The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 29, 1984 - Page 5 Women could soon join execution list, expert says From the Associated Press Elizabeth Ann Duncan, 58, who so loved her son, Frank, that she hired two laborers to kill her daughter-in-law, was the last woman legally executed in the United States. She died in a California gas chamber Aug.8, 1962. ALMOST 22 years later, 14 women in nine states await execution. The two youngest are 19, the oldest 54. Since a 1976 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that effectively ended a 10-year moratorium on executions in this country, 15 men have been put to death. With the pace of executions steadily rising - one in 1977, two in 1979, one in 1981, two in 1982, five in 1983 and four id the first three months of this year - some capital punishment exper- ts say a woman could soon join the list. "It's very, very likely for a woman to be executed," Watt Espy of the Capital Punishment Research Project at the University of Alabama Law Center said in an interview. "THE SUPREME COURT is in- sisting that it be applied in an equitable fashion," he said. "Some of these women have been on death row for a long time and their appeals are going to run out. Alabama has not hesitated to execute women in the past." Dr. Coramae Richey Mann, a professor of criminology at Florida State University, disagreed. "There are a lot of things Americans can take, but I just don't think they could take seeing a woman hanged," Ms. Mann said. "EVEN THOUGH judges and the whole criminal justice system are get- ting more punitive toward women, I just don't think the public could stand seeing a woman strapped into an elec- tric chair or hung or standing before a firing squad," she said. Since 1608, there have been 12,264 legal executions in the United States, Espy said, including 286 women. From 1930 to 1962, 30 women were put to death for committing murders, one for kid- napping and one for espionage. The earliest recorded execution of a woman in America was Jane Champion in the Virginia colony in 1632 "IN THE COLONIAL period, they didn't know what women's rights were, 'Espy said. "A woman who was an accomplice in the murder of her husband was considered to be commit- ting treason, so she was executed. If a slave murdered her master, she was also guilty of treason and put to death." By the Victorian age; Espy said, "men had adopted a far more protec- tive attitude toward women." AP Photo Ouff track Heavy rains washed out a Southern Railway System bridge causing an engine and 18 tank cars to derail early yesterday morning, with no injuries reported. Farmowners denied new trial "We've always executed women, but few indeed relative to men and the number of homicides women commit," said Henry Schwarzschild, director of the Capital Punishmen Project of the American Civil Liberties Union. As of March 1, he said, 1,312 inmates were waiting on death row. Only 14 were women. Of the 18,511 arrests for murder in 1982, according to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports, 16,052 were men and 2,459 women. HARRY'S* ARMY SURPLUS Texport 2 person BACKPACKERS TENT SALE $19.98 / REG. $28.98 Texport 3 person WALL TENT SALE $29.98 / REG. $43.98 Slumberiack "ARROWHEAD" SLEEPING BAG 3 lbs. holofil SALE $29.98 / REG. $37.98 ENTIRE LINE OF FRAME PACKS - 20% OFF One of the largest suppliers of camping and backpacking equipment in the area! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK TO SERVE YOU! SALE ENDS APRIL 2, 1984 By CAROLINE MULLER A Chelsea farm couple convicted of enslaving two mentally handicapped farmhands has lost their bid for a new trial. Ike and Margarethe Kozminski were convicted in Ann Arbor Feb. 10 of two counts of involuntary servitude and one count of conspiracy to violate the far- mhands' civil rights, in the state's first slavery trial in 60 years. Tuesday, U.S. Federal Court Judge Charles Joiner denied motions by their at- torneys for a new trial. One of Barris' objections to the trial, was testimony by witnesses that the two farmhands - Robert Fulmer and Louis Molitoris - had been kept in a trailer without heat or bathing facilities. Barris contended that Judge Charles should not have allowed the testimony because it was irrelevant to the charges against the Kozminskis. Barris also objected to the fact that Joiner had allowed psychiatrist Harley Stock to testify against the couple. Stock had testified that the farmhands were suffering from a "captivity syn- drome" because the Kozminskis had broken their will. Barris argued that the testimony should not have been allowed because Stock hadn't talked to the Kozminskis before drawing his con- clusions. John Kozminski, 30, the couple's son, was also convicted in February of a charge of conspiracy to violate the farmhands' rights, but acquitted of the involuntary servitude charge. His Mar- ch 13 appeal for an aquittal had been delayed pending a decision on his parents' case. 338 S. State St. 996-9191 d' V40 \ a MIXED DRINKS Senate finds facts on Meese income Nights FABULOUS FRIDAYS Happy Hour 2 - 7 Free Pizza & Pasta WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan praised Edwin Meese for his "great economic sacrifices" in joining the administration, but tax returns show Meese and his wife have reaped their biggest income since moving to Washington, sources said yesterday. Ursula Meese, wife of the attorney general-nominee, produced most of the financial boom by landing a $40,000-a- year job as head of the William Moss Institute, a non-profit center founded by a wealthy Republican oilman desiring more research into America's future. Based on their joint federal income tax return, Meese and his wife earned pre-tax income of $115,762 in 1982, sour- ces close to a Senate investigation of Meese's finances said. Meese's salary PSN say s laboratory sit-ins necessary (Continued from Page 1) toid. "That line of reasoning would say black people in the south should have just stayed in their place," he said.' Since the sit-in, some of the homes of PSN members have been vandalized, and some of the members agreed that the defense research issue is polarizing the campus. Marx, who recently spoke to the Engineering Council which was con- sidering drafting a letter condeming the demonstrations, said "there was definitely some antagonism" from the, group, but said they seemed more sym- pathetic when he talked in the hall'for an hour-and-a-half afterwards. as presidential counselor that year was $60,653. The Meeses had an average income of $70,731 in the six years before he came to Washington in late 1980 to oversee Reagan's transition to the Oval Office, the sources said. During those years, their highest income was in 1980, when they reported $91,431, including what Meese rountinely lopped together on his tax return as law pratice, legal services and consulting work. Meese listed on his 1981 financial disclosure statement at least $15,000 in 1980 income from activities related to Reagan's campaign and transition to office. Mrs. Meese, who did not work fulltime before moving to Washington, has said in newspaper interviews her husband's salary as a lawyer and University of San Diego instructor was halved when he joined the ad- ministration. Meese's confirmation as attorney general has been stalled by a flurry of questions about his finances, including acceptance of several loans to tide him over during financial hardships stem- ming from his purchase of a $300,000 home in suburban Washington before selling his California home. Several people who aided Meese financially later got jobs in the ad- ministration. The Writers-In-Residence Program at the Residential College presents a reading by RICHARD E. McMULLEN POET! Author of Chicken Beacon and Trying To Get Out 8:00 P.M., TUESDAY, APRIL 3 Benzinger Library / East Quad (East University between Hill and Willard) A RECEPTION FOR MR. McMULLEN WILL FOLLOW THE READING The PublicIs Cordially Invited The Writers-In-Residence Program is made possible, in party, by a grant from the National Endowment for the A rts Poor roads lead tocostly vehicle." repais... We need good roads.. . Cs f a.N.. " - ROADS TO BE IMPROVED For better Ann Arbor streets vote yes April 2 on the 1 mill Street - m. . U COMMUNITY SERVICES The University of Michigan Minority Student Services HISPANIC SYMPOSIUM: GRASS ROOTS MOVEMENTS: ORGANIZING FOR SOCIAL CHANGE IN HISPANIC COMMUNITIES " Thursday, March 29, 7 pm, SCHORLING AUD., School of Education Dolores Huerta speaks for United Farm Workers