2~ itt *rni Weather Tonight: Partly cloudy, low around 20' Tomorrow: Increasing clouds, high around 40°. One hundred four years of editorial freedom Friday March 3, 1995 Balanced-budget amendment fails in Senate by 2 votes From Staff and Wire Repons WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday narrowly defeated a pro- posed constitutional amendment to balance the budget, ending more than a month of increasingly bitter rheto- ric and scuttling the centerpiece of the publicans' agenda for overhauling e government. The 65 to 35 vote, two votes shy of the two-thirds majority necessary to adopt a constitutional amendment, marked a setback for Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole and other Republi- can leaders who championed the cause but could not overcome Democratic charges that the measure would lead to "looting"the Social Security trust fund. Dole postponed the final vote for two days in a desperate bid to find the 67th vote necessary for a two-thirds majority. But in the end, Oregon Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, the lone Republi- can holdout, and one or two Demo- crats who might have turned the tide, refused to budge. As the roll was called in the hushed, packed Senate chamber, with practi- cally all the senators seated at their desks, Hatfield sat directly behind Dole, with his jaw set and his hands gripping the arms of his chair. When the clerk finally called out "Mr. Hatfield," the silver-haired Appropria- tions Committee chairman rose and, in a whisper, said, "No," signaling to Dole and everyone else in the chamber that the amendment was dead. Fourteen Democrats joined with 52 Republicans in the failed effort to pass the amendment. At the last minute, Dole switched his vote to no in a parliamentary maneuver that will permit him to bring up the amend- ment again some time before the 1996 campaign heats up. Michigan's senators split their votes on the amendment. "I cannot vote for a constitutional amendment which raids the Social Security trust fund surplus to cover up a huge deficit," Democratic Sen. Carl Levin said in a statement. GOP Sen. Spence Abraham voted for the amendment. At the White House, President Clinton told reporters the balanced- budget amendment failed "because Republicans could not provide enough Democratic senators with the simple guarantee that Social Security would be protected in any balanced-budget amendment procedures." "President Clinton knows best!" Dole said. "He is saying to the Ameri- can people: You want something else - higher taxes, higher debt." Presidential politics were an obvi- ous subtext to yesterday's historic * vote, as Dole and other Republican Man charged with seria rapes, murder By Frank C. Lee Daily Staff Reporter Ervin D. Mitchell Jr. was charged Pterday with one count of first-de- g 'ee murder and four counts of first- degree criminal sexual conduct in con- nection with a series of Ann Arbor rapes. Mitchell,33, remained unemotional as he pleaded not guilty to all counts in Washtenaw County's 15th District Court. Magistrate George Parker sched- uled the preliminary examination for Wjirch 15. "First-degree murder in Michigan carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole," saidWashtenaw County Prosecutor Brian Mackie. "Criminal sexual conduct in the first degree carries any term of years - up to life." Mitchell is being held in the Washtenaw County Jail on $50,000 bond awaiting an April 3 trial date for *ault and purse-snatching charges stemming from a separate Christmas Eve attack on an Ann Arbor woman. He was denied bond yesterday in the latest criminal charges. "The court feels there's a very good likelihood that the defendant would flee given the opportunity," Parker said. "That's the reason for the denial of bond." sexually assaulted Oct. 13 near Com- munity High School. At the arraignment, the magistrate advised Mitchell of his legal rights and once again appointed Lankford as Mitchell's legal representative. Mackie will likely serve as prosecutor in these new criminal charges. "It's a matter of scheduling and availability," Mackie said. "The pre- sumption is the charges and trials will be separate. However, there will be instances where the defense, for their own tactical reasons, wants casesjoined and they may move for that." The murder and sexual-assault charges are the culmination of a frus- tratingand lengthy manhunt fora serial rapist in Ann Arbor. "As with any other case, we charge when it's appropriate - that is when we think we can prove our case,, Mackie said. Lankford said. '1 think, realisti- cally, I have to deal with them one at a time. Clearly the more serious charges are the ones (Mitchell was arraigned on). As far as the time goes. the at- tempted unarmed robbery is first in line as far as the trial date." In several media interviews, Mitchell has maintained that he is inno- cent, despite mounting circumstantial See MITCHELL, Page 2 Washtenaw County Prosecutor Brian Mackie speaks to the press after Mitchell's arraignment. Mitchell was wearing a bloody glove at the time of his arrest Christmas Day. DNA tests conducted on the glove, which was allegedly used in the rob- bery attempt, have linked Mitchell to four of the five Ann Arbor rapes that occurred during a 2 1/2 year period. One of the victims died as aresult of herinjuries. No bodily fluids were found on the last known victim, who was leaders sought to shift blame for the defeat of the popular amendment to President Clinton, while Dole's chief GOP rival, Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, sought to upstage Dole. During a news conference after the vote, Dole was asked whether Repub- licans might support a proposal to pre- vent Congress from using Social Se- curity trust fund surpluses to reduce the deficit. Dole snapped: "We have a President who has abdicated responsi- bility... If we had a real President down there we might think about it." 'U' pres. to testify on state budget ® Duderstadt to address changes in college funding By Cathy Boguslaski and Zachary M. Rami Daily Staf Reporters~ For more than 20 years, Michigan State University and the University of Michigan have received equal fund- ing from the state, but Gov. John Engler's proposed state budget could break that balance. University President James J. Duderstadt will testify in Lansing to- day to address that possibility. If approved by the Legislature, Engler's budget proposal would give Michigan State University $10 mil- lion more in state appropriations than the University. Duderstadt will testify before the House Appropriations subcommittee on higher education and the standing committee on higher education. The president will take.a non-par- tisan approach as a representative of the state's research universities, said University spokeswoman Kim Clarke. "He'll be speaking about the past two or three decades in state funding and what it's doing to higher education in the state," she said. "He will say that Michigan's state universities have dif- ferent, but distinct and important roles to the state of Michigan." Duderstadt told the University Board of Regents at its February meet- ing that the proposal would break an equilibrium that has been beneficial to both universities and may jeopar- dize the cooperative environment that has developed between them. The president of Michigan State University, M. Peter McPherson, will also testify to the committees. "We want the president of each university to tell us what information they believe we need as a legislative appropriations committee to make informed decisions of their universi- ties," said Rep. Donald Gilmer (R- Augusta), who chairs both the House Appropriations Committee and its subcommittee on higher education. In other words, the presidents will explain "Why they believe (they) should be entitled to more," Gilmer said. The larger appropriations increase for MSU - 7.5 percent compared to the University's 3 percent - was based on Carnegie evaluations of Michigan universities. The Carnegie classifications rate universities ac- cording to the amount of federal fund- ing received and number of doctoral degrees granted, among other factors. Engler's budget gives additional funds to Michigan schools that rank lowest in funding in their particular classification. At the regents' meet- ing, University administrators said they do not feel the Carnegie classifi- cations were the most accurate means of determining funding. "We think a university should be funded by its mission," Provost and Executive Vice President for Aca- Resident challenges A executive sessions Ervin D. Mitchell Jr. enters 15th District Court yesterday afternoon to face charges of first-degree murder and four counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. Preliminary DNA tests link Mitchell to a series of Ann Arbor rapes that occurred during a 2 1/2 year period. New party to run MSA candidates By Maureen Sirhal Daily Staff Reporter The Ann Arbor City Council faces t another legal matter as a retired city employee has filed two com- plaints against the council for violat- ing the Michigan Open Meetings Act of 1976 during two of its executive sessions last month. An executive session is closed to the public under the special exemp- tion clauses of the Michigan statute that requires open meetings for gov- mental bodies. The council has had a few prob- lems with its closed executive ses- sions during the past few weeks. At the Feb. 21 council meeting, several mem- bers voted against holding an execu- tive session because they believe that information was leaked to outsiders. "Information was immediately handed to people not involved. That is a reprehensible violation," said *uncilmember Elisabeth Daley (D- 5th Ward). Other members agreed for differ- ent reasons. "I voted not to go into executive session that night," said Councilmember Peter Nicolas (D-4th Ward). "I have never been in favor of executive session except in rare cases." Retired city employee Robert Peer -J filed the complaints on Feb. 17, stat- ing that the council violated the Open Meetings Act on two occasions. "I filed complaints on separate meetings. According to the Open Meetings Act, the separate minutes shall be taken by the city clerk or a designated secretary of the closed session, and there was no one taking minutes," Peer asserted. The complaints were filed in re- sponse to decisions by the Committee on the Deferred Compensation Pro- gram. The program is a retirement plan in which two companies offered con- sulting services for retired city employ- ees. The plan was discussed with an outside attorney in the closed sessions. The committee on the program fired one of the companies, Diversi- fied Financial Consulting, without conferring with participating employ- ees. The other company, ICMA, will be retained. "I think the committee has a hid- den agenda. When they fired Diversi- fied, they moved between $3 and 5 million from that company to the other one, ICMA " Peer said. Many council members maintain that their executive sessions were not in violation of the act and further state that it was the retired workers' disap- The Open Meetings Act The act onfy allows closets meetings under select circumnstances. For example when discussing: I disciplinary actions of employees or students; colletive bargining U real est a tions; or, U pending litigation with outside council where an open meeting would cause financial harm. pointment over the committee's deci- sion that prompted Peer to file the complaints. "I voted to go into executive ses- sion on the advice of the city attor- ney." said Councilmember Jane Lumm (R-2nd Ward). "This is the kind of material that is exempted from discussion in the Open Meetings Act." Councilmember Christopher Kolb (D-5th Ward) said that the council has the right to hold a closed session to discuss legal matters where outside attorneys are involved. "In this case the information was attorney-client privilege and is confidential," he said. Peer said the Michigan State po- lice are investigating the complaints and the detectives' report will be re- leased to the county prosecutor's of- fice in the next few days. He said the prosecutor may then bring charges against the council depending on the outcome of the report. By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter The Maize and Blue, a new cam- pus political party, has entered the race for the Michigan Student Assembly's executive office seats. Pledging to concentrate on issues that directly impact the student body, Engineering junior Mark Biersack and LSA sophomore Chris Hanba are run- ning for president and vice president, respectively. Neither Biersack nor Hanba cur- rently holds a seat on MSA, but Biersack served during the fall term of 1992 with the Conservative Coali- tion party. "I'm getting involved again because I see around campus a lot of things I'd like to work on before I graduate," Biersack said. "I think we can bring to MSA a new way of looking at the same issues. We haven't been involved, but we're not ignorant." One of the most drastic sugges- tions on the Maize and Blue platform is a proposal to eliminate the party system. "It's not a group of students help- ing another group of students right now," Hanba said. "It's become basi- cally counter-productive in all the bickering." Biersack and Hanba plan to elimi- nate parties by revising the MSA-com- piled code. Currently the code allows a party to be formed from five or more candidates or representatives from three or more schools. "We want to revise the code to Rose said. Seth Altman, the MSA vice chair of the rules and elections committee, said eliminating parties would violate student rights. "(Prohibiting parties) would be a violation, not of an MSA code, but of the First Amendment right to as- semble," Altman said. "Furthermore, it seems pointless because regardless of eliminating the parties, the ideolo- gies and ideas behind them won't change." The Maize and Blue party pro- posed other changes affecting cur- riculum. Its platform suggests chang- ing the LSA foreign language require- ment to lower the current class mini- mum from four to three terms. The pass/fail option would only be per- mitted for one of the three terms. "I've gone through four terms of a language and once you get to the fourth term there is a basic lack of interest," Hanba said. "In addition, the TAs know we're not inter- ested. With three terms interest will be heightened, Biersack and TAs will do a better job." The candi- dates also hope to see changes in the current math pro- gram. Biersack ' I h I