The Michigan"Doily--Soturday, May 26, 1979-Pagei '1 Spenikelink executed yesterday (Continued from Page Q door to the private office of Gov. Bob Graham that aides feared it would bur- st open. But the door held and Graham remained secluded, rejecting a telephone call from a woman iden- tifying herself as Lois Spenkelink, the condemned man's ailing 67-year-old mother. THE DISTURBANCES died with Spenkelink. Opponents of the death penalty had regarded Gilmore's execution as a fluke, since he taunted authorities and said he wanted to die. But Spenkelink fought his execution with every legal weapon at his command virtually up to the hour of his death, and opponents of capital punishment predicted his death would trigger a rash of executions among the nearly 500 people on the death rows of prisons across the nation. Five times Spenkelink took his case before the U.S. Supreme Court, and five times he lost. The final ruling that sealed Spenkelink's fate came at 9:50 a.m., just minutes before his execution. SPENKELINK GAVE to his friend and spiritual adviser, Rev. Tom Feam- ster, what he intended to be his last words. "Man is what he chooses to be. He chooses that for himself," he wrote. "The last thing he said was .that he loved me ... We shook hands," Feam- ster said. FORMER ATTORNEY General Ramsey Clark, one of Spenkelink's defense attorneys, called the execution "a tragic moment in our history as we rejoin the nations that seek to control populations by killing. "I believe that the imperative need of our time is a reverence for life," he said. "Any person's death does diminish us all. I would hope Anerica would soon abandon this barbaric prac- tice." Although Spenkelink was white, foes of the death penalty say it is used most often against minorities. A black prisoner, Willie Jasper Darden, Jr., had originally been scheduled to die with Spenkelink, but he won a stay. "IT'S A TERRORIST attack on the part of government against poor minorities all over the country," said attorney Millard Farmer, a long-time opponent of capital punishment who fought to save Spenkelink through a federal court in Atlanta. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down death penalty laws in 1972 and Florida was the first state to write a new one. Now 32 states have death penalty statutes and two more take effect July 1. "They (Florida officials) might kill . 130 in the next year," Farmer told a newsman bitterly just moments after Spenkelink died. "From what I've seen in the past few days, if their appetite continues, they possibly will." FARMER REFERRED to the fact that Florida Attorney General Jim Smith had flown to New Orleans and Washington in a state plane getting the federal courts to dissolve the stays of execution which they issued in Spenkelink's case. The Florida attorney general said nothing personal was involved in his ef- forts to have Spenkelink put to death. He said he simply was carrying out his job for the state of Florida, and if the federal courts did not want executions in the United States, they should so in- form the states so other appropriate laws could be devised. Spenkelink became the 197th person and the first in 15 years to die in Florida's 55-year-old electric chair. The state still has 133 on death row. HE WAS EXECUTED for the 1973 murder of Joseph Szymankiewicz, an Ohio parole violator, in a Tallahassee motel. Spenkelink had picked up Szy- mankiewicz in Nebraska while Szymankiewicz was hitchhiking through a snow storm. He said he killed Szymankiewicz because Szymankie- wicz sodomized him, robbed him of $8,000 and forced him to play Russian roulette with a loaded gun. Gov. Graham gave the final order at 10:11 on an open telephone line to prison Superintendent David Brierton: "Go ahead. There are no stays at this time. May God be with us," Graham said. In Tallahassee on Tuesday, Graham told a state representative who delivered a statement of support signed by 120 House members that the people must realize the signing of death warrants is going to be "a routine part of our daily lives from now on." Top, Carol Spenkelink, sister of condemned murderer John Spenkelink, stands to the right of demonstrators outside of Florida State Prison, while her brother is executed in the prison's electric chair. Below, sign-carrying protesters mnarch outside the U.S. Supreme Court building yesterday mor- ning, demonstrating against the death sentence the nine-member court han- ded Spenkelink. Sunday, May 27 Aud. A, Angell Hall THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES (BIttLY WItLDER, 1970) ROBERT STEPHENS plays probably the best screen Holmes to date. In this "private" episode, the cocaine-using misogynist finds himself in the midst of international intrigue-and falling for a beautiful, mysterious blonde woman (Genevieve Page). Lush photogrpahy and great acting have made this film a cult-classic. (125 min.)7:3089:40 Cinema 11 Is now accepting new member applications. Pick them up at all Cinema 11 film showings. Saturday, May 2b Aud. A, Angell Hall A STAR IS BORN (GEORGE CUKOR, 1954) The best version of this thrice made film, the combination of JUDY GARLAND, as the woman whose stardom destroys her husband, and GEORGE CUKOR, as director, is just about perfect. Garland, at the peak of her career, does full justice to the music of composers Harold Arlen and Ira Gershwin. With a great supporting performance by JAMES MASON. (154 min.) 7:00 & 9:40 Cinema It is accepting new member applications--Pick them up at all Cinema II film showings. Spekelnic