Page 2-Wednesday, March 16, 1983-The Michigan Daily Legal services gets new boss (Continued from Page 1) board, staff members wanted salary increases - money Rose believed should have been put into expanding the program. ACCORDING TO Rose, the staff members saw one-way of getting raises was to get a new director. "The same four people who demanded higher salaries, demanded a new director," he said. Chambers said that the board had resolved the salary disputes in May 1981 and that they were not a major issue, although the salary disputes and other staff complaints "were worrisome" to the board. Incidents pointing to an effective ad- ministration had been cropping up sin- ceathe spring of 1981, Chambers said. FOR EXAMPLE, staff members for a long time could not decide how much money should be given to casework and how much should be devoted to housing law reform, Chambers said. "The program needed an administrator who was skilled at mediating this unavoidable conflict between casework and law reform," he said. There were also long periods without staff meetings, Chambers said. According to a document published by the board explaining its findings, books were not kept up properly now were taxes paid in a timely fashion. The office incurred a $2000 tax penalty in 1980. CIAMBERS SAID there was very lit- tle cooperation between Rose and the staff members. "The whole office was in a state of collapse in terms of day-to- day morale," he said. As an example of "how much the of- fice had become crippled," Chambers pointed to an incident in which no staff attorneys would co-sign a check with Rose to pay a temporary employee. Rose had a law student, who was also working for him, qualified at the bank to sign the check. Rose contends that the board did not disagree with the amount or the ap- propriateness of the check, and should not have made an issue out of it. The board didn't understand that one staff attorney was creating a situation to show that Rose and the staff didn't get along, thereby creating a need for a new director. ' "THE BOARD looked at trivial ad- ministrative details which are perhaps typical to any office and lumped those together with the important resource allocation and macro-planning function (of director)," Rose said. . Informal communication between the six staff attorneys and the director did not necessitate formal staff meetings, he said. He added that "camaraderie and playfulness" characterized the of- fice atmosphere, except right before board meetings. Jimmy Flaum, a former MSA treasurer responsible for allocating payments to Legal Services, said the allegations regarding poor bookkeeping practices were trivial and should not have part of the review. "It's common for an enterprise to get a tax penalty and the office only sustained one in 11 years," he said. ROSE AND THE board seem to disagree on exactly what a director should be doing. No formal guidelines were established by the program's by- laws or the board of directors. Accor- ding to the board's documents ex- plaining its findings and conclusions, the director should be responsible for administrative detail. But Rose said, "I think management is more competent if it focuses on ob- jectives rather than procedures." Rose appealed his removal to the Michigan Student Assembly last fall. An MSA review committee concluded in January that the board could not cite any irresponsible conduct which would have called for Rose's removal. Accor- ding to committee member Rich Layman, the reasons given for Rose's removal were '"unfounded allegations." He said they were largely a result of a board consisting of "primarily nonprofessionals" who had no, basis for deciding if the office was running effectively. ALTHOUGH MSA did not adopt it, the review committee submitted a resolution censuring the board for its actions. If the board later finds it was not right in appointing a new director, Nichols will remain with Legal Services as a staff attorney with the same salary of $28,000, Chambers said. Since the board first issued its decision in December 1981, Rose has been handling the Housing Law Reform unit while Paul Teich, a staff attorney and board member, coordinated the administrative work of the office. ACCORDING TO board member Helen Gallagher, "Jon considers him- self, and is, a very strong advocate for housing law reform. In our judgement, that is where his skills best serve the student body." Numerous University students with whom Rose worked on landlord-tenant cases praised his talent. Brian Donahoe who was involved in the first rent- control agreement arranged by a tenants union, said of Rose: "Jonathan really believes in Student Legal Ser- vices. He put a lot of time and effort and Legal Services money into (the agreement) and that is an excellent use of resources," he said. Another student, Roy Cohen, called Rose "an extremely good lawyer, who was very much concerned with student interests and causes." BOARD AND STAFF members prefer to put an end to the controversy and begin fresh with a new director, working toward improving the effec- tiveness of the program. Nichols said, "My whole hope is that we will be able to work together." She also said, "I see myself as a successor to the battle scene and I would just as soon not become part of an ongoing bat- tle," she said. Soviet rates beat OPEC oil prices (Continued from Page 1) Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani hinted, however, that a price war could still erupt if non-OPEC Britain slashed the price of North Sea oil again. "IT WOULD be serious because definitely Nigeria would follow suit and, if so, OPEC as a group will have to reduce their prices," Yamani said. On Feb. 1, the Soviet Union fired the* first salvo in the threatened price war - a $2.15 cut - after OPEC deadlocked on pricing at a Jan. 25 summit. Egypt, whose oil competes with Russian crude, responded by cutting its prime export crude by $2 a barrel. Then on Feb. 19, Britain, the world's fifth largst producer, announced a price cut of $3 to $30.50 a barrel for its high quality North Sea crude. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Philadelphia commuter rail unions join area transit strike PHILADELPHIA-Members of 12 railroad unions went on strike in the Philadelphia area yesterday, cutting off train service for 50,000 commuters, but a more massive transit walkout that would have affected 400,000 other people in the city was averted at the last moment. The strike by about 1,500 members of the railworkers unions was the Nor- theast's third major commuter rail strike in two weeks. Two other walkouts continued to affect 155,000 commuters in the New York City area and parts of Connecticut and New Jersey. Negotiators for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority and Transport Workers Union Local 234, representing Philadelphia's bus, trolley and subway workers, reached an agreement about an hour after their contract expired at 12:01 a.m. yesterday. The TWU's 5,200 members refused to honor the picket lines of the 12 com- muter rail unions, whose members walked off the job after their midnight contract deadline. "The only reason the TWU got their contract was because of us," said Frank Gavin, 36, a railworker walking a picket line. "They never would have gotten 19 percent (pay increase over three years) without us, and then they left us on the street. Miami at odds over riot cause MIAMI-Police and black leaders were at odds yesterday on the cause of disturbances in the Liberty City ghetto, where two nights of violence resulted in more than 50 arrests. Authorities said the trouble started Sunday when police tried to get about 500 young blacks to lower the volume on their music at an unauthorized street dance, which officers said may have been organized by drug dealers. Black leaders said the rock and bottle throwing that resulted when police attempted to pull the plug on the "sandlot disco" was simply a reflection of the racial tensions that have been building in the community over the fatal police shootings of five blacks during the past several months. Ray Fauntroy, leader of the Miami chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said yesterday it was. "ridiculous" to think the violence was not racially motivated. "We've said this so many times. All the music was an excuse," he said. "It just served as a spark which people used to vent their anger at injustice, at the police. "To isolate this and say it was just a result of loud music at a party would be wrong and even dangerous. Nobody should underestimate the fury out there. We warned this would happen, and we know it will again. Continued production gains reaffirm economic recovery WASHINGTON-A surge in auto production lifted America's factory out- put 0.3 percent in February, the third month of improvement despite sharp cutbacks in the unsettled oil industry, the Federal Reserve Board said yesterday. The month's gain was far weaker than January's revised 1.3 percent im- provement, yet kept alive a string of increases that began in December. "It confirms the December end of the recession," a jubilant Commerce Department chief economist Robert Ortner said. "February is a pleasant surprise." Jack Lavery, chief economist for Merrill Lynch & Co., said the new in- crease "reinforces the notion that the recovery is very much a reality." In fact, he said, overall economic growth-as measured by inflation-ad- justed gross national product-could soar at an annual rate as high as 6 per- cent in the January-March quarter, the fastest pace in two years. Burford escapes prosecution WASHINGTON-Attorney General William French Smith yesterday vir- tually ruled out criminal prosecution of Anne Burford, saying that "Congress has done very well" in getting documents she withheld from House investigators. But Smith's insistence on not prosecuting contempt of Congress charges against the former Environmental Protection Agency chief produced several angry exchanges and a warning that the next executive branch of- ficial who won't cooperate with Congress may not be so lucky. "This matter is a matter that isn't going to go away," Rep. Peter Rodino (D-N.J.), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said. "We really are searching for an answer because it is going to occur again." As he left a committee hearing on the Justice Department's $3.4 billion budget request, the attorney general was asked by a reporter if the Reagan administration's agreement to give Congress the EPA documents it sought ruled out prosecution of Burford. "The case has been settled," he said. "You'll have to come to your own conclusion." Senate delays defense vote WASHINGTON-Senate Republicans yesterday reluctantly postponed critical votes on defense spending in hopes of working out sharp differences with President Reagan, while House Democrats announced a "consensus" budget blueprint of their own for fiscal 1984. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and other Democratic leaders spelled out a Democratic alternative budget calling for much slower growth in defense spending than Reagan wants, additional spending for domestic programs, and new job-training and education programs. "This is a consensus budget," O'Neill said of the $863.5 billion plan, con- ceding there are still some differences among Democrats on increasing tax revenues and other issues. Reagan's budget proposal is $848.5 billion. Vol. XCIII, No. 129 Wednesday, March 16, 1983 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. 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