Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1971 PageSix HE ICHIAN DILYSatudayJul 10,197 Appeals pending for 'U' departments settle on 1969 bookstore sit-in three per cent budget cut DIAL 5-6290 603 E. Liberty 'MAJESTY ON FILM! IT IS WONDERFUL!" (Caontinued from Page Ii statute that deals with conten- tion "was held to be vague" and therefore unconstitutional, ac- cording to Levin. Meanwhile, most of the appeals cases are still before circuit court. According to local attor- ney Donald Koster, who is hand- ling "a bunch," perhaps most, of the appeals, the steps of the procedure include filing an ap- peals claim and a brief for the defendant, the filing of an "ap- pearance" is filed by the county, and finally a circuit court judge grants or rejects the appeal. According to Koster, most of the material has been filed, but the court will decide the cases "in its own time." Koster would give no estimate on when all the cases would be through the cir- cuit courts. Asst. County Prosecutor John Hensel, who is handling the ap- peals for the county, says that "appeals are bound to take a fair amount of time no matter what." The circumstances of these par- ticular appeals seem somewhat strange, according to one appel- lant, who was convicted in No- vember, 1969. He says that Kos- AA concerts to continue Sunday afternoon rock con- certs in Gallup Park will con- tinue this week after a one week break last weekend. The concerts, sponsored by the Ann Arbor Tribal Council's community park program, us- ually begin between 2 and 2:30 p.m., but the park opens about an hour before concert time. The groups scheduled to per- form this week will be SRC, Rodriguez, Whiz Kids, and Ju- lius Victor. The concert was cancelled last week due to a prior arrange- ment between the city and Con- cordia Lutheran Junior College under which the concert would be moved. The alternate site proposed by the city however was judged unacceptable by the Community Park Program and the concert was cancelled. WOMEN ter filed his appeal, but the coun- ty "did not prosecute the appeals for a long time. All of a sudden, it picked the cases up again." Hensel agrees that there was "nothing done" on the cases "for a considerable amount of time," but says that he has only been in his present position since April, The appeals are being made on several aspects of the case. According to an appeals brief filed by Koster on behalf of eight persons who were given a consolidated trial, there are five bases for the appeal, and Koster says most of his briefs are similar. The argument contends that first, if the defendants are challenging the constitution- ality of a statue, they need not establish their own conduct as being legal under the chal- lenged law; and second that the defendants are challenging the contention statute -as un- constitutional "on its face as being vague and overbroad." A third argument says that the prosecution did not es- tablish a prima facie case. "De- fendants' arrest at the scene of the sit-in, without proof that there was a disturbance, that Defendants actively partici- pated in the crime charged, and that Defendants were the parties participating in an un- proven 'disturbance,' does not establish a prima fade case," the brief states. The fourth argument charges that convictions "violate due process of law," because of lack of "evidentiary basis except their presence at the scene of the 'sit-in'." The final argument for the appeal contends that the de- fendants should have been al- lowed five peremptory jury challenges each, instead of two for the groupasa whole, A peremptory challenge allows the defendant tor defendants) to eliminate a potential juror without listing a reason. Meanwhile, the remnants of the 107 protesters are grow- ing older, graduating and mov- ing on, still faced with the pos- sibility of a seven day jail sen- tence and $240 fine (the sen- tence and fine are stiffer for the three second offenders, all of whom are appealing their cases), for a sit-in held two years ago. 'S PICNIC Continued from Page I1 per cent of that figure was saved through the salary budget, while the remaining 40 per cent_ was cut from equipment costs. "We left several positions un- filled this year," he explains, "including lab technicians and one'secretary." No one had to be fired, however, to make the sav- ings, he says. In the engineering college the loss of money for equipment will be felt severely. "We have long felt that our equipment budget has not been adequate and we have worked hard trying to keep our equipment up to date," Van Wylen says. League Manager Wilma Steke- tee reports the cutbacks have forced a reduction in office help and a "doubling-up" of duties. Steketee herself has taken on the added responsibility of man- aging the North Campus Com- mons with no increase in her pay. Food is currently prepared at the League and trucked to the North Campus Commons. "We found that central preparation of food and the consolidation of the administrative staffs was a more efficient way of operat- ing," she explains. presents a BENEFIT for the WOMEN'S FILM COLLECTIVE DUCK SOUP Marx Brothers Madness Tues.-Wed., July 13-14 7 & 9 p.m. Architecture Aud. Support Women Filmmakers In the chemistry department, Assoc. Chairman Robert C. Tay- lor says that all the required savings were made by not filling certain faculty vacancies and cutting out several "temporary jobs." Taylor claims that the literary college sent out a letter to all of its departments directing them to make the three per cent s a v i n g s from their salary budgets rather than dipping into their funds for materials. Last night. Associate LSA Dean Hayden Carruth declined to comment on the alleged di- rective, but sources in other LSA departments have backed up Taylor's statement. GET YOUR MANWITH A .Want Ad In everyone'S ise thre's a SUMMER OF '42 -SHOWN DAILY- 1, 3, 5,7,9 P.M. NEXT "PLAZA SUITE" UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron 10:00 am---Resources for Strength," Calvin S. Malefyt 7:00 p.m.-"Sacrif ice" 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY 10:00 p.m. JULY 10 Akira Kurosawa's LOWER DEPTHS TOSHIRO MIFUNE ISUZO YAMADA GANJIRO NAKAMURA "I hove no fear -of overpraising LOWER DEPTHS: the film is as near perfect as makes no matter." -NEW YORKER 1st BAPTIST CHURCH 502 E. HURON-near State St. $1 contribution 71-7849 ARM/Michigan Film Society free coffee Ecumenical Campus Center A JULY 11 -SUNDAY - 3-10 P.M. Winchell Courtyard in West Quad Bring your own food and drink, crofts you wish to display and sell. Karate demonstrations, films about women. Bring sports equipment and musical instruments. For Information: 662-4431 extension 332 or 335 ask for Claire or Barb - ALL WOMEN INVITED DIAL 662-6264 * At State & Liberty 3rd " rLITTLE HIT HORROR WEEK TALE, F SHREWDLY ORGANIZED} OPEN 12:45 Shows at NAIL- Where your nightmares 1, 3, 5, CHEWER" end... 7A9 P.M. uu-Veta m mRtR"m --NEXT--begins. Woody Allen's LO "BANANAS"--Moves you more than prunes! 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