}' ?age 2-Wednesday, October 19, 1977-The Michigan Daily A4mnesdv r n tv- NEW CAPITAL PUNISHMENT S TA TUTE USED: human rihts turning Illinois killer gets death sentence since Hill's attorney William O'Malley, into a political issue (Continued from Page 1) Amnesty's 2,000 chapters throughout the world seek to gain the release of pri- soners assigned to them. In order for the local chapters to remain non-parti- san, they are never assigned prisoners from their own countries. Amnesty finds out about prisoners through a variety of sources, Ruben- FRI ENDS DON'T LET FRIENDS DRIVE DRUNK. For free information, write to: DRUNK DRIVER, Box 2345 Rockville, Maryland 20852 d.. I .iw ar ' "'b' stein said. Often a prisoner's family will write to Amnesty or the organiza- tion will receive reports from clergy in different parts of the world. ''We've even received letters smuggled out of prisons," he added. After an Amnesty chapter is assigned a prisoner, it will send letters, telegrams or aerograms to the gover- nment of the country in which the per- son is imprisoned. These letters, "polite and persistant" in tone, ask for the re- lease of the prisoner in question, Rubenstein said. RUBENSTEIN said Amnesty uses this letter-writing approach because "governments like to work in the dark. They like to think that they can put someone away and no one will know. Everyone is watching Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov, but when Joe the grocer gets arrested and letters pour in, they're astounded. Although Rubenstein's organization has gained the release of many prison- ers of conscience, he emphasized that Amnesty "does not regard itself as a panacea" for various governments' use of violence and torture to squelch dissent. "Often we work on cases that are very dispirited," he said. When asked if he felt his organization was doing any good, he replied, "In Uruguay, they say we're communists. In the Soviet Union, they say we're im- perialists. If they both dislike us so in- tensely, we. must be accomplishing something. If our effect is so illusory and ineffectual, why would they care' either way?" - ------=-- - The UM Black Graduate Alliance will hold a forum for all black grad & professional students at the U of M entitled, * "How To Survive I * at Michigan," I ' on FRIDAY, OCT. 21, from 4-6 in the East lecture room of the RACKHAM BUILDING. 'I. CHICAGO (AP) - William Hill, convicted in the execution-style slaying of two West Side drug store owners, was sentenced yesterday to die in the elec- tric chair. The wails of Hill's stepmother and stepsister pierced the courtroom as Judge John Moran ordered sheriff's deputies to take Hill to Stateville for execution, "causing a current of elec- tricity to pass through the body of William R. Hill until the defendant, William R. Hill, is dead." IT WAS THE first imposition of the death penalty since the new Illinois capital punishment statute was signed into law on June 21 by Gov. James Thomson. The last prisoner to die in the electric chair was James Dukes, executed in 1962 in the Cook County Jail for killing a policeman. As Moran read the sentence, tears streamed down the faces of Hill's relatives, the younger woman being led from the courtroom by a matron and her anguished sobs echoing in the em- pty marbled hall on the sixth floor of the Criminal Court Building. Before Moran imposed sentence, Hill, 28, declared that the trial, at which he was convicted of killing pharmacists Allen Ziperstein, 61, and Robert Fields, 47, had been "an injustice." "I DON'T THINK I got a fair trial," he said. "I would have pleaded guilty if I was guilty of the charges." Hill, wearing a black, pearl and lavender checked suit and a black shirt and surrounded by three policemen, two armed bailiffs and two husky Cook County Jail guards, then told Moran: "Do what you have to do." With that, Moran, his eyes fixed on the defendant, began to read the elaborately worded death sentence prescribed by law. Moran fixed the execution date for Jan. 9. But that was merely a formality, plans an appeal to .the Illinois Supreme Court. In Springfield, Supreme Court Clerk Olell Woods said it was unlikely that the appeal would be decided before May. THE PROSECUTION contended that Hill contracted with a West Side den- tist, the late Dr. Max Kaye, to execute Fields. Kaye was said to have been in- furiated with Fields because the phar- macist refused to participate in a plot of defraud the Illinois Department of Public Aid. Ziperstein was killed by a shotgun blast Aug. 23, 1974, outside his Haymarket Pharmacy. Prosecutors told the jury that Hill killed Ziperstein by mistake, thinking that he was Fields. Realizing his blunder, they con- tended, he returned to the drug store to get Fields, who was shot and killed Jan. 18, 1975,as he arrived for work. Hill was said to have received $2,800 for both killings. Otterbacher tells local Dems he wants Griffin's Senate seat is a bad neighborhood," said Otter- bacher. "But we've got a long way to go if we're going to arrive at the place we said we were 200 years ago." OTTERBACHER said he spent some of his free afternoons talking to his constituents in a neighborhood pub. From these conversations the senator said he garnered the sense of disillusionment of the lower middle class. "They know folds are just driving through the tax system," said Otter- bacher. "They feel they're not going to ante up to a system that isn't giving them anything in return and they begin to ask 'What the hell is going on here?' "We are going to be better served by a few folks who are not separated .from their condi- tion... "We're not going to make it all better; We start out thinking that we're going to make it all better, but we realize we're providing inade- quate solutions to complex problems and it takes it all out of you. "But there's one thing you can't take out of John Otterbacher and that's his neighborhood. You can try but you just can't take it out of me.." Otterbacher ran for the Democrat- ic nomination for the Senate seat vacated by Phil Hart in 1976 and lost. But he never 'really stopped running for the United States Senate. He has accumulated a grass roots network of volunteers who have their sights set on the Democratic nomination in 1978. THIS YEAR Otterbacher has trav- eled to 82 of 83 counties in the state, talking about his neighborhood and Senate floor to get bills passed. I like to campaign. I want to be where the action is. "And that's why I get into the car in Lansing and come down and talk with you, when I could be sitting in a bar in Lansing." Otterbacher said he hoped he could run an honest, issue-oriented cam- paign, even at the risk of taking some 'I come from a neighborhood that is screaming for change. It is an inner city neighborhood with a 12 per cent unemployment rate. Most of the people with a little money have gotten out ... There's one thing. you can't take out of John Otterbacher and that's his neighborhood.' -State Senator John Otterbacher ... . ** .... *. . . . . . ... .::: .v.. .: . . . .....:: . i- .: :We have 7quality packages bm Skilom, Rossignol, and Trak at pre-season sale prices. Her'sjust an example of the Skind of savings you'll get: ~Tour Package Trak Sefeld Fishscale Skis .......--71.50 Trol Boots...................... 3.., 0 *Toni"e..... .....99 133.40 Package Price ..............109.95 Kick P:ckgeSave $23.00 Skilom Waxess ibergls Ski Skilom Bindings ..... . .9 95 Tonklin Poles ......... ................ 9 5 c 13.90 Package Price...............99.90 Saves$40.00 Plus, great savings on downhil/l packages. . . on sale now. The Peak Sports Center 3150 Carpenter Rd. * 971-4310 his pet issues - health care and the problems of the aged. "Why do you go through it all?" askedOtterbacher. "Well, in third grade, I decided I wanted to be the quarterback of my school's football team. I've always wanted a piece of the action. I' like struggling on the unpopular stands. "In running for high office, I hope we can trust each other enough to disagree on some issues," said Otterbacher. "It's not easy to walk the line saying what political ana- lysts say you should. So I'm going to say what I feel is right and hope we can find areas of agreement." FOREIGN LANGUAGE PERIODICALS. Our selection includes French, Germnan, Spanish, Italian, and Arabic titles. A PERIODICAL RETREAT 663-0215 316 S. State, Ann A rbor PEDIATRICS HOSPITAL IN ARGENTINA BUENOS AIRES (AP)-Construction is under way in Buenos Aires of a National Pediatrics Hospital which will be completed in 1980. It will be the largest children's hospital in South America and will be among the most advanced of its kind in the world, hospital officials say. The five-floor modular hospital will be equipped with the most sophisticated equipment available, and is designed for easy' adaptation to advances within the medical profession. The hospital, complete with a heliport atop the building, features accom- modations for the mother to remain with her child as if at home, as this had proved an effective means of ensuring the rapid recovery of the child. Amy asks for cake, burgers on birth day WASHINGTON (AP) - Amy Car- ter's 10th birthday, to be held today, is being handled like most other offi- cial business at the White House - by memo. Tucked inside a bright orange folder were several notes from Rosalyn Carter to her daughter with suggestions for the party as well as an invitation in the form of a poem, printed on an orange pumpkin. Following her Dad's example, Amy initialed the memo with her own big "A" and wrote an enthusiastic "I like it," according to Mary Hoyt, the first lady's press secretary. So today, 14 young guests will gather in the Solarium for hamburg- ers - "Let everyone put things on their hamburgers," Amy wrote - vanilla cake with chocolate icing, and ice cream. TflE EN'l't(TA INM ENT will be the original movie of "Frankenstein" because, Amy.put in a request for a horror show for her birthday. Amy's guests will include friends from school, her violin partner, the children of presidential press secre- tary Jody Powell and congressional liaison Frank Moore. The party invitation was composed by a member of the first lady's staff, Barbara Block. It reads: "Next Wednesday's my birthday, and I can't thnk of anything "I'd rather do than to celebrate my tIrning 10 years old by having a party with you. There'll be pumpkins to carve, and friends to meet and even our own horror show. We'll also hav dinner - hamburgers, I hope, and birthday cake - that much I know. "Please join me next Wednesday. It should be great fun - from 5-7 at night - having you here will be all that I need to make my 10th birthday just right." I OPENt HOUSEI saturday Sunday October i 228 *3150 CARPENTER ROAD I ~ 971-9510I +,=-== = - -- - 1 U' CMT O * Housing Review Board * Rate Study Committee * Housing Judiciary Sign up for on Interview for Appointment by Oct. 21 at: MSA Office 3909 Michigan Union GTINVOLVEDI a' a x b r E S 3 r 4' 4 f 4 i i GO BLUE!... n. thit ce SHOW YOUR SUPPORT With this fine jewelry epoxy finish jewelry of the Univer- sity of Michigan helmet PANHELLENIC'S ANNUAL PLANT SALE to benefit UM's 4 It 4 Children's Psychiatric 41 Hospital 4 UNION BALLROOM 4 f AnL.t.. . -1... n v 4 The Peace Corps is alive and well and waiting for you. All your life you've wanted to do something im- nortant for the wnr1 r Nn a I \-%/