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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ten of the top albums of the year, as chosen by Associated Press Music Writer Maria Sherman. Instead of embracing the antiquated practice of ranking very different albums against one another, we're celebrating the best next to the best. Leading the charge is Peso Pluma, whose third studio album, “Génesis,” became the highest-charting regional Mexican album of all time. “Hackney Diamonds,” The Rolling StonesPrior to “Hackney Diamonds,” the Rolling Stones hadn’t released an album of original material in 18 years. AP's Jocelyn Noveck put it best: This album is their best new work in decades — tight, focused, full of heart and swagger.
Persons: Maria Sherman, “ Barbie, , Carín León, , Pluma, Olivia Rodrigo, Rodrigo, , Joan Didion, ” Rodrigo, “ Lucky, Megan Moroney Let’s, Morgan Wallen’s “, Luke Combs, Tracy Chapman’s, Megan Moroney, Taylor Swift, Charlie Watts, Andrew Watt, Post Malone, Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, AP's Jocelyn Noveck, Raven, Kelela, Shaadi Devereaux, ” Karol G, reggaetón, Daddy Yankee, J Balvin, Rauw Alejandro, Karol G's, there's, Ojos, Shakira, It’s, Carlos Niño, Rihanna, Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar’s, Arlo, Arlo Parks Organizations: ANGELES, Associated Press, banda, Tennessee, “ Hackney, Ojos Ferrari, Sun, Chicago, NFL, Carolinas, Locations: Mexican, Mexico, Kelela, Será, Puerto Rican, Panamanian, , New York, Colombian, “ Carolina, California, Sunbeams,
“Her music is unapologetically, boundlessly and globally Black,” Thomas said. In many cases, lighter skinned slaves were the product of sexual violence by White men against enslaved Black women. Lighter skinned Black women were often deemed “redbones,” a term that for some undermined their Black heritage by implying that the women were mixed non-Black ancestry. A 2023 survey by nonprofit Catalyst found women with darker skin tones were more likely to experience workplace racism than women with lighter skin. “I also get to be critical of Beyoncé,” Thomas said.
Persons: Queen Bey, , Tina Knowles, ” Knowles, “ Brown, Geneva Thomas, ” Thomas, , JeffriAnne Wilder, Wilder, White, ” Wilder, Beyoncé, India Arie, ” Arie, Arie, ” Beyoncé, Kevin Mazur, Oscar, Octavia Spencer, Thomas, she’s Organizations: CNN, Los Angeles, Catalyst, University of Chicago Press, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium Locations: America, New York, Black America, London, England
In Paris, a Fashion Store That Moonlights as a Small Hotel
  + stars: | 2023-12-01 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
The British musician Yazmin Lacey, 35, sings in a mellow, textured voice, often just behind the beat. She’s been selling out dates for her first headlining tour, which began in Warsaw in November, in support of her debut LP, “Voice Notes.” (She plans to add U.S. dates in 2024.) Before “Voice Notes,” she released a trio of EPs (the first of which, “Black Moon,” appeared in 2017) while working full time with a youth support program in Nottingham. But with this LP, she’s made music her sole career. “Voice Notes” takes its title from the stream-of-consciousness audio messages Lacey leaves for her friends and the spontaneous melodies and ideas she records on her phone.
Persons: Yazmin Lacey, Lacey’s, She’s, Priscilla, Lacey, , she’s, Dave Okumu, Emily Lordi Locations: British, Antigua, Europe, Warsaw, East London, Nottingham, London, United States
“I just went and looked at all the beautiful talented black celebrities who have worn platinum hair and it has been just about everyone of them at one time or another. Knowles shared in her post a video – seemingly not created by Knowles herself – that further put into context the points that she was making. “Beyoncé is a brown skin girl,” text in the video stated. A brown skin girl is more than a skin color. Beyoncé is a brown skin girl.
Persons: Tina Knowles, Giselle Knowles, Knowles, , Beyoncé, Versace, , ” Knowles, , Etta James, Cynthia Erivo, Octavia Spencer, Keke Palmer, ” Spencer Organizations: CNN, Beyoncé, Los Angeles
While many in the world of cocktails are familiar with Tom Bullock, renowned for his juleps and long considered the first African American bartender to publish a cocktail manual, fewer know the work of Atholene Peyton, a home economics teacher whose 1906 “Peytonia Cook Book” predated Bullock’s by a decade. Peyton’s story is just one told in Toni Tipton-Martin’s new book, “Juke Joints, Jazz Clubs and Juice: Cocktails From Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks,” a chronicle of the ways in which Black people contributed to American cocktail culture. “This is really a work of investigative journalism. It’s not just a book of cocktails,” said Ms. Tipton-Martin, a James Beard award-winning author of several cookbooks and the editor of Cook’s Country magazine, who pored through centuries’ worth of published recipes for her new work. The book is a continuation of her 2015 book, “The Jemima Code: Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks,” which credited Black women for much of the country’s culinary history, and her 2019 follow-up, “Jubilee: Recipes From Two Centuries of African American Cooking.”
Persons: Tom Bullock, Atholene Peyton, Peytonia, Toni Tipton, It’s, , Tipton, James Beard Locations: Bullock’s, Martin
[1/3] An employee hiring sign is seen in a window of a business in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., April 7, 2023. So far, he said at a Boston Fed labor market conference earlier this month, measures like the employment-to-population ratio largely have not behaved differently for key racial groups, for women versus men, or among those with different education levels. Research has since tended to suggest that there may be untapped pools of labor that only become available when the job market is tight - an argument for keeping monetary policy looser than not. The labor market recovery so far has been "remarkably equitable," she said. Pandemic-era programs threw a safety net under many families, and the tight job market that has since developed helped many get a foothold, Rouse said.
Persons: Elizabeth Frantz, William M, Rodgers III, Rodgers, Torsten Slok, Jerome Powell, quartile, Chris Wheat, Cecilia Rouse, Joe Biden, Rouse, what's, we're, Howard Schneider, Dan Burns, Paul Simao Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Institute for Economic Equity, St, Louis Federal Reserve, Boston Fed, Blacks, Apollo Global Management, JPMorgan Chase Institute, Workers, Reuters Graphics, of Economic Advisers, Brookings Institution, Thomson Locations: Arlington , Virginia, U.S, joblessness
An a episode of NYT's "The Run-Up," Black voters discussed Biden, Trump, and the Democratic Party. Several Black voters expressed varying degrees of disappointment with the administration. One Black voter told The Times he perceives Democrats as empowering Black women over Black men. Many voters in group told Herndon that they largely backed Democrats due to a GOP agenda which they find intolerable. AdvertisementA Black male in the group, who said that the GOP espoused values of entrepreneurship that might attract some Black men to Trump next year, also spoke openly of how he felt that Democrats empowered Black women at the expense of Black men.
Persons: Trump, , Joe Biden's, Biden, Donald Trump, Herndon, Kamala Harris, we've, Barack, Obama, Harris, they're Organizations: Biden, Democratic Party, Times, Service, Democratic, Black, New York Times, Trump, White, GOP Locations: Georgia , Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Siena, Black
Millennials hold the most student debt, with an average balance of about $35,000 per person. Most student-loan borrowers want Biden to deliver broad debt relief. Take Helena, a 58-year-old borrower with $145,000 in student debt who previously had to sell items on eBay to afford her payments. That amount varies by generation: the average Gen Z borrower holds $24,472 in student debt, the average millennial holds $42,637 in student debt, and the average Gen Xer holds $48,733 in student debt, according to TransUnion. A Morning Consult and Politico poll in June 2022, right before Biden's first debt relief plan was announced, found that of 2,000 registered voters, 65% of respondents aged 18 to 34 supported $10,000 in debt relief, with 61% of respondents aged 35 to 44 feeling the same.
Persons: Millennials, Biden, , Helena, Joe Biden's, Theresa Teders, that's, it's, Xer, Zers, millennials, Gen Xers —, Biden's Organizations: Service, eBay, Education Department, Higher, American Association of University Women, Federal Student Aid, Politico
Sam Altman's high-profile firing has drawn comparisons to Timnit Gebru's exit from Google. Some tech observers and "Black Twitter" asked: "What if Sam Altman were a Black woman?" Sam Altman's shocking ouster— and reinstatement — to OpenAI drew comparisons to Steve Jobs's exit and eventual return to Apple . But a less obvious comparison has been drawn that asks the question: "What if Sam Altman was a Black Woman?" Advertisement"What If Sam Altman Were A Black Woman?
Persons: Sam Altman's, Sam Altman, , OpenAI, Steve Jobs's, Timnit, Altman, wasn't, Gebru's, Googlers, Jeff Dean, WVBvXJZwh0 — Daniel, @growing_daniel, Eric Schmidt —, Kimberly Bryant, Bryant, TechCrunch's Dominic, Madori Davis, Greg Brockman, z5Dc1BbhbQ — Taylor Poindexter, @engineering_bae, aren't, Émile Torres, Black, Gebru, Torres Organizations: Google, Service, Apple, Microsoft, Tech, Black Locations: America, OpenAI
The letter came after a series of lawsuits Combs filed against Diageo, whose other brands include Johnnie Walker, Don Julio and Smirnoff. Diageo ended the Cîroc partnership over the summer, saying at the time that Combs had breached his contract. That period, the company said, "happens to correspond with the pendency of Combs Wines' original lawsuit against Diageo." Diageo didn't respond to requests for comment. Revolt didn't respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Cassie, Sean, Diddy, Combs, Johnnie Walker, Don Julio, Smirnoff, Roberta Kaplan, Casandra Ventura, Ventura, Harve Pierre, Pierre, Pierre didn't, @Diddy, Dawn Montgomery, Montgomery, Kelly, Kesha, they'd, Faith Evans, Sean John streetwear, Sean John, Sean John's, Evan Nierman, wasn't Organizations: Diageo, New York Times, Combs, Bad Boy Records, Boy Entertainment, NBC News, Bad, Variety, Combs Enterprises, Love Records, Motown Records, Nordstrom, Saks Locations: New York, London, Los Angeles
Among other lifestyle changes, "I stopped using chemical straighteners," she says. Breast cancer risk was similar for Black and white women, but straightener use was far more common among Black women. Notably, research also has shown that rates of aggressive subtypes of the disease surged in the recent past among U.S. women, with Black women particularly affected. Yet aside from cancer, hair care may pose an additional concern for people planning to get pregnant. More than half of Black study participants reported using their first relaxer before they were 10 years old.
Persons: Mirtha Aguilar, Fort, flaking, Aguilar, she’s, , who’d, Jordan Geller, it’s, Geller, , Elena A, Dr, Monte Swarup, ” Swarup, Johanna Lukate, Lukate, Christofides Organizations: National Institutes of Health, University of North, Hill, National Cancer Institute, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, American, Epidemiology, Boston University School of Public Health, Max Planck Institute, Institute Locations: Fort Myers , Florida, University of North Carolina, straighteners, Los Angeles, Florida, Columbus , Ohio, Arizona, Germany, U.S
Some health systems are embedding health-equity programs in their business strategies. The report said health inequities led to increased costs associated with premature death, loss of work productivity, and excess medical spending. "When you lean into health equity, you can create value, better outcomes, and lower costs," he said. Bhatt said health systems can push for health equity by creating diverse care teams. "If you lean into health equity," Bhatt said, "there is opportunity to improve outcomes, build consumer loyalty and trust, and create economic value."
Persons: , Keneica Moore, Moore, MAAME doulas, Sarahn Wheeler, Wheeler, who's, inequity, Jay Bhatt, Bhatt Organizations: Healthcare, Service, Empowerment, Duke Health, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute, Minority Health, Deloitte Health Equity Institute, Deloitte Center for Health Solutions Locations: Durham, North Carolina
In a scene in Jocelyn Bioh’s “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding,” a man rolls in a cart of items to sell to the clients and stylists at the titular salon. I wasn’t the only one: A small contingency of the audience at the Samuel J. Friedman Theater started snickering and laughing before he had even fully stepped onstage. “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” draws its comedy from this world — a world familiar to many Black women audience members like me. Bioh’s salon isn’t an abstraction or callback; it’s a Black business set in modern-day Harlem. Bioh’s writing captures the quirks of a Black hair salon, and the characters who populate it: the unfortunate early-bird client who’s first to arrive when the shop’s late to open, the internal salon politics of stylists competing for clients, the inappropriate gossip, the sense of community.
Persons: Jocelyn Bioh’s “, , Samuel J, , Whitney White, it’s Organizations: Friedman Locations: Harlem, Jaja’s
On June 24, 1983, Byllye Avery welcomed busloads of Black women to the campus of Spelman College in Atlanta. The women had traveled from Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania — even as far away as California — for a three-day event billed as the First National Conference on Black Women’s Health Issues. But more than addressing specific illnesses, the conference encouraged Black women to share information and consider how oppression affected their interactions with the health system. Ms. Avery decided to organize the conference when she was researching a paper on Black women’s health. Black women had disproportionately high rates of disease across a swath of ills — hypertension, diabetes, cervical cancer, to name a few.
Persons: Byllye Avery, busloads, Black, Lillie P, Allen, Avery Organizations: Spelman College, First National Conference, Black Locations: Atlanta, Mississippi , New York , Pennsylvania, California
On TikTok, about a third of the content we watched were ads — but it didn't always feel that way. Other users have complained on the site that they are receiving ads "all over their FYP" or ads "every 6 videos." We focused solely on TikTok videos and slideshows and excluded TikTok stories and TikTok livestreams — even streams that were explicitly there to sell products, like QVC. The key difference is that you scroll past a TikTok ad. Kristen Schiele, a USC Marshall School of Business professor, told Insider we could see an increased ad volume since advertisers push more ad content around the holiday season.
Persons: TikTok, didn't, , Hannah, Sebastian, TikTok livestreams, I'm, Trevor, I've, Kristen Schiele, Schiele, Soo Slick, Elizabeth Adeoye, Adeoye, she's, They've Organizations: Service, Intelligence, QVC, TikTok, Disney, USC Marshall School of Business, Amazon Locations: Southern California, Northern California, Bay, Nigerian
When Kimberly Dowdell becomes president of the American Institute of Architects next month, her ascent will be noteworthy. Ms. Dowdell, an architect in a profession that is overwhelmingly white and male, is a Black woman, the first to fill the post in the group’s 166-year history. African Americans make up 13.6 percent of the U.S. population, but only 1.8 percent of licensed architects in the country are Black, according to the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. Fewer than a quarter of the nearly 120,000 licensed architects in the United States are women, and not even one half of 1 percent of architects are Black women. There are small signs of change: Nearly 3 percent of architects who received their license last year were Black, and 43 percent of new architects were women.
Persons: Kimberly Dowdell, Dowdell Organizations: American Institute of Architects, National Council of Locations: United States
Goldman Sachs has done this program each year since. How does the program work? All finalist teams on stage at the 2023 competition at Goldman Sachs' headquarters. "Something that we look for in all candidates at Goldman Sachs: What is your innovative and creative spirit?" Megan Hogan of Goldman Sachs courtesy of Goldman SachsWhat's the formula for success once accepted?
Persons: Taylor Weekes, That's, Weekes, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, , who's, Zachariah Smith, Megan Hogan, David Solomon, Proctor, Hogan, you've, Smith, hadn't, " Smith, they've, it's Organizations: Howard University, Morehouse College, Alcorn State University Delaware State University Fisk University Florida A, M University Hampton University Howard University Morehouse College Morgan State University North Carolina, T, Prairie View, M University Spelman College Texas Southern University, Goldman, Gamble, L'Oreal, Pepsi, Wall Street, Wall, Black Locations: York, we're
They wanted it to be everything most social media struggles to be: positive, safe and inclusive. And as the user base of the platform now known as X splinters, so does Black Twitter, the community of Black users that was a big part of Twitter’s growth and culture. Legacy social media platforms have repeatedly failed to anticipate how their products might be manipulated or misused until something goes wrong. Alphonzo Terrell, co-founder of the social media app Spill, demonstrates how the platform works during an interview with CNN. CNNEven with AI content moderation models, other social media companies often fail to catch harmful content that makes it onto their platforms.
Persons: Alphonzo Terrell, he’d, Terrell – who’d, , Elon Musk, Terrell, DeVaris Brown, , , ’ ” Terrell, who’s, Brown, Musk, , Maya Umemoto Gorman, , ” Terrell, Brown —, Kenya Parham, weren’t, Elon, Maya Iman ‘, they’ve, “ That’s, Alphonzo Terrell “, Paul Barrett, they’d, it’s, — don’t, Jalaiah Harmon, Taylor Lorenz, Latoya Lee, ” Lee Organizations: New, New York CNN, Twitter, Elon, CNN, Spill, Washington Post, HBO, Showtime, YouTube, Intel, Cisco, Microsoft, NYU Stern Center for Business, Human, Apple, Kapor Center, Social, Mac Venture, Netflix, Disney, Amazon Prime, VH1, Pew Research Center, New York Times, California State University Fullerton Locations: New York, Los Angeles, Kenya, Spill, Georgia
Now she shares her wealth-building tips with other Black women. One of her coworkers was a "Tesla bull," an investor who believes in Tesla's aggressive growth in the future, who kept pushing her to buy Tesla shares. Now she's teaching Black women everything she knows about the stock market by starting a community called Modern Blk Girl (MBG). James believes that the stock market was designed to seem "scary or unattainable," especially for Black women and people of color. "It's motivating, having a big-sister, little-sister moment where Black women who have been trading for a while can mentor younger investors," shares James.
Persons: Tiffany James, , James, we're, Read, Black creatives Organizations: Service, CNBC, Financial, Tesla Locations: New York City, Tesla
Inside the legal fight by Black women over hair relaxers
  + stars: | 2023-11-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
Generations of Black women have used cosmetic hair treatments to straighten their hair. Now thousands claim those hair relaxers gave them cancer. This special episode takes us inside the legal fight by Black women to demonstrate hair relaxers were harmful and the cosmetic companies who made them knew that and kept marketing to them anyway. Visit the Thomson Reuters Privacy Statement for information on our privacy and data protection practices. Further ReadingThousands of Black women claim hair relaxers gave them cancerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: relaxers Organizations: Apple, Google, Reuters, Thomson Locations: U.S
Some of the ads show Black women applying hair products before cutting to a summary of the NIH study’s findings. “We do not believe the science supports a link between chemical hair straighteners or relaxers and cancer,” Revlon said. Lead author White said in a statement in response to Reuters questions that there is currently no strong evidence linking family history of breast cancer to increased risk of uterine cancer. The sisters said they wanted their mother’s death last year following a battle with uterine cancer to mean something. Bush, the St. Louis cosmetologist, joined the litigation in August, she said, because of the possibility that hair relaxers cause cancer.
Persons: Sheila Bush, Bush, Revlon’s, ” Revlon, L’Oreal, , Ben Crump, George Floyd, Diandra, ” Debrosse Zimmerman, Jenny Mitchell, Crump, “ it’s, ” Crump, Louis, Jayne Conroy, don’t, Adam Zimmerman, Alexandra White, phthalates, White, Weiss, Porter Kaye Scholer, Jennifer Hoekstra, Zimmerman, , X Ante, Quiana Hester, Ariana, Nakisha, Patrice Hester, Louis cosmetologist, Mike Spector, Richa Naidu, Kristina Cooke, Diana Novak Jones, Eve Watling, Lawrence Bryant, Alicia Powell, Angela Johnston, Lucy Ha, Vanessa O’Connell, Suzanne Goldenberg Organizations: L’Oreal, Revlon, U.S, National Institutes of Health, Reuters, NIH, Supreme, University of Southern California Gould School of Law, U.S . House, American Cancer Society, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, World Health Organization, Paul, Arnold, FDA, USC, Washington DC Locations: Louis, Olive, U.S, India, Minneapolis, Missouri, Chicago, United States, Rifkind, Baltimore, Houston, Washington, San Diego, Bush
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Five women who say they were sexually assaulted or harassed by a former Kansas City, Kansas, detective filed a lawsuit Friday accusing the government of allowing police corruption to thrive for years. The Kansas City Star reports that the federal lawsuit says the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, allowed its officers to “terrorize, abuse and violate” Black residents through a pattern of misconduct and assaults without being disciplined or investigated. Golubski has been accused by federal prosecutors and civil rights groups of framing Black citizens and sexually harassing Black women and girls for years in Kansas City, Kansas. Four of the five plaintiffs allege Golubski sexually assaulted or stalked them. Acoording to the lawsuit, Golubski replied, “Report me to who, the police?
Persons: Roger Golubski, Golubski, Acoording, Organizations: KANSAS CITY, Kan, Kansas City Star, Unified Government Locations: KANSAS, Kansas City , Kansas, Wyandotte County and Kansas City , Kansas
AdvertisementAdvertisementGoldman Sachs' Black Women Initiative released a new report that asked over 2,000 Black women about money. In an effort to shed light on critical workforce disparities affecting Black women, Goldman Sachs' Black Women Initiative released a new report: "Money Matters: One Million Black Women Economic Mobility Survey." In fact, 63% of Black women report that they are optimistic about their futures. This comprehensive investment in Black women includes direct investing, which emphasizes financial health and digital connectivity across areas that directly impact Black women and their lives. It's led by Black women, advised by a council of Black leaders from across the country in partnership with Black women-led organizations, and most importantly centers Black women with the goal of positively impacting over 215,000 Black women across the core investment pillars of healthcare, job creation and workforce development, education, affordable housing, digital connectivity, financial health, and access to capital.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, , Asahi Pompey, It's, Black, Pompey Organizations: Service, Economic Mobility Survey, Asahi, Goldman Sachs Foundation, Goldman, Goldman Sachs Investment Locations: Black, America, United States
Trigg-Jones said she applied for funding from grant groups, venture capital funds and investors, but most of them denied her. Late last month, a federal appeals court granted the Alliance’s motion to temporarily block the Fearless Fund from awarding grants exclusively to Black women entrepreneurs. Black business leaders told CNN the lawsuits, if successful, could stand to undo decades of progress toward leveling the playing field for Black and brown people in the workplace and small business sector. According to a 2019 report from American Express, Black women are the fastest growing demographic of entrepreneurs in the country. Black business owners are turned down for loans at a rate three times higher than White business owners, according to a 2020 analysis of small businesses by Goldman Sachs.
Persons: Cathleen Trigg, Jones, , you’re, ” Trigg, Edward Blum, Blum, Fearless, ” Blum, , Goldman Sachs, Arian Simone, , AAER “, Rashae Barnes, Barnes, ” Barnes, Kaycea Campbell, ” Campbell, Lenwood Long, , Long, CNN’s Jaide Timm, Garcia, Isabel Rosales, Tami Luhby Organizations: CNN, Trigg, American Alliance for Equal Rights, Civil, American Express, , Evals Equity, Pierce College Los Angeles, Federal, Consumer Finances, African American Alliance of Community Development Financial, Black Locations: New York, PitchBook, White
As Abortion Access Shrinks, Hospitals Fill in the Gaps
  + stars: | 2023-10-23 | by ( Allison Mccann | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +16 min
As Abortion Access Shrinks, Hospitals Fill in the Gaps For this article, Allison McCann and Jamie Kelter Davis spent time with a patient from Indiana as she underwent an abortion at a Chicago hospital. Alaska Fla. Hawaii 16% 18% 20%+ Total or six-week abortion ban Wash. Maine Mont. Dr. Jonah Fleisher is a co-director of the Complex Abortion Regional Line for Access, or CARLA, which helps abortion patients find appointments at four Chicago-area hospitals. Chronic Conditions and Abortion Bans These health conditions, especially when left untreated, can add risks for abortion patients. Alaska Fla. Hawaii Diabetes among women High blood pressure among women Cardiovascular disease among women 9% 11% 13%+ 28% 30% 32%+ 5% 6% 7%+ Total or 6-week abortion ban Total or 6-week abortion ban Total or 6-week abortion ban Wash. Wash. Wash. Maine Mont.
Persons: Allison McCann, Jamie Kelter Davis, , , Roe, Wade, Conn ., Dobbs, Jenni Villavicencio, Jonah Fleisher, CARLA, Laura Laursen, Laursen, Dr, Conn . Conn ., Kan ., Nev, PolicyMap, “ It’s, Allison Cowett, Erica Hinz, couldn’t, Caroline Nyheim, Qudsiyyah Shariyf, Megan Jeyifo, J.B . Pritzker, CARLA —, — you’re, Mr, Pritzker Organizations: ” RUSH University Medical Center, Health, Ore, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb, N.J . Ohio Nev, Ill . Utah Md, ., . Ill . Utah Md, OB, Society for Family Planning, Midwest, RUSH University Medical Center, Diabetes, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb . Ohio Nev, N.J ., N.M, Hawaii Diabetes, N.D ., Vt, Wis ., Pa . Conn . Iowa Neb, Pa . Iowa Iowa Nev, Nev . N.J ., Ariz . D.C, Black, S.C . Iowa Miss, Nev . D.C, White, Family Planning, Chicago Abortion Fund, South, Nurses, Chicago Abortion, Illinois, Gov Locations: Indiana, Chicago, Indianapolis, . Maine, N.D, Vt, Minn, N.H . Wis, Idaho, S.D, Mich, Conn, Conn . Pa . Iowa, N.J . Ohio, Ind, Ill . Utah, W.Va, Colo . Va, Kan, Calif, Mo, Ky, R.I, N.C, Tenn, Del, ., S.C ., Ga, Ala . Miss . Texas La, Alaska Fla, Hawaii, N.J, Nev . Ohio, . Ill . Utah, R.I . Tenn, Okla, Illinois, N.H . Wis . Idaho, Wyo, Conn . Pa . Iowa Neb . Ohio, N.J . Ind, Ariz ., Pa . Conn . Iowa, . Ind, . Ark, N.H, Wis . Idaho S.D, N.Y, Wash . Maine, N.D . Maine Maine Mont, Mont, Minn . Vt, Ore, Mass, Wis, Wis . Idaho Idaho, Conn . Conn, Conn . Conn . Pa, Pa . Iowa, Pa . Iowa Iowa Nev . Ohio, Neb . Ohio, Nev . N.J, Nev . N.J . Ohio, W.Va . Ind, Ill, Colo . Utah Utah Md, Md, W.Va . Va . Colo, Colo, Ky . Va . Va, Kan . Kan, R.I . Ky, Okla . Tenn, Ariz . Ark, Ala . Miss ., Ala . Ala . Miss, . Texas La . Texas Texas, La . Alaska Alaska Alaska Fla, Fla, Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii, Ohio, Pa . Minn, Neb, Mo . Md, Ala, Wash, Ky . N.J, Conn . Va . Ind, S.C . Iowa, Ariz, Tex, Nev ., Fla ., Massachusetts
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