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Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Book Preview: #1 The first voice Jenny heard after the anesthetic wore off was the surgeon s. The sterilization procedure was a success, and you re eight weeks pregnant. Jenny was twenty-six, the mother of two young children, and had been suffering from lymphatic cancer, Hodgkin s disease, for the past two years.#2 Jenny had never viewed abortion as a women s liberation issue, even though she knew how important it was to address the problems women faced. She was afraid that if abortion was made into a women s issue, women might become alienated from women s liberation.#3 Jenny had been an advocate of women s rights for most of her adult life. She was raised on the stories of her great-aunt Lillian, a suffragette, who had once chained herself to the gates of the White House. She was active on civil liberties and civil rights issues in college.#4 In 1965, women in the Movement began raising the issue of women s second-class status in the Movement and in society in general. By the fall of 1967, radical women realized they needed to form their own movement.