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Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall ride on the Severn Valley Railway, a year after they planned to.
The Prince of Wales will finally pay off a family debt dating back more than 350 on a visit to Worcester.
The BBC Urdu service's Masud Alam shares the pleasures - and pains - of receiving mail from London.
Welcome to your memories of the decade that has passed into British mythology. But did it deserve to? Was it really as good as we think?
Part of women's fashion label Paul Costelloe, which dressed the partners of Europe's Ryder Cup golf team, is up for sale.
BBC Europe editor Mark Mardell asks whether the economic arguments for wine reform outweigh all other considerations.
Birmingham's oldest company, which was put into administration last month, is bought by a London firm.
Some projects in which offenders meet victims have had to be abandoned on safety grounds, research reveals.
Your pictures of the winter weather that has struck across the country
Channel 4 is to screen what it says is the world's first interactive drama series, called Dubplate Drama.
The findings of the most important archaeological dig in Worcester in 15 years are being shown on Thursday.
Updates from BBC reporters and fans during the fourth Test
A look at what's making the headlines in Friday's morning newspapers.
The owner of a cat with a penchant for cheddar pays £152 at auction for a piece of a new extra-strong variety.
The family of a man who was killed by a straw-laden trailer in 2002 is awarded £425,000 damages.
BBC One's Whistleblower exposes the shocking behaviour of a car dealership in Croydon which targets the poor.
Jersey's first Chief Minister is to be elected in December 2005, the island's government announces.
A member of a Jersey government review panel calls for a speed-up of changes to the island's States.
The Monitor is the new one-page home for some of our most popular features, including the Caption Competition, and 10 Things.
Accident Group special investigator Paul Stott speaks out for the first time, and reveals to the BBC that fraudulent claims were much more widespread than previously believed.
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