OPINION Page 4 S/£k ja Iu Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Tuesday, October 10,1989 The Michigan Daily Support lesbian and gay men's rights: Come out and celebrate Vol. C, No. 24. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 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. Pittston and the press WHAT COUNTRY in the world is durrently experiencing a miners' strike that has included major sit-ins? In what ountry have the labor leaders involved ii such strike action been arrested and imprisoned for strike activities? 'If you answered "the USSR" to ei- ther of these questions, you guessed Wrong. The answer is the United States, the strike involves 1900 miners cf the Pittston coal company-as well as almost 40,000 other miners who walked out with them this summer- and the repression they have suffered at tie hands of state and federal govem- ients contrasts sharply with Gorbachev's peaceful stance toward the Soviet miners' strike that took place in July. But don't blame yourself if you an- swered incorrectly; blame the press. While they have been all too willing- appropriately so-to offer front-page coverage of the Soviet strike, they have almost completely ignored a strike that has at times involved tens of thousands -of miners and their supporters, over three thousand of whom have been ar- rested (not one Soviet miner was ar- rested in the strike there this summer). The reason for this disparity is obvi- ous enough: our journalistic celebrities can score ideological points on strife in Eastern Europe, while they stand to gain none from the class warfare going ton in Virginia's coalfields. Soviet min- =ers, so the logic goes, are striking for -democracy and human rights; their U.S. comrades are simply trouble- makers. Hence, two weeks ago, when one hundred Pittston miners occupied ,Pittston Coal Company's Moss #3 preparation plant, thereby stopping all of Pittston's non-union operations, you probably heard nothing about them-or about their two thousand supporters outside, who prevented the hundreds of state troopers, Federal marshalls, and hired guns who were also outside from going in and removing the strik- ers. ABC, CBS and NBC said not a word about this occupation, even though the miners had hired a heli- copter to videotape the initial seizure of the plant and offered the footage to all three networks the same evening. The New York Times mentioned the occu- pation once, in a one paragraph story about the miners leaving the plant four days later. USA Today ran one sen- tence about the occupation, three days after it began. The Wall Street Journal gave it one paragraph in a three para- graph story. Imagine how much attention the press would have given to a similar stand-off between thousands of Soviet miners and the Red Army. If this summer's Soviet strike-which in- volved no police force-was worthy of the front page every day, a strike there like the one in Pittston would probably merit a banner headline. We do not begrudge the Soviet min- ers the attention they so well deserve. But the Pittston miners-less than a day's drive from Ann Arbor-deserve the same. Caught within the U.S. myth about a classless society, the U.S. press stands convicted of employing a double standard in order to keep that myth alive. Worse, it thereby forfeits its primary function as a supposedly independent source of information: to challenge rather than confirm prevailing wisdom and the powers that be which such "wisdom" protects. By the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee You may wonder why the Lesbian and Gay community has proclaimed tomor- row, October 11, "National Coming Out Day" or why Gay Men and Lesbians feel the need to announce their existence. The two are very related questions. On October 11, 1987, one of the largest protest marches on Washington, D.C. oc- curred. Doesn't ring any bells? That's be- cause it was a march for lesbian and gay men's rights. It was virtually ignored by the mass media. It was organized because of a Supreme Court decision to uphold the conviction of Michael Hardwick, a gay man arrested for sodomy when police entered his home with a warrant and found him having sex with his lover. Georgia courts convicted him of sodomy, and the Supreme Court used its power to sanction discrimination of lesbians and gay men through sodomy laws. Justice Byron White's majority opinion stated that homosexual acts of sodomy are not protected by the Constitution because the Constitution does not protect lesbians and gay men. This decision sparked outrage in the gay and lesbian community. The original National Parks Service estimate for the 'Justice Byron White's majority opinion stated that homo- sexual acts of sodomy are not protected by the Constitution be- cause the Constitution does not, protect lesbians and gay men.' ,.,.4-ch was 300,000 people. This is the number that went to the press and was dis- seminated through limited coverage. The final number that the National Parks Service gave was 600,000 people. Others have estimated a turnout of 800,000 to one million people. cause of the widely accepted and often sanctioned discrimination against gay men and lesbians. The Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee (LaGROC) is holding a rally on the Diag this Wednesday at noon. We are asking people I 6 You may wonder how a march of this size could be so easily concealed. This is where the expression "coming out of the closet" comes in. Society tells gay men and lesbians toihide their sexual orienta- tions from the rest of the world, to keep "skeletons" in their closets. People silence lesbians and gay men by committing and accepting acts of discrimination against them. Coming out of the closet is a process that involves both realizing and accepting that one is gay and telling other people about it. This is an extremely difficult process for all but the few people who are lucky enough to come out in an environ- ment where they are not likely to be ostra- cized or threatened by friends, family, and other people around them. Few people can afford to be out to everyone they know be- who want to come out to wear stripes that day, and people who support gay and les- bian rights to wear blue jeans. If you feel it is unfair for us to ask you t~o do some- thing that you might normally do anyway, think about this: being gay is as natural as wearing blue jeans is for some people. If you wear blue jeans on Wednesday, will you be afraid that someone might single you out because your jeans say you sup- port gay rights? Maybe they'll think you are gay. Maybe you'll have a fraction of an idea of what lesbians and gay men feel every day. So come out to the Diag, (if you want to, come out on the Diag) Wednesday at noon, listen to the speakers, watch the skit, be saved by Preacher Dyke, and help lift some of the silence surrounding les- bians and gay men. COME OUT AND CELEBRATE! TR~rwT E~ Ei EfOOL6ED SY HtsR MOuS-LbNClG fp* H NR GUESS WNk5)iEt K Er a ro 5 RAUGN F 3 P5FCC NNltAL,%I~cA. rS u'5 t ~TNrIoN5 MA" O JyCE... DIR' T. 7"FIR~ST MovE" AN MTE1"dMPRO3A~y TVfNKIJG 1)4SA^C 7w4G YoU ARE. KNo7Aae .. ... uHV.w ^ ManE, ANCDPEIR 1I M.ArceoV LUST 5 BUT L4tHOVSEIDEOW P~ARE wNTTWC aT+st u.ET. , , RrrSE N O UI E N-Y QE-Ou46wO, Q r L"F-elANLEAN 7H =;c. "A WET rammoommom ----------------------- - Il M.- IV - S R YOU RYR E 5 S EXASK HER W r W SHE U KES. * A o~ SNOW.. BROW.N RMC W.' . . TT0 I MN~". . RUST LIk Reproductive, rights awareness week: 1 " GET CARRIED AWAY. so, ww" ARE You AWW4 IN? .F o f1 =1 rr NJ.tlaw MLAI"S * 1Mo'lfi1g D7t. 1 ©1986 Alison Eechdel, Dykes to Watch Out For, Firebrand Books An informed choice Pittston II: Fight the powers that be IN 1972, a dam of coal waste main- tained by the Pittston Company-sec- ond largest coal exporter in the United 'States-broke, killing 125 and leaving hundreds homeless in West Virginia. A Pittston spokesperson called the break "an act of God." On June 21, 1983, an .explosion ripped through Pittston's ;McClure #1 mine in Virginia, killing 4seven. The company was fined only ,$47,000, despite the 1972 disaster and niassive safety violations at McClure. :Now, in 1988, Pittston is guilty of 'something more heinous than the first two actions combined: it is trying to break a union. w .The miners are fighting for their sur- :vival-and the survival of their union. :1ttston, which has successfully busted the Teamster local at its Brinks sub- idiary, is demanding unlimited con- tacting out to non-union firms; aboli- :tion of the workers' pension plan; a 20 percent cut in health care for active nliners; and the elimination of all health -benefits for Pittston retirees, widows, -and disabled miners. One Pittston .pokesperson, asked about the appar- ent callousness of this last demand, cal- lously replied: "It's like a credit card that expires. Their's expired." .w". a good faith effort to negotiate: the United Mine Workers (UMW) waited fourteen months after the expiration of their last contract before walking on April 5. Pittston provoked the strike to bust the union. And they may wind up sorry that they did so. Pittston's profits in its Virginia operations alone are down 40 percent since the strike began. Pittston's second quarter financial statement records losses of approxi- mately $1 million a month. The com- pany's coal shipments from the ports of Cleveland and Baltimore are down 25-33 percent. But if the miners are going to win. they must shut these operations-and Pittston Coal-down completely. The only reason they haven't accom- plished this already is because of the shameful role the State of Virginia and the Federal Government has played throughout the strike. Virginia's Democratic governor, Gerald Baliles, has spent $1 million a month on three hundred state police designed to "keep order" in the coalfields; he has also racked up $300,000 in campaign con- tributions from Pittston executives and lawyers. And state and federal courts are responsible for the outrageous fines and three thousand arrests imposed on the miners and their supporters. These fines are meant to discourage solidarity by making strikes by other UMW miners-like the forty thousand who walked in support this summer- illegal. But as last week's new rash of "illegal" solidarity strikes demonstrates yet again, miner solidarity will prevail against the heaviest oppression-as it did in 1978 and through countless bat- tles this century. The powers that be- what one Catholic priest in Virginia re- cently referred to as a "police state"- are messing with a union which truly understands the old song about By the Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights Abortion and its implications are com- plex issues. We may feel instinctively that women should have the right to control their reproduction, but we may not know why. We may say that abortion should be illegal because someone told us to think that way, but we do not really have the knowledge we need to decide for ourselves. The Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights, in conjunction with lo- cal chapters of Planned Parenthood and the National Organization for Women, is sponsoring a Reproductive Rights Awareness Week from October 10 to 14. Our purpose is to make information about abortion and reproductive rights readily available to the public and to stimulate discussion and thought about these issues. "Abortion: Religion and Philosophy" is the title of a panel discussion which will be held on Tuesday, October 12 at 7:30 in the Henderson Room of the Michigan League. Members of the anti-choice movement try to give the impression that religious morality is on their side only and that it is impossible to have religious be- liefs and be pro-choice at the same time. The media has helped to spread this im- pression, but it is incorrect. There are large numbers of clergy and followers in all religions who believe that their faiths sanction choice for women. We will fea- ture two speakers who hold this point of view: Rev. Ann Marie Coleman of the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights, who is also a member of the Ann Arbor City Council, and Sandra Damesworth, president of Catholics for. Choice, Michigan. In addition, Jeff Gauthier, a doctoral candidate in Philosophy; and David Frankfurter, a doctoral candidate in Religion at Princeton University, will add an academic perspective to the discussion of abortion rights and theology. On Wednesday, October 11 at 7:30 in the Michigan Union Ballroom, our guest speaker will be Dr. Ethelene Crockett- Jones, OB-GYN. Dr. Jones came to the attention of the media recently when she performed the abortion for a 15-year-old rape victim who is challenging Michigan's ban on Medicaid funding for pregnancy termination. Although Dr. Jones' specialty is saving the lives of in- fants born prematurely or at risk due to poor prenatal care, work which the anti- choice movement wants us to think of as conflicting with a pro-choice view, she has long been at the front lines of the abortion rights movement. Dr. Jones' talk on "The Politics of Medicine" should help to clear up many misconceptions. Thursday's panel will discuss "Abortion Rights and Women of Color." Barbara Ransby of the United Coalition Against Racism, lawyer and community activist Paquetta Palmer, and Christina Jose- Kampfner, a professor of Women's Studies, will share their perspectives on the necessity of freedom of choice and the approaches which need to be taken to as- sure that freedom. Join us for their presen- Kurg, a nurse and longtime activist, will share "Strategies and Tactics of the Pro- Choice Movement." Cindy Tobias of Ann Arbor Planned Parenthood will present "Birth Control and Abortion Technology.' And the Ann Arbor Planned Parenthood Peer Educators will discuss "Youth and Reproductive Choice." The Reproductive Rights Workshop will provide an oppor- tunity for women and men of all ages to learn more about reproductive control and the pro-choice movement in a friendly, re- laxed atmosphere. Saturday, October 14, will be the cul- mination of Reproductive Rights Awareness Week. A March For Choice will leave from the Federal Building at Fourth and Liberty at 3 p.m. Kathy Edgren, a former Ann Arbor City Council member and longtime supporter of repro- ductive choice, will give the kick-off speech. In addition, women who have had abortions - some recently, others before abortion was legalized - will speak out about their experiences. Come and hear what they have to say firsthand, and then join us as we march through downtown Ann Arbor, ending at the Diag. 'Our purpose is to make information about abortion and re- productive rights readily available to the public and to stimu- late discussion and thought about these issues.' 0 tation on October 12 at 7:30 in the Michigan Union Ballroom. In the spirit of self-education, Reproductive Rights Awareness Week will include a Reproductive Rights Workshop on Friday, October 13 from 3 to 6 p.m. Come to the First Unitarian Universalist Church, 1917 Washtenaw (just south of the Washtenaw/Hill intersection), to learn more about reproductive control and the history of the pro-choice movement. Jean King, from Planned Parenthood of Michigan, will discuss "The History of the Abortion Rights Struggle." Elissa Last but not least, the week will finish with a Dance Benefit For Choice at the Dance Gallery studio in the Performance Network complex, 111 Third St. The dance will begin at 9 p.m., and free snacks will be served. A $3 donation will be col- lected at the door, to support our work for freedom of choice in the future. We look forward to seeing you at the Reproductive Rights Awareness Week events! The Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights meets Tuesdays at 5:30 in the Michigan Union. Lth.r ILetters to the .editor i No justice in anitalism stop at a very limited definition of justice - "getting what you deserve" - without exploring farther the imnl 'rtiwnn f thic, education? Are those not born into such a situation not enti- tled, do they not "deserve" any those who exist at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder are denied the freedom to put- cliP anddo nont have enal a1 c, I 1 11 I\, 1) \ , \ \ \\\1 I/ W[ WVv\,ATAA I