The Independent (London, England) back issues from July 1999:
Football: Wenger's buy from Brazil
Jul 01, 1999;
Football: United withdraw from FA Cup
Jul 01, 1999;
Liberation of Kosovo: War crimes - Women's bodies found in stream
Jul 01, 1999;
Sporting Digest: Sailing
Jul 01, 1999
The Independent Recommends: The Five Best Shows
Jul 01, 1999;
The Independent Recommends: The Five Best Plays
Jul 01, 1999;
The Independent Recommends: The Five Best Films
Jul 01, 1999;
The Information: New Films
Jul 01, 1999;
Education Letter: Commons watch
Jul 01, 1999;
Education Letter: Labour Pain
Jul 01, 1999;
Education Letter: Exams fail the test
Jul 01, 1999;
Tales out of School: Strange Stories from the Global Classroom
Jul 01, 1999;
Education Comment: Monsanto may or may not be greedy, but its managers won't destroy its own business by poisoning its customers
Jul 01, 1999;
We're driving our lecturers away Pay levels here are unprofessional, argues Richard Baillie (below), wh ose salary in London is worth a quarter of what it is in the US
Jul 01, 1999;
Five-set thriller keeps Henman dream alive
Jul 01, 1999;
British pilots threaten millennium flight ban
Jul 01, 1999;
`Historic' offer lifts peace hopes
Jul 01, 1999;
Britain `backed arms deal after Pinochet coup'
Jul 01, 1999;
Violent past of man who killed son
Jul 01, 1999;
MPs censure Cook over report leak
Jul 01, 1999;
Home loan rebuke for Mandelson
Jul 01, 1999;
Making a sequel to long Good Friday Agreement
Jul 01, 1999;
The pipes and drums fade away to leave only Protestant anger and bitte rness
Jul 01, 1999;
Two share pounds 3.8m Lottery jackpot
Jul 01, 1999
Four cygnets die in rifle attack
Jul 01, 1999
Doctors seek new year bonus
Jul 01, 1999
Duty-free dash as perk vanishes
Jul 01, 1999
MPs censure Cook over report leak
Jul 01, 1999;
Internet porn is dealt legal blow
Jul 01, 1999;
pounds 10 passport sweetener for travellers
Jul 01, 1999;
Cellphone man in jet scare faces jail
Jul 01, 1999;
Parliament: Ten-Minute Bill: Remembrance day urged for the Holocaust
Jul 01, 1999;
Drive to cut violent abuse of women
Jul 01, 1999;
Election funding setback for Gore
Jul 01, 1999;
Boy of 13 duped New York over his 4,000-mile trek
Jul 01, 1999;
Recycled rubbish suffocates man
Jul 01, 1999
Mbeki to send peace-keepers
Jul 01, 1999
Company to end animal testing
Jul 01, 1999
Ancient tablet `key to language'
Jul 01, 1999
UN office evacuated in East Timor
Jul 01, 1999
Barak government takes shape at last
Jul 01, 1999;
Tennis: Williams has right answer to early call
Jul 01, 1999;
Rugby League: Saints take advantage of errors St Helens 46 Halifax Blue Sox 10
Jul 01, 1999;
Sporting Digest: Football
Jul 01, 1999
Athletics: Jones quickly into her stride
Jul 01, 1999;
Cricket: Munton's hat-trick heaven
Jul 01, 1999
Cricket: Harvey makes belated impact Nottinghamshire 265-9 v Gloucestershire
Jul 01, 1999;
BT gets Control in pounds 200m deal
Jul 01, 1999;
Leeson's release set to stir painful memories in the City The `rogue trader' is to be released on Saturday. But what happened to the men dragged down with him?
Jul 01, 1999;
Outlook: Allied/Whitbread
Jul 01, 1999
Outlook: Bernie's bond
Jul 01, 1999
Outlook: Relief, but the bubble is still growing
Jul 01, 1999
Around the World's Markets: New York
Jul 01, 1999
Emap eyes home of style bible `The Face'
Jul 01, 1999;
US rates rise but markets toast neutral Fed stance
Jul 01, 1999;
Ecclestone downplays EU ruling
Jul 01, 1999
Dilemmas: My sons watch violent films with their friends
Jul 01, 1999;
Is she really going out with him? In real life, Catherine Zeta Jones (29) is stepping out with wrinkly M ichael Douglas (58). In her new movie, she takes up with pensioner Sean Connery (67). So what's the attraction of the older man? Kate Mulvey (32) explains
Jul 01, 1999;
A Question of Health
Jul 01, 1999;
Health Check: Inner calm? Worry makes the world go round
Jul 01, 1999;
Health: Getting well can be a religious experience Take a pew. The latest research suggests that believing in God could b e good for your mind, body and soul.
Jul 01, 1999;
Health: Finding the right words Post-traumatic stress disorder has been around for centuries, although it was not always recognised as a medical condition. Now a treatment has been devised that offers new hope for sufferers.
Jul 01, 1999;
It's the end of the world as we know it (but I feel fine)
Jul 01, 1999;
Thought for the Day
Jul 01, 1999
Monitor: Comment as Abdullah Ocalan, Kurdish rebel leader, is sentence d to death All the News of the World
Jul 01, 1999