Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 2008-09-26 12:10
Story here. Excerpt:
'An expelled schoolgirl who blamed a maths teacher for her exclusion stormed into a classroom and launched a ferocious attack on the woman, which left her in hospital.
The girl stabbed at the teacher's face with a marker pen, before punching her to the ground and kicking her until her legs bled, witnesses said.
Pupils and fellow teachers screamed at her to stop until two male members of staff managed to drag the girl away.
Police were called and the girl was arrested but she was later released with a caution.'
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Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2008-09-26 02:21
Story here. Excerpt:
'Brazil is in mourning after former Vasco de Gama player Thiago da Silva was brutally tortured and murdered, allegedly by hired assassins on the orders of his ex-girlfriend.
...
According to reports from the local police, the instigator of the crime is da Silva's former girlfriend.
...
He was handcuffed, beaten and tortured. When he tried to flee he was hit by three bullets.
Both the former girlfriend and her aunt, Marcia Padula Viana, were arrested on Sunday as instigators of the crime, and accused of hiring the assassins to kill da Silva.'
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Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2008-09-25 09:14
Article here. Excerpt:
'They call it the Queen Bee Syndrome and the sting in it is that it punctures a great feminist myth.
For years the sisterhood has moaned that if only more women could smash through that glass ceiling, if only more women got the top jobs and if only we all had women bosses, our working environment would be a far warmer, caring, sharing place to be.
Now a university study finally proves that the opposite is true.
In fact, women who work for other women suffer more from both psychological and physical ailments - depression, insomnia and headaches among them - and are more likely to end up embroiled in workplace conflict.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-09-24 23:54
Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2008-09-24 23:49
Story here. Excerpt:
'It is like a nightmare for David Goldman, except that when he wakes up, it is still there. His son Sean, abducted to Brazil by the boy’s mother four years ago, remains almost in sight but always out of reach, in defiance of the laws of two nations and the world.
...
Goldman thought his marriage was solid and his wife happy. But when she got to Brazil, his wife called him and said she was not returning to the United States. And, she said, she was keeping Sean with her. What’s more, Goldman says, Bruna told him that if he ever wanted to see Sean again, he would have to assign sole custody of the boy to her.
Goldman had been traveling to Brazil for every court hearing that ruled against him over the years. He went again, only to discover that his late wife’s Brazilian husband had filed a petition with local family courts to remove Goldman’s name from Sean’s birth records and replace it with his own.
...
“[That] would exclude me from ever even being my son’s father,” Goldman told Vieira. “So far, the Brazilian judicial system is letting him do this.”
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Submitted by Roy on Wed, 2008-09-24 23:41
Story here. Excerpt:
"A California woman who escaped from a Michigan prison 32 years ago and lived on the lam as a suburban mother was sentenced to probation Wednesday, five months after her capture.
"I knew for years this was coming," Susan LeFevre, 53, said.
Wayne County Circuit Judge David Groner said LeFevre had already served 14 months in prison on a drug conviction when she escaped.
"The court finds no reason to give you extra time," said Groner, who ordered two years of probation."
Now, this woman was sentenced originally in 1974 to ten years for heroin distribution. She jumped the prison fence after 14 months and lived as a fugitive until last year.
I suppose the obligatory question is -- do you think a male fugitive would get a minimal probation, or would he be back in the slammer serving out his sentence?
And more importantly, when is she going to be on Oprah and get her book deal?
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Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2008-09-24 18:31
Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 22:17
Story here. Excerpt:
'A woman admitted she helped her troubled, bullied 14-year-old son build a cache of weapons by buying him a rifle and gunpowder, but investigators still don't know if she was aware her son was planning a deadly school attack.
Michele Cossey, 46, pleaded guilty Tuesday in Norristown to one count of child endangerment. She admitted that she bought him a rifle with a laser scope and gunpowder, which investigators said he was using to build grenades.
...
Michelle Cossey's sentencing hearing won't happen until after she undergoes a psychiatric evaluation. The maximum possible prison term is 3½ to 7 years, but her defense attorney she could get less than a year - or even just probation - under sentencing guidelines.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 21:19
This is an article about Roy Den Hollander, the man suing Columbia because of bigoted Women's Studies programs. This writer challenges his notion and suggests Men's Studies does exist, though not at Columbia. While certain colleges do offer such a program they are essentially by-products of the Women's Studies departments. Essentially, they teach chivalry and male self-loathing.
'I know what you're wondering, and the answer is yes. Men's studies exists in the broader academic world, although Columbia doesn't have a men's studies department. It explores such subjects as "paradigms of fatherhood" and "gendered violence." And according to Harry Brod, editor of the scholarly book "The Making of Masculinities: The New Men's Studies," it's an outgrowth of the feminist movement. "If Roy Den Hollander really understood what men's studies was," Brod told me, "he wouldn't be in favor of it.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 21:09
Article here. Excerpt:
'Like so many chivalrous male victims Biden defends his abusers even having suffered “nuclear sanction”. I say “abusers” because someone in his immediate family other than his sister must have rendered the mushrooming catastrophic punishments. Even so, Sister Valerie Biden Owens had “absolute impunity” giving her license to abuse at will without fear of penalty.
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 20:56
Article here. Excerpt:
'At this point in the review, we pause to allow women to expel a thundering, collective scoff. This notion is bogus, for sure. Right? Has to be. There's no way 40 years of feminism have pulverized millennia of male domination. Nevertheless, four books rolling out this fall are standing up for men by saying maybe we've been too focused on women's advancement to realize that boys are withering in school, stumbling blindly through adolescence, living recklessly during and beyond college and slouching toward manhood.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 20:50
Article here. Excerpt:
'The old always seem to blame the young for the downfall of civilization. So readers under 40 might be skeptical when I, a member of the “senior class” of Baby Boomers (born in 1946), claim that markers of male maturity have declined sharply in the last 20 years. Who am I to complain? Many from my generation rejected the values of their parents, and vowed in the 60s to never trust anyone over 30. But I still think it’s fair to say today there is no rush into maturity if that can be measured by an early embrace of family responsibility.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 20:47
Article here. Excerpt:
'Women are also winning the most important of all gender wars—the war for educational qualifications. They earn 57% of bachelor’s degrees, 59% of master’s degrees and half of doctorates. And they are doing better all the time. In terms of higher education, women drew equal with men in 1980. By the early 1990s six women graduated from college for every five men. Projections show that by 2017 three women will graduate for every two men. The meritocracy is inexorably turning into a matriarchy, and visibly so on many campuses: the heads of Harvard, Princeton, MIT, Brown and the National Defence University are all women.
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2008-09-23 15:23
Article here. Excerpt:
'Alec Baldwin blamed a "corrupt" family court system Monday in part for dragging out the bitter custody battle between him and ex-wife Kim Basinger after the couple's divorce in 2002.
The actor, fresh off his first Emmy win the night before, said it contributed to the anger and frustration he was feeling when he berated his daughter in a phone message leaked to the media last year.
In the book, Baldwin rails against the family court system in Los Angeles, offers advice based on his own experience with divorce litigation and talks about how one parent can turn a child against another parent.
Baldwin said he's apologized to his daughter, Ireland, for the phone message, which he said was wrong and "horrified" him. But he added that it never should have been released without his permission.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2008-09-22 10:27
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