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Osborne and Balls in pre-Budget clash
Chancellor George Osborne and shadow chancellor Ed Balls set out their competing messages in Sunday newspapers ahead of the Budget.
MPs claim Yes would damage education
A Westminster committee says independence would have a damaging effect on higher education and research in Scotland.
Scots Tories: End free prescriptions
Scottish Conservative Party leader Ruth Davidson would scrap free prescriptions in order to fund 1,000 extra nurses and midwives in the NHS.
Body-find churchyard rededicated
A rededication of the Oxfordshire churchyard where 17-year-old Jayden Parkinson's body was discovered will take place later.
Helicopter's flight recorder found
The flight voice recorder of the crashed helicopter that killed four people in Norfolk, including Northern Ireland peer Lord Ballyedmond, is recovered for analysis.
Bomb set off by wire, police say
A bomb thought to have been thrown at a police patrol in west Belfast on Friday night was in fact detonated by a command wire, the PSNI has said.
PROFILE: The Sun is a daily national "red top" tabloid newspaper and the biggest-selling newspaper in the UK. Famous for its "Page 3" girls and catchy banner headlines, it is published by News Group Newspapers of News International, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation. While throwing it's considerable mass influence behind Tony Blair's New Labour, politically, the paper's stance was less clear under Prime Minister Gordon Brown with numerous editorials critical of Brown's policies and often more supportive of those of then Conservative leader David Cameron. On election day (6 May 2010), The Sun urged its readers to vote for David Cameron's "modern and positive" Conservatives in order to save Britain from "disaster". Profile extracted from Wikipedia and used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.