BBC
BBC Director General Mark Thompson will give evidence to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on 19 June 2012.
A West End musical based on Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, directed by Sam Mendes, is to open in London next year.
Photography graduates at Stockport College
Five things parents need to know about phonics
The government plans to shift its policy on the quality of food provided in academy schools in response to a campaign led by celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, Education Secretary Michael Gove has signalled.
The SPL says Rangers have a "case to answer" over player payments as a date is set for a vote on the club's request to stay in the league.
Winners of the National Autistic Society photography competition.
Restoration work starts in Swansea on the childhood park of Dylan Thomas in readiness for the 100th anniversary of the Welsh poet's birth in 2014.
A man is airlifted to hospital and a woman is treated for minor injuries after a two-car crash on the main A92 road through Fife.
Cricketer Tom Maynard dies after being struck by a Tube train, shortly after it is believed he may have tried to escape from police.
Lawyers for a man convicted of murdering a student in Bournemouth claim new CCTV footage shows he was not at the scene.
China celebrates as its Shenzhou-9 capsule - carrying the nation's first female astronaut - links up with the Tiangong-1 space lab.
BBC Radio 4 news reader Susan Rae offered politicians a helping hand pronouncing the names of international leaders.
A declaration granting Egypt's army broad powers is widely condemned, but military rulers insist they will hand power to an elected president.
Dave King says Rangers need investment from funders on a non-commercial basis for the next three years.
The jury in the trial of a woman accused of murdering her seven-year-old son has been discharged after failing to reach a verdict.
The leader of Greece's election-winning party begins talks to form a national coalition, as markets falter and European bank stocks plummet.
Why the 1812 conflict between America and Britain still matters
24 hours of news photos: 18 June 2012
Rwanda's controversial community "gacaca" courts finish their work, after 10 years of trying those accused of involvement in the 1994 genocide.
|
Recent comments
14 years 46 weeks ago
15 years 25 weeks ago
17 years 11 weeks ago
17 years 22 weeks ago
17 years 23 weeks ago
17 years 23 weeks ago
17 years 23 weeks ago
17 years 23 weeks ago
17 years 28 weeks ago
17 years 28 weeks ago