00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / A Fludde of tears at Aldeburgh's festival of Britten00:02
Fashion: Clothes that grow on you00:02
Arena: From corn field to field of dreams: David Tremayne explains how the home of the British Grand Prix flourished from its agricultural roots00:02
Books: In the lists00:02
Bishop bows out00:02
TELEVISION / The private man, the primetime exposure00:02
Mortar victim00:02
Jordan-Israel talks00:02
Innovation: Reading in Context00:02
Letter: Back remedy00:02
'Summer smog' hovers over England00:02
Murder hunt00:02
Western envoy said to be hiding fugitive author00:02
'Please, please bring our baby back'00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The venerable art of moving mountains: The complete landscape designs and gardens of Geoffrey Jellicoe by Michael Spens, Thames and Hudson pounds 3600:02
Today's Papers00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Hand in hand with tyranny: Distant voices by John Pilger, Vintage pounds 6.9900:02
Profile: All the world's his stage: Bill Kenwright: From Euripides to Everton is a short step for our most prolific producer, says David Bowen00:02
Passport to the suffering club: Ian Buruma on why all America's minorities want to join Jews on the rollcall of victims00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: The popular hero of Ireland's odyssey must draw on the natural talent at his disposal: Eamon Dunphy says an unlikely triumph depends on a tactical switch by Jack Charlton00:02
THEATRE / The Almeida's USSR-friendly nights at the opera00:02
Innovation: Landfill spyplanes00:02
Arts: Buried treasure?: Three meetings this week will consider whether we need a Museum of Women's Art. Blake Morrison talks to its proposers, asks the artists for their views, and discovers what lies neglected in the vaults of the Tate00:02
Eating Out: Bullish old boys' reunion00:02
Iran frees 'spy'00:02
Lord's Prayer to be given in three versions00:02
Letter00:02
Murderer's 'final freedom': The bizarre life of Jack Unterweger, poet and killer of prostitutes, ends at his own hand00:02
Letter00:02
Bunhill00:02
EXHIBITIONS / Discreet charm of a bourgeois: In the last years of his life, Bonnard shut himself off at Le Bosquet, painting what he knew best. But can a great artist live in a world of his own?00:02
Words00:02
A mix that has worked for Shell and Unilever00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: When one man's burden is another ma's destiny: Richard Williams hears why popularity with the fans is not the goal for Carlos Alberto Parreira00:02
Motorway protest00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Voller strikes to inspire Germans00:02
Tough on yobs, tough on the causes of yobs00:02
Nine years in prison for ex-Albania ruler00:02
Leading Article: Major Major: an example to us all00:02
Murder hunt00:02
Jobs should be higher priority than inflation, says Beckett00:02
Colombia's own-goal star shot dead00:02
Real Life: Women in love: more than just a fashion statement: Gay chic is in vogue, but lipstick lesbians aren't the full story, writes Linda Grant00:02
How We Met: Libby Purves and Paul Heiney00:02
Playing the field cuts pounds 3,000 off premiums00:02
With a wing in each corner: Fight to replace RAF transport aircraft highlights plight of contractors00:02
Motor Racing: Hill beats Mansell to pole00:02
How the green lane can lead to ruin00:02
Envelope mystery00:02
Rallying: Second victory for Auriol00:02
The two faces of Japan's 'Socialist' leader00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Calculus of seduction: Stendhal by Jonathan Keates - Sinclair-Stevenson pounds 2000:02
BR pounds 120m loss 'due to sell-off'00:02
Fashion: Clothes that grow on you00:02
Almanack: Saddled with pain00:02
York on ads: The director who parodied himself - literally: No 35: Volkswagen00:02
Postscript00:02
Flat Earth: Twin billing00:02
First Hand: 'We'd skull as many pints as possible': Boys at public school drinking and smoking? It's nothing new says Rupert00:02
Numbers00:02
Leading Article: Middle class, high anxiety00:02
Real Life: Charming drawings, but where's the story?: Someone should have told Beatrix Potter that whimsy is no substitute for plot, says Brian Cathcart, sick of baffling and boring his children00:02
Church closes training body00:02
Britons held00:02
Jordan-Israel talks00:02
Cricket: History-making wicket-takers00:02
Fishing Lines: Hooked on the close season00:02
Enterprise chairman under fire: Hearne may split roles after Lasmo bid fails00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Colombia's own-goal star shot dead00:02
Pressure builds up for US invasion of Haiti00:02
Ode to a speculator: Fictional trader offers useful lessons on investment00:02
Cycling: Tour de France: Boardman's flying start: British sprinter breaks speed record to lay first claim to yellow jersey00:02
Food & Drink: Grapevine: Kathryn McWhirter on new summer drinks00:02
Cancer suspect00:02
Leading Article: Major Major: an example to us all00:02
Christian right loses RE battle00:02
Rescue cash for Hartstone00:02
Wild-eyed response to this sorry affair00:02
First Hand: 'We'd skull as many pints as possible': Boys at public school drinking and smoking? It's nothing new says Rupert00:02
Balkans bound for even bloodier conflict00:02
Food & Drink: Psychobiology and the mood foods: Carbohydrates make you happy; coffee boosts mental skills. Michael Bateman presents a psychologists guide to diet00:02
Birthdays00:02
Buy the book00:02
CINEMA / It's just take, take, take00:02
How to prosper effortlessly - pounds 5 per lesson: Sue Webster learns that wealth and happiness depend on how nice a person you are00:02
Flat Earth: Lunch courtesy of St Michael00:02
Envelope mystery00:02
Thorn EMI00:02
Cricket: Best men00:02
Q & A: Secrets of the Eton bore game00:02
Desert heroes shed new light on secret state: World Cup success puts Saudis under spotlight00:02
What the papers said about . . . Diego Maradona00:02
Golf: Nicholas and Wright force the pace00:02
Athletics: Regis back with a hat-trick00:02
Arts: Perchance to dream: Fassbinder is coming to the ICA. Chris Petit remembers an original00:02
Cricket: Pike strives in vain00:02
Sailing: Chieffi leads the way00:02
Cricket: Donald menace cheers Procter00:02
Letter: Capitalism cannot be curbed00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Martina falls at the last: Martinez claims a place in Wimbledon history as the dream of a Centre Court legend is scuppered00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Tough on yobs, tough on the causes of yobs00:02
Inside Story: Instant pictures, instant policy: Is television driving foreign policy? ITN's Nik Gowing examines the 'something must be done' factor and picks out five examples from the bloody conflict in Bosnia00:02
Everybody loves Martina in defeat00:02
RADIO / But Tony Benn goes on forever00:02
'Horsiculture' curbed to save countryside00:02
Food & Drink: On the shelf: Capers00:02
Political Commentary: What the Prince of Wales needs is a proper education00:02
Balkans bound for even bloodier conflict00:02
'Dangerous' DIY bull bars land driver with summons00:02
Settlers take a sanguine view of the 'terrorist'00:02
Books: Paperbacks00:02
Letter: CD campaign deserved to fail00:02
Lilley sets new targets for CSA00:02
Flat Earth: Twin billing00:02
Real Life: Charming drawings, but where's the story?: Someone should have told Beatrix Potter that whimsy is no substitute for plot, says Brian Cathcart, sick of baffling and boring his children00:02
Wild-eyed response to this sorry affair00:02
Cycling: Tour de France: Boardman's flying start: British sprinter breaks speed record to lay first claim to yellow jersey00:02
Football: Football fact file00:02
Aircraft orders dry up00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Delgado falls00:02
Home thoughts00:02
Lost worlds rich in unique wildlife: Scientists discover two new species of deer in the remote jungle region between Laos and Vietnam00:02
Alluring venture but not for stags00:02
Bridge00:02
Boxing: Eubank keeps control: Harry Mullan applauds the acumen of a smart fighter who makes much of modest talent00:02
Athletics: Regis back with a hat-trick00:02
Racing: Erhaab is eclipsed00:02
Jobs should be higher priority than inflation, says Beckett00:02
Britons held00:02
Words00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: A god felled by his own hand: Ian Ridley traces the steps that led to the exit of a player of substance00:02
Opinions: Do you still eat beef?00:02
Best and worst00:02
Football: Worthington in talks with Wilkinson00:02
Church closes training body00:02
'Summer smog' hovers over England00:02
Labour egg-thrower00:02
Flat Earth: Looking homeward00:02
Letter: Idol boast00:02
Quotes of the week00:02
Rallying: Second victory for Auriol00:02
Christian right loses RE battle00:02
Property: The craftsman: Caught Knapping: Cutting, or knapping, flints is a Stone Age skill, an expert tells Caroline McGhie00:02
Innovation: Computers see the light: A British discovery could lay foundation for a new generation of processors00:02
Murderer's 'final freedom': The bizarre life of Jack Unterweger, poet and killer of prostitutes, ends at his own hand00:02
Cricket: Lewis hits back00:02
Everybody loves Martina in defeat00:02
Letter00:02
Profile: The self-made captain: Dermot Reeve: Derek Pringle analyses the determined approach and extrovert nature of a cricket escapologist00:02
Bromsgrove investors revolt00:02
The Broader Picture: Pilgrimage to the god of ice00:02
Lord's Prayer to be given in three versions00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Navratilova's last Wimbledon: Pam Shriver bids an emotional farewell to her former doubles partner00:02
Boxing: Eubank keeps control: Harry Mullan applauds the acumen of a smart fighter who makes much of modest talent00:02
Show people: In your funnybone rather than your face: Punt and Dennis00:02
Profile: Big man on a roll: Helmut Kohl: He has united Germany. But can he do the same for Europe? Steve Crawshaw reports00:02
THEATRE / Breaking up proves harder to do00:02
Too singular to go Dutch: The downfall of Reed Elsevier's British co-chairman last week was perhaps inevitable given the clash between corporate cultures. William Kay reports00:02
My Biggest Mistake: John Drummond00:02
The two faces of Japan's 'Socialist' leader00:02
Cricket: Lewis hits back00:02
Arts: The maverick who went full circle: James Garner had all it took to be a fifties film star - except the snobbery about television. Now he's back, as his best-known character's father. David Thomson on a Hollywood great00:02
Innovation: Secrets of ohm cooking: Heating with electric current offers alternative to freezing food00:02
Letter00:02
Profile: Big man on a roll: Helmut Kohl: He has united Germany. But can he do the same for Europe? Steve Crawshaw reports00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: When one man's burden is another ma's destiny: Richard Williams hears why popularity with the fans is not the goal for Carlos Alberto Parreira00:02
Rowing: Britons' low ebb00:02
Mortar victim00:02
Cricket: Millns leaves Essex all at sea00:02
Cricket: Johnson claims perfect ten00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Voller strikes to inspire Germans00:02
Iran frees 'spy'00:02
Letter: The Captain should keep out00:02
Letter: Idol boast00:02
Home thoughts00:02
Danny, 11, enjoys pet reptiles and West End stardom00:02
Teaching hours are no key to standards00:02
Cafe society blends coffee with culture00:02
Cafe society blends coffee with culture00:02
Motor Racing: Hill beats Mansell to pole00:02
Personal Finance: Bank on a higher rate00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Guerrillas in the mist: Blue Burneau by Glyn Maxwell, Chatto pounds 9.9900:02
Swimming: Brew gets it right in the end00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Navratilova's last Wimbledon: Pam Shriver bids an emotional farewell to her former doubles partner00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The tail of the pig: Dogs of God by Pinckney Benedict: Secker pounds 9.9900:02
Glastonbury comes of age00:02
Rugby League: Myers signs for Bradford Northern00:02
Inside Story: Instant pictures, instant policy: Is television driving foreign policy? ITN's Nik Gowing examines the 'something must be done' factor and picks out five examples from the bloody conflict in Bosnia00:02
Letter00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Faint grumblings heard in Serendip: Reef by Romesh Gunesekera - Granta Books pounds 13.9900:02
Travel: A family guide to summer Britain: The South Coast and East Anglia00:02
Letter: CD campaign deserved to fail00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Sweden laugh off the Saudi threat00:02
A drug called winning: It's a habit they can't break. Peter Corrigan on sporting heroes and villains00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Spain set off on the high road00:02
Cricket: Independent on Sunday Rankings:00:02
Under the guise of 'controversy' we are offered wagon-loads of trash00:02
Cricket Diary: Twelfth Man: Doc gets in some general practice00:02
Pressure builds up for US invasion of Haiti00:02
Desert heroes shed new light on secret state: World Cup success puts Saudis under spotlight00:02
Today's Papers00:02
Impressing the press: Tom Peters On Excellence00:02
Reckless Enterprise00:02
Equestrianism: Thomson pushes for place00:02
The Broader Picture: Pilgrimage to the god of ice00:02
'Dangerous' DIY bull bars land driver with summons00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: World Cup Diary: Foreign legion on the march00:02
Do I not like that . . . A hero not a villain: Andrew Castle, the former British Davis Cup player, rallies to the cause of a vilified Boris Becker00:02
Under the guise of 'controversy' we are offered wagon-loads of trash00:02
Bishop bows out00:02
Passport to the suffering club: Ian Buruma on why all America's minorities want to join Jews on the rollcall of victims00:02
World Cup on TV: Light balls, and the heavy hand of Howe00:02
Database00:02
Sailing: Chieffi leads the way00:02
Pay-if-you-die cover slashed: The fall in the cost of fixed-term life assurance could save home-buyers thousands of pounds00:02
Golf: Els having a ball00:02
Pressure builds up for US invasion of Haiti00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Delgado falls00:02
Whites become whipping boys of Mugabe00:02
Letter00:02
Cricket: Millns leaves Essex all at sea00:02
Tokoza killings00:02
Letter: Little England's signal success00:02
Cricket: Best men00:02
Numbers00:02
Letter: Little England's signal success00:02
Car thieves rise to hi-tech challenge00:02
Property: Houses in the landscape: Flint and chalk: Patterns from the past: Flint, one of the first stones used by man, sparkles like black diamonds, or forms playful decorations on chalk, says Caroline McGhie00:02
Quotes of the week00:02
Rear Window: Defenders of the faith: How Hal muddied the holy waters for Charles00:02
THEATRE / Breaking up proves harder to do00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Leap back into make-believe: William Scammell examines four poets' treatment of love, family and contemporary life00:02
Exports: Small firms make waves overseas: An annual award shows that some companies have defied the conventional wisdom by exploiting foreign markets00:02
Nine years in prison for ex-Albania ruler00:02
Diet product claims may be trimmed00:02
Cricket: Hooper hits heights00:02
Birthdays00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: Martina falls at the last: Martinez claims a place in Wimbledon history as the dream of a Centre Court legend is scuppered00:02
Tokoza killings00:02
Racing: Erhaab is eclipsed00:02
Arts: Perchance to dream: Fassbinder is coming to the ICA. Chris Petit remembers an original00:02
Letter:00:02
Flat Earth: Looking homeward00:02
Cricket: Brown on attack00:02
'Strange things' in the sky puzzle minister00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: World Cup Diary: Foreign legion on the march00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: A player's diary: My dream Wimbledon: Mark Woodforde, the doubles specialist, tells how his fortnight ended in triumph00:02
Cricket: Leatherdale belter00:02
Letter00:02
Books in Brief00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Lilley will blame fathers for CSA's failings00:02
Pru goes shopping00:02
TELEVISION / The private man, the primetime exposure00:02
Cricket: Smith to the rescue00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Sweden laugh off the Saudi threat00:02
Arts: The maverick who went full circle: James Garner had all it took to be a fifties film star - except the snobbery about television. Now he's back, as his best-known character's father. David Thomson on a Hollywood great00:02
IoS crime book offer00:02
Motorway protest00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: A final show of power: Simon O'Hagan weighs up prospects for a fascinating battle on Centre Court today00:02
Books: Paperbacks00:02
How much does he earn?: No 35: Professor Sir Martin Rees, last week appointed the 15th Astronomer Royal (from next January).00:02
Cricket: Pike strives in vain00:02
Leading Article: Middle class, high anxiety00:02
More flee from Aden00:02
Cricket: Leatherdale belter00:02
Cricket: Brown on attack00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Just another borderline case: The paper wife by Linda Spalding, Bloomsbury pounds 15.9900:02
The list00:02
IoS crime book offer00:02
Whites become whipping boys of Mugabe00:02
How would Othello make out in Manhattan?00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Cricket: Donald menace cheers Procter00:02
Football: Football fact file00:02
Letter: Different owners, same name00:02
Copycat summit fails as retailers pull out00:02
Guaranteed bond yields poor return00:02
Letter: No doubling of nuclear costs00:02
Scandal sweeps back through Standard00:02
Cancer suspect00:02
Teaching hours are no key to standards00:02
Cricket Diary: Twelfth Man: Doc gets in some general practice00:02
Takeover threatens Shanks & McEwan00:02
Swimming: Brew gets it right in the end00:02
Rear Window: Defenders of the faith: How Hal muddied the holy waters for Charles00:02
Tried & Tested: Shades of summer: There's more to sunglasses than looking cool. Our panel of experts puts nine pairs under the spotlight00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
What the papers said about . . . Diego Maradona00:02
Letter: The journalists are to blame00:02
Cricket: History-making wicket-takers00:02
Cricket: Hooper hits heights00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Spain set off on the high road00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: A final show of power: Simon O'Hagan weighs up prospects for a fascinating battle on Centre Court today00:02
Letter:00:02
Arts: Buried treasure?: Three meetings this week will consider whether we need a Museum of Women's Art. Blake Morrison talks to its proposers, asks the artists for their views, and discovers what lies neglected in the vaults of the Tate00:02
Lilley sets new targets for CSA00:02
Motorcycling: Cadalora beats Doohan to pole00:02
Putting some wellie into design00:02
Profile: The self-made captain: Dermot Reeve: Derek Pringle analyses the determined approach and extrovert nature of a cricket escapologist00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Golf: Els having a ball00:02
RADIO / But Tony Benn goes on forever00:02
Innovation: Travelling late00:02
Cricket: Independent on Sunday Rankings:00:02
The high yen dilemma: Currency strength may spell short-term pain but long-term gain00:02
Books: In the lists00:02
ROCK / Lady sings in blues, and red00:02
Database00:02
Food & Drink: On the shelf: Capers00:02
Lost worlds rich in unique wildlife: Scientists discover two new species of deer in the remote jungle region between Laos and Vietnam00:02
Q & A: Secrets of the Eton bore game00:02
Real Life: Women in love: more than just a fashion statement: Gay chic is in vogue, but lipstick lesbians aren't the full story, writes Linda Grant00:02
Arafat's men fumbling for the reins: On the morning after the PLO leader's homecoming, the practice of statehood fails to live up to its symbols00:02
Letter: No doubling of nuclear costs00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Bridge00:02
Golf: Nicholas and Wright force the pace00:02
Buy the book00:02
Cricket: Third Test: Gough is the demolition man: Northern lights burn brightly for England as the dark clouds gather for a fragile New Zealand00:02
Letter: Different owners, same name00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / A Fludde of tears at Aldeburgh's festival of Britten00:02
Pattern of slaughter confounds French00:02
Bill means less trade on others' marks00:02
Health: Second Opinion00:02
Coopers aims to shed 90 partners00:02
A drug called winning: It's a habit they can't break. Peter Corrigan on sporting heroes and villains00:02
Arena: From corn field to field of dreams: David Tremayne explains how the home of the British Grand Prix flourished from its agricultural roots00:02
Cricket: Smith to the rescue00:02
Settlers take a sanguine view of the 'terrorist'00:02
Almanack: Saddled with pain00:02
CINEMA / It's just take, take, take00:02
Travel: A family guide to summer Britain: The South Coast and East Anglia00:02
Fresh BCCI lawsuit00:02
Opinions: Do you still eat beef?00:02
Rugby League: Myers signs for Bradford Northern00:02
RECORDS / New releases00:02
Economics: No time to favour home ownership00:02
Diet product claims may be trimmed00:02
Letter: What colour is Leo's hair?00:02
Postscript00:02
Cricket: Johnson claims perfect ten00:02
How to prosper effortlessly - pounds 5 per lesson: Sue Webster learns that wealth and happiness depend on how nice a person you are00:02
Letter: What colour is Leo's hair?00:02
Tennis / Wimbledon '94: A player's diary: My dream Wimbledon: Mark Woodforde, the doubles specialist, tells how his fortnight ended in triumph00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Russia's ballistic missives: Special tasks: The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness - A Soviet Spymaster by Pavel Sudoplatov & Anatoli Sudoplatov with J & L Schechter, Little Brown pounds 18.9900:02
Cricket: Third Test: Gough is the demolition man: Northern lights burn brightly for England as the dark clouds gather for a fragile New Zealand00:02
World Cup on TV: Light balls, and the heavy hand of Howe00:02
BR pounds 120m loss 'due to sell-off'00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Gardening: Garden extras hog the limelight00:02
The list00:02
Pattern of slaughter confounds French00:02
ROCK / Lady sings in blues, and red00:02
Political Commentary: What the Prince of Wales needs is a proper education00:02
Letter00:02
Letter: The journalists are to blame00:02
Car thieves rise to hi-tech challenge00:02
More flee from Aden00:02
Tory sceptics let Major off hook00:02
Motorcycling: Cadalora beats Doohan to pole00:02
'Please, please bring our baby back'00:02
Danny, 11, enjoys pet reptiles and West End stardom00:02
FA rethinks Spurs penalty00:02
Football: Worthington in talks with Wilkinson00:02
'Strange things' in the sky puzzle minister00:02
Letter: Back remedy00:02
Flat Earth: Lunch courtesy of St Michael00:02
How the tabloids got it wrong00:02
How much does he earn?: No 35: Professor Sir Martin Rees, last week appointed the 15th Astronomer Royal (from next January).00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Such impertinence from that young Dimbleby00:02
City File: GEC light under a bushel00:02
Give Japan the space for its soul searching00:02
Equestrianism: Thomson pushes for place00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: The popular hero of Ireland's odyssey must draw on the natural talent at his disposal: Eamon Dunphy says an unlikely triumph depends on a tactical switch by Jack Charlton00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: A god felled by his own hand: Ian Ridley traces the steps that led to the exit of a player of substance00:02
How the tabloids got it wrong00:02
Rowing: Britons' low ebb00:02
Food & Drink: Psychobiology and the mood foods: Carbohydrates make you happy; coffee boosts mental skills. Michael Bateman presents a psychologists guide to diet00:02
Innovation: Contraceptive kit00:02
Labour egg-thrower00:02
Western envoy said to be hiding fugitive author00:02
Lilley will blame fathers for CSA's failings00:02
Fishing Lines: Hooked on the close season00:02
Tracking costs of moving staff00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: Such impertinence from that young Dimbleby00:02
Letter: The Captain should keep out00:02
Letter: Capitalism cannot be curbed00:02
Glastonbury comes of age00:02
Letter: Yes, Bruges is very nice, shame about the bigoted British00:02
Do I not like that . . . A hero not a villain: Andrew Castle, the former British Davis Cup player, rallies to the cause of a vilified Boris Becker00:02
'Horsiculture' curbed to save countryside00:02
Pressure builds up for US invasion of Haiti00:02
Arafat's men fumbling for the reins: On the morning after the PLO leader's homecoming, the practice of statehood fails to live up to its symbols