P*0«4 Portland Observer Thumday August 10 1978 Tuition Advance: New plan for school assistance Behind the wall r i, LarryBaiter 938021 O. S. P Correspondent Donati Danjord «32323 Asst O.S.P Correspondent JuJtus D. Snowden 938013 P o e m Editor by Donald Dan ford 932323 There is a hunger strike going on segregation unit. It's about the conditram there. Prisoners are kept awake by a steel ga:e banging on a steel post — steel bouncing on steel at 11:30 p m (or 1:30 a m and so on all night) a few feet from a prisoner's head. Sometimes prisoners are kept awake by the tapping of a guard's cowboy boots on the smooth cement at 12:30 a m Or the guards might decide to put out the metal breakfast bowls on the metal table at 4.-00 a.m. and do it so that the sound of each bowl hit­ ting the table can be heard at the op­ posite end of the building There are a couple o f dozen other ways the guards keep prisoners awake or wake them if they choose A complete list would be a study in abnorm al hehamor. It may be hard to imagine a group of guards purposely going out o f their way to hassle sleeping or almost sleeping prisoners. But it is not hard for the hundreds who go to the SAI unit (Security and Isolation) each year. Guards may be a lot o f things, but they are not complete morons: they know when they are banging a gate at two in the morning and they know the results o f banging that gate. Noise at night is a common thing, both m the SAI building and the main cell blocks. But since SAI has the accoustics o f an echo chamber, it is often asNsiei on one fifteen tnan tier in SAI than on one side o f a 400 man ceil block. The guard's noise at night is one of the several techniques that have been hammered out over the years as to what constitutes acceptable behavior toward prisoners. Food handling by guards in the SAI unit who have gr.me on their hands, and stacking the bottom o f one tray squarely on another tray full of food are two more techniques. Allowing the food to get cold and serving it mixed with din and hair is yet another example o f acceptable behavior by guards. Guards get away with actions that w ould not be accepted in a civilized atmosphere, and they get away with it consistently because there are not any checks to stop them. And this is what the food strike is all about: the quality of the staff working the SAI unit. Upgrade the quality o f that staff and hopefully the new staff will not only know that a kN o f noise keeps prisoners awake (as the present staff does), but also they will not make it. There are hundreds o f goals that could be accomplished if prisoners were allowed to sleep at night, and this one “ righ t” , i.e ., allow ing a prisoner the chance to sleep, would be a step toward meaningful prison reform id the ■ l i s i illtllti; fluiiii» iHuwji UW jili A Chicano inmata chats with an O S P guard by A rt Chavez 936388 1 think one would be surprised at the amount o f conflicts that could be avoided if we would learn to show som e respect for one another. I MEAN ALL OF US, Staff as w ell as inmates. White, Black, Chicano or whatever our color or origin , . . may be. Regardless o f what a man has done or w hat position he is in within these walls, he deserv es some respect, in order to receive respect. We must learn to give respect. Many times a guard would get more cooperation if he would lower the tone in his voice just a little, and the same goes for the inmates when needing cooper alien fiom the prison staff. Many tunes the way we talk to a person can make all the difference in the world. We have to realize that tension exists in this penal institution. This tension is felt by the guards as well as the inmates. The presence o f tension can create short fuses, short fuses ignite and expiode fast And to the guards: You don't have to relinquish any authority or become a push-over' by addressing an inmate in a decent, but yet a for­ mal v oice. The same can apply to we who wear blue dungarees with prison numbers on them. The guards and the adm inistration don’t want to be 'fronted-off by an inmate who is subordinate. It doesn’t make you any less a man to answer someone in a 'cool' and normal voice. A man trill be recognized as a man, whether he is in O .S.P. or out on the streets. It all depends on the way one carries himself. We don’t have to wake up each morning trying to prove our manhood, unless we are uncertain o f it. (Ladies, when 1 use the word Mar, and Manhood’, 1 use it in a general term, referring to both sexes.» Most frequently we have the In­ mates vs. Inmates conflictions, we should be more than willing to be respectful to one another, because we share the same fate each day, regardless who we are. W e may receive disrespect from the guards and feel reluctant to respond, because of the futility of our position, but on the other hand if disrespect comes from another inmate we may do him some great bodily harm. This is not necessary , if we just learn to respect one another. Some o f the most powerful and in­ fluential people in history have been humble and soft spoken. Screaming and shouting or insulting remarks only reflects the same. If a person is respectful, he de­ serves the same. We are all from dif­ ferent backgrounds, educational, econom ical, political, social and racial. We have d ifferen t lik es, dislikes, personalities, and moral values. Some o f us are free, some confined and some semi-free. But we all have one thing m common. We are all human beings. If 1 can stand in the chow-line for ten minutes, why can't everyone do the same. If 1 didn't want to eat, 1 wouldn’t be there. If I walk from the back of the line to the front I am being disrespectful to every man in that line W ould it hurt to ask a person for the salt and pepper, instead o f reaching over his tray for it? This type of incident may seem trivial but to men already denied some o f the basic pleasures in life this is only adding insult to injury. Let's treat the next person the way we would like to be treated and maybe we can lose that label of being an animal. Or do we prefer to be called ‘.Animals’? A man is a man, whether he is four or eight feet tall. WASHINGTON - Senator Ed­ ward M. Kennedy has introduced legislation in the U nited States Senate to establish Boston University President John R. Silber’s plan for a Tuition Advance Fund (TAF). Kennedy declared that the bill “ presents an adm irable way o f providing for college costs in a com­ prehensive fash ion , and with a financing scheme that is equitable to other taxpayers as well.” Kennedy is a co-sponsor o f the legislation with U.S. Senator John Durkin (D-N.H .). The bill, S. 3044, is identical to the one introduced in the H ouse o f Representatives on April 20th by U .S . R epresentative M ichael J. Harrington (D -M ass). The Senate and the House hills call upon the federal governm ent to establish an education trust fund to advance to college sop h om ores, juniors and seniors the cost o f tuition plus SI.000 in education-related ex­ penses. such as room and board, up to a maximum o f S5.000 annually. The advance would be repaid by the student through small yearly payroll withholding installments at the rate o f two percent of adjusted gross in­ come during his working lifetime, plus a fifty percent surcharge. Default would be precluded. In an essay in the July issue o f The A tlantic M onthly, President Silber wntes o f “ The Tuition Dilemma. A New Way to Pay the Bills." "Something fundamental must be done — and done soon — if America is not to default on its national Interested in current books about African Liberation? Visit JO H N REED BOOK STORE In the Oakum Building 519 S W 3rd Avenue Sixth Floor Or call 227 2902 finance the existing system . The whole system has got to go. And now that South A frica has a law em­ powering it to take over any com­ pany it deems "essential to national security", GM. Firestone and any other foreign company can be forced to produce w ar material to crush any Black uprising. And their personnel would be "encouraged” to join the Volunteer Army. S o, the argum ent frequently voiced by businessmen about being in South Africa solely to do business and not engage in politics becomes as hollow as a Winchells donut. The moment you invest in South A fnca. you are already inextricably in ­ volved in the politics because you are supplying the money that keeps the system afloat Equally hollow is the argument that foreign companies can do more harm than good by withdrawing because if they stay, they can force a relaxation o f som e apartheid policies. The recent crackdown on dissidents and the banning of almost all publications critical of apartheid indicate that the reverse is true. Foreign companies will merely toe the government line. The gap be­ tween Black and white earnings has climbed almost sixty percent since 1969 South A frica's Financial M ail, their equivalent o f The Walt Street Journal, in its article about the Prin­ ciples, titled it a "damp squib” (a There has been an increase in bicycle thefts in the St. Johns area due to bicycles being improperly secured or left in unlocked garages or open car ports. Furtherm ore, ow ners o f these bicycles have failed to properly engrave their bikes and have failed to copy down the serial number This decreases the likelihood that the property will ever be returned to the rightful owner. For information on how citizens can safeguard their property contact the CRIME PREVENTION U N IT/ NORTH PRECINCT 248-5720. E AD VER TISIN G OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and »rations prepared by the Ot rtr becomes the property of O b server and may not reproduced for any other without explicit prior approvi SHOP IE N O W S FOR BRA M O S y o u K n o w V A R IE TIE S you IHio SIZES y o u W O T .« • ttl? A 1 1 i o « M ‘*w*»**« t U r w iB a • : • 3 IB«* A 3 ^ A • ll M I M g rv M M ru 1 i N • •« » Or«.«., . • i»l-a - i i . .... • O m O-—. •M*oaa aa ««*>«•• X O D U S r ' - J f r s O a s a / w - r u i S a n d ' ^ te a /m e n / (NOTE: Chavez is an inmate at the Oregon State Penitentiary serving five years for burglary. Born January 4, 1945, Mexican-American descent. From Los Angeles, Califor­ nia, ninth grade education and he has no one to correspond or visit with here in the State of Oregon. A nyone wishing to do so please write. ‘Chavez’ »36385 , 2605 State Street, Salem. Oregon 97310.) firecracker that fizzles,. It faulted the Principles for leaving out all mention of trade union rights: "The American business manifesto needs to be a lot further . . . and be followed up with determination. As a head on confrontation with apar­ theid, it is just not o n .” Finally, a top secret memo from Mr. Bowdler, the U.S. ambassador to South A frica and printed in Southern Africa (published in North Carolina) Bowdler had conducted a poll to determine the acceptability of the Sullivan Principles. His con ­ clusion was that the vast majority of the Africans rejected them out of hand, citing many o f the reasons outlined above. Donald W oods, speaking at the NAACP Convention two weeks ago when asked about the Principles merely asked. "What would the Jews have said to A m erican com panies doing business in Nazi Germany under a cod e o f principles for the em ­ ployment of Jews?” So, the message from Black South Africa is loud and clear American com panies out o f South A frica NOW provide more m oney for federal grants, loans and work-study aid They would be an improvement over the present situation; but they do not promise the comprehensive volution to the problem that the TAF does.” President Silber estim ates the probable cost of the TAF to be 43.5- $4.5 b illion annually in current dollars and calls for it to be assessed ” in light o f the billions we spend each year on nonessentials: $5 billion for candy and ice cream; $17.4 billion on tobacco; $37 8 billion for alcohol.” Responding to a question July 10th on a Boston television show about how TAF “ jibes with the m ood o f the country in terms o f Proposition 13,“ President Silber said: ” , think it jibes very well. One o f the reasons why Americans are so burdened by taxes is that they arc terribly burdened by the cost o f educating their children If one can take from the back of the parent the total cost o f educating two or three children, and placed that burden gent­ ly on the shoulders o f each student, and let him carry it and pay it o ff over a working lifetime, taxpayers in this country will feel instant relief. And they won’t feel instant relief of $250 or $500 as under the tuition tax credit plan. Rather it would he relief of up to $5,000 each year for three years o f college education. Now when you take a burden o f financing a college education o f $15,000 off the back of the middle class parent, he is going to feel great relief.” Thefts increases retire 1518 N E KILLtNGSWORTH PORTLAND OREGON 97211 284 7997 Africa Blacks reject Sullivan Principles (Continued from Page 1 Column 3) employ ing a total o f 30,000 people which is a ridiculously small percen- age of the total Black population — 0 .1 6 * to be exact. And. is that all that we w ant — integrated bathrooms, a few more pennies and a title? For the umpteenth time, NO! W e want our fair share o f the pie W e want to be masters of our own destiny and not just a huge labor reservoir for the benefit o f the Afrikaner We are entitled to the nght to live where we choose and not be subject to banishment to some back of beyond called a “ homeland” . Thus the Principles, dreamed up by Sulliv an who also happens to be a member of General Motors' Board of Directors (GM is very much in­ volved in South Africa) are totally unacceptable since they pledge to work w ithin, and to continue to com m itm ent to equal educational opportunity,” he writes. “ Unless comprehensive steps are taken in the financing o f higher education — steps com parable in scope to the Mornll Act o f 1862 establishing land grant colleges, or the Servicemen’s R eadjustm ent Act of 1944 establishing the Gl Bill — increasing numbers o f academically qualified students will be denied access and choice in higher education simply because the costs will prove un­ manageable.*' In his essay. P resident Silber argues that the Moynihan-Packwood proposal for tu ition tax credits “ properly calls attention to these problems, but does not provide an adequate solution, for it leaves a major burden o f financing higher education on the backs o f the parents who. as a general rule, cannot find the resources to feed and clothe their children and to carry, in addition, the cost of their college education. In order to achieve authentic educational opportunity, we must in­ troduce the old-fashioned American principle that the person w ho receives the benefit is the one who ought to pay for it. “ The other major proposal now before C ongress com es from President Carter. The TAF is con- sistent with the President's statements on financing higher education, and is in no way at odds with his programs The proposals made by President Carter and Representative William D. Ford (D-M ich.) would Facts of Importance VOLUME III AUGUST 1978 SERIES I Exodus completed its first certificate training course for its counselors on July 21, 1978. This training provides additional counseling skills to its staff, in order to serve its clientele more consistently. A similar course will be scheduled for the com­ munity at large during the month of October. The course will center around communication linkages between substance abusers, spouse of substance abusers, children who are substance abusers, and parents of children who are substance abusers. This course will be taught at the grass-roots level. Registration for this course will be published in our September column of the Portland Observer. Our clients thank you for your continued support.