Google's First Female
Engineer. [United
States] It's hard to believe that search engine giant Google hasn't
even celebrated its 10th birthday yet. But still, the success stories of people like
Marissa Mayer, the company's vice president of search products and user experience, are
among some of the nation's best. "I was the first woman engineer hired," Mayer
told John Donvan on ABC News Now's "Ahead of the Curve." "I was lucky to
catch Google early, and I was just intrigued to come and work alongside a lot of really
talented engineers." ittle did Mayer know that jumping on the Google bandwagon would
put her at the top of the industry in less than a decade. Though she was the lone woman on
a team of engineers when she began her career at Google, Mayer says the company keeps the
doors open to women who want to get into computer sciences. She says that colleges and
universities report that 25 percent to 40 percent of their computer science majors are
women, and Google tries to keep pace by maintaining that percentage of women on its
engineering staff. For women or anyone looking for a career on the digital horizon, Mayer
says now is the time. "I think it's a fun time and a fun place to be a geek,"
she jokes. |
Utah
Launches Criminal Probe of Church. [United States]
Utah has launched an
organized-crime investigation into a polygamist sect and its fugitive leader Warren Jeffs,
now on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list. Jeffs is already wanted on
Utah and
Arizona charges
alleging he arranged plural marriages of underage girls. Attorney General Mark Shurtleff
said Monday that his office is also looking at Jeffs and his church for "double
books, cooking books, offshore accounts and fraud." The FLDS church is one of a
number of polygamist sects in and near Utah. Followers believe
The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, or Mormon church, went the wrong direction when it abandoned
polygamy more than a century ago as Utah
was seeking statehood. Estimates of the number of
polygamists range from 30,000 to 100,000. |
Astronaut
Eileen Collins Leaves NASA. [United States] Eileen Collins, the first woman to command
a space shuttle who also led last year's harrowing return to flight after the Columbia
disaster, said Monday she will leave the space agency. Collins, 49, said she wanted to
spend more time with her family and pursue other interests. Named an astronaut in 1990,
she became the first female pilot on a space shuttle with the flight of Discovery in 1995,
the first to rendezvous with the Russian space station Mir. She also flew on Atlantis in
1997 and became first female commander in the 1999 Columbia
flight |
Prostitution
Alleged In Cunningham Case. [United
States] Federal authorities are investigating
allegations that a California defense contractor arranged for a Washington area limousine
company to provide prostitutes to convicted former congressman Randy "Duke"
Cunningham (R-Calif.) and possibly other lawmakers, sources familiar with the probe said
yesterday. In recent weeks, investigators have focused on possible dealings between
Christopher D. Baker, president of Shirlington Limousine and Transportation Inc., and
Brent R. Wilkes, a San
Diego businessman who is under investigation for bribing Cunningham
in return for millions of dollars in federal contracts, said one source, who requested
anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. The Cunningham investigation's latest
twist came after Mitchell J. Wade, a defense contractor who has admitted bribing the
former congressman, told prosecutors that Wilkes had an arrangement with Shirlington
Limousine, which in turn had an arrangement with at least one escort service, one source
said. Wade said limos would pick up Cunningham and a prostitute and bring them to suites
Wilkes maintained at the Watergate Hotel and the Westin Grand
in Washington, the source
said. The San Diego Union-Tribune yesterday cited a letter from Baker's lawyer, Bobby
Stafford, saying that Baker "provided limousine services for Mr. Wilkes for whatever
entertainment he had in the Watergate" from the company's founding in 1990 through
the early 2000s. The letter also stated that Baker was "never in attendance in any
party where any women were being used for prostitution purposes." Reached by
telephone yesterday, Stafford would not comment on the letter. |
Shere Hite: On
Female Sexuality in the 21st Century. [United States]Thirty years ago a book by an
unknown American writer took the world by storm. Its author, a young graduate student, had
debunked one of the great myths about female sexuality: that most women should be able to
have orgasms through sexual intercourse. The idea that something was wrong with popular
assumptions about sex, not women, was so radical that it propelled Shere Hite to instant
fame. Her timing could not have been better. Disappointment with the sexual revolution of
the 1960s had prompted a fever of intellectual excitement among women, with one big
feminist book after another on the bestseller lists. Six years earlier Germaine Greer had
told women they were female eunuchs; now here was another brilliant young woman explaining
why. Ever since Freud, women had been faking orgasms during coitus and worrying that there
was something wrong with them. Even talking publicly about such things was taboo and Hite
struggled to find a language which wasn't medical or embarrassing for the more than 3,000
women who agreed to fill in a detailed questionnaire about their sex lives. When she
published their responses in The Hite Report: A Nationwide Study of Female Sexuality, it
revolutionised the way American women thought about their bodies. A year later, in 1977,
the book came out in the UK
and British women excitedly passed copies to their friends,
spreading Hite's message that conventional sex placed unrealistic expectations on women. |
Mayor Tapped Water
Customers for Sex. [United States] The 72-year-old mayor of this Arkansas town was
arrested this week on charges he sought sex from two women in exchange for preventing
their water from being turned off. One of the women told investigators she had been having
sex with Troy Anderson for money for eight to 10 years, according to an affidavit. She
said Anderson paid her $25 per encounter and $60 for a late water deposit. He also allowed
her to change the name on her overdue water bill to keep the service running, the
affidavit said. In February, the woman wore a recording device when Anderson picked her up
for a sexual encounter, authorities said. |
Group Supports Women Who Lost Moms at an
Early Age. [United States] Heather Hallam remained angry at her dead mother for years
because it was easier than facing her grief. Lisa Royer was convinced she would die at 24
- her mom's age when she succumbed to cancer. The two Logan residents have healthy careers
and children of their own, but both still feel a profound sense of loss many years after
the early deaths of their mothers. As Mother's Day approaches, they are among many Utah
women whose moms' absence has shaped their identities, wounded their self-esteem and
influenced their own maternal behavior. I feel like I don't have any map for my
life," says Hallam, whose mom died of bone cancer when she was 16. "I don't know
who I'm supposed to be or what I'm supposed to do." Sunday's holiday is always a
melancholy one for the two friends, but this year, they're doing something about it: They
are holding a free, catered luncheon Saturday in Logan for motherless women of all ages.
More than 50 women already have signed up to attend, and more are welcome. |
Women Urged
to Get 'Morning After' Pill. [United States] Get an advance prescription for emergency
contraception so it will be on hand if you need it, the nation's largest gynecologist
group advised women Monday. The new campaign aims to increase access to the morning-after
pill following the Bush administration's refusal to allow the emergency birth control to
be sold over the counter nationwide. "We want women to be prepared, well before a
contraceptive failure or unprotected sex occurs. Afterward may be too late," said Dr.
Michael Mennuti, president of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The
morning-after pill is a high dose of regular birth control pills. It cuts the chances of
pregnancy by up to 89 percent if used within 72 hours of rape, condom failure or just
forgetting routine contraception. The earlier it's taken, the more effective it is. But it
can be hard to find a doctor to write a prescription in time, especially on weekends and
holidays. |
8 Female
Cleaning Workers File Suit, Allege Harassment. [United States] Eight women who clean
commercial buildings in the Twin Cities have filed a lawsuit alleging sexual harassment by
their supervisors and are seeking class-action status that could expand the plaintiff
group to hundreds of employees. The federal lawsuit filed Monday in Minneapolis names
California-based American Building Maintenance Industries, one of the largest
maintenance-service contractors in the United States with some 75,000 employees. The women
worked in cleaning jobs at dozens of Twin Cities locations, including Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport. All allege they were harassed by their immediate supervisors, who
demanded sex, fondled them and, in one case, coerced a worker into having sex. All say
they complained to their supervisor's boss but were either ignored or retaliated against.
The women, all Latina and Spanish speakers, also say that their supervisors took advantage
of communication problems. Minneapolis attorney Justin D. Cummins said his eight
plaintiffs are all native Spanish speakers with limited abilities in English. He said
their immigration status has no bearing on their lawsuit. |
Maine
Guard Selects First Female General. [United States] The vice commander of the 101st
Air Refueling Wing has been selected as the first female general officer of the Maine
National Guard. Col. Frances Auclair will be promoted next month to brigadier general and
will assume new duties in Augusta as
chief of staff for the Maine Air National Guard.
Auclair, who grew up in Lewiston and graduated
from St. Dominic
High School, began her
military career in 1972 when she enlisted in the Navy as a hospital corpsman. After four
years of active duty, she returned to complete her bachelor's degree at
the University of Southern
Maine. Auclair gained her commission as a second lieutenant after her 1981 graduation from
the Air National Guard Officer Training Program in Knoxville,
Tenn. She has since
commanded and supervised units at all levels. Maj. Gen. John Libby, Maine's adjutant
general, will conduct Auclair's promotion ceremony June 3 in Bangor. |
Female Vets Face
Tough Road Back to Life as Workers, Moms. [United States] Keri Christensen spots an
empty pop can on the side of the road in McHenry
County, and in a flash she is back at the
helm of a heavy-equipment transporter maneuvering along Iraq's treacherous highways. Her
two children are strapped into seats in her mini-van, but Christensen finds herself
scrutinizing roadside trash for signs of a makeshift bomb. "Everything is
weird," said Christensen, 33, a Wisconsin National Guard soldier who returned in
November to the Chicago area after serving 10 months
in Iraq. "I went from a
stay-at-home mom to a soldier instantly." Traveling that path in reverse has been
equally tough for Christensen and a rising tide of other female veterans. Since 2003, the
number of former soldiers seeking help for combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder
has grown so much that the North Chicago
Veterans Affairs Medical
Center has shifted its
women's mental health program to respond to combat stress disorders. Formed in 2001, the
program was originally geared to help women suffering trauma from sexual harassment to
rape. The program still helps women with what the Armed Forces calls "military sexual
trauma." But therapists now are seeing female vets who exhibit the same signs of
post-traumatic stress disorder as men who served in infantry units. "Flashbacks,
hyper-vigilance, sleep disorders. They're always on edge," said Katherine Dong,
manager of the Women Veterans Health Care Program at the North
Chicago facility, who
helped form the mental health program. "If somebody drops a book, they hit the
floor." |
Female Arrests In Mountain
States See Dramatic Increase. [United
States] Washington DC (AHN) - A new study
revealed that the number of female incarcerations grew by 757 percent nationally but 1,600
percent in the Mountain states. The Woman's Prison Association studied the number of woman
inmates serving a sentence of more than one year on a state-by-state basis over the past
30 years. Idaho, Wyoming,
Montana, Oklahoma, North
Dakota, and Hawaii had more than 10
percent of their prison population comprised of woman in 2004. Oklahoma reportedly had the
highest per capita female imprisonment rating with 129 woman for every 100,000 in the
state. MSNBC reported that 96,125 federal and state inmates in 2004 were woman. The Bureau
of Justice Statistics show that about one in three female inmates were serving time for
drug charges in 1999, compared to one in eight in 1986. |
Female Chat Names Generate
More Threats. [United
States] Next time you chat online, think twice about your screen
name. A new study finds that using a female screen name like Cathy, Melissa or Stephanie
is more likely to elicit threatening and sexually explicit messages. In the study,
automated chat-bots and human researchers logged on to chat rooms under female, male and
ambiguous screen names, such as Nightwolf, Orgoth and Stargazer. Bots using female names
averaged 100 malicious messages a day, compared with about four for those using male names
and about 25 for those with ambiguous names. Researchers logging on themselves produced
similar results. |
ABC
Yanks 'Commander in Chief'. [United
States] ABC has pulled its White House drama
"Commander in Chief" off the schedule for the rest of the season, following a
low-rated run plagued by behind-the-scenes turmoil and scheduling interruptions. The three
unaired episodes of "Commander," starring Geena Davis as the nation's first
female president, are tentatively slated to air next month. Beginning this week,
newsmagazine "Primetime" will return to its Thursday 10 p.m. slot.
"Commander" launched with a lot of promise, ranking as the most-watched new
series of the season and earning an early full-season pickup. But ratings steadily
declined. |
Study:
Mothers Deserve $134,121 in Salary. [United States] A full-time stay-at-home mother
would earn $134,121 a year if paid for all her work, an amount similar to a
top U.S. ad
executive, a marketing director or a judge, according to a study released on Wednesday. A
mother who works outside the home would earn an extra $85,876 annually on top of her
actual wages for the work she does at home, according to the study by Waltham,
Massachusetts-based compensation experts Salary.com. To reach the projected pay figures,
the survey calculated the earning power of the 10 jobs respondents said most closely
comprise a mother's role -- housekeeper, day-care teacher, cook, computer operator,
laundry machine operator, janitor, facilities manager, van driver, chief executive and
psychologist. Employed mothers reported spending on average 44 hours a week at their
outside job and 49.8 hours at their home job, while the stay-at-home mother worked 91.6
hours a week, it showed. An estimated 5.6 million women in the
United States are
stay-at-home mothers with children under age 15, according to the most recent U.S. Census
Bureau data. |
Are
Women Better People Managers? [United
States] If Men are from Mars and Women are from
Venus, then who's in the workplace? In my experience, men often don't seem to really
understand or value the concept of recognition - what it looks like, why they need to do
it, how to do it well, when to do it and knowing when they've done it enough. When men are
in charge of managing others, they typically view their jobs as needing to focus primarily
on the business side of things, that is, "getting the job done": business
objectives, sales and growth, competition and advantage, utilization and investment, and
the like. Relationships are often secondary to the business task at hand. Men seem to say,
"Do a good job, be competent, and I'll like you." For women, it's often the
reverse: "If I like you and trust you, I'll do a good job for you. They often seem to
need to first feel good about those they are working with, getting to know them on a
personal basis before they are then comfortable enough to have a productive working
relationship. Is this a trust issue? I'm not sure. |
Woman Reports Rape by
Stranger at Home. [United States]
A woman told Colorado Springs police a stranger
raped and choked her after breaking in last weekend through a bedroom window of her
southeast apartment. The attacker fled, and no arrests have been made. Sgt. Maggie Santos
said Monday the assault is very unusual because most sexual assaults are
committed by someone the victim knows. Stranger assaults only represent about 20
percent of all sexual assaults or rapes, said Cari Davis, director of TESSA, a
sexual assault prevention center. Police said there havent been other reports of
similar rapes recently. The woman told officers a man broke into her groundfloor apartment
about 4:30 a.m. Saturday near Murray
Boulevard and Airport Road.
She had left the window
open a few inches, police said. The rapist stayed for about 15 minutes and kept a firm
grip on her neck during the assault, police said. |
Last Titanic
Survivor Dies. [United
States] Lillian Gertrud Asplund, the last American survivor of
the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, has died, a funeral home said Sunday. She was 99.
Asplund, who was just 5 years old, lost her father and three brothers -- including a
fraternal twin -- when the "practically unsinkable" ship went down in the North
Atlantic after hitting an iceberg. She died Saturday at her home in
Shrewsbury, said
Ronald E. Johnson, vice president of the Nordgren Memorial Chapel
in Worcester, Massachusetts.
"She went to sleep peacefully," he said. |
Slain
Female Soldier Will Be Buried at National Military Cemetery.
[Canada] Capt. Nichola
Goddard, Canada's first female combat
soldier to be killed in battle, will be buried at
the National Memorial
Cemetery in Ottawa, an honour which will draw attention to the
little-known site. The cemetery, within sight of the Parliament buildings, was established
in 2001 at the urging of Gen. Romeo Dallaire, now a senator, who believed
that Canada
needed something equivalent to the American military burial grounds at
Arlington, Va. To
date few soldiers killed in combat have been buried there, military historian Jack
Granatstein said Tuesday. "I think this is where people who are killed in action,
killed overseas, should be buried," said Granatstein, former director of
the Canadian
War Museum. Goddard, 26,
died May 17 near Kandahar in a Taliban ambush. She was the 16th
Canadian soldier to be killed in Afghanistan. Her funeral will be held Friday at St.
Barnabas Anglican Church in Calgary, where
she married Jason Beam in 2002. |
Women Who Escape
Abuse Focus of Study. [Canada]
The University of Calgary is
launching an unprecedented three-year study to track the lives of about 200 women in
Alberta who have fled domestic
abuse. Prof. Leslie Tutty is heading the study and said yesterday it's important to know
what happens to these women over the long run. "We really aren't sure how the women
are doing and we may be surprised to find out some of them are doing beautifully -- but
that won't be the case for everyone," she said. |
Female Prisoners
Get Pre-Mother's Day Gift. [Jamaica] Female prisoners at the Women's Prison in Golden
Grove, Arouca, were on Friday allowed visits from their under-18-year-old children as a
Mother's Day gift from prison authorities. For the first time ever in the history of the
prison service, mothers were able to have their children under 18, some mere babies, visit
them to commemorate Mother's Day, which is celebrated on May 14 worldwide. Emotions ran
high and some mothers, imprisoned for serious crimes, broke down in tears at the sight of
their children walking through the prison gates. Prison guards stood some distance away,
allowing the prisoners quality time with their children. Some of the inmates who delivered
their babies in prison and who were separated from their newborns soon after birth
appeared at a loss for words as they held their children for the first time since the
delivery process. |