Wednesday 13 June 2012

HOW SHOES REVEAL WHAT’S IN YOUR SOUL

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TREAD carefully – your shoes are a dead giveaway to your personality, according to new research.
Psychologists found the style, cost, colour and condition of someone’s footwear are a window to the soul.

Shoes that may be old but immaculate are for conscientious types.

Practical shoes are worn by agreeable people, ankle boots by aggressive types, while calm people wear stylish and costly if sometimes uncomfortable shoes.

Liberal individuals, like old hippies, really do wear scruffy sandals.

High earners and fashion-conscious celebrities such as Victoria Beckham will inevitably go for the most expensive brands, while flashy or colourful footwear are the preserve of extroverts.

Dozens of students were asked to look at photographs of more than 200 different pairs of shoes belonging to volunteers who filled in a personality questionnaire.

he students were then asked to guess the gender, age, social status of the owners, as well as their emotional stability and agreeableness.

Results of the US study at the University of Kansas were hailed as 90 per cent accurate about a wearer’s personality traits.

However, volunteers didn’t guess the most boring shoes belong to those who “found it hard to form relationships”.

“Shoes serve a practical purpose and also serve as non-verbal cues with symbolic messages,” the researchers told the Journal of Research in Personality.

“Because of their variety, do shoes carry individual difference information? We suggest: Yes.”

BOMB PLOTTERS IN HUMAN RIGHTS PLEA

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THREE failed suicide bombers who wanted to bring carnage to Britain are pleading with European human rights judges to overturn their convictions in a move that sparked anger yesterday.
Lawyers for Muktar Ibrahim, Yassin Omar and Ramzi Mohammed are arguing they failed to get a fair trial because reams of evidence from police interviews should not have been used.
The men also claim they were unfairly blocked from speaking to their legal teams when first arrested.
Critics last night slammed the legal system for allowing appeals to reach the European Court of Human Rights. Nick de Bois MP, a member of the Justice Committee, said: “It should be up to British courts to decide the fate of these convicted criminals, not the discredited ECHR.”
Ibrahim, 34, Omar, 29, and Mohammed, 30, made a similar plea to the UK’s Court of Appeal in 2008 but it was thrown out. That year they made an appeal to the unelected judges at the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights in the hope they would overrule the move.
It has taken almost four years for the court to rule on the next stage and the UK Government has now been asked to submit further evidence before it decides if there is a case to answer.

If the European judges accept their argument they could rule their human rights were breached and their convictions unsafe, opening the door for a retrial or compensation.
The three were jailed for at least 40 years each for conspiracy to murder alongside co-conspirator Hussain Osman. He did not appeal his conviction in 2008 and is not involved in this action.
They had planned to blow themselves up on the public transport network in 2005 just two weeks after 52 people were killed in four bombings on three Tube trains and a bus.
The detonators in their rucksack bombs went off but the home-made explosives did not ignite. At their trial they claimed it had been a hoax designed to raise awareness of the Iraq war.

STUDENT WAS DRAGGED HALF MILETO DEATH UNDER A BUS

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A CAMBRIDGE University medical ­student died after being dragged half a mile under a bus, a court heard yesterday.
Mingwei Tan, 20, suffered massive ­injuries when hit by the double-decker as she crossed the road in the early hours.
The driver didn’t know he had hit her and even stopped to pick up a passenger while Ms Tan was under the vehicle, it was alleged.
The Singaporean student’s body, described as looking like a “plastic doll” in a bundle of clothes, came free 900 yards from the collision in Hampstead, north London, the court heard.
Iranian-born driver Shahriar Firouzian finished his shift and only discovered what had happened when he turned up for work the next day. He told police he thought he “may have hit a fox” that night, London’s Blackfriars Crown Court was told.
Firouzian, 52, of Watford, Herts, denies causing death by careless driving in September 2010. A jury was shown CCTV f­ootage from Firouzian’s bus and another double-decker Ms Tan had just got off moments before she was hit. 

Hamish Reid, prosecuting, said of Firouzian: “He is turning right and she is crossing the road directly in front of him. He totally fails to see her. She is caught by the bus and dragged underneath.”
Paul Kenny, who was driving a separate bus, was the first to spot the body. “I saw what I thought was a bundle of clothes scattered on the southbound carriageway,” he said. “I also noticed the face of a person. It didn’t look real and I thought it could be a plastic doll.”
He called the emergency services and rushed over but Ms Tan, in her third-year at Cambridge, was already dead.
A couple of hours earlier, Ms Tan had flown back with fellow medical student Mike Money from a ­holiday in Cyprus.

HALF A MILLION TELL DAVID CAMERON THEY OPPOSE GAY MARRIAGE

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DAVID Cameron was yesterday presented with a 500,000-name petition opposing plans to legalise gay marriage.
Amid growing opposition to the move, campaigners from the Coalition For Marriage delivered the petition to 10 Downing Street. It follows warnings from senior clergy that the historic tie between the Church of England and the state could be broken if the law is changed.
Mike Judge, spokesman for C4M, said: “Marriage is incredibly important. Its definition predates the Government and the Christian church and I don’t think it’s for politicians to redefine it.
“If they were to hold a referendum, I’m confident the British people would say we are happy with marriage as it is.” Coalition ministers pledged to change the law to allow same-sex marriages by the next election in 2015.
A growing number of Tory MPs oppose the plan. Some clergy fear vicars could be forced to conduct gay weddings against their will.

RUPERT MURDOCH TRIED TO MAKE ME CHANGE POLICY, SAYS SIR JOHN MAJOR

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SIR John Major launched a bitter attack on News International yesterday, revealing how Rupert Murdoch warned him to switch policy on Europe or the Tories would lose the support of his newspapers.
Appearing at the Leveson inquiry into press ethics, the former prime minister recalled a dinner with the media mogul and his daughter Elisabeth in February 1997 – months before Labour won a landslide election victory with The Sun’s backing.
Sir John told the inquiry: “Mr Murdoch said he really didn’t like our European policies. This was no surprise to me…he wished me to change our European policies.
“If we couldn’t change our European policies, his papers could not and would not support the Conservative Government.”
Sir John said he believed what Mr Murdoch was “edging towards was a referendum on leaving the European Union”.
His account appeared to contradict Mr Murdoch’s evidence to the inquiry when he said: “I’ve never asked a Prime Minister for anything.”
It was the second time in two days that Mr Murdoch had been accused of lying, after Gordon Brown said he had never told the media baron he was “declaring war” on News International.

Sir John admitted he struggled in the shadow of his predecessor Margaret Thatcher who was admired by Mr Murdoch, and said that he suffered “hostile” coverage after becoming prime minister in 1990.
Mrs Thatcher, admired “buccaneering businessmen” who were prepared to take risks and they admired her, he said. Sir John also suggested that Tony Blair was more Right-wing than him, so he was not surprised that The Sun switched its backing to Labour before the 1997 election.
He said: “I remember joking once that I had gone swimming in the River Thames and left my clothes on the bank, and when I got back Mr Blair was wearing them.
“I don’t think it was very surprising that they (The Sun) decided to support Labour.”

THE TELETUBBY OLYMPICS

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A SNEAK preview of the opening ceremony for the London Olympics yesterday revealed a set looking more akin to Teletubbyland than a £27million sports spectacular.
A billion people around the world will tune in on July 27 to see Britain represented by a rather bizarre rural-idyll, complete with real animals and even a cricket match. All it seems to need are Tinky Winky, Dipsy and Laa-Laa from the TV series.
The 10,000 volunteers, cast and crew have been rehearsing day and night to make sure the event goes off as planned. The set, which will transform the stadium in Stratford, east London, was unveiled by Danny Boyle, artistic director.
Boyle, the filmmaker behind Trainspotting and the Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire, insisted it evoked the “green and pleasant land” of William Blake’s poem Jerusalem, an emblem of Englishness.
He added the ceremony would be a “reflection of part of our heritage” as well as a look to the future.
The audience of 62,000 in the stadium will see farmers tilling soil while animals graze. These include horses, cows, goats, chickens, ducks, geese, sheep and sheep dogs.

In addition to the cricket match, there will be picnicking families and a hill modelled on Glastonbury Tor in south-west England. Below the hill, spectators will fill a “mosh pit”, evoking the Glastonbury rock festival and other music events.
There are clouds that can produce real rain – while the meadow is surrounded by a parade ground for the 10,500 athletes taking part.
Boyle has nicknamed it the M25, but let’s hope that does not turn out to be too true to life.

HALF DODGE JOB SCHEME

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NEARLY half of unemployed people got out of a compulsory work scheme by signing off benefits or failing to turn up, figures revealed yesterday.
Of the first 3,000 referred to the Mandatory Work Activity scheme, 29 per cent signed off jobseekers’ allowance in the 21 weeks after their first referral. A further 17 per cent did not start their placement
Ministers think this suggests many claimants have secret jobs. The figures came as Employment Minister Chris Grayling announced a crackdown on claimants who sign off benefit to dodge work placements then sign back on.

CHILD SEX ABUSE ‘A MASSIVE PROBLEM’

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THOUSANDS of children are being sexually exploited across the country, the Deputy Children’s Commissioner has told MPs.
Sue Berelowitz said girls as young as 11 are being forced into horrendous sex acts.
She revealed that in parts of London they are made to perform sex acts on rows of boys for up to two hours.
Ms Berelowitz told the Commons home affairs committee her in-depth study of the problem suggested there “isn’t a town, village or hamlet in which children are not being sexually exploited”.
And she shocked MPs with a graphic description of some of the crimes she had encountered in her research for a report due out in September.
She said that thousands, not hundreds, of children in England were being abused and that “it was common” for girls lured out by predators on internet chat rooms to be gang-raped by groups of boys.
She was “extremely concerned” about the role being played by the internet in enabling and fuelling abuse.

Young people were acting out scenes they saw in online pornography and organising abuse via social networking sites and messaging systems, she said.
One police force showed her a list of 1,000 girls, aged 12 to 14, who had become “friends” on Facebook with a man in his forties who was masquerading as a boy.
Ms Berelowitz said the recent sex-grooming case in Rochdale, in which mainly Pakistani men targeted white girls, was just one part of a wider picture of exploitation involving victims and abusers of all races and cultures.
“I regret to say that there are parts of every single community – white, Pakistani, Afghan, Gypsy and Romany travellers, you name it – who are seeing children as easy access in terms of sexual exploitation.

“And in terms of victims we are seeing the same sort of profile,” she said.

HOLIDAYMAKER KILLED IN 40FT CLIFF PLUNGE

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A RAMBLER died and his wife was fighting for her life last night after they plunged off steep cliffs.
The couple fell 40ft from a path on to the concrete roof of a wartime German bunker.
Peter Scurr, 69, was found dead at the scene by police and paramedics.
His wife Lorraine, 65, a retired nurse, was found nearby with serious injuries.
It is believed she clung on to tree branches before losing her grip and falling.
The couple from Southampton, both keen volunteers for Guide Dogs, had been holidaying on the Channel Island of Jersey and were enjoying a stroll along the scenic Railway Walk between St Aubin and Corbiere.
The area was quickly cordoned off while Jersey Fire and Rescue, police and paramedics attended the scene. A spokesman for Jersey General Hospital said Mrs Scurr was flown to Southampton General Hospital for specialist treatment. She is on a life support machine.

Jersey police say officers are treating the death as a tragic accident and will now prepare a file for the coroner.
There was no one at the couple’s £220,000 semi-detached, three-bedroom house last night and neighbours were too distraught to talk.
Southampton Guide Dogs mobility team manager Tim Stafford said: “We’re very sorry to learn of the sad death of Mr Scurr. He was a dedicated volunteer puppy walker, fundraiser and speaker. He was a great ambassador for Guide Dogs and will be missed by all who knew him. Our thoughts are with his family.”
Mrs Scurr also helped at St Patrick’s Church, in Southampton.
Father Claron Conde said: “Lorraine is a very generous woman and very active, nothing is too much trouble for her. They loved to go walking and were always out enjoying the countryside.

EURO 2012: RUBBER BULLETS FLY AS SOCCER HOOLIGANS FIGHT PITCHED BATTLES

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VIOLENCE erupted at Euro 2012 last night as football hooligans fought pitched battles in the streets of Warsaw.
Trouble flared ahead of joint-host Poland’s crunch match with Russia at the city’s National Stadium.
The bloodshed began after thousands of Russian fans began a “provocative” march through the Polish capital to mark their homeland’s national day.
Witnesses said the Russians fought back after they were ambushed by a gang of Polish hooligans.
Riot police raced to the scene with squads of officers firing rubber bullets as dozens of rival supporters beat and kicked each other.
Several people were seen lying injured and bleeding on the ground,
Last night police said 100 people had been arrested and 10 injured ­– one of them seriously.
Security forces had braced themselves for a showdown over concerns of a confrontation which has already been dubbed the Battle of Warsaw.

Poland’s Conservative opposition had condemned the Russian fans’ march as a provocation but it was still given the go-ahead by the authorities.
More than 6,000 officers were drafted in amid fears that centuries of bad blood and conflict between the nations would trigger violence.
Poland suffered more than four decades of repression during the Cold War after the Soviet Union’s forces frustrated the country’s hopes of independence at the end of the Second World War.
Last night’s match was scheduled on Russia Day – a national holiday marking the end of the Soviet Union, which has been celebrated since 1992.
The Russians said the march was not political and was aimed at supporting their team.