In 2001 the group was again reorganized by a group including Dr. Jerome Campher (South Africa), Dr. Frank Repper, Dr. Bernie L. Wade, Dr. Aniefiok Simonson (Nigeria), Bishop Harold McFarlane and others.
Roe v. Wade | Bernie Ecclestone | Bernie Taupin | Bernie Sanders | Abdoulaye Wade | Wade Hampton III | The Bernie Mac Show | Dwyane Wade | Weekend at Bernie's | Wade Dooley | Bernie Worrell | Bernie Geoffrion | Henry Wade | George Wade | Bernie Wrightson | Bernie Mac | Bernie Kosar | Wade Hayes | Wade Boggs | Nicholas Wade | Laura Wade | Charles Wade | Bernie Parent | Bernie LaBarge | Wade Phillips | Wade in the Water | Wade Guyton | Wade Davis | Wade | Kenneth Wade |
Smith also used her position to actively oppose the recruitment of women into the United States military and the spread of abortion, which had been legalized in the United States in 1973.
Baruch A. Brody (born 1943) is an American bioethicist who was among the first scholars in the field of applied ethics to write about abortion in the era following Roe v. Wade.
In 2000, following the amalgamation of the City of Hamilton with neighbouring towns, Morrow lost the election to Ancaster mayor Robert E. Wade.
He is also the author of Liberty and Sexuality, a history of the legal struggles over reproductive rights in the U.S. prior to the Roe v. Wade decision.
Doc Frankenstein has since been involved in world history (flashbacks show him as a gunslinger in the Wild West, a soldier in World War II, a supporter of the teaching of evolution in 1925's Scopes Trial, and a supporter of Roe v. Wade in 1972).
Jones attracted attention for her opinion in the case of McCorvey v. Hill, which was a request by the Ms. McCorvey, the 'Jane Roe' of Roe v. Wade to vacate the finding of that case.
One noteworthy Nightly News broadcast Utley appeared on aired on January 22, 1973, the day the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its momentous Roe v. Wade decision.
The case worked its way through the appellate process, culminating in the Supreme Court's landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision which made abortion legal in the United States.
Upon completion of flying training, he was assigned to the 11th Bombardment Squadron, 7th Bombardment Group, Hamilton Field, California, and in December 1941, was deployed with this unit to the Southwest Pacific.
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After completing high school in Wortham, Texas, he returned to Arkansas, and graduated from the Magnolia Agricultural and Mechanical Junior College in 1936.
The cardinal also attributed America's decline to Supreme Court decisions such as the 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade, which imposed "permissive abortion laws nationwide."
Another set of names often used for anonymous parties, particularly plaintiffs, are Richard Roe for males and Jane Roe for females (as in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court abortion decision Roe v. Wade).
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The landmark 1973 United States Supreme Court abortion case Roe v. Wade gets half of its name from Jane Roe, an anonymous plaintiff later revealed to be named Norma McCorvey.
Originally, the character was to have been aborted (in what was the first abortion on television after the Roe v. Wade decision).
Kevin Lynn Wade, (b: 1951, Reading, Pennsylvania, USA) was the 2012 nominee of the Delaware State Republican Committee for the United States Senate.
In May 1982, California Attorney General George Deukmejian stated the gestation limit of the 1967 California abortion law was considered unenforceable because of conflicts with the 23-week Roe v. Wade ruling in 1973, but fetuses could be individually examined to determine viability, which was the legal limit.
He returned to his estate in Avondale to engage in work as a fruit farmer and to pursue other horticultural interests with his oldest son, Melancthon Armstrong Wade.
Foster appointed another Tensas Parish legislator, Thomas M. Wade of Newellton to the state board of education; Wade was later the long-term Tensas Parish school superintendent.
American fighter pilot Lance C. Wade, one of the leading Allied Aces in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations (MTO), was a Flight Commander and Squadron Leader of No. 145 Squadron.
Bob Wade entered the new city of Hamilton's mayoralty race and was not expected to win, as the incumbent Bob Morrow had been Hamilton's longest serving mayor and had a strong electoral base.
Roe v. Wade, a landmark decision by the United States Supreme Court on the issue of abortion
Sarah Ragle Weddington (born February 5, 1945), is an American attorney, law professor, and former Texas state legislator best known for representing "Jane Roe" (real name Norma McCorvey) in the landmark Roe v. Wade case before the United States Supreme Court.
Steven C. Wade (born 1983) is a Massively Multi-player Online Game/MMORPG veteran who has created and introduced several online computer games to the western markets, including: A Tale in the Desert Series from eGenesis, Last Chaos from Aeria Games, and most recently, Dragon Oath from the NASDAQ listed Changyou.com Ltd.
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He is also the founder of MMOsmart, supporting games for many internationally known brands and companies, including Disney and Warner Bros.
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In April 2009, Wade's second Company Zyon Games Inc was Aqui-hired by the NASDAQ listed Changyou.com for the development of their Western Game portal.
Until 2006, the base of operations for American Collegians for Life (ACL) remained in Washington, D.C. with a new set of student officers being elected every year at the annual conference, the conference being held on the eve of the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision.
Two years before the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Roe v. Wade she wrote two multipart series on the campaign for the passage of abortion reform in Washington state.
School board members from the early years included George Henry Clinton, John Newell, J. H. Netterville, and Thomas M. Wade.
Urban historian Richard C. Wade challenged the Frontier Thesis in his first asset, The Urban Frontier (1959), asserting that western cities such as Pittsburgh, Louisville, and Cincinnati, not the farmer pioneers, were the catalysts for western expansion.
William H. Wade (1835–1911), American politician, U.S. Representative from Missouri