ABORTION LEGISLATION: Officials don't trust women's choices By LINDA WILLCOX In an attempt to snnease some public opinion, the Supreme Court decreed 1i-st week that poor women are nit necessari- ly entitled to n hlic funds for "non - therane'itic" abortions. The Court did leave the defini- tion on "non-therapestic" some- what at the discretion of the woman's doctor. But the ruling, rather than satisfy anyone, only incited seg- ments of both sides of the abor- tion question, and brought even more governmental influence into a strictly private arena. Pro-abortionists cry "discrim- ination"; anti-abortionists feel the issue of abortion was not addressed to their satisfaction, and they continue to fan the fires of the anti-atortion back- lash. In the short years since the 1973 Supreme Court ruling tell- ing women when they can and cannot have legal abortions, governmental bodies have tried to influence this already too- sticky issue. THE INTERIVENT1ON reflects governmental distrust of the women to act upon their predi- lections about abortion. The decision to abort a child could not be called an easy de- cision. Means of support, religi- ots beliefs, and home life are but three of myriad reasons leading to the decision to abort. Some women may simply want no more children, but their con- traceptive methods might have failed. Others might be preg- nant as a result of rape or in- cest. Others might have had a naive sense of overconfidence: "It won't happen to me," they might say. But it does. And their are several hundreds of women who get pregnant be- cause their knowledge of or ac- cess to birth control was lim- ited or nonexistent. SUCH WOMEN are most dras- tically affected by last week's Court ruling, because such wom- en are generally in the lower classes. The two largest groups of women seeking "non-therapeut- ic" abortions are poor women and teenagers; sometimes the groups overlap. Should any or all of these women be denied the option of abortion - by the Supreme Court or pending Congressional legislation - the consequences would be dire. Obviously, the propagation of socioeconomic barriers would increase. Children born in the lower classes, especially unwant- ed children, would be subject to lesser quality medical care, housing, jobs, and innumerable other disadvantages inherent to unwanted children and poor chil- dren. THE DENIAL of the option of abortion to teenage mothers could add more statistics to the list of lower class persons. Few teenagers are qualified to be- come full-fledged mothers be- fore they might even reach the age of majority. Certainly, some of those un- wanted, children born to such mothers could be adopted. But it is unreasonable, for courts to ask such mothers to bear the children, then take the chil- dren, then take the children away, especially when medical statistics have proven it to be more dangerous to carry a child full term than to abort, All governmental authority over the issue of abortion should be halted, and the decision plac- ed back where it belongs: only in the hands of those it affects most directly. Rather than channel tremen- dous energies against the class- es of persons who need such things as therapeutic and non- therapeutic abortions, those en- ergies would be better directed at the development of more ef- fective birth control methods, and better dissemination of birth control information. As it stands, the aourts and the federal legislature stand ready to pose a choice: safe and legal abortions for all who desire them, even if provided with public funds, or a return to back street butchers, coat hangers and lye. The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, June 29, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 'U' open meetings force encouraged by Regents LAST MONTH the Regents asked Chief University Attorney Roderick Daane to prepare a legal argu- ment to enable the University to circumvent the new state Open Meetings Act. The intent of this act, which went into effect April 1 is to make all decision-mak- ing meetings of public institutions or organizations open to anyone who wishes to attend. Just prior to the break between spring and sum- mer terms, Daane presented to the Regents what he called "the most defendable" legal position the Uni- versity could take to circumvent the law "But he stressed there was no guarantee these positions would hold up in court University President Robben Fleming concurred with Daane on both counts, saying he believed the posi- tion to be "a reasonable analysis of the law." The problem with, the position taken by the Re- gents and University officials is if they succeed by legal sleight-of-hand to avoid compliance with the let- ter of the law they will still be consciously undermin- ing the intent of the law which in our eyes in just as heinous a crime. This University is funded not only by the students who attend classes here, but also by every taxpayer in the state of Michigan, and all these people have a right to know where and how their money is being spent. They also have a right to hear the arguments presented be- fore such decisions are reached. Presently, the Regents convene both privately and publicly, but the open ses- sions are merely a reenactment of the decisions already reached in closed session. Although actual voting is done in public meetings, there is little if any discus- sion of the issue during this session. The regents do all their haggling privately, then simply recite their ayes and nays when all of us are watching. OFTEN, AS IS THE CASE with promotions to dean, hiring of new officers, and salaries of professors and administrators, the public is either informed of these decisions after they are made, or not informed at all In the last five years we have seen faith in our public institutions dip to an all-time low, and the se- crecy these institutions insist on maintaining is the major cause of this lack of faith. The intent of the Open Meetings Act was to make these institutions open their doors, and show the public they have nothing to k'e'! s v "Ntr 1Jt Su' r'ui ;"*t~ eO e OWO SWMS! I1 ri -- Health Service Handbook By NANCY PALCHIK Thus, the practice of giving soup for a cold and SYLVIA HACKER may be more than a common folk remedy. Al- though colds are caused by viruses, many of QUESTION: Whenever I call home about be- the complications that set in are bacterial in ing sick, my mother seriously suggests chicken origin. soup. Is there any truth in this, or is it one of those old wives' tales? QUESTION: I'm planning to go to Europe. Is there any place at the Health Service where ANSWER: For years, people have been jok- I can get information on shots needed in dif- ing about the curative power of chicken soup, ferent countries? and some doctors have even said they would consider giving it by injection, but were afraid ANSWER: Not only does our Immunization the noodles would get stuck in the veins. Clinic give information but they help students, At ' a five-day conference of the American spouses and faculty with travel immunization Society for Pharmacology and Experimental planning. This means they work out an immuni- Therapeutics last year at Michigan State, two zation program which includes the time period scientists stated they believe the positive effects for the spacing of certain shots as well as pro- of chicken soup and other fat derivatives have viding the vaccines. been ignored too long. They detailed their tests Send all health related questions to: on the germ-killing qualities of various substanc- Health Educators es obtained from laboratories all over the world, University Health Service finding that the derivatives with the strongest Division of Office of Student Services bacterial action were those middle-sized chains 207 Fletcher of fatty acid derivative. , Ann Arbor, MI 48109