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00:02
Golf: Foster's coolness the key00:02
The Independent Management Game 1994: Teams clear first round00:02
Will US politics be forced to its knees?: The right's Christian soldiers are on the march - bent on a conquest that could wreck the Republican Party00:02
BOOK REVIEW / A pessimist's guide to the state of the Union: 'The Edge of the Union: The Ulster Loyalist Political Vision' - Steve Bruce; Oxford Univerity Press, 6.99 pounds00:02
Cat flap00:02
TELEVISION / The Desmond does his thing, again: Surely there is a vast difference between an ape's grimace and signals used by a football coach?00:02
Words: Ownership00:02
Banks in pounds 200m WPP share sale00:02
Blair might need more than a pleasant turn of phrase: Political Commentary00:02
ROCK / Got them tired old has-been blues00:02
Is 'Grimes' great? the view from 1945 . . .00:02
INTERIORS / Grand illusionist of Spitalfields: Ricardo Cinalli cares nothing for architectural correctness. His Georgian house in the East End is all his own work. He took Dinah Hall on a somewhat unsettling tour00:02
Just like the brochure (not): Looks nice, sounds nice, but do you believe it? Helen Fielding thumbs through four decades of glossy holiday promises00:02
Saying of the week00:02
Flat Earth: Slanted chant00:02
Bump in the night00:02
Football factfile00:02
July second hottest since ice-cream was invented00:02
Innovation: Breathing easy00:02
Cricket: Munton's sweeping statement00:02
Captain Moonlight: Joachim Major00:02
Days numbered for car scramble: As the mad rush for the latest car registration gets underway again tomorrow, William Kay explains why the motor industry needs to find a better way00:02
ETCETERA / Bridge00:02
Sir Donald Gosling00:02
Athletics: IAAF press US on Harris reinstatement00:02
Almanack: Driven man of power politics00:02
A case of bad medicine: Peter Victor on a war between doctors and a chemist00:02
Cricket: Heavy burden of integrity: Richard Williams describes how a matter of national interest was closed and reopened00:02
Labour joins outcry over book deal00:02
Cricket Diary: History lesson for a hat-trick hero00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Grapevine00:02
Captain Moonlight: Those Greene revelations in full00:02
FASHION / Modes of resistance: In late 1944 Paris was free, but the fashion industry was in tatters. A unique artistic collaboration helped to re-establish French couture. Its heroes were 70cm tall00:02
Opinions / Do you believe in God?00:02
Cricket: McCague making merry00:02
Cricket: The new order and the old disorder: South African sport has taken a turn for the better and a turn for the worse. John Carlin in Johannesburg explores the reasons00:02
FILM / Go North: the kids are cuter there00:02
City & Business: Bizarre options00:02
How We Met: Judy and David Gascoyne00:02
When you can't love your neighbour: Hester Lacey on feuding over the garden fence00:02
The threat of Hitler's tunnel vision00:02
Nobel prize chemist dies at 8400:02
Database00:02
Letter00:02
Gonzalez accused of jail deal00:02
Motor Racing: Mansell flies to pole position00:02
US broker takes on Murdoch00:02
How much does he earn?: No 39: Michael Johnson, gentlemen's lavatory attendant at the Savoy Hotel, who retired on Friday after 31 years' service.00:02
BOOK REVIEW / American graffiti: 'Life After God' - Douglas Coupland; Simon & Schuster, 8.9900:02
Banker held00:02
My Biggest Mistake: Mike Bett00:02
First-Hand: People didn't just come looking for orgies: Two British women, once in the Rajneeshis, face a US murder plot trial. Elizabeth Puttick recalls her days with the sect00:02
Exports key to steady revival00:02
BOOKS / Paperbacks00:02
Show People: Meek inherits the mirth: Harry Hill00:02
Golf: Britain behind in Curtis Cup00:02
Blinkers required for TV's prying eye00:02
HEALTH / Second Opinion00:02
Cricket: Gibson on hot streak00:02
Watchdog defends MPs-for-sale report00:02
Last orders at Britain's dying pubs: Public houses are closing by the thousand in the face of recession, the breathalyser and imports. Cal McCrystal visits a doomed country bar00:02
City File: Water shares circle political whirlpool00:02
MMM 'financial monster' devours Russian savings00:02
Days numbered for car scramble: As the mad rush for the latest car registration gets underway again tomorrow, William Kay explains why the motor industry needs to find a better way00:02
Football: English game perfects foreign accent: Simon O'Hagan sketches the rise of the overseas player in football's home territory00:02
Chippendale killing00:02
Sport on TV / Grand farce of fibbing, leaping and diving00:02
Plea bargain led to Bhagwan plot charges00:02
Nervy wait over bonds: Personal Finance00:02
Reynolds 'cleared' by beef inquiry00:02
Rear Window: How Quintin Hogg made sure the kids were all right: Loud rock concerts00:02
Rallying: McRae clear of world champion00:02
Motor Racing: Ferrari back to forefront: German Grand Prix: Berger and Alesi raise the stakes to spoil Schumacher's homecoming00:02
Cricket: Scott plays it safe00:02
Letter00:02
Cricket: Lamb springs into season00:02
BOOKS / The Independent on Sunday bestseller list00:02
TRAVEL / Better late than never: There are still two million unsold holidays for 1994. This week and next, Jill Crawshaw tracks down bargains for last-minute bookers00:02
Cricket: Illogic of tampering with truth: Derek Pringle uncovers a personal parallel with the Lord's controversy00:02
The policies of disability: Nic Cicutti explains how insurers' varying definitions of ill health could seriously damage your pension plan00:02
Innovation: Strapped for cash00:02
Cricket: Ferocious Haynes piles on the pain00:02
March of the skywalkers: Tom Peters On excellence00:02
York on ads: Couldn't give a XXXX for the post-modern subtext: No 39: Tooheys Lager00:02
The untold miseries of a bit of decent weather00:02
Criticised union boss joins TNT00:02
Bunhill: Barnsley turns to bottle at sight of clear water00:02
FOOD & DRINK / Pronto per favore: The Italians, too, are demanding food that is quick to prepare. Michael Bateman suggests tips for maestros of taste in haste00:02
Captain Moonlight: Roll up for golden Virginia00:02
Leading Article: Last gasp for the car00:02
Letter: How the system fails the mentally ill on the streets00:02
City & Business: Off their trolleys?00:02
BBC man murdered00:02
In Godzilla they trust: A mutant dinosaur holds the key to Japan's hopes and fears00:02
Motor Racing: Benetton's colours running: David Tremayne believes the image of the leading grand prix team is now tarnished00:02
Innovation: Watertight solution00:02
Captain Moonlight: Taki's troubles00:02
Unfair play on the game: Nottingham prostitutes are declaring war on invading teenage rivals. Sarah Lonsdale reports00:02
Major vetoes minister's appeal to striking signal workers00:02
Colour printing shows its worth00:02
The Sicilian hand that steers Italy: A quiet 86-year-old banker has spun a web of influence that spans the entire economy. Is it about to unravel? John Eisenhammer explores00:02
Profile: No nonsense for the Cabinet's new boy: Brian Mawhinney: The transport boss may have a twinkle in his eye, writes Stephen Castle, but he won't take flannel from civil servants00:02
Mike Atherton: The week that changed a cricketer's life00:02
US and Japan break off talks00:02
Captain Moonlight: Two men in a boat00:02
Re-righting history: Nick Cohen meets the young Conservative writer who blames Britain's ills on the party's 'wet' failures in the post-war years00:02
Arena: A tribute to towering elegance: Norman Fox recalls the great games and names that have graced Helsinki's ageless Olympiastadion00:02
Best and worst: Personal Pension Annuity Rates00:02
Letter00:02
Truce talks over oil raid00:02
ARTS / Overheard00:02
Today's papers00:02
Self-interest points way to city states00:02
Letter: Marxism and Methodism00:02
ETCETERA / Chess00:02
Smoking clouds chance of a job00:02
Letter: Not forgotten00:02
What the papers said about . . . Mike Atherton00:02
Letter: Never mind the legwear, stick to the lunch00:02
RADIO / Have a garlic sarnie00:02
Prostitution plea00:02
A week in Goma: The genocide may have stopped, more or less, but the torments of the people of Rwanda - self-inflicted and otherwise - continue in the cholera-ravaged refugee camps across the border in Zaire. Report by Robert Block00:02
Letter: 'Cure' for drugs is not new00:02
Captain Moonlight: The organ grinder00:02
Bullets disable MX00:02
Letter: Mass murderers must be tried00:02
'My Way' too morbid for patients00:02
The politician's best friend is a silent sibling00:02
Britons open hearts and wallets for Rwanda00:02
Pensacola abortions shootings00:02
Swimming: Pools of controversy: Owen Slot hears the frustrations of Britain's top swimmers who feel let down by officialdom00:02
Blair's shift to 'glasnost' unsettles left00:02
Moscow's street marketeers00:02
Muggers kill soldier00:02
Signet shares shine for the lucky few: Compensation for private preference shareholders00:02
Cricket: Is the law an ass? Cricket experts explain how a grey area should be redefined00:02
West lacks will to force peace in Bosnia00:02
Letter: A game of two00:02
Clue to killer00:02
Full cost of cover to be revealed to consumers00:02
Prince's pioneers00:02
Quotes of the week00:02
Do I not like that . . . Master of his own destiny: Tracy Piggott, the racing broadcaster, defends the right of her father Lester to delay retirement00:02
The latin lover: For thousands of post-war cinema- goers Marcello Mastroianni has been the quintessential European male. At 70, the charm still works. And his role as the great seducer turns out to have been more than just acting00:02
Golf: Parnevik the ghost buster00:02
Campaigner widens assault on Midland00:02
Water, water: Once, we barely gave it a thought. Now, with charges rising further, it is our most hated industry. Helen Kay on what went wrong00:02
Cricket: Tourists on track00:02
Swimming: Britain treading water00:02
MUSIC / J S Bach's tiny dome of sound: The Albert Hall - a place where Sumo wrestlers wrestle and multinationals hold AGMs - is no one's living room00:02
Lacrosse: Americans retain command00:02
Crisis in mental healthcare forces NHS to use costly private hospitals00:02
Property steady00:02
Almanack: postscript00:02
How tradition became letter of the law00:02
Sheffield says 'no thanks' to a chance to give00:02
TRIED & TESTED / The bottom line: Is the label on your jeans just a fashion statement? Five leading brands for men and women are put to the test for cut and comfort00:02
Fury after Bank stirs rate fever: Governor under fire from City00:02
Families flee south Lebanon in fear of Israeli reprisal: US is seen as having given nod to raids, reports Robert Fisk in Beirut00:02
Q & A / FA Cup now in mint condition00:02
ARTS / Records00:02
Pledge to ban live transport cheers animal welfare groups00:02
A terrible place to live and die: Hutu leaders use tales of Tutsi revenge to keep refugees in the camps - where death outpaces the mounting rescue effort00:02
ETCETERA / Home thoughts00:02
Profile: From hell to Helsinki: Norman Fox charts the return to the fast lane of an athlete cursed by injury and misfortune: Roger Black00:02
Bunhill: Rebounding Bill00:02
Ombudsman set to resign over powers00:02
Cricket: Rutherford hangs on to captaincy00:02
Letter: MPs and business - as usual00:02
Study loans ease pain00:02
Silcott officer will return in triumph: Graham Melvin will receive a hero's welcome when he re-enters the Yard tomorrow, says Peter Victor00:02
Letter: How the system fails the mentally ill on the streets00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Celebrity consciences on mercy dash to save the starving: 'Cause Celeb' - Helen Fielding; Picador, 14.9900:02
Big earners00:02
Equestrianism: British team repair pride00:02
ARCHITECTURE / An English drama: The look of central London is threatened by a new law. Peter York explains00:02
Captain Moonlight00:02
Rugby Union: The Boks who smack of arrogance: Chris Rea argues that the ills of Johan le Roux are part of a wider affliction00:02
Flat Earth: Arms control00:02
Letter: Marxism and Methodism00:02
Bunhill: St Paul's for hire00:02
Bunhill: Oxo Tower00:02
Getting left out of life together: Cohabitants who split up may regret not having a contract to protect their property rights00:02
THEATRE / The little goose grows up00:02
Letter: Analysis of the write stuff00:02
Maxwell widow's book 'could prejudice trial'00:02
Innovation: Gas scans could end lung X-rays00:02
Shares: An awesome commitment to investors00:02
Innovation: Clean water without tears: British inventor hits pay dirt with low-chlorine system for disinfecting pools00:02
Bunhill: Russians invade Highgate00:02
Numbers00:02
Almanack: Coal dust and a pocket of hope00:02
DANCE / Deane shows how to get the corps business right00:02
BOOKS / IN THE LISTS00:02
Computers: Auntie ventures into taboo zone - A fledgling company will give members of the BBC Networking Club access to Internet, where anything goes - even porn00:02
Letter: Mass murderers must be tried00:02
Top dealer to join Tiarks: Forex traders on the move00:02
ART MARKET / A collector who backs his own hunches: Trends mean nothing to Robert Loder. Abstract Expressionism is his great love and he wants us to share it, as Geraldine Norman reports00:02
Racing: Ills and spills00:02
Almanack: Verbal hurdles test goodwill00:02
Leading Article: No shortage of wet excuses00:02
Fear stalks Zairean camps00:02
Radio ruling may signal wave of buyouts00:02
Tesco to up bid for Low00:02
BOOK REVIEW / Fat frogs among the handfuls of dost: 'W H Auden: Juvenilia, Poems 1922-28' - ed Katherine Bucknell: Faber,00:02
Sailing: Masquerade has a ball00:02
No 'word police'00:02
Bomb alert Britain ignored: Arabs and Jews in London claim that the authorities turned a deaf ear to their warnings of probable terrorist attacks00:02
Innovation: Radioactive links00:02
Death driver appeal00:02
Cop Aid00:02
Egypt and Jordan send agents to hunt London car bombers00:02
Fishing Lines: The season of shark practice00:02
Golden boy loses his shine: Silvio Berlusconi is finding that his recipe for business success can leave a nasty taste in the political arena00:02
Letter: Never mind the legwear, stick to the lunch00:02
Abbie goes home00:02
Britain feared Nazi Chunnel00:02
Tearing pages from his book: Richard Koch00:02
Captain Moonlight: Disadvantaged dogs00:02
Putting the God in cod: We learn about ourselves from animals, says Colin Tudge, but refuse to believe they, too, have emotions00:02
BOOK REVIEW / The clean bright light of a lifetime's learning: 'Shelf Life' - Thom Gunn: Faber, 14.9900:02
Bunhill: Wakey wakey00:02
Marketing: Matchmaker for the small hotel: A focused guide offers family-run establishments throughout Britain the benefits of worldwide exposure00:02
Flat Earth: Wedding march: 'Paint It Black'00:02
Cycling: Obree's freewheeling world: Simon O'Hagan tracks down a rare talent who is putting fitness into perspective00:02
Racing: For The Present a gift to bookies00:02
How tradition became letter of the law00:02
Profile: Nuts and bolts of genius: From industrial sheds to the British Museum: Laurence Marks on an architect in demand - Sir Norman Foster00:02
Letter00:02
Your policies cause pollution, ministers told00:02
Diana files stolen00:02
The list00:02
History is full of human journeys that begin in hope and end in despair00:02
Letter00:02
BOOK REVIEW / For Celia read Alice: 'Dreamhouse' - Alison Habens; Secker, 9.9900:02
Cricket: Thorpe faces Test of mettle: Derek Pringle discusses the options for Atherton and the Headingley selectors00:02
Athletics: Illwill Games so off the pace: Norman Fox argues that as a championship event St Petersburg was a non-contender00:02
Critics snipe at Stock Exchange chief for lack of tact00:02
Letter: No complaint against Wardle00:02
Guard on bull with human genes00:02
Cricket: Sorry end for Surrey00:02
Slowly does it, as Little Jimmy hits the big time again00:02
Cricket: Hostility in a four-pack: Derek Pringle assesses a bowling unit which feeds on controlled aggression00:02
Set 'em up, knock 'em down: Mike Atherton's plight shows the shortening lifespan of heroes, says Henry Porter00:02
ARTS / Cries & whispers00:02
BOOKS / Not fit for our eyes: Hundreds of literary works condemned by the state and destroyed. Nazi Germany? No, Britain in the Fifties