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Word: clinics (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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...first sign of coming events was modest. On a lot across from the Aware Woman Center for Choice, which performs abortions, two portable toilets sprouted. They were put there by Operation Rescue, the militant pro-life organization that had bought the property in part to demonstrate near the clinic without violating a court-ordered buffer zone. Soon, locals knew, video cameras would appear -- toted by nearly every actor in the coming passion play: pro-lifers and pro-choicers taping each other, police taping both and TV-news teams taping everybody. "There's probably more money spent on camera equipment than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abortion: In Your Town, in Your Face | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

...Fort Worth; San Jose, California; Jackson, Mississippi; and the area around Melbourne. Among its goals, explained spokeswoman Wendy Wright, is to ensure that "anyone in the continental United States ((is)) within a day's drive of a rescue." To pro- choicers, the implication is chilling: the transformation of abortion- clinic picketing from an activity for incensed locals and traveling zealots into a sort of vacation experience -- one that could turn every major city into a potential Melbourne...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abortion: In Your Town, in Your Face | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

Founded by Randall Terry in 1987, Operation Rescue sprang to prominence with a 46-day clinic blockade in 1991 that nearly paralyzed Wichita, Kansas. This year the organization has intensified its harder-edged tactics aimed at clinic employees: wanted posters of doctors, picket lines around their homes, and harassment of their children and neighbors. After one such target, physician David Gunn, was shot to death in March by a man connected with an unrelated but similar organization, "the pro-life movement was on the ropes a little bit," admits Operation Rescue's national spokesman, Patrick Mahoney. Nonetheless, Rescue continued...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abortion: In Your Town, in Your Face | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

Meanwhile, the opposition has been honing its defenses. The Fund for the Feminist Majority has assembled 4,000 volunteers for counterdemonstrations. In Philadelphia a local coalition says it can field 500 at once to defend local clinics. Sympathetic restaurants have offered to fuel them with free snacks. The St. Paul police force, which one lawman describes as "massively" prepared, surrounded a clinic with an 8-ft.-high chain-link fence, while the cops in a Cleveland suburb made do with barrels, sandbags and 40 officers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abortion: In Your Town, in Your Face | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

...defenders also found legal weapons. Although a federal clinic-access bill is still in committee in the House and awaits floor action in the Senate, most of the sites have recourse to local laws, like those in Minnesota against blocking a clinic entrance and "stalking" doctors and nurses, or San Jose's 8-ft. legal privacy "bubble" around clinic clients. Local officials have been heard from. Declared Philadelphia Mayor Edward Rendell: "I want to say clearly and unequivocally to Operation Rescue that lawlessness will not be permitted in this city...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abortion: In Your Town, in Your Face | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

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