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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT2016>
<title>
July 19, 1993: In Your Town, In Your Face
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ABORTION, Page 29
In Your Town, In Your Face
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A radical pro-life group launches a summer assault, but its
tactics draw fire
</p>
<p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--With reporting by Marc Hequet/St. Paul, Julie Johnson/Washington,
Janice C. Simpson/New York and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
</p>
<p> In Melbourne, Florida, the first sign of coming events was
modest. On a lot across from the Aware Woman Center for Choice,
which performs abortions, two portable toilets sprouted. They
were put there by Operation Rescue, the militant pro-life organization
that had bought the property in part to demonstrate near the
clinic without violating a court-ordered buffer zone. Soon,
locals knew, video cameras would appear--toted by nearly every
actor in the coming passion play: pro-lifers and pro-choicers
taping each other, police taping both and TV-news teams taping
everybody. "There's probably more money spent on camera equipment
than anything else," joked Melbourne police captain Gary Allgeyer.
Then he turned serious: "We seem to be in the middle of it.
And it's a very uncomfortable position to be in."
</p>
<p> Starting last Friday, much of America was in the middle of it
as Operation Rescue kicked off a 10-day marathon titled "Cities
of Refuge." The campaign featured speeches, rallies and pickets
in seven urban areas: Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota; Cleveland,
Ohio; Philadelphia; Dallas-Fort Worth; San Jose, California;
Jackson, Mississippi; and the area around Melbourne. Among its
goals, explained spokeswoman Wendy Wright, is to ensure that
"anyone in the continental United States ((is)) within a day's
drive of a rescue." To pro-choicers, the implication is chilling:
the transformation of abortion-clinic picketing from an activity
for incensed locals and traveling zealots into a sort of vacation
experience--one that could turn every major city into a potential
Melbourne.
</p>
<p> Founded by Randall Terry in 1987, Operation Rescue sprang to
prominence with a 46-day clinic blockade in 1991 that nearly
paralyzed Wichita, Kansas. This year the organization has intensified
its harder-edged tactics aimed at clinic employees: wanted posters
of doctors, picket lines around their homes, and harassment
of their children and neighbors. After one such target, physician
David Gunn, was shot to death in March by a man connected with
an unrelated but similar organization, "the pro-life movement
was on the ropes a little bit," admits Operation Rescue's national
spokesman, Patrick Mahoney. Nonetheless, Rescue continued a
Melbourne "boot camp" that tutored recruits in everything from
sidewalk "counseling" to surveillance. Graduates are now aiding
the Refuge campaign in their hometowns, as Terry and other leaders
jet from city to city, exhorting the troops. "We must strive
to build a Christian democratic republic that is founded on
the Ten Commandments," he says in a preview. "The only alternative
is a pagan nation with rampant murder, rape, drug abuse, gang
warfare, etcetera."
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the opposition has been honing its defenses. The
Fund for the Feminist Majority has assembled 4,000 volunteers
for counterdemonstrations. In Philadelphia a local coalition
says it can field 500 at once to defend local clinics. Sympathetic
restaurants have offered to fuel them with free snacks. The
St. Paul police force, which one lawman describes as "massively"
prepared, surrounded a clinic with an 8-ft.-high chain-link
fence, while the cops in a Cleveland suburb made do with barrels,
sandbags and 40 officers.
</p>
<p> The defenders also found legal weapons. Although a federal clinic-access
bill is still in committee in the House and awaits floor action
in the Senate, most of the sites have recourse to local laws,
like those in Minnesota against blocking a clinic entrance and
"stalking" doctors and nurses, or San Jose's 8-ft. legal privacy
"bubble" around clinic clients. Local officials have been heard
from. Declared Philadelphia Mayor Edward Rendell: "I want to
say clearly and unequivocally to Operation Rescue that lawlessness
will not be permitted in this city."
</p>
<p> Rescue will be under tight scrutiny because pro-life radicals
stand accused of neglecting their quest's spiritual side and
turning to bravado and brutality. In Milwaukee, not a Refuge
city, one of the newer forms of protest is "speed-bumping"--throwing oneself under the cars of patients headed for clinics.
Local doctors have received death threats in person, and bullets
were fired through a clinic window last week. Declares pro-choicer
Joan Clark: "The blockaders are not from here. They're all from
somewhere else, and they're paid by the missionaries. They're
thugs, and they travel."
</p>
<p> Increasingly, those who once made common cause with Terry and
his group have been alienated. Bill Price, head of Texans United
for Life, is boycotting the current Dallas campaign, citing
incidents including a case in which a Rescue member allegedly
made a bomb threat to a Dallas clinic from a phone in New Jersey.
"These are the tactics of the Mafia," says Price. Earlier this
year, Twin Cities Catholic Archbishop John Roach urged militant
antiabortion groups to avoid his area. "I do not find Operation
Rescue to be a positive element in the pro-life movement," he
said, "and I just wish they'd stay wherever they are." Operation
Rescue ignored his plea. This week the group's challenge will
be to regain the confidence of its less radical fellow believers.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>