OPINION Monday, February 13, 1989 ''Poge 4 Unity The Michigan Daily critical to saving abortion rights By Dawn Chalker, Carolyn Paden, and Molly Henry On Saturday, January 21, women's rights supporters won a significant victory in defending a woman's right to control her own body. In Detroit on that day, ap- proximately 80 abortion rights demon- strators succeeded in keeping the East GYN Clinic on Eight Mile Road open, despite the presence of 150 anti-choice protestors. The anti-choice forces, Lt'4 ... .. .. .. .... .. .. mnobilized as part of the national Operation Rescue (OR) campaign, unsuccessfully attempted to close a Detroit women's health clinic through civil disobedience- type tactics. Clients had appointments not only for abortions but also for contracep- tive counseling and gynecological health care. Many women, accompanied by pro- choice escorts from the Committee to De- fend Abortion Rights (CDAR), bravely decided to walk past the harassment of ,Dawn Chalker and Carolyn Paden are members of CDAR, Molly Henry is a member of Ann Arbor NOW. -'I anti-choice fanatics and the intrusion of television cameras in order to keep their appointments. A key reason for the success of the clinic defense was that a number of Detroit abortion rights demonstrators arrived be- fore OR showed up and were able to secure the front doors. Pro-choice demonstrators were forcibly pushed away from the back door by police, while anti-choice protesters were allowed to sit in front. As in Livonia, where a successful clinic de- fense took place on November 12, the po- lice were especially hostile to pro-choice activists. In Livonia, police took nearly three hours to begin arresting the anti-choice blockaders. The police also told clients the clinic was closed. They only began arrest- ing OR people after pro-choice demon- strators attempted to pull them away from the door because the police refused to act. One pro-choice woman was unjustly arrested while attempting to defend the clinic against OR's assault. When the doctor almost succeeded in entering the clinic the officers threatened to arrest him unless he turned back! In both Livonia and Detroit it was clear to pro-choice protesters that the police would have al- lowed the OR fanatics to illegally close the facilities had there not been a strong and determined presence of pro-choice ac- tivists. Now is the time to begin building a vigorous movement to defend a woman's right to choose abortion. This is ex- tremely critical since the Supreme Court has decided to review Roe v. Wade, the decision that recognized a woman's right to abortion. This decision may be over- turned sometime this year when the court hears a Missouri case. The recent denial of Medicaid funding for abortion in Michi- gan, the emergence of Operation Rescue, and the continuation of clinic bombings point to the urgency of building a strong grassroots movement in order to protect reproductive choice. The movement for abortion rights has the dynamism and the capacity to reinvig- orate the struggle for women's rights in this country, a struggle that has been un- der increasing attack since the 1970s. Within this movement, it is natural and healthy that debate take place over ideol- ogy and tactics. For this reason, we feel we must respond to statements made by the Michigan National Organization for Women (NOW) concerning the defense ef- forts by the Detroit and Ann Arbor CDARs. At a rally in Lansing on January 21, NOW put out a press release denouncing the clinic defense actions. At a clinic defense in Detroit the same day, a woman who presented herself as a NOW leader, Carol King, publicly stated that the anti- Operation Rescue demonstrators were engaging in "vigilante" activity and were as much a part of the problem as OR. She also stated that Committee to Defend would have been wiser to leave the business of stopping OR to the police. Further, she claimed that CDAR was not a legitimate part of the women's movement. In fact, what took place on Eight Mile Road and Livonia were victories for the women's movement in protecting a woman's right to obtain an abortion. The success of activists in keeping the clinic open benefitted the women seeking coun- seling or abortions. It was also clear that the police would not have interfered with OR if the pro-choice demonstrators had not been present. Had there been more pro- choice activists there early to secure the doors, OR would never have gotten near the clinic and the defense would have been even more orderly and peaceful. NOW's primary strategy has been to lobby and pressure the legislature to secure women's rights. But legislators, both Democrat and Republican, have shown time and again that they are willing to cut Medicaid funding and are now moving ahead to ban state employees from using their health insurance for abortions. While statewide demonstrations in Lansing are important, direct actions such as clinic de- fenses show the real potential for mass struggle, struggle which government lead- ers may be unwilling to provoke. Activists in CDAR seek the support of members of NOW and anyone else who wants to fight for all forms of reproductive rights. CDAR and the Washtenaw County NOW chapter have begun friendly discus- sions about how we can work more effec- tively together. Within our movement we can agree to disagree as long as there is unity in action. This unity is critical to maintain the rights guaranteed in Roe v. Wade. 6 Police confront pro-choice and anti- abortion protesters outside an abor- tion clinic in Detroit on January 21. 'Pro-choice demonstrators were forcibly pushed away from the back door by police, while anti-choice protesters were allowed to sit in front...' 6 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan POWER calls ' ' out 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. IC, No. 95 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. a" Porn ;:SPORTS ILLUSTRATED'S (SI) 25th .,anniversary swimsuit issue hit news- ;:.stands this week, continuing SI's tra- dition of degrading, objectifying and exploiting women under the guise of sport. Pornography is the media of violence against women. Though most Ameri- cans usually conceive of pornography "in its more extreme form - peep shows, massage parlors and S&M magazines, pornography is also a :;system of representation which pro- motes women's bodies as a tool to sell .anything from automobiles to hard 'liquor. The emphasis in these adver- tisements is not upon the woman as a person, but on the selling/promotion of a product. SI is pornography. Since the 'inception of the issue in 1964, other sports magazines have eagerly imitated OSI; February issues of both Inside Sports and Sport each feature bikini- clad female models on their covers. The swimsuit edition of SI is partic- ularly insidious because it is accepted Zand incorporated into the mainstream of ,magazine publications. Because the magazine focuses on just one issue for ;its "pornography," it can continue to ;count itself as outside that industry. Time Inc. stands to make a staggering '$30 million from the SI issue, includ- ming calendar and video sales. While pperpetuating the selling of women's bodies as a socially acceptable business ploy, distributors also argue that pro- fessional models are paid for this "work," thus skirting the central issue. 'The key irony in this business ar- x rangement is that women are used as ,-billboards for a particular advertising .;company, while the real profits and gains are gleaned by the roster of own- ers of Time, Inc. and those advertisers .benefitting from the swimsuit issue. SI has also been criticized for its lack of coverage of women's athletic ac- complishments. The only women to receive significant attention are those professional models displayed for men. lustrated Dehumanizing photographs send a powerful message: women are not to be regarded as complete human beings, but rather as objects whose purpose is to sell goods and to serve men's sexual interest. This year's SI documents the extent to which its degrading portrayal of women is is accepted - even cele- brated - in a four-page spread on college students whose bedroom walls are covered with photos from past swimsuit issues, including three Uni- versity of Michigan students. One stu- dent actually "considered placing geo- metric mats over the pictures to high- light the models' faces and body parts." These images and attitudes are man- ifested as violence against women. Although these magazines are purport- edly selling swimwear, the expressions and poses of the models clearly illus- trate what is really being sold. And the nature of the accompanying captions - "Don't just sit there!" - perpetuate the myth of women as sexual objects who need - and want - to be conquered. In other words, women are to sit passively and be acted upon. In order for people to begin to per- ceive of pornography as a pervasive system of institutionalized sexism which promotes violence against women, it must be viewed as an active facilitator of that violence, rather than as an ineffectual mode of entertainment. There is a very specific message which pornography promotes for a very specific purpose. It defines women as inherently and naturally un- equal to men in our culture. This sub- ordination of women makes it possible to objectify and commodify women's bodies. SI' s swimsuit issue not only marginalizes women's contributions to the magazine as a whole, but also minimizes women's experience. If the swimsuit issue did not make money, it would not exist. Boycott Sports Illustrated. Do not participate in the corporate exploitation of women! By Sharon Holland, Pam Kisch, Andrea Densham, Kristin Pope, Sue Baker, and Liz Paige On January 3rd four men - all Univer- sity varsity hockey players - chased and shouted threats of rape at two women as they walked home on North University. Their threats included "Are you ready for us?" and "Where's your mace?" As the women walked toward the Diag the men blocked them from the path with their car while continuing to verbally threaten them. In an effort to escape, the women ran onto the Diag. But when they emerged from the Diag the men in the car were there, parked outside Stop-n-Go on East University. As the women approached the store, the men drove their car straight at the women with their brights on, stopping just short of hitting them. In an "apology" published in the Daily and the Ann Arbor News these men have since claimed to be merely "young and impulsive," that they were sorry they had caused any undue embarrassment to the two women, and that they hadn't intended to harass anyone. The players were well aware of the women's fear of rape and they used in their threats. What could be more intentional? Though the players were sentenced and fined by the city of Ann Arbor, the Uni- versity has neither taken an action against them nor made a statement condemning the incident. In fact, hockey coach Red Berenson responded by saying that he's "been through these kind of things before" and that he's not going to "wash [the team's] laundry" in a public forum. Clearly, the Athletic Department has encountered incidents like the one which occurred on January 3 before, and have chosen to deal with them behind closed doors. However, the privatization of pub- lic issues exacerbates the very problem it claims to solve. Sexual harassment will Sharon Holland, Pam Kisch, Andrea Densham, Kristin Pope, Sae Baker, and Liz Paige are members of People Orga- nized for Women, Equality and Rights. continue until it is publicly recognized and dealt with as unacceptable behavior at and by the University. Last week it was reported that two of the four men might sit out for a game, but Berenson insisted that any connection to the events on January 3 and this action would be "pure speculation." If this is true, then perhaps Berenson should specu- late some more as to why he refused to punish the players at all. If, on the other hand, this represents Berenson's method of "private" punishment perhaps he should ask himself what he hopes to accomplish by refusing to openly confront President James Duderstadt promised to make a public statement about this issue two weeks ago, but has not done so. If the University administration intends to foster an atmosphere on this campus that is comfortable for everyone, then it must re- spond to this incident. Its relative silence continues to be an indicator of their par- tial, if not total agreement with sexist be- havior on the part of students on this campus. People Organized for Women, Equality and Rights (POWER) demand that Duderstadt, Athletic Director Bo Schembechler, and Berenson adhere to the following demands: -w 6 6 A. 4I f 4 / ,4 .44 OqC. k- 1~aM, GOBS S k t, 4100 Opp'*'- POWER protests the University administration's non-response to sexual harassment at the Michigan hockey game on February 3. i institutionalized sexism. Adequate re- sponse is especially important since it might serve as a likely deterrent to future incidents of sexual harassment on and off the team. There needs to be a public acknowl- edgement of why these men have been suspended - if in fact they are. The Uni- versity community needs to be told about the January 3 incident and its specific connection to player suspension. As long as there is silence around this issue, the policies toward sexist language and abu- sive behavior remain undefined and unclear at this University. Speaking of going public, University -We demand a public statement from the University condemning the actions of the four students enforcing this statement with punitive measures. -We demand that the four players be suspended from the hockey team - ha- rassers should not be the representatives for our University. 'We demand that the rules of conduct for University hockey players and all athletes include strict and clear guidelines condemning sexual harassment and assault as unacceptable behavior in every instance. These rules of conduct should be published and available to the public. 6 tt~e............. Other trees destroyed To the Daily: In response to Andrew Ka- plan's article of January 24, entitled "Groups Unite for Is- this case some of Israel's sup- porters, continue to discrimi- nate between Palestinians and Israelis. If they don't even re- alize that trees are trees, regardless of whether they be- long to Israelis or Palestinians, how can we expect them to re- alize that Palestinianshareenti- tled to the same rights as Is- it is these types of actions that can either hinder or facilitate peace in the Middle East. -Tahani Abboushi February 6 Arms of oppression like to inform the University community that a showcase on the ground floor of the Michi- gan Union will be exhibited for one week starting today, Mon- day the 13th. The showcase will present various forms of ammunition used by the Israeli military forces against Pales- tinian civilians during the .... ... ...................,..............,... ... .............. ...... 4 1