North America
| Women Speak Up for a Bigger Role in Islam. [United States] On a recent Friday, a veiled woman entered a crowded mosque and surveyed the scene. In the front, a few hundred men waited for the call to prayer. In the back, women and children sat in a separate area behind tinted glass. With barely a pause, Asra Nomani made her choice. Defying age-old Islamic traditions, she stepped over a low partition, sat with the men -- and kicked off a furor. | 
| Women Explore Ties Between
 Rights and Religion. [United States]  A new group is aiming to connect
    female clergy with women's rights leaders to begin to promote their shared progressive
    values.  Fifth in a series about
women and
    religion.  Maricela Morales left a
    recent national conference in Washington, D.C., on linking faith with feminism determined
    to bring the message to the grassroots level.  She
    plans to get female clergy members talking, through being the associate executive director
    of CAUSE, the Central Coast Alliance United for A Sustainable Economy -- a nonprofit group
    in Ventura, Calif. that advocates policies to aid low-income workers. | 
| In American Orchestras, More Women Are Taking the Bow. [United States] A male violinist's discrimination suit against the New York Philharmonic underscores a little-noted phenomenon: Women have come to dominate the violin sections of some of America's leading orchestras, or at least hold their own. A nd their numbers among violin players have also helped raise their prominence as concertmasters, the most important orchestra jobs after the conductors. But men still predominate in orchestras, and the testosterone level rises with the string instrument's size. | 
| 10
    Things Every Single Girl Must Own. 
[ | 
| Ohio Girl Crowned Miss Teen
    USA.  [United States] Allie LaForce did her
    mother one better.  LaForce -- the daughter of Miss
    Teen Ohio 1977 -- was named Miss Teen USA Monday night, defeating 50 other contestants to
    take home the crown and a prize package worth an estimated $250,000.  
The 16-year-old's winnings include a one-year
    modeling contract with Trump Modeling Management, a custom-designed wardrobe, a four-day
    trip to the Caribbean or Mexico, a scholarship to The School for Film and Television in
    New York and a one-time appearance on the NBC soap opera "Passions." | 
| Stress Equal For Female
    Soldiers: Women Do No Better, No Worse Than Men.  [ | 
| Female Soldiers are Fighting and
    Dying in Iraq, Even Though U.S. Policy Allows Only Men in Frontline Combat.  [United States]
      She busted down doors of Iraqi arms dealers in house-to-house raids in
    Fallujah.  She seized caches of weapons and
    took prisoners.  She fired her machine gun from
    a Humvee and was shot at while wearing the uniform of the United States military.  She still can't hear thunder without thinking of
    incoming mortar fire.  But the Department of
    Defense won't say Sgt. Maria Freudigmann was in combat.
      Under a federal policy, only men are allowed in frontline combat on the
    ground; women can join "combat support" units that are supposed to be farther
    away from the frontline.  In Iraq, however, the
    distinction between the two types of duty is blurred.  In
    this war, there's no real frontline.  Violence
    can break out anytime, anywhere.  Women are
    getting shot at and are shooting back.  They're
    getting killed.  One won a Silver Star for
    Valor in May.  Freudigmann fought alongside the
    Army's 3rd Infantry Division active-duty combat troops while serving in Fallujah with the
    Rhode Island National Guard's 115th Military Police Company.
      But still, the Pentagon doesn't call her work -- or that of other female
    soldiers in similar jobs -- combat, denying them the designation that has long been a
    point of pride for males. | 
| The Court and Gender
 Decoys -
    What's a Woman Anyway?  [United States] The
    very idea of 'woman' as an identifiable identity-one which resonates with ashared sexual
    status that is not completely individual in nature -- derives from the idea of feminism
    itself.  Recognizing this identifiable category
    is central to a feminist construction of democracy.  Instead,
    today, gender stands in more and more as a decoy for democracy.  Gender decoys are females in drag and
the drag
    allows us to think that they represent the best of democracy when they don't.  Women-whomever, whatever, the definition-play a role
    of deception and lure us into a fantasy of gender equality rather than gender fluidity.  As a result, the sex often just changes while the
    gendered politics can and often remain the same. | 
| FDA to Rule
    on Morning-After Pill.  [United States] By
    month's end, federal health officials will decide whether to let women buy emergency
    contraception without a prescription -- and if so, whether the morning-after pill will be
    treated more like aspirin off the shelf or like cigarettes.  Regardless
    of how the Food and Drug Administration ends the two-year saga, it isn't likely to settle
    the issue.  States are moving to expand access
    to Plan B, the pill that can prevent pregnancy if taken soon after unprotected sex, amid
    some competing efforts to restrict it. | 
| Mockery of
    Katherine Harris Shows Double Standard.  [United
    States] When women reach middle
    age and finally have a crack at power and influence, they are struck by the pervasive
    double standard of aging: Men can look like unmade beds and gain in gravitas while women
    are judged ruthlessly on their looks and often silenced. | 
| O'Connor's Legacy: Landmark
    Decisions.  [United States] Justice Sandra
    Day O'Connor's moderate judicial perspective made her vote critical in the most
    significant cases of her era -- from abortion rights to affirmative action. Although Republican of a conservative political
    background and appointed by President Ronald Reagan, she often supported the rights of
    women and minorities. | 
| U.S. Teens Snap
    Up Japanese Comics.  [United States] Sales of male-oriented comics have stagnated
    in the United States.  An exception is the
    hot-selling Japanese import called "manga."  This
    month a new manga series was offered to female readers, who are fueling strong growth of
    the category. | 
| Catholic
    Women Unofficially Ordained.  [Canada] Nine
    women are referring to themselves as ordained priests and deacons in the Roman Catholic
    Church, risking excommunication after a secret religious ceremony on a boat in the St.
    Lawrence River.  The women -- eight Americans
    and a Canadian, 65-year-old Michele Birch-Conery, a former nun from Vancouver Island --
    were unofficially ordained Monday aboard a tour boat in the Thousand Islands near
    Gananoque, Ont. |