CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: State's murder as legal suicide? By . AJIES 510AULDING to murder. Pritic New Service William C. Bailey, a Cleveland Slate- With the recent rn- ire in public senti- University sociologist, has s u r v e ye d ment favoring the death penalty, a grow- crime statistics in 42 states and found, Ing number of critics are going on the on the average, more people kill each counter-offensive, with the claim capital other in states which have the death punishment may, in fact, be an invitation penalty than in states without it. This is }94 wry rr~eira -3 true, he says, even allowing for regional, ciltural and other differences. The explanation, say Bailey and others, is capital punishment offers certain types of deranged personalities an acceptable means of suicide. - EXPERTS DISAGREE on why support for the death penalty has greatly in- creased in the past 10 years, but most say a major reason is the increase in crimes of violence. A fearful public, they say, looks at the death penalty as the most effective deterrent. Yet, Dr. Louis West, head of the de- partment of psychiatry at UCLA, claims capital punishment "breeds more murder than it deters.' "These murders," he says, "are dis- covered by the psychiatric examiner to be - consciously or unconsciously - an attempt to commit-suicide by committing homicide. It only works if the perpret- rator believes he will be executed for his crime." Gary Mark Gilmore, who was executed Jan. 17 by a firing squad in Utah, is often cited as an obvious example. Some of his prison psychiatrists said Gilmore sought out his own d e a t h by murdering two young men in senseless, execution-style slayings. Following his conviction, Gil- more demanded the death penalty be car- ried out despite the many objections of his attorneys. IN 1958, JAMES FRENCH killed a motorist who gave him a ride in Okla- homa. He asked for the death penalty, but his public defender successfully pleaded for a life sentence. Later, in state prison, he deliberately strangled his cellmate. According to West, "During a psychi- atric examination in 1965, French admit- ted to me he had seriously attempted sui- cide several times in the past, but always 'chickened out' at the last minute' (Gil- more also attempted suicide while in pri- son, apparently afraid his execution would be further delayed. "French's basic motive in murdering his inoffensive cellmate," West said, "as to force the state to deliver to him the electrocution to which he felt entitled and which he deeply desired." Dr. Bernard L. Diamond, a psychia- trist at the University of California, Berkeley, said a man he examined at San Quentin Prison in 1959 the day be- fore his execution confessed, finally, th reason he murdered three women was "for the express purpose of dying by legal execution." THE SAME CONVICT told a state investigator he had tice tried suicide before the murders, "but lacked the guts." He agreed to talk to, Diamond the day before the execution only on the condition the execution would be carried out. "It took three murders and an at- tempted fourth to complete his suicidal mission," Diamond later wrote in a psy- chiatry journal. "I asked him what he would have done," Diamond said, "if California had had no capital punishment. He answer- esd, 'I would have had to go to another state where they did have capital pun- ishment and do it all there.' " Diamond said he is convinced if the person had known s-he wouldn't be exe- cuted and would have been forced to serve time in prison' (which s-he hated bitterly), s-he would have been unable to commit murder. Diamond concedes if capital punish- ment is eliminated, such people might still seek death in other ways, such as a shoot-out with police. For them, he says, suicide is difficult, if not impo.s: ble. The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, June 15, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 'U' keeps stoudent s in line REMEMBER the ridiculous queues of students waiting in front of the University Ticket Office for over a month last year just to get good seats to football or basketball games? They'll be back again this year, cour- tesy of your favorite athletic director, Don Canham. Complaining about the University's ticket policy, the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) put the question to a ballot, with the understanding the University would heed the vote. It didn't. Students chose to make the whole system computer- ized, and just have the tickets mailed randomly to stu- dents wanting them. Had we adopted that policy, stu- dents would not have been able ta sit with friends-an important aspect of attending athletic events. Canham rejected the idea. But just because the new method wasn't supported, a return to the old ways is not merited. The old method, is use for years, is highly discrimina- tory against individuals and small groups. Under that plan, the first person in line makes the rules for ticket- waiting.- The inequity in this system is apparent when you realize there are no restrictions on the rules. The first person (which usually is the representative*of some lar- ger group) sets what could be entirely unfamiliar rules. Consistency is lacking. Because students may not know what the rules for any particular year may be, they may be denied good seats. Clearly, it is time for-a change. The athletic depart- ment should make one set of rules to apply every jear. Only in that manner everyone could be aware of the policy, and only in that fashion every student would have a. fir, chance of getting good seats. - Health Service Handbook By NANCY PALCHIK and SYLVIA HACKER QUESTION: How do you catch infectious hepatitis? ANSWER: On the assumption you're not going to use the in- formation to run out and catch some, here's the scoop. The most common form, Hepa- titis A, is spread from person to personsthrough close contact with someone who has it. The virus travels from mouth to anus. Persons sharing food, kitchen or bathroom facilities with others nay occasionally become infected, ifsa member of their household is infected, It is now also thought the infection can occur throughsin- tercourse, since the virus has been found in the vagina. Shellfish, such as oysters and clams, may become contamina- ted in coastal regions with in- adaquate sewage treatment fa- cilities and when such fish are eaten raw, the virus may be introduced., Sometimes, epidem- ics of infectiouns hepatitis occur from accidental contamination of water supplies with sewage. Hepatitis B is usually spread ui, aen rt nDMAse nr~f+5 in#r ANSWER: According to our Health Service nutritionist, Irene Hieber, fiber is just as important to college age as to non-college age persons: it is essential to the digestive process. Fiber increases the rate of peristalsis, the wave-like con- tractions which propel intestinal contents along the digestive tract. It also allows for the proper hydration of the contents of the intestine, that is, allows them to combine with water in an optimum balance. Although there have been ma- ny recent proclamations on the miraculous disease cures that may be derived from increasing the fiber content of the diet, these claims must be considered untested hypotheses. QUESTION: If I am drinking alcohol ,is there anything I can do to prevent myself from get- ting drunk? - ANSWER: There is really nothing you can do to keep the alcohol from having its effect. If you drink too much you will get drunk. However, according to the National Institute on Al- cohol Abuse and Alcoholism, (NIAAA), eating before and while drinking does slow the rate at which alcohol is absorb- ed into the bloodstream. Eating while drinking may al- so serve to slow down the rate at which people drink. It takes approximately one hour for the average drink (e.g. a 12-o. bot- tle of beer, or 4-5 oz. glass of wine) to be metabolized once it is in your bloodstream. Anything that slows your rate of drink- ing will decrease the probabili- ty of getting drunk. Diluting al- cohol diluted with non-carbona- ted mixers is absorbed less rap idly than alcohol diluted with carbonated mixers). The NIAAA notes there are no "coatings" (milk, butter) which could keep alcohol from getting into your bloodstream. Thesetproducts must be seen as any other food substance, and would, therefore, have similar effects. Send all health related questions to: Health Educators University Health Service Division of Office of Student Services 207 Fletcher Ann Arbor, MI 48104 . 5 ' c . :-'5 by use of ne by an infecte other is injec needle. The ed person is ous. Hepatiti more serious symptoms t Drug users v with others prone to lefe Ceaes contamrnate xd person when an- C ntct your reps cted with the same blood of an infect- Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washing extremely infecti- ton, D.C. 20510 s B tends to be a Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep.), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, s form, and the Washington, D.C. 20515. end to last longer. Rep. Carl Pursell (Rep.), 1709 Longworth House Office Bldg., who share a needle Washington, D.C. 20515. are particularly Sen. Gilbert .Bursley (Rep.), Senate, State Capitol Bldg., ction. Lansing, MI 48933. L: Just how i rt- ,, ' el. Perry dullard (Dem.), House of Representatives, State to someone of col. Capitol Bldg., Lansing,.MI 4033.