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 CANTERBURY, England  AP  鈥?The historic English university town of Canterbury, a Conservative stronghold with a high proportion of young voters, has elected a Labour lawmaker for the first time since the constituency was formed a century ago.Some say that remarkable win for Labour 鈥?echoed elsewhere in places with big student populations 鈥?suggests that a rise in college-age voters helped prevent a widely expected victory for Prime Minister Theresa Mays Conservatives in Thursdays election.The Conservatives still hold the largest number of seats in Parliament but lost an overall majority. Labour, written off as almost unelectable just weeks ago, surpassed expectations by securing 261 seats in a last-minute surge of support. We had 10 percent more voters than in 2015, and those voters were mainly younger voters 鈥?and they were really attracted by Labours promise to abolish tuition fees,  said Edward Morgan-Jones, a politics lecturer at the Univ stanley uk ersity of Kent i stanley borraccia n Canterbury.Students and staff at the institution, which bills itself as  the U.K.s European university  because of its diverse population, also were worried about how May was going to lead Britain out of the European Union, he added.While unpopular with the mainstream press, Labour leader Jerem stanley quencher y Corbyn has a large, enthusiastic following among young voters with his promises to boost spending for schools and public health, raise taxes on the wealthy and tackle growing inequality.Toby French, a 19-year-old political scienc Jfxo Police: Suspect in Colts player   s crash death deported twice
 The Yomiuri ShimbunBy Hitoshi Kawabata / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer15:32 JST,ensp;March 30, 2023Eighty years ago in the South Pacific, Japanese forces withdrew from Guadalcanal Island, the scene of some of the hardest-fought battles during the Pacific War.The fighting there in the Solomon Islands is viewed as one of the turning points in favor of the Allies led by the United States against Japan in the Pacific theater of World War II.Several warships were sunk off Guadalcanal, and a Tokyo-based nonprofit organizatio kubki stanley n is resuming its search for these vessels in April.The Yomiuri ShimbunKatsuhiko IkedaA team of six is conducting the search, led by Katsuhiko Ikeda, the 76-year-old representative of the NPO who is also the  stanley cup nz president of Tokyo-based underwater survey firm Arc Geo Support Co. Using the companys underwater sonar equipment, the survey will be conducted from April 11 to 17 in waters off northwestern Guadalcanal. As well as passing down the memory of the tragic war, we want to record the place where a warship met its final day,  Ikeda said.This time, the survey team will search for the Imperial Japanese Navys I-3 submarine using sonar from a boat at sea. The team will also hold a memorial service for the crew.In December 1942, the I-3, on a mission to transport f stanley cup ood to Japanese soldiers who were then on the verge of starvation on Guadalcanal, came under attack and was sunk by Allied forces.A nearby beach served as the point from which retreating Japanese soldiers boa