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In the ongoing trials and tribulations of Tareq Salahi, add insult to insult: Not only did his wife ditch him for a has-been guitarist from Journey, but now Salahi’s complaining that the band is messing with him. Seems old Tareq was the victim of a quartet of 3am phonecalls this…

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If you like deep-dish pizza, you’re a lot likelier than fans of thin crust to have conservative politics, according to Hunch , a taste-tracking website that cross-referenced millions of responses to discover that the differences between left and right don’t end at the dinner table. Among its findings: Liberals are slightly…

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Trying to attract a beautiful, hunky, or otherwise desirable biped? Zoologists and anthropologists at the Natural History Museum in London have a few tips drawn from the natural world, the Telegraph reports: Make Men Work. Male bower birds build nests. Birds of paradise stage flamboyant courtship displays. So let men…

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Shocking as it may be, not all Playboy Playmates are “bastions of class and social distinction,” writes Olivia Allin in The Frisky . Ten who found themselves on the wrong side of the law: Angela Dorian : The 1968 Playmate shot her husband during an argument last year—in the back. She…

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Looks like Joe McGinniss is in full spin mode after reviewers largely decimated his biography of Sarah Palin. Although The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin mostly depicts her as a racist, bulimic bully who indulges in religious nuttiness and extramarital affairs, 68-year-old McGinniss insists his book is no…

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Surgeons separate twins joined at head

Sudanese girls brought to Britain for series of operations are finally parted at Great Ormond Street hospital Conjoined twin girls born with the tops of their heads fused together have been separated in a rare and risky series of operations at London’s Great Ormond Street hospital. Eleven-month-old Rital and Ritag Gaboura who are from Sudan were flown to Britain for the surgery which took place in four stages, with two operations in May, one in July and the final one on 15 August. Tissue expanders which are essentially balloons intended to help stretch the babies’ skin over their newly exposed heads were inserted in July. Twins born joined at the head are known as craniopagus twins and they occur in about one in 2.5 million births. Separating them can be dangerous, especially if as in this case, there is significant blood flow between their brains. However, a failure to operate can be equally dangerous as conjoined twins almost never pump the blood across their bodies evenly and the strongest sibling strains his or her heart trying to pick up the slack. Facing the World, a charity which helps disfigured children, said that Ritag’s overworked heart was already failing by the time her family arrived in Britain. Lead surgeon David Dunaway said: “Incidences of surviving twins with this condition are extremely rare. The task presented innumerable challenges and we were all very aware of our responsibilities to the family and these two little girls.” Even successful operations can leave neurological damage, but experts are confident Rital and Ritag are healthy. “Within days the twins were back on the general ward interacting and playing as before,” said Sarah Driver-Jowitt, from Facing the World. Driver-Jowitt predicted that the girls’ parents, who have not been named, may soon return home “with two healthy, separate girls”. Although rare, operations to separate twins linked by their heads have been carried out for many years. The American National Library of Medicine records that one of the first successful operations took place in 1956. In 2003, surgeons in Dallas separated Egyptian craniopagus twins and a year later doctors separated Filipino twins in four major surgeries that took place over a period of 10 months. London Health Children Sudan Damien Pearse guardian.co.uk

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There’s a brand new sheriff in town. Only problem is, he’s a moron, Maureen Dowd writes in the New York Times . Sizing up a Rick Perry–President Obama race for 2012, Dowd sees “a classic cultural collision between a skinny Eastern egghead lawyer who’s inept in Washington gunfights and a pistol-totin’,…

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This time, Dominique Strauss-Kahn will face his own people. The former head of the IMF will speak on French television tonight, making his first public appearance since his arrest in May for allegedly raping a New York hotel maid. The maid’s lawyers are calling for him to give his version…

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Post Office mutualisation proposals unveiled

Postal service overhaul could result in Post Office run along same lines as John Lewis or Co-operative Ministers will on Monday unveil plans to move the Post Office into mutual ownership as part of the government’s major overhaul of the Royal Mail. The Post Office could be on a “clear path” to mutualisation by the end of this parliament, ministers said, in advance of the launch of a consultation on the proposals. Subpostmasters, customers and communities could be given a say in how the Post Office arm of the network is run, including the appointment of directors. The move follows the announcement of a plan to privatise the Royal Mail side of the postal business, which the government argues is necessary to protect its future and ensure growth. The consultation – Building a Mutual Post Office – follows a report earlier this year led by Co-operatives UK , the trade body that works to promote them, which suggested that a mutual body, such as a company or a co-operative, could be set up, with members including staff and customers. The government would then transfer ownership of the Post Office to that body, which would have a say in board appointments as well as sharing in profits. Postal affairs minister Edward Davey said: “The consultation … sets out the different options for how we might enable subpostmasters, employees, post office customers and local communities to have a real stake in the future of the Post Office. “Combined with our major investment programme and the Post Office’s ambition to become the ‘front office for government’, a mutualised Post Office could help link a new commercial focus with an even stronger community purpose.” The government said it believed that Post Office Ltd could be ideally suited to a mutual model, with those that know it best working together, giving them a greater say in how the business is run, as well as a stake in its success. Changing Post Office Ltd – the national company which sets the strategy for the post office network and operates some larger branches – to a mutual would not affect the thousands of privately owned branches across the UK, said Davey. The Co-operatives UK report suggested a number of models, such as John Lewis or the Co-operative, but Davey said the Post Office mutual could be a hybrid of different ideas. The coalition was investing £1.34bn into the Post Office to improve efficiency and levels of service, but mutualisation would help secure its future, he said. The consultation will continue until mid-December, but it could take years before the process is completed. The government’s plans to privatise the Royal Mail were waiting for regulatory changes and European clearance on state aid, but Davey said there had been a “dramatic change of atmosphere” now the postal services legislation had been approved by parliament. Post Office Royal Mail Postal service Privatisation Economic policy Damien Pearse guardian.co.uk

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Pakistani troops and Taliban fighters battled over a downed CIA drone today, raising fears that America’s enemies may gain access to its military technology. Taliban militants reportedly surrounded the Predator in a tribal region of Pakistan, but were fought off by Pakistani troops in a 4-hour battle that left three…

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