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Newsround:
A lamb has been born with five legs on a farm in Northumberland.
Staff at Whitehouse Farm in Morpeth have named the lamb Quinto, who was born on Sunday.
She has an extra front leg which is fully formed and isn't causing her any problems, according to the manager of the farm.
A vet is due to look at Quinto to decide whether she should stay with five legs or if it would be better for her health to have it removed.
If she does have it removed, staff at the farm say it won't affect her health.
Justin Bieber's pet monkey, Mally, has been held back at an airport in Germany because he didn't have the right paperwork.
The fourteen-week old Capuchin monkey was confiscated by customs in Munich and is being kept there until the popstar can provide them with a health certificate and other documents for Mally.
Bieber had travelled from LA to Germany on his private jet as part of his Believe tour when the monkey was confiscated.
A spokesperson at the airport said, "The animal was confiscated by us and has been found appropriate animal housing. The animal is doing very well."
Tennis star Andy Murray battled past David Ferrer to grab his second Miami title and gain world number two ranking.
Andy won the final of the Masters tournament 2-6 6-4 7-6 (7-1).
He was ranked number three in the world, but this win has pushed him up past Wimbledon champ Roger Federer into second place.
Novak Djokovic is currently world number one.
But it was far from easy. "It was such a tough match...it could have gone either way, both of us were struggling physically at the end," said Murray.
Murray first achieved world number two, his highest world ranking, in 2009 but he only stayed in that position a few weeks.
Scientists from Salford University claim large amounts of white fish in Britain is labelled incorrectly and being swapped for cheaper types of fish.
They discovered seven per cent of cod and haddock - what you find in your fish and chips - was actually the cheaper pollock, or farmed fish from Vietnam.
Dr Stefano Mariani from Salford University is concerned consumers are being deceived: "Consumers should be able to go to a shop and know they are eating what they paid for."
Even though scientists say there's no serious health risk, Dr Mariani said it could be a problem for people with certain allergies if they don't know what they're eating.
An Australian billionaire is building the world's biggest dinosaur park that will become home to 165 robotic dinosaurs!
Palmer Coolum Resort in Australia is already home to Jeff the Tyrannosaurus Rex and Bones the Omeisaurus, but over the next few months will be getting loads of new arrival.
It's being built by Clive Palmer, the same man who is building an exact replica of the titanic ship.
They'll be displayed in natural woodland at the resort and the dinosaurs will come to life with swaying tails and crunching jaws.Scottish schools are trying to tackle the problem of bullying and are using an unusual method - bringing babies into class.
Bullying is a big issue for many kids and something schools all over the UK are trying to stop.
In Scotland the government has recently promised to spend £1.2million on lessons to help do just that.
Martin's been to a school where babies attend special lessons and it's hoped the scheme, that's being rolled out across Scotland, will make a big difference.