Word: goldsmith
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...women to seek desperate, dangerous illegal abortions before the Supreme Court legalized abortion in 1973. Each year thousands of women, a disproportionate number of them poor and minority, were killed or mutilated by "back-alley" abortionists and self-induced abortions performed with coathangers and knitting needles. As Judy Goldsmith pointed out, those who lived before 1973 remember that the screams of women were not silent. Kim Ladin...
...lower federal courts, however, have kept right on ordering and approving goals and timetables. By and large, they have applied Stotts only to cases in which no discrimination has been proved, and the hiring of a minority leads to the displacement of a white male. Says Judy Goldsmith, president of the National Organization for Women: "The Memphis decision has had very little effect because it did not attack the philosophy of affirmative action." A few weeks after Stotts, for instance, a federal judge ordered the city of Detroit to rehire 1,000 (mostly black) police officers, many of whom...
...activists on both sides of the abortion controversy think Reagan's statements have created a momentum of their own. Said Ray Kranz, a South Dakota farmer who traveled to the march in Washington by bus: "Reagan has helped us out a lot. He's been an inspiration." Judy Goldsmith, president of the pro-choice National Organization for Women, expressed concern that "the President could send us back to the time when women risked their lives to be able to determine what happened with their bodies...
...abortion, had remained silent. FBI Director William Webster had claimed that the violence was not the result of a conspiracy and thus did not constitute a form of political terrorism that his agency could investigate. Pro-choice leaders contended that the federal silence was encouraging the violence. Asked Judy Goldsmith, president of the National Organization for Women: "Where is the great advocate of law-and- order?" Then came three bombings on Christmas Day in Pensacola, Fla., and one early New Year's morning in Washington, D.C. Goldsmith dashed off a telegram to the President, urging him to condemn "the terrorist...
...tendency to rely on too much direct quotation from Boswell's compendious papers, as opposed to paraphrasing or explicating it. To nitpick, one feels another shortcoming is the dearth of illustrations accompanying the text to enliven the famous names. Many prominently mentioned members of Boswell's circle, Goldsmith, Burke, Temple, and most egregiously Boswell's father, wife and children, are not included. Neither, of course, are paintings of London or Edinburgh...