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CREATED:20051001T215200Z
DESCRIPTION:Rosie J. Day Event  Speak out against the Hyde Amendment!!!   In 1977, 
 Congress passed the Hyde Amendment that restricted the use of federal funds 
 to women seeking abortions.  On October 3, 1977, Rosie Jimenez was the Hyde 
 Amendment's first known fatality.  On the anniversary of her death, 
 feminists demand that the federal government repeal the loathsome Hyde 
 Amendment. Rosie Jimenez, who represents countless other poor women and 
 women of color, will not be forgotten.  Like other women in 17 states who 
 depend on federal assistance, Ms. Jimenez was unable to obtain a safe, 
 legal abortion.  To receive health care she would have had to carry the 
 baby to term.  She died of a botched abortion on this day, 28 years ago in 
 the state of Texas.  Women who serve in the military face the same unjust 
 treatment since their health care does not cover abortions and they must 
 pay for these from their own pockets.  This policy puts poor women at far 
 greater peril than women of means.  It could be changed easily by 
 legislators championing the needs of women, especially poor women and women 
 in the military.  But neither the Democrats [when in control of the House 
 and Senate] nor the Republicans have shown the initiative of speaking up 
 for the equal rights of women across this country.  In short, our 
 government, in defiance of widespread public opinion supporting a woman's 
 right to choose, effectively denies this choice to many women.  We continue 
 to battle on many fronts-John Roberts is the new Chief Justi  ce of the US 
 Supreme Court, Proposition 73, the "Parental Notification" measure is on 
 the November ballot to try and limit a young woman's access to abortion, 
 and the government shows no signs of ending the war in Iraq.  By building a 
 movement which connects the source of these attacks, we can win 
 reproductive justice for all women.  Come to a speak-out on Monday, October 
 3, 2005 at 12:30 p.m. in front of the Women's Choice Clinic, 570 14th 
 Street, Oakland, (across the street from the Federal Building).   Endorsed 
 by BACORR, Radical Women, and the Socialist Party USA    
 **********************  ************************************************  
 In Remembrance: Women Who Died from Illegal and Unsafe Abortions  The seven 
 women below are just a small representation of the countless women who have 
 died because they did not have access to safe and legal abortions. Most of 
 these women died before Roe v. Wade offered them a safe alternative. 
 However, women continue to die and suffer injury due to current 
 restrictions that particularly affect young women and poor women.  Our 
 government is now controlled by conservative leaders who are extremely 
 hostile to women's reproductive rights. If more restrictions on abortion 
 are enacted, and especially if Roe v. Wade is overturned, this list of 
 lives cut short could grow to include our daughters, sisters, mothers, best 
 friends, wives, partners, granddaughters and other special women and 
 girls...  Clara Bell Duvall  Clara Bell Duvall  Dec. 23, 1896 - March 27, 
 1929  Clara Duvall, her husband and five children (ages 6 months to 12 
 years) were living in Pittsburgh, Pa., with her parents due to limited 
 financial resources when she learned she was pregnant again. Clara 
 attempted a self-abortion with a knitting needle. Her doctor, knowing she 
 was seriously ill and in severe pain, delayed sending her to a hospital for 
 several weeks. The Catholic hospital where she died chose to list the cause 
 of death as "pneumonia."  Ruth Irene Friedl  Aug. 24, 1901 - Aug. 21, 1929  
 Denied a legal abortion though her pregnancy was diagnosed as 
 life-threatening, Ruth Friedl attempted to self-abort by drinking a plant 
 poison, ergot apiol. That night at the dinner table of their home in 
 Denver, Colo., with her husband and two small children present, she 
 collapsed and died.  Pauline Roberson Shirley  Pauline Roberson Shirley  
 June 22, 1910 - August 22, 1940  Pauline Shirley and her six children were 
 living with her mother in Arizona while her husband sought work in 
 California. After an illegal abortion, she began to hemorrhage and was 
 hospitalized. She needed massive transfusions. While Pauline's mother 
 searched the community for donors, Pauline bled to death.  Vivian Campbell  
 December 12, 1925 - May 6, 1950  Vivian Campbell was the mother of two 
 children ages five and three. She was newly separated from her husband when 
 she realized she was pregnant. Sending her children to stay with her 
 parents, she sought and obtained an illegal abortion. She sent for her 
 husband, but by the time he arrived at the hospital it was too late. She 
 died in agony of peritonitis.  Geraldine Santoro  August 16, 1935 - June 8, 
 1964  The photo of Geraldine Santoro dead on a hotel room floor has become 
 a symbol for the horror of illegal abortion. Gerri, as she was known, lived 
 on her family farm in Coventry, Conn., with her two daughters. At the age 
 of 28, separated from her abusive husband, she became pregnant by another 
 man, Clyde Dixon. Afraid that her husband would kill her if he found out, 
 she and Dixon looked for ways to terminate her pregnancy. With no other 
 options, they attempted to perform the procedure themselves. When the 
 operation went awry, Dixon fled, leaving Santoro behind where she bled to 
 death. A chambermaid found her body the next morning.  Rosie Jimenez  Rosie 
 Jimenez  1950 - Oct. 3, 1977  A single mother with a 5-year-old daughter, 
 Rosie Jimenez of McAllen, Texas, was a scholarship student six months away 
 from her teaching credential. She was the first known victim of the Hyde 
 Amendment, which cut off Medicaid funding for abortion to women on public 
 assistance-women who by the government's own definition cannot afford 
 health care. Too poor to pay for the procedure at a private clinic, she 
 died in agony from a botched illegal abortion.  Becky Bell  Becky Bell  
 August 24, 1971 - Sept. 16, 1988  At 17, Becky became a victim of an 
 Indiana state law requiring parental consent for a minor to obtain an 
 abortion. Unable to bring herself to disappoint her parents by telling them 
 she was pregnant-or go before a judge to bypass the law-Becky sought an 
 illegal abortion. When she became seriously ill, her parents rushed her to 
 the hospital. In severe pain from a massive infection, Becky still could 
 not tell them, and despite the efforts of the doctors, she died.  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/10/01/77063.php
SUMMARY:Feminist Speak Out
LOCATION:Women's Choice Health Clinic   570 14th Street, Oakland  (across from 
 Federal Building)
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/10/01/77063.php
DTSTART:20051003T193000Z
DTEND:20051003T203000Z
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