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Menna Barlow Morrison, 22, lives at Rockland Ranch, Utah, USA, with her husband Abel Morrison, 42, his three other wives and their 15 children.
Menna, a mail carrier originally from Arizona, grew up in a polygamist family with three wives and 40 children, and started a relationship with Abel when she was just 18 years old.
The pair – who share a son, Oliver, born in April 2022 – met through their religious community and married a year and a half later.
The family came to fame in the documentary ‘Three Wives, One Husband’ which aired on Channel 4, TLC, and Netflix. However, it did not feature Menna because she and Abel were not yet married.
Rockland Ranch is a fundamentalist Mormon community that was founded in 1977 to allow its members to practise their religion – which includes polygamous marriage – freely.
Mormon Fundamentalism is an off-branch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS), but encompasses principles and practises that are no longer held by the LDS church.
One of the main tenets of Fundamentalist Mormon belief is that plural marriage will help them to reach the highest level of Heaven.
Menna says she has faced many challenges in her marriage, most notably having to share her husband with three other women.
In addition to this, she has also faced much criticism from others who have called her ‘stupid’ and ‘brainwashed.’
And although she wouldn’t change her family for the world, Menna acknowledges a plural marriage is not easy.
‘The greatest challenge is the most obvious which is sharing your husband,’ she explained. ‘It’s hard to know that you’re not the only woman in his life.
Menna continued: ‘I’d say my biggest struggle, more specifically, is that he’s my best friend and I can’t just hang out with him all the time or whenever I want. I have to wait my turn to have his company and attention.
‘I’ve obviously never experienced losing time as other wives have, but I can only imagine. I often sit there and think about how they lost time with their spouse each time he got married again, and how that would be very difficult to go through.’
Despite this, Menna finds great joy in her marriage.
‘Life would definitely be easier with no sister-wives, but I know that this is what Heavenly Father requires,’ she said.
‘Without plural marriage, I wouldn’t have my baby boy Oliver. And I never could’ve married Abel, who has been a huge blessing to me. He does an excellent job of caring for his family.’
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Menna wants to rid people of some of the preconceived held about polyamorous marriages.
She said: ‘Some think we’re forced into this way of living which is not true. No one in our circles is forced into plural marriage.
‘I wish more people understood that we choose to live this way, and we are happy. We try and overcome our humanly struggles, learn to share, and have many children.
‘Every plural marriage in our public fundamentalist circles is consensual.’
The mum has also lost friends because of her choice to live in plural marriage.
Menna said: ‘I have some friends that don’t approve and it’s made things awkward. I’ve noticed that my relationships with those people are pretty much broken.
‘I still have a few relationships with family and friends who believe differently and are still extremely supportive of the way I live because they’re huge advocates of personal choice and free will.’
Through sharing her experiences on TikTok, however, she’s found a 13,000-strong support group among her followers.
‘Up to now, I’ve been private about things,’ Menna added.
‘I’ve been contacted before about interviews and such because I’m Abel Morrison’s fourth wife, but I turned them down.
‘But as I thought about it, I realised that my husband is one Google search away and that is not private at all.’
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Allegheny Township police arrest man on sex charge after investigating ChildLine report
Tony LaRussa


Friday, Nov. 18, 2022 1:15 p.m.
| Friday, Nov. 18, 2022 1:15 p.m.

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Allegheny Township police charged a man from Lawrence County with having an inappropriate sexual relationship with an underage girl they say gave birth to his child.
Elijah James Sowerby, 19, of Riverview Avenue in New Castle faces a felony sex charge along with a count of corruption of a minor.
He was released from custody after posting a $50,000 unsecured bond and faces a preliminary hearing Tuesday before District Judge Cheryl Peck Yakopec, Nov. 22, according to court records.
Police began investigating Sowerby in early July after receiving a state ChildLine report and interviewing the parents of a 17-year-old who gave birth to the child, according to a criminal complaint.
The parents told police their daughter informed them that the baby was fathered by a juvenile male, but they suspected she was not being truthful and obtained a DNA test that ruled out the person she named, the complaint said.
The girl told police during a July 22 interview she refused previous sexual advances made by Sowerby, the complaint said.
The girl said she had unprotected intercourse with Sowerby one time in October 2021, according to the complaint.
Sowerby told police during questioning that he and the girl were “close,” but he denied having sex with her, the complaint said.
A DNA test on the girl, the baby and Sowerby, conducted in September by the Westmoreland County Domestic Relations Office, determined the probability he is the child’s father is more than 99.99%, the complaint said.
Tony LaRussa is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Tony by email at tlarussa@triblive.com or via Twitter .
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The World Cup is equal parts sporting event and international celebration — and for many fans, alcohol plays a large role. That's been true in stadiums, and in bars that open early or stay open late to show games.

But the 2022 World Cup in Qatar is unlike any before it. Just two days before the tournament's first match in the Muslim nation, officials made the surprise announcement that fans won't be allowed to drink beer at the country's eight World Cup stadiums — a reversal of a previously announced policy.

Alcohol is tightly regulated in Qatar, where customs agents are under orders to seize any booze visitors try to bring into the country.

It's one of many cultural clashes and potential legal issues that fans might encounter in Qatar, particularly if they're traveling from more open societies. Here's a quick guide:

For a sign of how dramatic the shift in Qatar is, consider that FIFA successfully pressured Brazil to change its federal laws to allow alcohol sales in its stadiums before it hosted the 2014 World Cup — overturning a ban that had been enacted due to violence at its stadiums.

"Alcoholic drinks are part of the FIFA World Cup, so we're going to have them," then-FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke said back in 2012 . "Excuse me if I sound a bit arrogant but that's something we won't negotiate."

But that was then. In Qatar, regular fans won't have access to alcohol at matches. Only spectators in the stadiums' high-end luxury suites will have easy access to booze. Outside of the stadiums, fans can still drink at special World Cup gathering spaces, or at specially licensed restaurants, bars, and hotels around the country.

In general, the public consumption of alcohol is illegal in Qatar — an offense that can bring up to six months in prison and a fine of more than $800, according to the Library of Congress . Anyone smuggling alcohol into the country can face up to three years in prison, the agency said.

Islam is the official religion of Qatar — and anyone found to be proselytizing for other religions or criticizing Islam "may be criminally prosecuted," the State Department said, in a factsheet about Qatar for World Cup visitors.

It's also not safe to assume you can practice your faith openly: "Qatar allows some non-Muslim religious practice in designated areas like Doha's Religious Complex , but all faiths are not accommodated equally," the U.S. agency said.

In addition to import restrictions on alcohol and pornography, "travelers cannot bring pork products" into the country, the State Department said in a video about Qatar's laws.

Speech that's deemed critical of the Qatari government could trigger an arrest. Those laws apply both to spoken words and social media.

And while past World Cups have brought a heaping of argy-bargy — scenes of rival crowds yelling or even singing obscenities at one another — open conflicts can bring big problems in Qatar.

"For example, arguing with or insulting others in public could lead to arrest," the State Department advisory video stated.

"Homosexuality is criminalized in Qatar," the State Department notes.

"Advocates say that LGBTQ people in Qatar are subjected to conversion therapy, harassment by authorities and imprisonment," as NPR's Becky Sullivan says in her rundown of controversies surrounding the host country.

Such reports have fueled outrage, and authorities will be under scrutiny for how they handle LGBTQ fans and symbols.

Visitors to Qatar can also face harsh punishments for "indecent acts and the act of sexual intercourse outside of marriage," the Library of Congress noted, citing Qatari law.

Recriminations range from a fine or six months' imprisonment for anyone found to have committed "immoral" actions or gestures in public to up to seven years in prison for someone having sex outside of marriage. Public debauchery can also carry a sentence up to three years in prison, according to the Library of Congress.

If a pregnant fan goes to Qatar for the World Cup, they should be prepared to show a marriage certificate if they need prenatal care there, the State Department said.

Qatar's oppressive heat forced the tournament to move from the summer to November and December — but fans who find it hot there should limit how much skin they show.

Dress codes in many public areas require that "both men and women cover shoulders, chests, stomachs, and knees, and that tight leggings be covered by a long shirt or dress," the State Department said.

As with alcohol, clothing standards often shift according to the degree a neighborhood or venue caters to foreigners.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Alice Oseman. Photograph: Rebecca Gannon
Heartstopper review – possibly the loveliest show on TV
Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning
© 2022 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (modern)
The writer and illustrator on turning her ‘weird hobby’ into a bestselling YA series and Netflix hit, the importance of asexual representation and lessons from her fans on love bites
A t 28, the author and illustrator Alice Oseman recently achieved what so many of her peers cannot: she bought a flat. But instead of giving up Netflix so she could save for a deposit , as Kirstie Allsopp notoriously recommended, she sold the streaming service the rights to her gay romance comic book series.
The series in question is of course Heartstopper, the web comic turned graphic novel turned Netflix show that this paper’s reviewer described as “completely lovely” when it aired earlier this year. The boy-meets-boy tale, set in a British secondary school, sees rugby captain Nick and socially awkward Charlie navigate friendships, bullying, coming out – and falling in love. It’s not hard to see why the TV adaptation won over teenagers and adults alike, with its lovable characters, quirky nods to its comic book origins – for example, tiny animations of hand-drawn flowers form a circle round the actors when Nick and Charlie share their first kiss – and an injection of starriness in the shape of Olivia Colman (Nick’s mum) and Stephen Fry (headmaster Barnes). The show’s success resulted in a huge increase in book sales for Oseman: the Heartstopper series has now sold more than 6m copies worldwide. Volume One recently won the Books Are My Bag readers’ choice award and is a contender for the 2022 Waterstones book of the year.
Oseman, who is also the author of four prose novels for young adults, knows her experience in the publishing world has been a rare one. “Very few creators achieve this level of success, and I’m very aware of that. I feel really lucky and grateful to be in this position.”
She may put it down to luck, but there is a quiet determination in the way the writer talks about her work. At just 18, she made headlines after bagging a six-figure deal for her first book, Solitaire, which tells the story of 16-year-old Tori Spring, a sardonic introvert who is reluctantly persuaded by her new friend Michael to help discover the identity of a hacker who is disrupting the school computer network. What motivated her to send out her writing to publishers at such a young age? “I thought it was good,” she says simply.
Clearly she wasn’t the only one – publishing houses tussled for the novel, which HarperCollins bought after a bidding war. The announcement was made during Oseman’s freshers’ week at Durham University, when commissioning editor Elizabeth Clifford called the novel “the perfect story for the Instagram Tumblr generation”. From Solitaire grew Heartstopper: Nick and Charlie, who are 16 and 15 at the start of the comic, began as supporting characters in the novel, which is set roughly a year after the pair began their relationship. Oseman had always loved them as characters, and “knew that they had some kind of backstory”. Initially, she wanted to tell that story in another novel, but “just couldn’t get it to work”.
“Nick and Charlie’s story didn’t have that beginning, middle and end structure that you have in a novel,” she says. The episodic nature of the web comic format allowed her to zoom in on specific periods in the teenagers’ lives without the need for an overarching narrative.
Oseman grew up in Rochester, Kent, with a dance teacher mother and a father who works for an electronics company. She “hated” the local grammar school that she attended, always wanting “to be at home writing stories and doing creative things”. She started working on Heartstopper during the final year of her English degree (“I skipped a lot of lectures”), at which point drawing the comic strip felt like “a very weird hobby”, rather than something that could actually be lucrative. The first instalment went live the September after she graduated, and a dedicated group of readers began to grow.
It is arguably the writer’s first-hand knowledge of how fandoms and online communities operate that has been the key to Heartstopper’s success. From the very start of the web comic, Oseman engaged directly with her fans, responding to their comments and fan art online. Due to the sheer number of messages, she can no longer reply to all her readers, but her latest book, The Heartstopper Yearbook, is evidence that she still wants to cultivate that fandom. The yearbook, “a cross between an annual and an art book”, is aimed at the comic and TV show’s fans, complete with quizzes, drawing guides, and behind-the-scenes information about the characters.
Oseman understands this world because
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