The Michigan Daily-Thursday.May 6, 1982-Pege 11 U.S.'DEATH ROWS'OVERCROWDED Inmate executions stalled From the Associated Press Death rows are becoming overbooked in several states as more than 1,000 condemned prisoners find their executions delayed-sometimes against their will-by appeals to higher courts. Since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty six years ago, 1,013 men and women have been condemned to die in the 36 states that allow capital punishment. But only four have walked that last mile, none in the past year. EVEN SOME convicted killers who say they are ready to die find their cause taken up by civil liberties organizations who object to the state "sanctioning suicide." In the most recent such case, the Supreme Court on Monday refused to dismiss an appeal filed on behalf of Dickie Gaines, 22, convicted of the 1978 murders in Illinois of two people in a $1 robbery. Gaines, one of 42 condemned prisoners in Illinois, has said he wants to drop the appeal and die. IN TEXAS, where 161 people-including two women-have been sentenced to lethal injections, state Criminal Court Judge Truman Roberts said a convict sentenced to death is virtually assured of get- ting a stay from federal court. "I don't know whether anybody will ever be executed under the present death penalty law," said Roberts, a judge in a state that electrocuted 361 con- victs between 1924 and 1964. Houston attorney Will Gray, who represents about two dozen death row inmates, is not so sure. "NORMALLY, you can figure probably four or five years before you exhaust all of the remedies," he said. "Ultimately, a bunch of them are going to be executed." Before 1964, condemned Texas convicts were placed in one of eight cells near the electric chair at the state prison in Huntsville, and most were executed within 30 days of their arrival. Today, of- ficials have had to move death row to a larger unit 16 miles away. Opponents of the death penalty feared a wave of executions after Gary Gilmore voluntarily went before a Utah firing squad on Jan. 17, 1977. It was almost two years later, on May 25, 1979, that John Spenkelink, who killed a fellow drifter in a motel room, was electrocuted in Florida. Spenkelink became the first prisoner in the United States put to death against his will since the '60s. JESSE BISHOP was sent to the Nevada gas cham- ber later that year, on Oct. 22. The nation's last execution was on March 9, 1981, when Steven Judy, 24, was electrocuted in Indiana for the -rape and strangulation of a mother and the slayings of her three young children. The NAACP Legal Defense Fund said that in late April there were 1,009 people on death row in various states, the most since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment. They included 528 whites, 422 blacks, and the rest Hispanics or other minorities. Future of , El Salvador evaluated (Continued from Page 5) likewise, the military pressured the Constituent Assembly to name Magana," he said. "The trivial matters are left to the president," Samayoa said. The more crucial decisions, he added, are made by the United States then passed to the military factions in El Salvador and then finally to the president. THERE ARE several theories as to why the election boycott, organized by the Democratic Revolutionary Front and other opposition forces, was not completely successful, Samayoa said. Samayoa hypothesized that those who voted did so either out of convic- tion, because they felt they had nothing to lose, or due to intimidation. However, he also said he doubted the accuracy of the election results and believes the success of the election has been greatly exaggerated by the media. A reported 1,400,000 El Salvadorans voted in the elections but this would have been "almost physically im- possible," due to the election structure, according to Samayoa. PDQ Bach brings fun to classics (ContinuedfromPages) played "by a clarinet, trumpet, and trombone. The finale combined the artistic and comic talents of composer PDQ Bach and Peter Schickele as piano soloist. He is a fine pianist, whose technical facility impressed both the audience and a lone policeman who ticketed Schickele for playing too fast. For his solo, Schickele played variations centered around the note G with all the love and care and appen- dages possible (his nose, knees, chin; etc.). Why the note G? PD9's favorite was the G-string. x t ; x 4*0 Not sure whi1chTI is right for you. We stock the complete line of Texas Instruments calculators. And we understand what we sell, so we can assist you in selecting just what you need. We're competitive. In fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money. ELECTRONICS Showroom 1110 S. University, 662-3201 Main Store 549 E. University, 662-3201 t a . M.riVQ -Fri. 8-3Q-5:0,Sa. 9:30- 5:0