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The England & Wales Cricket Board have won the BMJ Sport and Exercise Team of the Year.
Scientists are awaiting the announcement of a decision on where the world's biggest and most powerful radio telescope will be built.
Surgeon Aimee Di Marco demonstrates how a digital cadaver on a touchscreen dissection table can be used to teach students and plan operations.
The 30th anniversary of the sinking of HMS Coventry during the Falklands conflict will be marked at a ceremony in the city on Friday.
Two African elephants wave a Union Jack as the Olympic torch passes their safari park on board a steam train.
High temperatures have been recorded across many parts of the UK and the hot weather is forecast to continue.
Fun with the Olympic torch, running a half marathon in a hot air balloon and the chocolate record that actually plays.
The Leveson Inquiry has heard that Jeremy Hunt, the Culture Secretary, sent a memo to the Prime Minister backing Rupert Murdoch's bid for BSkyB just weeks before he was given a crucial role in the process.
Shafilea Ahmed's sister has told a court it was a "relief" to tell police after seven years that her parents had murdered the teenager.
The partner of ex-Liberal Democrat Cabinet minister Chris Huhne has lost her High Court case against Associated Newspapers for alleged breach of privacy and harassment.
The Queen marks 60 years on the throne this year, but Queen Victoria remains the nation's longest serving monarch.
The SNP is to launch its campaign to try to secure a 'yes' vote in a referendum on Scottish independence.
Dr Richard Shepherd has said the police should take seriously new claims that the bag Gareth Williams was found in can be locked from inside the bag.
Indie band The Stone Roses have played their first gig in 16 years to an ecstatic reception from fans in Cheshire.
The UK economy shrank by 0.3% in the first three months of the year, more than previously estimated, revised figures show.
The government has announced that 261 schools in England will receive money from a new school building fund.
A leading charity says over half of NHS trusts in England are restricting access to cataract operations, which is in breach of government guidelines.
A lobbyist for Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation tells the Leveson Inquiry he did nothing ''inappropriate'' in contacting Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt's former special adviser.
Conservationists say they're outraged by proposals to allow Buzzards to be captured and their nests destroyed in an effort to protect young pheasants in England.
Rare access to London's oldest wholesale market reveals that as tastes change so does the products that are sold there.
The mother of two-day-old twins has described the moment they died in her arms after being given a morphine overdose at Stafford Hospital.
Iran's nuclear negotiators have spent much of the day sat around a table in Baghdad with six western powers, but British Prime Minister David Cameron has already held talks on the possibility of conflict in the Middle East.
Jedward say they are responsible for attracting a "mainstream" audience for the Eurovision Song Contest after they made it through to their second final.
Thousands of people in Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, cheer on a 16-year-old boy with one leg as he runs with the torch.
Piers Morgan warned Jeremy Paxman that he would be a fool if he did not use the security settings on his mobile phone to protect his voicemail messages, according to the Newsnight host.
The Queen is meeting hundreds of leading cultural figures at one of the most glittering gatherings of actors, writers and artists the UK has seen.
President Obama's ancestral home in Ireland has been opened to the public, on the first anniversary of his visit to Moneygall in County Offaly.
Olympic advertising rules mean some well known landmarks face a temporary name change
The prosecution team at the Michaela McAreavey murder trial in Mauritius begin delivering their case.
Retail sales figures for April fell by 2.3% after a sharp drop in petrol sales.
The Westminster village and journalists use words such as civet, chillax, grexit, twitterati and eurogeddon, but they may leave some of the public behind who have no idea what such words mean.
A stuntman is thought to have become the first person to jump out of a helicopter and land safely without deploying a parachute.
The Princess Royal's daughter, Zara Phillips, has carried the Olympic flame while riding her horse Toytown.
Radio 5 live asked the director of the Reagan Foundation about the sale of a vial of blood taken from President Reagan.
The Olympic torch relay continues in the west country, with large crowds watching as it was carried across the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol.
Prince Charles proved to be a dab-hand as a DJ on a visit to a youth centre music studio in Canada.
A man jailed for making racist comments on twitter after the footballer Fabrice Muamba's collapse says he is sorry for his actions. Liam Stacey, from Pontypridd, served half his 56-day prison term.
British defence giant BAE signs a £1.9bn ($3bn) deal with Saudi Arabia to supply Hawk trainer jets, saving 218 jobs in East Yorkshire.
About 100 firefighters tackle a blaze at a furniture factory and warehouse in Sparkbrook, Birmingham.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has urged more companies to offer shares to their employees, saying a "John Lewis economy" would improve productivity and unlock growth. Allegra Stratton asks just what is the John Lewis model?
Many patients with advanced cancer and other debilitating conditions are being "under-treated" for their pain, new guidance from the health watchdog NICE says.
The parents of 17-year-old Shafilea Ahmed physically abused her "every day" because they disapproved of her lifestyle, a court has heard.
A senior Olympic official was willing to sell thousands of pounds worth of tickets to the London 2012 Games for cash, an undercover BBC London investigation reveals.
BBC Newsline's Natasha Sayee reports on the opening of the trial of two hotel workers for the murder of Michaela McAreavey.
Singer Katherine Jenkins reaches the final of the hit US show Dancing with the Stars.
Thousands march for peace in Mexico TENS of thousands of people have marched in Mexico's second most populous city, angry at the inability of authorities to end a crime wave.
(heraldsun world)
Fake Android apps scam cost users £28,000 Malicious Android apps posed as Angry Birds and Cut the Rope in a scam that used premium rate text messages to defraud customers of £27,850.
(telegraph technology)
First creature to walk on land 'dragged itself along' - like it was on crutches The creature lived in floodplains on what is now Greenland during a period known geologically as the Devonian period - about 360 to 410 million years ago.
(dailymail sciencetech)


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