<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9501140623
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950416
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, April 16, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1H
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
COMMENT
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FLAP AT HARVARD IGNORES ONE PERSON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Dead men tell no tales. And dead parents make no complaints. So it's
impossible to know what Dorothy Mayfield would have thought about her
daughter's acceptance to Harvard University.

  Or what  she might have thought when Harvard changed its mind.

  It seems that her daughter's application -- which featured straight A's and
glowing recommendations -- left out one alarming fact: The girl had  murdered
her mother four years earlier.
  Not exactly a small detail.
  Now, murder is a strong word. But someone  was murdered. The controversy
that has erupted since Harvard accepted-then- rejected  Gina Grant -- the
school claimed she lied by not admitting her past -- seems to focus on the
rights of juvenile criminals.
  Almost no one talks about the dead person.
  Let's review: In 1990, in  South Carolina, Grant whacked her mother with a
lead crystal candlestick. It was not accidental. She whacked her in the head,
over and over, maybe 13 times, until she was dead. Then Grant and her petty
thief boyfriend tried to make the killing look like a suicide by sticking a
knife in the woman's neck and placing her hand around the weapon.
  The police were not fooled.
  Grant was charged with  murder. At the trial, her lawyers claimed abuse.
Not physical abuse. They never said her mother hit her, or, for that matter,
ever whacked her with a candlestick. Emotional abuse was the mother's flaw.
She had been an alcoholic.
  The judge seemed to sympathize. After the lawyers struck a deal, reducing
the charge to voluntary manslaughter, he sentenced the 14-year-old Grant to
just six months in  a juvenile detention center.
  She was then allowed to move in with relatives in Massachusetts, under the
umbrella of probation.
  Six months and a bus ticket.
  That was justice for Dorothy Mayfield.
No  sign of remorse
  Yet today, all we hear about is justice for Grant. Picketers march on
Harvard's campus, offers of help come rolling in -- from free legal advice to
a guaranteed admission to Boston University -- for which Gina, in a statement
read by her lawyers, was "deeply moved."
  What she didn't say in that statement,  or in the court transcripts, is
that she was "sorry." That she has remorse  for killing her mother.
  Isn't that part of the rehab process?
  The judge who gave Grant only six months -- instead of locking her up until
age 21 -- recently said, "I just felt (that sentence)  was too much.
  "This is a very bright and talented young woman. Every time her life
started to take off, someone was throwing a roadblock at her."
  Well. Then again, that candlestick was a pretty  big roadblock for her mom.
  By the way, Harvard says it is not the crime but the lying about it that
got Grant bounced. Grant answered "no" to the application question about
previous trouble or probations.  She also, allegedly, lied in an interview,
saying her mother was killed in a car crash. Harvard only learned the truth
after someone sent in newspaper clippings from South Carolina.
  Grant's lying  "violates the values of the university," a spokesperson
said. Not to mention that Harvard could be  liable if she commits violence
once she's at school.
  Grant claims she didn't have to reveal the  incident because "the records
were sealed." This is a sticky legal point. Yes, sealing records is supposed
to give juvenile offenders a clean slate. But it doesn't necessarily mean you
can lie to direct  questions. Especially if your crime was once front-page
news.
Paying the price
  Now, having said all this, let me throw you a curve. I happen to think Gina
earned her admission to Harvard. As dumb as our system is, she did what she
was told to do. She has become -- on the outside, anyhow --  a model citizen,
good grades, charity work. That beats paying taxes to keep her in prison.
  But Harvard  is not out-of-bounds to seek honesty in its candidates. And
critics are not out-of-bounds to scream for the victim. In this instantly
disposable society, we're too quick to forget the dead. Even the  O.J. Simpson
trial seems to focus more on what's fair for him than for his ex-wife and her
murdered friend.
  Grant is not the first person to suffer emotional abuse. Not everyone grabs
the nearest  weapon. And while being 14 makes it sad, it does not entirely
excuse the act. Serious crime by teens -- even murder -- has doubled in recent
years, and that may have something to do with how we sentence  them.
  Sure, missing out on Harvard hurts. It's called "punishment."  And as much
as any college class, it is a concept worth learning in our
blame-somebody-else society. Critics wail about Gina  Grant having to
"continue to pay the price," but isn't that what happens when you kill
somebody? As near as I can tell, the victim continues to pay the price as
well.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; HARVARD; REFUSAL; ADMISSION;  PARENT; HOMIVIDE; GINA GRANT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
