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July 03, 1992 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-07-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

abortion can be performed. In
addition, teens who seek abor-
tions must have consent of one
parent or a judge.
Supreme Court Justices
Sandra Day O'Connor, David
Souter and Anthony Kennedy
wrote the majority decision.
Joining in were Harry Black-
mun and John Paul Stevens.
Dissenters were Clarence
Thomas, Byron White, Wil-
liam Rehnquist and Antonin
Scalia.
Justices Blackmun and
Stevens wrote separate opin-
ions, saying the four provi-
sions in the Pennsylvania case
should have been ruled un-
constitutional. The four dis-
senters said they wanted this
case to overturn Roe.
One Orthodox Jewish
group, the Agudath Israel of
America, submitted a brief to
the Supreme Court indi cat-
4 ng that Roe vs. Wade should
be overturned.
David Zwiebel, general
council for the New York-

) The court also
upheld the
provision requiring
doctors to keep
records on each
abortion
performed.

based Agudath Israel, said the
court went out of its way to re-
embrace Roe. Mr. Zwiebel
says the "ruling has little ba-
sis as a practical matter and
has led to the undermining of
the value of fetal life."
In the Pennsylvania case,
Casey vs. Planned Parent-
hood, Inc., the court also up-
held the provision requiring
doctors to keep records on
each abortion performed, but
the justices did not agree that
married women must tell
their husbands about abortion
plans.
The Pennsylvania case es-
sentially threw the abortion
debate into the hands of state
legislators.
Guam, Louisiana and Utah
have passed laws restricting
abortion. Several states, in-
cluding Michigan, are expect-
ed to use this case to expedite
similar legislation.
Already pending in Lansing
is a bill that would require a
24-hour waiting period. It also
would require women to look
at photos of a fetus and hear
about alternatives to abortion.

Continued on Page 29

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

27

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