monday, October 22, 1979 daily nebreskan Attitude shift noted Pro-lifers criticize media WASHINGTON-In the Dast few vears. or at least sinr the Supreme Court's 1973 decision on abortion, I have met few opponents of abortion who think the media have been fair to their side. John T. Noonan, a University of California law profes sor and one of the most intellectually respectable voices in the pro-life movement, has documented a strong case against the media. In articles and books-the most recent work is MA Private Choice: Abortion in America in the Seventies"-he has detailed many of the distortions and omissions. MThe pro-life movement,' he says, "fights against a news blackout of what is good on its side. It fights against the media propagating everything that can help the other r j Ma it i a. : a. - i . i siue. ii ngms against a journalism wmcn euner is lnaiiier ent or hostile." I'm troubled by Noonan's charges because for some time I have had far different perceptions. If anything, public opinion appears to be turning against the abortion -il.! . 1 xl 1 - . . . . , . emic-ana me laws supporting it precisely oecause me pro-lite message has been getting through as never before. A major turnaround occurred in March 1975 when Newsweek ran on its cover a color photograph of a 16-week-old fetus. Fingers, toes, physical features, and even blood veins where graphically clear. Previously, this was the picture that many people found ghastly and repulsive as it was waved on placards by marching right-to-lifers. But now it was on Newsweek's cover, . THE FETUS wasn't a lifelsss tissue after all. The startl ing photograph, give sudden respectability from an un- a - J . ...1Ji L.I T J. -i. il ---I- I really thought that much about abortion. It was a moment to stop and reflect: Perhaps it isn't so simple an issue, to be neatly summarized in the slogans of pro abortionists. If the Newsweek cover was a breakthrough, so also was a piece a year later in Good Housekeeping. Dr. Bernard Nathanson wrote "Second thoughts on Abortion from the Doctor Who Led the Crusade For It." Nathanson was saying in a mass-circulation magazine what he had written earlier in the New England Journal of Medicine: "I am deeply troubled by my own increasing certainity that I had in fact presided over 60,000 deaths ... We are taking life, and the deliberate taking of life, even of a special order and under special circumstances, is an inexpressibely serious matter." This, month, Doubleday is publishing' "Aborting America," Nathanson's account of his years of moral struggle that has lead him to believe, as Doubleday notes, that "abortion on request is wrong." Articles along these same lines by writers re-examining old positions and exploring new feelings-have been appearing regularly in the past two or three years. LINDA BIRD Francke's od-ed column in the New York Times, which led to her book, "The Ambivalence of Abortion," was memorable,. Last year's. Chicago Sun Times' expose on the abortion mills of Chicago was journalism at its most powerful. In the current issue of Harper's an essay called "Of Two Minds About. Abortion" describes abortion foes as anything but fanatics. Instead, "they conceive of a social and moral order where citizen ship has duties and passions are held in check." Among abortion supporters, "what is lacking is any sure sign of concern over the society we have, and the people we will be, once their ends are attained." What's striking about these new media probings is where the articles appeared: from Good Housekeeping to the Chicago Sun-Times. In the minds of many in the pro life movement, these publications are among the media that are considered the "indifferent and hostile enemy." t- " - - Yet, if any turning around of public opinion is occurring, and I am convinced it is, then the positive contributions of the so-called' biased media must be recognized. After the 1973 decision, the superficial cover age of the abortion-the facile write-off that this was "a Catholic issue" or that pro-life officials inflated their numbers-was less an example of unfair coverage than coverage that was unknowing. The media were over their heads amid the moral, social and political complexities, Incompetence was at work, not bias. . If this has changed, then the chances are increased that the abortion debate can be more reasoned and less strident than what has been the sorry case until now, (c) 1979, The Washington Port Company well.meruM, vsiwat's yooR ANALYSIS OP THAT LAST TOUCHDOVJM DRIVE ? 0 LAST TOUCHDOVJM ' 1 DRIVE? V k ML" mi gel I'M SOWtf,DCtt,BUT 1 WA WATCH IMG TMC aw, heck! S0 VJA I -.7 1 5 S IM I YOU THINK MAYBE" WE H0UU TAKE TUfcMS.OKK? 5WUT UP, MOD HMsiD ME THOSE UlUOCULAfcS. Lion - Tuc3 0 -10 pm c'.zo O" AH E!r?!& n l r , "J i r-' v at L- -L m 7 J MENTION THIS AD- GET FOUR FREE GUITAR PICKS! GUITARS AND SOUND REINFORCEMENT BY: Gibson Ibarrti Biamp MXR Fender Roland Electro-Voice Sunn THE ORIGINAL GUITAR STORE 2841 N. 42th upstairs 4S4-637S While in picking up your fresh flowers register for a 10-speed bicycle to be given away Oct. 31 call 432-2775 9 226 South 11th EAST OF THE BR AN DEIS PARKING LOT i The Glass Onion . 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