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hsii Turnout Low in One-Candidate Runoff in Zimbabwe
Lfkr Pres. Bush Addresses Nation on Iraq, War on Terrorism
BOISE, Idaho AP 鈥?A regional Planned Parenthood organization is suing Idaho over a new law that bans nearly all abortions by allowing potential family members of the embryo to sue abortion providers.The law, which is based on a similar one that Texas enacted last year, was signed by Idaho Gov. Brad Little last week. At the time, the governor said he supported the anti-abortion policy but was worried the enforcement mechanism of the law would soon be proven both unconstitutional and unwise. Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaii, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, which operates 40 health centers across six states, filed the lawsuit with the Idaho Supreme Court on Wednesday.Dr. Caitlin Gustaf stanley cup son, a family medicine doctor who has practiced in Idaho for nearly two decades, joined Planned Parenthood in the lawsuit. She said the abortion ban is unconscionable and unconstitutional. Life is hard. It me stanley cup ssy and decisions about pregnancy are complicated and need to be made between a patient and their doctor without stanley cup influence and direction from the government, Gustafson said. These situations are as complex and varied as all of us 8230; I believe our elected officials shouldn ;t be involved in making these intimate and personal medical decisions. READ MORE: California governor signs law that makes abortions cheaperUnder the law, even extended family members like aunts and uncles of the patient seeking the abortion or the person who impregnated them could sue an a Lorv Pew Poll: Republicans Have 13-Point Edge Among Independents
It was just after sunset on a fall evening in Brooklyn, and Matt Gallagher was mulling a breaking and entering.The 31-year-old writing instructor and former Army cavalry officer was to lead a class in ten minutes, but the library where he normally taught had been accidentally shuttered for the night.Moments later, Gallagher was on the shoulders of Marine Corps vet Matt DuPre, struggling through a window left ajar. These military guys! said comic book artist Jess Ruliffson, smiling and shaking her head from the ground below.Video by Elisabeth Ponsot and Ariel Ritchin.Successfully indoors, students claimed spots salomon on well-worn couches and folding chairs to discuss a selection of World War II writings.Gallaghers weekly workshop is held by Words After War, a stanley cup literary nonprofit that brings together veterans and civilians for writing instruction in an effort to bridge the gap between the two increasingly separate groups.In the decade following the Sept. 11 attacks, only about .5 percent of the American population serves in the military, compared to more than 12 percent during World War II.While the statistical difference is significant, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Columbia University Allan Silver said the comparison to World War II does not give a full picture of the contemporary divide. Now what you have is a s stanley cup teady flow of veterans in and out, he said. Theres no definitive end, no definitive victory in the old sense. Looking ahead and looking behind, the whole |
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