Opinion Page b Saturday, May 22, 1982 The Michiqan Daily .........., .. ... ...... .j Freeing inmates, accepting athletes IF YOU COMMIT a crime and get caught in the next few months, you may not have a place to stay. To help ease overcrowding in the state prisons, Gov. William Milliken declared a state of emergency Wed- nesday that allows the early release of nearly 900 inmates in several state In spite of a local crime rate increae after the early release last year, Jack Frost, area manager of parole, probation, and community resident problems of the corrections depar- tment, had some soothing words of area residents. These prisoners "would be released in 90 days anyway," he said. More trial delays? RE THAN A year after the shoot- ings of two University students in Bursley Hall, the trial of the alleged murderer, Leo Kelly, faces even further delays. From a choice of over 150 perspective jurors,,the field was narrowed down to a 14-member jury in Washtenaw Coun- ty Circuit Court Wednesday. Kelly's attorney, William Waterman, has challenged the jury selections, however, because no members are black, so the jury was not sworn in. Waterman has also asked that the trial be relocated, claiming a fair trial in Washtenaw county would be impossible because of pretrial publicity. The trial is scheduled to begin Mon- day at 9 a.m., but if Waterman's challenge is upheld, the jury selection process will have to start all over again. Despite low scores TNIVERSITY AND athletic depart- ment officials were still insisting last week that admissions standards are not compromised for athletes. In spite of the publication of anonymous high school grade point averages and SAT scores of several current University athletes in a Daily story in April, Admissions Director Cliff Sjogren said these students were probably enrolled in the School of Education's physical education program. The program has the lowest threshold for admission at the Univer- sity. Athletic Director Don Canham said the athletic department aids disadvan- taged students and also aids the University in achieving -its goal of 10 percent minority enrollment. Even with the help of the athletic department, however, the University has achieved minority enrollment that actually is closer to 5 percent. Perhaps if the University expanded its athletic department, then it could achieve the affirmative action goals it set over ten years ago. The Week in Review was com- piled by Daily editors Julie Hinds and Kent Redding, and Daily staff writer George Adams. It will be featured every Saturday. counties, including Washtenaw, over the next three months. The action comes on the eve of a similar move last year by the governor, but state and local officials do not ex- pect the release to have much of an ef- fect on the crime rate. Most of the in- dividuals being released will be from halftway houses, community residence programs that provide a transition for prisoners reentering the community. In the past, overcrowding in state prisons has caused riots in Jackson, Ionia, and Marquette state prisons. State prisons currently are 175 inmates over their emergency capacity. Waterman: Is fair trial possible? The Michigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 14-S Ninety-two Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Doing business in S. Africa A step backward R IGHTI;ST ELEMENTS IN El Salvador's Constituent Assembly currently are doing exactly what many suspected they would - suspending popular reforms. The assembly suspended on Thursday a reform program designed to redistribute land in the strife-torn nation. Turn the country back over to the rich landowners and to hell with the peasants, they seem to be saying. The suspension could put the country on the brink of more intense civil violence. This time U.S. aid must not help the government. One of the preconditions made by the United States during the formation of the riew Salvadoran government was that it faced a cutoff of U.S. economic and military aid if it reneged on the land reform program. Congress and the Reagan administration must not reward the government of El Salvador with any encouraging aid if it is intent on moving back to privileged minority control, in- steac + towardlefOrm andIreebndliatol.5 To the Daily: It is well known that for several years there has existed a basic disagreement between some of the Regents, and hundreds of students and faculty on this cam- pus regarding the issue of divestment from South African oriented stocks. In "South African divestment bill passes the state House" (Daily, May 14), Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) ex- pressed disapproval of the bill passed by the state House of Representatives that, if it became law, would require public colleges to divest from U.S. companies operating in apartheid South Africa. H4 said, "We're talking about companies that are in Michigan, that employ people in Michigan, and pay Michigan taxes." As Regent Roach knows;this is only half the truth. These com panies also happen to be multi- national corporations, a new, hard-to-define animal, with global rather than national horizons and appetites. In South Africa, these com- panies are no longer just Michigan companies. They are employers of South Africans, pay South African taxes, and most r i ar oreGjntI 'are ubject to South Africa's ominous laws of apar- be taken over by the South theid. U.S. civil rights standards African Ministry of Defense un- are illegal in that nation. der current South African law. Even more serious is the Even in peace time these com- revelation by the New York panies sell trucks and other Times of May 19;1978, that in the vehicles to the South African ar- wake of the 1976 riots, General my and police. Motors Corporation officials in Many prefer the divestment S outh Africa drafted a secret route Perry Bullard has forged. contingency plan to train its own One must hope his bill passes in security personnel in 1977, in case the Senate and that others con- of further race riots. tact state senators to tell them Furthermore, in the case of a their views on divestment. national emergency, G.M. and -Leonard Suransky the rest of the auto industry could May 15, 1982 M1 DOES-NOT LiV B SCHOOL LUNCH PRO6AMM ALONEJ