Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 9, 1 971 Pae enTHIMCIGA AL Tuesday..March... 171 T} Denton' arraigned on assault By PAUL TRAVIS Fleming, judiciary committee negotiatei Peter Denton, Grad, has b e e n arraigned on assault charges in District Court, in the third arrest resulting from confrontation between dem- onstrators and police during last month's Regents meeting. At a hearing before District Court Judge S. J. Elden last Thurs- day, Denton stood mute on the charge and a plea of not guilty was entered for him by the court. Elden set Denton's trial for this week but after objections by at- torney David Goldstein re-sched- uled the trial for April 15. The charge of assault, a misdemenor, carries a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and $100 fine. Denton is accused of assaulting University security official George Stauch while attempting to gain entrance to the o p e n Regents meeting Feb. 19. The meeting was behind locked doors, guarded by a contingent of city police and University security personnel, af- ter a group of demonstrators had announced plans to disrupt the meeting. Denton admits to being present at the confrontation but denies assaulting Stauch. He has said he is being "framed" on the charge and was "picked out" because of his history of political activism at the University. The incident at the Administra- tion Bldg. occurred after a group of approximately 50 demonstra- tors attempted to gain entrance to the meeting. They had planned to present demands to the Regents that the University end classified military research, abolish t h e ROTC program, establish a child care center, end job-recruiting by discriminatory corporations in University subsidized placement facilities a n d donate University facilities to the anti-war move- ment. (Continued from Page 1) his agreements with the committee are likely to be incorporated in the final judicial plan. The committee's original draft was presented to the Regents in December. Last month, the Re- gents released a revised draft which altered the plan in a way which student members of the committee said they would not ac- cept. While the Regents retained the most controversial aspect of the plan-the use of an all-student jury to determine guilt and pun-I ishment in trials of students-they altered the provisions d e a 1 i n g with the judge's panel, deleting a section strongly favored by the student members of the commit- tee. Under the committee's draft, the panel would be headed by a pre- siding judge selected from outside the University community. During the first six months of the judicial plan's one-year trial period, the judge would be joined by two associate judges-one stu- dent and one faculty member, who could overrule his decisions. During the next six months, there would be three associate judges-two students and one fac- ulty member in student trials, and two faculty members and one stu- dent in faculty trials. The latter plan is strongly sup- ported by students, who maintain that it is necessary that there be a majority of students on the as- sociate judges panel in student trials in order to provide a fair trial for the defendant. In their draft, the Regents de- leted this section, indicating pref- erence for the presiding panel of a judge, and a student and faculty associate judge. In addition, the Regents re- moved a provision of the plan which would have granted the stu- dent associate judge a veto power over rulings to exclude certain evidence at trials, such as evidence of a political nature, and to bar the defendant from the courtroom if his behavior is considered inap- propriate. China warns U.S. on war expansion (Continued from Page 1) -ens in pressing the war against South Vietnam. "It makes no sense under t h e rules of war, international 1 a w or equity to let an enemy occupy territory and use it against our forces and use it with impunity," Rogers said. Meanwhile, in Indochina U.S. warplanes flew 1,000 missions for the second consecutive day in sup- port of South Vietnamese invas- ion forces in Laos and a renewed South Vietnamese push in Cam- bodia, sources reported. The U.S. command admitted to the losses of five more American helicopters yesterday, bringing the official total of helicopters des- troyed in the Laotian invasion to 58. Two Americans, including an officer of field rank were killed in the latest loss'es and six more Americans were wounded. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 7) discussion sessions"in morning; student /counselor mtgs. 1-3 plm., SAB Bldg. Ecumenical Campus Center: J. Water- bury, "The Role of the Intellectual in the USA," Ecumenical Campus Center, noon. School of Music: Wind instrument dept. Student Recital, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. Spec. Astronomy Colloquium: J. Lyon, U. of Md., 807 P&A Bldg., 4 p.m. English Dept. & Extension Service: N. Madgett, poetry reading, UGLI Mul- ti-Purpose Rm., 4:10 p.m. Physics Seminar: C. Cronstrom, Princeton, "Generalized 0 (1,2) Partial Wave Analysis," P&A Colloq. Rm, 4:15 p.m. Dental Res. Inst. Seminar Series: J. Dowson, "Problems and Research Ap- proaches in Endodontics," 2033 Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Ctr. for Russian and East European Studies: MSU Russian Chorus, U n i v . Elementary Sch., 1405 Education Sch. Bldg., 7:30 p.m. Sch. of Music: A. Britton, "Paradox in Paradise: Music in American Higher Education," Chrysler Aud., 8 p.m. Christian Science Organization: P. Erickson, "How to Relate to Our World," Canterbury House, 8 p.m. PROBE and Commission on Women: 3532 SAB, 8 p.m. Linguistics Dept. & English Lang. .r:;.;c . :x,.::;:.. ....?t'. ...*..-'::::: ::eqX". . .k. .2"ji}| iG' Inst.: C. Kisseberth, U. of Illinois, "tRe- cent Developments in Generative Phon- ology," W. Conf. Rm., 4th fl., Rackham Bldg., 8 p.m. General Notices All Students in Sch. of Education (Undergraduate): Preclassification f a r Fall Term 1971 and Spring-Summer Term 1971 wi listart Mar. 8 and will run for four weeks; material may be obtained Rm 2000 Bch, of Ed. Bldg.; early registration for Fall Term will be April 12-23; students who advance classify and do not early register will lose their reserve places and ist re- classify in Waterman Gym in Sept. The Henry Russel Lecture will be delivered by Paul G. Kauper, Henry M. Butzel Professor of Law, Mar. 11, 4 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater; his lecture topic, "Government and Religion: the Search of Absolutes;" the Henry Russel Award will also be made at that time. Placement Following Ann Arbor area jobs h a v e been received thisweek, check w It h our office, 764-7460. Coldwater State Home & Trng. Sch., MSW, with appropriate exper. Kelsey-Hayes, Romulus, analytical chemist, for job in AA. MS with exper. in x-ray defraction, elec. micro-probe; use of analytical equip. Branch City Probate Court, C 01 d- water, Juvenile Sourt Dir., prefer exper. with Juvenile Court or casework. AA Co. for wholesale business; also part-time jobs inretail business. Middle Earth, AA, manager, prefer ex- per. in sales and display, with artistic bernt degree not req. Mgmt. Recruiters, AA, Software De- sign & Frog. for Soc. Sc. areas. Exper., OSIRIS 2, will train; must be fam. with IBM 360-40 Model 67. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES 212 S.A.B. Interviews, for appointments c a 11 764-7460 and ask for Summer Place- ment. Thurs., Mar. 11, distributors of na- tionally known home products will in- terview from 1:30-5:00; literature is available. March 12: Camp Tamarack, Detroit Fresh Air Society, cabin counselors specialist in waterfront, arts and crafts: nature campcraft, tripping, dramatics, dance, puppetry, unit and asst. unit. supvrs., caseworker, nurses, truck-bus driver, cooks, aests. TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 t rP I AM W6-&m&;,Iz# NEW COURSE MART DEADLINE-MARCH 29 Course Proposals for Fall '71 must be turned in at 1018 Angell Hall, Student Counseling Office. BEAN BAG CHAIRS MAKE YOUR OWN IT'S EASY! i i i i i i h Big fr1: ii fr{ i it : {-' ;? F:9 I iJri{ hff."i:? > iy> :}::.u{ tv:"tii {{4}iii: The M.S.U. Russian Chorus PROFESSOR DENIS MICKIEWICZ, Conductor in a program of Russian vocal music, including liturgy, art song, folk song, and Gypsy romances THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Center for Russian and East European Studies is pleased to present a concert by is :K 1. 3+." 'til i.±r k:v L y vi f,{{i kY? "Mx. r{x,: S¢i I mg r4 H Announcing,.* GRAND OPENING OF THE NEW 1306 S. University A Complete Line of Delicatessen Foods including LOX - SABLE - CHUBS - CORNED BEEF OPEN 7:30 A.M.-1 2 Midnight-Mon-Thurs. 7:30 A.M.-2 A.M.-Friday & Saturday 7:00 A.M.-12 Midnight-Sunday Exciting Contest! Name Our New Deep-Fried Cinnamon Raisin Bagel and Win A DOZEN BAGELS PER WEEK FOR ONE WHOLE YEAR! Grand Opening Special!! 40c Shake Only 20c 19c French Fries 1 Oc With Purchase of 75c Sandwich aii ~1 fir I 4 ,w 'I' -Ilk