Tales from a river prank: 'Two and a half men in a boat' - Nigel Williams: Hodder, 14.99 pounds00:02
Bernard Silver00:02
Nato Summit: The Americans00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
FASHION / The fickle skirt: Up we go again00:02
Ulster University took grant from fund backing whites00:02
SCIENCE / Beware bolts from the blue: Your chances of being killed by a meteorite may be higher than you think, reports Philip Ball00:02
How to ride the wave of change00:02
Employment: Niche services prove the key to survival: While most firms are still looking ahead nervously, the head of one computer company is planning to create more jobs00:02
US health industry seeks cost-effective cure00:02
Letter: Evolution versus religion: even Darwin had his doubts00:02
Weasel words in the bathroom: Fiammetta Rocco investigates the 'no animal testing' claims made on the labels of cosmetics00:02
Almanack: Bonfire of the profanities00:02
SHOW PEOPLE: Sex'n'drugs'n' ..art: Modigliani00:02
Final respects00:02
Football: Reds suffer black-out00:02
Letter: Two ways to count as jobless00:02
Fraley dies00:02
The Art of Theatre: 10 Games & Parties: Nicholas Wright's Masterclass00:02
Paper accused of Aids 'distortion'00:02
THEATRE / Losing their way down memory lane00:02
Comment: A question of loyalty00:02
Letter: Two ways to count as jobless00:02
Lives of the great songs / Cheatin' meeting of minds: The Dark End of the Street00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Knocking at heaven's door: 'Pigs in Heaven' - Barbara Kingsolver: Faber, 14.9900:02
Rugby union round-up: Carling returns in triumph00:02
Fishing Lines: Sturgeon feeding on the Loch Ness legend00:02
Captain Moonlight: Spy scoop00:02
Football: Sutton's case for Deehan00:02
Mission to Mir00:02
Rates in the balance00:02
Almanack: Grantham's example at head of the table00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A star is reborn - after getting the message in a bottle: 'Anthony Hopkins: In Darkness and Light' - Michael Feeney Callan: Sidgwick&Jackson, 15 pounds00:02
How and Why: A 3-3 draw at Anfield was a showcase for English football at its best00:02
Cricket: England driven to distraction00:02
Innovation: Robots eye up tower blocks00:02
Blunders helped psychopath kill: Woman to sue Home Office over daughter who was brutally murdered by a prisoner granted home leave00:02
Assad gains the upper hand in the peace stakes: As the PLO deal turns sour, Syria's wily president is playing for bigger prizes. Robert Fisk reports from Beirut00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Alan Brazier00:02
Profile: In the school of hard Knox: Sir Ian Wood: Britain's northernmost tycoon looks beyond oil. David Bowen reports00:02
Cities are fighting doughnut syndrome: Oxford Street splutters in tide of tat00:02
Captain Moonlight: Royal Mail gets black marks as stamps flood the nation00:02
Floods stiffen upper lips as Britain fights the elements00:02
FILM / History with a touch of soap00:02
Rates in the balance00:02
Football: Everton cling on for Walker00:02
THEATRE / Hello, hello, it's good to be back00:02
MUCIS / Cheap tricks on the road to High Wycombe00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A star is reborn - after getting the message in a bottle: 'Anthony Hopkins: In Darkness and Light' - Michael Feeney Callan: Sidgwick&Jackson, 15 pounds00:02
Football: Tear-jerker for Bromsgrove00:02
Innovation: Fresh effort00:02
Sarajevo shelled00:02
Killer jailed00:02
ART / Year of the living dead: Hard times, cautious management, Old Masters keeping new talent out of the picture: our art critic on what to expect in 1994 (CORRECTED)00:02
How to ride the wave of change00:02
Captain Moonlight: Garrick Club news00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Knocking at heaven's door: 'Pigs in Heaven' - Barbara Kingsolver: Faber, 14.9900:02
The Art of Theatre: 10 Games & Parties: Nicholas Wright's Masterclass00:02
Rugby Union: Barnes exerts a quiet control00:02
Bunhill: Sex and Lloyd's00:02
The Yuk Factor: Is it morality or squeamishness which is driving the designer baby debate? Rosalind Coward reports (CORRECTED)00:02
Football: FA Cup third round: County scale the heights00:02
TSB forced to rely on loyalty of investors: Improved profits still far short of 1986 levels00:02
The rat children of Romania: Winter bites, and the street urchins head for the sewers00:02
Off to work they go: The panto season is in full swing, but the only jobs for small actors tend to come in groups of seven. Robert Butler meets one set who are spending another year as stage Dwarfs00:02
Advisers lay debtors' options on the line00:02
City & Business: Media shares scream down the superhighway00:02
Getty family takes stake in UK acquisition venture00:02
TSB forced to rely on loyalty of investors: Improved profits still far short of 1986 levels00:02
Best Practice: Benchmarking moves on to bench-testing: Old methods are being pulled into the light00:02
Bunhill: Kelway's Nurseries00:02
CRIES & WHISPERS00:02
American Football: Montana is the Chief architect00:02
FOOD & DRINK / A-Z of treats: Upside-down pudding00:02
Innovation: Easy riders00:02
EATING OUT / A Thai of the best school00:02
L&Y seeks to retrieve pounds 10m loss00:02
Computing: A centre for excellence: Two MBAs put sophistication within reach of small firms00:02
Golf: Mickelson makes most of mixed fortunes00:02
Public Services Management: Short-term funds go down the tube: Dragging an antique system into the 1990s requires years of commitment to modernisation. Cathy Aitchison has a look underground00:02
Letter00:02
Standards I expect from a Tory minister: The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold00:02
Letter: Two ways to count as jobless00:02
Lung cancer stalks women00:02
Cricket: Richards returns from retirement00:02
Rugby Union: The dying of the light: Richard Williams traces the declining fortunes of Wales, a nation with a proud rugby heritage00:02
Cricket: Slow torture for the fast men: Fraser is fit again to shoot from the hip but England must guard against being bowled out before their time00:02
I'll never have it so good00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Speed skating: Ritsma goes for broke to take record00:02
ROCK / New tricks from pop's old dogs00:02
Athletics: Radcliffe pulls clear in the rain00:02
Ice-dancing: Return to perfection: Six of the best: Torvill and Dean make a powerful impression as they warm up for Olympic glory00:02
Public Services Management: Short-term funds go down the tube: Dragging an antique system into the 1990s requires years of commitment to modernisation. Cathy Aitchison has a look underground00:02
Computing: A centre for excellence: Two MBAs put sophistication within reach of small firms00:02
Alternative to USM sought00:02
Profile: In the school of hard Knox: Sir Ian Wood: Britain's northernmost tycoon looks beyond oil. David Bowen reports00:02
Football: Campbell turns on full power: Norman Fox meets the striker at last beginning to establish himself00:02
Cricket: Confident Crawley is ready to graduate: Glenn Moore in South Africa assesses a batsman revelling in his further education00:02
Flat Earth: The other side of a Bosnian coin00:02
First-Hand: Memories of a tug-of-love child: Anna's father snatched her away from her mother at the age of four. He then snatched her brother. His reason, she says, was not love but selfishness00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
The Yuk Factor: Is it morality or squeamishness which is driving the designer baby debate? Rosalind Coward reports (CORRECTED)00:02
Racing: Atone foils Satin gamble00:02
ROCK / New tricks from pop's old dogs00:02
Cities are fighting doughnut syndrome: Oxford Street splutters in tide of tat00:02
Nato Summit: The Americans