9 enactment of Proposal B in 1978. The proposal eliminated "good time" for prisoners, requiring them to serve at least their minimum sentences beforee being eligible for parole. Ln an effort to relieve the problem, the state approved the controversal Emergency Powers Act of 1980. The act allows the governor to declare a state of emergency in Michigan prisons, slashing 90 days from the sentences of all state prisoners not serving life or flat sentences. The state has been forced to use-the act three times-in May of 1981, May of 1982, and August of 1982. The moves have resulted in the early release of more than 2,200 prisoners who had 90 or fewer days left in their sentences. The act, officials said, is the reason why Michigan was the only state whose prison population dropped between 1980 and 1981, while the overall number of prisoners in federal and state prisons jumped 12.1 percent. But are prisons, even the progressive ones, the right approach to use when dealing with minimal offenders. Hall thinks half-way houses and restitution programs-prisoners working off their debt to their vic- tims-might be the answer. But he realizes that, at this point, prisons can- not be altogether eliminated. "You can't tear the walls down. That's no answer because you've got people in here that are extremely dangerous. On the other hand, you've got peple in here who if you let them go tomorrow, you're probably safer with them than you are perhaps with some people who are living out there in the community. But nobody can look inside the minds of these people and decide who's who." - Others advocate reorganizing the sentencing system. "There's quite a bit of disparity in sentencing in our state," Foultz declared. For example he says; the impact of the crime on the com- munity should not play a role in senten- cing. In a small, northern town, Foultz explained, a person convicted of homocide would probably get a longer sentence than if the crime had occurred in a larger, metropolitan area. Edgren expands on Foultz's claim. "The criminal justice system is an in- tense reflection of what our society is," she says, recalling that upon a visit to a state system, she realized that a majority of the inmates were young, black males. "If you're a young black man, our society is saying to you, 'Too bad. You don't fit.' It perpetuates a racist and classist society." Edgren argues that police are ex- tremely subjective in deciding who they bring in for questioning and what neighborhoods they decide to patrol. For example, she says, in a well-to-do neighborhod, when someone is stopped for drunk driving, often a policeman will just escort him hem rather than make an arrest. "At every step along the way there is discrimination." Marc Mauer, community relations director for the American Friends Ser- vice Committee, says he thinks the sen- tences handed out today are too harsh. "Giving out 10, 20, and 50 years casually, as a lot of courts do, is virtually unheard of in a lot of other societies," he says. Harsher sentencesd don't serve as a deterrent to crime, he says. "You can hold the threat of capital punishment over someone's head, but as long as we have the kind of poverty and unem- ployment that we have, it's a natural breeding ground.. . Until we deal with some of those causes, we're just fooling ourselves." Determinate sentencing is often cited, as the answer to disparity. In Min- nesota, a "grid" formula is used to determine a prisoner's sentence, taking a convict's past criminal record and current offense into account. Mauer says he thinks some corrections of- ficials use the argument of phasing out the older institutions to rationalize building new ones. "It's just a way of getting more prisoners into the system," says Mauer. If the new facilities really are going to be used as replacements, he says, it should be written into the same legislation that the older ones will be closed. Hall has an even more basic problem with the system. It begins, he says, before the prisoner even gets to prison. "I think too many people are sent to prison who don't need to be sent to prison. A lot of people need a closely controlled environment, but it doesn't necessarily have to be a prison.,," "They (inmates) have to learn what I call 'expectation behavior.' You walk down the street and you expect not to be molested. If I violate your expec- tations, then something has to be done with me.I have to learn to respect your expectations." "What can you do in a prison? Negative reinforcement doesn't help anybody. You can control their behavior while you've got them right there but as soon as you let them go, they're gonna go right back to the way they were." Fannie Weinstein is a Daily staff writer. V I COVER STORY Prisoninage 1 Huron Valley isn't so much a prison as it is a correctional facility. But do the institute's plans for rehabilitating inmates work, or does the campus- style buildings provide only a comfortable place to pass time? Cover photo by Brian Masck. MU SIiC 1VIVJ1\~ Good times Men at work come all the way from Austr to entertain American audiences, but the Sisters had an equally difficult trip to succes will be in concert this weekend. Page 4 alia just Pointer ss. Both CLASSICS Old fashioned Page s The traditional sounds of classical to romantic music from the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra and virtuoso pianist Lydia Artymiw are both on campus this coming week. DISCS Pop tunes Page 6 Top of the charts popsman Billy Joel has released an album with music from his darker side, while Hall & Oates continue their stream of spiffy songs. THE LIST Happenings Page 7-10 Your guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor, Film capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed in a handy-dandy day-by-day schedule. Plus a roster of local restaurants. x. fi ;;{x'. t? 'zi i! ri ' George Hall: Articulate inmate some prisoners who abuse the prison's rehabilitation efforts. "I'm sure that there are people that will try to beat the system. Most of them try to beat the system on the outside and that's why they're on the inside. I think that could probably account for your failure rate in terms of convicts returning to prison. The individual is still trying to beat the system." T HE COST of running a prison is phenomenal. Huron Valley has an annual budget of almost $8.6 million. To maintain Jackson, the state lays out almost $46 million a year. The annual price tag of $10,000 for housing each Michigan prisoner adds up quickly. "Unless we have more severe cuts, we'll be able to scrape by this year," says Light of the State Department of Corrections. Already, cutbacks in the state funds have forced a reduction in prison staffing. On Nov. 27, 119 correc- tions officers will be laid off unless their union agrees to wage reductions, ac- cording to Light. Although the Depar- tment of Corrections was forced to lay off 67 corrections officers last April, all but three have since been rehired. The other three have not returned because they asked for places at the Muskegon prison where they had been working, Light says. The state sees building more prisons as the solution to its woes. The public disagrees. In 1980, voters turned down a ballot proposal which would have in- creased state income tax from 4.6 to 4.7 percent, with the difference-about $300 million annually-going to the Department of Corrections for better prisons. The proposal would have allowed the state to demolish the 100-year-old Ionia Reformatory, upgrade existing prisons, and build four smaller, multi-security regional prisons. These would make it easier for prisoners to get back into society according to corrections of- ficials, because they would gradually move from maximum to minimum security in the same facility. Even without the proposal, con- struction began last year on a facility in Plymouth, just east of Ann Arbor. The state was forced to stop building when the money ran out, but officials say they hope to start things up again this spring, and even begin buildingaa co-ed prison in Lansing. "The state of Michigan is in dire need of additional prisons," says Dale Foultz, warden at Jackson Prison. "There's no question that they (prisons like Jackson and Ionia) are too large to manage, and the record will reflect that ... We've got to get out of these unmanagable situations," he says. One reason for the overcrowding problem in Michigan prisons was the THEATER Playing around Page 15 Young Peoples Theater does a lot more than simply putting on plays, but that may be what they do best. Meanwhile, Musket finally sinks its teeth into a play with substance. RESTAURANTS Central Cafe Located on Main Str an intimate atmospher and a wonderful array Mexican. C Date rape To Weekend: I must disagree with Brian Frumh- off's fiery letter (Weekend, October 29) on the date rape article. I do not believe his letter so much represents the male viewpoint at the University of Michigan as it does his own warped perspective. Why is he so angry? Why does he com- bine two obviously different groups (i.e. actual date rape victims as opposed to sexually aggressive females) and ac- cuse of them of foul play? I wonder about his motives for writing. Admittedly, I can see the conception of an argument within his tangled logic. He is expressing concern that if he is tempted into "casual sex" he may find himself facing a rape charge. However, he commits an error by portraying the average University woman, if indeed there is an average, as a premeditated date rape victim, as a person who ac- tively pursues sex with the intention of afterwards calling it rape. That is just not true. What it amounts to is that he is trying to, accuse the woman of entrap- ment. Yet Frumhoff's letter is not quite so distorted as it is disturbing. His letter is so biased, so prejudiced, that it ap- proaches the satiric. For example, his position on older women: they "know how to fulfill (their) desires-and nothing more." He then proceeds to dehumanize all sex into a business transaction, an exchange of property between "advertisers" and "pur- chasers." At a time when relations between the sexes are already strained, and at a time when the fear of date rape is not without justification, Mr. Frumhoff's letter accomplishes nothing. In fact, for failing to recognize the problem, it is a step backwards both for him and the University community. -Peter Meitzler November 1 Nov. 1 Li thi Your re( reminds n counter of to a fellow or she is I reply. I Detroit?" live outsic lives IN DE Quite a Detroit, tf country a someone e Weekend Weekend is edited and managed by students on the Weekend, (313) 763-037 vol.1. issue 8 staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- Daily, 764-0552; Circulation Frdoy, November 12, 1982 bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition tising, 764-0554. Magazine Editor .................Richard Campbell of the Daily every week during the University year Assistant Editor .......................... Ben Ticho and is available for free at many locations around the Copyright 1982, The Mich campus and city. 3 W Prison newspaper:1 bars 14 Weekend/November 12, 1982