By Ed Sterling.
Texans, Americans and citizens of the world in the past week remembered the shock and aftermath of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy 50 years ago in Dallas, on Nov. 22, 1963.
Many newspapers and other media reflected on coverage of those days, some expanding on how the assassination changed views on public safety and kindled the public’s desire for a faster-moving stream of news.
A ceremony was held in Dallas on Nov. 22 at Dealey Plaza, adjacent to the street where assassin’s bullets struck President Kennedy and then-Texas Gov. John Connally, who survived wounds to his chest and wrist from a bullet that first passed through the president’s body.
Eyewitnesses at the scene of the shooting and related events in 1963, in news accounts published in recent days, and at the heavily reported memorial ceremony in Dallas last week, expressed their persistent impressions of what they saw and heard.
Court will not intervene
New abortion regulations passed by the Texas Legislature last summer will stand, pursuant to an order issued by the U.S. Supreme Court on Nov. 19.
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the 5-4 majority, rejected Planned Parenthood’s motion for the high court to intervene in its case challenging the constitutionality of certain provisions in the new law.
On Oct. 30, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals overruled a lower court’s stay preventing parts of the new law from taking effect. The short-lived stay was granted on Oct. 28 by Austin U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel, who ruled unconstitutional the law’s requirement that an abortion provider have admitting privileges at a nearby, state-approved “ambulatory surgical center” and the law’s prohibition against a physician using their own medical judgment in prescribing an abortion-inducing medication.
So, the case remains under the purview of the Fifth Circuit and arguments in the appeal are scheduled for early January. The lawsuit is Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas Surgical Services et al. v. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, Commissioner David Lakey of the Texas Department of State Health Services and Mari Robinson, executive director of the Texas Medical Board.
Not taken up in the court motions was the new law’s prohibition on abortions after the 20th week of gestation.
Group shuts down ‘hunt’
The Young Conservatives of Texas, a student group at the University of Texas at Austin, called off “Catch an Illegal Immigrant” game that it had planned to conduct on the UT campus last week.
University President Bill Powers denounced the activity and called on the group to cancel it. The group’s chairman, Lorenzo Garcia, complied.
Reportedly, the gubernatorial campaign of Attorney General Abbott, who is running for governor, distanced itself from Garcia, a former field director for the campaign.
Ed Sterling works for the Texas Press Association and follows the Legislature for the organization.








