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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

NFL, Referees Union Agree to Collective Bargaining Agreement, Ending Lockout


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Tim Goodman: ABC's 'Neighbors' Is Fall's Worst Sitcom

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The Hollywood Reporter Breaking News
  September 26, 2012
  Tim Goodman: ABC's 'Neighbors' Is Fall's Worst Sitcom
 

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The Onion Weekly Dispatch - September 26, 2012

The Onion

George W. Bush Returns To America After Spending 4 Years In The Himalayas 09.25.12

JACKSONVILLE, FL—Garbed in unwashed robes and wearing a long, gray, wispy beard, former president George W.

It Literally Impossible To State How Unimportant Next 3 Hours Are

News in Brief »

Neil Armstrong's Wife Glad To Finally Get Rid Of All The Space Hobby Crap

Office Cheering On Employee Going For 32-Minute Nonstop Work Streak

BREAKING: Friend Who Just Got Motorcycle Already Dead

American Voices »

Pediatricians: Stop Using Trampolines

“Sounds like these doctors just want more trampoline time for themselves.”

Obama Tough On Iran At U.N.

video »

Reporter Steps In To Replace Woman's Missing Husband

When the war in Afghanistan leaves a woman without a husband, caring reporter O'Brady Shaw steps in to replace him.

opinion »

Now That My Campaign Is Over, I'd Like To Talk To You All About The Church Of Latter-Day Saints

by Mitt Romney, Republican Nominee For President Of The United States

By Mitt Romney

Radio News »

Unicycling Bear's Agent Has Long List Of Demands

featured section: »

Horoscope »

Aries Mar 21 - Apr 19

You've long thought of yourself as a left-brain type of person, but the stroke will quickly and dramatically change all that.

Most Popular »
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'Innocence of Muslims' Actress Files Bigger Lawsuit in Federal Court


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Women in the World: One Woman's KKK Battle

The CheatSheet

Today: ‘I Pray My Daughters Have A Life Like Mine’ , Why Women Should Stop Trying to Be Perfect
Women in the World

Week of
September 26, 2012
CONTROVERSY

Malika Fortier doesn’t think the first grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan is someone to celebrate. Fortier is leading a charge against the construction of a monument in honor of Nathan Bedford Forrest in her hometown of Selma, Ala. Forrest, a Confederate general hailed by some as a Civil War hero, is believed to be the first national leader of the Klan. Fortier calls the proposed monument “boldly racist.” On Tuesday, she turned in a Change.org petition with more than 325,000 signatures to the Selma city council. Her efforts paid off; the city council voted Tuesday night to halt all work on the statue until the courts decide who owns the property where the monument would be based—the city or a Civil War historical society. “I never dreamed that we might, as a town, go backwards,” Fortier tells Abigail Pesta on The Daily Beast.

UNVEILED

I pray my daughters have a life like mine.” These were the words of the devout, conservative matriarch with whom Karen Elliott House lived as she wrote her definitive new book on modern Saudi Arabia. In Newsweek, she describes this woman’s life: “By choice, Lulu rarely leaves home. During the week I spend with her (and on subsequent visits), it is clear that Lulu not only accepts but welcomes the confines of her life. She is the primary caregiver to her seven children and has no household help, as the salary of her professor husband can’t cover maids for both wives and Islam requires that a husband treat his wives equally. And Lulu has no aspirations beyond living a life that pleases Allah and ensures the entry of her and her family into paradise.”

WOMEN

Sure, women have powerful jobs, well-run homes, and perfect children. But we’re still not making it to the very top, says Debora Spar, the president of Barnard College, in Newsweek. “I have juggled like mad, with three wonderful kids, a husband I adore, and jobs that leave me perched perpetually on the edge of insanity,” she writes. “Through all this chaos I have become increasingly convinced of two interconnected points. First, that there is undeniably still a ‘women’s problem’ in the United States, a problem that relates deeply and intimately to the bleak roster of numbers that tell this story. And second, that part of this intractable problem is tied to the fact that women in this country are struggling far more than is necessary not only to have that ephemeral ‘all,’ but to do it all alone.”


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