Word: donor
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION. This is the oldest and by far the most common of the techniques prohibited. The Instruction not only opposes the introduction into a womb of sperm from a "third party" donor other than the husband but rejects the use of a husband's sperm. The first condemnation of artificial insemination came in a 1949 speech by Pope Pius XII, but the teaching has been ignored by many Catholic couples and disputed by some theologians...
...there is anyone out there who still imagines that modernism is not the official culture of our day, not the secular religion of the U.S., this project will dispel those last illusions. The wing, named for the late co- founder of the Reader's Digest, who was the largest donor, cost $26 million to build and will require an additional $2 million a year for operating expenses. One does not go spending such amounts on the marginal and the controversial -- on what modernism used to be when the chairman of the Met's 20th century department, William S. Lieberman...
...distinguished from statutes in all 50 states against baby selling. Further, in the 29 states that have laws covering artificial insemination, the consenting husband of a woman who is artificially inseminated is deemed the legal father. The opposite is proposed under potential surrogacy legislation in which the semen donor is considered the father...
Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer did not merely rise to this challenge. The new wing, named for its principal donor, Robert O. Anderson, former chairman of the board and CEO of Arco, has obliterated the old museum like the giant foot in Monty Python. What was once the museum's forecourt is now filled with a stepped facade some 300 feet long and, at its highest, 100 feet tall: a blind screen of yellow limestone, horizontal bands of green ceramic and patches of glass block, with a gargantuan rectangular entrance portal. The architects have so overdone their contextual homage to Hollywood Deco...
...violations could cost S.M.U. the first-ever "death < penalty" of two years' banishment from intercollegiate football -- and $3.2 million in annual revenues the school normally earns from the sport. But winking at regulations is so endemic to big-time football that when the news broke, Dallas Developer (and alleged donor of the free apartment) George Owen, already permanently banned from recruiting by S.M.U. for previous violations, offered a classic rationale: "I don't know why they're making such a big deal of this," he said. "Everyone bends the rules a little...