OPINION Page 6 The Michigan Daily .Tuesday, July 26, 1983 A The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 27-S -x 93 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by students of The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board TV news: A (pretty) woman's world OVER THE HILL at 38. That's what former news anchorwoman, Christine Craft was told by Kansas City's KMBC-TV. Too old, too unattractive and "not deferential" enough to male colleagues, her former employers repor- tedly told her. Craft, who now works as anchor for KEYT- TV in California, appears to have been the vic- tim of the double standard women must face in television news: Male newscasters can age gracefully with no fear of losing their job, while women newscasters face an end to their careers at the slightest sign of aging. Seeking reinstatement to the co-anchor position, lost wages and benefits, and damages equal to that, Craft filed a sex-discrimination, suit against Metromedia Inc., the former owner of the television station. It doesn't take much convincing to believe Craft's charges. Anyone who watches television news knows that anchorwomen are much younger and are usually, "attractive" women. Anchormen, on the other hand, don't have to be handsome enough to be able to appear on the cover of GQ magazine (most are pretty average looking), can be a few pounds overweight, and don't have to worry about graying hair. What's so ironic about the Craft case is that she is by most people's standards, quite attrac- tive. The only problem is that she was fast ap- proaching the age of 40 - a kiss of death for TV newswomen. The ridiculousness of the case, however, is that if television news is supposed to inform the public of the day's news, who cares what the person looks like? In the past, our best and most trusted male newscasters were not particularly "good looking" - no disrespect, Messrs Cronkite, Huntley, and Chancellor - and people still tuned in regularly. So why should the networks be any more concerned with the way their anchorwomen look than they are with the way their anchormen do? The only explanation is that the networks believe male viewers will only watch female anchors if they look like Bo Derek. Although there are men like that, most would probably just as soon tune into an "average-looking" an- chorwoman as they would an "average- looking" anchorman. Besides, there is already enough programming for the "cheesecake" viewers. If Ted Koppel, Roger Mudd, and David Brinkley never had to win any beauty contests, then why should Christine Craft or any other female newscaster? Cocaine's newest victims: Battered women By Mary Claire Blakeman In a famous letter to his sweetheart, Sigmund Freud war- ned her that she was no match for "a big wild man who has cocaine in his body." Women still have reason to fear coked-up lovers. In shelters for battered women around the coun- try, increasing numbers of wives and girlfriends are showing up with bruises given to them by men who abuse cocaine. The national toll-free Cocaine Hotline (800 COCAINE) receives between 750 and 800 calls a day, according to Dr. Jane Jones, the hotline's associate medical direc- tor at Fair Oaks Hospital in Fair Oaks, N.J. Calls from men out- number those from women three to one. Three-fourths of all callers tell of fights and arguments and half mention thoughts of suicide. In Oakland, Calif. a black welfare mother fled to a women's shelter with her three children when her boyfriend, who smoked cocaine base, started slapping her and throwing dishes. A wealthy young white woman told counselors in Southern California that she had traveled to places like Tahiti and the Caribbean with her coke-dealing fiancee who beat her in hotel rooms. "I've been assaulted in some of the most beautiful places in the world," she said. Certainly not all people who use cocaine turn violent, and alcohol still leads among substances abused by batterers. But in the last two years the estimated number of Americans who have used cocaine jumped from 15 to 20 million, according to a poll conducted by Time Magazine and the opinon of drug abuse experts. Counselors working with bat- tered women say they have seen an increase in cocaine-related violence in the same time span. Pamela Lincoln, who works with the Coalition for Abused Women on Long Island, N.Y., says, "There's absolutely been an in- crease in the last two or three years with the number of women coming in." These counselors and therapists are quick to point out that a direct line can't be drawn from substance abuse to violen- ce, since that would excuse the behavior of the batterer. "A man who hits a woman still is respon- sible for that action whether he's using a drug or not," says Trish Donahue of Marin County's Abused Women Services in San Rafael, Calif. Dr. Richard Gelles, a sociologist at the University of Rhode Island who has studied family violence for 10 years, says society often lets drug and alcohol abusers off the hook too easily. "Plenty of people go out at lunch and do cocaine," he says. "Are those same people coming back and being violent with their co-workers or the boss? They'd never take a swing at the boss. But if they use cocaine and hit their wives, people say, 'Oh, you poor drug addict.' " A recent California state study of violence points out that many factors - drugs, junk food, unemployment and violence on television - can exacerbate violent tendencies, but there is no absolute cause-and-effect relationship between those fac- tors and abusive behavior. Still, cocaine is adding its own unique tint to the picture of wife- beating in America. Because it is a stimulant, cocaine can heighten feelings of anxiety, tension or aggression. That effect coupled with the drug's expense, can create an explosive mixture. David Griffis, a police officer in San Rafael, recently responded to a call from a home in affluent Marin County where a stock- broker who used cocaine was hit- ting his girlfriend. "He started beating on her when she started asking where the money was going," Griffis says. Trish Donahue tells of a California woman whose cocaine- snorting husband gradually grew more violent over the course of a year. "He had bizarre suspicions about her seeing other men," Donahue says. "He would beat her because the way the gate on the fence was closed indicated to him that she was seeing someone. Once he beat her because he thought the way the food was arranged in the refrigerator meant she was having an affair." On the other side of the coin women who use cocaine may find it more difficult to get out of a relationship even if they are abused. "When a woman is getting cocaine from her partner she ?ECrUSE I NELED I NST ALL ~TE N CETS OcO ToRSKT T IN CNILE. BUT LETS LDWKT T{E FACT - \F IT WERN'T FOR PNOC OET.. doesn't want to let go of that con- nection even if she's being bat- tered," says Cindy Burton, who has counseled battered women in Marin County. "And because of attitudes toward women who use dugs, she feels she can't reach out for help since so many judgments will come down on her." Counselors say it's important for women to realize drugs alone may not be at the root of a man's violence. Sociologist Gelles em- phasizes the point. "Battered women shouldn't be lulled into thinking that their husbands have a drug problem and that's why they're getting beaten," he says. "They shouldn't hang around waiting for the 'drug problem' to get bet- ter. They should just clear out." Sherry K., the welfare mother in Oakland, learned that lesson the hard way. For almost 10 years she lived with an abusive husband who was involved with drugs. 'Later, she let her boyfriend - who drove a Cadillac, wore designer clothes "and was really popular" - move in with her when he lost his job. "I didn't know he was doing cocaine at the time," she says. "He started basing (smoking) cocaine around the house and quit caring about the way he looked. He lost everything. He never punched me, but when he started to slap me I had a feeling it would lead to that." This time around, Sherry K. got out quickly. She went to a women's shelter. Now she is working to complete her high school education and find a job. "He was going nowhere but down," she says of her boyfriend, "and he was taking me with him." Blakeman wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. PEoFLE QUESTioM %Y C0MTMENT To FOtRI& MED M IN LAT\N AMER\CA1 CILE STEETS WOULDN'T BE FULL OF PEOPLE )EmA Dt DECAOCxy I I 4 .I 4