Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 08, 1984, Page 4, Image 4

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    SENIORS!
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or Summer of ’85. 2,000 positions are now
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Book-of-the-Week
G.B. TRUDEAU
DoonesburY
DOSSIER
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perhaps most timely an
thology. More than 500 daily strips and 80 full
color Sunday pages. Trudeau at his best.
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national/regional
Indian activist
faces sentencing
PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — Indian
activist Dennis Banks faces a
possible 15-year prison term
when he is sentenced Monday
for a 1973 clash between In
dians and police, but his at
torney argues that after nine
years as a fugitive. Banks
“should not be in jail.”
Banks, 47, has been held
without bail in Rapid City since
Sept. 13, when he surrendered
to face sentencing on convic
tions of rioting with a
dangerous weapon and assault
with a weapon without intent to
kill. He fled South Dakota
before he could be sentenced
after his 1975 trial.
Attorney William Kunstler
said he will present Circuit
ludge Marshall Young, who
presided over Banks’ trial, with
scores of letters from famous
people arguing for a light
sentence for the co-founder of
t he American Indian
Movement.
Testimony for Banks will in
clude written statements by the
Rev. Jesse Jackson and author
Peter Matthiessen, who wrote
“In the Spirit of Crazy Horse,” a
book about AIM. But Kunstler
said he is not sure whether any
celebrities will testify at the
Custer County Courthouse.
“I’m going to say a lot, but in
essence it’s going to come down
to asking this judge to stand up
and be a man, you know, and
recognize that this man should
not be in jail,” Kunstler said.
Banks could be sent to prison
for up to 15 years, and the law
in effect in 1975 imposed a
minimum two-year sentence for
the riot conviction, but Young
could place him on probation,
the attorney said.
“He really should get
nothing, but the realities of life
may prevail," Kunstler said
Sunday.
South Dakota Attorney
General Mark Meierhenry, who
helped prosecute. Banks in
1975, said he won’t recommend
a sentence on Monday.
Security will be tight, with
state troopers helping sheriff’s
deputies and metal detectors set
up outside the courtroom to
screen spectators. Sheriff’s
Deputy Matt Peters said
Sunday.
Banks said he surrendered
last month out of concern for his
family and because his nine
years as a fugitive in California
and on the Onandaga Indian
Reservation in New York had
"taken its toll."
He was charged in a Feb. 6.
1973, riot that broke out after he
and other AIM leaders asked
authorities to file murder
charges against a white man in
volved in the stabbing death of
an Indian. The man had been
charged with manslaughter and
was later acquitted.
Banks fled before sentencing
and was given asylum until ear
ly 1983 by former California
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. He
then sought refuge on the
17-square-mile Onandaga
reservation.
Bluegrass State
welcomes queen
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) —
While the U.S. presidential
horserace dominated much of
the Bluegrass State's attention
Sunday, officials here welcom
ed Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II,
an avid horsewoman paying a
private visit to some of
America’s top stud farms.
Despite the presence of Presi
dent Reagan and Democratic
presidential candidate Walter F.
Mondale just 80 miles away in
Louisville for Sunday night’s
debate, the queen is staying
away from the political
hurlyburly. Instead, her 5-day
visit to Kentucky will focus on
thoroughbreds, a passion the
queen shares with the top
breeders who will be her hosts.
The queen was greeted at
rainy Blue Grass Airport at 4:40
p.m. by Gov. Martha Layne Col
lins, Lexington Mayor Scotty
Baesler and other local officials,
including William S. Farish III
and his wife, Sarah, at whose
farm the queen is staying.
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