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Hosni Mubarak has stomach cancer, his lawyer says, amid conflicting reports that are emerging two months before the former Egyptian president’s trial. Word that Mubarak has cancer has circulated since he had a growth removed from his intestine last year; today, his lawyer told AFP that the 83-year-old has “stomach…

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Strangers No More celebrates Oscar win at Israel’s melting pot school

Academy award-winning documentary hands round its statuettes at Tel Aviv school, despite many pupils facing deportation There’s not much that is usual about the Bialik Rogozin School in Tel Aviv – so the pupils took it in their stride when the end of term was celebrated with two Oscar statuettes being handed around. This year’s Academy award for best documentary was won by Strangers No More, which tells the story of students from the school, 70% of whom are immigrants, many from the world’s most dangerous countries. On Monday, the film’s directors, Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon, brought their Oscars to share with the schoolchildren and to allow them to bask in a little reflected glory. With 832 pupils from 48 countries, including Muslims, Christians and Jews, the children might not share that much in common, but one thing was for sure – they all wanted to get their hands on the Oscar. “This is a tribute to the miracle that is Bialik Rogozin. The moment we came here, we found love and we are still in love with this school and everyone who has found a home here,” said Goodman as the school celebrated with readings and awards while some of the girls nervously carried out dance routines, interrupted by the occasional misstep and technical glitch. “If we received an Oscar, it’s because these kids opened their hearts to us. All we did was capture it,” said Goodman’s co-director Simon. Many of the students face deportation and the government is due to make its decision on their futures. “They might postpone it but it still leaves the kids living in fear,” said Simon. In recent years, Israel has received 35,000 asylum seekers and refugees from across Africa. It also has tens of thousands of foreign workers who have overstayed their visas, some of whom have children born in Israel. Non-Jewish migration has created confusion in Israel. The ministry of the interior, headed by a minister from the ultra-orthodox Shas party, is keen to cut the numbers but others are proud that Israel has become a refuge. The film documents a year in the life of the school, focusing on three students: Esther Aikpehae, who fled South Africa after her mother was murdered; Johannes Mulugeta from Eritrea, who had not previously attended school; and Mohammed Adam, who walked to Israel from Darfur in Sudan after seeing his grandmother and father murdered in front of him. All three have temporary residence permits. The school is due to receive Israel’s national education prize from the president, Shimon Peres, but headteacher Karen Tal pointed out it was not easy running a school where so many pupils were worried about their future. “We have a deal with the pupils: we keep the routine and aim for educational achievement which will give them confidence at a time when they have no roots. The other side is that we are very active in agitating on behalf of the students. I speak to prominent people all the time and we have set up an action committee and hosted guests from all over the world,” she said. Goodman believes the school is an example to others all over the world that struggle to provide good education in multicultural environments. “How can you take kids from 48 countries and and educate them? The answer is, give them the right opportunity and the right atmosphere and they will come together and learn. Here, being different is the norm,” she said. Tal’s vision for the school and the country is of a society based on shared responsibility. “In our vision, all students who come to Israel, whether they are Jewish, Muslim or Christian, have made a statement that they want to be part of that society and all that means. If that means military service or civil service, then that is part of our duty.” International education news Israel Middle East Oscars Oscars 2011 Religion Judaism Islam Christianity Children Conal Urquhart guardian.co.uk

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Why did Ron Paul do so well in a GOP straw poll over the weekend ? Simple, he said on Today this morning: He’s popular with all those who are tired of the “endless, undeclared, unwinnable wars dumped on the young people” and the rising US national debt. “That’s why…

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After a little bit of drama , the music video for Weird Al Yankovic’s Lady Gaga parody, “Perform This Way,” is here. It’s basically what you’d expect: A truly scary-looking Weird Al’s head is superimposed on a woman’s body, and is featured wearing, among other things: a unicorn headdress, a nun’s…

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The Supreme Court has ruled for Wal-Mart in the biggest sex discrimination lawsuit ever, holding that the case cannot proceed as a class action. The court rejected a US appeals court decision that as many as 1.6 million women could take part in the suit, which could have ultimately…

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Hard as it may be to believe, there’s still at least one woman out there who’s willing to date Mel Gibson. Her name is Stella Mouzi and she’s a “gothic model.” What does that mean? Well, the New York Daily News describes the Greek-born beauty as “pale” and “raven-haired,” and…

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Protests broke out across Syria today, after president Bashar al-Assad delivered a speech that blamed “saboteurs” and “foreign conspiracies” for the country’s unrest. The speech had been hailed in advance as one that would potentially be “groundbreaking,” but it actually offered little new in terms of concessions or reforms, according…

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Not a match to raise the roof but just what Andy Murray needed | Richard Williams

With sterner tests to come, the British No1 will be grateful he was given a decent work-out by Daniel Gimeno-Traver Just what the boy Murray needed. A stiffish test for over an hour, followed by a cruise through to the second round. Full marks to Daniel Gimeno-Traver, a 25-year-old from Valencia who had previously won only two matches on grass, for providing the No4 seed with a useful opening-day work-out under the retractable roof and for giving the crowd 70 minutes of admirable tennis before his mind and limbs grew tired. The rain had come at one minute past five o’clock, with the women’s singles match between Francesca Schiavione and Jelena Dokic still in the balance on the Centre Court as the roof was given an early opportunity to do its £80m-worth of stuff. Two years ago Andy Murray and his fourth-round opponent Stanislas Wawrinka became the first players to contest a match in the new weather-proof SW19 showpiece. Murray, who was on his way to his first appearance in the Wimbledon semi-finals, took that match in five sets, with somewhat greater difficulty than he experienced on Monday. When the No4 seed and the Spaniard ranked No59 in the world made their appearance, once Schiavone and Dokic had completed their business, the lights were shining from beneath the translucent covering and the air was humid. Knights of the realm in the royal box included Jackie Stewart, Clive Woodward and Terry Wogan, along with Angela Mortimer, a British singles champion at Wimbledon in the long, long ago. In the only previous meeting between the two men, in 2009, Murray had won in straight sets on a hard court in Gimeno-Traver’s home town. Now the position was reversed, with the Spaniard venturing on to the Scot’s adopted turf and giving a good account of himself in the opening stages. This is Murray’s sixth visit to Wimbledon as a senior since his debut in 2005 – he missed the 2007 tournament with a wrist injury – and it will not have escaped his attention that his progress has taken the form of an unbroken upward curve: third round, fourth round, quarter-final, then consecutive semi-finals in the past two years, with his path to the final denied first by Andy Roddick and then by Rafael Nadal. Defeat in another semi-final, at the age of 24, would represent the consolidation of his known status, if not the satisfaction of moving up another level. Elimination at an earlier stage in his quarter of the draw would necessarily be at the hands of a player outside the top four, a Gaël Monfils or a Richard Gasquet, or maybe Roddick, the eighth seed, and would involve a significant disappointment. Murray dropped only two points in his first four service games, while Gimeno-Traver was holding his own serve with considerably more difficulty, fending off a break point in the fourth game. Serving at 4-4, however, the Scot suddenly lost control of his forehand, saving two break points before losing a third and finding himself unable to prevent the set slipping out of his hands at the first time of asking. “He deserved to be up at that point,” Murray said afterwards, and it was indeed a very enjoyable and competitive spectacle for the crowd. Gimeno-Traver, the son of a chemist and a nurse, is said in his official biography to have taken up the game at two years of age – his more celebrated opponent delayed his first efforts until after his third birthday – and he was matching Murray shot for shot, covering the court with springy athleticism and mixing up the pace and angles to considerable effect. When he took the first point of the seventh game in the second set against Murray’s serve, with a beautifully manufactured low forehead lob that hit the baseline and scurried away, the court rang with warm applause. The crowd were showing their appreciation of what was, at that stage, still a proper contest, but a couple of minutes later the evening took a decisive turn when Murray exploited a series of errors and made the most of a third break point before brusquely closing out the set with a service game that included three aces from the deuce court, each one scorching the centre line at around 125mph. Here was a hint of the consistent menace he will no doubt need in the later rounds. The best of Murray came as he broke Gimeno-Traver again in the opening game of the third set, again needing threebreak points to achieve his aim but also producing a running forehand down the line and a marvellously judged drop shot. At that point his opponent caved in and hardly won another point, never mind a game. At 4-0 in the third the Spaniard called for treatment to a thigh injury, probably the result of a fall in the sixth game of the second set, and the remainder of the match constituted little more than an exhibition. It ended with a gentle exchange of angled volleys and drop shots, Murray delivering the coup de grâce with a lethal delicacy that he may not have occasion to display in what will surely be the sterner contests to come. Andy Murray Wimbledon 2011 Wimbledon Tennis Richard Williams guardian.co.uk

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Not a match to raise the roof but just what Andy Murray needed | Richard Williams

With sterner tests to come, the British No1 will be grateful he was given a decent work-out by Daniel Gimeno-Traver Just what the boy Murray needed. A stiffish test for over an hour, followed by a cruise through to the second round. Full marks to Daniel Gimeno-Traver, a 25-year-old from Valencia who had previously won only two matches on grass, for providing the No4 seed with a useful opening-day work-out under the retractable roof and for giving the crowd 70 minutes of admirable tennis before his mind and limbs grew tired. The rain had come at one minute past five o’clock, with the women’s singles match between Francesca Schiavione and Jelena Dokic still in the balance on the Centre Court as the roof was given an early opportunity to do its £80m-worth of stuff. Two years ago Andy Murray and his fourth-round opponent Stanislas Wawrinka became the first players to contest a match in the new weather-proof SW19 showpiece. Murray, who was on his way to his first appearance in the Wimbledon semi-finals, took that match in five sets, with somewhat greater difficulty than he experienced on Monday. When the No4 seed and the Spaniard ranked No59 in the world made their appearance, once Schiavone and Dokic had completed their business, the lights were shining from beneath the translucent covering and the air was humid. Knights of the realm in the royal box included Jackie Stewart, Clive Woodward and Terry Wogan, along with Angela Mortimer, a British singles champion at Wimbledon in the long, long ago. In the only previous meeting between the two men, in 2009, Murray had won in straight sets on a hard court in Gimeno-Traver’s home town. Now the position was reversed, with the Spaniard venturing on to the Scot’s adopted turf and giving a good account of himself in the opening stages. This is Murray’s sixth visit to Wimbledon as a senior since his debut in 2005 – he missed the 2007 tournament with a wrist injury – and it will not have escaped his attention that his progress has taken the form of an unbroken upward curve: third round, fourth round, quarter-final, then consecutive semi-finals in the past two years, with his path to the final denied first by Andy Roddick and then by Rafael Nadal. Defeat in another semi-final, at the age of 24, would represent the consolidation of his known status, if not the satisfaction of moving up another level. Elimination at an earlier stage in his quarter of the draw would necessarily be at the hands of a player outside the top four, a Gaël Monfils or a Richard Gasquet, or maybe Roddick, the eighth seed, and would involve a significant disappointment. Murray dropped only two points in his first four service games, while Gimeno-Traver was holding his own serve with considerably more difficulty, fending off a break point in the fourth game. Serving at 4-4, however, the Scot suddenly lost control of his forehand, saving two break points before losing a third and finding himself unable to prevent the set slipping out of his hands at the first time of asking. “He deserved to be up at that point,” Murray said afterwards, and it was indeed a very enjoyable and competitive spectacle for the crowd. Gimeno-Traver, the son of a chemist and a nurse, is said in his official biography to have taken up the game at two years of age – his more celebrated opponent delayed his first efforts until after his third birthday – and he was matching Murray shot for shot, covering the court with springy athleticism and mixing up the pace and angles to considerable effect. When he took the first point of the seventh game in the second set against Murray’s serve, with a beautifully manufactured low forehead lob that hit the baseline and scurried away, the court rang with warm applause. The crowd were showing their appreciation of what was, at that stage, still a proper contest, but a couple of minutes later the evening took a decisive turn when Murray exploited a series of errors and made the most of a third break point before brusquely closing out the set with a service game that included three aces from the deuce court, each one scorching the centre line at around 125mph. Here was a hint of the consistent menace he will no doubt need in the later rounds. The best of Murray came as he broke Gimeno-Traver again in the opening game of the third set, again needing threebreak points to achieve his aim but also producing a running forehand down the line and a marvellously judged drop shot. At that point his opponent caved in and hardly won another point, never mind a game. At 4-0 in the third the Spaniard called for treatment to a thigh injury, probably the result of a fall in the sixth game of the second set, and the remainder of the match constituted little more than an exhibition. It ended with a gentle exchange of angled volleys and drop shots, Murray delivering the coup de grâce with a lethal delicacy that he may not have occasion to display in what will surely be the sterner contests to come. Andy Murray Wimbledon 2011 Wimbledon Tennis Richard Williams guardian.co.uk

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Ed Miliband must be more courageous, says Peter Mandelson

Architect of New Labour expresses concern over pace of progress in development of a coherent party ideology Ed Miliband needs to be more courageous so that he cannot be seen as a leader of factions inside the party, Peter Mandelson, the former cabinet minister and architect of New Labour has warned. He also called on him to take more risks and for the party to produce a coherent policy review that addressed the big issues facing the country, including public services in an era of austerity. Speaking to a seminar at the Labour pressure group Progress, Mandelson reflected some of the frustration at the pace of the party’s attempts to find a voice since the general election, and appeared to admit that Miliband has yet to prove himself. He said “Our leader is a leader of the country, not of the party’s sections and factions, and it is to the country he needs to be given the space to prove himself. The leadership election is over. We support Ed. No ifs and buts. He is our leader, period”. He warned that infighting in any party is deeply corrosive, saying it “all but killed Labour in the eighties”. He also appeared to express a concern at the perception of the party’s wider leadership, saying: “We have to sound and look like a genuinely national party drawn from every region and social background, and not just ex-political assistants, researchers and trade union apparatchiks recruited from inside the London beltway”. He expressed concern at the pace of progress, saying the party currently appears “too tactical, too afraid to answer questions that would trigger difficulty in the party or how the media will report it.” He added: “We need to spend less time talking to ourselves about Ed and more time talking to the country with smart ideas that are realistic and sufficiently innovative to command media and public attention”. He urged Miliband to take a few risks, talk directly to the country and innovate on policy challenges. There is also concern that the party’s policy review may prove to be fragmented without a coherent overall ideology. Mandelson said “the party needed to realign our instincts and outlook with those of the British people”. He argued that “the lesson from the 80s and the pre-1997 is this renewal has to be done as a coherent whole if we are to be sure that policies fit with the aspirations and outlook of the British people. He said that in a whole swath of areas Labour need to be clearer about the need for responsibility and the overlap between the state and the individual. “Rights coming with responsibility is an eternal verity of our party,” Mandelson said, arguing this principle could be applied to issues such as antisocial behaviour, health, cultural integration and sexualisation of children. A key task for the party, he said, was how to continue to improve public services and lever up productivity. He said this was “a huge challenge now the economy is not growing. People will not support further tax and spend unless they can see clear value for money”. “Further enlarging public sector employment is not an option in the coming decade and we need to look to the real economy, to the private business sector, to deliver sufficient numbers of decently paid skilled jobs.” He said the party itself needed to go through radical reform. He said the party needed to revolutionise its funding sources, saying “we cannot let this situation persist.” Mandelson insisted this was not a coded attack on the unions, admitting the party could not exist without them, but added: “We have to develop smarter ways of raising money. We have to combine the latest solutions with community engagement to open up new sources of cash.” “We have to go where the public are, having allowed ourselves to drift away from them in the last few years of our government. People take their politics from the issues they care about – jobs and unemployment, immigration and asylum, health and the NHS, schools, cost of living, pensions and poverty. In these issues people find meaning to their policy”. Ed Miliband Peter Mandelson Labour Trade unions Party funding Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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