Susan Murphy-Milano...

Moving Out Moving On" is a very practical resource to safety and sanity for all of our lives. The information you receive will take you from the State of Being Controlled to the State of Being in Control.

2007/7/22

Parents Held Accountable-Found Guilty

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@ 03:23 PM (28 months, 14 days ago)

Many parents who did not agree with the charges and the trial, believed the couple did not commit a crime.  But, those same parents did not loose their children.  Parents must remain vigil in knowing where their children are, what they are doing, and with whom they are with at all times.  Saying there is a party at a friends house and the parents will be home, could also have consequences to your teenagers well being.

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2006/11/28

Father Declares War On Drug Dealers

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@ 02:14 AM (36 months, 10 days ago)

Lance Merrill came to know the seedy streets of Provo, Utah, while searching for his 19-year-old, heroin-addicted daughter, Jani.

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2006/7/17

The Infatuation With Tattoos

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@ 03:20 AM (40 months, 24 days ago)
 

The popularity of body art ebbs and flows like ocean waves. Its ancient heritage is surrounded by physical pain, the mental shock of being marked for life and personal rebellion which brought it into the mainstream in the 1920s. In 2006, many teens do whatever they can to get one.

In states such as Massachusetts and Oklahoma, tattooing is illegal. The reason: AIDS is still an incurable disease that can be passed through dirty needles. In order to operate legally, all tattoo shops must use sterile equipment.

Tattoos have become a fashion statement judging by their growing popularity among teens and adults alike.

Some reasons for the spontaneous outbreak of tattoos among teens comes from its reputation among famous people. Music and Sports celebrities have tattoos and teens who idolize them want to get one too.

The history of tatoos dates back to a 5,300-year-old frozen man found near Innsbruck, Austria with a cross behind his knee and lines on his back. In the 1880s, it became commonly known when upper class Americans would travel as far as Japan to decorate their bodies. The actual word "tattoo" comes from the Tahitian word "tatua," which means to mark the skin.

The working class adopted the art when tools became available. That sparked the big fetish for tattoos in the 1950's. Tattoo shops popped up like jack-in-the-boxes all over Coney Island. A picture of a well-endowed woman, a skull with cross bones and a little heart that read "Mom" could all be purchased for about $15. Now tattoos range from $50 and up depending on and where you go.

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2006/5/8

Scum Bag News:High School Teacher Charged With Attempted Murder & Kidnapping

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@ 03:49 AM (43 months, 4 days ago)
When I first heard about this story, as many of us did, I thought for sure, the young high school student would never be found alive.  According to news accounts, a high school teacher had broken her neck, along with other injuries she sustained and police found her barely alive last week.  We've seen in the news a lot teachers sexually assaulting children or having relationships with their young students.  This case is particularly disturbing because the teacher had left the young woman to die.  Who by the way, is still not out of the woods, she remains in critical condition, fighting for her life.  I'm not trying to bring gloom and doom to these posts.  My objective to is make everyone aware that violence has become a way of life at so many levels it's down right scary.  And as parents everyone must do their part to know where their kids are, even at 17 years of age.  Don't be too busy in your life.  By paying attention you, just might save a life.
http://media.bonnint.net/apimage/c5f8b80e-fe0e-4af9-93b4-91d57ad1b055.jpg(ap newswire)These photos provided by the St. Clair County (Ill.) Sheriff's Department, show Ashley Reeves, 17, and Samson Shelton, 26, right, who is jailed on $1 million bond on charges that he tried to strangle Reeves and broke her neck. Shelton led investigators to a wooded area east of St. Louis where he allegedly left Reeves for dead, but Reeves survived there for more than 30 hours before being found Saturday, April 29. On Tuesday, May 2, 2006, Reeves remained in serious condition at a hospital in St. Louis as police officials and others continue pressing to build a case against Shelton.

According to reports the high school teacher who moonlights as a pro wrestler attacked a 17-year-old girl and then left her in the woods with a broken neck for more than 30 hours before accompanying investigators back to where she lay.

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2006/3/31

Barney's Lends a helping Hand For A Great Cause

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@ 03:23 AM (44 months, 12 days ago)
Good-hearted Chicago teenagers are helping to save the lives of women struggling with AIDS in Africa.

Private school girls are marketing the “Dolls of Hope,” hand-sewn by the patients far away. The grassroots campaign stretches from Rwanda to Chicago’s Gold Coast neighborhood.

A bucket of dolls in a Gold Coast store symbolizes a triumph for women in Africa, and for a doctor and some school girls in Chicago.

Dr. Mardge Cohen, a Cook County HIV researcher, went to Rwanda two years ago to treat AIDS patients.

“Women who’d been raped during the genocide and were infected with HIV were dying and needed medicines very quickly,” Cohen said.

Cohen’s organization gave out medicine and sewing machines, and the patients learned to make dolls to earn money. The faces and hair, the babies on the dolls’ backs, and the colorful Rwandan textiles have international appeal.

“They’re really representative of the women who put effort in these dolls,” said Julia Luscombe, a teacher at the Latin School of Chicago.

Students from the Latin School volunteered to sell the dolls for charity. They boldly asked for space in the Barney’s New York store at 102 E. Oak St., and landed a window display.

Abby Schreiber, a high school junior at Latin, said, “I just thought I’d give it a shot; didn’t expect it to happen.”

The exposure attracted well-heeled customers.

Barney’s New York general manager Cindy Schwartz said, “They ask for the information and write the check.”

Krizia Lopez, a high school freshman at Latin, said, “The people who come here can afford $125 for charity.”

All of the money goes back to the Rwandan women.

Cohen said, “With $3, we’re able to feed a family and send the children to school for an entire year."

Barney’s has sold more than $5,000 of dolls for Rwandan AIDS victims, and the girls are thinking about careers in international business.