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Carolyn Hax: Debating couple’s counseling to save a relationship

Tell Me About It: Counseling for troubled couples can be worthwhile, if . . .

Carolyn Hax: Husband hurts a decade after wife’s affair

Statistics show binge drinking higher in Michigan than national average

Taking More Seats on Campus, Foreigners Also Pay the Freight

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Carolyn Hax: Debating couple’s counseling to save a relationship

Adapted from a recent online discussion . Dear Carolyn: How do you know when a relationship has become too much work? My boyfriend of three years wants to go to couple’s counseling, and while I am willing to try to work out our problems, I am not optimistic about a couple who have had problems for almost half the relationship and already need counseling. Read full article >>

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Tell Me About It: Counseling for troubled couples can be worthwhile, if . . .

Question: How do you know when a relationship has become too much work? My boyfriend of three years wants to go to couples counseling, and while I am willing to try to work out our problems, I am not optimistic about a couple that has had problems for almost half the relationship and already needs counseling.

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Carolyn Hax: Husband hurts a decade after wife’s affair

Dear Carolyn: Approximately 10 years ago, my wife had an affair with our daughter’s soccer coach. Of the nearly 7 billion people on the planet, she was adamant that she had found her “soul mate.” Not only has she never really apologized for the affair, but I also had to beg her not to leave, primarily to keep our two kids close to their friends and extended family, as we could not afford our ...

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Statistics show binge drinking higher in Michigan than national average

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Taking More Seats on Campus, Foreigners Also Pay the Freight

SEATTLE -- This is the University of Washington's new math: 18 percent of its freshmen come from abroad, most from China. Each pays tuition of $28,059, about three times as much as students from Washington State. And that, according to the dean of admissions, is how low-income Washingtonians -- more than a quarter of the class -- get a free ride.

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