Georgia executes first black From the Associated Press A convicted murderer who buried his victim alive was executed in Georgia early yesterday after refusing a final statement or prayer, while Florida won permisson to carry out one execution Friday and asked the U.S. Supreme Court to allow a second to proceed. Ivon Stanley became the 21st person executed in the nation since the Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976 and the first black man executed in Georgia since 1963. IN FLORIDA, David Washington and Jimmy Smith, who killed a total of five people, had been scheduled to die yesterday in the nation's first double execution in 19 years. But they won 24- hour delays on Wednesday while the 11th U.S. Circuit of Appeals in Atlanta considered their cases. Washington's bid for a stay was rejected yesterday, and prison officials said he would be executed in the elec- tric chair at 7 a.m. today. The Atlanta court granted Smith a stay, but Florida's attorney general immediately appealed that to the U.S. Supreme Court. DEATH WARRANTS for both men expire at noon today. Despite pleas for clemency from civil rights leaders and a last-minute appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, Stanley was put to death at Jackson, Ga., for the since '63 1976 robbery-killing of an insurance collector who was beaten, shot and buried alive. His attorneys and friends had attem- pted to depict him as a man of below- normal intelligence who was led into the killing by co-defendant Joseph Thomas. Thomas also faces the death penalty and is imprisoned at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center, where the execution took place. Stanley, 28, was ushered into the execution chamber at 12:07 a.m., a half-hour after six justices of the Supreme Court refused to stay the sen- tence. HE WALKED unassisted and without hesitation to the electric chair and wat- ched closely as guards strapped him in. He looked once at Warden Ralph Kemp and once toward the 11 witnesses separated from him by a windowed partition. He never spoke. Asked by Kemp if he had a final statement, Stanley shook his head. Asked if he wished to have a prayer said, he again shook his head. Three hidden volunteers pressed but- tons that sent more than 2,000 volts of electricity through Stanley. His body arched violently and his fists clenched before the current was shut off two minutes later. Washington, 34, was under his third death warrant for a 1976 crime spree that claimed three lives in Miami. The Michigan Daily - Fiday, July 13, 1984 - Page I1 "Gimmeo D Gimme an A Gimme anI*9*L ..Y Give the MICHIGAN DAILY that old college try. CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription Talks continue over Midland (Continued from Page 3) proposal that it cancel the plant if an audit due to the PSC by Jan. 15, 1985 shows the cost of finishing one unit exceeds $4.45 billion. The company has most recently estimated that finishing one unit would cost $3.95 billion. The cost is further inflated to $4.12 billion when adding other related costs. Among the outstanding areas to be. decided is the company's request for an immediate rate hike, not including Midland costs. Falahee said the firm needs $160 million, while the PSC staff has recommended $141 million. "We've gone along with basically all ABATE came in with," Falahee said. ABATE presented its plan to the utility's board of directors Wednesday morning, but after a 2 -hour board meeting Consumers Chairman John Selby said the ABATE plan had been rejected and set today as the deadline for reaching a settlement. Tracy Dobson, chairperson of the Michigan Citizens Lobby said Wednesday her organization would oppose any plan calling for large rate increases. "We fear greatly that if we have those kinds of rate increases that some businesses may close, others may relocate, and others may choose not to come to Michigan because the energy costs are too high," she said. If the power company decides now to give up on the project, officials said they will go to the state's Public Service Commission in an attempt to recover the $3.6 million it has already invested in the plant through rate increases. But Dobson said her group will continue a petition drive to get a measure on the 1986 ballot requiring voter approval of rate increases. Anderson said Wednesday the attorney general's office would oppose any rate hike designed to recover the costs if the plant is abandoned now. "The company constructed this on its Blanchard ... enters negotiations own decision and at its own risk without any voice in the matter by the customers," he said. - "If the company eventually goes into bankrupty it will be because the company spent $4 billion on the Midland plant and then found it couldn't raise any more money," Anderson said Wednesday. Company officials say Consumers will go bankrupt unless a settlement is reached or the project is abandoned. Read and Use Daily Classifieds . -#",C * It '$.'3 A A Jt' 'k'r 3t "K'1@ ^%44 ! ",TAO W .I..a. 4 ik . -a. s ... ,a...a i .. t 4 sf. s s..r 'a k YE-