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plausible
Sir Michael Caine says he knows what happened after the credits rolled on cult film The Italian Job.
The Mumbai terror attacks continue to dominate the papers, with the focus now on whether there were UK links.
Friendly bacteria could be used to protect critically ill patients from developing pneumonia, scientists believe.
Shahra Marsh dressed in designer clothes and dripped with expensive jewellery, but was a fraudster writing hefty cheques on an empty bank account.
The key sections of the ICT programme of study for Key Stage 3, extracted from The National Curriculum 2007, which relate to BBC News School Report.
Whenever ice cream sales rise, so do shark attacks. As more economists are recruited to the Treasury, inflation rises. In his fifth lesson of a weekly series, author Michael Blastland gives some hints about reading causation into "correlated" facts.
Shopkeepers are targeted in a scam where a woman steals cigarettes after pretending to forget her purse.
An Edinburgh couple have lost a battle with the estate of Chronicles of Narnia author CS Lewis over a web domain name.
Charles Wheeler was a scrupulous reporter who tirelessly pursued the truth. But on one occasion, a story that seemed far-fetched turned out to be true after all, says Lisa Jardine.
Elderly people are warned to watch out for conmen posing as water board officials after four people were targeted.
A taxi driver is jailed for running over his wife and killing her after she damaged his car during a row.
Babies may be programmed in the womb for anorexia by their mother's hormones, new evidence suggests.
About 30 animal rights activists are the first to be hit by a controversial law that forces them to hand over decryption keys to police.
People are warned not to accept offers from 'cold caller' builders after one who tricked OAPs out of £8,000 is jailed.
Police in Shropshire issue a warning after complaints about a sophisticated new internet scam.
The Russian military tests a giant fuel-air bomb which it says is the biggest non-nuclear device in the world.
Star Wars actors Natalie Portman and Hayden Christensen are voted as having the least plausible screen chemistry.
The popularity of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has plummeted after a series of scandals.
If the idea of robot ethics sounds like something out of science fiction, think again, writes scientist Dylan Evans.
When Stef Penney won a major literary prize for a novel set in Canada, eyebrows were raised at the fact she had never been there. Some readers may have felt deceived, but best-selling author Lynne Truss argues such vivid imagination is the mark of a truly great writer.
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