News Headlines - 13 November 2013

Video: Prince Charles at 65: Ten things one can learn from the heir to the throne - Telegraph

As Prince Charles celebrates his 65th birthday, we consider what one can learn from the life of the UK's longest serving Prince of Wales

Conservative party deletes archive of speeches from internet | The Guardian

The Conservatives have removed a decade of speeches from their website and from the main internet library – including one in which David Cameron claimed that being able to search the web would democratise politics by making "more information available to more people". The party has removed the archive from its public website, erasing records of speeches and press releases from 2000 until May 2010. The effect will be to remove any speeches and articles during the Tories' modernisation period, including its commitment to spend the same as a Labour government.

Spy In Bag: MI6 Man Probably Locked Himself In

Police believe spy-in-the-bag Gareth Williams probably died accidentally and no-one else was involved in his bizarre death.

Fukushima residents may never go home, say Japanese officials | The Guardian

Japanese officials have admitted for the first time that thousands of people evacuated from areas near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant may never be able to return home. A report by members of the governing Liberal Democratic party [LDP] and its junior coalition partner urges the government to abandon its promise to all 160,000 evacuees that their irradiated homes will be fit to live in again.

Michael Jordan's sneakers from 'Flu Game' up for auction from former Utah Jazz ball boy - ESPN Chicago

A former Utah Jazz ball boy is preparing to auction off the sneakers worn by Michael Jordan during Game 5 of the 1997 NBA Finals, when the iconic guard famously battled through flu-like symptoms while leading the Chicago Bulls to a narrow victory. Preston Truman revealed during a recent interview with The Salt Lake Tribune that Jordan gave him the shoes after the contest, known as "The Flu Game."