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United Press International: Good grease news from the fat police! According to a new study from the New England Journal of Medicine, high-fat diets for women do not necessarily lead to increased heart disease. In fact, women who ingested high amounts of vegetable oils had a 30 percent lower risk of heart disease than those ingesting high amounts of animal fats.

Associated Press: Does your baby have trouble getting out of the bed in the morning? The toddler psychologists have already introduced us to the prevalence of medicated preschoolers; now, the AP reports that 1 in 40 babies suffer from depression.

Wired News: A look at the limits and powers of "perv-tracking" technology in the wake of California passing Prop. 83 -- which, among other things, requires lifelong GPS monitoring for felony sex offenders. (Side note: The San Francisco Chronicle reports that "a federal judge has blocked local enforcement of a provision [in Prop. 83] forbidding past offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or park," in San Francisco, Alameda, Marin and Sonoma counties, at least temporarily.)

The New Yorker: Rebecca Mead reviews "Beauty Junkies," the cosmetic-surgery memoir by New York Times shopping columnist Alex Kuczynski, which Mead calls "an anomalous literary phenomenon: a muckraking book that comes out, on balance, in favor of muck." Mead seems less entranced, suggesting that "a culture that insists on the appearance of nubile availability among women old enough to be grandmothers" is borderline "tyrannical."

And, today's a proud day: Nerve noticed that a record number of gay and lesbian politicians have been elected to federal, state and local offices this year.

Posted in: Media

Shacking up, not settling down
Horrors! Young couples are moving in together without plans for marriage
Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

Recent Posts

Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

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