Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom Alt t ~IaIQ SDS Variable cloudiness with a chan- ce of afternoon rain showers. High in the mid-50s. Vol. XCV, No. 151 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, April 10, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Legal services' settlement may hike fee By DEBRA LADESTRO Students r may have to pay 19 cents more per semester next year to support Student Legal Services, in part to cover an out-of-court set- tlement with its former director, Jonathan Rose. Students currently pay $3.24 each term for the legal services, but that fee may be in- creased 9 cents next year to cover inflation and another 10 cents to pay for the $40,000 set- tlement. IF A MAJORITY of the students voting in this week's Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions endorse the fee hike, Student Legal Ser- vices will go to the University regents in May for approval. The out-of-court settlement came on March 26 as a result of several lawsuits filed by Rose against members of Student Legal Services Board of Directors. The board removed him as director of SLS in December 1981 after con- cluding from a series of hearings that he was an incompetent administrator. The board said Rose handled funds carelessly, failed to pay taxes on time, didn't keep financial records in a manner acceptable to the auditor, and paid inadequate attention to important details. But the board recognized Rose's expertise in housing reform law and kept him on staff as director of the Housing Law Reform Project. IN THREE lawsuits filed in Wayne County Circuit Court, Rose charged seven members of the board with making defamatory statements during the hearings leading up to his removal from office. One of two founders of SLS, Rose resigned on March 26. Rose was unavailable for comment. SLS attorney Stanley Pollack, one of the board members named in the law suit, said Rose filed one suit after another over a period of three years in an attempt to pressure the board into giving him some sort of settlement. The other members named in Rose's suits were Thomas Easthope, Molly Reno, Barbara Kessler, Amy Hartman, Stephan Johnson, and David Chambers. "HE THOUGHT he was wronged by the process to demote him," said MSA Vice President Steve Kaplan, the current president of the SLS board. The board did agree to act as one unit so that the board, rather than each individual, would be responsible for paying legal fees, according to Kaplan. The board then decided to give Rose an out- of-court settlement of $40,000, rather than in- vest just as much money in court costs and take time away from their regular jobs to prepare for the case, Kaplan said. ROSE WAS first offered the settlement last summer, Pollack said, but declined. Last mon- th the board renewed its offer and Rose accep- ted it, resigning simultaneously. "My impression was that nobody really wan- ted him to stay, and he wouldn't leave unless they paid him a lot of money," Pollack said. Kaplan said Rose's term on the SLS staff af- ter his demotion created tension among the at- torneys and board members, and that office work can now return to normal. I THINK IT was really sad that it had to end that way," said Jocelyn Frye, an LSA senior who serves as vice president of the board. "'I know Jonathan has done a lot for SLS and students." Pollack was the only board mem'nber who voted against the settlement. "I was vehemen- tly opposed to it," he said, calling the set- tlement a "grossly inappropriate" use of student fees. The board will use its $25,000 surplus from this year's budget to pay Rose. The additional $15,000 will be raised from the extra 10 cents students will be assessed next fall and winter, Kaplan said. Pending student voter approval, the board wil ask the regents to raise student's man- datory fee assessment. Margaret Nichols, current director of SLS, said she is confident the regents will approve the increase. "I think the program is a tremendous economy to the students of the University," she said. "(The regents) are not unaware of the problem we've had. . . I don't think they'll be surprised or concerned about (the fee hike)." Intruder attacks Warsaw priest WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - A nasked man surprised a pro-Solidarity )riest in his home, knocked him out vith a blast of Mace-like gas and bur- ied a V-sign into his chest with cigaret- es, a Catholic official and a union sour- !e said yesterday. Cardinal Franiciszek Macharski of .rahow said in a telex message to the -hurch hierarchy that the Rev. Tadeusz :aleski, 29, was attacked Saturday at us home in the southern Polish city of (rakow. "THE PRIEST was stunned and then his face, hands, and body were bur- ned," Macharski said in a message sent to Polish Primate Jozef Glemp and Ar- chbishop Bronislaw Dabrowski, who is secretary of the Polish Episcopate. "The priest, who suffered second- S legree burns, received first-aid treat- ment from the abulane crew," he said. An independent Solidarity source reached in Krakow by telephone said Zaleski was an ardent supporter of the outlawed union. THE INCIDENT came a few weeks after the car of another pro-Solidarity cleric was stoned in. Krakow and six months after dissident Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko was slain by three secret police agents in northern Poland. The Solidarity source said Zalesko was walking to the basement, in his house when he was confronted by a masked man and knocked out with a Mace-like gas from a small container. "The priest collapsed and later woke up in pain as his hand and body were on fire," said the source. - "A V-SIGN was burned out on his breast" by about 30 cigarette burns, the source said. Solidarity sympathizers use the V- sign symbol by raising two fingers during rallies and anti-state demon- strations in defiance of communist authorities. The cardinal called on authorities to find the priest's assailant and assure the church that the incident would not be repeated. Macharski said the church and the more than 700,000 residents of Kradow were "shocked and concerned" by the attack, especially following Pop- jeluszko's murder. All rhtl Activism returns to campuses By KERY MURAKAMI After a decade-long lull in student ac- tivism transformed college campuses, around the country into what Abbie Hoffman calls "hotbeds of social rest," activism seems to be making a rebound. At the University of Colorado yester- day, 30 students in the latest of a recent surge in CIA protests, were arrested af- ter they crossed police lines outside in- terviews by CIA recruiters. THE ARRESTS serve as a preface for the disciplinary hearing of six Yale students who were arrested after protesting CIA recruitment on their campus in March. Representatives for six colleges around the country are using the occasion to support the protesters in a rally and vigil tomorrow, and to discuss forming a national campus movement against the CIA. Eight other schools, including the University, have sent letters of support to be read at the vigil. "Michigan's .protesters support Yale's actions," reads the letter written by University graduate Tom Marx. "The Progressive Student Network plans to continue opposing CIA recruitment on campus." The letter applauds the formation of a national CIA resistance network. STUDENT protests also entered their eighth day in New York yesterday, where up to 50 students and non- students continue to blockade Hamilton Hall in protest of Columbia University's holdings in South African stocks. Columbia has $39 million invested in companies that do business in South Africa. According to Tanaquiel Jones, a Columbia University senior and one of the organizers of the protests, Colum- bia University obtained a temporary restraining order on Monday, and if it succeeds in obtaining a permanent restraining order today, it can have the protesters arrested. "I would hope that they do not arrest us, that they divest their stocks, but I don't think they'll allow us to stay here forever'," Jones said. He-added that administrators have had to take an underground passage in- to the hall to get to their offices. The protesters have chained the front door. JONES, speaking from a pay phone taken over by the protesters at the university, said that morale among the protesters was high and growing, and said that most were willing to be arrested. "This is a minor sacrifice," said Jones, "sleeping on the concrete steps of Hamilton Hall and putting our academic careers on the line, com- pared with what the blacks in South Africa have to go through." Jones hoped that the example of the protesters would serve to "inspire" students around the nation. "This is the least Americans should do about the See STUDENTS, Page 3 Daily Photo by BRAD MILLS LSA senior Byron Roberts (left) receives an achievement award yesterday from University President Harold Shapiro. Roberts was one of 48 students honored at the Student Recognition Award ceremony in the Michigan League. Students receive awrd By RACHEL GOTTLIEB University President Harold Shapiro yesterday gave first-year law student Eric Schnaufer an achievement award at the student recognition awards ceremony for his effort in fighting the proposed code of non-academic conduct and increasing student awareness -work that forced Shapiro to o code. Forty-eigh groups re recognitionf the Univers extra-curri ceremony i Ballroom. S ts and two Ten best 'U' T good batch of rder ther of the received the more honorable rewriting achievement plaques for outstanding contributions. ht students and 11 student FOR THE last five years, the award ceived certificates of committee presented only for their contributions to achievement plaques. Last year, uacommuity t shrough however, the committee decided to cular activities in a give out certificates as well so that n the Michigan League more people could be recognized. seventeen of the 48 studen- of the 11 groups also "By offering the certificates we are able to recognize more students than we did in the past when only plaques were given out,"'said David Mitchel- Yellin, administrator of the program. A s.A The sponsors of the award ceremony include the Office of - Student Services, the Comprehensive Ni ninei's Studies/Opportunity Program, and the Michigan League. "The recognition awards are a ith awards of $750 at a singular distinction," said Shapiro. cheo inthe ichga "It demonstrates a commitment cheon in the Michigan made by students to something rday. beyond themselves." the University's prized ANY GROUP or individual could be Scanlan, who has joint nominated for the awards. This year, s in the English depar- a total of 131 individuals and 30 groups e Pilot Program. He has were nominated for the awards. A ductory and upper-level screening committee makes the final courses, argumentative decision on who receives certificates akespeare, fiction, 20th and plaques. ature, and Language of Court date set for billboard protesters Ify NADINE LAVAGNINO Recipe for a winning teaching assistant: Graduate student who has studied at one or two of the world's top universities and who, though young, is renowned for original research. Add a dose of creativity. And combine the mix with an admirable rapport with students. Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost, presen- ted a perfect batch of teaching assistants w special lun League yeste ONE OFI TAs is John appointments tment and th taught introd composition writing, Sha century liter By NANCY DRISCOLL Judge Pieter Thomassen of the 15th District Court set May 23 as the date for the jury trial of LSA junior Jennifer Ak- firat and Ann Arbor resident Mary Jane Emanoil. The two women are accused of defacing the Canadian Black Velvet Whiskey billboard near the 200 block of North Main Street. Akfirat and Emanoil, who face fines of up to $100 or 90 days in jail, have pleaded not guilty to a charge of malicious destruction of property. ON MARCH 7, the sign, which depicts a woman in a low-cut black gown and the words "Feel the Velvet," was pain- ted with the slogan, "Objects never, Women forever, Women RISE." Canadian Black Velvet Whiskey has adv.ertised on the billboard for 20 years. The billboard is owned by Central Ad- vertising of Jackson. About 60 people connected with the group RISE (Women Rebelling in a Sexist Environment) filled the cour- troom yesterday in support of Akfirat and Emanoil. They sang "I did it, she did it, we all did it." . THEY PLACED signs with anti- sexism messages around the courtroom but were asked to remove them by Thomassen. See DEFENDANTS, Page 2 See FRYE, Page 3 See CEREMONY, Page 2 TODAY- They're here THEY'RE HERE. No, it's not aliens from outer space, but something just as intriguing. Boxes full of 1985 Michigan Ensian yearbooks arrived this week in all their brown vinyl snlendor at the Gearhead parade THE LEADER of the University of California's Nerds Parade says "It's not what you wear that makes you a nerd, it's what you are underneath that matters." Kevin Lange, waving a T-square as a baton, led fellow engineering students Monday in the march spoofing their reputation as goofy eggheads. Calculator holsters dangling from their belts, pens and mechanical pencils stuffed in shirt pockets and eyeglasses held together with pieces of engineering students are so busy studying they don't even have time to bathe, explained Wally White, another engineering student. True, there are more women taking engineering, but they don't bathe either, he added. The engineers were accompanied by the Cal marching band. Naturally, they were out of step all the way. "We don't dan- ce much," said Dan Ring, who wore navy and red-plaid polyester pants and a brown wool sports jacket. The entire outfit cost $3. .I