The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 28, 1980-Page 9 OAKLAND PROSECUTOR LEADS PETITION DRIVE Death penalty may reach ballot By CATHY BROWN Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson says, "There's no doubt in my mind" that a state-wide petition drive to place a referendum to reinstate the death penalty in Michigan on the November 1982 ballot will succeed. "I know what it takes and I'm will ing to put forth the effort into it," said Patterson, the petition drive's chief promoter. "This week I'll give five speeches and next week five more."' According to the prosecutor, 30,000 of the 288,000 signatures needed to put the proposal on the ballot have already been gathered. CAPITAL punishment has been banned in the state since 1846, when it was ruled unconstitutional by the state Supreme Court. Current -law provides that persons convicted of first-degree murder in the state may be released from prison only upon the governor's pardon. A petition to put a similar proposal on the November 1978 ballot failed by approximately 10,000 signatures. Patterson said he considers his drive "better organized" than its predecessor and added, "I have given myself enough time, as well as already having gone through a suc- cessful petition drive on the 1978 ballot." THIRTY-NINE states and three- federal jurisdictions have re- instituted the death penalty since 1972, according to Patterson. "We're clearly in the minority on that question," he said. Patterson said he is in favor of the death penalty because "the criminal justice system does not punish the offender. "It's been an evolutionary process with me," he explained. "After 11 years, I've gradually come to this conclusion." Patterson said the killing of an Oakland County woman by a man who admitted guilt, but said he committed the act to see what it felt like to commit murder provided the impetus to start the drive. When that occurred, he said, "I said that's it that's it. I feel capital punishment will deter some first degree murders." MEMBERS OF several groups opposed to the petition drive disagree with Patterson on that point. "He's not familiar with the facts, there's no correlation between the ups and downs of the murder rate and the existence of the death penalty," said Eugene Wanger, co- chairman of the Michigan Commit- tee Against Capital Punishment. Wanger said the number of mur- ders in states where capital punish- ment is legal does not decrease near the times of well-publicized executions. He added that "in some cases (executions) cause a suicide- murder syndrome." This, he said, occurs when a person frightened to take his own life murders someone else to gain publicity. "It (the death penalty) is not just a. deterrent," Wanger said, "but creates additional victims." "CAPITAL PUNISHMENT ap- plies not only to premeditated mur- trying to educate people so they won't vote for it. It's a basic educational, effort and campaign against the death penalty," she ad- ded. Bove said - the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, church groups, labor- movements, and women's organizations are also joining in the fight against the petitions. State Appellate Defender Jim Neuhard is also working to oppose ya '4 ,} V.. V V 'Capital punishment is a violation of the cruel and unusual punishment amendment.' -Brenda Bove, American Civil Liberties Union r " ".a;:." r 'k ,;. ".;, w t. " """:: a+": "r:; x{;" , k";:;,"': Y ",:am .:?r der, but also to those convicted un- der the felony-murder rule.., anyone involved in the crim could be convicted of first degree murder, including the get-away-car driver," Wanger added. "Capital punishment is a violation of the cruel and unusual punishment amendment, the Eighth Amen- dment. It's as basic as that," said Brenda Bove of the American Civil Liberties Union. "WE'RE TRYING to raise funds: to stop it (the petition drive) and I the petition. "We're informing people close to the criminal justice system, judges, lawyers, etc. of the effect capital punishment will have on them," along with "locating and talking with those released from prison on governor's pardon," noted Neuhard. "I had a friend in Florida who had four or five clients on death row and he had a nervous breakdown. He's not practicing law now. He couldn't take it," he added. "It traumatizes the people associated with it." HEW: Pot stronger, users starti WASHINGTON (AP) Government health officials sounded alarms yester- y that American youths are smoking Wore potent marijuana and starting at earlier ages despite new evidence that marijuana poses serious health hazar- ds., The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), said in a report to Congress that marijuana smoking "now often begins at a much earlier age and is more likely to be frequent rather than experimental use" n comparison with 1970. IT SAID THE potency of street marijuana has increased markedly in the past five years while the percentage of high-school seniors who smoke marijuana daily has jumped from 5.7 per cent for the class of 1975 to 10.3 per cent for the class of 1979. It said that although marijuana has not been conclusively linked to lung cancer, "it appears likely that daily use of marijuana leads to lung damage similar to that resulting from heavy *igarette smoking." The 48-page report, "Marijuana and Health - 1980," was prepared by HEW's National Institute on Drug Abuse. It is the eighth such report to Congress. IT CITED one study that found smoking less than one marijuana joint per day diminished a smoker's ability to breathe deeply as much as 16 cigarettes did. It also said some animal and human tudies indicate marijuana may lower the sperm count in males and affect fer- tility in females. "Given the many unknowns concer- ning the effects of marijuana on fetal development, the use of marijuana during pregnancy should continue to be strongly discouraged," it said. THE REPORT, citing surveys by the University Institute for Social Resear- ch, said 60 per cent of last year's high ng earlier school seniors had tried marijuana and, 37 per cent were current users, smoking it in the month prior to the survey. At the same time, the survey found that the percentage of those seniors who fir- st tried marijuana in the ninth grade was more than 30 per cent, up from 17 per cent in the class of 1975. The report said eight per cent of children ages 12 and 13 have had some experience with marijuana. That per- centage rises to a peak of 62 per cent among young adults between 22 and 25. But it said that even those who feel occasional, social use of marijuana by healthy adults is not a serious problem agree that "frequent use by children and adolescents can be seriously disruptive." ACCORDING TO estimates from a 1977 survey, 43 million Americans had tried it as of spring 1977 and 16 million had smoked it in the month before the survey. Dr. William Pollin, director of the drug abuse institute, said in a statement, "While many of the con- clusions in this report are disturbing, my greatest concern is for the youth of our country, who, at a physically vulnerable age, are using increasing amounts of stronger marijuana. The report said that marijuana con- fiscated by police in 1975 seldom had more than one per cent content of THC - Delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the main psychoactive ingredient that gives users their "high" - but "by 1979 samples as high as five per cent THC content were common." Pollin said, "Many young people want to view marijuana as a simple herb with the power to enhance their lives. In fact, research is showing it to be a complex drug which can negatively affect learning and motor coordination, and may eventually lead to serious health problems." -* STEVE'S LUNCH - We Serve Breakfast All Day * * Try Our Famous 3 Egg Omelet * * with your choice of fresh bean .sprouts, mushrooms, * * green peppers, onion, ham, bacon, and cheese. * - See Us Also For Our Lunch & Dinner Menus * * 1313 S. University Open Tues.-Fri. 8-7, Sat., Sun. 9-7 X ******** ******************* *X tIW( %uq& presents nt P AR "y FRIDAY Ec SATURDAY U R9pm - lam NO COVER ! 1140 South University i DO YOU HAVEAAI INTEREST? IN PHOTOGRAPHY? -IN GRAPHICS? -IN BUSINESS? 5PFE EGR SPRCE GAMTE HEROUURPRTER5 the LATST anD eLecTronic ames 5a4 worth of FREE pinball or -IN WRITIN If you do, we want you to work for the 1981 MICHIGANENSIAN. New Staff Meeting: Tues., April 8, 7:00 p.m. at Student Publications IG? i Building. 426 Mnanrd