I E 'trail News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 764-0554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 One hundred eight years of edtorial freedom Friday January 22, 1999 ; C I X , il. illilig4liffi A A ,g11I ay 1' facul get highest '98-'99 salary increase By Jaimie Winkler Daily Staff Reporter For a third straight year, the average pay increase for University faculty remained higher than administration and staff increases. M e University released its 1998-99 s~y report yesterday revealing this year's pay rates for University faculty, administration, deans and staff. On average, faculty salary changes reflected an increase of 4.7 percent. The University deans received average increases of 3.96 percent. University staff pay increases averaged 3.8 percent and University executive officers received average salary increases of Regents hold first 2.89 percent. Since July, the Office of the Provost has been working to generate appropri- ate salary increases. "We are very proud of what we've been able to do over the past six months," University President Lee Bollinger said at yesterday's Board of Regents meeting. Bollinger said the University works to make sure its employees are "fairly" and "meritoriously" compensated. Before the regents proposed and approved Bollinger's merit salary increase of three percent, he asked that they not increase it more than three per- cent to keep in step with the average executive officer and dean's increase. "We are well pleased, on behalf of the University, with the performance of the President," said Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor), reading from a statement issued by the regents. "But strictly in the spirit of - and with great respect for - President Bollinger's desire to emphasize improv- ing the competitiveness of our faculty's salaries, the board has agreed to hold the President's increase to a percentage below that of the average faculty increases.: Bollinger's new salary of $295,996 places him ahead of of former University President and Engineering Prof. James Duderstadt, whose salary rose from $282,214 to $292,797. ' Duderstadt has fallen from his top position on the 1995-96 list of the University's highest paid employees with a salary of $260,709 to his current ranking of No. 6. The 1996-1997 year report marked the first year the administration received percentages of salary increases lower than the faculty. In 1996-97 the faculty received a 4.4 percent increase while the administration received a 4 percent increase. The gap widened until 1998-1999, when the average salary increase for the See SALARY, Page 2 'U' Top 10 highest paid employees 8 Gilbert Omenn, executive vice president for medical affairs: $515,000 ® Larry Warren, executive director of University Hospitals and Health SCenters: $360,500 N Mark Orringer, department head of Thoracic Surgery and prof. Thoracic Surgery: $348,045 1 Lazar Greenfield, chair of department of Surgery and Surgery prof.: $340,o113 " Lee Bolinger President of the University and Law Prof.: $295,996 James Duderstadt, Engineering prof. and former president of the University: $292,797' t Lloyd Carr, Michigan football coach: $280,000 2 Tom Goss, Director of Intercollegiate Athletics: $275,000 I A rnold Coran, head of Pediatric Surgery: $273.212 2 Paul Lichter, department chair Ophthalmology: $269,948 ashingon woes meeting 8f year U New computer system presented at Board of Regents meeting. V ichaol Grass Staff Rp rter In their first meeting of the new year, newly elected Regents Kathy White (D-Ann Arbor) and David Brandon (R- Ann Arbor), along with the rest of the University Board of Regents discussed yesterday the progress of updating new administrative computer systems. More than $9.5 million will be needed to finish the implementa- tion of M- Pathways, the University's con- solidated computer administration sys- Brandon tem, which is being introduced in stages. The new systems will replace com- p systems that are becoming out- dated. Most of the older systems have been in use for more than a quar- ter of a century. Laura Patterson, director of the M- Pathways project, presented to the regents the accom- White p ments of M- Pa1hways to date, the problems that have arisen and the costs accumulated. ' When completed after the turn of the century, M-Pathways will link comput- er systems froh different areas of the University including physical resource management, research, human resources, student affairs and financial information. 4atterson said the systems needed to ompletely overhauled because it would have been difficult to upgrade the systems for new features and tech- nologies and for year 2000 problem compliance. "We were going to loose our ability to compete for the best students, facul- ty, and research dollars," she said, adding that the overlap in computer systems has led to numerous "data redundancy across the University. "We should throw (the old sys- t#) out and put in place a new data structure that can be used and shared across the University," Patterson said. Currently, more than $30.5 million has been spent on implementing the M-Pathwvays system, mainly on con- sulting and contracting. Another $4.9 million has been spent on the soft- ware itself. e first implementation of M- Pways involved hospital physical asset management of University Hospitals in October 1996. More systems have become available over time, most recently one last semes- ter involving application process- inn. Lawyers for Clinton wrap up defense By Mike Spahn Daily Staff Reporter WASHINGTON - Amid growing speculation over the future of the Senate impeachment trial of President Clinton, the White House Defense team closed its case yesterday, calling the attack on the President dangerous and nightmarish. Former Sen. Dale Bumpers (D-Ark.) closed the proceedings with an address that - in addition to returning a little laughter to the chamber - provided histo- ry lessons, literary allusions and an elo- quent assessment of the meaning of the Constitution. Bumpers' speech, which was called the greatest ever presented on the Senate floor by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), attacked pieces of the House case against the President, but mainly focused on the Constitutional standard for impeach- ment. "A decision to convict holds the poten- tial to destabilize the office of the President forever," Bumpers said. He added that the "most intense investi- gation ... by anyone in history" did not provide the necessary means for convic- tion, and at this point is very dangerous. "Javert's pursuit of Jean Valjean in Les Miserables pails by comparison," Bumpers said. "There's been nothing but sleepless nights and agony for this family for five years." But while the address drew rave reviews from both Democrats and Republicans, it did not cause a great shift in sentiment from Republicans. As they continued to call for his removal, even Bumpers con- ceded. the President's actions were "inde- fensible, outrageous, unforgivable and shameless." Following Bumper's address, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) praised the former senator's speech but added that he felt bringing in the popular former senator was an attempt to shore up Democratic support. Sen. Tom Harkin(D-la.) dismissed that possibility. "If there were any softness in the Democrats, after the end of yesterday, there was none,' Harkin said. Bumpers' closing address followed an exhaustive examination of the evidence in the case by White House lawyer David Kendall. Kendall focused on the obstruc- tion of justice charge the President faces, reading from testimony and using charts, some his own and others "borrowed"_ from the House managers, in an effort to show that the Republicans' presentation was incomplete. "If you look at the presentation of the House managers you would not be aware of the direct evidence which refutes obstruction of justice," Kendall said. Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.), who chaired the House Judiciary Committee's drafting of the articles of impeachment, said that See TRIAL, Page 2 Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) leaves the Senate chamber yesterday to speak with reporters. WARREN ZINN/ Daily Experts: Clinton plan a quick fix The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Clinton's flashy new plan for bol- stering the Social Security trust fund may seem attractive politically,. but it is an unusually complex piece of fiscal legerdemain that would probably provide only a modest and temporary fix, budget experts say. With details only now being digested two days after the pres- ident unveiled the plan, fiscal analysts on all sides are describ- ing it as a Rube Goldberg scheme that seems designed largely to postpone any serious reform. Long after Clinton has left office, they say, the White House and Congress will still have to cut some Social Security benefit to restore the health of the trust fund for the longer term. "All of this is blue smoke and mirrors" to avoid tackling the loom- ing Social Security deficit head-on, said Carol Wait, director of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan mon- itoring group. Stanley Collender, head of the Federal Budgeting Consulting Group, which tracks such issues closely, is equally skeptical. "If this isn't a true Rube Goldberg proposal, it's the next thing to it," he said. Officials say the plan would See SECURITY, Page 2 GEO rally focuses on contract negotiations By Nick Falzone Daily Staff Reporter As perturbed graduate student instructors raised signs proclaiming "Without GSIs, U of M dies" high in the air, approximately 225 members of the University community congregated in the Diag yesterday to raise awareness about the Graduate Employment Organization's contract negotiations "It was exactly three months ago that we started negotiation with the administration and they have moved very slowly from the beginning," GEO president Eric Dirnbach said. "We are here to tell the administration and the University community that the members of our union are dissatisfied with the current state of negotiations, and that we want a new contract." Cedric De Leon and other members of GEO protest in order to receive a better GSI contract in front of the LSA building yesterday. - rn