Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2006-11-02 16:02
Story here. Excerpt:
'The killings began in San Diego County in December 1965 with the death of Sherry Scott, who was 11 days old, and continued a month later with her sister, Carla Scott, who was 1, Poma said. Both were deemed natural deaths.
"She kind of wanted to deal with it," he said. "She seemed surprised and remorseful."'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2006-11-02 15:56
Story here. Excerpt:
"A woman who previously served prison time for second-degree murder was arrested Wednesday and accused of setting a blaze that killed six people and gutted much of a historic brick building in Reno's downtown casino district."
"About 30 people were injured, some of them after they leaped out the windows of the three-story building, which was primarily a residential hotel."
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2006-11-01 22:40
Story here. He was found guilty. I imagine though that there could be an appeal. This is another one to watch. Excerpt:
'During the trial, Adem testified he never circumcised his daughter or asked anyone else to do so. He said he grew up in Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia, and considers the practice more prevalent in rural areas.
Adem's attorney acknowledged that the girl had been cut, but implied that the family of the girl's mother, who immigrated from South Africa, may have been responsible. The Adems divorced three years ago, and attorney Mark Hill suggested that the couple's daughter was coached to testify against her father by her mother, who has full custody of the child.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2006-11-01 21:52
Story here. Excerpt:
'A woman accused of duct-taping her two children together and leaving them home alone has been charged with child abuse, the sheriff's office said.
Agla Nadia Vincent, 25, was arrested Monday following a seven-month investigation into whether she left her two boys, then aged 2 and 3, taped to each other while she went to work, said Lt. Annie Smith of the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office.'
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2006-11-01 19:26
This is disturbing for a lot of reasons. Lowered "T" in men is associated with an increased risk for various health problems including susceptibility to cancer, infertility, and depression. Excerpt:
'While a man's testosterone level will fall steadily as he ages, the researchers observed a speedier decline in average testosterone levels than would have been expected with aging alone.
They hypothesized that the rising prevalence of obesity as well as the sharp decline in cigarette smoking might help explain their findings, given that testosterone levels are lower among overweight people and smoking increases testosterone levels. But these factors accounted for only a small percentage of the observed difference.
It's likely that some sort of environmental exposure is responsible for the testosterone decline, Travison said, although he said attempting to explain what this might be based on the current findings would be "pure conjecture."'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2006-11-01 17:36
Story here. Excerpt:
'A new state law allows men a way out of child-support payments when they can prove that they are not the child's biological father.
Last year, 30 percent of the 15,495 men targeted as possible fathers in paternity proceedings turned out not to be.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2006-11-01 04:01
Story here. Excerpt:
'More city schoolgirls are landing in juvenile detention now than a decade ago - while crime among boys is dropping, a new report reveals. Last year, 1,037 girls younger than 16 entered city detention facilities, up from 772 in 1992, according to the report by the Citizens' Committee for Children.'
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Submitted by Luek on Wed, 2006-11-01 03:13
Well, it has happened again thank God!
DNA testing cleared this man of the politicized crime of rape.
What makes this rescue notable is that the judge who released him, a female judge no less, apologized to the victim and said it made her sick to her stomach thinking about the years he spent incarcerated over a crime he didn't commit! However, the article doesn't say anything about monetary compensation or the need for stricter evidence guidelines for rape.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 2006-10-31 21:58
Yes, the BBC has chosen to give a headline on their main website entitled "Fewer women seek student places". Reading the article reveals the decrease to be about 0.5% (yes really) but that female applicants outnumber male applicants by 55% to 45%. The BBC has recently been exposed as internally admitting that they "may have taken political correctness too far". This article is living proof. You couldn't make it up.
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2006-10-31 15:00
Story here. Excerpt:
'DURHAM, North Carolina (AP) -- The prosecutor in the Duke lacrosse rape case has heard the criticism from experts and armchair lawyers, and said Monday he is comfortable with nearly all the decisions he has made and confident about taking the case to trial.
...
In the early days of the case, Nifong granted numerous newspaper and TV interviews, at one point calling the players "hooligans" and declaring that DNA would identify the guilty. DNA failed to connect the players to the accuser.
...
Roberts said she was unable to get the accuser to leave her car, and pushed on the woman's arm and leg to try to force her out. Roberts quoted the accuser as saying: "Go ahead, go ahead. Put marks on me. Go ahead. That's what I want. Go ahead."'
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2006-10-31 04:18
Story here. Excerpt:
'Scientists are developing a male contraceptive drug which stops the development process of sperm.
Tests on rats show blocking connections to cells which "nurture" developing sperm makes the animals infertile.
The US and Italian researchers say they used relatively low doses of the molecule and found no obvious side effects, and the effect was reversible.'
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Submitted by afg on Tue, 2006-10-31 00:51
A few weeks ago, the Governor-General of Canada, Michelle Jean, attended a violence against women fund-raiser in Montreal. After the function, she was met by a number of fathers' rights protesters outside. She listened to their views, thanked them, and left.
Here are her reflections on that meeting. Notice how she paints the views of these fathers in comparison to how she paints the views of battered women's advocates? We can send her a letter through the appropriate channels mentioned on her site, we can respond to the blog entry in the comments section, or we can start a discussion on her forums. The important thing is we have to be heard.
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2006-10-31 00:17
If this was a "NC17" website, I would offer numerous examples of women using their sexuality as a form of manipulation at S.U.
"Story" here. Excerpt:
'They wish more young men would focus on their minds and souls, instead of their bodies. They are tired of crude social games that serve the desires of men rather than the dreams of young women.
.
.
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'Women have flourished academically in this well-regulated environment. On the other hand, men increasingly set the rules for an unregulated social life. … They’ve streamlined the old system. They’ve eliminated the time-wasting efforts to attend to women’s wishes and gotten down to the fundamentals of adolescent male desire: playing competitive games, drinking with buddies and having sex with lots of compliant women.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2006-10-31 00:06
Gentleman, no more briefs! Get to the store a purchase some boxers! Story here. Excerpt:
'A Canadian city under pressure for alleged sexual harassment within its fire department has ordered firefighters to wear only boxer-style underwear.
Richmond, British Columbia, will spend $14,200 to buy six pairs of underwear for each firefighter in a bid to make firehalls in the suburb of Vancouver more gender neutral, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.'
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2006-10-30 16:20
'More companies, in the United States and elsewhere, have realized that they overlook women at their own financial peril.'
And there's no financial peril in overlooking male consumers?
Essay here.
You know, it seems the NYTimes has gotten a case of multiple personality disorder when it comes to gender-issues reporting. It seems some of their writers are fully aware of the negative impact of feminism and at other times, celebrate it. I can only imagine what one of their editorial meetings looks like.
I recall reading similar kinds of articles on the purchasing power of women that had been published back in the 1920s. The same point was made even then about how women make most of the household purchase decisions-- in households where they lived with men (back then, it was presumed, to men to whom they were married).
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