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Research fellow charged with possession of drugs after teenager is taken ill at house party in west London A university academic has been arrested on suspicion of possession of drugs following the death of a teenage girl who became ill at a party. Brian Dodgeon, a research fellow at the University of London’s Institute of Education, is believed to have been held over the death of Isobel Clara Reilly, 15, of Acton, west London. Officers were alerted by London Ambulance Service at 4.10am on Saturday after she took ill at a house in Barlby Road in north Kensington. Isobel was taken to hospital, but died later that morning. A 60-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of possession of drugs and child abandonment, the Metropolitan police said. He was bailed to return at a date in June. Isobel’s death is currently being treated as unexplained, but officers are examining whether drugs played a role in her death. “We await the results of the postmortem examination,” a police spokesman said. A 14-year-old girl, believed to be Dodgeon’s daughter and two boys, both aged 14, were also taken to hospital as a precaution. Last night they remained there under observation. Detective Sergeant Neil Philpott appealed for more information from guests who attended the party. “We believe the victim was taken ill during a party at the address in Barlby Road,” he said. “We are yet to make contact with all those who attended and would ask anyone who was present at any point during the evening to make contact with officers.” Isobel’s family said last night they and their daughter’s friends were “devastated and heartbroken” about her death. “We hope that if anything positive comes from this dreadful event, it is that others will make the right decisions to be safe and well in the future,” they said in a statement. They appealed for privacy, and also for anyone who had any information concerning Isobel to contact the police. Tony Ryan, headteacher of Chiswick Community School, where the teenager attended, described her as an “extremely popular girl”. “Her tragically early death is devastating news to everyone associated with the school and all our thoughts are with her family at this time,” he said. Crime Drugs Amy Fallon guardian.co.uk

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Franklin Graham Claims Government Stepped Into Churches’ Role Caring For Poor And Needy

Click here to view this media I can’t help wondering why Franklin Graham isn’t preaching an Easter Sunday revival instead of showing up on Christiane Amanpour’s show to make political statements, or to be more accurate, pronouncements. Some pronouncements, however, should not be allowed to stand unchallenged, and the following is one of them. AMANPOUR: We in this country and around the world are living in very dire times right now. Dire financial times, economic crisis, the gap between rich and poor is growing, not only here, but all over the world. What can the church do to fill that gap and to step into that gap? GRAHAM: Christiane, a hundred years ago, the safety net, the social safety net in the country was provided by the church. If you didn’t have a job, you’d go to your local church and ask the pastor if he know somebody that could hire him. If you were hungry, you went to the local church and told them, “I can’t feed my family.” And the church would help you. And that’s not being done. But the government took that. And took it away from the church. And they had more money to give and more programs to give, and pretty soon, the churches just backed off. And as a result, now you have generation after generation of pastors in churches that have not done that. And you would have to teach them again how to do it. Well, Reverend Graham, that is somewhat true but mostly not , because of course, churches rely upon the gifts of their congregation. Churches, like everyone else, suffered the effects. Many had debt obligations on their church buildings and were forced into default as offerings fell away, causing them to have to close the doors entirely. The depression had a devastating effect on the Churches as well as on the nation. In the optimistic flush of the ‘20’s many congregations had built new edifices far too large and expensive. When the depression hit, they found themselves unable to pay. Most carried their huge debts; a few rejected their obligation, thus bringing shame on the Christian Church. Colleges and publishing houses, missionary enterprises, and the social work of the Churches were all hard hit by the depression. Many an institution of the Church lost its endowment in the financial crash and had to close or had to drastically cut back its activities. In 2008, everything old is new again . The 20th annual study by Empty Tomb Inc. reaffirmed a “long-term turning inward of congregations” exhibited by a dwindling share of church donations spent on benevolence and evangelism. It also found a dip in money given to churches during the 2008 recession, even while donations to religious organizations overall increased. enlarge But of course, there were reasons why those offering plates were a little emptier, and not just because of massive unemployment. While there was some resurgence of piety among the lower classes (which manifested itself in an increase in the strength of religious fundamentalism during this decade) most middle and upper class individuals, remained unmoved even though they too may have suffered from the Depression. This cover plainly represents how the upper classes during the 1930′s continued to pay little attention to religion during this decade. The tip of a hat by the dead rich gentleman being rushed up to heaven shows the only tacit attention which such individuals, often caught up in the business world, paid to matters of religion. It’s no different today. Giving is carefully structured and often targeted. Giving by wealthy conservatives to religious organizations tends to be oriented toward overseas missions, even in desperate financial times here. For those who do focus giving toward religious organizations, it tends to be of an amount that isn’t even close to what’s needed to help people on the streets. Graham rewrites history in this segment to leave viewers with the impression that churches were handling everything just fine until FDR’s government came and snatched that responsibility away. They weren’t. In Colleen McDannell’s book Picturing Faith: photography and the Great Depression , two paragraphs in chapter 5 give a look inside the evangelical churches serving the poor: “I’ve had two dark rainy days on which it was impossible to work outside so, I did a pretty complete story on the City Mission, community chest financed and operated by a Baptist minister who is quite a little stinker.” John Vachon was photographing in Iowa, and in April 1940 he was in Dubuque. “It really breaks my heart to hear this little Baptist say, ‘all right men, upstairs to bed’ after the hymns had been sung,” he wrote to Stryker. “They go up, fumigate their clothes, take showers, and go to bed about 8:30.” The only Catholic to work for the Historical Section, and probably the only photographer who went ot church every Sunday as a child, Vachon did not take the evangelical tone of the charity very seriously. “The first night I sat through the services and raised my hand on the third call that yes I wanted to be saved. I never realized before what a lousy situation it is to have ‘charity’ operate this way. ” The “lousy situation,” however, was interesting enough to prompt Vachon to return one more day. “I am going back once more to get shots of children coming to get pails of the stew that’s left over,” he explained to his boss. A few days later, Stryker dashed off a letter in support of his young clerk. “The City Mission story sounds good. I hope your pictures portray the real character of the Baptist minister. I know the type. Will save my comments about them until you get back.” This is the church of Franklin Graham. The authoritarian, evangelical church that calls for conditions upon the charity he extols as being stolen from the church. My point here is not to say that all churches are failures. Not at all. Many are working toward social justice and a more fair, just, compassionate America . But Franklin Graham’s vision is one where we are pushed back to the days of horses, buggies, tent revivals and a government who does not exist to serve the people governed.

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Glenn Beck’s final days at Fox: Kind of a pathetic spectacle, really

Click here to view this media After all the damage that Glenn Beck has inflicted on the national discourse in the past two-plus years at Fox News, no one will be missing him anytime soon. We especially won’t miss the nutty chalkboard rants, which really became so tedious that I don’t doubt they played a big role in his steep ratings decline. But since this is his last week at Fox coming up, he’s getting all nostalgic and trying to sum it all up for us, his loyal viewers. He seems to be trying to ball it all up at once, as he did Friday with a session that included one of his fake “town hall” audiences, which he then tried to gin up into an angry mob by telling them that their way of life was going to be destroyed by a conspiracy of secret radicals in the Obama administration. Oh, and Obama is just another Octavian, according to Beck: conspiring to destroy democracy so that he could assume dictatorial powers. It’s kind of pathetic, actually, because at this point it’s just so much hot air escaping into the ether: irrelevant and insignificant.

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From Not Factual to Non-Existent: Kyl’s Remark Stricken from Congressional Record

The mistruth that was “not intended to be a factual statement” is now nowhere to be found on the official Congressional minutes. During the budget negotiations, Republican Arizona Senator Jon Kyl took the floor to speak out against Planned Parenthood, rattling off that the health centers use 90% of their funding for abortions. One problem:

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From theatre to Thor

With Thor, Tom Hiddleston has shot from indie star to Hollywood. Next stop, Spielberg Tom Hiddleston turns up for breakfast at a central London hotel dead on time and breathlessly thrilled. Though the 30-year-old has already had an impressive career, renowned as one of the most penetratingly intelligent actors of his generation and working with directors as illustrious as Michael Grandage and Terence Davies , travelling here on the tube he had a Hollywood moment. He saw a poster of Thor for the first time. He sits forward eagerly. “It’s a wildly exciting time. I’ve never been in a film that has posters on the tube. And it’s not even my face on the poster.” The Thor poster shows a close-up of Chris Hemsworth as the god of thunder; Hiddleston plays his Machiavellian brother Loki, the god of mischief. On screen, the two actors are brawn and brain, large and little. Hemsworth’s Thor is a brash yet increasingly likable god; Hiddleston’s Loki is ultimately just a kid who wants to please his dad, Odin, played by Anthony Hopkins . It’s surprising, then, to learn that director Kenneth Branagh initially asked Hiddleston to audition for the title role. Hiddleston digs into his eggs benedict and laughs. “Ken found out he’d got the job in late 2008, when we were appearing at the Donmar together, knocking eight bells of ideological crap out of each other every night in Chekhov’s Ivanov . Dressed as the self-righteous 19th-century doctor Lvov, with wire-rimmed spectacles, a pocket watch, grey trousers, a linen jacket and a goatee, I ran up to Ken’s dressing room holding a massive empty water cooler that I pretended was Thor’s hammer. He looked at me and said, ‘Don’t joke, love, you never

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Trump denies poor voting record

US tycoon reacts with fury to revelation by news station in his home town that he has not voted in primaries for 21 years Donald Trump, property tycoon turned reality TV star turned potential presidential candidate, is a busy man. Too busy, it seems, to make it to the polling booth. Records unearthed by NY1 , Trump’s hometown news station, show he has not voted in primary elections for 21 years. City election board spokeswoman Valerie Vazquez confirmed NY1′s story at the weekend. The news prompted a furious denial from Trump. “I voted in every general election … You’re going to pay a big price because you’re wrong … I have records that I voted and so does the board of elections … I signed in at every election,” he told NY1. Trump has yet to confirm he will run for president but will be hoping for a more committed turnout from his own supporters if he is to move forward with his campaign. In order to secure the nomination he would need to get fellow Republicans to vote for him in a primary election – something that the state election board records appear to show he has failed to do consistently since 1989. Back in 1989 Trump voted in the primary for mayor when Rudolph Giuliani beat business magnate Ronald Lauder, but according to the documents, Trump failed to show up at the primaries after that for over 20 years. It wasn’t just local elections Trump missed. The tycoon also failed to cast his vote in several presidential primaries, including in 1988 and 1996. The star of The Apprentice became a Democrat in 2001 but missed the 2001 and 2005 primaries for mayor. In 2002 records show he also appears to have skipped the general election. In 2008 Trump voiced his support for Barack Obama during the fiercely fought primary with Hillary Clinton. “I think [Obama] has a chance to go down as a great president,” Trump told NY1 in 2008. “Now if he’s not, if he’s not a great president then this country is in trouble.” Perhaps it was this ambivalence that led to him missing that vote too. Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen told Associated Press on Saturday that “for one of the greatest international businessmen who travels all over the country and the world, his voting record is very, very good.” Trump’s campaign has been fuelled by his questioning whether Obama was born in the United States, and by his plans to seize the oil of countries including Iraq and Libya. The latest Gallup poll finds Trump tied in first place among Republican voters with Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, on 16%. Mitt Romney is third with 13%, with former Alaska governor Sarah Palin in fourth on 10%. Donald Trump United States US politics Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Keep out – for 100,000 years

Few architects have to design anything to last more than 100 years, so how do you build a nuclear waste facility to last for millennia? And what sign do you put on the door? Ceremonies will be held around the worldon Tuesday to mark the 25th

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David Brooks still stands by his man, Rep. Paul Ryan’s ‘Junk Science’ Budget

Click here to view this media On Meet The Press today, David Brooks was still trying to bail out his young idol, Paul Ryan, who hurt the GOP brand very badly by trying to dismantle our safety net programs with his budget. Brooks digs deep in bizarroland by saying that even though he doesn’t agree with everything Ryan proposed, he’s still a hero for starting the debate and confronting the question. Sure, one way to try and put out a fire is to throw gasoline on it too. Meet The Press : MR. GREGORY: And there is a lack of compromise and a great desire for compromise. David Brooks, Ron Brownstein in the National Journal writes in his column this week something that I really think sets up this discussion very well. He said, “Leading thinkers in both parties say that events of the past two weeks have locked in place a major part of the 2012 general-election contest. “The debate will revolve around a big question more often dodged than confronted: How much government are Americans willing to pay for? Before the conversation is over, the answer could produce uncomfortable moments for President Obama and Republicans alike, not to mention voters themselves.” MR. DAVID BROOKS: Yeah. Well, that’s what I liked about the Ryan plan . It actually confronts you with that question. Listen, the average senior citizen is–pays about $150,000 into Medicare, pays in $150,000. They get out of it, the system, about $450,000. That $300,000, a large chunk of it is being paid for by their grandkids. And so Ryan said, “Is that moral? Is that what you really–what we want to leave a legacy?” So what he did was extremely politically foolhardy, but–and I don’t agree with every part of his plan–but he asked people to face the question, the, the implications of their choices. And so I, I think everybody’s going to have to do that in many different ways, but I thought what he did was a step in the right direction. Brooks is seriously demented if Ryan ever thought in “moral’ terms and the idea that he’s brave is nonsense. This is what Conservatives really believe and have been fighting for all these years. Ryan said this about the vote: Ryan, R-Wis., the plan’s architect, said of the House action today: “This is our defining moment.” Almost the entire Republican HOUSE voted for Ryan’s plan which backs up their long held beliefs. Is that a step in the right direction? The Beltway media is still congratulating Ryan for putting out a junk science budget proposal that would destroy Medicare and Medicaid. Fareed Zakaria did it earlier today. I actually like his show and many things he says, but not on this. What’s so brave about Ryan’s plan? Please tell me? Why not congratulate the CPC like Krugman did for releasing their budget proposal that calls for tax hikes and cuts to the Military Industrial Complex? As usual Dana Milbank loves to punch liberals because his beltway friends will cheer, but maybe he should read The Economist . which isn’t a left leaning publication on the CPC budget. They actually praised it because it more seriously balanced the budget without adding 6 trillion to the debt as Ryan’s did and finds it much more courageous. Mr Ryan’s plan adds (by its own claims) $6 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, but promises to balance the budget by sometime in the 2030s by cutting programmes for the poor and the elderly. The Progressive Caucus’s plan would (by its own claims) balance the budget by 2021 by cutting defence spending and raising taxes, mainly on rich people. Mr Ryan has been fulsomely praised for his courage. The Progressive Caucus has not. I’m not really sure what “courage” is supposed to mean here, but this seems precisely backwards. For 30 years, certainly since Walter Mondale got creamed by Ronald Reagan, the most dangerous thing a politician can do has been to call for tax hikes. Politicians who call for higher taxes are punished, which is why they don’t do it. I’m curious to see what adjectives people would apply to the Progressive Congressional Caucus’s budget proposal. But it’s hard for me to imagine the media calling a proposal to raise taxes “courageous” and “honest”. And my sense is that the disparate treatment here is a structural bias rooted in class . Of course we won’t hear about this Economist column on the Sunday Talk Shows because of a structural bias rooted in pundits.

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Many of us on the ATLAS experiment at CERN have been a little more busy than we anticipated this Easter. I tried to explain why on Channel 4 news. You may have seen reports of rumours of …. dramatic findings at the Large Hadron Collider over the past few days. I haven’t commented on them here so far since the rumours are based on an leaked internal document. Nevertheless when Channel 4 asked me about it I though I should go on: So, it is not a hoax. But the rumours are based on an analysis which has to pass many levels of scientific scrutiny before I get very excited by it. It could fail at any stage. If it passes, it will be released by ATLAS , and will then be submitted to a journal. For comparison, journal submission is the stage the CDF bump has got to, and that is far from established yet as a real new physics effect. The thing is, CERN is an exciting place right now. New data are coming in as I write. There are lots of levels of collaboration and competition. Retaining a detached scientific approach is sometimes difficult. And if we can’t always keep clear heads ourselves, it’s not surprising people outside get excited too. This is why we have internal scrutiny, separate teams working on the same analysis, external peer review, repeat experiments, and so on… So don’t go tearing up your particle physics text books just yet. But please stay tuned for when we really do have something to say! These are indeed interesting times. Jon Butterworth guardian.co.uk

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Reason number 89,562,490 why I could never, ever be a conservative: I lack the inherent mean streak necessary to qualify. For all their posturing about how generous they are with their charity dollars, yada yada, the fact remains that they’re downright mean. Rush Limbaugh thinks poor kids should dumpster dive ? No problem for conservatives. They agree. So here’s the newest conservative budget-saver. Michigan State Senator Bruce Caswell thinks foster kids should only be allowed to buy secondhand clothes. Hey, it would save the state about $17 bucks, so there’s that. Michigan Messenger: Under a new budget proposal from State Sen. Bruce Casswell, children in the state’s foster care system would be allowed to purchase clothing only in used clothing stores. Casswell, a Republican representing Branch, Hillsdale, Lenawee and St. Joseph counties, made the proposal this week, reports Michigan Public Radio. His explanation? “I never had anything new,” Caswell says. “I got all the hand-me-downs. And my dad, he did a lot of shopping at the Salvation Army, and his comment was — and quite frankly it’s true — once you’re out of the store and you walk down the street, nobody knows where you bought your clothes.” Under his plan, foster children would receive gift cards that could only be used at places like the Salvation Army, Goodwill and other second hand clothing stores. Quite frankly, I don’t give a jolly red rip about Caswell’s daddy making him wear secondhand clothes. And yes, you can hit the Salvation Army and occasionally find something worth wearing. But is he suggesting these kids should buy secondhand underwear, socks and shoes too? Evidently so, or they can just suck it up and go without. This seems to me like a guy working out his own childhood. I fully expected his next proposal to be eliminated school buses in the winter because he had to walk 30 miles in the hip-deep snow to get to school and dammit, he liked it. And while this proposal has been dropped from the budget, other proposals have been inserted that are equally mean, equally targeted at those least able to speak or have any power in this process, and are just as demeaning. It’s just mean. Mean-spirited. Another way of saying to those kids (who, by the way, are not foster kids because they requested that particular status) that they’re just not quite worth the investment of a new pair of jeans and shoes. Mean.

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