00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Ripper's wife gets divorce00:02
Open Preview: Scotland's major hope: Robert Green picks out the men most likely to take the Open crown00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Baggio pounces to send Italy through: World Cup quarter-final: Striker's thrilling late goal breaks the Spanish resistance as history threatens to repeat itself00:02
Bunhill: The Archer story that got away00:02
Region holds its breath over Kim's succession00:02
Forget wins place in Swiss final: Tennis00:02
Booming Far East reaches for the sky: As Western economies decline, their skyscrapers are being left far below the towers of China, Malaysia and Hong Kong00:02
Joyner-Kersee 'faster than ever': Athletics00:02
BOOK REVIEW / What a swell party that was: Some hope - Edward St Aubyn: Heinemann, pounds 13.9900:02
Votes point to double defeat for Beckett00:02
Crying mother takes Abbie's blanket to bed00:02
Racing: Bolas repays faith00:02
Economics: Turkey's bold war on debt00:02
TRIED AND TESTED / The Fake Bake: Save your skin and use a self-tanning cream or lotion - but which one? Our panel smears on seven00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Mary Renault: A Biography - David Sweetman: Pimlico, pounds 1000:02
RADIO / Nothing elementary about them00:02
Behind the jolly Greene giant: Geoffrey Wheatcroft says one of our greatest writers was only playing games00:02
How We Met: George Mackay Brown and Peter Maxwell Davies00:02
Cricket: De Villiers' policy has a high return: Derek Pringle meets the former insurance man who invested in cricket00:02
Numbers00:02
Become a saint or face the global cosmic penalties00:02
FILM / Louis Malle competition winners00:02
Lord Archer the author signs in to a haven at Harrods00:02
Innovation: Sugars harnessed to fight disease: A glycobiology company spun off from Oxford University plans to use its expertise to develop more effective drugs00:02
Captain Moonlight: So, let's hear it for the cheesemongers00:02
Letter: Mad cow disease is no joke00:02
Golf: Cool Mason shows his might00:02
EXHIBITIONS / In the end, size was everything: In his heyday Franz Kline was regarded as the ultimate Abstract Expressionist. But how does he shape up now?00:02
Ben beats resistance to change: Young saver's father takes a stand over good banking habits when building society branch refuses to count coins00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Double Life of Stephen Crane: a Biography - Christopher Benfrey: Vintage, pounds 7.9900:02
Facing up to the factoids: Truth can be an illusive commodity in the world of 'tactical research', warns David Nicholson-Lord00:02
Innovation: Recycled plastic00:02
Acquisitions: Buying and selling going concerns: Growing by purchase can bring triumph or trauma. A guide offers tips on avoiding the pitfalls and knowing when to bow out00:02
Letter: RE should be about learning, not about pleasing all faiths00:02
Profile: A multi-storey monopolist: Sir Don Gosling: The chief of National Car Parks is not keen on nosy parkers, as William Kay discovers00:02
Letter: One Parliament is enough00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Sex with Strangers - Geoffrey Rees: Penguin, pounds 5.9900:02
Letter: Boyo backlash00:02
Words: Paradigm00:02
World Cup on TV: Second-class delivery on postcards from Dallas00:02
Letter: Decline of a once great Britain00:02
Health groups target young00:02
PROPERTY / Houses in the Landscape: Houses for sale: Brick00:02
DTI winds up get-rich-quick company00:02
PROPERTY / Houses in the Landscape: Keeping the brick kiln burning: Brick: The Craftsman: Caroline McGhie visits a family business in East Anglia where bricks are still hand-made the traditional way00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Undisputed lieder of the pack00:02
Rules that give the middlemen a cutting edge00:02
Smith's boat damaged in collision: Sailing00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Briefly: French invade00:02
BBC offered pounds 200m sell-off proceeds00:02
Split over Wembley rescuers00:02
Profile: Scalpel to blunt an axe: Dr Sandy Macara: He is leading the BMA out of the sickroom. But where to? Jack O'Sullivan reports00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Short and not sweet: Toulouse-Lautrec: A Life - Julia Frey: Weidenfeld, pounds 2500:02
Rwandan PM says government forces 'have lost'00:02
Hanson abdication likely00:02
Any Other Business: Haute cuisine adds spice to sweet life: Sir Neil Shaw: The first in a series on business leaders who like to run a bit of other business on the side.00:02
Boxing: Eubank wins a bloody bore00:02
Football may be the loser in a dirty war00:02
TELEVISION / Oases amid the Troubles00:02
ART / Show People: California screaming: L700:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Marriage of Cadmus and Harmony - Roberto Calasso, trs Tim Parks: Vintage, pounds 5.9900:02
Personal Finance: Societies on a tightrope00:02
THE BROADER PICTURE / Ireland's World Cup runneth over00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The First World War and the Avant-Garde: A Bitter Truth: Avant-Garde Art and the Great War by Richard Cork (Yale pounds 4500:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Sugar Cane - Paul Bailey: Penguin, pounds 5.9900:02
Q & A: Fulham striker game for laugh00:02
Labour pledges legal right to clean air and water: Exclusive00:02
Zoe Heller in America: Dress for success? It must work for some people00:02
Cellular supplier to float00:02
Cricket / Benson and Hedges Cup final: Smith has extra puff: Warwickshire cruise through to untroubled victory over spluttering Worcestershire00:02
Family dies in fire00:02
Push for early Archer report00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Remembrance of Proms past: The Proms are 100 years old. Well, almost. Michael White chooses his Top 10 concerts00:02
Fishing Lines: Soothsayer of the riverbank00:02
TRAVEL CLINIC / Pet-minders and house-sitters00:02
Letter: Drug runners00:02
The IoS playlist the five best discs of the moment00:02
Vacuum in Pyongyang throws G7 off course00:02
Letter: Break point00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Geoff Armstrong00:02
Motor Racing / British Grand Prix: Defiant Hill races to the front: Adversity fuels determination as home hero distances himself from Schumacher00:02
RECORDS / New release00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Cool chic: hot favourite: Gazpacho, a Spanish peasant dish, has achieved dinner-party status. Michael Bateman reports00:02
Letter: If it doesn't move don't cover it00:02
Benefits crackdown to get go-ahead00:02
Do I not like that . . . Boxers know the score: Harry Mullan, boxing correspondent, believes the business does not need new rules to protect its fighters00:02
Obituary: The god who fed his people a diet of lies: Kim Il Sung00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Life's all gas and gaiters: Sydney Smith - Peter Virgin: HarperCollins, pounds 22.5000:02
Flat Earth: Stone me . . .00:02
Innovation: Cropping forecasts00:02
Cycling / Tour de France: Sun sets on the yellow reign of Yates00:02
Best and Worst: European Unit Trusts00:02
Motor Racing / British Grand Prix: Williams pull a fast one: Andrew Baker joins the mechanics in the pit as Damon Hill's car is prepared for action00:02
City & Business: Lemmings cheer another path to the precipice00:02
Briefly: UVF leader dies00:02
Gonzalez makes successful defence: Boxing00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: The things some people get up to in church00:02
FILM / Something for the weekend?: Nudity, scandal and Hugh Grant. Could 'Sirens' be the film to make John Duigan a household name? Anthony Quinn reports00:02
Leading Article: The ultimate gravy train00:02
Innovation: Slugging away00:02
FOOD & DRINK / On the shelf: Condensed milk00:02
Blame is not the point, but children need support and we need the CSA00:02
Rugby Union: Kirwan's record00:02
MPs call for bull bars ban00:02
ROCK / Costello and the distractions00:02
Celtic's designs on Burns blocked: Football00:02
The Journey of a Lifetime: Photographs by George Rodger00:02
Letter: 'Horsiculture' is not a blot on the landscape00:02
TRAVEL / A Family Guide to Summer Britain: 3 Northern England00:02
Bunhill: Sweet and sour00:02
Flat Earth: Unprotected species00:02
Bunhill: No smoking car00:02
Brown in late bid to save Rosyth00:02
Intervention in markets to stop00:02
Today's papers00:02
Flat Earth: A short cat's tale00:02
Those not so retiring types: Are they founts of wisdom or just stubborn old timers? Richard Thomson asks whether some of Britain's company leaders may be holding on to the reins of power far longer than they should be00:02
Letter: RE should be about learning, not about pleasing all faiths00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: World Cup Diary00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Jarvis targeted by share crusader00:02
Football fact file: The transfer trail00:02
Cadbury shys off 'cacao phallus'00:02
Mansell pipped for pole position: Motor Racing00:02
Cricket Diary: Scott reaches his great landmark00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
Tennis: A winner lost on the crowd: Simon O'Hagan explains why tennis has yet to acclaim Pete Sampras00:02
Bunhill: Gold is cheap00:02
Culture and sore shins: Tom Peters On Excellence00:02
Four-wheels on thin ice: Competition and the cost of fuel could put a brake on sales boom00:02
Milne pays tribute to 'most distinguished correspondent'00:02
City File: Bail-out at the Royal Bank of Scotland00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Southern fried cry-babies: Starcarbon - Ellen Gilchrist: Faber, pounds 14.9900:02
'Transfer fees' wheeze cuts old school ties00:02
Scott expects disabled paper before recess00:02
Safety fear after signals threat00:02
Letter: Briefly00:02
CINEMA / Rare find on a darker shore: a film director: The Saint of Fort Washington (15); Go Fish (18); Wild Target (15); Staggered (15)00:02
Fiji outpower weary France: Rugby League00:02
Innovation: Pick a keyboard00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: The quiet revolutionary: Romania's challenge centres on the midfielder poised to be the star of the tournament: Richard Williams meets Gheorghe Hagi, who can today further his claim on greatness00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Survivor's Song: Life and Death in the African Wilderness - Delia and Mark Owens: HarperCollins, pounds 7.9900:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Potter on Potter edited by Graham Fuller: Faber, pounds 7.9900:02
ARTS / Cries & Whispers00:02
Big Brother's blind spot: The baby Abbie affair has thrown up awkward questions about security in our public buildings00:02
Tully quits BBC00:02
Innovation: How your washing can come out green00:02
'Organised hysteria' for Kim Il Sung00:02
Leading Article: Insecurity in the faceless culture00:02
The List00:02
GARDENING / How avant-garde can a garden get?: When Chelsea judges snubbed Paul Cooper's exhibit, were they opposing the inevitable? Helen Chappell sees green shoots of radicalism in the conservative world of exterior design00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Branco the Brazilian saviour: World Cup quarter-final: Striker's thrilling late goal breaks the Spanish resistance as history threatens to repeat itself00:02
Open Preview: Burden of the bag-carriers: Owen Slot analyses the wide-ranging role of the master caddies00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Open Preview: The 17th: Hole of hidden terrors00:02
Bunhill: Alcatel-Alsthom00:02
Cheltenham cocks a snook at candyfloss00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Quotes of the Week00:02
Bunhill: Bernard Levin00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: Rules of Desire: Sex in Britain, World War 1 to the Present - Cate Haste: Pimlico, pounds 1000:02
HEALTH / Sudden death on the sports field: Young athletes in peak condition should not have heart attacks - but they do. Victoria McKee reports on new research into a syndrome that strikes at the fittest00:02
Drift to nowhere in central Europe00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday Bestseller List00:02
ETCETERA / Chess: England's leading woman player, now married to a Croatian grandmaster, tries out her new name in the Croatian Team Championships.00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Strong hold of Germany: As criticism rains on Vogts and his men, reigning champions revel in a siege mentality: Ian Ridley senses the growing resolve of Europe's most formidable contenders00:02
FASHION / String Quartet00:02
Ebbw Vale make double signing: Rugby Union00:02
Life's a beach and then you lose00:02
EATING OUT / Heaven-bound by the riverside: Cantina del Ponte00:02
Arena: Running with the winds of change: 12 Crystal Palace: Norman Fox explains how Britain's centre of athletic endeavour has been forced to move with the times00:02
Political Commentary: Gosh, Jeffrey has got himself into another scrape00:02
History haunts US Haiti policy00:02
BOOK REVIEW / People to be reckoned with, again: The wages of guilt - Ian Buruma: Cape, pounds 18.9900:02
Shares: Ravaged but on the way up: Three companies over the worst00:02
Cricket: Lara and Hick in the shade: Simon O'Hagan sees the man given star billing fail to shine in a one-sided affair00:02
Hoodoo hex on Interstate 20: The blinding of Myra Crawford demonstrates how racism and fear of demons linger side by side in pockets of the Old South00:02
What the BBC needs to do now00:02
What the papers said about . . . the Irish00:02
Profile: A name to rule the game: Ernie Els: Robert Green assesses the rare talent of a young golfer equipped to be a star turn at Turnberry00:02
Bonus in the supply chain00:02
Time fails to fade memories of Marie: The discovery of little Rosie Palmer's body stirs sad and bitter recollections of another killing. Hester Lacey reports00:02
Opinions: What's the most exciting thing you've ever found?00:02
GEC boss faces City backlash: Institutions to oppose Weinstock's re-election00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Two halves, one world: Football: Against The Enemy - Simon Kuper: Orion, pounds 14.9900:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Support for small business ministry00:02
MOTORING / Auto Biography: The Renault Laguna in 0-60 seconds00:02
The open and shut buildings checklist00:02
Football / World Cup USA '94: Why Ireland crave a man of vision: Eamon Dunphy believes that the time is right for Jack Charlton to put an end to the legend00:02
UAL heads for buy-out: Vote due on worker control00:02
Database00:02
BOOKS / London illustrated: The Chronicles of London - Andrew Saint and Gillian Darley: Weidenfeld, pounds 2500:02
Athletics: Christie to bide his time: Burrell's manager plays fast and loose as the world awaits head-on contest of top sprinters: Norman Fox explains why a date at the Palace is a non-starter00:02
Marketing: Mix of faith, hype and charity may not improve the image: Aerobathon fiasco highlights the risk of using national fund-raising events to increase brand awareness00:02
City & Business: Diller in the wings00:02
The young who kill without a qualm: Hutu militias patrol the roads of Rwanda, but with the Tutsis in control of Kigali and Butare, their days could be numbered00:02
First-Hand: He'd wait until midnight, then shake me awake: Joseph Ellas recalls how he was repeatedly sexually abused at his Catholic boarding school00:02
City & Business: Split imperatives00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Paperbacks: The Raj at Table - David Burton: Faber, pounds 6.9900:02
How much does he earn?: No 36: Richard Littlejohn, journalist, broadcaster and former Irritant of the Year.00:02
Equestrianism: Fire One speeds home00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Secrets of Musical Confidence: How to Maximise Your Performance Potential - Andrew Evans: Thorsons, pounds 7.9900:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
THEATRE / Warm glow of Fanny by spotlight: A Busy Day - King's Head; The Seagull - Olivier; A Collier's Friday Night - Hampstead; The Schoolmistress - Chichester00:02
Captain Moonlight: The Captain's Catch-up Service00:02
TELEVISION / York on Ads: Close encounters of the Spielbergian kind: No 36: J FM00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Signposts to the brave new world: The hidden Huxley: Contempt and Compassion for the Masses - David Bradshaw: Faber, pounds 17.5000:02
Don't marry a television celebrity: Fame affects character, as Ruth Inglis discovered when her husband became a well-known Granada presenter00:02
Heath's Euro vow00:02
Dedicated ignorers of fashion: Have British men become more stylish in the last 10 years? Andrew Tuck asks around00:02
Onwards, upwards, sometimes downwards00:02
Words come back to haunt home sellers: Careless comments to a property purchaser can land the vendor in court, warns Sue Fieldman00:02
Pupils' homes 'no excuse' for poor results00:02
ART MARKET / Best of British, going cheap: Once the most fashionable works money could buy, 18th-century British paintings are now the most affordable. Geraldine Norman reports00:02
Rear Window: Blinded by the blight of Pugin: Gothic Architecture00:02
BOOK REVIEW / In Brief: The Dark Stuff - Nick Kent: Penguin, pounds 9.9900:02
Boy drowns in pool00:02
Letter: Pier group worth a mention00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
My mate Mike00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The past imperative: Across the bridge - Mavis Gallant: Bloomsbury, pounds 9.9500:02
Music firm in threat to sue Kingfisher00:02
Huge drugs haul00:02
Insider dealing: What is it? Who does it? Why do they do it? What happens if they get caught? And what is being done to stop it? David Bowen offers a layman's guide00:02
Briefly: Ship blaze rescue00:02
ETCETERA / Home Thoughts00:02
Letter: Briefly