Sunday, January 16, 1977 THE MICHIGAN [DAILY rage even THE MICHIGAN OAILY rage ~everi 'Basically somebody has got to be first' UNDERGROUND SPLIT REPORTED: Radical fugitives may, (Continued from Page 1) "BASICALLY, somebody has MADISON, Wis. (MP)-Leaders laws for the American Civil Lib- got to be first," Shevin said, the radical Weather Under- erties Union in New York. adding he was relieved the dis- o edical W e Unr tinc ion was not Florida's. He ground, including some facing thas aftr he firs. few'federal charges, have begun to SHE FEARED that as execu- agreed at er implement a plan to give them- ions increase the public will executions public attention inay selves up, according to state- simply become bored with the wane and politics weigh less ments attributed to dissident gruesome spectacle, heavily in the timing of an exe- members of the clandestine "Some people think it's no big cution.d group. deal. How many times has the "I don't view it (Gilmore's The fugitive activists are public seen Rubyl kill Oswald on death) as terribly historic," sought in connection with nu- TV? They've seen the Kennedy Shevin said. "'The historic part merous acts of political sabo- assassinations replayed many was the Supreme Court deci- tage', including the 1971 bomb- times and the Vietnam War. sion." - "But the executions might In strictly legal terms, Gil- work the other way and remind more's execution will have vir- people what the death penalty tually no impact anywhere. really is and make them dis- Even in Utah other death row gusted with the barbaric prac- inmates can contest the scate's tice of human sacrifice," Levy death penalty law at the Utah said. land U.S. Supreme Courts. The twist in Gilmore's case is that BUT SHE added that "politi- he wants to die and chose not cal pressure will be more dif- to appeal. ficult to bring to an end capital F punishment if everybody thinks In Florida, the first exeution, it's an episode of 'Kojak'." is at least four months away be- Lawyers disagreed with a cause the governor and his cab- Florida inmate's view expressed mnet personally review the case several weeks ago that Gil- of each condemned man or wo-, more's xwould be like man before a death warrant is popping the cork on a cfnamsigned. That schedule will notl pagne bottle" and make other be hastened. executions speedier. A GEORGIA assismat attr- Florida, for example, has more persons on death row than ney general said no execution any other state, about go. At- dates are definite in that :tate, torney General, Robert Shevin whose law was also lirec ly up- says Gilmore's death simply held by the Supreme Court. represents a "first" that was David Kendall is a young law- predictable since the Supreme yer who has spent his profes- Court upheld certain kinds of sional career fighting the death death penalty laws - including penalty for the NAACP -Legal Florida's - last July 2. I Defense Fund. But he agrees ....................:::m with Shevin that Gilmore's exe- . cution will have little direct im- Daily Officl Bulleti pact on others. <"A stay of execution -n a cap- The Daily Official Bulletin is an ital case is one of the most agon- official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be izing decisions a judge can fade sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to and it is made no easier Dy CI- 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of more," Kendall said. ing of the U.S. Capitol. They have successfully eluded the FBI for seven years. DISSIDENT members of the Weather Underground, including Bernardine Dohrn, probably the best known of the fugitives, complain that the group's lead- ership plans to abandon violence and to concentrate on above- ground political work. The dissidents' criticisms re- cal violence apparently lies at veal a deep division within the the center of the group's intern- organization, according to Take- al controversy. over, an alternative newspaper;. In a statement dated Nov. 20, here which will publish the 1976, which was reportedly cir- statements this week. The state- culated at secret meetings in ments, which are quietly circus California and New York, the, lating among leftists, are un- dissidents charged the leader- usual because bickering within ship committee had "aban- the supersecret group has rarely doned their revolutionary prin- been allowed to leak out. ciples and directions" and had Texts of one of the statements eliminated "the political basis and a transcript of a tape-re- of many members' original com- corded message by Dohrn were mitments - support for black obtained by The Associated liberation, Vietnam and armed Press from Takeover. ' struggle." DOHRN'S message makes it THE LEADERSHIP group, clear that she has split from the known as the Weather Under- leadership committee. She re- ground Central Committee, has fers to the Weather Under- not responded to the November ground at one point as "the old statement, sources said. organization," indicating the The dissidents call themselves group may have broken up over the "Revolutionary Committee." the plan to "surface." It was impossible to learn who Law enforcement officials in the dissidents are or how many Washington and in California, Inembers of the Underground where police believe leaders of they represent. the Underground may be living, According to the dissidents' said yesterday they are aware statements, Jeff Jones in 1975, of the split within the organiza- hatched a plan to begin surfac- tion, but know nothing of plans ing the organization. They said by the leaders to give them- Jones called the strategy "in- selves up. version," to describe the pro- It was impossible to authenti- cess of emerging from fugitive cate the dissidents' statements life. through law enforcement offi- THE THEORY behind : the cials. strategy was apparently Jones' HOWEVER. Takeover said its belief, adopted by the leadership sources close to the Under- committee, that the group would ground have confirmed the au- he better able to enlist other thenticity of the statements. in- radicals if they were organized cluding Dohrn's message that, into an above-ground group. "I cannot say this plan for the "The original plan to surface leaders to turn themselves in. two members of the Central ha been stonned." Committee to lead the inversion The Weather Underground is was reiected that summer 1975," tfrL o,,ht .to number several hun- said the dissidents. "It was dred white political activists, thought that two peonle would give up lance under Republican admin-. istrations in exchange for'pos-' sible leniency on criminal charges. Many members of the group are under indictment on various charges, -but o hers face no out- standing warrants. BUT EVEN persons not! sought by warrant would be sub- ject to grand jury scrutiny if they surfaced as federal and lo-, cal prosecutors attempted to close their books on unsolved political violence. A Festival of Women in the Arts lectures, performances, guest art- ists, exhibitions, dempnstrations. JANUARY 23-29 PEN DLETON ARTS INFO. CENTER second floor MICHIGAN UNION For further information cal: 763-1107 668-7884 764-3234 763-0087 ey looser recrui 'policy es iter (Continued from Page 1) of Bu sin e s s Administration Placement. Klee says that although his of- fice gets affirmative action and anidsrimnto statements SPECIAL OFFER TO MICHIGAN FANS! Limited Edition Michigan Lamp and Football Stein from all companies, "the Uni- wbh emnerged from the '60s anti- versity shouldn't pretend to po- war movement in 1970 to create lice the world." a secret gron to wage 'arined A'bDPflTAffAT~i Qn str' ugle" against government the day preceding publication and h. 9 inAm.Fidnv fr r aturda and by z p.m r ay for y uraan Sunday. Items appear once only. "THERE IS much rhetoric Student organization notices are about a bloodbath that will fol- not accepted for publication. For low Gilmore, but what real im- more information, phone 764-9270. pact can it have on judges? Sunday, January 16, 1977 Would it really be easier for a Day Calendar judge sitting in Georgia not to WUOM: p t i o n s in Education, issue a stay because Gilmoret "Teachers and Teaching," 1:00 p.m. was shot in Utah? I think not."{ Music School: Michigan Youth Kendall said Gilmore's execu- Symphony, Hill Aud., 3:00 p edalsidGmmr'.ee; Faculty chamber concert, Rackham tion and attendant publicityI Aud., 4:00 p.m. might have one major social im- Monday, January 17, 1977 pact, encouraging "suicidal hom-i Day Calendar Physiology: Jean-Phillippe Bon- icides" in which persons whoi jour. U of Bern, Switzerland, "Regu- really want to die themselvesl lation of the Renal Transport of commit capital crimes for both Phosphate,' 7745 MS II, noon. attention and death. Music School: Harvey Soilberger, "New Music for Flute," SM Recital' He noted that Luis Monge, thei Hall, 8:00 p.m. tlast person executed in this coun-1 Ctr. Human Growth/Development:, try, also chose not to appeal his Truffaut's Wild Child, Aud. 3, MLB, ss 8:00 P.m. conviction in Colorado. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 764-7456 RECRUITING ON-CA1M4PUS Jan. 17 -U.S. Army Nurse Corps. and Curtin Matheson Science, Inc. Jan. 18 - U.S. Navy, Montgomery Ward & Co., University of Chicago Hospitals & Clinics, and Energy Research & Development Administration. Jan. 19 - Proctor & Gamble, and Ashland Oil Co. Jan. 20 - U.S. Air Force Nurses. Jan. 24 -- University Hospitals of Cleveland. Jan. 25 - Chemical Abstract Services, Oak Ridge National Laboratories, and Action/Peace Corps/Vista. Jan 26 - Bell Systems, Proctor & Gamble Distributing Co., Action/ Peace Corps/Vista, and Libby-0wens-Ford Co. Jan. 27 - Rike's and Action/Peace Corps/vista Jan. 28 - First Chicago Corporation 5 and Leo Burnett U.S.A. Y Phone 764-7460 for information on the following: The Burke Marketing Research Fel- lowship will be awarded to one or two students who are' deeply inter- ested in a career in marketing re- search. Applicants should have high levels of academic achievement in the behavioral sciences, as well as: marketing, quantitative analysis; or other business-related majors. Appli- cations must be received no later I than March 15, 1977. Qualified seniors with backgrounds in Physics and Electronics are invi- ted to apply for participation in findamental cosmic ray research. Following a training period during , the summer, each observer will spend a year in residence at one of Tickets avai the field stations in the South Pole, Mendelssohn Th MoMurdo Sound, or Thule, Green- For Info land. Applications are being accepted for*Tickets als three internships beginning July 1, 1977 for the Phoenix Management Intern Program. H Y~(V~lY1H1 L L Yu p er cent of both the Business and Engineering students take ad- vantage of placement services. Director of Career, Planning and Placement, Evart Ardis, doesn't anticipate any increase in the number of companies coming to recruit the 40-45 per. cent of the Literary College (LSA) students who use the pro- gram. "The companies all have af- firmaive action, even if the law doesn't require them to get it," he said. So when the Senate Assembly meets to consider the revision next month, the faculty mem- bers may end up passing into polic what is already being practiced. WHEN YOU COMIN BACK; RED RYDER? Elk Ott ce lable at PTP Ticket Office eatre Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10-1, 2-5 rmation Call- 764-0450 o available at all Hudsons policies, The FBI credits the groun with a wide array of criminal actions. including the Canitol explosion, and a number of at- tacks against .big business and multinational corporations such as the 1974 blast at Gulf Oil headquarters in Pittsburgh and the 1970 prison escape of firmer drug guru Timothy Leary. At one time. several of the leaders of the group were on the FBI "Ten Most Wanted" list. SOURCES said the dissidents' statements were being circulat- ed outside the Underground probably as an effort to stop the "surfacing" operation. The question of using politi- be ineffective so the concent was broadened, nrobably to in- xrol e the entire five-nerson laershin erolln and possibly tho entire grolln. ' "'from the fall of 19'5, tis -hn was mnt into nractice with- not the k-nw!Padge of most mem- hers " said the dissidents' state- mwnts. "LAWYERS were oraanind +n vrennre leoal d-fense. The film "Undergro'md" released hast year was nlanned as both a means to sanitize the image of the organization and to raise money for legal defense: new ornanizational bases were set up from which to surface." . The dissi,'nts alto said under- cTroe1nd leaders "made over- tfres" to Democratic party of- fi-ials in an effort to trade in- fornation about police surveil- 1) Rugged 18" high DESK LAMP decorated in Maize and Blue. N a t u r a I burlap fabricated shade. Practical and unique. 2) 8" high Football-shaped STEIN with KICKI NGTEE STAND. Decorated in, Maize and Blue with Michigan inscription. 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