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Three men in court charged with teenagers’ murder

Three men will appear in court charged with the murder of two teenagers shot in an alleyway in Milton Keynes Three men will appear in court charged with the murder of two teenagers shot in an alleyway. Yahya Harun, 20, Sharmake Abdulkadir, 20 and Fuad Awale, 23, are due at Milton Keynes magistrates court on Friday. The men, who are all from Milton Keynes, are charged in connection with the fatal shooting of Mohammed Abdi Farah, 19, and Amin Ahmed Ismail, 18, on the town’s Fishermead council estate on 26 May. Abdulkadir has also been charged with possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life. A 17-year-old boy has been released without charge. Both victims were from the Somali community and were known to police for involvement in low-level crime. Superintendent Rob Mason said: “I still believe there are people who have crucial information, but who have not yet come forward and spoken about it. “I hope that the fact we have charged three people with this offence will encourage anyone who has been previously too afraid to come forward to find the courage to speak to the police. “It is still really important that anyone who has any evidence contacts us.” Anyone with information in connection with the incident should contact 0845 8505 505 or Crimestoppers, where information can be given anonymously, on 0800 555 111. Crime guardian.co.uk

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Michigan gunman kills seven during rampage

Rodrick Shonte Dantzler shoots dead his own daughter before killing himself after hostage standoff in Grand Rapids A gunman opened fire in two homes in the US state of Michigan on Thursday, killing seven people, including two children, before leading police on a high-speed chase through a city centre and taking three hostages. The standoff ended when he killed himself with a gunshot to the head, authorities in Grand Rapids said. The hostages were released unharmed. Authorities did not have a motive for the suspect, 34-year-old Rodrick Shonte Dantzler. Police said Dantzler’s daughter and a former girlfriend were among the seven people killed, but that it had been some time since he had a relationship with his ex-girlfriend. The manhunt for Dantzler began after four people were found dead in one home and three were discovered in another across town. “We believe there were prior relationships with at least one person at each location, so we think there were some difficulties there,” the police chief, Kevin Belk, said. Following the discovery of the bodies, Dantzler led officers on a chase, crashed his car and then took the hostages, police said. Dozens of officers with guns drawn cordoned off a neighbourhood near a small lake and shut down a nearby interstate highway. Records show Dantzler was released from state prison in 2005 after serving time for assault. A spokesman for the prison system said he had not been under state supervision since then. At one point during the chase, the suspect crossed a wide grassy median on the highway and drove the wrong way down while more than a dozen squad cars pursued him. Belk said he crashed the vehicle while driving down an embankment into a wooded area of the highway, which remained closed hours later. Two other people were shot when the suspect fired at police during the chase, but their wounds were not considered life-threatening. One man was wounded in what Belk described as a “road rage” attack after the suspect fired through the rear window of the vehicle. A woman was hit in the arm in a separate shooting. The names of the dead were not immediately released. Postmortems were scheduled for Friday. Michigan United States US gun control Gun crime guardian.co.uk

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Did Khadijah Make a Good Judgment in Marrying Muhammad?

Article by WorldNews.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. Would Muslim women add valuable insight and sensitivities as judicial officers, and would their perceptions and insights on law and justice benefit Shari’ah courts? These two questions came to mind when the Nairobi Star reported that some Kenyan Muslim leaders, imams and councils were upset over the possible appointment of female Muslim judicial officers, or Kadhis, for Shari’ah courts. Since Kadhis are judicial officers and not religious leaders, Muslim rights activists believe no discrimination should exist on the basis of gender. Some Muslim leaders, however, believe women should not be judicial officers. At issue is if women can…

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Hack job! Murdoch axes paper to save deal

LONDON – Rupert Murdoch will shut down Britain’s biggest selling Sunday newspaper, the News of the World, in a startling response to a scandal engulfing his media empire. As allegations multiplied that its journalists hacked the voicemails of thousands of people, from child murder victims to the families of Britain’s war dead, the tabloid hemorrhaged advertising, alienated millions of readers and posed a growing threat to Murdoch’s hopes of buying broadcaster BSkyB . The announcement, one of the most dramatic in the 80-year-old press baron’s controversial career, is widely seen as an effort to prevent the crisis from spreading beyond the News of the World to more lucrative parts of Murdoch’s…

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There’s many reasons why I don’t want my Social Security or Medicare cut, but one of the many zombie lies being spewed is that our safety net benefits have to be cut because Americans are living longer and longer. Well, that’s bullshit: “In December, the Los Angeles Times reported — very briefly — that from 2007 to 2008, life expectancy in the United States declined by 0.1 year . It should have been the lead story of every newspaper in the country with the largest possible headlines (‘LESS LIFE’). Did 9/11 reduce life expectancy this much? Of course not. Did World War II? Not in a visible way — American life expectancy rose during World War II. I can’t think any event in the last 100 years that made such a difference to Americans. The decline is even more newsworthy when you realize: 1. It is the continuation of trends. The yearly increase in life expectancy has been dropping for about the last 40 years. 2. Americans spend far more on health care than any other country. Meaning vast resources have been available to translate new discoveries into practice. 3. Americans spend far more on health research than any other country and should be the first to benefit from new discoveries.” It’s not like we didn’t already know this, but still, please tell me why this information never gets reported when the LIE is used so frequently? Joan McCarter: The latest available information is demonstrating that the gains in life expectancy that led to this zombie lie in the first place are now being reversed. This weekend, Laura Clawson wrote about a University of Washington study showing a significant drop in life expectancy for both women and black men in the past decade. From 1987 to 1997, there were 227 counties where female life expectancy dropped. From 1997 to 2007, the number of counties where women’s life expectancy dropped exploded to 737…. Besides the precarious state of women, life expectancy for black men in two-thirds of the nation’s counties is no better than what it was in other rich countries in the 1950s. US Media, riddle me this. Why are these lies being thrown around by Congress allowed to flourish in your reporting?

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Just how is it that Republicans get to lecture Democrats about ballooning federal deficits?

Click here to view this media This sneering, preening performance by the new Republican National Committee chairman, Reince Priebus, yesterday on Fox News really set me off, for some reason. As you can see, it’s all about blaming Democrats for the state of the economy, insisting that they are somehow responsible for the ballooning federal deficit and the need to raise the debt ceiling. That’s the thrust of the RNC’s latest round of Obama-bashing ads. You certainly can’t say they lack for chutzpah. Look, this meme has been building ever since the Tea Partiers started raging about the deficit and the debt, and now it’s the official Republican talking point. It all makes me want to ask: Where do you guys get the balls to lecture Democrats about deficit spending and the state of the economy? Seriously. The previous Democratic president — a guy named Bill Clinton, who Republicans hounded with a meaningless sex scandal — handed off to his Republican successor a $46 billion federal surplus after having erased the deficit for three successive years. That surplus disappeared the first year George W. Bush was in office, even before the 9/11 attacks happened, in no small part because Bush began slashing taxes for the wealthy immediately upon taking office. And then he and his Republican allies running the Congress proceeded to ring up the deficit to unheard-of heights, thanks largely to a needless invasion of another nation under false pretenses. Where were all these Republicans in the years 2001-2006, when they were setting new records for federal deficits and destroying the economy along the way? And then blaming Obama and the Democrats for lost jobs really takes the cake. It’s undoubtedly true that Obama’s policies have not restored jobs in anything near an adequate fashion. But those millions of jobs were destroyed on Republicans’ economic watch, as a result of Republican economic policies. Fixing the economy is indeed a much bigger uphill climb than the Pollyannas on the White House economic team reckoned. But Republicans have done nothing but make it harder, by obstructing every Democratic initiative to stimulate the economy and improve our economic competitiveness (which was what the health-care debate was largely about), not to mention the employment picture generally. Indeed, it’s now becoming crystal clear that they are perfectly willing to wreck the American economy entirely in order to defeat Obama’s economic policies, such as they are. And at the same time, they not only plan to blame Obama for the wreckage, they are already doing so. Remind me again why our president is deluded into believing he can bargain in good faith with these people. OK, rant over.

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End of the ‘World’: Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World To Close After Phone Hacking Scandal

James Murdoch has announced that Sunday’s edition of the British tabloid News of the World will be its last. Murdoch, son of Rupert Murdoch and the Deputy Chief Operating Officer of News Corporation which operates NotW, was the one to break the news to the paper’s staff, saying that after consulting with senior employees, “I

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University admissions study reveals extent of Oxbridge divide

Five elite schools sent more pupils than 2,000 others, with choice of A-Level subjects helping to account for gap Four schools and one sixth-form college sent more pupils to Oxford and Cambridge between them over three years than 2,000 schools and colleges across the UK, according to a new study that analyses university admissions from individual schools. Westminster, Eton, St Paul’s, St Paul’s girls school and Hills Road sixth-form college, a Cambridge state school, produced 946 Oxbridge entrants from 2007-09, the study by the Sutton Trust finds. In the same period, there were 2,000 schools and colleges which sent two or fewer pupils to Oxbridge, producing 927 in total. The difference in these schools’ success rates is driven mainly by gaps in achievement at A-level, but some schools do better at gaining entry to university than others with similar exam results. The analysis is published as the Office for Fair Access, a government watchdog, vets universities’ plans to charge fees higher than £6,000 a year. It will announce next week which have been approved, based on an assessment of their proposals to widen access to students from state school backgrounds. The Sutton Trust study underlines a familiar divide between the private and state sectors – finding that independent school pupils are twice as likely as comprehensive pupils to get into the 30 most selective universities and seven times as likely to get into Oxbridge. Even at the 30 highest achieving comprehensive schools, entry into competitive universities lags behind private and grammar schools. Just under 60% of pupils from the best state schools went to the most selective universities compared with just under 90% of pupils at the best private schools and 74% from the top grammars. Of a comprehensive and a private school in Cornwall, with near identical results, the former sent 17% to selective universities and the latter 66%. There are striking differences even between schools of the same type. At two comprehensives with similar results, almost 70% of 18-year-olds applied to go to university at one, but only 33% at the other. Such differences cannot be explained by ability, the study says, but may be influenced by parental backgrounds, choice of A-levels and poor advice to pupils. The study highlights Cockermouth school in Cumbria, a comprehensive with below-average results which exceeded expectations. Nine pupils went to Oxbridge over the three years of the study and 37% to highly selective universities. Its head, Geoff Walker, said it paid close attention to its pupils’ A-level choices and offered the preferred subjects for elite universities. “We have 100 students doing physics, 100 doing maths. We don’t have anyone doing sociology, media studies or theatre studies.” The study says Oxford and Cambridge find it hard to attract applicants from the north as teenagers increasingly opt to study near home. Of the dozen local authorities that send more than 2% of state school A-level candidates to Oxbridge, all but one, Trafford, is in the south-east. In Hammersmith and Fulham, 86% of state school sixth-formers go to university. In Reading, one of the most affluent parts of the country, more than half of those staying on after 16 go to highly selective universities. But not a single student in Knowsley went to Oxbridge in the three years of the study. Deprived parts of the south also have a poor record. Portsmouth only had four Oxbridge entrants in three years. The study notes that of the city’s 279 state-educated A-level candidates last year, only 14 took English literature and 11 took maths. In the same year, 25 took media studies. Sir Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust, said: “We know these stark inequalities in university progression rates are driven primarily by the exam results in schools, yet the data we are publishing today also reveals that university chances can vary dramatically for schools with similar average grades. “Our hope is that by making these figures available, the spotlight on schools will widen to encompass the actual destinations of pupils after they have left, alongside their A-level results.” The trust’s report was criticised by universities for comparing schools based on average points per A-level student. Dr Wendy Piatt, director general of the Russell Group of leading research universities , which includes Oxford and Cambridge, said this did not take into account the specific subjects and grades required to enter highly competitive degree courses. She said: “We are absolutely committed to ensuring that our doors are wide open to students with the qualifications, potential and determination whatever their background. “We urge schools to encourage their students to apply to leading universities, and work hard to help them to do so.” A spokesman for the University of Cambridge said: “It is incorrect to assert that similar total points scored equates to ‘identical A-level results’ when considering entry to highly selective universities. “When applying to the University of Cambridge, it is the quality of the student’s performance in relevant exams that is of most importance. Our research shows that the state and independent school students we admit go on to perform equally well in their degrees.” Oxbridge and elitism Access to university Higher education University of Cambridge University of Oxford A-levels Equality Private schools Schools Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk

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University admissions study reveals extent of Oxbridge divide

Five elite schools sent more pupils than 2,000 others, with choice of A-Level subjects helping to account for gap Four schools and one sixth-form college sent more pupils to Oxford and Cambridge between them over three years than 2,000 schools and colleges across the UK, according to a new study that analyses university admissions from individual schools. Westminster, Eton, St Paul’s, St Paul’s girls school and Hills Road sixth-form college, a Cambridge state school, produced 946 Oxbridge entrants from 2007-09, the study by the Sutton Trust finds. In the same period, there were 2,000 schools and colleges which sent two or fewer pupils to Oxbridge, producing 927 in total. The difference in these schools’ success rates is driven mainly by gaps in achievement at A-level, but some schools do better at gaining entry to university than others with similar exam results. The analysis is published as the Office for Fair Access, a government watchdog, vets universities’ plans to charge fees higher than £6,000 a year. It will announce next week which have been approved, based on an assessment of their proposals to widen access to students from state school backgrounds. The Sutton Trust study underlines a familiar divide between the private and state sectors – finding that independent school pupils are twice as likely as comprehensive pupils to get into the 30 most selective universities and seven times as likely to get into Oxbridge. Even at the 30 highest achieving comprehensive schools, entry into competitive universities lags behind private and grammar schools. Just under 60% of pupils from the best state schools went to the most selective universities compared with just under 90% of pupils at the best private schools and 74% from the top grammars. Of a comprehensive and a private school in Cornwall, with near identical results, the former sent 17% to selective universities and the latter 66%. There are striking differences even between schools of the same type. At two comprehensives with similar results, almost 70% of 18-year-olds applied to go to university at one, but only 33% at the other. Such differences cannot be explained by ability, the study says, but may be influenced by parental backgrounds, choice of A-levels and poor advice to pupils. The study highlights Cockermouth school in Cumbria, a comprehensive with below-average results which exceeded expectations. Nine pupils went to Oxbridge over the three years of the study and 37% to highly selective universities. Its head, Geoff Walker, said it paid close attention to its pupils’ A-level choices and offered the preferred subjects for elite universities. “We have 100 students doing physics, 100 doing maths. We don’t have anyone doing sociology, media studies or theatre studies.” The study says Oxford and Cambridge find it hard to attract applicants from the north as teenagers increasingly opt to study near home. Of the dozen local authorities that send more than 2% of state school A-level candidates to Oxbridge, all but one, Trafford, is in the south-east. In Hammersmith and Fulham, 86% of state school sixth-formers go to university. In Reading, one of the most affluent parts of the country, more than half of those staying on after 16 go to highly selective universities. But not a single student in Knowsley went to Oxbridge in the three years of the study. Deprived parts of the south also have a poor record. Portsmouth only had four Oxbridge entrants in three years. The study notes that of the city’s 279 state-educated A-level candidates last year, only 14 took English literature and 11 took maths. In the same year, 25 took media studies. Sir Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust, said: “We know these stark inequalities in university progression rates are driven primarily by the exam results in schools, yet the data we are publishing today also reveals that university chances can vary dramatically for schools with similar average grades. “Our hope is that by making these figures available, the spotlight on schools will widen to encompass the actual destinations of pupils after they have left, alongside their A-level results.” The trust’s report was criticised by universities for comparing schools based on average points per A-level student. Dr Wendy Piatt, director general of the Russell Group of leading research universities , which includes Oxford and Cambridge, said this did not take into account the specific subjects and grades required to enter highly competitive degree courses. She said: “We are absolutely committed to ensuring that our doors are wide open to students with the qualifications, potential and determination whatever their background. “We urge schools to encourage their students to apply to leading universities, and work hard to help them to do so.” A spokesman for the University of Cambridge said: “It is incorrect to assert that similar total points scored equates to ‘identical A-level results’ when considering entry to highly selective universities. “When applying to the University of Cambridge, it is the quality of the student’s performance in relevant exams that is of most importance. Our research shows that the state and independent school students we admit go on to perform equally well in their degrees.” Oxbridge and elitism Access to university Higher education University of Cambridge University of Oxford A-levels Equality Private schools Schools Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk

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Cancer patient receives first synthetic organ transplant

Man given synthetic trachea created by growing his own stem cells on artificial ‘scaffold’ Surgeons have performed the first transplant operation using an organ wholly grown in a laboratory to give a man a new windpipe. The 36-year-old is recovering after surgeons implanted the world’s first wholly lab-grown organ into his body. The synthetic trachea was created by growing the patient’s own stem cells on an artificial “scaffold”, which British scientists helped design. Windpipes have been grown from stem cells before, but only using the collagen “skeletons” of donated tracheas. The landmark operation at Karolinska University hospital in Sweden could mean patients may not have to wait for a suitable donor organ. This could be particularly significant for children, for whom donor tracheas are much more difficult to find. The patient, an African student living in Iceland, had been suffering from life-threatening tracheal cancer. Professor Paolo Macchiarini, a Spanish expert in regenerative medicine who led the groundbreaking operation, designed the Y-shaped synthetic trachea scaffold with Professor Alexander Seifalian, from University College London. The Y-shaped structure was made from a plastic-like “nanocomposite” polymer material consisting of microscopic building blocks. Two days after stem cells were placed into the scaffold they had grown into tracheal cells ready for transplantation. Since the organ was built from cells originating from the patient, there was no risk of it being rejected by his immune system. Prof Seifalian said: “What makes this procedure different is it’s the first time that a wholly tissue-engineered synthetic windpipe has been made and successfully transplanted, making it an important milestone for regenerative medicine. We expect there to be many more exciting applications for the novel polymers we have developed.” The patient is said to be doing well and is due to be discharged from hospital today. Medical research Stem cells Cancer Biology guardian.co.uk

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