Readers Write THE CITY 0 Detroit has n eronomically infirms for e tim Let the healing p begin Th are th that exhort against an increase in crime. 1.00 t it this y, 're gonna have crime without ino gambling. We all know that vice' an inveterate part of our society. Let us not dwell on the dark side but rather, let us the ligh think of the good it will do, not just financially but harmonio ly. Our Commander in Chief persistently propounds us with "The oourage to change." We am do this Detroit! The only thing to fear is fear itsel£ I'd hate to think that we as a city are too calloused and barbaric a people to inoorporate the gaming industry into our oommunity. Envisionyourselfrubbingelbows with uperstarathletea at the blaclQack table or toeeingthe dice with premier entertainers, This amino gambling�tesan uncommon bond between the common man, the indigent and the prominent, executi and electricians, the waitress and the school teacher, serves as a nexus for commu­ nication, eoothingetbnic anxieties, casting a concentric point from which to reverberate good vibes throughout our fair city. CONSIDER THE revenue it will attract - Canada, Ohio, Chicago. The Hen-Cen will bustle with business, and the Westin Hotel, inundated with guests. Then there' the Ponchartrain, the Millender Center. Why, even the old Hudson's Department Store would make one heck-of-a-nice Hotel/Casino. Corporate investo-, fcxxi distributors, laundry suppliers, limo and taxi moaJ, junkets, excursions, b planes, trains, M0- town BOOMINGl An invigorating economy, that's casino gambling. Thousands of gamblers leave our city weekly, monthly, headed to Atlantic City' or Sioux Ste. Marie and with them goes thousands upon thousands of dollars. Get the picture? Why not keep the currency to help stimulate our own my. Come 'mon it, get with the program. I say it' . got "back on he map." J.ryl B.rg near, Detroit VIOLENCE IN' AMERICA , fII1.I "MORE AMERICAN 'nIAN APPLE PIE" WDC-Dr. David Satcher, Director, Center for Disease Control and Prevention: "Violence is the IeacliDC cause of lost Ufe ill America." Por African A.n1erican , the various affects of institutional and interpersonal violence poses the most serious threat to survival since slavery. If aD Americans were killed by gun at the same rate young Black male .260,000 people would'be murdered cb year. Since 1900 aD estimated 850,000 dvlUans 'have been IdlIed by bull 11. Between 1938-88, more Ameri lIS died from posbot ounds (1,209,199) than from aD oureountry' ars (1,177,956). Corponte violeDCe from cigarettes, alcohol and drup IdUs more , than 500,000 people annually. There are 20 million jail admi i� and releases annually.: One-third of all ':ftnant women are battered, and 2.S mDUo dlDdreu are abused ann y. A woman is nine times more at risk in bet home than on the streets. There are upwards of 100 mlWon private ftrearms, with 1.S mOUOD " band produced each year. If the present pattern of incarceration continues. by the year 2(XX) 40.. of aU AfrlcaD· American men let 18 .. 35 MAkES will be in prison or Jail. 'IOU 'YoU WoIk related death from CAM AWN! corporate violence are six Wf1k 11ns $ftfF7? times greater than homicides. Every year occupational diseases cause 350,000 new Wn and up to 200,000 r "or er die from such .. (] � dlleases annually. "f.iiI .. The U.S. h been lIAN� the only country to use an atomic bomb, not once but ftJ4t7 twice, against the civilian populations of Hiroshima � .... and N gasaki. Since W.W. II. the U.S ... h s bee� ���.., involved in 2S overt or covert military mtervennons. The Cen Bureau estimates that over 158,000 n, women and chUdren cUed lD Iraq fro eGulfWar. TheU.S.accountsforS7�ofallanns es in the world. Violence infec our mo t basic in titution and relationships. Corporate crime and violence from the ites kills hundreds of times many Americans as gunfire in the streets, yet th re more animal.helters In the U.s. than lten for tiered 0 e t ore I IUD dealer than I do t: 'The current orgy for more cops, jailJ d punishment fro� the White House, the Conp and Mayors; waging a w.ar a ain t Violence at home With the same means as the Gulf Wat; holdmg 13-year-01d dren I y po Lester's World ,in il- Dercent of all ing1 family om 0 eel by inoom African Americans i ured, oompared to 79 nt 0 all similar dwellings o by 10 inoome whites. In Minneapo . ,only 48 percent of the black iJ)gle-family hom re insured . 80 percent of t hom in oomparable white districts. ACORN also disoovered in its reb tbat African Americans and Latino invariably pay much higher ra than whites to insure hom of identical val For emmple, in Kansas City, ACORN found that insur­ ance cost .88 percent of a home's value in low inoome minority neighborhood i in majority white, low income oqmmuniti , iD8\U'8DC9 cost only .45 percent of home' value. B1acb pay more and recei .. . Alon Color In " '. IN TERMS 0 th care, our greatest public health crisi is the AIDS/HIV epidemic. � relatively few hi m to reoognize the unequal impact of AIDS within minority communi­ ti . As of 1993, half of all AIDS cases and Ameriams living with HIV disease ere African­ Americans and Latinos. But Yale la pro r Harlon Dal­ ton 0 , within minority "oommuniti there is a justifi- able fear that public concern for Dr. Mcmning MCJTCJ!Jl« i. Pr0(4 � 0( the epidemic will wane. . . HulDryand Political � � � soon it becomes understood . tDroftMA{riCX1Jl,.oAmma::IAStud.altUJli.. that the face of AIDS bas dar - tute. Columbia UnivuaUy. New Yo" City. SORRY KIOS ... BUT WE JUST DON'T HAVE THE MONEY FOR STUFF LIKE THAT. - . . " the u.s. Death Row population, and 46% of state prisoners. Increasingly, . nee th lious 60' , prison populations have become blac er and, blacker, a reality that can only be perceived as threatening and fearful to the average white pris­ oner. For far too many Blac pris­ o have become a arped rite of passa , a malevolent mar of "Manhood," and a dark e eta­ tion. For whit , ho ever, even or . ng cl , prison a mar of social expulsion in extre . and an affirmation of on ' out­ cast tatus. Blac ha longer history of rejection from this ociety than the relati ly OO11t era of grudging acceptance. any have n socialized into oppres­ sion, with prison just 0 more By 'umia Abu-I amal Florida Death Row prisoner Michael Alan Durocher sent a letter to the governor, literally begging to be emcuted When Fla� Gov. Lawton Chiles signed his death warrant, Durocher sent him a thank you note. On Aug. 25th, 1993, at 7:15 a.m., Durocher, 33, got his wish. California's Death Row con­ vict, David Mason, fired his ap­ pellate lawyers, stating his willingn to die in th gas chamber. Mason, 36, was angrily criti­ cal of hat he called the "ind try" of lawyers capitalizing off of capital appeals. Despite his elevent h hour conversion from his previous de­ termination to die, the Mason case came to symbolize the ap­ parently growing occurrence of Death Row prisoners ho de- manddeath. . THE CEO demon- strates the differenCe bet n popular perception and reality. Of the approximately 2,700 men and women on U.S. Death Rows, only 26 people, I than 1 %, have volunteered to be cuted. The Washington, D.C.-based National Coalition to Abolish the Death P nalty has m­ bled data detailing the racial breakdown of of those opting for execution, and found follow­ ing; Whi co titute I than 51 % of all Death Row prisone in t U.S., but make up over 80% of all volun for execu- . Why? . naIl Afri tion. . atio y, can- Americans mar roughly 40% of From' Death Row grim e rienee, in a bitter . ten . T L RE equally, however, is th relent­ I regime of loc down, 10 li- , isolation and hopeless.DeEI8 hile 0 a waits th, e ding a terrible yehic, spiritual, psy­ chological and familial toll. A flight to d th th n, is oft­ tim a flight from th soul-kill­ ing conditions of Death Ro