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March 19, 2013: Kansas state Rep. Tom Burroughs, left, consults with Rep.
Julie Menghini, of Pittsburg, during the House's debate on anti-abortion
legislation at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan.APTOPEKA, Kan. Kansas legislators
gave final passage to a sweeping anti-abortion measure Friday night, sending
Gov. Sam Brownback a bill that declares life begins "at fertilization" while
blocking tax breaks for abortion providers and banning abortions performed
solely because of the baby's sex.The House voted 90-30 for a compromise
version of the bill reconciling differences between the two chambers, only
hours after the Senate approved it, 28-10. The Republican governor is a
strong abortion opponent, and supporters of the measure expect him to sign
it into law so that the new restrictions take effect July 1.In
addition to the bans on tax breaks and sex-selection abortions, the bill
prohibits abortion providers from being involved in public school sex education
classes and spells out in more detail what information doctors must provide
to patients seeking abortions.The measure's language that life begins "at
fertilization" had some abortion-rights supporters worrying that it could
be used to legally harass providers. Abortion opponents call it a statement
of principle and not an outright ban on terminating pregnancies."The human
is a magnificent piece of work at all stages of development, wondrous
in every regard, from the microscopic until full de
ng at how to improve our
schools and access to our schools without looking at how the past
impacted the present," said Elaine Ng, executive director of the Boston
Chinatown Neighborhood Center, which hosted the story circle where Powell
described her visit back to her old school.As the daughter of Chinese
immigrants, Ng learned to speak English as a kindergarten student in a
Boston public school. But after her family moved from Chinatown to a
white neighborhood in 1976, students threw stones at her when she walked
to school. Ng said one of her frustrations is that people don't
recognize all the ripple effects busing had."It didn't matter whether or
not you were on a bus," she said. "Racial tensions in the
city were just really high."The uproar started in 1974, when a federal
judge imposed busing after a lawsuit claimed black students were getting
lower-quality education than children who attended mostly white schools.
Black students were bused to schools in white areas, and white students
went to black neighborhoods. The National Guard was called in amid demonstrations
and riots; school buses got police escorts.The unrest continued for years.
In 1976, a news photographer caught a white teenager attempting to spear
a black man with an American flag during a busing protest outside
City Hall. In 1979, 15-year-old black football player Darryl Williams was
left paralyzed by a white sniper's bullet during a high school game.Alexander
Lynn,
NEW YORK Police say a man bled to death outside a
Brooklyn restaurant after he fell on a broken bottle during an argument.The
incident happened at 4 a.m. Saturday in the borough's Flatbush section.Witnesses
tell police two men were involved in a dispute inside the eatery,
and then got into an altercation outside.When officers arrived on the scene,
they found one of the men bleeding from a cut on his
arm.The victim was in his 20s. He was taken to a hospital,
but doctors couldn't save him.News photographs of the scene showed investigators
retrieving a large knife from the street, but police said they believed
it was the glass, and not the blade, that delivered the fatal
wound.The slain man's identity wasn't immediately released.
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