editors: Mary long jo marcotty barb cornell Sunday mclgcazine inside: page four-books page five-profile Number 4 Page Three October FEATUR 12, 1975 ES Behavior mod: Euphemism for a kind o fps ychogenocide By DAVID WEINBERG "IT'S LIKE THEY'RE always watching you." He gestures to windows in the roof of his cell where guards can observe him. "Or they're listening to you." He indi- cates the speaker on the wall. "Always judging how you're be- having. Always telling you . ." his voice trails off. He looks at the floor in his cell thinking of what else to say. It is dinner hour at the prison, and a cart staffed by ten men begins moving slowly down the wing. One of the servers silent- ly gestures to the prisoner with an antiseptic, plastic - gloved hand. All but one of the prisoners ac- cept the stew and boiled potatoes served through a rectangular slot in the cell's bars. The prisoner continues, placing his food aside momentarily. "One thing you don't realize about the place is once you're in, you're in for good. There's no way out of here except through the program." IT'S NOT THE YPE of thing they're talking about at cock- tail parties anymore. It had its fling in the newspa- pers. For a while it triggered the public's imagination. Then behav- ior modification went the way of most 'vogue 'topics in this coun- try -- fading like the ephemeral image on a television screen For an involved few, it is a topic that has never lost its impact on society. To some its an unbeatable method of personal problem solv- ing. For others it symbolizes psy- chogenocide - the ultimate con- trol of human behavior. In the deepening silence sur- rounding it, behavior modification has moved quietly into the prison system, schools and one-on-one therapy. The initial furor has dis- sipated, but the behavior modifica- tion story and its problems remain - harbringers of a new technology and a new age. I OCAL BEHAVORIST James Mc- Connell once said to a group of lawyers that "The day has come when we can combine sensory de- privation with the use of drugs, hvnnocis and the astute manipula- tion of reward and punishment to gain almost absolute control over an individual's behavior.. .I forsee the day when we could take the worst criminal and convert him into a decent respectable citizen in a matter of months-or even less time than that." McConnell said earlier this year .; }; Dailv Photo by KEN FINK "No one insists that a physicist fall in love with electrons and treat them nicely and humane- ly," McConnell once said. "They are free to be objective about the things they study. The be- haviorist asks no less than this. That is, he deals with people as 'objects to be studied' and perhaps to be manipulated." ........ that this statement was "blown totally out of proportion. The fact was, I was talking to a group of lawyers who were doubting that people could ever be changed. I wanted to reassure them that pri- soners could be changed as peo- ple." Behavior mod does have its posi- tive uses, but it is in the omnipo- tent mentality which produced Mc- Connell's statement that the con- troversy- lies. There is something compelling about-a manipulative power under a scientific cover. * * * - SINCE THE TURN OF the cen- tury, and particularly since WWII and B. F. Skinner, the appli- cation of behavior modification - B. Mod, B.M., Behavior Mod, what- ever the moniker - has expanded enormously. Proponents of the theory insist on, examining people "objectively," dealing with their behavior. They do not focus. on motivations or intentions, but on observable behavior. Some behav- iorists even speak of their patients in techno-scientific jargon. "No one insists that a physicist fall in love with electrons and treat them nicely and humanely," Mc- Connell once said. "Nor do we in- sist that a chemist be particularly nice to each oxygen molecule. They are free to be objective about the things they study." Behavorists ask no less than this. Thev deal with people as 'objects to be studied' and perhaps to be manipulated. -rPROBABLY THE MOST ideal en- vironment for the study of hu- man maninulation is a closed one, a controlled institution where 'narticinants' could be compared with laboratory animals. A prison. When you cross the Mackinac n-ido'e. vnu're about half way to th0 Michigan TntensivP Program renter (MIPC) in Marquette. From then on the road to Mar- onotte hecomeC a series of empty nassa geways through sprawling forests. The city and the prison are surrounded by woods, and it is almost shocking to find a peniten- tiarv at the end of the tree lined driveway leading to the Marquette Branch Prison (MBP). But past the MBP gates and in the only barren area for miles around, sits the MIPC. The MIPC is a behavior modifi- cation program designed to house about 90 "troublesome and assaul- tive" - inmates. Originally funded by the federal Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, the $1.5 million program is one of the most advanced behavior mod set-ups in the country, or for that matter in the world. THE CENTER FOR activity and security for the prison is the Control Bubble, a complex series of instrument panels manned by two guards (or "specialists" to use Marquette terminology) who con- trol heat light, doorways and an intercom system for every cell in the building. Cells stretch out in a four-wing X shape from the bub- ble, and each wing is named a dif- ferent color - blue, green, orange, yellow for program purposes. The program is based on a "tok- en economy" system where in- mates are awarded points for good behavior. In order to be promoted from one level wing to the next, a prisoner must amass anywhere from 2000 to 3000 extra tokens, and to remain on any one level, a week- ly "rent" must be paid in tokens. CREEN WING, the lowest level of the MIPC, puts virtually a to- tal clamp on a prisoner's activity. A prisoner describes it: "Once in Green Wing, you're riot allowed anything except the ne- cessities such as clothes, bedlinen, soap, etc. and many times you're denied these." Green Wing is sm- ply sensory deprivation to the ul- timate degree and it is used for brainwashing and experimentation purposes. It is also a common place for beatings, gassings, and feces in the food." "We can't set those accusations aside," says MIPC superintendent Ronald Gach. "But we have been bombarded with investigation upon investigation. Everybody thinks we're using lobotomies, Clockwork Orange techniques." ( ATER THAT AFTERNOON, a prisoner in the Yellow Wing, the highest level of the program, denied that he's been changed by behavior modification. The man is in his mid-20's, and has been in prison since 1979, but has only been in the program for six months. "No, he smiles and shrugs, "I don't think I'm any different. Are they really using drugs here? "Well, I don't know. I don't see them forcing it on anybody. I know somebody got kerosene in their food last week. And I know that sometimes I'll drink some milk here and feel myself start to go numb." "Look," counters Gach, "what would you do if you were locked un and wanted to make life miser- able for your keepers? Harrass them. Make life miserable for them. That's why they are writing the letters and saying those thines." BUT PRISON ADMINISTRATORS ar circumspect in responding to these charges. They prefer to discuss the logistics of .their insti- tution. Dr. James Metzin, the staff psy- chologist. is a gnarled man who is so tired he has a pernetual flow of tears down his cheeks. "We're not Intere.-ted in the mysterious little thinks that take place in these neo- npie's heads" savs Metzin. "Our fo- cus here is on the obiectively ob- servable behavior. They can think Phnoit ki ing or raping somebody P11 thv want." The most serious problem with the nrogram is that no one on the the prison. A ND THEY'VE got a law suit on their hands. Gabe Kamowitz of the Michigan Legal Service in Detroit is seeking to close the prison down. "The whole basis of our attack on the MIPC," he says, "is that it's an ex- perimental process. And if we can prove it's an experiment, they ain't gonna be able to do it." The Kaimowitz case has nation- al significant because it's not testing for obvious abuses in the MIPC program, but the concept as a whole as violating constitutional rights of the prisoners. It could be the end of behavior modification in prison. A RECENT AUDIT of the MIPC confirms what many people have thought all along about maintaining behavior modifica- tion programs in prison-it's ex- pensive, in this case nearly three times the cost of a normal peni- tentiary. Otherwise, life goes on quietly at Marquette with little indicaition the officials may face legal and fiscal trouble ahead. For the priso- ners, that trouble could mean, if nothing else, the end of a program that never stops "watching" them through the walking hours of the day. THE PUBLIC SCHOOL system has felt the effects of behavior modification probably more than the prison system, but the battles over it have been much less in- tense. Only a few concerned par- ents and some administrators have raised their voices. And vet' its use in the classroom is certainly no less exnerimental than behind prison bars. Excent nPorhanm. that it is less directly maninulative since it is most often vmed in coniunction with other tearching methods. But an uncomfortable number of shool enrsonnel are interested in its function as a discinlinarv tonl. To a casual ohserver. the Mark Twain niublic school in Maryland is as normal and as American as itq name. But subtle differences Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS a kid how they're behaving," says school psychologist Steve Johnson. "With the cameras we can confront them afterwards, and say, 'You be- haved this way,' and then show it to them." RETWEEN THE VIDEO tapes, point system, 'evaluations,' compliment cards, and 'T-A' ses- sions the school has designed a program in which the children can probably never forget 'how they be- have.' Mark Twain is one public school which uses behavior mod as an ov- erall approach to teaching and managing children who have been disciplinary problems in the regu- lar school system. Johnson said, "I don't know. I wonder sometimes if we have too . . . too much control over these kids. If you consider how much ef- feet we can have on these lives- sometimes it reminds me of the witch - hunting in Salem, or the German persecution of the Jews." Johnson is a young, native Ne- braskan who is unusually honest in apnralsing the virtues and de- ficiencies of his own school. "But it bothers me sometimes, like we're saving to the kid 'this is the way you have to be' even if they're not that way." TEACHERS EVALUATE their stu- dents at the beginning and end of every class hour. Students can use 'noints' to buy extra food and small models. One behavior mod-style school in Washington D.C. actually has someone special- lv assigned to monitor the class and keep a running tab of the stu- dents' points on the blackboard. There aren't many schools in this country that use behavior modification to the extent that Mark Twain does. But many class- rooms do use it in some form. One University Education School official estimates that 85-90 per cent of the school's graduates come out with some exposure to behav- ior mod techniques, and about 40- 50 ner cent graduate with a work- in knowledge of them. Ed. school nrof Finley Carpenter, _ . IN