Tutsday, November 9, 1976 Man peeks death; court stays execution THE MICHIGAN DAILY page Seven THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven SALT LAKE CITY U.Pt - The Frank Wilkins and Richard, Utah Supreme Court issued a Maughan, the court said only stay of execution yesterday for that the stay was granted. convicted ,killer Gary Mark IT WAS requested by attor- Gilmore, despite two regests neys Graig Snyder and Michael by Gilmore that he be shot by Esli a firing squad as scheduhld in GTLMOJz , was convicted last seven days. month of slaving a Provo motel' The court did not specify the cl'&rk July 22, and is charged length of the delay, which was with the slaying of a service requested by two court appoint- station attendant July 21. ed attorneys. Gilrnore, who has spent 18 of THE COURT said it would his 36 years in penal institu- review the case before deciding tions, says he wants to face the the length of the stay. firing .squad next Monday rather The execution had been set than spend the rest of his life for next Monday and the stay in Prison. came the same day that Gil- THE attorneys appointed to more had , sent the court the d-fend him say he fired them second of two requests that he after they decided his case be executed on schedule. should be appealed so that con- In a statement signed by Jus- stitutional questions could be tices J. Allan Crockett, D. heard. Meanwhile, Gilmore's uncle, Vern Damico, a shoe repair- man in Provo, said in a tele- phone interview the incident has been hard on the family. He said he would not try to ston the execution because his nephew "did wrong and knows that deep down.'' BUT Damico said Gilmore's mother, a bed - ridden arth- ritic living in Wilwaukee, Ore., wants the execution prevented. Damico said Gilmore's trou- hlliodesianegotiators ocked; tension rises (Continued from Page 1) of anv stalemate, saving, "We promise on what they call the, had always planned to come "Kissinger plan," which Rho- back at this time for consulta- desian Prime Minister Ian tion. This is a very difficult Smith accepted after talks with problem. It's very comolicated U.S. Secretary of State Henry with a history of hostility and Kissinger earlier this year. suspicion . 7 nights a week AT THE RESTAURANT 4OUNGE That elan calls for ,a biracial ble in Utah may stem from an ruling council with a white incident in which a girl told chairman, and for leaving the him she was "going back to one army and police in white control. of her husbands." The black nationalists also have Gilmore's letter to the court rejected that proposal, and in- dated yesterday asked that any sist on immediate black control attempts by others to prevent inerm government 1"1 of the RICHARD, on arrival at Lon- don's Heathrow airport, said he was "moderately encouraged" by the talks. "We're now down to the hard bargaining part of it," he de- clared. "We've got over the emotional hum n' dis exeention be consderenu and void. Two American observers at Frat initiation deAti may result in student expulsions NEW YORK (AP) - All of the students involved could be expelled if hazing was involved in the stabbing death of a teen- I aged pledge during military fraternity rites, a spokesman for St. John's University said yesterday. At the same time, the spokes- man continued to deny that haz- ing played a role in the death, but a former member of the group said that hazing was a part of the ritual of the ROTC fraternity. "IT WAS PROBABLY the re- sult of too much zeal on the part of the students in attempt- ing to perfect their military tactical skills," said Martin Fu'rbish lousew ort doomed?. (Continued from Page 1) Gies list scheduled for adoption early next year. "There will be a definite con- frontation with the Endangered Species Act is plans for the dams continue," Dyer told the Maine chapter of the Appala- chian Motntain Club. B O T H Dyer and University of Maine botanist Charles Rich- ards, who teamed up on a two- week survey of the Dickey area, agreed that the furbish louse- wort had little intrinsic worth. "It has no cemmercial value. It's not pretty or beautiful,"" said Richards. "It's scientific, entirely. It's a rare plant that might become extinct." Congress so far haseappro- priated funds only for environ- mental impact and feasibility studies connected with the pro- ject, which calls for construc- tion of two dams on theUpe St. John in northerniostMaine. ONE OF the dams would be at Dickev, the other downriver at Lincoln. Fornmore than a decade, the Dickey - Lincoln project has been a pet Project of congress- men from New England. Tt is designed to generate 1.2 billion kilowatt hours of electricity per year. First opposed by private pow- er companies, the project is now a chief target of environ- mental groups fighting to pre- serve the Upper St. John, one of the last wild rivers in the' Northeast. Dyer said he doesn't opposei the project, but has yet to be convinced it should be under- taken. "We're trying to be as objective as we can," he said. Healev, St. John's public rela-1 tinns director. 1 "If they really were hazing, all, the students who took part could be expelled. I understand state law makes it a misde-; meanor." One former member of the I ROTC groun, the Pershing Ri-, fles, a national military frater- nitv, said in an interview, "They're sick and the sooner' thev put an end to that type , of hazing, the better off they'll be. It's gone too far. It had gone too far when I was in. It gets too dangerous." THE FORMER member of r the group asked that he not be quoted by name. Thomas Fitzgerald, the vic- tim of Friday night's stabbing, was a student at Queens Col- lege and a member of the St. John's ROTC unit. He would have been 20 years old today. Police said he was stabbed by James Savino, 21, a cadet sec- ond lieutenant, during a night- time fraternity ritual on tiny, uninhabited Indian Island off the south short of Long Island. SAVINO WAS being held with- out bail in the Suffolk County jail on' a murder charge. He de- nied any intent to harm Fitz- gerald. Savino lived in Bay- side, Queens, and attended Ste- vens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J. Abo - 1' members and pledg- es of P ershing Rifles went to the 50-acre island for the night- time sim"lPtion of a c tir, between prisoners and their cantors. Fi wns nlavin the role o soner and was wearing en nlar ie that cove chest as a shield. As noliPe reconstruc tr ieru, Savino nosed a ernv officer and stabbed gerald with a jingle knife in an attempt to date the "prisoner." S the shield slinTed and inch knife plnaged in Gerald's chest, severing artprv to the heart. offic "AS FAR AS I'M co it was nranthorized tr ;aid Lt. Col. James nOTC commander at St Me refused to accept t hn-in=. The former fraternif ber said he underwen to vin his way intoF Rifles, founded in 1894 ond Lt. John "Black Pershing, who became1 eral in command of th Expeditionary Force in during World War I. "It's supposed to be a mental thing," the continued, "to break d pledge, to test his en But sometimes it cang ty physical and that you can get into troubl try to make it realistic ry. Funeral services will for Fitzgerald tomorrow -- the talks, Asst. Secretary of State William Schaufele nd Richard, Britain's ambassador John Reinhardt, flew back to to the United Nations, said one Washington early yesterday to of the first big problems had report to Kissinger. been to persuade Smith and the four black nationalist leaders to THERE HAVE been increas-; sit down together and discuss ing calls for either Kissinger or j the issues. g British Foreign Secretary An-I thony Crosland to appear at the lIE CALLED his 24-hour te- onfronta- talks to try to break the dead- turn to confere with Crosland of war lock. "routine." itzgerald Schaufele, on returning to One white Rhodesian source f a pri- Washington, told reporters the said before Richard's departure a wood- possibility of Kissinger going to was announced that he believes red his Geneva had been discussed. "At that "somebody or'other has to this point it''s much too early to bring back a sense of -espon- 'ted the say whether his presence would'sibility into the proceedings." is an en- be required," he said. "He's Smith has often said in r'cent at Fitz- never ruled it out." 's' weeks that a new Kissinger in- survival Schaufele denied that he and volvement would be "wonder- intimi Reinhardt had returned because'Su omehow, No cover Casual dress -ALSO- " Jazz in our 1 st floor Fri & Sat, eve, S nd2wod Sun. eve, Come Listen To RON BROOKS' & FRIENDS 100 S. Fourth SIERRA High atop the NOW APPEARING arn arbor inn 769-9500 Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. 0 1 ) 1 the 10- to Fit7- a main ers said. nr'erned. rainin ," Raferty, . John's. he term y mem- t hazing Pershing by See- k Jack" the gen- he Allied Europe mostly sources! own the durance. get pret- 's when e ... We and sca- be held w. pC orYn Putersan Society 310 MAYNARD WEEKLY SPECIALS TUESDAY: 1/2 price on beer 7 P.M.-1 1 P.M. j WEDNESDAY: 12 price on beer & liquor 7 P.M.-1O P.M. FRIDAY: 15c Hot Dogs 2-5 P.M. NEW GIANT 7 FT. T.V. for viewing your favorite televised sporting events 0V4 NO COVER A 310 MAYNARD ccsb6 U I Winte~r 1977 * v : "ter. i - . - ca a' h ecp LO nt flnformaahon LUNCH-DISCUSSION Tuesday, Nov. 9, noon "SPACE EXPLORATION: DO BLACK HOLES EXIST" PROF. W. ALBERT HILTNER Chairman, Department of Astronomy AT THE Ecumenical Campus Center 921 CHURCH Lunch (75c) is prepared and served by Church Women United There a S a difference! -MCAT - LSAT - DAT eGMAT *CPAT *VAT .GRE +OCAT "SAT " NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS . ECFMG *FLEX Flexible Programs and Hours Over 38 years of experience and success. Small classes. Voluminous home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers open days and weekends all year. 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