May 25, 2010
When Alexander the Great to set foot on the west coast of Egypt in 332 BC, he was stunned by the beauty of nature. “Here is my dream city would be built”, he said. Alexandria,a city, then became the capital of Egypt for nearly 1000 years. It is inhabited not only by the Egyptians but also those who live around the Mediterranean Sea such as Turkey, Italy, and Greece, Alexandria – along with Athens in Greece and in Syria-Anthiocia growing rapidly become the intellectual center of Alexandrian Empire that stretched from India to Egypt.
Unlike the City of Thousand Mosques in Cairo or Luxor, the Ancient Egyptian city Pharonic period, Alexandria was almost entirely the character of the West. Naturally some people call it a European city stranded in Egypt. Its location is near the coast, air cool, clean and orderly to make Alexandria a favorite summer vacation spot.
Among the heritage that are still Hellenic, today we can still find the world’s first legendary library, Bibliotheca Alexandrina.
Aristrophanes manuscripts in the library Calligio Romano Rome, tells how the Egyptian library was built in 300 years BC. (more…)
April 10, 2010
Recent research shows that comprehensive sex education can reduce the possibility of teenage pregnancy, and there is no indication that it is raising the level of sexual activity or sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
“It’s not harmful to teach teens about birth control, in addition to the rejection of sex.” said Pamela Kohler, program manager at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Parents and educators have long argued, whether the student should get a teaching birth control, or are easy to just say no to free sex.
Kohler and colleagues studied the results of a national survey of the United States in 2002 and focused on heterosexual teen ages 15 to 19 years. These findings, based on responses from 1719 adolescents, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
After reviewing the results, researchers found that one in four teens received sex education course denial. Nine per cent, mainly in poor and rural areas, did not receive sex education at all. Two-thirds of the remainder receives comprehensive instruction, with discussion of birth control and rejection of the relationship. Teens that received comprehensive sex education has 60 percent less likely to get pregnant, compared to that received no sex education at all. (more…)
