New ,prison 4s sresses freedom FLINT, Mich. (AP) - Guards ;work alongside prisoners and in- mates learn that good behavior earns them a degree of freedom in Michi- gan's first direct-supervision jail, Genessee County Sheriff Joe Wilson "In the old jail, they'd just lay ,around all day long and not do any- 'thing," Wilson said of inmates. "Nothing was expected in the old jail. A lot is expected in the new jail. ,We're trying to change the be- havior, teach some responsibility." Guards at the jail, which opened Nov. 12, mingle with the prisoners instead of working from enclosed Prisoners are required to make their beds in time for daily 7 a.m. ,inspections, to shave and to keep ktheir cells tidy. In return, they are locked in only at night and when ;guards change shifts. During the day, they can visit ac- Etivity rooms, use the phone or go out to an exercise area. A second direct-supervision jail an $18 million, 488-bed addition to the Oakland County Jail - is scheduled to open Feb. 1. Only about 50 county jails in the nation use the approach. "It's probably the wave of the ;future," said Susan Herman, ad- iinistrator of the state Department of Corrections' office of facility services. "There really is true super- vision as opposed to just sur- Iveillance." Wilson said greater contact with prisoners and closer supervision gives guards a better understanding of what goes on in the jail, and the personal attention and extra respon- sibilities give prisoners a sense of pride. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 26, 1989- Page 3 First woman bishop elected BOSTON (AP) - The Rev. Barbara Harris, elected the first woman bishop in the 2,000-year tradition of apostolic succession, said yesterday she sees her mission as mainly religious and not political. "I do not intend to be an international Anglican gadfly, moving around to promote ordination of women, but I will be as supportive as possible," she said at a news conference the day after the Episcopal Church approved her election following a long and sometimes bitter debate. Harris was joined at the news conference by Bishop David Johnson of Boston, her new boss, who sounded a note of conciliation. "It is a time for reception, a time for inviting," he said. Harris, who is Black, said- she believed an element of prejudice lurked in some of the criticism of her background and qualifications to be a bishop. "Given that racism is so prevalent in our society and so woven into the fabric of our lives...I am certain that there was some element of racism present in some of the objections," she said. When she is consecrated Feb.l in Boston as suffragan, or assisting bishop, Harris will become the first woman bishop elected by the 2.5 million-member church. Although Harris was elected locally in Boston, her consecration could not be formally announced until she was elected by the majority of the 118 Episcopal bishops. That majority was reached Tuesday. Critics said the 58-year-old Harris, a former public relations executive, was too liberal in her political views, or unqualified because of her lack of a degree from a college or seminary. Some were concerned by her divorce, while church conservatives have opposed her election simply because she is a woman. Harris acknowledged yesterday that she would still have to overcome some opposition. "We recognize that this presents a problem for some people theologically and emotionally," she said; "and we must always be abut helping or attempting to help them to understand what this means in the life of the church and to mdve toward some reconciliation with them as far ais possible." One critic, the Rev. Andrew Mead, rector of the Church of the Advent in the 96,000-member Boston diocese, said Tuesday he would neither recognize the consecration nor allow Harris tto conduct religious services in his parish. Her consecration "is against the Catholic tradition. We're supposed to be part of the Catholic Church. This just ensures the drift of the Episcopal Church to Protestantism." Harris ... first woman bishop New subpoenas e 1ssued for North WASHINGTON - Attorneys for fired National Security Council aide Oliver L. North disclosed today they have issued subpoenas in the Iran- Contra case to three House committees and two members of the House. North attorney Barry Simon said the subpoenas were sent to the House Intelligence, Foreign Affairs and Armed Services committees. The two members of Congress weren't identified. Defense subpoe- nas also were issued fo two unidentified House staff members. The House, through the general counsel to the clerk, subsequently moved to quash portions of the sub- poenas to the committees. A 22- page court brief said the panels could not allow the "wholesale rummaging through the records of the House" sought by North's lawyers. North's subpoenas require "surrender of the broadest imaginable range of privileged documents," in- cluding "the whole set of records" of the House intelligence panel's investigation of the re-supply opera- tion for the Nicaragua contra rebels, the brief said. The committee began the investigation after the October 1986 shootdown of a Contra re-supply plane in Nicaragua carrying Ameri- can Eugene Hasenfus as one of its crew members. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell said with regard to the two House members subpoenaed, "We're not going to pull them off the floor. We're going to have to approach this part of the case with some degree of accommodation." North's trial is scheduled to get under way next Tuesday, although an interagency intelligence group is still reviewing classified documents that both the prosecution and defense want to use at trial. The brief references to subpoenas by North's defense team came at a court hearing where prosecutors ar- gued in favor of subpoenaing North's spiral notebooks, which he compiled on a daily basis while he was at the NSC. Fatal ide Associated Press*R Fatal ride Members of the Kansas Highway Patrol pull an eight-year-old boy from Walnut Creek, where a school bus crashed into a bridge yesterday morning. The bus driver was killed, and one of 10 passengers was in critical condition after being trapped under water for more than 30 minutes. Correction Northwalk does not serve Northwood Apartments. The Daily reported this information incorrectly in Tuesday's paper. In yesterday's Daily a work of art at the Slusser Gallery was incorrectly identified in a photo cutline. The work, by artist Doug Hagley, is titled J"Where Numbers Go." Senate OKs cabinet me WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate unanimously confirmed James Baker III as secretary of state yesterday, as Majority Leader George Mitchell pledged to cooperate with the Bush administration on a Democratic agenda of improvements in minimum wage, housing, health care and the environment. The Democratic-controlled Senate also confirmed Elizabeth Dole as Labor Secretary and Richard Darman as Budget Director without - a dissenting vote. Mitchell outlined his goals for the 101st Congress, including "true bipartisanship" in foreign policy. The vote was 99-0 to confirm Baker, who served as Treasury Secretary and White House chief of staff under President Reagan and was President Bush's campaign manager last year. Mrs. Dole, the wife of Senate GOP leader Bob Dole, also won approval on a 99-0 vote. She is a former Secretary of Transportation who resigned her post to help her and Education Secretary Laurio Cavazos are holdover appointments from the Reagan administration an did not require confirmation. In the busiest day so far of the new 101st Congress, committees The vote was 98-0 to confirm Baker, who served as Treasury Secretary and White House chief of staff under President Reagan and was President Bush's campaign manager last year. mbers privately with anti-abortion senators and apparently persuaded them hejs committed enough to their causeto win their support for confirmation. aa "Dr. Sullivan believes in hi~ heart that the Roe vs. Wade decision should be overturned," said Senatoj Gordon Humphrey (R-N.H.)', referring to the 1973 Supreme Court rulingathat legalizedabortion Sullivan had upset' manyr conservative senators when he was quoted by another senator as saying he did not favor overturning th4 ruling. The House was not in session' but inside the Senate chambei speeches by Mitchell and Republican leader Bob Dole were followed by the introduction of legislation for thl first time this year. j Y K f 5i i{ ; z i k M i 4 f i t } 4 i 4 i s i t Y t 4 THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today husband's unsuccessful 1988 presidential campaign. Baker, Dole and Darman were the first Bush appointees to face confirmation votes in the Senate. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady also held confirmation hearings for Defense Secretary-designate John Tower and several other Cabinet nominees. Louis Sullivan, President Bush's choice to head the Department of Health and Human Services, met Speakers "Preparing, Retooling, and Charting a Career Path for the Future" - Joseph J. Mika, WSU, Vandenberg Rm., Michigan League, 1:30 pm. "Le Sujet Trouve: Experience and Experiment in Surrealist Confessions" - Alina Clej, French and Comparative Literature, Rackham W. Conference Rm., 8 pm. "Offensive Reproductive Tac- tics: Egg Removal and In- traspecific Brood Parasitism in the European Starling"- Michael Lombardo, Ph.D., Bio Dept., Rackham E. Lecture Rm., 4 pm. "House Mounds and Factory - Flakes: What I Saw Besides Mud at Kichpanha, Belize" - Richard Lesure, 2009 Museum of An- thropology, 12 noon-1 pm. Meetings Inter-Varsity Christian Fel- lowship - Henderson Rm., Michi- gan League, 7 pm. Animal Riots Group - 124 E. Quad, 6-7 pm. Rainforest Action Movement - 1040 Dana, 7 pm. Society of Women Engineers General Meeting - 1200 EECS, 6:30 pm. Big/Little Sib Sundaes, 6 pm. Asian-American Women's Workshop: Discussing the Shared Experience of Asian- American Women - Kuenzal Rm., Michigan Union, 7:30 pm. PIRGIM Mass Meeting - Pond Rm., Michigan Union, 7 pm. Be a toxic avenger! SALSA-Socially Active Latin Student Association - B111 MLB, 7 pm. ference Rm., 7 pm. For Horseback Trail Ride, Sun., Feb. 5th, $24 regis- tration fee. Includes transportation. Furthermore Introductionrto Career PLan- ning and Placement - CP&P, Library, 2:30-3 pm. The Summer Job Search - CP&P, Rm 1, 4:10-5 pm. Applying to Law School - CP&P, Conference Rm., 4:10-5 pm. Interviewing: The Employer Perspective - CP&P, Library, 5:10-6 pm. Resume Writing for Education Students - 2346 SEB, 5:10-6:30 pm. Employer Presentation: Ford Motor Co. - CP&P, Conference Rm., 5:30-6:30 pm. Employer Presentation: Great American Insurance Co. - Michigan Union, Welker Rm., 7-8:30 pm. Pre-Interviews - Cardiac Pace- makers, 1303 EECS, 5:15-7:15 pm; General Motors, 1311 EECS, 6-8 pm. LASC Film Series:tPuerto Rico - Rackham Amphitheatre, 8 pm. RAM Presents Blowpipes and Bulldozers - A Film about the Penan Tribespeople on Borneo, 1520 Dana, 7:30 pm. Performances Music at Mid-Day - Carolyn Dueis, harpist, Pendelton Rm., Michigan Union, 12:15 pm. Free. The Holy Cows - At The Beat, doors open at 9:30 pm. "Blues and Jazz in the Base- ment" - Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., Jan. 27, Friday from 10 pm-1 am. Featuring Straight Forward. Vietnam is not entirely forgotten BY THE PACIFIC NEWS SERVICE A Phantom casts its shadow over America as the echoes of the My Lai massacre reverberated through a Stockton, Calif. schoolyard. Four- teen years after the war's end, the one-person commando raid that left five Southeast Asian students dead reminds Americans that this nation has yet to exorcise the ghosts of Vietnam from our collective psyche. If the sins of our ancestors are visited on us, it was forcefully borne out at the Cleveland Elementary School. Patrick Purdy, the deranged young man in fatigues described as driven by a military hang-up, was the son of a Vietnam Veteran. His child victims - too young to have been born during the war - were more of this soil than Asia's. Stockton was the favored place for secondary resettlement as Cam- bodians and other Southeast Asians regrouped after leaving their initial sponsors across the United States. While by no means a high-tech town, the city offered accessible prices for housing large extended families. With remarkable luck, Southeast Asians took menial jobs, attended English classes, set up small garment shops and went to work on nearby farms. With nearly feudal loyalty, Southeast Asians - who had lost their homes and kin in America's cause - trusted their allies to shelter them in defeat. But the tragedy of Southeast Asian refugees is that their lives are situated at the intersection of two dark currents of American life - this country's war against Asia and it's homegrown racism against Asian Americans. Distinctions about one's own service and sacrifices are not taken into ac- count. The Stockton schoolyard incident cannot simply be seen as the action of a single aberrant individual. It raises hard questions at a time when America is closing its doors to Southeast Asian refugees. It is the response to a national leadership which refuses to accept the Vietnam war for what it really was - not a defense of freedom but a war against Asia. As Americans - white and Asia# - join together to mourn the blood of innocents, we must come to terms with a painful past if we are ever to lay to rest the ghosts of Vietnam and discover our common humanity. POLICE NOTES Man pulls rifle in lot A woman said a man in a car pulled a rifle on her in the parking lot of Wolverine Towers on S. State St. Tuesday, according to police re- ports. According to Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Sherry Vail, .the woman said she heard someone yell, and she turned and saw a man in a car hold- ing a long barrelled gun. The woman ducked and the car drove away, Vail said. A witness telephoned police froni a cellular car phone and pursued thg suspect's car until police arrived, aca cording to the police report. Police arrested four suspects froni the vehicle and confiscated a .22-calm iber rifle. Three of the suspects werd released and one of the suspects wag placed in jail. The investigation i$ continuing, Vail said. She said the incident could be tried as a felonious assault because of the possession of a firearm. - Monica Smith Fee may be charged to depositors S WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Bush said yesterday his administration is considering charg- ing depositors to help pay for the envia dnnn crick hnt oa.-mpmar,. for every $100 in deposits. But, he stressed that the option has not been forwarded yet to Bush. Brady did not say how the fee would h e colleted-but his considered a tax, thus violating his "Read my lips: No new taxes" pledge. "I will answer the question with a anustion T (it) a t , hen the ne,_ 205 insolvent S&Ls. More than 35P other insolvent institutions remain open and billions of dollars more will be required. The TrpenvD enartment A I