01 OPINION Page 4 Friday, October 27, 1989 The Michigan Daily SIw £icbigau ailg Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol C, No. 38 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. Bush's war on women PRESIDENT BUSH'S new "war on drugs" places women - especially those who are young and poor - un- der attack, as lawmakers attempt to sanction through criminal proceedings the behavior of women during preg- nancy. In California, Florida and Illi- nois, district attorneys have attempted to prosecute women who gave birth to infants who tested positive for the presence of illegal substances. In each instance, the prosecutors sought to apply in unprecedented ways existing laws concerning child abuse or drug trafficking in order to criminalize the behavior of women during preg- nancy. In two of these cases the women were frustrated in their efforts to locate drug treatment facilities that would accept them. Nevertheless, they were subjected to criminal prosecutions on account of their drug use during pregnancy. In another case, a woman was prosecuted for allegedly failing to furnish necessary care for her "pre- born" child. Her doctor attributed her son's stillbirth not only to the woman's amphetamine use, but also to her sup- posedly deliberate "refusal" to follow physician's advice and "stay off her feet." The woman, a mother and a primary caretaker of two small children, lacked the funds to pay for childcare for the duration of her pregnancy. Complying with the doctor's recommendation that she stay off her feet during pregnancy would have required her to neglect her already living children. While the problems of maternal drug use and drug-affected infants are not class-specific, the proposed "remedies" discriminate against alleged criminals on the basis on race, sex and class. Government programs for detecting drug exposure in infants target women who rely on public health facilities. Lacking private health insurance and access to other funds, women of color are disproportionately dependent upon government subsidized programs to address their health care needs. While women in government subsidized fa- cilities are routinely subjected to inva- sive drug tests, women who can afford private health care are not tested under similar circumstances. Not only does this system violate the privacy of nu- merous women- the vast majority of whom are not drug users - it also un- fairly exposes poor women to tests, and possible prosecution, that affluent women need not fear. Efforts to take punitive measures against women on the basis of their conduct during pregnancy offer a my- opic response to a crucial health issue. They dismiss important civil rights, and they sacrifice reproductive rights while simultaneously undermining the most promising solutions to the prob- lem - accessible, funded pre-natal health care and, where medically ap- propriate, drug treatment tailored to the particular needs of pregnant and post- partum women. A survey conducted in New York City by Dr. Wendy Chavkin, professor at the Columbia University School of Public Health, revealed that over half of the drug treatment centers in the city refused to treat pregnant women under any circumstances. Dr. Chavkin also found that nearly 90 percent of the city's drug treatment programs refuse Medicaid recipients who are addicted to crack. The National Institute for Drug Abuse recognized over a decade ago that the inability to obtain child care prevents many women from participat- ing in drug treatment programs. Still, only two of the 87 drug treatment pro- grams in New York City provide child care for parents. While lawmakers focus excessively on matemal drug use, they give little attention to the more serious and widespread problem of inadequate pre- natal care. As Dr. Maxie Collier, Commissioner of Health in Baltimore, argued at the American Civil Liberties Union Biennial Convention, "Poverty is one of the single most important factors that influences health....Problems of race discrimina- tion have gravely affected socio-eco- nomic status and health status..." The maternal drug problem must be viewed as a public health concern, one which cannot be examined in isolation from the economic and racial oppression that frequently compound it. The same is true of the problem of infant mortality. With the exception of South Africa, the U.S. has the highest infant mortality rate in the industrialized world. Black infants are twice as likely as their white counterparts to die before their first year of life; in some cities, this ratio is three to one (Children's De- fense Fund, 1986). The lack of acces- sible and affordable prenatal health care - not illegal drug use - remains the greatest threat to infant health. The in- fants most likely to die tend to be born prematurely; their mothers are often in their teens, and they tend to have had little or no prenatal care. Clearly, punitive measures against pregnant women will not address these real problems. People who are truly concerned about children and about human life must demand increases in prenatal, neonatal, postpartum and pe- diatric health care programs. While such programs are certainly not all that is needed to end the problem of poverty in this country, without them, the sit- uation will never improve. Feast on By Tamara Nedell Fearless Friday has nothing to do with ghosts, goblins, or even Halloween. It is, however, the highlight of Eating Disorders Awareness Week, which is taking place all across the nation from October 23 through October 29. The goal of Fearless Friday is simple: it is a day free from all diets, re- gardless of the person's weight or personal feelings associated with body image. To- day, people are being encouraged to eat healthy meals and a "forbidden food." It is hoped that people will consume food without feeling guilty or "bad" about themselves. This may sound easy, but for some people - particularly women - Fearless Friday may be a challenging experience. Many women are forever "on a diet." The mere thought of indulging in a scoop of rocky road ice cream, a second helping of spaghetti, a real Coke, or even eating three meals in a day can produce feelings of guilt, anxiety, and sometimes fear. It is estimated that 15 to 30 percent of all college women suffer from eating dis- orders. Anorexia Nervosa is a complex emotional disorder characterized by severe weight loss. Victims of Anorexia have iron determination to become thin, in addi- tion to an irrational fear of becoming fat. 'It is estimated that 15 to 30 percent of all college women suffer from eating disorders. Anorexia Nervosa is a Fearless Both of these feelings heighten as more weight is lost. There are many symptoms of Anorexia and, while they vary according to the degree to which the person is af- fected, they include distorted perception of weight and body image, prolonged exercise despite fatigue and weakness, peculiar pat- terns in handling food, perfectionism ac- companied by a profound sense of ineffec- tiveness, and social withdrawal. Anorexia Nervosa can also cause an unusual sensi- Friday shape and a preoccupation with becoming thin. The physical repercussions are dental problems, frequent weight fluctuations, edema, swelling of the parotid glands, and problems with the throat, esophagus, stomach, and colon. Fearless Friday is just one of the many events that are taking place nationwide in recognition of Eating Disorders Awareness Week. It is being sponsored by mental health professionals, physicians, nutrition- complex emotional disorder weight loss.' characterized by severe * tivity to cold, abnormal function of repro- ductive organs, thinning of the hair and nails, and, in extreme cases, death. Bulimia is an emotional disorder which consists of episodes of "binge" eating. A binge is the consumption of large amounts of food during a relatively short amount of time. The bulimic then follows the binge with self-induced vomiting, diet pills, laxatives, or a combination of these methods to lose weight. Additional charac- teristics of bulimia are deep-seated feelings of depression, recurrent mood swings, emotional instability and impulsiveness, in addition to dissatisfactions with body ists, dieticians, educators, coaches, ath- letes, and, most importantly, the media. For one day, resist the word "diet" and all its negative connotations. Celebrate Fear- less Friday today! Support and self-help organizations such as the Center for Eating Disorders, 408 North First Street in Ann Arbor, are active participants in Eating Disorders Awareness Week; they provide support and referrals year round. If you need help or are inter- ested in volunteering at the Center, please call 668-8585. A bagel sale will be held in the Fishbowl today to raise money for the Center. Clearing the air for MSA By Don Blome I find my name mentioned prominently in a recent Michigan Daily article referring to this summer's joint PSC/MSA delega- tion to the Occupied Territories. Although I explained what I considered my role in the delegation at least three weeks ago to an MSA committee assigned to the mat- ter, statements in the Daily article as well as a recent Michigan Review article show that inter-MSA communications move slowly, and some confusion still exists. Regrettably, neither the Daily nor the Re- view attempted to contact me regarding their stories. But most remarkable is the fact that neither Aaron Williams nor Ori Lev, the two MSA members who have ad announcing a joint PSC/MSA delegation to the Occupied Territories. I understood that MSA had appropriated some funds to the trip, and that PSC was supplying the remainder. I applied with the PSC, an organization I knew little about, and I was interviewed by two PSC members. I got a call from the PSC telling me I had been chosen to go. At no time was I informed, by PSC or MSA, that I was the "MSA delegate." Rather, my impression of the project was a unified delegation of five people, supported in part by MSA. Similarly, I was never informed, by either group, of a requirement of a re- port to MSA of any specific kind, although I would have been glad to give one, if anyone had asked me. gave us a chance to meet a wide variety of Palestinians as well as Israelis involved in the peace movement. From beginning to end, the delegation traveled as a single group. This unity is probably where the confusion between the designations "MSA" or "PSC" delegation lies. I learn now that an MSA committee of two peo- ple, including MSA rep. Ori Lev, took part in choosing my application. So, I guess I'm the "MSA delegation," and the four university students who accompanied me are the "PSC delegation." Fine. MSA's good name is untarnished. It seems remarkable to me that MSA and PSC have not discussed the issue between themselves before throwing around accusa- tions and "restrainment orders" (whatever those are). Whether MSA should fund these types of student trips is an appropriate topic of discussion. However, MSA has funded this trip, and we should not let semantic games overshadow the important job of educating ourselves about the realities of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and assess- ing whether it is really in our best inter- ests, as U.S. citizens, to continue to sup- port the denial of political and civil rights to the Palestinian people. '...MSA has funded this trip, and we should not let semantic games overshadow the important job of educating ourselves about the realities of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict...' loudly embraced the issue, have tried to reach me either. The issue, it seems, is whether we had an "MSA" delegation or a "PSC" delegation. My answer since the beginning of the venture would have been both. In February or March, I responded to a Daily If there was a specific agreement be- tween PSC and MSA on the structure of the delegation, I should have been in- formed. However, if I criticize PSC's han- dling of the matter, I also believe they worked quite hard to organize an intensive three-week trip to the territories which In the aftermath of the San Francisco earthuak Homeless are still The End oi fid Wa OfOFfd/ 1 .. I By the Pacific News Service While media focus on the plight of Ma. rina residents newly displaced by last week's earthquake, housing officials and social workers struggle to meet the needs of year round homeless left stranded across the city. The earthquake dealt housing here a double blow. Images of badly damaged res- idences in the picturesque Marina district have dramatized the quake's impact around the world. Far less noted, says Bradford Paul, deputy mayor of housing and neigh- borhoods, has been the loss of up to 1,000 low-income units in other areas, including five major hotels sheltering the homeless. The contrasts have shown up in other ways as well. At the Marina shelter, some 500 dis- placed residents lined up last week to get information on property insurance, while womenacirculated with "more food than they could get rid of," according to one observer. Army personnel from the nearby Presidio Base chauffeured residents from place to place while the press circulated continually, seeking stories of what it was like to suddenly be displaced. At the downtown Moscone Center, run by the Red Cross, nearly 1,000 homeless - including evacuees from the damaged hotels - lined up for information on re- ceiving welfare checks when they have no address. When they lined up for food, their ne surveyed the scene. "This is like the twilight zone here," he said. "It's surreal." Some officials hope the quake will fi- nally get the city moving on the homeless issue. But others fear the needs of the year round homeless are already being over- shadowed by those of the newly displaced. "Homelessness is difficult enough when the city is healthy," says Julia Lopez, general manager of the city's Department of Social Services (DSS). "But with five of our major shelters out of commission, these people are truly victims of the earthquake, even if the Marina people are getting all the media attention." In addition to the newly evacuated homeless, case workers are concerned about the thousands of homeless who haven't yet arrived for shelter or counsel- ing. Those evacuated from low-income ho- tels are in touch with city and state assis- ignored hotels, who have received a week's tempo- rary lodging, eligible for disaster relief housing. In addition, Paul hopes to gain access to unused federal buildings in San Francisco, and to receive other states' un- spent HUD funds for homeless relief. The homeless hope he's right. Ina Car- penter left her home in the Hunter's Point project to live in the Franciscan Hotel in Bay View after her husband began taking drugs. Today, she's on welfare, has a dis- placed hip, and suffers from multiple scle- rosis. Carpenter came to the Moscone Center, with seven members of her family soon after the earthquake seeking food and shel- ter. "I hope they don't prioritize the dis- placed first, and the homeless second," she. said. "This will give the homeless a chance to get put somewhere. Somebody's: going to help us... Somebody." 'Some officials hope the quake will finally get the city moving on the homeless issue. But others fear the needs of the year round homeless are already being overshadowed by those of the newly displaced.' tance programs. But hundreds of other long term homeless may have mental health severe enough to keep them from aid, even in the midst of disaster. "We're trying to find and identify as many homeless as possible," Lopez said. "Reports from staff indicate they're react- ing just as the rest of us are. As we get Willie Burnett, a former postal service; worker now at Moscone who lost job - and his home - after he had a hernia op- eration, feels compassion for the newly: displaced. "Even the rich are homeless in their hearts now," he says, gesturing to-, ward his heart. "They may have a lot' elsewhere - but right now, they're just