/' PINION Page 4 Sunday, September 27, 1981 The Michigan Daily 0 GIi 3bt'maun 4ati Edited and mfanaged by students at The University of Michigan Weasel Vol. XCII, No. 16 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board =AP'REUC PlotiY~,E i5pE,(IN T" Expand the services of the internship program nt t.(.OME 1-0 BUR&M CLOWN! GAVE sfoup- ORte?- WM BoF*IFA- cttwNS MOUT*. 1: L 14AVE A 3vu-Y 140-1{0 aR."R m v WHWF. MES 1 ILI- lhw B URL .R W tT N ND DF MW: R r - A W406P-M-IZO SUP-6m AND A Sit L { sv4AKE.. y woul-D Yau LIKE A BURS CLOWN M3 A#tp OAND PUPPET ? Nod Yp f SO/ gytpp RE! LY By Robert Lence 1a ON SATQRAAY- 0 6r T HE OFFICE OF Career Planning. and Placement will start selecting student finalists for it s Public Service Internship Program next month. Before this year's PSIP gets too far along, however, Career Planning and Placement should look at ways of- broadening student participation in the program. PSIP was designed to assist students in their efforts to find summer inter- nships in Washington and Lansing, but the. program has turned into an ex- clusive club of those students fortunate enough to be labeled as "mature and motivated" by the program's executive committee. For the unfortunate 80 percent of the applicants to the program who are not selected, PSIP provides no assistance to their efforts to find jobs. Some for- mer interns said the program, by giving applicants the perception that they must work through PSIP,, discourages maximum participation of University students in Washington in- ternships. But office managers in Washington who. make the final A new cente: - S THE OUTER layers of the new Michigan Alumni Center are added to its massive skeleton, passer- sby glimpse a tangible reminder of the presence of that otherwise ethereal boly of people, the alumni of the University of Michigan. Renowned for their generous contributions to their alma mater, the alumni are now creating a functional monument to the tradition of continuity for which the University has gained fame. While it commonly is expected that private institutions would command a devoted alumni 'following, Michigan has been recognized for its relatively unique reputation as a public school with strong alumni support. Graduates of the University tend to regard it as something more noteworthy than the average public institution, and their supportive attitude has contributed to the school's fame for continuous ex- cellence. But the University has entered 'an era of financial constraints which, ac- cording to a number of top officials, threatens this notoriety. Reductions in decisions on interns say they don't care if a student applies through the program or independently. In order to serve all the students with an interest in public service inter- nships more effectively, the program coordinators should investigate the possibility of re-directing the program to provide more students with inter- nship counseling and advice. If the program concentrated on in- forming all the applicants about the various possibilities in Washington and Lansing, as well as giving students ad- vice on proper ways in which to apply for these internships, it would not have to limit itself to aiding only 75 of those desiring positions in one year. Career Planning and Placement has a responsibility to all University of Michigan students. While it provides excellent -opportunities to the 75 students it enrolls in the Public Service Internship Program this year, its services to the 300 it rejects have been lacking. It appears possible for the office to provide assistance to University students on a more egalitarian basis; and it should do so. r for alumni state and federal aid, combined with. the effects of inflation have eroded the the University's financial position. The University, forced to react to the shor- tage of funds, is zealously pursuing the concept of "smaller but better.'' A number of programs and "finan- cial priorities," such as faculty salaries, have fallen prey to reduction efforts. Officials fear the University cannot withstand such pressure for any substantial length of time. The catch phrase that "it takes 50 years to build a fine University but only five to destroy it" is becoming more widely heard. But building the alumni center can do something more than all the telephone soliciations and other gim- micks that the University comes up with to beef-up its endowment funds. It gives the alumni a place to return to at the University. Call it blackmail, but the center will serve as a reminder to the alumni of the University, and, hopefully, en- courage them to make needed donations to the University'. . r i 1 Is the KKK behind recen t vC By Frank Browning RICHMOND, CALIF.-The worst attacks began a little more than a year ago. As Harold Phipps sat on his, front porch in a housing project near this San Francisco East Bay community, a Chevy pickup camper cruised slowly down the street for the second time. Suspicious, Phipps told everyone to get inside. In the next few, intense moments, five shots rang out from a black rifle barrel poked out the back door of the camper. The truck's engine gave a roar and disappeared. Phippspis a Mexican, but the apparent target of the shooting was a black neighbor, Junoel Guess, who previously had been. subjected to white harassment. THE ATTACK was no surprise to the many blacks who live in the project and in the nearby towns here in Contra Costa County. They say they have suffered a steady escalation of racial violence in recent years-so much so that legal investigators now believe that the Ku Klux Klan has come to use the area as one of its principal West Coast recruiting grounds. As a result of this and other at- tacks, black people here have learned to be afraid-afraid of teen-age toughs plowing through their lawns, afraid of rocks thrown through their windows, of crosses-burnt into their lawns, afraid of white sheets draped across their cars. On October 5-7, the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission will open four days of hearings into racial violence and harassment within Contra Costa County, focusing on a series of attacks that lasted through the final six months of last year. IN THE MEANTIME, the at- tacks are continuing. In August a black family's house in Rollingwood was firebombed. Another black family who had moved into the neighborhood in mid-August had their house spat- tered with eggs and returned home one day to find their garage painted with a swastika, a light- ning bolt and the letters KKK. "This used to be a white neigh- borhood until a few months ago," one neighbor said. "They mess them over if blacks move in. They're destroyig this neigh- borhood with their stupid beliefs." Lawyers and legal in- vestigators who have worked with black residents and with the Commission fear that the new school year could bring ever more attacks, especially by the proliferating campus and neigh- borhood gangs that police believe have been responsible for most of the violence to date. DISCUSSING THE pattern of racial attacks, a preliminary Commission report highlighted both the youthfulness of the at- tackers and their personal association with adult KKK members. The most common characteristic of the attackers seem to be rootlessness. lack of of the Investigative Task Force of the Legal Alliance for Racial Justice, an ad hoc group of lawyers, investigators and coun- ty prosecutors, the incidents were "Klan-inspired, if not Klan- perpetrated." Alliance investigators, however, view the attacks not so'' much at a conspiratorial assault- coordinated by the Ku Klux Klan, but as the work of a rising population of young white kids, many of them organized into gangs, who are engaged in various) criminal activities and who follow Klan members as authority figures. SUSPECTS IN the attacks - which noticesably subsided as soon as public attention began to be directed at the Klan-are said to maintain close friendships or, family ties to adult Klan mem- bers, according to both Alliance investigators and the county sheriff's department. Although Michael Mendonsa's Ku Klux Klan of California is not officially allied with the national Invisible Empire of the KKK (it was expelled a year ago for alleged criminal drug activity), its concentration on recruiting school-age youth is part of a national movement. Both the In- visible Empire and Knights of the' KKK, another breakaway fac- tion, boast of running their own "Youth Corps," and the older United Klans of America has a "Junior/Klan." In Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and even New England, Klan organizers have been reported proselytizing on college and especially high school campuses.' Said Tom Metzger, the "Grand Dragon" of the California Klan who won 50,000 votes last year in- hi San Dig County campaign for Congress: "We're interested in a strongly determined, in- telligent young Klansman for leadership later on. They're fresh enough that you can give them a, logical, rational argument and they'll see that you're right." One Klan Youth" Corps pam- phlet distributed in the schools declares that racial intergration has "brought crime, drugs, for- ced sex, disease and general havoc." In fact, Alliance investigators argue, it is the Klan itself, along' with other white supremacist groups like the Aryan Brotherhood, that has stimulated - drug dealing and violence among the disaffected and floating youth population of Contra Costa Coun- ty. Browning wrote this article for Pacific News Service with the help of a grant from the-. Fund for Investigative Jour-. nalism. I year comprise the heart of the in- vestigations. LAST NOVEMBER, 8, six black youths were sitting in a car, allegedly smoking marijuana, in front of the Tara Hills home of Mary Handy, a black woman, when a white male approached them asking to exchange a six- pack of beer for some dope. When he was refused, the white male left and returned with a friend, carrying baseball bats. A fight broke out in which one of the two whites was severely beaten. On November 11, Lovett Moore, the son of Mary Handy, was chased by two white youths bran- dishing a tire iron. He found refuge in the home of Otis and Geraldine Ireland-whose win- dows had been broken by rocks the previous day. Sean Wilkes, black and 15, was chased by whites driving in a pickup and badly beaten near the Handy home, also on November 11. On November 13, a mob of angry white males carrying large sticks gathered before the Ireland home. When a deputy sheriff arrived, members of the mob said that they "didn't like" what, had happened to their white buddy who had been beaten up five days earlier. ON NOVEMBER 19, the Ireland's 17-year-old son received several death threats in school. The same day a cross was burnt into the lawn of John Marion, a black man living in varin .nlap Ta nv.+ a ,. oanor a KKK meeting and wearing white hoods over their heads. Concomitantrwithhthese in- cidents, there has been heightened activity in an in- dependent branch of the Ku Klux Klan headed by Michael Leonard Mendonsa, a tattoo shop operator who works in the vicinity of the incidents. Mendonsa owns a Chevy pickup truck with a camper on it described as similar to the one seen at the first housing project shootout. He has boasted of taking part in the shooting, legal investigators say, but he denied any participation - when questioned by police. MENDQNSA, whose shop is close to the Richmond High School, has distributed KKK flyers to students. Apparent Klan members dressed in robes have been reported at high school foot- ball games and other -school events in the area. Klan literature was discovered during a racial fight at Richmond High in November of 1980. According to a 43-page report _ r .a 4 y __ .,,,rte-..: _,.... y .._ ,'' !! I j _ w .- . 75 LETTERS TQ THE DAILY: I Witsol r hns a .a To the Daily: In response to Howard Witt's column of Sept. 22, I should like to suggest Chinese 101 as a possible your hand. But if Mr. Witt prefers, I think he might enjoy the texciting compromise of reading Chinese in the verticn Ab