Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 14:04
Story here. Excerpt:
'SALT LAKE CITY — A Salt Lake City woman is suing Meadow Lark Elementary School, alleging that her son's special education teacher put the boy's hand in "scalding water" and burned him.
Maria Gutierrez's son, who has cerebral palsy and is confined to a wheelchair, was in Erin Robinson's class when she was teaching students the difference between hot and cold water and allegedly stuck the boy's hand in scalding water, according to the lawsuit filed Monday in 3rd District Court'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 14:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'It’s no new revelation that boys lag behind girls in reading levels and comprehension. Study after study has found this to be the case. The newest study, which the Center on Education Policy just released, found that while girls have made ground on boys in math, boys still fall behind girls in reading. An excerpt of findings from the report:
In reading, girls outperformed boys in 2008 at the elementary, middle, and high school levels. Higher percentages of girls than boys scored at or above the proficient level on state reading tests at grade 4, grade 8, and high school; in some states, these gaps exceeded 10 percentage points.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 14:00
Article here. Excerpt:
'Apparently “Omega males are the lowest of the low on the guy food chain; they’re the type of men who shirk responsibility, refuse to grow up and generally avoid participating in the real world,” found Moore, based on an article written by author Jessica Grose from Slate.com.
...
The majority of men are nothing like an Omega Male. Sure the financial crisis meant that men who defined themselves on fast cars and fancy dinners have had to redefine their masculinity on their actions not their job title alone. But Peter Pan – well he’s been around forever (he just wears a cardigan now) and Wendy - she always left him.
And anyway, the recession wouldn’t have caused his masculine decline– because Peter didn’t want a job to begin with…
In truth: while there may be men who would love to sit around, contemplate writing a novel, smoke pot, strum a guitar and give the proverbial finger to the man - these blokes find it very hard to find love off-screen.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 13:58
Story here. Excerpt:
'LANDER -- Fremont County authorities say a 25-year-old Casper woman admitted to lying about a rape claim in order to get out of a drunk-driving charge.
The Fremont County sheriff's office says Helen Witt came clean after investigators couldn't make her story from last summer match up.
Witt originally told law enforcement she was raped by two men on the Fourth of July in Boysen State Park. She said the two men drug her from her car and sexually assaulted her on a dirt road near the Cottonwood Bay area of the park.
...
Authorities say Witt has apologized for filing the false report.
Investigators spent hours on the case involving several agencies in addition to the sheriff's office: the Boysen State Park Rangers, the Fremont County Ambulance Service and the Fremont County attorney’s office.'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 13:56
Story here.
'Duke University and Mike Pressler, who was the lacrosse coach when false rape accusations were made against three team members, have settled a slander suit by Pressler, The Raleigh News & Observer reported. Pressler's suit focused on comparisons the university made between him and his successor after he was forced out in 2006, amid the scandal over the allegations that (at that time) were widely treated as fact. No details were released about the settlement, except that Duke issued this statement: "Coach Michael Pressler is an excellent coach. He did a great job building the Duke men's lacrosse program, while maintaining a 100 percent graduation rate in his 16 years. Duke University regrets any adverse consequences that the Newsday or AP article had on Coach Pressler or his family. Duke wishes nothing but the best for Coach Pressler in his future endeavors, especially at Bryant University and as he leads Team USA in the World Lacrosse Championships."
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 13:53
Article here. Excerpt:
'March 31st marked the end of Women's History Month, a celebration of women's contributions to history, culture and society throughout the history of our nation. Trailblazers like Gloria Steinem and Betty Friedan who helped redefine the role of a woman in America come to mind.
Perhaps one of the most transformative messages born from the women's movement was the concept that a woman can "have it all." It's an empowering and exciting message; yet, the misinterpretations of this message can also be dangerous and actually quite disempowering for women.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 13:51
Article here. Excerpt:
'First came women’s studies, then came men’s studies, and now, a new field in reaction to both: male studies.
Scholars of boys and men converged Wednesday at Wagner College, in Staten Island, N.Y., to announce the creation of the Foundation for Male Studies, which will support a conference and a journal targeted at exploring the triumphs and struggles of the XY-chromosomed of the human race -- without needing to contextualize their ideas as being one half of a male-female binary or an offshoot of feminist theory. Organizers positioned themselves in contrast to men's studies, which is seen as based on the same theories as women's studies and is grouped together with it as gender studies.
More than anything else, the event was a chance for supporters to frame men and boys as an underrepresented minority, and to justify the need for a male studies discipline in a society that many perceive to be male-dominated.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2010-04-08 13:47
Story here. Excerpt:
'Scott Cunningham has been vigilant about his health since both his parents were diagnosed with breast cancer in the 1990s.
When Cunningham, who is 45 and from Marion, N.C., developed the same symptoms as his father -- "knots" on the chest underneath the nipple -- he put off getting help for months because he had been laid off from his job at a furniture plant and was uninsured.
"My chest is swollen, just like it started with my dad," said Cunningham, who also said he feels tired and "different" than he did just a few months ago.
But as symptoms got worse, he finally called the local health clinic and was turned away -- not for financial reasons, but because he was a man.
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2010-04-07 21:44
Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2010-04-07 20:10
Story here. Excerpt:
'Jesse James should be glad he's married to Sandra Bullock and not Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kim Zolciak.
While Sandara has not publicly said how she will react to her husband's cheating scandal, Kim told RadarOnline.com that she thinks Sandra should castrate Jesse!'
During the video she also made reference to lighting James genitals like a firecracker and blowing it off.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2010-04-07 18:44
Video report here. Perfect setup for an insanity defense (or an attempt thereat). She claims in these letters that the "end times" are upon is, that she was sexually abused by her brother and dad, admits that at times she used chloroform to put her child to "sleep" to go out at night, that there was never any nanny she claimed there was, etc. etc.
And the drama continues... which is just what she is counting on.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2010-04-07 15:36
Story here. Excerpt:
'At Fathers & Families we receive many letters from divorced or separated military servicemembers with painful but preventable family law problems. California AB 2416 will help protect the loving bonds that servicemembers share with their children.
Fathers & Families has worked closely with Assemblyman Paul Cook, the American Retirees Association, and others on AB 2416, and last week thousands of you responded to our Action Alert in support of the Bill. We are pleased to announce that today the bill passed the Assembly Judiciary Committee unanimously.
The bill will now go to the full Assembly, where it has been put on the consent calendar and is likely to pass. Thanks to all of you who participated. We will keep our members informed of the bill’s progress–stay tuned for future Action Alerts.
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Submitted by MR on Wed, 2010-04-07 08:57
Submitted by trotter on Wed, 2010-04-07 08:00
Story here. Excerpt:
'India is about to become the first country in the world where women will be guaranteed by law a third of the seats in all legislative bodies in the country. The project ley managed to win a first hurdle in early March, to obtain the approval of the Senate (Rajya Sabha) and, although it still must be approved by the Lok Sabha, or lower house, its supporters are already singing victory.
And no wonder, because for them it is a milestone in the history of a society that has been sexist for centuries, as evidenced by the 14 years it took the proposal to open step in the tangle of legislation, before coming to a vote.
Although this time there were also controversies, heated arguments and even baiting events in the upper house, in the end negotiator skills were imposed by the president of the ruling Congress Party, Sonia Gandhi.
...
“In the name of the tradition, there are stereotypes imposed on us against which we must fight every day,” said the parliamentarian.
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Submitted by arindamp on Wed, 2010-04-07 07:14
Article here. Of course, if things go wrong it is because of men. If things go right it is because of women. More hypocritical feminist doctrine. Excerpt:
'There is a view that the banking crisis that sent Western economies tumbling two years ago may not have happened at all, or would have been less severe, if there had been more women at the top in the banking sector — the argument being that women are more cautious and risk averse and, therefore, more likely than men to challenge the sort of practices that caused the crisis.
Until now, this theory had been pushed mostly by women campaigners while men tended to snigger. But now even men seem to agree. A male-dominated parliamentary committee (13 men and one woman — an ironic comment on Westminster's own attitude to gender diversity) has blamed a macho culture and “potentially dangerous group think” for the collapse of several leading British banks arguing that boards need more women to prevent reckless decision-making.
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