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Taxi marshals to help revellers
A north Wales town launches a taxi marshal project to help people get home safely after a night out.
Donald to race at Cookstown 100
Australian rider Cameron Donald is a late entry for Saturday's Cookstown 100 Road Races.
How China is ruled - Communist Party

Call to cut 'dubious' uni studies
A professor provokes fury by suggesting education spending cuts should prompt a review of "dubious" research.
Coe firm on post-2012 stadium aim
London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe says that track and field remains the Olympic Stadium's primary purpose after the 2012 Games.
Living on no money and strangers' kindness
In two months, he's walked more than 600 miles and climbed the equivalent of four Mount Everests. All the time relying on strangers to provide him with food and shelter. BBC Radio 5 live reporter Bob Walker meets the self-styled "Water Pilgrim", Maxim Laithwaite, on his journey.
Brazil to begin crash bodies ID
The first bodies recovered from the scene of the Air France crash arrive in mainland Brazil for the purposes of identification.
Upset over historic bridge works
Stirling Council announce controversial plans to carry out major repair work on one of Stirling's busiest traffic routes.
The look of Mad Men
As the US TV drama Mad Men returns to British screens, viewers are steeling themselves for a series in which the narrative is often overtaken by the sheer style of the show. What is it about the look of early 1960s Manhattan that is so appealing?
Your comments on the City Diaries
BBC News website readers send their views on the city and the BBC City Diaries
Public Accounts Committee
The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) was set up in 1861 to examine that the sums of money agreed by Parliament for public spending were properly spent.




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