L _.a ,. 6 :Page 4-Sunday, March 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily Ninet l Years of Editorial Free(dom k Vol. XC, NO. 130 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Papa Bo really blew it s HOW MANY Michigan football players were suspended last Monday by Wolverine Coach Bo Schembechler? How many were put on probation? Who was involved? Were the players suspended for 'smoking marijuana? for using cocaine? for shooting heroin? Are the suspensions permanent? These are just a few of the questions that needed answers after the Daily learned Monday that something big was up over at Ferry Field. And, these' are just a few of the questions that Schembechler absolutely refused to answer until after wildly conflicting-and damaging-reports were broadcast and printed around the state and the country. Schembechler refused to comment on one of the University's most important sports stories presumably to protect his players from media larassment. Yet, not surprisingly, this -Paternal concern backfired: ,incriminating rumors about members bf Bo's flock were published as facts in A he Ann Arbor News, the Detroit News, .ad the Detroit Free Press; parents ,first learned of their sons' suspensions 4' ^ on late-night, long-distaice phone calls from reporters; and several of the five players almost spoke at" a news conference-that Bo should have held-to try to clear themselves. Schembechler clearly called the wrong play. The Wolverines are more than a mere college football team requiring protection from the story- hungry media by a concerned coach; they are a living legend in this state, and as such are media celebrities. Schembechler should not have been amazed that rumors of suspensions would spark intense media interest. The coach owed the media-and thousands of Wolverine fans-the courtesy of a clarifying announcement as soon as rumors started flying. He did not have to mention that drugs were somehow involved in the suspensions, He did not even have to elaborate any reason for his actions. But to have waited until days after the suspensions to comment is inexcusable.- Had Papa Bo really wanted to protect his players, he shouldn't have left five of them to fight off the media monster all alone. Q: When will a male pill become available? A: Unfortunately, not for a while. The development of a drug for men analagous to oral contraceptives for women is still in the experimental stage. Research efforts are directed at developing a drug, in either pill, injection, or under-the-skin capsule form, that will interfere with the hormonal signals that control the production of sperm in the testicles or will interrupt the sperm maturation process. The ideal contraceptive for men is one that eliminates or drastically reduces the amount of sperm produced in the testicles and leaves no sperm partially inactivated, which could possibly result in genetically-damaged offspring. Also, a good male contraceptive has few unpleasant or serious side effects and is completely reversible. Two such contraceptives being investigated. in this country and Europe are testosterone enanthate (TE) and a combination of this hormone and another hormone called danazol. The testosterone in TE signals the body to stop producing two substances crucial to the development of sperm. This hormone, when given by weekly injections, has lowered (or eliminated) the sperm count in 95 per cent of men tested, and reversal of the contraceptive effect has occurred within three to 12 months of discontinuation of the drug. Mild side effects that have been reported are weight gain of approximately four pounds, breast and body hair growth, and acne. The more serious side effects usually associated with taking male hormones, such as. higher cholesterol, abnormal glucose tolerance, and higher blood pressure have not been found. The studies of the combination drug TE with danazol have shown results similar to those for TE alone. The advantage to this combination drug is that monthly, rather than weekly, injections are given. The danazol is taken orally every day. 'rPill "fo men in future The most exciting development, however, has not been in the United States or Europe but in China. Since 1972 Chinese scientists have been studying gossypol, a constituent of cottonseed oil that has an antifertility effect. So far, clinical trials have yielded promising results. Health Service H0ndbook Gossypol is taken every day in a pill form, initially at large doses but at smaller maintenance doses once the sperm count falls to a contraceptive level. A study of 4,000 men reported in 1978 in the Chinese" Medical Journal showed gossypol to be effective in 99.89 per cent of the men tested. Gossypol's mechanism of action puzzles Western investigators. The only determination they have made is that it does not work by altering blood hormone levels as the previously mentioned contraceptives do. Although long-term study on gossypol's potential for causing toxic reaction in the men taking it or genetic damage in their offspring has not been done, one recent study carried out at the University of California School o Public Health and reported in the August 1979 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine determined that gossypol, when subjected to a standard testitig procedure, had no harmful gene-altering effects. Apparently, the Chinese investigators are ready to begin large-scale trials of gossypol, but there is uncertainty about the men's acceptance of this drug. American scientists are carefully watching these developments in China (and some collaborative research has begun), but moe feel they can not even make an educated guess on how soon this contraceptive innovation will be exported to the United States. Q: Is alcohol a good source of nutrients? A: Alcohol pr vides calories (and plenty of them) that have no nutritive value., (It may ,providevery small amounts of some vitamins and minerals, but the amounts are negligible.) This- is wh-y alcohol is said to consist of "empty calories." If too much your diet contains calories that provide no too few nutrients, you will either suffer a nutritional deficiency or, more likely, will consume extra calories. These extra calories translate into extra pounds. Health Service Handbook will answer a variety of health-related questions each Sunday on this page. Questions should be directed to Gail Ryan, Health. Educator, eUniversity Health Service 207 Fletcher A ve. Beating kids in U. S. schools 4" ~4h Mto An1 iF-h y V ~Col evi Fli Abolis n 1 HERE COULD be no more diffi- quite understandable. But however cult time than today for human the desire for revenge may be, ponents of the death penalty to there are certain human traits and affirm their stand. An astoundingly desires which the law ought best not to il mass murderer, John Wayne serve. Bloodlust is one such desire. icy, has just been sentenced to die The burden of proof should be on r the slaughter of 33 boys and young proponents of capital punishment to en. But none of the events of the past show why society needs that barbarous 3ek have changed the fact that tool. Some argue that capital pital punishment dis a Wuseless ,punishment isthe only way to ensure nseless, vicious, and iminoral that first degree murderers (the only swer to even the imost heinous deeds. killers who may be=executed) do nott e magnitude of Gacy's crime may ever have the opportunity to kill again. 11 justify his being locked up for the But there are places in this country st of his life; but nothing justifies where existing provisions for the Id-blooded, state-sponsored murder. imprisonment of convicted killers, rhose who would have the state of along with the careful process of inois put Gacy to death generally scrutiny applied before parole, have en't interested in the deterrence eliminated the problem of repeat ue. If they were, they would find offenders. The state of Michigan is one it of the many empirical studies that such place. ve been done, only one has indicated Michigan has been without capital at the death penalty is a more punishment for more than a century ective deterrent to murder than and a half. Since 1938, when the current prisonment. That study, guided by parole system was instituted, some 560 iiversity of Chicago economist Isaac convicted murderers have been irlich, has been spurned by Ehrlich's released from prison. Of these, only n colleagues as being severely ten ex-cons have returned to prison. .ilted, both in its data-gathering Five of these were jailed for technical ethods and other technical issues. parole violations. None were jailed for Clearly, deterrence is not a concern murder. the 70-some per cent of the Capital punishment is not a superior aerican public that favors capital deterrent; it is not a sensible answer to nishment. The central concern of society's fears. It is cruel and unusual ecution proponents is retribution. manifestation of the worst aspects of at's a euphemism for revenge. human nature. The time has come for Humanitarians certainly feel this nation to follow the other civilized acern for the survivors of murder nations in this world, and put it aside, timQ - indApd the finir thV f P;P .+ once and for all. A Corning, New York teacher recently punched a child so hard in the eye that emergency-room treatment was required. When the child's parents took the teacher to court, a judge ruled that the educator had acted within the law because in the Empire State, corporal punish- ment is permitted in the public schools so long as the force ap- plied is less than "deadly." Ob- usly, this student was still alive. A Camden, Delaware fifth- grader was beaten, so severely that the bruises on his back and buttocks were still visible several days later. The teacher had exer- cised her lawful right to assault the child because he had stayed in the bathroom too long. The teacher had neglected to find out that the boy was constipated. NOT ALL CORPORAL punishment is used to "punish" school children. 'Often, a paddle or some other blunt instrument is administered to backsides and other parts of the body in order to "motivate" students. In Beggs, Oklahoma, for instance, children with learning disabilities are now being "mainstreamed" into regular classes. In order to keep them up to the mark, those who fall behind in their studies or keep misspelling words are whacked by a paddle on their thighs, arms, elbows, and backsides. Official child-beating is prac- ticed in all but three states-New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Maine. Hawaii has declared a moratorium on corporal punish- ment while evaluating charges it has been abused. In nearly 'all other nations, however, the beating of school children has long since been abolished. Poland did away with it in 1783, and during the next century France, the Netherlands, and Finland followed. Corporal punishment is also illegal now in Japan, Israel, Italy, Sweden, Denmark, and the entire communist bloc Indeed, the only major nations that con- tinue to allow child abuse in the schools are West Germany, England, and these United States. In England, attempts to end corporal punishment have been beaten back from 1669 (a "Children's Petition" to Parliament) to the present. On January 16 of this year, in a plebiscite by the National Union of Teachers, 90 per cent of 258,000 British pedagogues polled vehemently supported the con- tinued use of child beating as an essential weapon inmaintaining oraer in the classrooms. So too, in America, where a considerable majority of teachers vociferously insist on the need to use force an an educational tool. When Los Angeles abolished corporal punishment four years ago, the teachers' union there pledged to get it reinstated; this past February 2, it succeeded. IN THE APPALLED minority of abolitionist teachers is Edith Oldham, who recently retired af- ter 30 years in the Louisville, Kentucky public schools. Writing in the Louisville times, she declared: "ishave witnessed many terrifying acts, I have seen children lifted and pulled and dragged by their hair; youngsters slammed violently against a wall so hard that they fell down on the floor; children struck by pointers or yardsticks that broke from the im- pact... (Yet) students who are most often targets for corporal punishment are those with very low self-esteem. Being paddled (and otherwise abused) only makes them feel more helpless, self-rejecting, and angry. It is, plain and simple, child abuse." Cases in the files of American Civil Liberties Union affiliates and various youth advocacy groups around the country un- derline Edith Oldham's point that corporal punishment often does become child abuse. After all, as Brandeis Univer- sity social policy professor Dr. David Gil emphasizes: "Rarely, if ever, is corporal punishment administered for the benefit of the attacked child .. . Usually it serves the immediate need of the attacking adult who is seeking relief from his uncontrollable anger and stress.'' FOR EXAMPLE, in a small New York town, a fifth-grade boy, afflicted with arthritis, is kicked to the floor by a gym teacher for refusing to do his exercises. Because his knees lock, the boy can't do those exer- cises, but the teacher insists that he could if he tried. By Nat Hentoff Professor David Friedman of the University of Southern California School of . Medicine, and Alma Friedman, a Los Angeles Schools pupil services counselor, recently conducted a survey of the physiological harm that fearsome teachers and prin- cipais actually can inflict onj children. they included: "severe tissiVe damage, lower spine in- juries, sciatic nerve damage, and A similar bill is now before the New York State legislature. During a learing to determin whether there is a need for such a law, Jeffrey Hull, a nine-year- old boy from Rochester testified. He had been beaten twice, in the same day, by his principal for "making noise." The first time, the "noise" happened because the child had yelled when a schoolmatehkicked him. The second time, the boy had acciden- tally fallen over his desk, with CHILDREN LIKE THESE face beatings at the hands of teachers and school administrators across the country each day. Corporal punish- ment is-still an accepted form of child abuse, even in 1980. Lllwwa-11GU L1 IyLI~ Ci m z " 0- 1 riiggins p, 9&OTH flA NoRVOM "V Qj) 3 O vS' ) . \' 3 , t . \ // , , .;: , . G - ; ,. t !! , Y t ' .. . \, 1 1 ' : ////1 f . :-' '\ { . : even blood clots due to paddling. Recent evidence leads to the suspicion of possible whiplash in- jury especially in younger children." CORPORAL PUNISHMENT, they add, "inhibits learning 'and interferes with the accomplish- ment of the important develop- mental tasks of children .. . It should be considered as child abuse and prohibited in all schools." One route has been closed to those parents and child-care professionals who are trying to prohibit official child-beating. In 1977, the Supreme Court con- sidered a corporal punishment case, Ingrahan v. Wright, in which the two junior high school victims had been paddled so severely that one had to stay in bed, face down, for a week and the other lost full use of his arm for roughly the same period of time. Nonetheless, in a 5-4 vote, the High Court decided that corporal punishment in the schools, no matter how severe, did not violate the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. THAT RULING, however, did not prevent abolitionists from working to have corporal punishment done away with in individual states, cities, towns, and school districts. And, during the past couple of years, child- beating has been ended in, among other places, Portland, Oregon ; Kalamazoo, Michigan; Urbana, Illinois; and Groton, Connecticut. Groups carrying on this battle to end child abuse in their schools resultant commotion. He was paddled so hard both times that when he came home that nigh4 his buttocks were bleeding. The " parts not bleeding were black and blue. THE CHILD'S father, Sergeant William Hull of the Monroe Coun- ty Sheriff's Office, brought the principal to court on a charge of third-degree assault. The case was dismissed because, said the judge, the principal had acted within the:law. He had not usee deadly force. "I just don't understand," said Sergeant Hull, "how they can keep this corporal punishment law on. the books. Nobody should have the right to beat anybody like that, especially a kid. Nobody. Not teachers, not prin- cipals. Nobody. In my job. I don't have the right to beat prisoners. even though some of them ar4 real sickies. And I shouldn't have that right. Why is it that only school kids can be legally beaten?" Theisame question was asked in 1853 by a judge on the Indiana Supreme Court: "The public seems to cling to the despotism in the government of schools which has been discarded everywhere else . . . The husband can no longer moderately chastise hi' wife, nor. . . the master his ser- vant or his apprentice. Even the degrading cruelties of the naval service have been arrested. Why the person of the schoolboy 'with his shining morning face' should be less sacred in -the eyes of the law than that of the apprentice or the sailor, is not easily ex- plained," - -vL~ r 3'