I rOran 14 Par w lit i Way: Partl cloudy High 56. ow 39, rmorrow Cloudy. High 62. Low 39. Serbs One hundred eight years of editoirzlfreedom Tuesday April 20, 1999 shut down refugee exodus he Washington Post For the second time since NATO began its air war against ugoslavia, authorities in Belgrade abruptly shut down the ow of ethnic Albania refugees from Kosovo to its southern eighbors, cutting off their escape route after days in which :n thousands have fled the province. Only a few hundred f es made the crossing yesterday into Albania, lacedonia or Montenegro. The Belgrade government's decision effectively to close e border added to fears among NATO governments and aid rganizations about the fate of 500,000 to 850,000 displaced hnic Albanian refugees still inside Kosovo, where many of em are believed to be without shelter and running low on )od as Serb-led Yugoslav forces continue to expel whole >mmunities from their homes. As the NATO air campaign entered its 27th day, President I"n asked Congress for an extra $6 billion to finance the Fisive, an amount that members of the House and Senate tid they would meet or even exceed. U.S. officials also ought to persuade NATO allies to consider measures for opping the flow of oil to Yugoslavia from foreign suppliers, ,.. ... including the use of force. U.S. and allied warplanes continued their raids on targets in Kosovo and elsewhere in Yugoslavia - including a gov- ernment headquarters in the country's second-largest city, Novi Sad, that was badly damaged early yesterday morning. Late last night, loud explosions were heard near the city of Nis, Yugoslavia's third-largest, according to the official news agency Tanjug. Although bad weather forced the cancellation of some NATO missions, officials in Washington and at NATO head- quarters in Brussels pronounced themselves pleased with the progress of the air war, which is aimed at forcing the govern- ment of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to pull its troops out of Kosovo and permit the safe return of refugees under the protection of an international peacekeeping force. At the same time, NATO officials reversed themselves after five days of confusion and acknowledged yesterday that precision-guided bombs from alliance warplanes probably killed a number of ethnic Albanian refugees during attacks last week on two separate columns of vehicles in Kosovo. See KOSOVO, Page 11 'Ualum works t i refugees in Macedonia By Yael Kohen Macedonian border. prehensible, Fink said, Daily Staff Reporter Speaking from Macedonia, Fink while conditions on the adding that Macedonian University graduate Sheri Fink, a doctor of neruosicence and part of Physicians for Human Rights, arrived in Macedonia shortly after NATO forces began bombing the region in an effort to end the atrocities from the war in Kosovo. Fink currently is part of the human- itarian effort underway on the said PHR has two objectives - to document human rights violations and to work with local doctors to gather information and provide assistance. "It was really, really horrible," Fink said, remembering her arrival in Macedonia. The problems in Kosovo are incom- border are terrible, she cannot even imagine the conditions in Kosovo. After arriving in Macedonia , on March 31, Fink found 50,000 refugees representing every element of society - from farmers to profes- sors huddled together - stranded on the border, exhausted from spending a week in a mudpit. Person after person See DOCTOR, Page 2 ydney r epares or 2000 E)Iympics y Adam Brian Cohen aily Staff Reporter DNEY, Australia The Games re coming and this city is getting ready. On Sept. 15, 2000, Sydney will host he 2000 Summer Olympics, which one fficial described as the "biggest event hat has ever hit Australia." The games ill showcase one of Australia's most opulated and developed cities to the iore than one million spectators, 5,000 athletes and 15,000 media and aff who will flock down under for the g d festivities. - less than a year before the iain event - developments and con- truction can be seen from one end of he city to the other. Commercial dvertisements plaster downtown uildings, with the city dolling out eco- omic incentives to companies that use tie Olympic logo. "It's the biggest upgrade (in Sydney) his century'" said Kathryn Pearson, City finey Council's Program officer in he 2-year-old Olympic Program Office. A light at the end of the tunnel Programs aim for diversity California, Texas schools automatically admit top high school graduates By Nika Schulte Daily Staff Reporter In the aftermath of court and voter decisions to eliminate race as a factor in admissions at several universities across the country, administrators are finding alternative plans to ensure diversity on their campuses and acces- sibility to all applicants. Last month, the University, of California system Board t of Regents approved a plan guaran- teeing admis- sion to the top 4 percent of California state high * school stu- dents to one of UC's eight undergraduate campuses. The plan, pushed by California Gov. Gray Davis, was implemented in an attempt to make more students eligible for admission. This is the first change in the admissions policy since the 1995 ban passed by the UC regents eliminating race as a factor in the admissions process. In 1997, Texas lawmakers passed a bill requiring the state's public universi- ties to grant automatic admission to all high school students graduating in the top 10 percent of their high school class. Texas state legislators passed the law to counter the effect of the 1996 Hopwood ruling which eliminated the use of race in admissions and financial aid at Texas' public universities. Administrators from both schools champion these plans as creating a level playing field by admitting students from a wide range of racial and eco- nomic backgrounds. But results from The Michigan Daily Student Survey show University stu- dents do not approve of programs simi- lar to these. In initial results from the survey _- a sample representing 87 percent of the student population - only 38 percent of respondents said they approve of programs that automatically admit a top percentage of high school graduates to state universities. The survey was conducted by the Daily in conjunction with the Institute for Social Research and Department of Communication Studies. Results of the survey are based on 873 interviews con- ducted with a stratified probability sam- ple of all currently enrolled students. The sample was drawn by the Registrar's Office and is weighted to account for demography. Interviews were conduct- ed between March 30 and April 13. The margin of error due to sampling is + 4 percentage points and it larger for subsamnples. Subgroups of survey respondents, who identified themselves as receiving financial aid or affiliation with the Greek community, also showed only marginal approval for the use of pro- grams like those in California and Texas. LSA junior Adam Weber, a survey respondent, said he does not think the admissions programs are appropriate. "Colleges should look at applicants on an individual basis," Weber said. "Colleges are always saying they want well rounded individuals. Just being in the top doesn't guarantee that.: While survey respondents indicated they do not approve of the programs, Augustine Garza, deputy director of admissions at University of Texas at Austin, said the top 10 percent plan is working well. Garza said that more Asian, black and Latino/a students were admitted for the 1999 school year than the previous year, a change Garza said he is happy to see. "Every institution wants diversity, but the law won't let us achieve it through the previous methods," he said. See SURVEY, Page 10 LX) - 2000 OLYmpics SYDNEY Anti ci pat i n g enormous crowds for the 2000 S u m m e r Olympics,sur- rounding univer- sities and schools JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily LSA senior Leah Dawson crawls through an Inflated tunnel yesterday during Senior Days in the Diag. Today marks the last day of class for all students before the summer break. SACUAdebates rights to intellectual prope rty ave decided to shut down for the James. "I think it would be a nightmare for ee to get to" the university, said Aeg Brewer, University of New South Vales executive officer to the academ- e board. UNSW hosts about 50 Jniversity of Michigan students for tudy abroad each semester. During the Olympics, many tour- uiding, hosting and driving jobs will pen to students familiar with Sydney's oads and the organization of the city. "We don't want students to be disad- JAged during that time," Brewer said. They should be able to take advantage f the casual paid work positions of the ames to be able to fully participate." University of Michigan students cur- "ently studying abroad in Sydney also ire being asked to apply for the part- See OLYMPICS, Page 7 By Nick Faizone Daily Staff Reporter The University has many ways of generating revenue independent of tuition and state appropriations, includ- ing funds spawned from the inventions of faculty mem- bers. But debate recently has been sparked on campus regard- ing the alteration of the percentage of faculty compensation if the invention is successful. Mary Mandeville, a Senate Advisory Committee for University Affairs research associate, said if a faculty mem- ber invents something while employed by the University, they are obligated to sign an agreement to give the rights of the "intellectual property" -- the invention - to the University. The faculty member and the University then agree upon a set percentage of the invention's revenue that the inventor receives, Mandeville said, when the creation is introduced to the world. But at the invention's introduction, Mandeville said many faculty members are unaware of the true value of their creation. "Sometimes you don't know if it's a good thing or not if it's worth $10,000 or $10,000,000," Mandeville See SACUA, Page 17 THE BARE ESSENTIALS Students, 'U' work to make Naked Mile safe As another school year comes to an end, so does the daily production of The Michigan Daily. Look for the Daily's Summer Weekly beginning May 4, with *tinuing coverage of Ann Arbor I the University. We'll be back in the fall to bring you coverage of the beginning of the lawsuits against the University's admissions policies, the review of the Code of Student Conduct and another ly O'Connor aff Reporter at do you get when you take an innocent jog ;h town, add drunk euphoria and hundreds of -sity seniors on the verge of graduation and :t their clothing? answer - the Naked Mile, a time-honored sity tradition celebrating the end of the ter and the end of college for many students. recent years, the size and safety of the famous te come into question, prompting some stu- - +n - -+~nc teir nw xvil l A-i-teynun national attention, the crowds of spectators are more unruly than ever. This behavior, she said, can jeopar- dize runners' safety. Seamon has recruited more than 200 volunteers who will line the runners' path to lookout for broken glass and other objects that could be safety hazards and com- municate with other organizers by walkie-talkie in case someone is injured and needs medical attention. But the ultimate responsibility for safety lies with Naked Mile participants, Seamon said. "If you're going to run, run smart," she said, list- ino a fewu tins for runners to keen in mind. "Carry I 1I - . Pc 4 r