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UK aims to double dementia funding
The UK will aim to double annual funding for dementia research to £132m by 2025, up from the 2015 target of £66m, the prime minister says.
Judges allow Scientology wedding
A woman who wants to marry in a Church of Scientology chapel wins her Supreme Court challenge as judges rule the church is a 'place of meeting for religious worship'.
Curb classroom disruption - Ofsted
Minor disruption and inattention in the classroom have been tolerated in too many of England's schools for too long, Ofsted head warns.
Midwife 'failure' at baby death unit
Insufficient midwife supervision is blamed for failings which led to the deaths of three babies and a mother at a hospital.
Free schools costs trebled to £1.5bn
The public spending watchdog says England's flagship free school programme will cost at least three times the sum it was originally allocated.
PROFILE: The Sun is a daily national "red top" tabloid newspaper and the biggest-selling newspaper in the UK. Famous for its "Page 3" girls and catchy banner headlines, it is published by News Group Newspapers of News International, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation. While throwing it's considerable mass influence behind Tony Blair's New Labour, politically, the paper's stance was less clear under Prime Minister Gordon Brown with numerous editorials critical of Brown's policies and often more supportive of those of then Conservative leader David Cameron. On election day (6 May 2010), The Sun urged its readers to vote for David Cameron's "modern and positive" Conservatives in order to save Britain from "disaster". Profile extracted from Wikipedia and used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.