Clash Between Bishop, Catholic Hospital That Authorized Abortion To Save Woman's Life Example Of Situation At Many U.S. Hospitals
February 7, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
Bishop Thomas Olmsted’s decision to revoke St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center’s Catholic status in December “is a bellwether of a profound disagreement that is playing out at many Catholic hospitals around the country,” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof writes. The loss of the hospital’s Catholic status is related to its authorization of an abortion to save a woman’s life…
Clash Between Bishop, Catholic Hospital That Authorized Abortion To Save Woman's Life Example Of Situation At Many U.S. Hospitals
January 29, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
Bishop Thomas Olmsted’s decision to revoke St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center’s Catholic status in December “is a bellwether of a profound disagreement that is playing out at many Catholic hospitals around the country,” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof writes. The loss of the hospital’s Catholic status is related to its authorization of an abortion to save a woman’s life…
Sex Trafficking In U.S. Should Be 'National Scandal,' New York Times' Kristof Writes
December 1, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Although “Americans tend to associate ‘modern slavery’ with illiterate girls in India or Cambodia,” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof writes that he recently interviewed a college graduate who emigrated from China and “says she spent three years terrorized by pimps in a brothel in Midtown Manhattan…
Misoprostol Has Potential For 'Gynecological Revolution' In Abortion Access, New York Times Columnist Writes
August 6, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Researchers are finding that the medication misoprostol is an alternative to surgical abortion “that is safe, cheap and very difficult for governments to restrict” and could save “tens of thousands of women’s lives … each year,” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof writes…
Despite Gains In Gender Equality, Labor Market Remains Unequal For Mothers, New York Times Columnist Writes
August 6, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
While the last three male Supreme Court nominees have all been married with children, the last three women nominated to the court — Justice Sonia Sotomayor and nominees Elena Kagan and Harriet Miers — “have all been single and without children,” which makes the court “a good symbol of the American job market,” New York Times columnist David Leonhardt writes…



















































