The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 5, 1984 - Page 5 Defense wants Faber trial moved By MICHAEL BEAUDOIN Judge Ross Campbell considered a petition for a change of location in the trial of Ricardo Hart, the alleged accomplice in the slaying of Nancy Faber, as jury selection for the trial began yesterday. In the Campbell's chambers before the selection process began, Thomas Quarterman, the defense at- torney, claimed his client couldn't get a fair trial in Washtenaw County because of the extensive local media coverage surrounding the case. CAMPBELL denied Quarterman's initial request for a change of venue, but the issue can still be raised at any point during the trial. "In the middle of all of this (the trial) I may still ask for a change of venue," Quarterman said. Quarterman also said that Judge Campbell wants to see if an impartial jury can be found before making any further decisions regarding the location of the trial. HART, 29, is charged with first-degree felony mur- der, armed robbery, and possession of a firearm for his part in the November 22 shooting death of Faber, a 39-year-old speech therapist and wife of Ann Arbor News editorial writer Don Faber. Hart was implicated in the incident in a taped statement given to police on December 21 by his girlfriend, 17-year-old Machelle Pearson after her arrest. He was questioned and finally arrested on January 6. Pearson was found guilty of identical charges last Friday and faces a mandatory life sentence which will be formally handed down by Judge Campbell on July 6. CLOSE TO fifty prospective jurors were seated in Judge Campbell's courtroom yesterday morning to begin the sometimes long process of jury selection. Campbell instructed the panel of jurors to jury procedure and then asked them various general questons centering around their prior knowledge of the Faber case. Most ofthe prospective jurors admit- ted to some familiarity with the case. Fourteen people were questioned individually by Judge Campbell and both attorneys before all were sent home for the evening. Six were discharged after questioning yesterday. JURY SELECTION is scheduled to continue this morning. During her trial, Pearson explained how she and Hart planned to rob someone in the parking lot of the Krogers store on Plymouth Rd. Pearson testified that Hart picked out Faber, gave her a gun and forced her to rob Faber. During the robbery, Faber was shot in the neck and died three days later of brain damage. The prosecution said they hope to prove that Hart "aided or abetted" Pearson in the commission of the crime." Detroit civil rights trial opens DETROIT (AP) - Two men senten- ced to probation for beating a Chinese- American man to death with a baseball bat face trial today on federal civil rights charges, in a case .that prosecutors say stemmed from misguided anger against the Japanese auto industry. Jury selection was scheduled to begin in the courtroom of U.S. District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor in the government's case against Ronald Ebens, 44, and his son-in-law, Michael Nitz, 25, both of East Detroit. THE MEN are charged with two counts each of violating the civil rights of Vincent Chin of Oak Park, who died four days after being beaten outside a topless bar in Highland Park on June 19, 1982. Witnesses said one assailant was a laid-off autoworker who apparently blamed his situation on imported cars and thought Chin, 27, was Japanese. "There's a serious question here about whether race had anything to do 'There's a serious question here about whether race had anything to do with it or if it was a barroom brawl that spilled out into the streets and had a tragic consequence.' - defense attorney Frank Eaman with it or if it was a barroom brawl that spilled out onto the streets and had a tragic consequence," defense lawyer Frank Eaman said yesterday. THE CASE attracted national atten- tion to alleged discrimination against Asian-Americans. The trial was to begin in January, but Taylor delayed it until March at the request of defense lawyers and later granted a second delay until today. The case prompted protests after Wayne County Circuit Judge Charles Kaufman sentenced the men to three years' probation and fined them $3,750 each on manslaughter charges. WHEN HE sentenced the men, Kaufman said they "are not going to go out and harm anybody else." The men originally were charged in the state court with second-degree murder, but Ebens pleaded guilty and Nitz pleaded no contest to the lesser charge. The sentencing drew protests from Detroit's Asian-American community, and a federal grand jury indicted the pair last Nov. 2. If convicted, Ebens and Nitz could be sentenced to life im- prisonment. Their lawyers wrote U.S. Attorney General William French Smith last month, asking him to dismiss the charges and investigate conduct by American Citizens for Justice, a Royal Oak-based civil rights group that inter-' viewed witnesses to the attack. "We've gotten no response, and, as far as we know, they're going to ignore our letter," Eaman said. He said three wintesses had collaborated on testimony and that American Citizens for Justice lawyer Liza Chan had told witnesses what to say. Chan declined comment yesterday, saying she just had received a court or- der that barred her from talking about the case.sHowever, the organization's vice president, Dr. Marisa Chuang, characterized the letter to Smith earlier as "a desperation ploy by the defense attorneys because they have no case." MSA continues search for judiciary members By DAVID VANKER The deadline for applications for positions on the Michigan Student Assembly's judicial board has been ex- tended beyond last Friday, MSA-Vice President Steve Kaplan said yesterday. "We're not going to discriminate against people who didn't meet the deadline," Kaplan said. "We'll keep in- terviewing until we get the ten." MSA BEGAN to solicit applications for the ten-member "Central Student Judiciary" during the second week of May after Kodi Abili, an unsuccessful candidate for president in last term's 0 Rackham Student Government elec- tions, demanded that his disqualification for campaigning too close to polls be reviewed by an appeals committee. The CSJ, a board which hears ap- peals and has jurisdiction over student governments and other University organizations, hasn't existed for two years. "It's hard to say there wasn't a need Sfor it," said Kaplan, whose ad- ministration took office in April. "It's probably a combination of no cases, and the, people who were on it graduating." "IN A WAY," Kaplan said, "it's un- fortunate that we had to start it up for this case." Kaplan added that he ap- preciates Abili's patience. Abili earlier said he would take his case to "municipal court" if MSA could not form the judiciary board before the summer ends. Yesterday, however, he said he trusts the assembly's efforts and will continue to wait. "It seems they're concerned," Abili said. "If there is no CSJ, I blame the previous governments for not having a justice system on campus. As of noon yesterday, Kaplan said, MSA had received six applications for membership on the judicial board. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 INTERESTED IN ADVERTISING EXPERIENCE?" Is Hiring a New Marketing Manager Get Experience In: * Promoting a Product * Sales 9 Advertising Apply at the Student Publications Bldg. (next to S.A.B.) or call 764-0550 for more information