00:02
Bunhill: Anyone for tennis?00:02
Crash victim dies00:02
Captain Moonlight: Sweet September00:02
Therapy by computer: DIY analysis is looming over the technological horizon, reports Alex Spillius00:02
Bunhill: Virtually dormant nice little earner00:02
Prima-donna politicians stage operatic battle: Row over director's dismissal hits the high notes in the latest act of a long-running French farce00:02
Football: Shadows of a golden past00:02
BOOKS / Events00:02
Britain misses the boat: After years in the doldrums, there are new opportunities for the shipbuilding industry worldwide. But the once-great yards of Britain may now be too weak to take advantage, says David Bowen00:02
Funds poised for a post-Castro boom00:02
Down in the mouth00:02
Fish turn female00:02
Sharelink plans Apricot tie-up00:02
Antonia weds00:02
MP to stand down00:02
Tribal 'court' banishes Alaskan pizza bandits00:02
Innovation: PCs enter the wireless age00:02
RADIO / Take two onions00:02
Battle of logos and T-shirts rages in refugee camps: Aid agencies scramble for cash00:02
Bunhill: Playing with fire00:02
Rules to change in CSA shake-up00:02
Letter: Good news for republicans00:02
Day of freedom00:02
City grasps lion's share of forex and overseas equity trade00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Barking up the family tree: Craig Raine's double-barrelled family saga, written in triplets, is a 'novel in verse'. But is it faction or fiction, history or hoax?00:02
Rugby Union: Geoghegan holds party line00:02
Productivity: The how-to guru still has time on his side00:02
Almanack: Top scorers00:02
Final rained off00:02
Profile: The rejuvenated tourist: Derek Pringle looks at the all-round ability of a man set to be a force for England in Australia: Phillip DeFreitas00:02
Ceasefire: How we changed00:02
'Freak' road death00:02
Criticism for Exchange scheme00:02
Business Information Service: Saying of the Week00:02
Cricket: Warhorses in harness: Old campaigners get call for another tour of duty as England seek to ignite Ashes campaign. Derek Pringle reports00:02
Cut the cost of college: Students should shop around for sources of finance to minimise the expense of their education00:02
Unions attempt to shed striking image00:02
Football: Regis seals Argyle's fate00:02
Tiny turns on adviser: Rowland blames PR man for bad publicity about expenses00:02
Economic magnet in Kent00:02
BOOKS / In the lists00:02
God is surely a man, and not a new one either00:02
Pope to go ahead with Sarajevo visit00:02
GARDENING / Colour in a colder climate: As the evenings draw in, Mary Keen suggests ways to keep borders bright in winter00:02
Football: Jolt from Johnson00:02
GARDENING / Peculiar Plants00:02
Youths on the run00:02
PROPERTY / Their own corner of a foreign field: Holiday memories fade as life reasserts its familiar pattern, but some Britons decide to prolong the idyll by buying a home abroad. Caroline McGhie follows the tracks of their dreams00:02
Letter: Portia Trust not selling grief00:02
FILM / Riding high on a pratfall00:02
Innovation: Motorway bridge to the future: A hi-tech revolution is under way in the construction industry. Nuala Moran explains what it will mean00:02
Cricket: Lara is set for grand gesture00:02
City & Business: Sterling footwork00:02
Auden competition winners00:02
FASHION / Time for the men to try it: Are these the new supermodels? Can they achieve parity with their female counterparts? Yes, if men's magazines have anything to do with it. Christa Worthington reports from New York00:02
Angling: Anglers lose scent of trail: Sweet smell of success remains elusive as the world's best fishermen are caught out in a sophisticated assault on the senses00:02
Football: Survivor with the know-how: Simon O'Hagan meets Don Howe, the enduring figure in England's coaching set-up00:02
My Biggest Mistake00:02
Ceasefire: Protestant politics adrift for lack of a Big Idea: David McKittrick thinks Unionists have good reason to be gloomy . . .00:02
A child's guide to the way we live now: Young film-makers examine Britain00:02
THEATRE / An auld Scots ballad of good intentions00:02
ROCK / Burning and barking in Berks00:02
COMEDY / Knowing him, knowing us, ah-haah]: Alan Partridge, smarmy master of the crass interview, is bringing his chat show to television. Ben Thompson meets the gauche celeb's comic creator, Steve Coogan00:02
Daily Bread: What the comedian ate one day at the Edinburgh Festival: Alan Davies00:02
Yacht family rescued00:02
PROPERTY / Buying abroad: Sale room00:02
Football: Teddy at top of the tree00:02
BSkyB coy about price rises00:02
The Broader Picture: She'll never walk alone00:02
The Agreeable World of Wallace Arnold: The delightful Tony carries the Carlton00:02
RECORDS / New Release00:02
Rear Window / Screaming Teens: We love you John, Paul, George and Howard00:02
Football: Otto strikes in a flash00:02
The Bear licks its territorial wounds: Russia may be grudgingly withdrawing its troops, but it still has designs on Eastern Europe00:02
Tennis: Bruguera's continental shift: King of clay makes a concrete statement of intent to go the distance. Bud Collins reports from Flushing Meadow00:02
Letter: The virtues of being Green00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A lot of fancy footwork: 'Prologue: An Unconventional Life' - Joan Brady: Deutsch, 14.99 pounds00:02
Letter: Failing to see Freud's bias00:02
Fimbra fine under attack00:02
Letter: Tourist potential blighted by Faroese 'sport'00:02
ETCETERA / Home thoughts00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Flat Earth: And that's flat]00:02
America faces up to the big corporate issue00:02
Flat Earth: Out of the wok . . .00:02
What the papers said about . . . Warwickshire00:02
Fleet-footed firms tip the transatlantic balance: The US contracting industry has been quick to respond, reports Phil Reeves00:02
Bunhill: Very special visit00:02
Football: Why Cole is a burning issue: As England prepare to meet America at Wembley on Wednesday, the absence of the man who took goals to Newcastle is striking - Ian Ridley says Venables should find a place for last season's top scorer00:02
Letters: Briefly00:02
Innovation: Satellite gives a pilot position00:02
Was it Washington that won peace in Ulster?: How London was sidelined in the final Irish-American push that led to the IRA ceasefire00:02
Diving: Fu breaks through00:02
TRAVEL / Ulster packs up its troubles: For 25 years violence has haunted Northern Ireland. As the province moves forward towards peace, its landscape and light recall distant memories of how Britain used to be00:02
GRAPEVINE / Kathryn McWhirter on bargains around pounds 300:02
Cable float revived00:02
Badminton: Chen Gang working for the future00:02
House prices fall00:02
Back to school in style: Traditional uniforms are popular with nostalgic parents and trendy pupils, finds Sarah Lonsdale00:02
GOING OUT / Stuntman makes star look good, and star returns compliment00:02
Football: Aldridge lands worthy winner00:02
Q & A: Keeping the team in bondage00:02
Rugby League: Sunday best for Dons: Dave Hadfield charts the remarkable upturn in Doncaster's rugby league fortunes00:02
Cricket: Cream rises to surface: Richard Williams sees the weather hold up Warwickshire's attempt to hit the jackpot00:02
Rugby Union: Movers and shakers in the top flight00:02
Economics: The price of peace in Northern Ireland00:02
Genetic riddle of 'scorpion' pesticide virus00:02
TRIED & TESTED / The leaner machines: All manner of devices promise fitness to those who exercise assiduously at home. Our panel put seven of them through their paces00:02
RECORDS / The IoS Playlist: The five best discs of the moment00:02
Rugby Union: Close call for Canterbury00:02
Time to take stock: Tom Peters On Excellence00:02
He'll never let you down: The Seventies may have been a terrible decade for pop music, but in retrospect, one man, Rod Stewart, stands out as a mentor for the young: a man of questionable taste in almost everything, except good pop music00:02
Lindsay Anderson, 1923-94: master of two art forms00:02
PROPERTY / Buying abroad: points to know00:02
Captain Moonlight: Dangerous irony00:02
How We Met: Duncan Goodhew and Colin Moynihan00:02
Zoe Heller In America: No place to get lost in, the village of New York00:02
Fishing Lines: Smelly epitaph of lovable beast00:02
Letter: Identity cards will lead to widespread police harassment00:02
Golf: Torrance falters00:02
How much do they earn?: No 44: Take That00:02
Captain Moonlight: Heseltine in very small desk mystery00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Even after 25 years, our ignorance about the IRA is almost total00:02
Today's Papers: School to start earlier00:02
Shares: Fashion is off the peg: Leading quoted houses are looking power-dressed for profits growth00:02
Wife sues president00:02
City & Business: BSkyB's the limit00:02
Captain Moonlight: You great big donkey, you00:02
City & Business: Sinking feeling00:02
A star is born (perhaps): Angela Marray meets Wigan's reluctant answer to Marti Pellow00:02
Sport on TV: Having a bawl, wish you weren't here00:02
Unions challenge Blair over Whitty00:02
Letter: 'Shamateurism' in rugby00:02
HEALTH / In the teeth of troubles: Is there an alternative to the dreaded drill and fill? As NHS charges rise, holistic dentistry may be more appealing. Victoria McKee reports00:02
1m pounds drugs haul00:02
Almanack: Under the spell of the old Magic00:02
Rugby Union: Bath aim to bridge the gap: As England build towards the World Cup, new challenges face club rugby's old powers. Chris Rea assesses prospects00:02
Football: McFarland wins time00:02
Athletics: Christie fades at the last00:02
GOING OUT / The Sunday Picture00:02
Captain Moonlight: Holiday in Scotland00:02
Rugby Union / Round-Up: Pilgrim denied00:02
Letter: Phone pests00:02
Wheelchair protest00:02
Leading Article: A shaky truce but it'll do00:02
Golf: Torrance falters00:02
Football: 'The complete captain': Billy Wright - Born 6 February 1924, died 3 September 1994: Geoff Brown reports on the tributes paid yesterday to a giant of football00:02
Bunhill: Protection at Abbey Life00:02
The Best and the worst: Japanese Unit Trusts00:02
Billy Wright dies00:02
Iced tea invasion turns up heat for soft drinks war00:02
Football: Match facts00:02
POP / Secrets of staying single: Why has an old Troggs tune been No 1 for three months? Nicholas Barber reports00:02
Profile: Power behind the palmtop: David Potter. The chief of Psion has built a computer company able to take on the giants, writes William Kay00:02
No hiding from Big Brother: Owen Slot hears athletes tell of the lengths to which drug testers will go00:02
Business Information Service: This Week00:02
EATING OUT / All the dining room's a stage: Midsummer House, Midsummer Common, Cambridge00:02
O J trial for BBC00:02
Letter: Men under the cosmetic knife00:02
Crash deaths secret00:02
Ceasefire: It's all just coming together for the fixer: John Hume risked all when he met Sinn Fein. Now there's talk of a Nobel Peace Prize. Cal McCrystal reports00:02
Equestrianism: Fox-Pitt in the hunt at Burghley00:02
Baroness's will00:02
BOOK REVIEW: Paperback Classics00:02
Oh, the hum of the bees and the whir of the modem: Geoffrey Wheatcroft in Somerset, or maybe Metroland00:02
Clinton assures Unionists 'there will be no sell-out': US moves to allay Ulster fears - Sinn Fein at talks if ceasefire holds - Loyalist paramilitaries split over peace00:02
Letter: Henry Moore could draw00:02
The epic appeal of great confrontations00:02
Cricket Diary: Stan quits a seamy world00:02
Cricket: Independent on Sunday Rankings00:02
Squash: Jansher and Nicol to meet again00:02
Sweet and sticky tale of success00:02
Fleet-footed firms tip the transatlantic balance: Fragmentation of European market has delayed restructuring, writes John Eisenhammer00:02
Saving Graces00:02
ETCETERA / Competition: Details No 20100:02
Ceasefire: Words: Pan00:02
Flat Earth: You're damn right my slip is showing00:02
TELEVISION / Funeral for a dead parrot00:02
Ravers split over use of hard drugs00:02
Racing: Sacrament can end Stoute's quest: Sue Montgomery sees the preparations of a horse with classic hopes in the St Leger00:02
Ceasefire: The game of two ends may be over: Peace means the Unionists need to talk. Nick Cohen tries to find some who are willing to say more than No00:02
City File: BT boss's cash-in inspires little hope (CORRECTED)00:02
Bunhill: PR at Yorkshire Water00:02
The Somme comes to Glasgow: In a redundant shipyard, actors are recreating the experience of the young volunteers who went off to the trenches00:02
Flat Earth: A girl's best friend00:02
Video: This week's releases00:02
Cairo takes its own precautions: Egypt locks up Islamic fundamentalists to protect delegates at UN population conference00:02
Deaths put pool safety in doubt00:02
Unholy battle00:02
Ceasefire: 'They talk to us like we're wee boys': Geoffrey Beattie returns to Belfast and hears worried voices on Protestant streets00:02
Productivity: The clock stops on waste: Efficiency can be learnt from sources as diverse as the rail dispute and one of the leading practitioners in the field00:02
Deadly game of musical chairs00:02
Do I not like that . . .: Plans spell sudden death: Alex Murphy, the veteran rugby league coach, believes the sport's latest plans will drain its lifeblood00:02
First-Hand: 'I constantly dream about my card collection': A keen collector has gone to prison for stealing rare beer bottle labels. Cigarette card enthusiast Edward Wharton-Tigar can sympathise00:02
Press complaint rejected00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Time to fish or cut bait: 'The Hawke Memoirs' - Bob Hawke: Heinemann, 20 pounds00:02
Halifax gun man found dead00:02
Football / Round-Up: Fjortoft supplies stability00:02
Quebec back on the road to independence00:02
Bunhill: Annual demand00:02
Abiola 'seriously ill'00:02
Letter: Price of a pint00:02
HEALTH / Second opinion00:02
Cadbury to beat forecasts00:02
Personal Finance: A failure to agree terms00:02
Bosnian Serbs cast doubt on papal visit00:02
Ceasefire: The British view00:02
3,000 pounds student bonds offer00:02
Show fails to go on for British entertainers00:02
Chess ace triumphs over the machine: Third time lucky as computer outflanks champion00:02
An afternoon walk up the Falls and down the Shankill: one city but worlds apart00:02
Rugby Union: Williams in full flight00:02
Leading Article: Some use crying over spilt coffee00:02
SHOW PEOPLE / A winner against the odds: Helena Kaut-Howson00:02
Football: On the move00:02
Almanack: Sore points00:02
Billy Wright, hard man and Fifties hero00:02
Prison worker quits00:02
Ceasefire: The foreign view00:02
Motor Racing: Mansell misses pole00:02
Bunhill: Bright future for Alain de Botton00:02
Football: The giant shadow of a golden past: Stephen Brenkley sees Wolves draw 1-1 at Sunderland on a day for memories00:02
Football: Reality bites for Millwall00:02
CLASSICAL MUSIC / Schiff: genius on the run00:02
Benn asks Adams to Blackpool meeting00:02
Drugs: Chasing the demon: As search for the truth continues, is there substance to Modahl's defence? Norman Fox reports00:02
Letter: Cut MPs' pay00:02
'The Three Graces' to stay in UK00:02
Profile: Excess after success: Marlon Brando - He squandered his talents, but don't expect his book to tell you why, says David Thomson00:02
Database00:02
Captain Moonlight: Booker Prize Warning00:02
Football: Fifa achieves Olympic agreement00:02
The List00:02
Bougainville peace00:02
The arms suppliers go to war: Domestic defence cuts have hurt US and UK contractors, so winning the export battle has become the key to survival, argues Richard Thomson00:02
Racing: Fontana flier00:02
York on Ads: At the end of the day, it's a middle-class mockery: No 44: News of the World00:02
Captain Moonlight: The Captain's Catch-up Service00:02
Barclays does staff U-turn00:02
Opinions: Which TV programme would you axe?00:02
Crime drops in Cadbury country: He resigned from the Tory party over law and order, but police figures prove he has got it wrong00:02
Benji mystery00:02
Midland card cash limit reins in travellers00:02
City & Business: More to vex Lonrho than Tiny's expenses00:02
Football: Diego calls full-time00:02
Homage to the heard instinct: Tim Melville-Ross00:02
Family formula for chaos: As a new boss takes over the CSA, Rosie Waterhouse asks where it went wrong00:02
The media projected Benji as an innocent victim: When Benji was shot he was Moss Side's martyr. But he left pounds 30,000. Was he a drug runner?00:02
Protestant elite seek 'a lasting peace'00:02
BOOK REVIEW / War and peace at home: 'Love and Hatred: The Stormy Marriage of Leo and Sonya Tolstoy' - William L Shirer: Aurum Press, 16.95 pounds00:02
So far solo00:02
McDonald's counts the cost of hot, hot coffee: Big Mac's 'naive' defence crumbles in face of scalded customer's wrath00:02
Male fish are being 'feminised' by river pollution