t J · National Conupotadelll-NNPA The Department of Justice recently reported, that of 586,609 priso rs in U.s. jaik, 246,833 - or 40% - are Black me� and men.. I "One of the things that f . ghtens me about Black America right no , is that I don't see that zeal to win or to survive as bard II use to see . that scares . I see people be- co mmg ddictive to materialism. y tend to forget that there is something that has made us survive all these years. It's called moral fiber," accord­ ing to Samual F. Saxton, Presi­ de of the American Jail As­ sociation and Director of Cor­ rections for Prince Georges County, Maryland Saxton. explains that most people get into trouble because they are followers nd pot leaders. "They get socialized . 0 tro ble. There is a te dency to see people come to jail in two' d four', and for years nobody understood that" Saxton suggests that one of the key reasons for the growing number of inmates is that the system i not focused on some of the critical areas that need to be serviced. "Weare putting our as­ sets in the wroog place. The bat­ tle in corrections has been that 60% (incarcerated) right in' the middle who cause most of the trouble. The system has tended to 100 everybody as exactly the same, and they have ignored that group in the middle." Accordiag to the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) female prisoner growth outpaced male inmate in 1987, by 2.4% or 28,839 women jailed . "The great majority of the men incarcerated are caught up in the drug scene somehow. And the . ds are going to get caught up in that too, unless we can find a way to divert that," stated Saxton. "You see some men getting into trouble in­ dependent of men, but it is stiU the rule, that the average woman that gets into trouble, did so in coajuncti n ·th a male." The omen, he says, are more difficult to deal ·th be­ cause of the "strong attachment" to their children. "We've got to have programs that ��t how to raise ypunpters here m the jail M of them, (mother jailed) have not been educated enough to woe with the . ds," he explained Saxton has promoted his vi on jail reform with the goal of moving the jails into the � century." Competency based education, work relese, and ho detention are the opera­ tional concepts to significantly upgrade the system, says the former Marine. Saxton says "I don't be . � . that much in the Ged in the Jail setting. because the (JED and 75 cents will get you a alp of coffee in most places. So what you h!ve to do is make it a much more career oriented education and give them something they can do and play to their strong suit." Having access to programs in the community, he sa� is man­ datoty to achieving success. Currently Saxton operates a 100 bed wor release detention center, which is being expanded to house 300 inmates enrolled in the program. In the prison's wOrk release to home programs, the individual is required to hay a job and to support his/her family. The family he says is aiti­ cal to the overall process. "I have family counseling as a component of this institution. Moving towards the end of your sentence our strategy is to have you meet up with a after-care counselor. After-care coun­ selors come from the community and e've trained them. In home-detention you re still obliged to come bac to the work release center for family conseling. That brings you, your wife, and your kids - all that back together. We can begin to talk about how three of them can begin to wor it out and become ole again," he slated Saxton says he violate prin­ ciples th t used to be sancrosanct. "We encourage of­ ficers to talk to inmates, We en­ courage them to get to know SENIOR CITIZEN APAA ENTS AVAILABLE At Lab II To Co-operati e A ·33 Labelle, H 18 d Park, MI 883-4030 I 9 •. m- oon in Opponunity e. them. We encour courage prisoners positive kinds of . dealing with a motivated to say me." You have to play the game, he says, to win, when responding to the inmate. "You can find your­ self getting out faster. You'll find things are going to work out bet­ ter for you. All of a sudden you begin to see maybe I don't have to be as I was before. Backing that up with vocational training, with education is a more practi­ cal kind of way." South African Union serve Shell nice (NIS) - The head of South Africa's powerful Mineworkers Union, making a surprise ap­ pearance the shareholders meeting of the Anglo-Dutch Shell Group, warned the giant oil congolmerate that it will be t rgeted for anti partheid .protests unless it withdraws from South Africa. otice w; served earlier this month by Union Pres'ideut J ame Motla � who attended 'the annual closed meeting at th H a shar older. An­ tiapartheid organizations had purchased shares of' the company's stock on behalf of th union leader. Motlasi, charging Shell with "fueling partheid", was joined aty the meeting by John Bonovic of the U.S. United Mine Workers. Dutch and, Danish anti­ apartheid activists protested outside. • II By Dorothy 1tObI __ If your child is having trouble learning to spell, as them to spell the following words: Mac- ... ..... - � Donald; Wendy; Burger King; Pepsi; and Coca Col Chances are the child can spell these words correctly because he has mental pictures of these. ords firmly etched in his mind The ability to take mental pic­ tures, store them, and call upo them when needed is one of the miracles of the human mind Every tim we remember some­ thing which happened or the way something looked, we are pulling out pictures from our mental storeroom. Wbe� children are ed to spell a word, they are being re­ quired to caU forth their mental picture of that word. If the men­ tal picture is very clear and ac­ curate, they can spell the rd easily and accurately. If the n­ tal picture is fuzzy or incorrect, they will have difficulty spelling the word. I f they have never seen the word, or if they do n bold a mental picture of �e way the letters are arranged to produce that particular sound, they will be unable to spell that rd, Helping children to become better spellers is primarily a matter of helping them to make mental pictures of words. Children automatically ow how to make mental pictures (it is their gift of being human), but sometimes they have to be taught how to take th time to focus their mental "camera" on the words they must learn to spell . Tell the mild to close their eyes and picture a blackboard in their mind, put the lettersl of the word 00 thi ntal blackboard, look atthe rd for a moment, 13 : Changingl I eeIt en s of the igger Boy" remar gets ·Chief fired By C A. H·· r. Washington, D.C. (NNPA) Black flJ'efighters. - After more than a k of Montgomery County tense standof posturing, NAACP Vice President Hanley Michael May, white chief of i. orment, said in an interview, Hyattstown, Maryland, volun-: "They (the Black firefighter ) 'teer fire department who ad- ar 't the only people who were milled calling a Black fireman of�t:!ed by this. While they, "nigger boy", resigned under' the Ives, may feel comfort­ pressure. able being called antebellum The incident generated so names, they canno speak for much beat that the Montgomery other Blacks." County Council voted to withold ontgomcry County is ad- more than $35000 orth of nt to Howard County, funding from the fire depart- d, wb�re in February of ment unless Chief May resigned, ar, a white manager of the and 35 Black fuefagbters, who te Turf Club w forced too work throughout the county, after he w accidentally staged a news conference and h d to say on telephone re­ demanded that May step down. cor r he thought w discon- May, who had issued a public , nected, "This nigger ... I'm oing apology and agreed to enter sen- to put . I up against th� wall. sitivity training, alleged that it remarks re triggered was a common joke at the station by a from a Howard County for him to address the Black NAACP official questioning firefighter "Diggers" and for hiri practices at club. ·themtocallhim"honky."Hewas t the in istence of the backed by 77-0 vote of his CP, the manager was fired, fare fighters, 0 include several e Hyattslown incident . I;)orothy Robin then call the letters out they see them. They ould be asked to do this several times .. th each of the rds they are learning to spell. They will sOoo learn h to mentally foc s on words automatically. 10· process is called "Imaging." An exqellent b k on this technique for young people is Imaging: Think Your WIlY To Success In Sports And Classroom by R. Ohley. (Atheneum 1985). ..... Drawing from the winning te iques used by successful athletes around the orld, Olney has gathered their mental f$lSing methods and p them in a step-by-step procedure which can be used by other aspiring athletes to become win­ ners. He then takes the winning techniques out of the sports aetna and ap . to the classroom. I Explaining t the muscle memory must be trai ed just carefully other in the body by persistent practice and discipline, tle states, "Every time you repeat an action, any action, the pattern becomes stronger and easier to follow again." He also gives ry detailed procedures on to develop confidence, ho to relax, and other techniques uld be able to learn everythiDg else with ease. If you ould try the spelling technique with your child, us hear about the results. Write to DorothyW. Robinso P.O. Box 19156, Otago, 11... 60619. "parallel to on in Gaithersburg, Maryland, fire department Just a year ago," Norment recalled. "Th fire chief Robert Wilson, a whi e man, was relating an anec­ dote at meeting attended by several Blacks. He finished with the punchline, • I've never met a nigg r who w uldn't steal from me. Wilson was fired also." The three towns are located short distances of one ano er in an area that is largely small town, rural and where Ku Klux Klan activity bas been recorded. Fifty years ago last fa the then newly formed Montgomery County NAACP brought legal . action on behalf of a Blac . school teacher seeking equal pay. They won the case. The lawyer: Thurgood Marshall, who was then chi f counsel of the AACP's "Ink" (Inc.) Fund Mar 8lI is now a justice of the u.S. upr me Court, I , ,