con Gre CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY sits again, reincarnate, on the Rehnquist Court of the Modem Age. Taney's Court, in Scott, left intact the power of the slaver by denying constitu­ tional rights to Africans, even if born in the U.S. Rehnquist's Court, in Mc aes key , leaves intact the power of the state to further cheapen Black life. One hundred and thirty years after Scott, and still unequal in life, as in death. YOUTH contIl'UKt from Page 1 ways to boost his mentee's self-es­ teem, too. The Teen Fathers Program reaches teen fathers in the Pontiac area with a network of resources and ongoing support. The mentor­ ing component complements a 12- week group counseling eries and individual counseling, with the en­ tire cycle running for 22 weeks. However, mentors are encouraged to continue contact even after the H P U Y thi integration will help th m look bility nd I at th n first." Th EveryBuddy program I doing wond rful work bringing childr n together in an integrated en­ vironment of leamin . Th Y realize that regardle or how "different" th yare, th children can till enjoy th me a tivitie and care about one another. One do n't have to b di abled or Black or Catholic to celebrate diver ity. The e exceptional children from EveryBuddy teach us all. Cow' milk for Infants discouraged Cow' milk and low-iron, formulas are not appropriate for babies younger than one year. The American . Academy of Pediatrics said babies should receive breast milk for the first 6 to 12 months. 1 not ey rev led ble, docu­ mented imbal n , here ee of victim nd of defend nt deter­ miOf'd wh therone ould live or die. . , th court id, perfectly co titutional. Robert A. Burt, Y le Law Schol r, e mined the impli - tions of McOe key in light of the 1 c e, Loc h rt v. McCree, where th Coun imilarly rejected t argument th t death-qualified, pro-pro ecution, pro- pital puni h­ m nt jury offend th fundamental constitution 1 comm nd for a fair, imp rtialjury. Profe or Burt note : Wh n we add this finding [i.e., that Lockh rt jurie tend to be white and male because Blacks and women are evidence gathered in McCleskey, that capital jurie impo e the death penalty with di proportionate fre­ quency on Black who murder whites and infrequently in re ponse to any murders of Blacks, a grim portrait of the American Criminal Justice system emerges. Thi portrait shows that law en­ forcement in the mo t serious and publicly visible cases is entrusted predominantly to group of white men who value white lives more than Blacks; and thus they take special, For more information contact: ve�geance on Blacks who murder Janet Hill, Chesterfield Community white and are much less concerned Services, Box 92, Chesterfield, VA, ?bout the murder of Blacks. Indeed, 23832,804/275-0005 or Beth Hall of Its low valuation of Blacks coupled the YMCA, 804/276-9622, with its special arousal when Blacks murder whites suggests a law enfor- , cement regime that acts as if our ociety were gripped by fears about, and prepared to take preemptive strikes against, an explosion of race' warfare. As of 7 !25/88, the State Court Administrator's Office recorded 107 persons on Pennsylvania's death row, and, of that total, 50 from Philadelphia, alone. Of that 50, 40 were of African blood, with seven whites, and three Hispanics. Statewide, Blacks, only nine percent of the population; emt!'ge as a clear majority of Pennsylvania's death row. Nationally, the picture is equally bleak, as Africans, just over 10 per­ cent of the nation's total, gro� into 40 percent of America's national death row. More often than not, in America, capital punishment carries a Black, brown, or red face. From daybreak to dusk, Black voices resound in exchanges of daily dramas which mark time in the dead zone; the latest on a lawyer; the latest on a lover; tidbits of thought bounc­ ing off bars of steel and walls of stone, relentlessly, in the wait for death. Echoes of Dred Scott ring in today's McCleskey opinion, again noting the paucity of rights held by Africans in the Land of the Free, who "had for more than a century before 'been regarded as begins of an in- ferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior, that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect" [Dred Scott v. Sanford 19 How. 393 (1857)]. 10 continu d from P 9 1 "hot- dding." He doe n't agr th t it would ve th tate mOD y. McGinni is inve tigating what n call "diversion programs" a olution to the problem. "Diver ion program" are alternative, 1 co tly incarceration methods de igned for non-violent criminals, which McGinni ay make up the majority of Michigan' prisoners. The program McGinni is mo t interested in expanding in Michigan is boot camp incarcera tion. Currently, the state operate one boot camp in Chelsea. ALTHOUGHHE AID that the tate has not yet complied olid evidence on how beneficial boot camps can be over prison , McGinnis said they are a much cheaper olution. Ninety days in a boot camp j ignificantly cheaper than three years in prison," he said. Not everyone can qualify for boot camp incarceration, however. A long list of exclusions makes many prisoners exempt, including murders, armed robbers and exual as auIt convicts. "Basically, no violent offenders can go to boot camp," McGirutis said. Since boot camps aren't for everyone, another cost-cutting option that the Department of Corrections is looking into is double-bunking prisoners. . H argue th t double-bunking (which i not yet u ed in Michigan) create potentially dangerous ituations, M Ginni ay th t it ha been u ful in oth r ta . McGinni aid that tati ti in in titution that double-bun pri oner how that, when implemented properly, ault rat actually have dropped. "Of cour e it' not an ideal ituation," McGinni admitted, "but, quit frankly, pri on i n't suppo ed to be an ideal ituation." OTHER PlAN are also being con idered, including privatizing many aspects of the corrections y tern. "One thing' for certai n, " McGinnis said. "There need to be other options (to ingle-bed pri ons). No other Northern industrial state comes close to locking them up as fa t a we do." Michigan has the seventh highest incarceration rate in the nation. r--- p 1 I van Neal has put· out a lot of fires · He's not a firefighter- he's a teacher. But to the kids he's reached, he's a· hero. eH. H e, Call1-800-45-TEACH. t!1��aI P :R In hs to open up ith our youth," children are "Older children' mortalitie more often are due to firearms, and (their death) occur during arguments, criminal activity and poor adult upervison," Ropp added, ying that tronger gun laws and parental supervi ion are needed. ALLEN TIN of SOSAD (Save Our Sons And Daughters) agrees. Allen is the director of the Survival Institute, SOSAD'sconflict resolution program for children and teens. "SOSAD wants to change that Wild West mentality, that attitude of 'I'm gonna get you before you get me," Martin said. "We're training young people to solve their conflicts nonviolently. We also want to build - .1 COUPON I Beautiful You Beauty Salon I . Donnie - Manlcurl$f/Pedlcurl .• Reg. $35 ... Now $25 I ASK FOR VICKIE, BRENDA OR GAIL. ...... TRY THE BESTIII I INTRODUCTORY OFFER - T - ThJ .... 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