Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 16:38
Article here. Excerpt:
'In 1991, the prestigious, but goofy, American Association of University Women (AAUW) made a startling declaration: ‘Most girls emerge from adolescence with a poor self image.’ Researchers, all female, informed the body politic that the primary culprit here was the public school system in America. No one seemed to notice that at the time this assertion was loosed upon us that 85% of all public school teachers were women.
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:41
Story here. Excerpt:
'LAWRENCE - Police arrested a Lawrence woman early yesterday and charged her with stabbing her ex-boyfriend and his sister.
Rosemary Nieves, 24, of 125 Jackson St., was charged with two counts of assault by means of a dangerous weapon.
...
Nieves said Edwin Rodriguez walked to the porch and kicked in her bedroom window after she told him it was not a good time to remove things from the apartment.
At that point, Nieves said, she grabbed her car keys and opened up a two-and-a-half-inch metal folding knife and stabbed Edwin several times in the forearm, Officer Todd Allard wrote in his report.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:25
Article here. Excerpt:
'“Alarming percentages of moms are angry at dads on a regular basis.“ “Hell hath no fury like a mommy scorned.“ “Moms are angry about dad’s role.“
These are some of the headlines which greeted Parenting Magazine’s new “Mad at Dad” survey which found that 31% of mothers get “little or no help” with childcare and 46% of mothers “get irate with their husbands once a week or more.” The New York Times called the survey “disturbing,” while a Washington Post columnist announced that mothers are “literally killing themselves.”
Mothers who are dissatisfied might want to examine their own behavior as well as that of their husbands. Studies reported in the Journal of Family Psychology in June, 2008 and the Journal of Marriage and the Family in 1999 show that mothers are generally the gatekeepers of fathers’ involvement with their kids. If she criticizes or insists that any way that isn’t her way is wrong, dad will often withdraw. But if she stands aside and lets him parent, he usually does.
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:20
Article here. Excerpt:
'San Mateo County will host an HIV awareness health fair today in Redwood City offering local women and girls free private risk-reduction counseling and HIV tests with near-immediate results.
...
According to the county, a quarter of all new HIV infections occur in women. More than 80 percent are black women or Hispanic women. AIDS is now the leading cause of death for black women between 25 and 34 years old, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
In addition to counseling and testing, the event will also include information on domestic violence and drug prevention. A photo exhibit, "I am," will be on display at the event, profiling county residents affected by HIV and AIDS.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:08
Article here. Excerpt:
'Most attempted suicides at the falls, Gromosiak found, are young men between the ages of 20 and 40.
Of all attempted suicides, 71 per cent are men. Twenty per cent of suicides occur at the Horseshoe Falls.
On the American side, several suicide prevention measures have been implemented near the falls.
Several emergency suicide hotline phones are installed at Niagara Falls, N. Y. State Park.
The phones are linked directly to the county's Suicide Prevention Service.
There are no such phones on the Canadian side, but that doesn't mean they might not appear in the future.
"It's a good idea and it is something we can consider," Kane said.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:06
Story here. Excerpt:
'When we as a society think of divorce recovery, we tend to think of women as being the more vulnerable gender needing the most help getting through the divorce. While women may be more sensitive to some things, men, too, can be knocked down by an emotional blow of divorce.
Care for women struggling with divorce has been covered thus far in the series, but what about men? Do they need the same kind of help that women do, if at all? Are men as much the victim in the emotional destruction as are the women?
...
“The reality is that suicide rates are up to 10 times higher in men who are separated or divorced compared with those who are still in a relationship. Men who don’t commit suicide are often depressed, but they cover up the depression by quickly remarrying to fill the void,” Kamaria said. “These men also tend to overwork, drink or gamble too much and since 67 percent of second and 74 percent of third marriages end in divorce, remarriage is not a solution.”
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:02
Story here. Excerpt:
'A Melbourne woman who shot dead her husband and lied about it for seven years, has been sentenced to five years in jail.
...
Margaret Uttley killed her husband Stephen Uttley on their Tarneit farm nine years ago, when he came home drunk late at night wielding a gun, and threatened to shoot her.
The court heard they struggled, and she accidentally shot him in the head.
The court heard she burnt his body and lied about the killing for seven years.
But she pleaded guilty to manslaughter earlier this month in the opening stages of her trial for murder.
She will serve a non-parole period of two years.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-03-16 01:00
Article here. Excerpt:
'SUICIDE rates in the Clarence Valley could rise because of a Federal Government decision not to continue funding a men's suicide prevention group.
Dads in Distress (DIDS) was founded nine years ago by Coffs Harbour man Tony Miller to help guide men through traumatic experiences. In 2001, Grafton became just the second city in NSW to start a DIDS support group.
Local co-ordinators have run DIDS support group meetings in an effort to help Clarence Valley men deal with any type of stressful situation that may lead to suicide or depression.
...
“The thing that amazes me is that the Government has announced a national men's health policy and here's a group that works to prevent male suicide and they're just letting it go,” he said.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 22:27
Story here. Excerpt:
'MINEOLA, New York — A former high school teacher in New York has been rearrested a day after being sentenced for having a long-running affair with a 16-year-old student.
...
The 25-year-old was first arrested in March. She pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct and was awaiting an August sentencing.
Prosecutors got a tip Kennedy was still meeting with the boy and began watching her. The victim also admitted having sex with Kennedy five times since her guilty plea.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 22:17
Story here. Excerpt:
'A group home for teenage boys in Columbiana will appeal the city’s council decision to shut it down, City Clerk Gina Antonili said Monday.
The council voted Feb. 17 not to grant a business license to the Fortress Group Home on Mildred Street. The home opened in late 2007 and houses boys 14 to 19 who are wards of the state.
A public hearing will be held to discuss the home’s future Monday, March 16 at 6 p.m. at City Hall. People for and against the home will be allowed to speak, Mayor Allan Lowe said.
Those against the home say the children there are unruly. Mayor Lowe said he’s received numerous complaints about Fortress. He also said several of the teens there have had run-ins with Columbiana police officers.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 22:14
Article here. Excerpt:
'An independent review into allegations of abuse at a school for boys with behavioural problems has found that pupils were restrained on a routine basis.
The local authority-commissioned report found that staff at Gatehouse residential school in Milton Keynes used restraint as a "first resort", instead of attempting to deal with pupil behaviour using alternative methods.
Pupils were also locked in classrooms frequently. One parent complained that a teacher punched their son in the stomach.
Teachers said that both the deputy and head teacher subjected them to intimidation and bullying.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 22:10
Story here. Excerpt:
'Last summer, Langley Park School for Girls and the neighbouring Langley Park School for Boys became locked in a dispute over a large-scale development at the boy’s school.
Bromley Council originally agreed to a complete overhaul of the boys’ school’s facilities in June, but the neighbouring girls’ school tried to overturn that decision at the High Court.
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 22:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'Framing safe heterosexual intercourse in the language of “men are dogs—protect yourself!” constructs a hypothetical, collective female vulnerability that deprives women of agency in their sexual encounters. Rather than empowering women, it establishes a paradigm in which women are victims of men’s animalistic urges. In reality, men are not the sole indulgers in promiscuity. This characterization assumes that men are infidels and that women are their perpetual victims, when this is by no means a universal truth. Forced sexual encounters are tragic occurrences that will erode sexual equality as long as they persist, but to establish the lying, cheating beau as the norm in sexual relationships is regressive and destructive. It instills a resignation that a dishonest scoundrel is all a heterosexual woman should hope for, when, in reality, any woman who writes off all men in one fell swoop is probably a bit of a dog herself.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 21:59
Article here. Excerpt:
'It was bound to happen. Since the scythe of recession got swinging, newly jobless men have been shuffling around Britain’s town centres on weekday mornings like prematurely retired racing dogs. You can spot them nervously sipping cappuccinos or hanging in morose little groups outside the local hardware shop. Watching them on the treadmills — literally going nowhere — is depressing. They have gone from power lunches to power shakes, from Bloomberg monitors to MTV, from having a ball to being in danger of losing theirs. And that’s only for an hour or two each day at the gym — what are they doing with the rest of their time?'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2009-03-15 21:56
Article here. Excerpt:
'Ireland could face social unrest and higher crime rates following a massive surge in unemployment among men in their early 20s, a leading economist has warned.
...
Men in their early twenties have experienced a threefold increase in unemployment, a more pronounced rise than any other age group, driven by the collapse in the building industry. One in five men in this age bracket were out of work in the three months to November, according to the latest Quarterly National Household Survey.
O’Neill believes society is ignoring the plight of men who opted out of further education in favour of earning huge wages in bricklaying, carpentry and other trades during the boom. Some 82,000 men who were working in construction in January 2007 left school without sitting their Leaving Cert exams.'
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