Page A5 — JUNE 3, 1998 (The ^J or liait b © bseruer It Does Happen There, Too Bv H i gh B. P rice P resident N atio n al U rban L eague The images of the mayhem that tore apart Springfield, Oregon are by now familiar to us all, no matter how faraway we live from the six suburban and rural com­ munities where since last Octo­ ber heavily-armed teenagers have gunned down a total of nearly three score of their classmates and teachers. The toll is stunning: Pearl, Mississippi, 3 dead, 7 wounded; West Paducah, Kentucky, 3 dead, 5 wounded; Jonesboro, Arkan­ I sa s, 5 dead, 10 w ounded; Edinboro, Pennsylvania, 1 dead, 3 wounded; Fayetteville, Tennes- . see, 1 dead; and now. Spring- fie ld , O regon, 4 dead, 26 wounded. Familiar, too, is the grief of the survivors and the shock of residents of these individual com­ munities, and many of us in the larger society, which has fol­ lowed each of these murderous rampages. Why is this happening here? Is thequestion being asked with increasing disquiet. “There is no sense to it,” Gary Bowden, the wrestling coach at S p rin g fie ld ’s T hurston High School, said last Thursday, strug­ gling to cope with the enormity o f the crime there. But it’s not true that there’s “no sense” to these killings. In fact, many people have iden­ tified the causes o f and contrib­ uting factors to these seemingly anarchic bursts of horrific vio­ lence. Norma Paulus, the Oregon state superintendent of schools, said in the wake o f the shootings, “this is not a school problem. This is a societal problem." John K itzh ab er, O re g o n ’s G overnor, pointedly asserted, “All o f us should look at how we have failed as a society and how this could happen in the heart of Oregon. It has been a priority to build prison cells and prison beds--after the fact. These ac­ tions in no way prevent juvenile violence.” Dr. Deborah Prothrow-Stith, o f the Harvard School of Public H ealth, suggested on A B C ’s “Nightline” last week, that we are seeing the “second wave" of the youth homicide epidemic that Salem Residents surprised with Ava­ lanche of Prizes While Claiming $6.25 Million Jackpot 1998 Ford Explorer X L T Among Bonus Prizes Awarded To Jackpot Winners To Steven Clinton, May 14, was like any other day, until he stopped on the way to work to pick up a snack and have his Megabucks ticket checked. That ticket, from the May 13, drawing, matched all six numbers, making Clinton the winnerofthe $6.25 million Megabucks jackpot. When purchas­ ing histickctClinton chose the’Tnvest- ment Fund" payment pla^which pro­ vides Megabucksjackpot winners w ith one single payment equal to one-half the advertised jackpot amount. When claiming his prize at Lottery headquar­ ters in Salem on May 14, he received a check in the amount of$2 million alter federal and state taxes were withheld. Clinton’s winningticke, was purchased atJack’sIGA Foodliner,30l I Market St. NE, in Salem. Clinton, 44, became the Oregon Lottery’s 151s, Megabucks million­ aire since the game began in 1985. In total, more than $365 million in Megabucks prizes have been paid. Clinton purchased 10 sets of numbers, a $10 investment. He used numbers that he has played on and off for about 8 years. The seventh combination turned ou, to be the big winner. The winning numbers were 7-13-21-23- 25-27. Clinton's winning ticket was one of 8,287 winning tickets from the May 13, drawing. There were more surprises in store for Clinton when he arrived at Lottery headquarters. “It’s amazing how your whole life can change in such a short time,” said Clinton primarily convulsed black and Hispanic inner-city neighbor­ hoods during the past 15 years now erupt in white small towns and rural communities. “ 1 he late 80s. early '90s was when the youth homicide rate in urban America almost doubled, started with what one might have thought were isolated incidents," Dr. Prothrow-Stith explained. "Eventually, we learned to un­ derstand that that was an epi­ demic," she continued. "I can’t, as a public health person, look at w hat's happened in schools over the last six to eight months and say these are isolated events. 11 you take troubled kids and add guns and add a precipitating event in a society that glam or­ izes explosive responses to an­ ger, you’ve got danger and I think it’s now happening pretty much across the country." Many experts on children and adolescents believe that dynamic is helping to fuel the extraordi­ nary callousness and the calcu­ lated indiscrim inate ferocity shown by these young killers. Sissela Bok, a philosopher and ethicist w ho has studied v iolence in America, told the New York Times, last week, "We have movie role models showing vio­ lence as fun, and video games where you kill, and get rewarded for killing, for hours and hours. It is a very combustible mix: en­ raged young people with access to semiautomatic weapons, ex­ posed to v iolence as entertain­ ment. v iolence shown as excit­ ing and thrilling." But the situation is far from hopeless, the successful effort by public agencies, private insti­ tutions and community organi­ zations in Boston to reduce that city’s climbing youth homicide rate is just a piece of the volumi­ nous quilt of evidence that we do know how to help great numbers of young people live their ado­ lescence in productive fashion. The current spasm o f horrific school v iolence is another warn­ ing that American society must intensify its efforts to do so. Finally, there is another point about these murderous incidents that cries out for notiee--a point that becomes clear if one imag­ ines it had been African-Ameri­ can youths in six different inner- city neighborhoods who had turned their predominantly-black high schools into killing fields. We know' what “ answ ers" would have been put forth--and what blame assessed--then. We know that we would have been subjected to the purplest "mean streets of the ghetto" prose then- -prose that is used to implicitly declare the problems of the inner cities a “Negro Problem" which has nothing to do with White America. fhe public discourse about these killings is entirely differ­ ent precisely because it is not black children but white ones who are showing the horror a deep alienation from society can pro­ duce. W e should examine w hy some white youths who are not poor are having and acting out mur­ derous impulses--not to play the racial "dozens," hut to determine what commonalties and differ­ ences exist in how the dynamic of violence operates in those places where violence is expected to happen and in those places where it's not supposed to hap­ pen. fo do otherwise would be to ignore the overwhelming evi­ dence that the 'mean streets' pro­ duced by the dynamic of vio­ lence in American culture can in fact be anywhere. . a A year ago... he was buried in debt, ■V he sold everything, his wife nearly le f t him. But th en she called for help. Today he’s p itch in g fo B&H T ires, and he’s o Problem gambling is an illness. But people recover. If you know someone with a gambling problem, do them a favor. Make the call. 1-800-233-8479 .w Problem Gambling Hotline ddicted gamblers do recover. Sponsored hy the Oregon Lottery lot the Gambling Addiction Treatment foundation.