Page 2-Thursday, February 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily PRISON DOES MORE HARM THAN GOOD: Judge says jail is no deterrent By BETH ROSENBERG Sending a young person to prison does not deter crime and does more harm than good, according to Detroit Recorder's Court Judge Samuel Gar- dner. Gardner came to the Center for Afro- American and African Studies yester- day to speak on "The Criminal Justice System and How it Affects Blacks" as part of Black History Week. PRISONS, GARDNER said, only "warehouse little bodies for limited periods of time and send them back to society and the same environment. Jail is supposed to teach convicts a lesson, Gardner said. However, the lesson it teaches is a lot different than the one intended, he added. "In jail, juveniles are exposed to Transcontinental telephone dialing was established in the United States in 1951. other criminals. They get an education there. Then they come out feeling they know how to commit crime, better," Gardner said. IMPRISONING someone is like casting them aside, according to the judge. "We had dungeons hundreds of years ago. It didn't work then and it doesn't work now." Imposing sentence is the hardest job a judge faces, Gardner said. "I sometimes walked the floor at night if I thought a sentence was wrong. If I found that to be true, I called the person back and gave him another trial." Realistic alternatives to incar- ceration are necessary, according to Gardner. IDENTIFYING the typical common criminal is an important factor in solving the crisis of high crime, Gar- dner said. A typical defendant is 17 to 22 years old, male, black, a high school drop-out or "push-out" and unem- ployed or underemployed, he said. Of the 12,000 cases heard in Recor- ders Court last year, 11,000 involved blacks, Gardner added. For three months, Gardner has been testing what he called a "pre-aversion" program in his Detroit courtroom. Of- 'in jail, juveniles are ex- posed to other criminals. They get an education there.,Tlhey come out feel- ing they know how to comn- mit crime better.' --Detroit Recorder's Court JI d ge Sai nu el Gard ner Drug dealers, however, are one group the judge is likely to send up river. "I do send drug pushers to prison. They get big time. That's my big hang-up. Drug dealers are dealt with harder than most homicides." Although he is against drugs, Gar- dner said marijuana should be decrim- inalized. "There is no evidence that marijuana leads to crime. The same isn't true for heroin. The cost factor is so high that addicts are driven to com- mit crimes." GARDNER DOES not deal as harsh- ly with addicts as with pushers because he looks at addicts as victims. "I had a case where a 17-year-old had a $200-a-day drug habit. He had to steal, but hadn't been caught for two years. He was a bright boy, but somewhere our system missed him. We miss a lot of people in our system. They aren't born criminals - it's not hereditary, - they're forced to (crime) by society." Studies show that crime decreases as education increases, Gardner said. A former Detroit Board of Education member, he said the city's education system is a disaster. "That's why all the public school teachers send their kids to private schools," Gardner commented. Detroit's crime situation will turn around, he predicted. As blacks rise up the economic- ladder, the dispropor- tionate number that appear in court will also decline, Gardner said. -. mm A careerin law- without law school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate'education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work tradi- tionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills-the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 2,000 graduates in law firms, banks, fenders, instead of being sent to jail, are put on probation and given guide- lines to follow. If they comply with the judge's rules, their criminal records are erased at the end of the probation, he explained. "TURN LOOSE" Gardner is the name the judge has developed among some, but he said he takes great pride in the nickname. Doily Photo by ALAN BIUNSKY Gardner: Jail fails Regents .to discuss By BRIAN BLANCHARD and corporations in over 80 cities. The University will ask the Regents' If you are a senior of high academic standing and are to support two proposals to increase interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like student activities space during this af- to meet you. ternoon's meeting in the Ad- Contact your placement office for an interview with our ministration Building. One calls for ad- representative. ditional space in Crisler Arena and renovation of the Student Activities We will visit your campus on: Building (SAB) workshop. The other, from 'University President. Robben Wednesday, March 22 Fleming, requests Union Thursday, March 23 reorganization. In other action the Regents are ex- pected to follow annual routine and ap- The Institute for prove the University.Rate Study Com- Paralegal Training mittee request for a 7.4 per cent room and board hike. 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 IT WILL COST about $150 more to (215) 732-6600 live in University housing next year if Operated by Para-Legal, Inc. the Regents agree to the increase. The committee recommendation ... calls for single room leases to cost -,r --.-. .. . ..--........ -.. ...... ....... s ecal - - LA AI & Tn T -~ .........-. $2,047.50; doubles to cost $1,759.50; triples $1,552.50; triple suites the same as doubles; economy doubles $1,478.25; and economy triples $1,388.25. The University currently ranks second in the Big Ten only to private Northwestern University in room-and- board fees. SPACE POSSIBILITIES before the Regents during the first of this month's two-day meeting include a recommen- dation by Student Service Vice- president Henry Johnson for more ac- tivities space in plant facilities in Crisler Arena and renovation of the SAB workshop. The total proposal would cost $360,000 plus another $24,000 for bus service expansion and in- creased maintenance. Unlike Johnson's proposal, there will be no vote on Fleming's request that the Regents relinquish control of the Union so it can be reorganized to attract more students. The Union's ten-member Board of Direct Regen rescind some I Unionv preside would' a "rat Union.' four fl wouldk housi'ng space. ors now reports directly to the rooms to help ease the housing squeeze. ts. If the Regents agree to AT A SPECIAL 8-p.m. meeting I one section of their by-laws at tonight, the Regents will listen to public future meeting, control of the comment on a private consultant's would shift to a University vice- report describing a University Hospital ent, probably Johnson, who traffic accessplan. then be responsible for bringing The University has threatened to hskellar-type operation" to the move the Hospital if a significant There is also a chance that the change isn't made in traffic patterns ors of hotel space in the Union over the roads leading to the Hospital be made into West quad dorm from the northeast. Begin hits U.S.-Arab warplanes deal PLATIGNUM ITALIC SET Contains afountainyen,five. -talic bis andtinstructton manuaf a((forony $6o.0... At art materiaC¥ s5ioys, codegc took.stores...orsen4 check to Tentafic Cory., 132 West 22 St., N.Y., N.Y. 10011 AddX50 cents for flanfhng-. (Continued from Page 1) Begin, who will be making his third visit to Washington since taking office last June, said he would hold three days of talks with President Carter. No dates for the visit were announced, but White House spokesman Rex Granum said it would probably be early in March. Granum said it was important "to have thorough discussions with Begin" on the Middle East situation similar to the conversations the President held with Sadat during his U.S. visit earlier this month. BESIDES the issue of U.S. arms sup- plies to the Arabs, Carter and Begin are expected to discuss the question of Israeli settlements in occupied Arab lands. The Carter administration op- poses the settlements as illegal under international law. NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup and Sandwiches 50* Friday, Feb. 17 Representatives from the CHICANA SEMINAR will talk about "The Women Prison Project" at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (corner of Oakland) Under the $4.8 billion arms proposal, the United States would sell Saudi Arabia 60 F-15s, the premier U.S. war- plane, and Egypt 50 of the less sophisti- cated F-5E fighters. Israel would receive 15 F-15s to augment the 25 it began receiving 14 months ago, and 75 F-16s. Selling the advanced F-15s to the Saudis was clearly the more worrisome element of the package to the Israelis, despite Saudi Arabia's status as a moderate state not in direct confron- tation with Israel. BEGIN claimed Saudi Arabia had promised "a certain Arab nation" the aircraft it received would be deployed agains Israel in the event of renewed warfare. He gave no' source for his assertion, implying that it came from an intelligence report. Saudi Arabia sent small ex- peditionary forces to help Syria against Israel in both the 1967 and 1973 wars. Begin said the F-15 would put Saudi bases within 10 minutes' flying time of the southern Israeli port of Eilat and a few more minutes away from Israel's population centers. The Israelis are likely to lobby again- st the proposed sale in Congress, which has 56 days to veto the deal. Congressional opposition to the proposal is already building, but Israeli newspapers were saying yesterday that this country has lost its automatic majority of supporters in Congress sin- ce Sadat's U.S. visit. 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