00:02
Royal lines of railway investment, from Victoria to Elizabeth00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Those beastly Irish beatitudes: The history of the Ginger man: by J P Donleavy, Viking pounds 1700:02
Innovation: Card trick00:02
Cycling: Boardman loses lead again00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Glad all over at Glyndebourne00:02
Is inflation coming back?: Retail price pressure could force an increase in UK interest rates, writes Robert Chote00:02
Best and worst: Unit trusts00:02
Leading Article: Labour's long road to work00:02
Birthdays00:02
Letter00:02
Chicken satay moves into pork pie country: It has conquered the high street, and is moving into the local pub. Catherine Milner on the astonishing success of Thai food00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The butterfly breaks the wheel: The essence of chaos by Edward Lorenz: UCL Press pounds 14.9500:02
INTERVIEW / Saeed Jaffrey's passage from India: Whenever directors are casting a voluble, likeable Asian character, their first choice is Saeed Jaffrey. Perhaps because that's just what he's like. Robert Butler met him00:02
Cricket: First Test: Gooch suffers a shortfall: The former England captain announces his return with a resolute double century00:02
Tried & Tested: Opener verdict: There are as many ways to open a tin as there are Heinz varieties. Our panel judged modern and traditional versions of an indispensible tool00:02
Haven for Haitians00:02
'Thumper' Prescott rewrites Bambi story00:02
Canadian veterans robbed in car park00:02
Seaside resorts take an inland road to revival00:02
Jerusalem's great carve-up: In the fight to keep the city Jewish, bulldozers are clearing the way for new eastern settlements00:02
Booby trap blast00:02
Bowater injects new life into investor relations00:02
Dr Sked: a man of magnetism?00:02
Inflation: Effect of a rate rise on: The finances of consumers00:02
Inside Story: Dangerous Visions: The Channel tunnel has run massively over budget, but as Nicholas Faith argues, this syndrome is nothing new on great projects00:02
Football: Sweeper tolls the bell for Sexton?00:02
Letter: Good news is no news00:02
Letter00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Opinions: Who is your local MEP?00:02
CINEMA / France's most wanted: From Gabin to Depardieu, French cinema has produced some great baddies. Robin Buss, author of a new book on French 'film noir', picks his 10 best00:02
Kuwait sentences00:02
Boxing: No favours for poor Espana00:02
Athletics: A sport too big for a Mr Big: Norman Fox, athletics correspondent, studies the progress made to restore a tarnished image00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Crimes with an aria of passion: No night is too long by Ruth Rendell writing as Barbara Vine: Viking pounds 1500:02
Letter: Swings and roundabout results00:02
Letter00:02
Cries & Whispers00:02
How We Met: Paul Foot and Ann Whelan00:02
Sport on TV: A long night from the days of innocence00:02
War declared on corruption00:02
The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
Health fears over doctors' use of ozone00:02
Inflation: Effect of a rate rise on: Manufacturing industries00:02
Tennis: Pierce is forced to wait00:02
Watchdog censures Lehman: US bank risks fine over 12 breaches of rules00:02
Management: Imagination makes things happen: Disorganisation and a haphazard approach to projects are paying dividends for a design-led company00:02
Backlash on the border: Spectre of racism hovers over California's assault on illegal Mexican immigrants00:02
Nuclear pressure00:02
Tennis: Duel of the Barcelona baseliners: Simon O'Hagan in Paris reports that today's all-Spanish men's singles final has caused more debate on the poverty of modern tennis00:02
COMEDY / Jack the Dad00:02
Racing: Dream for Balanchine: Dettori claims his first English Classic triumph as filly answers the doubts over stamina00:02
Real Life: Keeping up appearances: We are not snobs, Great British Snobs will protest. But, says Hester Lacey, if the tweed cap fits . . .00:02
Profile: Return of a baseline kid: Tracy Austin: Bud Collins traces the comeback of a tennis prodigy whose career has been blighted by injury00:02
Travel: Life after death: In the bustling markets, streets and temples of Cambodia, life goes on frenetically despite the murderous legacy of the Khmer Rouge. Robert Turnbull is welcomed by Thailand's troubled neighbour00:02
THE BROADER PICTURE / Monarchy on the High Seas00:02
Motoring: Like a dukw to water: Is it a boat? Is it a truck? Jonathan Sale meets an amphibious Normandy veteran00:02
Letter: Two unsatisfied customers00:02
Clean break00:02
CINEMA / Gere - the architect of his own destruction00:02
European Elections: Birth of the rogue state could kill family spirit00:02
Letter00:02
Show People: The rise and rise of little voice: Stina Nordenstam00:02
Cricket Diary: Twelfth Man: One-cap wonder is left wondering00:02
Cricket: Yorkshire fail test of strength00:02
Food & Drink: The spice with the Midas touch: Loved by the Romans and treasured by the Tudors, saffron is fashionable once again. Michael Bateman welcomes a taste for gold00:02
European Elections: Rise and rise of the rebel philosophy: Ruling parties face big losses00:02
'We will not go into houses. It will turn us mad': Sylvia Dunn, founder of the new Association of Gypsy Women, talks to Christine Aziz00:02
Letter00:02
Golf: Montgomerie defies wind and rain00:02
Doing battle with the dull 'New Zealand factor': It's one long happy ending as normality breaks out in South Africa00:02
Letter: Beggars should be choosers00:02
On excellence: Value for us and them00:02
Letter: The new Roman Catholic catechism reasserts moral values00:02
Exclusive: UK cleared over killing of IRA gang: SAS 'did not use unnecessary force' in Gibraltar00:02
Million Rwandans may have died00:02
Health: Second Opinion00:02
Overheard00:02
Abortion becomes test of power for Walesa00:02
Racing: Dunwoody is the champion again00:02
New Look to float: Women's clothing firm set for pounds 60m stock market valuation00:02
Economics: The dangers of stirring up chaos00:02
Athletics: Ridgeon's new hurdle: Hugh Jones talks to an injury-scarred athlete who has turned to the business of promoting his sport00:02
Blair assures unions and the left00:02
Pay movie channel challenges BSkyB00:02
Rallying: Wilson sounds four-minute warning00:02
Books: Events00:02
City & Business: Cooking takeover goose00:02
EXHIBITIONS / A few late-blooming perennials: It's the older Academicians who dominate this year's Summer Exhibition - some of them are producing their best work ever00:02
Profile: A royal white knight for Mickey Mouse: Prince Al-Waleed: Larry Black in New York on the rich Saudi prince who has bailed out Euro Disney and is keen to be a corporate raider00:02
Numbers00:02
Innovation: Recycled sails00:02
Why the bereaved must wait: Rules governing the release of money when a person dies can cause hardship for the survivors00:02
Poachers pay premium for City stars00:02
Cricket: Independent on Sunday Ratings00:02
Cricket: First Test: Blade with a double edge: Richard Williams at Trent Bridge asks if Gooch's presence is hindering progress00:02
JAZZ / Locking horns and bringing history to life00:02
The odd man and the mountain: Is Jonathan Pratt Britain's most successful mountaineer? A storm is raging among the climbing elite about this outsider's claim to have conquered the world's two highest peaks00:02
Mob pelt police00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Six on a boat and all at sea: Debatable Land by Candia McWilliam: Bloomsbury pounds 14.9900:02
Storm clouds to part once again for D-Day00:02
Dale leak under scrutiny00:02
Letter: Britain's colonial war crimes00:02
Why my diary didn't mention D-Day: Harry Jack was 10 and on a cycling trip on 6 June 1944. But it was not the invasion that excited him00:02
Arena: Fading glories in a grand setting: Chantilly: Sue Montgomery surveys the beauty of the Paris racecourse which will today stage the French Derby00:02
European Elections: New age of anxiety dawns: Elections come at a time of uncertainty over the future of most national governments00:02
Chunnel banks irate00:02
Cricket: Gatting lacks attack00:02
Chess00:02
1944: when ignorance was patriotic and lack of curiosity a civic duty00:02
Take cover on foreign roads: Holiday breakdowns can cost the unprotected dear00:02
Profile: Pretty honest woman: Julia Roberts: The mega-volt smile is back in Britain. Phil Reeves says this time she'll finish the job00:02
Winner by a nose00:02
Letter: In an English country garden00:02
Database00:02
Q & A: The perils of away successes00:02
Letter: Beggars should be choosers00:02
City & Business: Botched bid for Lasmo should be abandoned00:02
Art Market: Ascot of the antiques set: The socially aspiring Grosvenor House fair is 60 this year. Geraldine Norman reviews its troubled history00:02
Tesco in own-label row00:02
What the papers said about . . . Wigan00:02
Letter: Bull bars are no use in cities00:02
Vomiting children are not my idea of clean family fun00:02
Rear Window: Why Alan Clark is rich: Three generations prosper on the fruits of the spool00:02
Inflation: Effect of a rate rise on. . .Institutions in the City00:02
TELEVISION / How to out-loony the Left00:02
Personal Finance: Nerves fray in property00:02
Bunhill00:02
Books: The voice of Isaiah: Britain's most famous living thinker, Sir Isaiah Berlin, is 85 tomorrow. Ben Rogers describes a richly varied intellectual life, while fellow writers assess his importance00:02
Angst: Expert advice on your problems00:02
Boxing: Robinson makes powerful point00:02
Council rules limit death sum00:02
THEATRE / Of dragons, despots and daughters: There's no question of simply slamming the front door like Ibsen's Nora: how are they to live?00:02
Tennis: Bates the defender00:02
ROCK / Breaking their own records00:02
Football: Irish fit to take on the world: Eamon Dunphy says Jack Charlton's squad are equal to their biggest test00:02
Fleeing Cubans shot at00:02
Societies step up bid for savers00:02
The list00:02
Dear Malcolm, How do you do? Super, I hope00:02
Race that has been run for 300 years00:02
Jailed without charge: The French have been shocked by the detention in Belgium of a dashing business hero00:02
Just how dangerous can a dead cow be?00:02
Tony 'Persil' Blair could clean up in the South: Stephen Castle watches Labour's brightest, newest TV-friendly face00:02
Records00:02
Tories face defeat in heartland00:02
Books: Lots of smoke, a bit of aura and some prose: Raffaella Barker, whose first novel is published this month, went to learn more about her craft - at a masterclass given by Booker prize-winner Barry Unsworth at the Hay Festival00:02
Almanack00:02
Former chancellor Thorneycroft dies00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Poetry in commotion: The Akhmatova Journals - Vol I 1938-41, by Lydia Chukovskaya: trs Peter Norman, Harvill pounds 2000:02
RADIO / Five poets rhyming for a good reason00:02
A Memory for D-Day: The terror and the pity00:02
Accidents waiting to happen: Bull bars will not be banned until several people have died, says Christian Wolmar00:02
NHS threat to cheap policies: Insurers consider drastic surgery to save cover that allowed patients to avoid long waits00:02
A pounds 300m welcome: The UK is luring foreign business00:02
Letter: Punishment fits the crime00:02
Rugby League: Wigan's worries: Dave Hadfield on the new objectives for the world's top rugby league team00:02
Words00:02
Hollywood big shots return to British studios: Pinewood and Shepperton end years of decline00:02
Sailing: Pumped-up Reebok comes of age00:02
Letter: Disabled protest lacked dignity00:02
Shoprite investors 'misled'00:02
Football: Ticket trouble hits US hosts00:02
Sex cases dominate criminal courts: Accusations of rape and indecent assault have reached record levels, placing huge burdens on the machinery of law00:02
Motor racing: Mansell not quick enough00:02
Rugby Union: Cape crusader's dream: Chris Rea in Pretoria meets a man whose vision has been vindicated00:02
Design Dinosaurs: 19: The electric typewriter00:02
Motor Racing: Brundle walks the high wire: David Tremayne talks to the Briton who has spearheaded the fight for safety00:02
Cricket: Essex rein in talent00:02
Letter: The new Roman Catholic catechism reasserts moral values00:02
Now HMSO goes private00:02
Innovation: Faster response00:02
Letter: Those who can't spell can vote00:02
Eating Out: Celebration on a whim00:02
Revenue moves to cut investors' returns00:02
Rugby Union: Andrew delivers the glory: Record-breaking day for outside half as inspired England return to form and crush South Africans00:02
Athletics: Solomon prospects for gold: Richard Williams meets the late developer dubbed the new Linford Christie00:02
Cricket: Lara pursues perfection00:02
Arts: Variations on a solitary theme: At 23, Glenn Gould recorded his 'Goldberg Variations'. At 31, he retired from live performance. At 50, he died. Michael White on the short life of a reclusive genius.00:02
Weather radar 'could have saved Chinook'00:02
Skinhead victims00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Nicholas Brealey00:02
Golf: American gains for James00:02
City File: Bock hopes boost Lonrho00:02
Food & Drink: Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on the best of the boxes00:02
How much does he earn?00:02
City & Business: Disney prince00:02
Long Runners: No 34: Spitting image00:02
Political Commentary: Labour will need more than soggy solutions to win00:02
Leafy villages in uproar over 'population rise'00:02
Innovation: All aboard the super lorry00:02
The Independent on Sunday Free Film Screening00:02
Refugees move up the agenda00:02
Athletics: Ethiopian breaks 5,000m world record00:02
Airbus aims for longer haul00:02
Quotes of the week00:02
Innovation: Digital smell of success: An electronic nose offers commercial advantages over the human equivalent00:02
Fishing Lines: Still waters and old ways00:02
'We felt fear, but you just ran and prayed'00:02
Ballet standards appal director00:02
Cricket: Mushtaq's departure deepens gloom00:02
Racing: Moonlight's test00:02
Virago's book list is trimmed as sales drop00:02
Do I not like that . . . Caught at crossroads: Daryl Foster, Kent's Australian coach, sides with the young cricketers who may be faced with a dilemma00:02
Cricket: Crawley thwarted00:02
Cricket: Class puts Surrey back in the swing: Derek Pringle predicts success for a trophy-starved county cricket club00:02
Notice Board: Random access to banks: Dylan Thomas reports on recent findings in management and finance. Contributions can be sent to him at City University Business School.00:02
Books: In Brief00:02
Asterix retires00:02
Motorcycling: Isle of Man Formula One washout00:02
Books: Paperbacks00:02
Letter00:02
Letter: Punishment fits the crime: From T MOORE00:02
Anniversaries00:02
Play safe with the bears: Blue-chip shares are the best bet for investors while the market remains weak00:02
Different class as the stars bite back00:02
Books: In the lists00:02
Media: Ad agencies learn to tune in: Commercial radio offers intimate contact with the listener but many are unsure how to use it00:02
Letter: The new Roman Catholic catechism reasserts moral values00:02
A U and non-U exchange: In 1956, Alan Ross defined the language that marked a man above or below stairs. Today, can one still tell?00:02
Flat Earth00:02
Cricket: Benjamin breezy00:02
Tennis: Queen's wild cards aid British00:02
Leading Article: Plugged in to a victory for Britain00:02
Clinton braves the hostility of British press: Americans outraged by 'tabloid sensationalism'00:02
York on ads: No 31: Norwich Union00:02
Lilley's attack on foreign scroungers thwarted00:02
Athletics: Backley back in hope: Mike Rowbottom charts the return to fitness of the javelin thrower aiming to reach the top again00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Few chips off the old block: Richard Hughes by Richard Perceval Graves: Deutsch pounds 2000:02
Home thoughts00:02
Bridge00:02
Hi-tech thieves take the shine off Apple Mac