00:02
Old Tibet falls to Chinese wreckers00:02
Lep came out fighting: David Hellier examines the plans that a company made to contest a wrongful dismissal court case brought by its former chairman00:02
Amis letters to Larkin stir up censorship row: The Bodleian is sitting tight, writes Marianne Macdonald00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Put that in your pipe, Professor Cannadine00:02
MOTORING / Wild car chase on the China Sea: In Hong Kong cars are stolen to order and smuggled by boat into China. Jeremy Hart joins the police pursuit00:02
Hockey: Mayer makes a four-goal start00:02
Boat club cuts moorings: Humberside sailing group fights tide of rising costs with its own marina00:02
Regulars in a regulators' club: A pattern is emerging in the backgrounds and careers of watchdogs over utilities00:02
Bunhill: Trendy young thing00:02
Captain Moonlight: From ideals to images00:02
ROCK / At last, a comfortable Cave: The daunting front-man of the Birthday Party has mellowed into a songwriter fully at home with himself. Ben Thompson met him00:02
Sport on TV: Motley crew make best of their handicaps00:02
Innovation: Radio chips in00:02
Best and Worst: Broken bonds00:02
A feeling for the game: Tom Peters On Excellence00:02
Tax-free investors help charities the easy way00:02
Almanack: Postscript00:02
Almanack: Dictator dates00:02
Oppenheimer 'passed on secrets'00:02
Today's papers00:02
Sledgehammers and eggs: Roger Gosden on the strange case of a Criminal Justice and Foetal Tissue Bill00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
How to outmanoeuvre the West: The Serbs' assault on Gorazde has exposed the UN's threadbare policy, writes Christopher Bellamy in Vitez00:02
Travel: A painterly city: Correction00:02
Harried Clintons head for clean bill of health: White House scandals wear thin00:02
She Who Must Be Obeyed: Penelope Leach, scourge of the guilty middle-class parent, has produced another book. Baby and Child became the child-rearers' bible. Children First is a manifesto for children's rights00:02
Economics: An opening for the Governor00:02
Snooker: Hendry misses golden break00:02
Football: Taylor rediscovers golden touch00:02
Awards for IoS and its writers00:02
Bunhill: Loosened tongues00:02
Exclusive: Privatised water firms secretly overcharge customers by pounds 280m00:02
Police quiz four00:02
Rugby League: Castleford hold key00:02
Lasmo to sell house stake00:02
Why don't women like sport?: Geraldine Bedell finds that playing fields and football grounds are still a man's world00:02
Innovation: Quest to harness power of the deep: Variations in ocean temperature promise to give the world a cheap and abundant source of electricity00:02
ARTS / Exhibitions: One lump or two?: Laura Godfrey-Isaacs is obsessed with the clammy and the viscous. For her new show she even got help from ICI. Plus a tribute to Adrian Heath00:02
Insurance blow for flat owners: Landlord need not seek cheapest quote00:02
As others see us: Videos00:02
THE ART OF THEATRE / Nicholas Wright's Masterclass: 24 Endings00:02
Bunhill: Chicago Pizza Pie Factory00:02
Letter: Gummer was right about birds00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Return of the Style Victim: Monique Roffey at a club where glamour fiends get off on showing off00:02
BOOKS / In the frame: Race, sex and gender in contemporary art00:02
DANCE / Tender slices of love and death00:02
Opinions: Suburbia: is it heaven or hell?00:02
Competition: Win the New Grove, worth pounds 140000:02
Database00:02
Food mixer death00:02
Threat of pounds 1bn lawsuit hits payout to Atlantic creditors00:02
Letter: Crime is still linked to class00:02
ETCETERA / Design Dinosaurs: 12 The Hostess Trolley (CORRECTED)00:02
Crime figures down by 50,00000:02
BOOK REVIEW / The heights of achievement: Mr Vertigo by Paul Auster: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
FILM / Stately pleasure-domes: The first cinema opened 100 years ago (arguably). David Thomson shows you to your seat, while other film fans name their favourite picture palaces00:02
Yates wine lodges look at tapping the stock market00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Ways of seeing in the underworld: Lost children by Maggie Gee: HarperCollins, pounds 14.9900:02
Political Commentary: Conspirators and adulterers breathe freely again00:02
Rugby Union / Swalec Cup semi-finals: Llanelli at the last00:02
Chunnel link battle begins: Rival bidding groups are jockeying frantically as the deadline nears for tenders to build the pounds 3bn high-speed track to London. Neil Thapar reports00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In your own test-tube: Seven experiments that could change the world: A Do-it-Yourself Guide to Revolutionary Science by Rupert Sheldrake: 4th Estate, pounds 15.9900:02
Sailing: Yamaha breaks clear of the field00:02
Cricket / Fifth Test: Lara's master blast: West Indies regroup as a centurion rolls over England's attack00:02
Profile: Holier than the House: His campaign against violent videos has touched a nerve. Mary Braid on a very moral MP / David Alton00:02
Football: Le Tissier has a ball00:02
Double-crossed in the single market: Wiltshire tests EU consumer protection - in the Canaries00:02
City landmark makes way for '1930s wireless'00:02
Troops 'killed 32'00:02
Why bother with opinion polls?00:02
Innovation: Battery afterlife00:02
Almanack: Lonely battle of the forces00:02
Equestrianism: Lansink on the boil00:02
Eurotunnel warning00:02
Confusion in the Tunnel: A user's guide to an engineering triumph and a disaster in public relations and public planning00:02
Flat Earth: Spotted: Muldoon00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Letter: Good books and battery acid00:02
Police seek witnesses in Bucks murder hunt00:02
No-Go Britain: About the map00:02
Property: Digging dirt on toxic sites: A surveyor in search of contaminated land00:02
Shylock, unacceptable face of Shakespeare?: David Lister reports on two companies who have felt impelled to alter The Merchant of Venice00:02
RECORDS / New Release: Van Morrison - A Night in San Francisco (Mercury, CD/ tape)00:02
Football: Oldham hit by Morley00:02
Football round-up: Top two stumble in step00:02
Cut-price offers for tax returns00:02
Serbs shoot down British jet as all-out conflict looms00:02
Letter: What the best-dressed priests are wearing00:02
State turns agony aunt: Couples receive marital tips00:02
Racing: Turtle Island storms home00:02
Design: Confusing signals for commuters: A panoply of competing logos awaits travellers seeking continuity amid the rail free-for-all00:02
Council tax clawback if homes sell too dear00:02
Bunhill: Son steps out of father's shade00:02
Russian 'armada' scare enlivens Black Sea saga: Helen Womack in Moscow on how Ukraine repelled the latest attempt to take over the old Soviet fleet00:02
Keays attacks CSA00:02
Harrier pilot safe00:02
Rugby Union / Swalec Cup semi-finals: Laity lifts Cardiff00:02
Hope I'll grow up before I get old00:02
Fear rules in No-Go Britain: A report on the parts of the country most people would rather not think about - never mind live00:02
Do I not like that . . . A game's bad moves: Rogan Taylor believes that the demands of TV have had an adverse effect on the rhythm of football00:02
TRIED & TESTED / Light and shades: Out of the dark, into the lighting department. Our panel switches on to small lamps to see what's watt in desktop illumination00:02
New product venture inspires unemployed00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
What the papers said about . . . Olazabal00:02
Captain Moonlight: Cut out and keep catch-up service00:02
Boxing: Looking ahead00:02
Football: Villa tighten chains00:02
Flat Earth: Frostbitten Butte00:02
ART MARKET/ Up for sale00:02
TRAVEL / Botswana: Buzzing with wildlife: The thrill of the unspoilt wild drew Anthony Gardner to southern Africa, but a disturbing encounter with the angry native bee proved a severe test of his frontier spirit00:02
ETCETERA / Chess: Britain's leading woman grandmaster describes how she was battered by our leading member of the pre-teen age-group00:02
How We Met: Jonathan Bigg and Sally Gunnell00:02
The UN's scuttle diplomacy: Somalia, Angola and now Rwanda. Lindsey Hilsum says we are not learning from our mistakes in Africa00:02
Football: Fiery Cole levels with the best00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Severn polluter to face court00:02
Flat Earth: Civil ex-servant00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
No-Go Britain: Where, what, why00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / The king of the jungle: After Gorecki, Charles Koechlin? Michael White on French music's missing link00:02
Letter: Kurt Cobain: an appreciation00:02
Killer sought00:02
Letter: Forget the collectivist past00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Could be much verse: William Scammell dips into the raging torrent of new poetry00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / The sailor who fell from grace with the sea: Grimes; Gawain00:02
Irish PM offers power sharing00:02
Shares: Market value of miracles - Biotechnology firms promise breakthroughs but the bandwagon has yet to roll00:02
Exclusive: Tory right halt sex education campaigns00:02
Football: Ipswich invasion00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
More fight left in the Uruguay Round00:02
Football: European football: Milan to the point00:02
Roll up, roll up, for the latest way to puff smoking: Catherine Pepinster leafs through a new 'lifestyle' magazine for the bloke who smokes, drinks, gambles - and identifies with Napoleon00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Flat Earth: Moral galaxy00:02
Perfect teeth, sharp suits, and empty promises: but it's not fascism00:02
Rugby round-up: Carling's fears for SA tour00:02
Fishing Lines: Wilful neglect of the furry flounders00:02
Quantity control that drives Quality Street00:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
TRAVEL / The folks who live on Beacon Hill: Henry James's Boston, with all its high-minded rectitude, still exists alongside the original 'Cheers' bar. Michael Leapman explored both worlds from a B & B00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Caesarian sections: Mazzini by Denis Mack Smith: Yale pounds 19.9500:02
Football: Ferdinand floors sad Everton00:02
Bunhill: Reel uncertainty00:02
East shakes as Schneider runs: Cities such as Leipzig face the worst damage if the edifice collapses. Steve Crawshaw in Bonn assesses the ramifications00:02
Charge of the test-tube rhino00:02
Dirty Dogs Campaign: Dog wardens - such an undervalued breed: More officials are needed to help overcome the problem of dog fouling, reports Rosanna de Lisle00:02
Snooker: White knight among true heroes: Eamon Dunphy looks ahead to the World Snooker Championship and hopes that a wayward genius will be rewarded at last00:02
Basketball: Johnson abandons coaching career00:02
Words: Nasty00:02
Nuns rejoice00:02
Private jail firm fined over prisoners' revolt00:02
Ordination cleared00:02
Captain Moonlight: Keep out]00:02
City File: Greggs finds breadwinner00:02
RECORDS / The IoS Playlist00:02
Gum wars: dentists lead the way00:02
CHILDREN / Black sheep safely graze: The 'familially ostracised', people cast out by their own families, have found a champion. Bridget Freer reports on the scientist who is making the first serious study of their plight00:02
ETCETERA / ANgST: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Personal Finance: PEP firms lack fizz00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Daily Bread: Robin Ince: What the stand-up comedian ate one day last week00:02
TELEVISION / Long Runners: No 27: Jim'll Fix It00:02
Q & A: Scot heard around the world00:02
Quango Watch: A guide to those unelected quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisations that run our lives. No 10: Office of Water Services (Ofwat)00:02
My Biggest Mistake: John Naisbitt00:02
Letter: The geeks have a word for it00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on this week's best buys00:02
FOOD & DRINK / On the Shelf: Sesame Seeds: This is the first helping of an occasional series designed to suggest ways of using up those ingredients you bought for a special dish which have been on the shelf ever since00:02
Letter: Crime is still linked to class00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
Tennis: Chang in Hong Kong decider00:02
Leading Article: Hard choices on health00:02
Small traders suffer multiple injuries00:02
Bunhill: Lehman Brothers00:02
Royal Academy entries00:02
The consumer dilemma: commission or fee?00:02
Golf: Spaniards' rich vein00:02
Football: Wright's perfect pitch00:02
New York bidders circle LIG: Predators stalk condom maker00:02
Almanack: Boxing clever00:02
TELEVISION / York on Ads: No 24: Quorn00:02
TELEVISION / One hurt in soap's race down the slippery slope00:02
THEATRE / Revolutionary with a royal crush: Hated Nightfall - Royal Court; HRH - Theatr Clwyd; The Cherry Orchard - Glasgow Citizens; Ghost from a Perfect Place - Hampstead; Butterfly Kiss - Almeida00:02
Profile: So what's love got to do with it?: The Weisfelds: Business is a powerful glue in the marriage of the couple aiming to turn round Poundstretcher. They talk to Richard Thomson00:02
Assault inflicts crippling blow on Nato strategy00:02
Letter: Soros and Quantum Fund00:02
Nuns tell of machete horror00:02
Ellison dies00:02
Flat Earth: Spring fever on the Moskva00:02
The List00:02
Squash: Jansher slips out of contention00:02
The 1994 London Marathon: Mexican wave ready to sweep home: Hugh Jones, winner of the London Marathon in 1982, sees little hope for the British in this year's race00:02
Mandela's brave bid for Zulu hearts00:02
Motor Racing: Senna on slippery pole00:02
City & Business: Macho late payers00:02
Captain Moonlight: Nice pictures, shame about the facts. . .00:02
How much will he earn?: No 25: A Channel tunnel train driver.00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Rotten to the core: Rotten: No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs by John Lydon with Keith & Kent Zimmerman: Hodder pounds 14.9900:02
FOOD & DRINK / Cracking the eggplant: For centuries the aubergine has baffled science and delighted cooks. Michael Bateman learns the dark secrets of the enigmatic vegetable00:02
Snobbery blossoms in borders and the shrubbery: 'Plant war' over gardening taste00:02
Letter: Help Rwanda heal itself00:02
HEALTH / A lifetime in the shadow of death: Thousands whose parents died early go in fear of their lives, haunted by the dread of dying in the same way. Annabel Ferriman reports00:02
Leading Article: A sound unfit for heroes00:02
Eastern Europe rushes to OU for help00:02
Cricket: Top of class of '94: As a new cricket term opens for the universities, Russell Cake seeks to follow a noble line: Simon O'Hagan meets a Cambridge batsman with first-class prospects00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Zen and the art of Venetian maintenance: Dead Lagoon by Michael Dibdin: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
Letter: Fanaticism is a feminist issue00:02
Bunhill: Running on bread (CORRECTED)00:02
Cricket: Warne points Australia to last four00:02
RADIO / Gielgud at 90: still every inch a king00:02
US clothes chain targets Britain: TJX plans up to 100 discount stores for top brands00:02
Badminton: Nielsen beaten in semi-final00:02
Captain Moonlight: Wanted: New Bond00:02
Motor Racing: Mansell edged off front row00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Reason not the breed: The Nature of Knowledge: Concerning Adaptations, Instinct and the Evolution of Intelligence by Henry Plotkin: Allen Lane/Penguin Press, pounds 2000:02
Football: Fashanu restrains United: Battle for the Premiership: Wimbledon give champions a rude shock while Southampton halt Blackburn's progress00:02
Letter: Rear Window: Placing the rough with the smooth: State school boys at Eton00:02
Talks on Rwandan ceasefire00:02
Job bar on headteacher 'was racist'00:02
Onassis in hospital00:02
Ciampi resigns as Berlusconi gains00:02
Profile: Business is the spur: Alan Sugar: Norman Fox studies how the chairman of troubled Tottenham has changed his ways00:02
Letter: Eurobabble00:02
Rugby Union / County Championship final: Yorkshire run to victory00:02
Diplomatic refusal00:02
Lessons in mastering the twin impostors00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Innovation: Screens to give patient advice00:02
Football: Gunn foils City00:02
ARTS / Show People: Through the looking glass: Cindy Sherman00:02
Childcare bibles and my bonfire of the sanities00:02
City & Business: Laura Ashley follows the same old pattern00:02
Yemeni Jews describe their holocaust: Sarah Helm in Yehud reports on claims that Israelis stole 4,500 children from immigrants00:02
Hunches fix top pay00:02
FILM / Crash, bang, codswallop: Fearless (15); Tom and Viv (15); Widow's Peak (PG); Striking Distance (18); White Angel (18); Stalingrad (15); That Night (12)00:02
Director boasts of late paying00:02
Football: Purist pays a high price: By JAMES TRAYNOR00:02
GARDENING / Fast Plants: A guide for impatient gardeners: 2: Large Annuals00:02
Innovation: On-line to Vatican00:02
Letter: You get what you're paid for00:02
Public Services Management: Champions of the free vote - The people who guard your polling rights at home are also defending that principle round the world. Liza Donaldson asks them why00:02
City & Business: Tale of two tycoons00:02
D-Day cancellations00:02
Captain Moonlight: Europe defends its huddled masses, and rugby leaguers00:02
ITC accused over Ulster TV 'error'00:02
First-hand: The pilot said: 'Prepare for emergency landing': Robert Shipton entered every traveller's nightmare when a routine flight got into trouble after being struck by lightning