THE MICHIGAN DAILY [: :A- r-t--. .-- . I%^ i r "~9 Friday, -ebruary 20, 1970 ) I 'ive more wrrested (Continued from Page 1) Regents ask Fleming for minority aid plan' 1 _ . I Clear Van Der Hout on sit-in Ir -- ~ - _ S. and opposing an officer, $750 bail; (Continued from Page 1) Glenn Mitchell, '72, resisting and op- students interested in making sure posing an officer, $500 ball; James that people who are planning our Brugh, Grad, assault and battery, $250 ftr ilpa uuew a bail; Fred Miller, '70, resisting and op- future will Plan a future we Can posing an officer, $500 bail; Fred Par- live with" are invited. sons, resisting and pposing an officer, The Regents have, in the past, $750 bail, anid as;sault and battery, $250 said that there is some question bail; Joel Riff, illegally propelling ai snowball at a person or vehicle, $250 of whether they have the power ball; Marie Raulet, resisting and op- to allow tuition waivers. posing an officer, $500 bail; Susan Lewis pointed to precedents in Eisenberg, '72, resisting and opposing which certain groups had been ex- atn officer, $500 ball. The following people were ar- emnpted from paying tuition in the rested Wednesday night during past. He attempted to dispel the. and after the mass march: argument that the State Legis- lature might cut University funds Gerald Weisberg, '72, assaulting a po-lauemgtctUirsyfnd lice officer; Doug Sprinkle, '71, creat- if a waiver proposal was passed. ing a disturbance; Gerald Piffer, creat- Lewis also cited constitutional ing a disturbance; Joseph Richards, provisions and opinions by -state malicious destruction of property; Mike attorneys-general which, he said, Muiry, '70, creating a disturbance; The following people were ar- clearly defined the Regents' power Tested wiyeeterday:-over internal University affairs- rested yesterday: such as tuition assessments. Richard Feldman, '71, resisting and At one point during the hearing, opposing an officer, $500; James: For- A n on uigtehaig rester; Clark Cogsdill, '71, creating a Vice President and Dean of Grad- contention, $100; James Brugh, Grad, uate Studies Stephen Spurr pre- creating a contention, $100; Harold sented some figures on the cost Rgsenthlal,° '71, creating 'a contention,ofmitnngpentU vrsy $100. of maintaining present University programs for minority students. He said that $1.5 million would be needed next year just to maintain such programs as the Opportunity Awards at present levels. Several people in the audience rose to speak after Spurr's pre- sentation. Discussions between them, Spurr and Fleming revolved around the issues of finances, prioritiestat the University and the power of the Legislature to control University affairs. At one point, a student said that the Regents "knew very well how to make money." He referred to their jobs and said "Where do you work, Regents? Regent Otis Smith, you work for GM, don't you?" Angered by the taunting com- ment, Smith burst out, "You all think you're so goddamn smart, and you don't know anything." He went on to tell the audience that "this University is composed of all kinds of people with all kinds of demands, each which have to be considered." (Continued from Page 1) came after the testimony of pro- secution witnesses and other wit- nesses for defense. The trial itself was marked by many interruptions, objections, and outbursts. At one point on Tuesday, Elden had to clear the court of spectators ,and on sev- eral occasions, the jury was sent from the room while Van Der Hout asked questions or was giv- en warnings by Elden. Prosecuting Attorney Jerome Farmer's case followed the pat- tern most of the LSA sit-in cases have taken in trying to convict the defendant of "creating or incit- ing a contention or disturbance." However, testimony was limited by Elden for the first time in the LSA sit-in trials, to what occurred in and around the LSA Bldg. the night of the sit-in. Elden sustained objections and warned Van Der Hout not to bring his political issues of re- pression into the trial. Van Der Hout emphasized the point that he as an individual was not in- volved in the specific incidents cit- ed by the prosecution as conten- tious. The six-man jury deliberated for over three hours, before reach- ing the verdict of "not guilty." During that time they re-entered the courtroom twice to ask ques- tions on the nature of the conten- tion statute. At the trials beginning, Van Der Hout asked Elden to disqualify himself; and after the prosecution witnesses. he asked for a directed verdict of "not guilty" on t h e grounds that the prosecution had not proved him guilty. Both mo- tions were denied. Farmer, on Tuesday, after the prosecution's witnesses were fin- ished, had been granted a motion to sequester the defense witnesses, but several sat through testimony yesterday morning. On the grounds that the witnesses had not been, properly sequested, he asked f o r a mistrial, late in the presentation of defense testimony. The request was not acted on. One witness for the defense was dismissed by Van Der Hout after the judge warned him that any- thing he said in court could be used against him in his own pend- ing LSA sit-in trial. However, architecture Prof. Jos- eph Wehrer, chairman of the Sen- ate Assembly's Student Relations Committee, who also has his sit- in trial pending, testified despite, a similar warning. Several of Van Der Hout's twelve defense witnesses directly contradicted testimony of Farmer's five witnesses, and in his instruc- tions to the jury, Elden emphasiz- ed that the "credibility" of the witnesses had bearing in the jury's! decision. The trial was the third in which defendants have been acquitted, and the first in which a defendant has earned his own acquittal by acting as his own lawyer. Newman Student Association presents rllOY AO JVANQ author of THESTRA NGED OD TOPIC: "-What Is Needed in Renewal Today" Frid ay, Feb. 20 8 P. M NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thompson No A drission F IIY 9YMIYIYII IIR \Y II II ADVERTISEMENT .4 it THESIS DEADLINE MARCH 16- Avoid the Hassle, Check Our Rates and Professional Service CAMPUS MULTISERVICE 214 Nickels Arcade-662-4222 o - Repeat Performance Oxford presents another chance for you to consider a broad range of housing oppor- tunities before you decide on housing for next year. OPEN HOUSE MAX KADE GERMAN HOUSE 603 Oxford Road Sunday, February 22nd 2-4 P.M. i PUBLIC HEALTH STUDENTS for ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION PRESENT The First Annual Ann Arbor Environmental Film Festival 'ri M, Order Your subscrpton Today' 764-0558 Featuring: By Lc Aa Cock Pond Rat N The1 Food Fri.& Sat., Feb. 20-21 7 and, Sea, and Air y at the Ken ilworth Dump roach ora's Easy-Open Flip-Top Box Killing Third Pollution or Famine & 10 P.M. School of Public Health Aud. Wiii the friendly lady show thef sailors the ropes??? Find out on The Don Adams Special: "Hooray for Hollywood"... brought to you by Budweisere, the King of Beers®. Thursday, February 26, CBS-TV, 8 p.m. EST. Anheuser-Busch, Inc. . St. Louis SUOS(I E TUOTHE M AN DAILY REFRESHMENTS TOURS 0i Iii®MI 1' Read Books each Sunday FIND YOUR OWN THING on the DAILY BUSINESS STAFF see Barb or Phyllis at 420 Maynard +, f r ' , '' . . ; .-, - , f r r S ...KWNA~ E I j I } i! ,y , i i A I I 4 Stare at your walls. Ycu might learn something for a change. Something about learning and change. Thinking and participating. Even about film-making and quantum physics. It's not done with mirrors but with charts. Three of them. It's asking a lot of three charts to undo all the harm done by university education. You have to undo most of it. But the charts can help. The charts, and an accompanying handbook (to ease your transition from print) now comprise a BLUEPRINTFOR COUNTER EDUCATION. The liberated chart watcher sees before him the crisis of western civilization in a pattern of names, concepts and events configured around the most radical members of today's intellectual and artistic vanguard-from Marcuse and McLuhan to Eldridge Cleaver and John Lennon. From there on, everything becomes self-evident. Or unintelligible. Maurice Stein and Larry Miller, who created the charts, are two deeply committed radicals now affiliated with the California Institute of the Arts in Los Angeles. Marshall Henrichs, who designed them, is now making a movie of his own screenplay. Where are you? VI5KT A1 A 4 Iqmfmm&'fi~ K,~