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Scrap policy that gives refugees with leave to remain 28 days to find housing, say UK groups

Halving time asylum seekers have to leave Home Office accommodation will make thousands homeless at time when ‘racist sentiment’ is on the rise

More than 60 homelessness and asylum seeker organisations have urged ministers to reverse an eviction policy that could leave thousands more refugees on the streets this winter.

Leading homelessness organisations including Crisis, Shelter, St Mungo’s and the Chartered Institute of Housing and dozens of refugee and migrant organisations have written to the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, and the housing secretary, Steve Reed, urging them to cancel a controversial new policy which halves the length of time asylum seekers have to leave government-provided accommodation after they have been granted leave to remain, from 56 days to 28 days.

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Next shares slide as retailer warns on weak UK growth and jobs

Chain reports 18% rise in profits but says outlook clouded by declining vacancies and rising tax burden

Bosses at clothing and homeware chain Next are forecasting “anaemic growth” across the UK, as the retailer claimed regulation, government spending, and higher taxes would hurt jobs and productivity.

The FTSE 100 company, which is headed by the Conservative peer Simon Wolfson, said that while it did not believe the economy was heading towards a “cliff edge” the weakening outlook gave the company “another reason to be cautious”.

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How 4 key infrastructure projects centered in Italy will reshape the European travel map

How 4 key infrastructure projects centered in Italy will reshape the European travel map
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Jimmy Kimmel ‘Cancelled’ Over Charlie Kirk Comments: Trump Celebrates, Hollywood Fury—Live Updates

The suspension of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” is raising big questions about political censorship and free speech. Follow Newsweek for updates.
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Mets VP of player development thrilled with rookies: ‘You celebrate the kids’

From a development standpoint, 2025 can’t be viewed as anything but a success for the Mets.
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Hollywood reacts to ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ being canceled

Jimmy Kimmel at the 96th Oscars held at Dolby Theatre on March 10, 2024 in Los Angeles.
Jimmy Kimmel at the 96th Oscars held at Dolby Theatre on March 10, 2024 in Los Angeles.

  • Hollywood celebrities are voicing support for Jimmy Kimmel after his show got pulled by ABC.
  • ABC canceled the show over Kimmel’s comments on the killing of Charlie Kirk in a Monday episode.
  • Reactions from celebrities, including Ben Stiller, Wanda Sykes, and Jean Smart, have poured in.

Hollywood is rallying behind Jimmy Kimmel, after his talk show, “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” got pulled from ABC.

ABC “indefinitely” suspended the show over Kimmel’s comments on the shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk on September 10.

“We had some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them,” Kimmel said in a Monday episode of his show.

He added that Trump’s supporters were politicizing the shooting.

Reactions from actors and comedians have poured in, expressing dismay over the show’s cancellation.

Ben Stiller
Ben Stiller at the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards held at the Peacock Theater on September 14, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Ben Stiller said the show being canceled was not right.

Actor and comedian Ben Stiller used just a few words to describe his feelings about the show’s cancellation.

Reposting an X post by The Wall Street Journal’s journalist about the news, Stiller wrote, “This isn’t right.”

The Zoolander actor made the post on Wednesday evening.

Wanda Sykes
Wanda Sykes arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 27, 2022, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.
Wanda Sykes arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 27, 2022, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

Actor and comedian Wanda Sykes made a reel on Instagram to criticize the Trump administration.

In the reel, posted on Wednesday evening, she said she had a full face of makeup on because she was set to go on Kimmel’s show.

“But as you have heard by now, the Jimmy Kimmel show has been pulled indefinitely, abruptly, because of complaints from the Trump administration,” Sykes said.

She said Trump had ended freedom of speech within his first year of his term.

Sykes ended the reel saying, “Love you, Jimmy.”

Paul Scheer
Paul Scheer at the
Paul Scheer protested the show being pulled.

Paul Scheer, an actor, comedian, and podcaster, protested the show being pulled from ABC.

Near midnight on Thursday, Scheer posted on Threads about the show cancellation, musing on why ABC could not air the show on its cable affiliates like ESPN.

Alex Edelman
Alex Edelman at the Harmony Gold Theater on August 27, 2025.
Alex Edelman posted about the show’s cancellation on X.

Alex Edelman, a comedian, actor, and writer, made a series of posts on X about Kimmel’s show being canceled.

“The Paper” actor first posted about it on Wednesday evening, saying, “This is the actual cancel culture everyone claims to hate so much.”

He then criticized the government, accusing it of pressuring ABC to fire Kimmel.

Shortly after midnight, he posted, “The joke I would like to make about the Kimmel situation is one I, apparently, can only text to close friends.”

Jean Smart
Jean Smart attends the 73rd Primetime Emmy Awards at L.A. LIVE on September 19, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.
Jean Smart attends the 73rd Primetime Emmy Awards at L.A. LIVE on September 19, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.

Actor Jean Smart, known for her role in the comedy-drama “Hacks,” posted about the cancellation on Instagram.

“I am horrified at the cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel Live,” she said. “What Jimmy said was FREE speech, not hate speech.”

“People seem to only want to protect free speech when it suits THEIR agenda,” Smart said. She added that she was sickened by Kirk’s shooting.

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Disney influencer’s children killed, husband in ICU after fatal car crash: ‘Worst day of my life’

“An accident has taken my two children from me, and put my husband in the intensive care unit,” the content creator wrote on social media.
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Owners DNA-Test Rescue Dog To Check Breed—Reveals Something No One Expected

“We’ve never gotten this close of a relative match before and it was such a cool, unexpected connection,” the owner told Newsweek.
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Lithuanian prosecutors allege Russia-linked network planned arson attacks in Europe

Lithuanian prosecutors allege Russia-linked network planned arson attacks in Europe [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
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I visited a high school where college isn’t the main goal. It’s nothing like I expected.

Upton High School
Upton High School in rural Wyoming implements a personalized learning structure.

  • I visited a public high school in Upton, Wyoming, that’s changing the conversation around college.
  • The school has a personalized learning structure, preparing students for one of three futures.
  • I was surprised at the level of individualization for every student’s career and education path.

“Do you want me to set your hands on fire?”

Normally, my answer to that question would be no. But I decided to put my faith in the hands of Joslyn Pischke, a 15-year-old sophomore at Upton High School in Wyoming.

I rolled up my sleeves and wet my hands and arms up to my elbows as Pischke added dish soap to a small tub of water. At Pischke’s direction, I scooped up some bubbles and held them in my hands.

“Don’t freak out,” Pischke told me, and then she set the bubbles on fire.

To my own surprise, I didn’t freak out as my hands went up in flames. We were in a high school science classroom, and when Pischke asked her teacher if she could demonstrate this experiment on me, the teacher said yes without any hesitation. Pischke, who plans to go to college after she graduates to study equine science, told me that she has thrived under the school’s personalized learning model because it has allowed her the agency to direct her educational path.

For the past couple of years, I’ve reported on the shifting conversation surrounding the value of a college degree; more Gen Zers are choosing to forgo college in favor of other routes, like trade school or directly entering the workforce. Upton is directly taking on that shift by making sure students know college is not their only option. The goal, as seen on posters plastered around the high school, is to be college, career, or military ready.

Before I visited Upton in early September, I’d spoken with teachers and administrators about the personalized learning structure it had adopted for its 82 students. I thought I knew what it meant: Teachers work with each student and give them individualized lessons and assignments based on their learning pace and interests.

I wasn’t wrong; that is, in part, what personalized learning is. But at Upton, I saw that it was much more than that. While there are time periods reserved for the more standard lectures, there are what the school calls “open periods,” during which students can choose how they want to put into practice what they learned. And teachers really mean it when they say that students can choose what they want to do. When I looked around Pischke’s science classroom, I saw at least five different projects that students were working on, which they selected themselves and were approved by their teacher.

Signs at Upton High School
Signs on Upton High School’s vision for students are posted on the school’s walls.

I was surprised at the level of personalization at Upton — from what I saw, each and every student was on a different path that they selected to best suit their needs and interests. Additionally, having attended a traditional public high school, the structure of the classrooms struck me. Every class that I walked into looked different, with some students sitting on couches, others working alone at desks, and some standing in clusters. The only classroom I saw that had the standard lecture format with desks in a row was the math class.

As the teachers at Upton told me, switching their learning structure was an uphill battle. Of course, it would be a much different undertaking at a bigger school or somewhere with different workforce demands and every teacher would need to be on board.

Upton population sign
Surrounding area of Upton High School.

The power of community partnerships and clear communication

When I walked into Joe’s Food Center, the town’s grocery store, around 5 p.m., a senior at Upton was working the register. I asked her what she thought about the school, and she told me she really liked the structure.

Two minutes down the road, I walked into Remy’s Diner, and I was greeted by another senior. He told me that the school allowed him to complete all of his assignments and lectures in the morning so he could work at Remy’s in the afternoon as part of a work-study program.

The small community is a major benefit for students at Upton. Not only are local businesses willing to work with the students — they sometimes request it, as Karla Ludemann, the school’s computer science teacher, told me. Her students have used the coding and tech skills they learned in class to create websites for local businesses and use their drones to take aerial photos of the area for the city.

Amanda Knapp, the school’s guidance counselor, also told me that businesses have been more than willing to give students work experience. Sam Johnson, an 18-year-old senior who never wanted to go to college, said that he loves hunting, and Knapp arranged for him to get a hunting apprenticeship while in high school. That opportunity led him to secure a job as a hunting guide upon graduation.

Upton’s model isn’t possible everywhere, though. Joseph Samuelson, the school’s principal, told me that the school made mistakes eight years ago when it switched to personalized learning — the district moved too quickly, and both parents and teachers weren’t given sufficient warning. This led some parents to withdraw their kids from the school, and just four teachers from the original staff now remain, likely a result of the lack of training they received on switching to a personalized model.

Knapp also told me that being a small, rural school is a benefit that other public schools in the nation don’t have. Wyoming’s agriculture industry dominates the economy, and it opens up career opportunities and apprenticeships for young students, enabling those who want to enter the workforce after high school.

Additionally, a small population is easier to corral on a learning model switch, and larger public schools would encounter more hurdles getting everyone on board.

More broadly, I found Upton students’ perspectives on their paths postgrad to be emblematic of the national shift we’re seeing in the value of college. When I was in high school, college was the only option I was given, and I’m glad I went — it opened up career opportunities for me that I wouldn’t have been able to get otherwise.

When I walked around Upton’s library during seniors’ free period, I saw three girls sitting in a booth doing homework. I asked them what their plans were postgrad, and they all said college: two of them are going to study business, and one of them wants to study nursing.

I walked over to another senior and asked him what he was working on. He told me he was taking a college course, so I asked him if he was planning to go to college, and he laughed. “Definitely not,” he said. “Trade school.”

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