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It's all very well to search for hard-and-fast truths but is it possible in a world filled with ambiguity, asks Laurie Taylor, in his weekly column for the Magazine.
A council leader says he is confident £9m tied up in failed Icelandic banks will be returned in the coming months.
Desert kingdom Abu Dhabi is determined to be known for more than just its oil wealth, and as Christian Fraser reports, there are no limits to its ambition.
Their silk is stronger than steel, so how do spiders spin it? Isis 2 will help scientists find out.
Charlize Theron speaks of the satisfaction she got from working as executive producer on her latest film.
Pop star Daryl Hall talks about his new homely collaborations - and why the golden age of music is over.
Foreign Secretary David Miliband has called on Labour colleagues to find the confidence to make their case afresh.
The BBC's Robert Trevelyan remembers his brief appearance in a film by the great Egyptian director Youssef Chahine.
Your catch-up service for those celebrities and personalities to have been interviewed over the past seven days.
Police complete their search of the remains of a warehouse where four firefighters were killed last year.
Some institutions do need to be changed, but altering the ones that are just fine as they are just adds to uncertainty, says Clive James.
How Kylie Minogue, who has been appointed an OBE in the New Year's Honours, abandoned TV stardom for pop.
Confusion reigns in Lebanon, where the post of president remains vacant after the departure of Emile Lahoud.
A behind-the-scenes look at work to restore the Cutty Sark to its former glory.
What does Gordon Brown's phrase "British jobs for British workers" actually mean?
BBC Scotland political reporter John Knox looks back at a the week in the Scottish Parliament.
Russell "Rock Bottom" Byars has skimmed his way into the record books, throwing a stone that skipped an amazing 51 times. How does he do it?
A group challenging a figure of those killed in Sudan's Darfur war welcomes a ruling that 400,000 is not factual.
An office building in the City is being demolished from the bottom up due to its quirky construction.
In his new show at the Edinburgh Fringe, comedian Laurence Clark uses humour to challenge perceptions of disability.
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