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After more than 5,000 gigs over 35 years, rock fan Ray Morrissey can claim to be Britain's most prolific concert-goer.
BBC News profiles the three people found guilty of causing the death of Baby P at a house in Haringey, north London
A decorative arch in Dorking celebrates the life of a 19th Century writer who lived there.
The mother of missing schoolgirl Shannon Matthews was more interested in a mobile phone than her daughter, a court is told.
You have been sending your views about England's chief medical officer column on how the NHS could learn from department stores, such as John Lewis.
Doctors dismissed Denzil Searle's claims that he had Lyme disease after tests proved negative, but he battled for treatment.
Inspectors find a range of weaknesses at a school for children with learning difficulties.
A 106-year-old American nun living in a convent in Rome could well be the oldest person to vote in the 2008 US Presidential election and says she will support Barack Obama.
Andy Murray returns to Wimbledon to face Alexander Peya in Great Britain's second singles match against Austria.
The BBC's Matthew Collin reports on the fight to save the stunning, eccentric structures that make up the Georgian capital's Old Town.
Parliament in Bhutan bans its members from bringing laptops to work - to stop them playing computer games.
An account of how voting went across Zimbabwe in the country's controversial presidential run-off.
The BBC's Alastair Lawson attempts to find out whether an ape-like creature roams the hills of north-east India.
The Democrats seem to have a decisive advantage in using the internet as a campaigning tool in the presidential election.
The governor of the Bank of England says it's been a nice decade, but is niceness really something to strive for?
Hamilton clinch the First Division title and send Clyde deeper into relegation trouble.
Trevor Immelman wins the 72nd Masters at Augusta National after carding a three-over round of 75.
Dr Mark Miodownik says UK science is going the same way as football - with world-beating universities employing sublime talent, much of it foreign.
Activists sometimes say "politics is in my DNA" - but there may be more truth in that than they realise. Research now suggests some of our voting habits may be hard-wired into us from birth.
English football fans' moods turn from optimism to anger and dismay as they see their team lose in France.
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