THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pag _ _ _ Pace . PROTEST ENDED: ADC demonstrators change trespass plea By SAM DAMREN Thirteen persons arrested last September during a sit-in at the County Bldg. to protest the treat- ment of welfare mothers pleaded "no lo contendre" yesterday to charges of trespassing. Sentence will be pronounced Plan teach-in for poli sci (Continued-from Page 1) agreed to voice strong objection to two alternate plans for student representation in faculty decision- making. One, include1 in the report of the Joint Faculty-Graduate Stu- dent Committee issued Monday, would allow student representa- tives to attend some meetings of the faculty and the executive, committee but would give them no vote.' Another would divide the execu- tive 'committee into two parts. One part would deal with person- nel decisions and the other with policy. This plan would allow students to vote only on the policy making part of the executive committee. SAE SUMMER STUDY IN ITALY -Learn up to 8 transferable credit hours -Learn Italian while study- ing italian art, history, phi- . losophy, literature -No previous knowledge of Italian required -%2 sessions or full summer session (coinciding with UAC and Grad. Assembly flights) Call between 5-7 P.M.: 769-4959 GET YOURMAN WITH A -Ad April 18. Maximum penalty is 90 days in jail and/or $100 fine. The defendants had previously entered a plea of not guilty, ac- cording to Stuart Katz, Grad, but changed their plea for monetary reasons and because "we have exhausted our forms of protest." Katz said the large amount of money needed to stage a jury trial would not be worth "the few words we could say in court." Charles A. Barr, the defendants lawyer, said the plea of "no to contendre" only indicates "the students conceed they can't win not that they are guilty." Although the student trespass- ing trials have been limited to "the narrow- forum.of the county circuit court," said Barr, he said he feels the protest was success- ful since the trials of the welfare mothers have been appealed to "the larger forums of the federal district courts." Richard Gordon one of the ae- fendants, said to the court: "I feel our protest was, political, and the substance of the protest was the 200 people who were arrested, but since the court has broken that number down into smaller groups to be tried we have lost the political impact of 200 people pro- testing." The students were: Ronald Co- hen, Grad, Juidy Cohen, '71. Isaac Welsh, '68, Thomas Zimmerman, '70, Harry Finklestien, Grad, 'Ellen. Frank, '69, Ida Altman, '71, Stuart Katz, Grad. . SDS bi By HAROLD ROSENTHAL About 150 people attended a teach-in on "Militarism and the University" held by Students for a Democratic Society in the Un- ion Ballroom last night. The teach-in was part of an SDS program against militar- ism on campus. The program is being carried out on campuses across the nation. Martin Nicoulas, a writer for the Movement and former edi- tor of "Viet Report" said "Even the older generation is begin- ning to have doubts about what it lived for." "Ourparents went abroad with the intent of overthrowing a series of governments whose leaders espoused a racist ideol- ogy, used military force, showed a high dedication to capitalist ideas and waged wars to support these," he said. "They are now seeing the reappearance of this here." Nicolaus added, "The task that faces us is overthrowing the capitalist system and re- placing it with our own." Because this "system relies on violence and force we can't overthrow the government with rallies and teach-ins," he said. Referring to ROTC, Nicolaus claimed universities "have been the breeding grounds for 50 per cent of the officers in the army." Officers favor war because it benefits them, he said. "We can intervene in a vicious circle by stopping this program." Nicolaus also said, due to the war less money is being spent on education and, that this has caused changes in the educa- tion process. The universities have to "adopt industrial methods" and "are becoming more like factories." Tom Horwitz, a member of SDS at Columbia, said, "ideal-. ism is a tool that makes you not deal with reality." "The . peace movement has turned into a war movement lasts militarism and there is no room for ideal- ism in a war," h, said. "We can't sit here and think about abstract ideals when we know this place is rotten, he said. "We have to go out and fight along with the people." "When thet ampus movement ties in with the people's move- ment you can't cut it off," he added. Earlier Jim Mellen, a region- al SDS worker, said, "The U.S. economy is a monopoly economy controlled by only a few com- panies., "Capitalism," he said, "needs high military technology and high military spending to ab- sorb surplus capital." Another place surplus capi- tal is spent is in education. "The university is, now used to make people to be productive units," he said. "College also delays entrance of students into the labor force," he said, reducing its size. The fact that it is handling human beings doesn't bother capitalism. I ---------- Tenants win first eviction ease; 'may set favorable precedent I , (Continued from Page 1) The total rent which the Ro- sen's put into escrow was $300., If the jury had voted in favor of Arbor Management they would have received this total plus twen- ty-five dollars in court costs, This, comes to a sum that is presumably; far less than the money spent on the lawyer. Though members of the steer- ing committee felt this particular case was a rather minor one and did not contain as many code via- latio's and unremedied complains as others, it ended up carrying more weight than was suspected, said Dale Berry, Grad, a member :f the steering committee. Berry felt that the case had become a precedent. "Specifically the verdict shows there is a great deal of sympathy for the strike in the community at large. For the rent strike as a Whole indicates that people can strike. They will be brought into court and then receive appropriate rent reduc- tions," he added. . "The jury reduced the Rosen's rent ($20 in total) because they didn't feel Kloian was deservant of $150 a month," Berry said. Rosen said, "We're pretty happy with the verdict." He felt that the procedure had taken up a lot of time and money on the part of the landlords while his own expenses Cycles sellI in Classifieds had been paid throuhg the R e n t Strike fund. At the beginning of the strike, according to Rosen, he had de- posited 10 per cent of his rent or $15 into the' fund. In receiving the twenty dollar reduction from .his own rent he made five dollars. He felt he "helped to establish a. very important precedent and a very important victory for the rent strike." Harris "hits tax ,system (Continued from Page 1) the city would collect, for the first time, $400,0001in new money by taxing the Ann Arbor income of non-residents. "The fiscal reform would be fairer, too, particularly for large families and persons in their el- derly years," Harris said. "We can embark on an era with new and different outlooks," said Balzhiser, "but it takes cooperatior. fromI business, labor, church and univrsity." It is this "coalition of concern" that will enable all the necessary legislation to be, passed that "will make things a reality." "Important bridges must be built to avoid tension,"- said Balz- hiser. 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