OPINION Page 4I Friday, February 12, 1988 The Michigan Daily Edite nd managedbtetai y a Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Praying for understanding Vol. XCVIII, No. 93 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. UCAR isn't Race Police' C ONTRARY TO WHAT Chuck Moss asserts in his column "U-M Race Police: Where Will They Stop?" (Detroit News 1/27/88), anti-racism activists are not taking over the University. Relying on extremism, inaccuracies, and misleading innuendoes, Moss failed to assess the complex tensions present in the University community with regard to racism. Moss, a free-lance writer from Birmingham, focused his column around the United Coalition Against Racism (UCAR); rather than all the students involved in the events sur- rounding the Martin Luther King holiday. Moss credits U C A R "sincerity in their cause," but im- maturely criticizes their tactics as too violent and unbecoming of a student organization that follows the teachings of Martin Luther King Jr. Moss wrongly accuses UCAR of using "fascist tactics" the same as "Hitler's storm troopers and Stalin- ist Reds." He claims that sit-ins and argumentative speech are capable of taking over the University and he implies that the non-violent, un- armed efforts of student groups such as UCAR are akin with a reign of terror and genocidal atrocities. Moss does not understand fas- cism, the nature of student groups, or the teachings of King. He totally. disregards fact and indicates that most of his information came from secondary sources and not from actual exposure. His absence from campus protests and UCAR activi- ties explains his ignorance about the role of student movements. Fascism requires power and Moss fails to recognize that the University has much more power than any student organization. UCAR's stated goals and actions have absolutely no relation to those of Stalin, Hitler, or Mussolini; rather, they aspire to democratize the University. Contrary to what Moss thinks, UCAR and the Black Action Movement (BAM) III are not the same and have different member- ships. Moss considers the agendas and funding of these two groups identical. In reality, the Trotter House, which serves the entire minority community, received the $150, 000 that Moss claims went to UCAR. In addition, the Black Student Union, a group autonomous and often po- litically divergent from UCAR, re- ceived the $35,000 that Moss at- tributed to UCAR. UCAR not only conducts sit-ins, they also organize educational ac- tivities and advise the Office of Mi- nority Affairs. As Moss has been conspicuously absent from UCAR meetings this term it is interesting that he thinks he knows about all of UCAR's activities. Moss indicates his ignorance by assuming that an elite educational institution should necessarily main- tain the status quo or be a funda- mentally white school. This way of thinking is archaic and racist and disregards the intellectual contribu- tions of minorities -despite their disadvantaged position in white so- ciety. , The editors of the Detroit News told the Daily that Moss's column was run without even a prior read- ing. It is a shame that such an erro- neous and uninformed column was ever printed and its publication re- flects poorly on the News. Blaming the students for the problems of racism at the Univer- sity ignores the power dynamics involved in the solution. If the ad- ministration were serious about fighting racism, they would in- crease minority recruitment immediately and create programs such as a mandatory class on diver- sity. Attacking an anti-racist student movement for presenting alternate educational events and forcing peo- ple to consider racism as a serious problem defiles those seeking to raise consciousness and minority representation rather than the real culprit: the administration. Moss is obviously misinformed and paranoid. His column ignores the power relations involved in the solutions. He is invited to shirk his apathy and participate, attend meet- ings, and get involved. Those with access to the media have a great re- sponsibility to be as informed and accurate as possible, and Chuck Moss failed miserably. By Mary Glover Final part of a three-part series The facilities at the Detroit House of Corrections (DeCoHo) are deteriorating steadily due to the large numbers of women who live there. The bathrooms are filthy and staph-infested. The mold and mildew is so bad you can smell it at the front door in the summer. Housekeeping and maintenance is poor because we are not even given minimal cleaning supplies. The kitchens are not clean and mice run free. Rats live under housing units and modular trailers. The men next door who cook our food do "things" to it, we hear, like urinating, defecating and ejaculating into it. Maggots and vermin, including birds have been found in our lunch. We recently went through a bout with no heat or hot water for several days and we were forced to sleep in our clothes. The modular units that were supposed to be temporary over ten years ago have been used to house women in large groups under foul conditions. Everyone lives together "barracks-style" over vermin. One woman broke her leg when she fell through the decayed floor boards. A friend of mine brought me a baggie of moss and mushrooms she had picked off her wall next to her bed in one of the "mods" and asked me what she could do. Her grievances were denied, and the grievance procedure that is theoretically designed to assist us is usually an exercise in futility. It is used as a means by the administration to further oppress the class of women. Policy and procedure governing the handling of our mail and incoming Mary Glover is currently serving three life sentences in Huron Valley Women's Correctional facility.nShe is enrolled in the college of LSA and received a Hopwood award this year for an essay. Along with another woman she gained the right to attend college through a civil rights suit against the State of Michigan. property demolishes our statutory rights. Frequently our mail simply disappears. Visitors are too often harassed a n d humiliated. Living conditions have not changed that much from DeHoCo the longer this sewer exists. The entire situation is deplorable. The warden calls this prison "cushy." I wonder if the average person would believe this if they had to spend a week or two locked up inside, let alone a life sentence. My life sentence has been a constant struggle to survive from more than just abuse and the degradation of living in a prison. It has been an education in itself to learn the ways of "inmate culture." So many hundreds of women in "pressure- cooker" situations day in and day out, year after year inevitably creates turmoil and stress the general public would not even believe. I have seen situations in here beyond the imagination. So many multiple personalities adapt in so many different ways that in and of itself this is hard to deal with. Living with "building tenders" or inmate police is difficult because you are constantly watch from everywhere. Life under the microscope is rough. Privacy is impossible. Disparity in sentencing haunts me. Your entire life depends on the philosophy of the sentencing judge. Deterrence, incapacitation, prevention, treatment -- whichever of these objectives is deemed the prime goal of criminal law will be reflected in the way the judge uses his or her power to sentence. In a small county, or in a highly publicized case, severe punishment which shocks the conscience is given with blanket approval of the community as the norm, aside from tailoring the sentence to the crime and the offender. The politics of the system strike with forceful vengeance, and the woman finds herself serving a life sentence. In a larger city or before a less biased judge, she may have been given years instead of letters. Examples of sentencing disparity are painfully remembered by women lifers. For years we have sat in this "dive" and watched women come and go whO committed fare more serious crimes iii actuality than we have. I remember a women who served 6 months for the murder of her eight-month old baby daughter, while I am serving my 12th yeat and did not "pull the trigger." Recent statistics from the Department of Corrections have shown the average time served for homicide is approximately three years for female offenders, many of whom were violently abused women who ha been incest victims. Yet in this state there are over 50 women serving life, many o whom are first offenders with absolutely no prior record of any kind. Most were involved as "situational offenders." Once the required numbers of years are served a "routine" Parole Board hearing is held. Parole for a lifer is a distant dream The harsh and dogmatic discipline of the prison, combined with the Parole Board's expectation that you "walk on water (that I was told to do at my first hearing) serves to keep you locked inside forever, until they carry you out on a stretcher dead. Hence, the lifer's constant search for a le- gal escape route. Above it all, I have learned human lifc is truly sacred. Justice becomes "just-us" because we were too poor to ever have a chance. You don't see Andy William's ex- wife Claudine serving life - she did three days in the county jail and got out fot "good behavior" after she killed her boyfriend with a rifle in a first-degree murder. Money an venue save the rich the poor get prison. Locking women u and throwing away the key is manifest injustice. In a society that claims to be truly democratic, there needs to be built-in "safeguards" to insure these ultimate cruelties do not occur. One of my teachers says the world will not change much if all prisoners everywhere were freed today. He does not advocate release of the criminally insane or believe in the death penalty1 Neither do I. Women lifers are united i the struggle to be released, and in the fighi for equality and justice for all. We pray we will be heard, as we pray for freedom and understanding. A fat look at Iowa caucuses Rambling disjointed reminisces from a cynical, road weary, white line fever suf- fering fatman following three days on the campaign trail in Iowa.... Who are these fellers and will one of them really be the next President? Your favorite fatman is going to cut through the crapola and bring this whole thing down to earth. Let's put it all in perspective. FAT AL Throw out the mailings you might have received and forget about what they told you on the fancy TV news last night. These here candy-dates are just folk too. So how would they be if they lived in my neighborhood? What would they be like to live by? Well, Robert Dole would be the mean- spirited nasty old neighbor who calls the cops when you have a beer-crazed high school party and tells your rents because it's the "right thing to do." He'd tell your dad, "He's a bright kid but if you askme, he needs some discipline." Dole would never once buy a raffle ticket from you, even though you were his next door neighbor. This guy would definitely suffer some serious eggin' on devil's night. Paul Simon would be the nerdy neigh- bor you made jokes about. Come on, y'all know the type. He should be sort of hum- ble but he's not because he's a smarty- pants who thinks he knows everything about everything. He'd bring you a bag of dog crap and say "I believe you left this on my lawn." George Bush is the overly polite feller who drives a Cadillac, plays golf at the club, and invites you to his Christmas party every year. You'd never go but he'd always invite you. As a fleshy fifteen year old, I would have stolen cases of beer off Bush's porch. Michael Dukakis would the be the good PTA papa. A real nice feller that you never got to know and always forgot his name. Jesse Jackson would be the neighbor- hood kid's favorite guy. The one who plays football with you and invites you over in the summer for a Bar-B-Q. Bruce Babbitt would be the guy I'd leave my key with. Friendly, sturdy, and reli- able. Pierre "not Pete" duPont would be my landlord. .ePat Robertson wouldn't live in my neighborhood. No way, no how.. Gary Hart put on a pathetic show. Man, he was so bad that I almost felt embar- rassed to have taken the time to rag on him in this here column of mine. He spokeat Stuart Anderson's Cattle Man restaurant, a cheesy suburban restau- rant/pickup bar. The candidate was over an hour late and the press' contempt grew by the minute. Only the 85 cent Budweisers kept my disgust from boiling over into some type of ugly scene. After an 11 hour drive, three hours of sleep, and a lunch of popcorn, string cheese, and beef jerky, I was more than a little edgy waiting around for a sleazy two bit politician in a sleazy two bit bar where good ol' media boys and girls outnumbered Hart supporters by two to one. When Hart finally showed, he looked and sounded like crapola. Obvi- ously, the guy was justa hangin' on to show he could hang on. While he jab- bered, Steppenwolf's "Born to Be Wild" played soft, like my favorite K-Tel sound- track. Somebody forgot to turn off the jukebox. Man, a heavily pathetic scene. "Let the people decide!" he bellowed. They did.... Wherever I moseyed my way to some ol' event, the secret service followed md 'round, carefully eyeing my every move. As if I were some kinda dangerous felon. It only got worse after I asked one of them agent fellers "Hey, boy, I guess a big part of your job is just sorta pickin' the potential troublemakers outta the crowd.' Heh-heh-heh....Paul Simon's hair looks just like Ronald Reagan's. We don't need another president with plastic hair..... Pat Robertson got 25 per cent of the vote in the Iowa caucus. Begeebers, that is some scary thought. I'm not sure who's scarier - Robertson or his flock, who tell you that God told Pat to run and that "we all have a hotline to God." Shoot, I think I got disconnected a long time ago. Fact is, I've been reading me some Siggy Freud and I think that ol'iPat is. hearin his Id and getting a little confused. Hmmm.... There were 4,000 journalists in Des Moines last week. Just think on that for a speck. The city was just crawling with shady, egghead-looking media types. It' kinda funny but I figured something right interesting out looking at all those fancy media folk. The TV fellers look more like politicians than print journalists. They got right slick hair, shiny suits, and toothy grins. The newspaper folk are unshaven, a little rumpled, and wearing sweaters 'stead of suits... Just when I was losing it, turning twc more shades of cynical, I arrived in Victor Iowa. I'd like to thank the good o1' folk o Victor for restoring my faith in the whole shebang. These people brought us back down to earth, talking simple, and giving us hot coffee, sweet cookies, and warm invitations to stay at their farmhouses. As we left, one lady said, "Now don't drive all the way back to Michigan. Stop for some bacon and eggs." Now, that's my kind of lady. Remove Arizona's Mecham LAST FRIDAY, THE STATE of Ari- zona restored faith in the account- ability of government as the state's House of Representatives voted to impeach its governor, Evan Mecham. The.impeachment, similar to an indictment, will legally re- move the governor from office if two-thirds of the thirty state sena- tors vote to convict Mecham of "high crimes, misdemeanors, or malfeasance in office." Mecham's tenure of slightly more than a year has been mired in con- troversy since its first day. Mecham's insensitive views on mi- norities have resulted in boycotts of conventions and cancelled perfor- mances in the state, national con- demnations of his administration, and a successful campaign to hold a recall election. legal means of expulsion for the governor. A special prosecutor for Arizona's House of Representatives accused Mecham of using $80,000 of the governor's protocol fund" to sup- port his auto dealership. The prose- cutor also held that Mecham failed to reveal a $350,000 private loan for his gubernatorial campaign and hindered investigation of an alleged death threat to a state official. The 46-14 vote of impeachment temporarily removes the governor from office pending a final vote by the state Senate. Officials predict that Mecham will be out-of-office for at least twenty days before the Senate can review and vote on the matter. A U.S. governor has not been impeached and convicted since 1929 when the Oklahoma Senate LETTERS: Silence is tantamount to approval T_ &L_ V%- !I-.- a...««:«. Ft.:n e feert nisin net dL __ _ CL1 _ aL_ _ .__L Y!_I