C Page 10-Saturday, April 11, 1981-The Michigan Daily Reagan administration supports death penalty WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration said yesterday it sup- ports legislation permitting the death penalty for some federal crimes, in- cluding espionage and the killing of a president. Assistant Attorney General Lowell Jensen said the Justice Department endorses death penalty legislation proposed by Sen. Strom Thurmond (R- S.C.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. THURMOND, meanwhile, said he is considering additional legislation making it a capital crime to attempt to assassinate a president. He said the pendulum toward protecting the rights of accused criminals had gone too far. "There are too many bleeding hearts who seem to forget the victims who have been robbed, killed, or raped," Thurmond said. Jensen, a former California prosecutor who has been head of the Justice Department criminal division for just 'a week, said the department would consider whether to support making the attempted assassination of a president a capital crime. But he said there is nothing unconstitutional about such a proposal. MORE GENERALLY, Jensen said, "The subject of the death penalty is not a pleasant one for a government official ... to have to contemplate." But, he said, "The rising tide of violent crime in this country, as evidenced by recent statistics and the events in Atlanta, makes consideration of the death penalty necessary and ... appropriate." Jensen said while there are "men of ability, good will, and conscience" who have views opposing the death penalty, "this administration does not subscribe to them." Dale Robinson, a Georgetown University law professor, and Ferris Lucas, executive director of the National Sheriff's Association, suppor- ted Thurmond's proposal. Robinson said would-be assassins "should be warned of the extreme possible consequences of their intended actions, irrespective of whether they succeed or fail in their effort." Federal law already calls for the death penalty for first-degree murder committed on government property, for the killing of a president, for some kinds of espionage and treason, and in some cases, kidnapping. But the Supreme Court struck down the death penalty in 1972 as "arbitrary and capricious," including the federal criminal statutes. IN 1976, however, the court ruled that new death penalty laws enacted by three states were permissible because they met certain guidelines, including participation of the jury in death penalty deliberations. Since then, 37 states have approved replacement death penalty laws, and there have been four executions. But repeated efforts for such legislation in Washington have failed. Now, with a Republican Senate and a changed political climate in both houses of Congress, supporters believe the federal guidelines will be enacted soon. Thurmond, a former judge who said he had sentenced four separate mur- derers to die, asked Jensen if he belived the death penalty is a deterrent for criminals. "It does deter," Jensen said. President Reagan and Attorney General William French Smith have previously expressed support for the death penalty, but the administration's specific position for federal crimes was not known. AP Photo Headed east George Murray, left, and Phil Carpenter, both from Florida, whiz down Los Angeles streets in the first day of their cross-country trek. If they make the trip, it reportedly will be the first time the United States has been crossed by wheelchairs. GE) ~Ito U 0. If You Find Your Name and Address in Today's Mich- igan Daily Classified Page YOU WIN TWO FREE TICKETS To Any One Of STATE 1-2-3-4 MIDNIGHT MOVIES Jailed IRA guerrilla' defeats Protestant in election ENNISKILLEN, Northern Ireland (AP) - Convicted IRA guerrilla Bobby Sands yesterday defeated his Protestant rival in a parliamentary election but cannot take his seat in Britain's House of Commons because he is in prison on a hunger strike "to the death." Sands, who has gone without food for 41 days in a bid to win political prisoner status for jailed Irish nationalist guerrillas, defeated his only opponent, Harry West, by 1,446 votes in the Fer- managh and South Tyrone district of this British province, authorities said. YESTERDAY'S result was likely to be a setback for Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government in its campaign to alienate the guerrillas from Northern Ireland's Catholic minority of 500,000. .. .. . . Sands, a Roman Catholic, was given a 14-years prison sentence in 1976 after a gunbattle with police. He is a member of the outlawed Irish Republican Ar- my's "Provisional" wing, an over- whelmingly Catholic movement fighting to end British rule here. Its aim is unification with the 97-percent Catholic Irish Republic. Sands' victory in this rural district along the sensitive border with the republic underlined the deep divisions between Northern Ireland's feuding communities and was expected to help push the one million Protestant majority behind extremist leaders in next month's local government elec- tions. "THIS NAUSEATING result has ex- ploded the myth that Catholics do not support the IRA," snapped Peter Robinson, deputy leader of the Rev. Ian Paisley's Protestant Democratic Unionist Party. "They're conducting genocide against Protestants along the border." Oliver Napier, leader of the non- sectarian Alliance Party, declared: "These votes will be claimed by the IRA as endorsing their vicious canA paign of murder and destruction." Many Catholics regarded the win as a "historic victory." Chief electoral officer Alistair Pat- terson announced that Sands took 30,492 votes in the Thursday election. West, a farmer and tough law-and- order advocate whose campaign slogan was "a vote for Sands is a vote for terrorism," polled 29,046. I t.. .. ... . ..................... .. ........... .......................... "J:.v:::..... .... n .... . r. ... ::""}tv}?: }::.:..:..: .vr ::t .::::::; ::. }i:i: . :?.:... .:' .. ..... ......: ... .. ... .: .. .. . .... ....... : v: v::::: .. .":... .......... .: v : :.v :.::..N.; ... ..: .......v :: ::N... . y........t. .\ . . ... }{.. ':: If your name and address appear, our business hours (9 om-5 pm), hours. 5 WINNERS EVERY DAYI com to therDaiyurn 420 Maynard, within 48 NO CONTEST TO ENTER! Hippo stew eaters debate female admittance to club A Public Service of this newspaper &The Advertising Council i T -- NEW YORK (AP) - Tonight's menu at the Explorers Club includes fried catfish nuggets, lion loaf, mountain bear meatballs, yak patties, jellyfish, moose mousse, and hippo stew. Tomorrow morning's distress, though, will not be of the gastric variety for some members. That's when the Explorers learn the results of a secret vote on whether to admit women to the group which has been all-male since it was formed in 1905 by a big-game hun- ter, a war correspondent, an arctic ex- plorer, a _birdwatcher, and an Indian fighter. CLUB PRESIDENT Charles Brush, a persistent advocate of sexual in- tegration, said recently he. is SYSTEMS PROGRAMMERS AND ACADEMIC COMPUTING ANALYST NEEDED AT NORTH TEXAS UNIVERSITY Openings for two systems programmers and one academic computing analyst provide on opportunity for growth under desirable working conditions with IBM VM OS Operating Systems. Current system includes NAS 5000/VM 370/OS-MVT/HASP/CICS/MUSIC. Systems Programmer qualifi- cations include: A DEGREE, TWO OR MORE YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH IBM OS systems programming. Academic Computing Analyst qualifications include: a degree (Masters preferred), two or more years experience in academic computing, knowledge of common statistical packages like SAS and SPSS, FOR- TRAN deisroble. Competitive salary. MAIL RESUME TO: NTSU Personnel Office, NT Box 13764, Denton, TX 76203 Or call Tom Madron, 517-788-2324, 817,566-6474 or 617-788-2281. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer MICHIGAN MEN'SGLEE CLUB 4 GREAT GLEE CLUBS 8 pm.H1#1 Auditorium TON IGH T! NOTRE DAME OHIO STATE ®&r A X/i r- C T r- pessimistic: "The feedback I get is negative. The members who are again- st it are very emotional and very vocal." Members last rejected women in 1977, and IBM, which has a policy against sexual discrimination, can- celed its corporate sponsorship. Feuds are nothing new for the Ex- plorers, who spent their early years bitter wrangling over such topics who reached the North Pole first. "I'VE GONE OUT ON a limb on this and I've gotten a lot of brickbats," Brush said on admitting women. "There are going to be resignations over this no matter which way the vote goes. But it's bizarre for us to call our selves the Explorers Club when we ex- clude half the human race." But in a letter to members, board Director Bengt Jansson argued for male "camaraderie . . . You have e4 perienced it if you have served on an expedition where survival was a man- to-man interdependent function." He said that "even a single female would destroy the quality camaraderie for which the organization exists." b L -ofty E Cail Red Cross todayaboutlearnigCPR- ouhonaryesuscitation. 'Blues (Continued from Page 5) feeling. The show's lighting cues seem an incurable series of botches, but Danek's urban sound effects of street vendors and wandering evangelists create an appropriately wistful aur (though the on-stage actors seem consistently turn in the wrong direction from the origin of the offstage calls). Lady House Blues is an outline of a play with nothing as its center, an exasperating pretender to profundity. It is, regrettably, a characteristic of- fering from The Canterbury Stage Company, whose admirable courage in searching for offbeat material is con- sistently subverted by the pedestriaAh