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  1. Feb 18, 2007 · The chapter “The Black Stork,” for example, hardly mentions research at all. Instead, Washington condemns the distribution of contraceptives to young black women by Planned Parenthood and ...

  2. Mar 8, 2013 · One of the most infamous movies of the silent era, which made a case for allowing disabled infants to die, sparked a national debate between 1917 and the late 1920s before sinking into obscurity. Along the way, The Black Stork rocketed a physician to fame and symbolized America’s conflicted attitude toward eugenics and the value of human life.

  3. Mar 30, 2024 · Thirteen years ago, a poor fisherman in a small Turkish village was retrieving his net from a lake when he heard a noise behind him and turned to find a majestic being standing on the bow of his...

  4. Book Review The Black Stork: Eugenics and the Death of “Defective” Babies in American Medicine and Motion Pictures Since 1915. By Martin S. Pernick. Oxford University Press, New York, 295 pp. Published: October 1998; Volume 7, pages 441–442, (1998) Cite this article

    • Elizabeth Gettig
    • 1998
  5. Jun 9, 2022 · This week we bring you a beach bag’s worth of recommended titles, from Ada Limón’s smart new poetry collection to Candice Millard’s riveting true adventure tale about the 19th-century ...

  6. Apr 22, 2007 · Black Monday in 1987, when Wall Street suffered its worst single-day decline in modern history — in a drop that started for no clear reason — was his epiphany.

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