Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2011-12-26 21:02
Story here. Excerpt:
'A typical day for Andrew Lawrence seems to be a pretty simple one. The 18-year-old said it usually consists of him sleeping until the early afternoon, playing video games at his apartment, and then going to work as a cook at a Superior restaurant. About once or twice a week, he goes to visit his parents about a mile away and do laundry.
It’s a far cry from his life just over a year ago, when he was facing charges that in July 2010 he broke into a Superior woman’s home, held a weapon to her throat, and raped her.
Those charges were dropped by the Douglas County Attorney’s office on Dec. 11, 2010, after DNA evidence found at the woman’s house didn’t match Lawrence.
...
A year after the charges were dropped, Lawrence said he still thinks often about the case and worries about how it could affect his future. Though the charges have been dropped, the accusation is still on his record.
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2011-12-26 20:56
Story here. Excerpt:
'For the first time since his ex-wife spirited their daughter away to Japan nearly four years ago, a Wisconsin doctor was able to tuck his little girl into bed after a bitter court battle that brought her home just in time for Christmas.
"Karina is at home and it's a miracle," Moises Garcia told reporters Saturday.
Garcia fought passionately -- and spent about $350,000 -- to get his daughter back after her mother, Emiko Inoue, took the five-year-old girl to Japan in February 2008.
The liver transplant doctor learned to speak Japanese so he could communicate with a daughter whose English was slipping away.
He hired lawyers in Japan and flew across the Pacific nine times to press his case and try to see his daughter. He enlisted the help of the US State Department and his native Nicaragua. He became active in an advocacy group -- Global Future -- run by US parents whose children were taken to Japan.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sun, 2011-12-25 06:39
Article here. Excerpt:
'LONDON, December 22, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A UK government parenting adviser has publicly stated that lesbians make better parents than heterosexual couples.
“Lesbians make better parents than a man and a woman,” said Professor Stephen Scott, director of research at the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners and the director of the National Adoption and Fostering Team at Maudsley Hospital, during an event hosted by the think-tank Demos, according to a Daily Mail report.
...
A spokeswoman at the Demos event defended Professor Scott’s declaration on lesbian parenting, saying other contributors had pointed out there was a relative dearth of research on the impact and importance of a father’s attachment to a child, according to the Daily Mail report.
However, there is a vast amount of research into the importance of fathers to children.
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Submitted by anthony on Sat, 2011-12-24 22:38
Article here. Excerpt:
'Annual checkups and tests such as colonoscopies and PSA assays are important, but it's not a good idea to rely on tests alone to protect you from cancer. It's just as important to listen to your body and notice anything that's different, odd, or unexplainable.
...
Commonly overlooked cancer symptoms, 1-10
1. Upset stomach or stomachache
...
2. Chronic "acid stomach" or feeling full after a small meal
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3. Unexplained weight loss
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4. Jaundice
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5. Wheezing or shortness of breath
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6. Chronic cough or chest pain
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7. Frequent fevers or infections
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8. Difficulty swallowing
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9. Chronic heartburn
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10. Swelling of facial features'
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Submitted by Minuteman on Sat, 2011-12-24 06:39
Link here. Excerpt:
'Fears about the emotional, financial, social and legal consequences of divorce explain why the percentage of married adults in the United States has reached an all-time low, researchers report.
The study of 122 people in cohabitating couples found that 67 percent said they worried about having to deal with the fallout of divorce, the University of Central Oklahoma and Cornell University researchers said in a Cornell news release.
...
Lower-income women were especially likely to have doubts about the "trap" of marriage. Many believed it would lead to more domestic responsibilities with few benefits or that it could hard to get out of a marriage if things go wrong.'
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Submitted by Minuteman on Sat, 2011-12-24 06:35
Women possibly being inconvenienced by over-servicing in the health care sector, but more research is needed. Link here. Excerpt:
'Women with breast cancer undergo many more imaging tests between diagnosis and surgery than they did in the early 1990s, a new study finds.
The tests -- breast ultrasounds, MRIs and mammograms -- help doctors determine the best course of treatment, but add to the hassles and expense of care, the study says.
"The burden to the patient is increasing substantially," said study leader Dr. Richard Bleicher, an associate professor of surgical oncology at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. For older patients, especially, coordination of care is needed, he said.
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Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2011-12-23 20:55
Article hee. Excerpt:
'LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A 9-year-old autistic boy who misbehaved at school was stuffed into a duffel bag and the drawstring pulled tight, according to his mother, who said she found him wiggling inside as a teacher's aide stood by.
The mother of fourth-grader Christopher Baker said her son called out to her when she walked up to him in the bag Dec. 14. The case has spurred an online petition calling for the firing of school employees responsible.
"He was treated like trash and thrown in the hallway," Chris' mother, Sandra Baker, said Thursday. She did not know how exactly how long he had been in the bag, but probably not more than 20 minutes.'
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Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2011-12-23 01:29
Article here. Excerpt:
'“It was a project with a lot devoted to developing the women’s facility using the latest for women prisoners,” said Bill Bashore, the command evaluator for the JRCFS and co-coordinator on the expansion project. “Historically, women’s facilities are built to men’s standards, then ‘painted pink.’ Women prisoners are defined a lot by the relationships they make in an institute, so we tried to design the facility to give them the ability to form relationships and interact with staff.”
To do that, several design elements were incorporated into the women’s housing unit that aren’t normally found in a men’s facility. The housing unit and dayroom, for instance, are rectangular (men’s units are triangular to allow for direct supervision by staff) and is divided into five smaller rooms by partial-height glazed walls as a way to facilitate the formation of relationships between the various subpopulations while still allowing for direct supervision.
...
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Submitted by Matt on Fri, 2011-12-23 00:32
Story here. Excerpt:
'PERINTON -- To the neighbors who knew her as Penny, she was a social coordinator and a breezy mom, passing out tea lights for their porches and windows this time of year.
On Wednesday, the wooded neighborhood in which she had become a fixture was illuminated by the flashing lights of a sheriff's deputy's squad car.
In the finished basement of her family's home on Red Fox Run on Wednesday morning, police say, Penelope Luddy, 53, killed her 10-year-old daughter, Alexandra; her father, Harold Bertram, 79; and herself with a shotgun.
About 8:30 a.m., she'd sent her husband, Michael Luddy, 57, to check on an ailing relative. When he returned home at 9:45, he found his wife dead and his daughter and father-in-law shot.
There were signs of a struggle, Monroe County Sheriff Patrick O'Flynn said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon to discuss the ongoing investigation.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2011-12-22 20:32
Story here.
'LOS ANGELES (CBS) — A Lynwood woman is facing federal terrorism charges after she made a false bomb threat to delay her husband’s flight out of Los Angeles International Airport.
According to court documents, Johnna Woolfolk called in a bomb threat to AirTran on Nov. 27. Woolfolk told a representative that her husband was planning to blow up an Atlanta-bound flight, FBI officials said.
Airline officials pulled Woolfolk’s husband off the flight. He denied the charges and told officials that he and his wife were having marital problems and that they recently had a fight.
FBI agents later interviewed Woolfolk at her Lynwood home who admitted to the call.
She was charged with providing false and misleading information. Woolfolk is expected to enter a plea next week in federal court.'
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2011-12-22 01:09
Article here. Excerpt:
'EAST BROOKFIELD — A 44-year-old Sunday school teacher from Oakham pleaded guilty yesterday to lying to police, telling them she’d been raped, and she was sentenced to 2 years’ probation.
Christine Drolet went to Spencer Police Detective Michael Shea earlier this year and reported that William Domey, a paramedic who worked with her husband, had raped her.
She went to a hospital for treatment, called police several times to check on the status of the case and never recanted until Detective Shea questioned her version of what had happened, prosecutor Courtney Sans told the judge in Western Worcester District Court yesterday.
...
Judge Timothy M. Bibaud sentenced Mrs. Drolet to one year concurrent sentences at Framingham state prison on the charges of filing a false crime report, criminal harassment and witness intimidation. She was sentenced to two years on a second witness intimidation charge. All of the sentences were suspended for two years, during which time she will remain on probation.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2011-12-22 01:00
Article here. Excerpt:
'One of first-wave feminism’s great achievements in the 1970s was to end the denial surrounding wife abuse in even the “best” homes. Resources for abused women proliferated. Traditional social, judicial and political attitudes toward violence against women were cleansed and reconstructed along feminist-designed lines.
But then a funny thing happened. The closet from which abuse victims were emerging had, everyone assumed, been filled with women. But honest researchers were surprised by the results of their own objective inquiries. They were all finding, independently, that intimate partner violence (IPV) is mostly bidirectional.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2011-12-21 22:22
Article here. Excerpt:
'A veteran of the Iraq war has had his parental rights terminated despite having in no way wronged his child or the mother. Read about it here (Booneville Democrat, 12/8/11).
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2011-12-21 22:20
Article here. Excerpt:
'HARARE - Male circumcision is becoming a canal for new HIV infections as men are now reluctant to use condoms on the basis that they are 60 percent safe, a government official has said.
MDC deputy spokesman and legislator for Bulawayo East Thabitha Khumalo said while circumcision was good in reducing the risk of HIV infections in men, the emphasis should be on the use of condoms than circumcision in order to save both men and women.
Circumcision and the use of condoms, Khumalo said, should be used together if Zimbabwe’s goal of Zero to new HIV infections and Zero to HIV related deaths by 2015 is to be attainable.
“We have a huge challenge where male circumcision has created a canal to those who do not want to use condoms.
People should understand that circumcision is not a cure, it is just a way to help reduce the risk of infections, together with the use of condoms, said Khumalo.
Khumalo said women will be the most affected because they have limited methods of protecting themselves.
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Submitted by Minuteman on Wed, 2011-12-21 15:56
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