2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 27, 1999 NATION/WORLD - - Hormone may reduce at Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - Americans are fatter than ever, with potentially disas- trous consequences for their health, but ijections of the recently discovered hormone leptin can help take some of the fat off, researchers said yesterday at University of California at Los Angeles seminar sponsored by the Amnerican Medical Association. The number of obese Americans - those at least 30 percent over ideal body weight - rose from 12 percent in 1991 to 17.9 percent in 1998, according to researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In a separate study, Tufts University researchers found that 63 percent of men and 55 percent of women over the age of 25 are obese or overweight, the highest rate ever recorded. Such obesity leads directly to at least 280,000 deaths every year and perhaps as many as 374,000, according to a new study from St. Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York City. That makes obesity the second-leading cause of preventable deaths after smoking, said Jeffrey Koplan, director of CDC, and "a devastating public health threat" But there is some hope. Other researchers from St. Luke's have found in the first clinical trial of the widely touted hormone leptin that daily injec- tions produced an average 15-pound loss over a six-month period. The findings are all contained in today's special issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association devoted to obesity. The increase in obesity is somewhat paradoxical, said Phil Fontanarosa, interim co-editor of the journal. Interest in jogging, inline skating, fitness in general, and low-fat, low-calorie foods has never been higher, he noted. Even so, he said, 40 percent of adults engage in virtually no sustained exercise, and the consumption of fast foods is at an all-time high. The i I articles in this week's journal, he added, represent an attempt to get physicians to think more about the problem and to encourage them to offer more counseling to patients about the importance of diet and exercise. The primary findings were from the CDC, where researchers led by Ali Mokdad phoned a randomly selected group of more than 100,000 people each year during the decade. Participants were asked questions about height, weight and smoking, alcohol use and a variety of other behaviors that increase their risk for one or more of the 10 leading causes of death in the United States. "in a scant seven years (from 1991 to 1998), we had a 50 percent increase in obesity in all age groups and in all eth- nic groups," Koplan said. "We've had a steady increase (in obesity) throughout the 20th Century, but this is a remark- ably quick upturn ... We don't have a simple answer why." SAVE A TREE. RECYCLE THE ® DAILY. DAILY# MINORITIES Continued from Page 1. tive board member of th lack Student Union, said many minoritV students lack adequate schooling and resources prior to attending college and are "not ready to compete on an equal level." Calzonzi said many elementary and secondary schools that minorities attend lack resources such as computer access and advanced placement classes. Members of the task force hope to create an atmosphere where public and private sectors make improvements in education, Miller said. Some of these recommendations include development of information and database resources, organizing a consor- tium of colleges and universities to con- sider options for raising achievement levels of minority students, collaborating with community groups outside the school to support young people, con- ducting research on underachievement issues and establishing a panel of experts to explore other options to raise the level of achievement. Educational improvements have to begin early on in school, Miller said. "Obviously you have to start at the bottom," Calzonzi said, stressing the importance of elementary education. Clark said that in the meantime stu- dents should take full advantage of the resources offered to them while at the University including tutoring and coun- seling services and study groups. - Daiy Srcporiwr k'wcl Gpowani contrihcd Io this Report. AROUND THE NATION Dems prefer Gore to Bradley in poll CONCORD, NH. - With an edge in national polls and a folksier approach to campaigning, Al Gore's political team believes he has stopped his slide in the Democratic presidential contest. Trouble is, he hasn't gained ground against rival Bill Bradley where it counts early primary states like New Hampshire. "I haven't seen a major qualitative or quantitative shift in terms of how his cam- paign is doing here,' said Clark Hubbard, political science professor at t* University of New Hampshire. Gore and Bradley campaigned lightly in New Hampshire yesterday, spending the bulk of their day closeted with consultants to prepare for their first head-to- head contest. The pair will participate in a televised forum tonight. The vice president hopes to produce further evidence that his campaign has stopped hemorrhaging. After squandering huge leads in national and state polls, Gore shook up his campaign Sept. 29: He moved his headquarters to Tennessee, weeded out half of his senior staff and jazzed up his public speak- ing style. A USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll published Tuesday showed that Democrats pre- ferred Gore over Bradley 57 percent to 32 percent. Two weeks ago, the margin wa 51-39. STUDY JAPANES E IN ToiiYO! The Waseda/Oregon Transnational Program, January 11- June 23, 2000, is a comparative US-Japan Societies study program that offers three levels of Japanese language instruction and thematic humanities/social science courses that mix US-based and regular Waseda students together in the classroom at Waseda University in Tokyo, Japan. Scholarships up to $1,000 are available. For more information, contact: Waseda/Oregon Programs at (800) 823*7938, info@opie.org, or www opie.org.. GOP disputes delay vote on budget cuts WASHINGTON House Republican leaders put off a vote yes- terday on a plan to cut most proposed government spending this year by 1.4 percent. They did so because of dis- putes within the Republican ranks about how the reductions should be made. House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-Texas) wants the cut to apply solely to administrative expenses. Senate Republican leaders want the cut applied more broadly and want to reduce it to 1 percent. Sone rank-and-file Republicans argue that the 3.4 percent congres- sional pay raises that are to take effect this year should not be exempt from the cuts, as they are in the orig- inal plan. Also exempt are civilian and military pay raises and benefit programs, such as Social Security and Medicare. The across-the-board reductions are needed to fill a $4.6-billion hole in the Republicans' proposed budget. Arme' said he expects a final ver- sion of the proposal to be voted upon by the end of this week. That is when the House will vote on the last of the 13 spending bills that will finance the gov- ernment for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1. San Francisco could ban ATM surcharges SAN FRANCISCO - A proposal to ban those SI to S2 ATM sur- charges goes before voters for the first time next month in Sai Francisco, setting the stage for. court battle. There is little doubt the ban will pass, but it is certain to face a lei challenge from the banking industr7 which contends that federally char- tered banks are not subject to local and state laws. No court in the nation has ruled specifically on an ATM fee ban. San Francisco's referendum is the latest sign of growing consumer outs rage over the cash-machine fees. DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED " WE'RE LOOKINGI FOR AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS WHO WANT TO TAKE LOTS OF PICTURES! * $25 FOR EVERY PHOTO THAT IS ACCEPTED AND OTHER GREAT INCENTIVES DIGITAL CAMERA PROVIDED FOR NON-OWNERS FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT ANNA AT (734) 395-9905 OR VIA EMAiL TO ANNACLIGHTSURF'.CCiM. AROUND THEWR 7 K ' House of Lords surrender many seats LONDON _- After lording it over this land for centuries, the unelected, unaccountable and unpredictable nobil- ity of Britain surrendered their already dwindling powers late last night along with most of their seats in the House of Lords. Instead of bowing to a sovereign, they yielded to a mere politician, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who was determined to bring a whiff of democracy to Parliament's upper cham- ber. Close to the stroke of midnight, the lords accepted the third and final ver- sion of a reform bill that will strip most of the 751 hereditary peers of their right to sit in the ornate upper chamber of Parliament. "The tale is now told," said Lord Strathclyde, leader of opposition Conservative peers. "The past is done. The glass is shattered and it cannot be remade. The prime minister has taken a knife and scored a giant gash across the face of history." If all goes as planned when the bill goes back to the lower House of Commons, only 92 of the hereditary peers will have the right to pull on the ermine robes and attend the Nov Queen's Speech, which opens the next parliamentary session. Indonesian Cabinet lessens mili'tary' role JAKARTA, Indonesia - In a move to sharply reduce the military's political dominance, Indonesia's new preside took the radical step yesterday of appoi ing a civilian to run the Defense Ministry. President Abdurrahman Wahid, whose election by parliament last week marked Indonesia's transition to democracy, announced a Cabinet filled with political neophytes, Islamic party politicians and fewer military officials than ever before. - CompledfiVom Daily wire reports. The Mi bigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via US. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) Is $180.O n-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 7640550 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to dai/y.Ietters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.michigandaily.com. i1-dii 1*1-m V.1 & 1.1 m r! T' rr"U r f r 1 1- T'f'Wl II CVI1 VKIAL , IAtt neal"OF naiillil5y UILVW 111 vnrc" . m NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor EDTORS: Nikita Easley, Katie Plona. Mike Spahn. JaimieWiniler. STAFF: Lindsey Alpert. Jeannie Baumann. Risa Berrin. Marta Brill Nick Bunkley, Anna Clark, Adam Brian Cohen. Shabnam Daneshvar, Sana Danish. Dave Enders. Anand Giidharadas. Robert Gold. Jewel Gopwani. Michael Grass, Elizabetn Kassab. Jodie Kaufman. Jody Simone Kay. Yael Kohen. Lisa Koivu. Dan Krauth. Sarah Lewis. Hanna LoPatin, Kevin Magnuson. Caitlin Nisn. Kelly O'Connor, Jeremy W. Peters. Asma Rafeeq, Nika Schulte. Callie Scott. Emina Sendijarevic. Jennifer Sterling. Shoman Terrelonge-Stone, Samantha Walsh. CALENDAR: Adam Zuwerink. EDITORIAL Jeffrey Kosseff, David Wallace, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Emily Achenbaum. Nick Woomer. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Ryan DePietro. STAFF: Ryan Slay, Chip Cullen. Seth Fisher. Lea Frost, Jenna Greditor, Scott Hunter. Kyle Goodridge. Molly Kennedy. Thomas Kuljurgis, Mike Lopez. George Malik, Steve Rosenberg, Branden Sanz, Killy Scheer. jack Schillaci, Jim Secreto, Jet Singer, Jennifer Strausz, Katie Tibaldi. Marion Weiss, Josh Wickerham, Paul Wong. SPORTS Rick Freeman, Managing Editor EDITORS: TJ. Berka. Chris Duprey, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Latack. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Matthew Barbas, David Den Herder, Sam Duwe, Dan Dingerson, Jason Emeott, Sarah Ensor, Mark Francescutti, Geoff Gagnon. Brian Galvin, Raphael Goodstein, Arun Gopal, Chris Grandstaff. David Horn. Michael Kern, Dena Krischer. Ryan C. Moloney, David Mosse. Stephanie Offen, Jeff Phillips, Kevin Rosenfield, David Roth. Tracy Sandler. Benjamin Singer, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler, Jon Zemke. ARTS Christopher Cousino, Jessica Eaton, Editors WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Jeff Druchniak, Nicole Pearl, Toyin Akinmusuru SUB-EDITORS: Gabe Fauri (Music ,Jenni Glenn (Fine/Peforming Arts}. Caitlin HaII(TV/New Medial. Gina Hamadey (Books), Ed Sholinsky (Film) STAFF: Matthew Barrett, Jason Birchmeier, Alisa Claeys, Cortney Dueweke, Brian Egan. Steven ,ertz, Jewel Gopwani, Chris Kula, Erin Podolsky. Aaron Rich, Adlin Rosli, Chris Tkaczyk. Jonah Victor, Ted Watts, John Uhl. Curtis Zimmermann. PHOTO Louis Brown, Dana Unnane, Edto ASSOCIATE EDITOR: David Rochkind ARTS EDITOR: Jessica Johnson STAFF: Allison Cantor, Sam Hollenshead. Dhani Jones. Danny Kalick, David Katz, Emily. Linn, Marjorie Marshall, Jeremy Menchik, Joanna Paine. Sara Schenk. Michelle Swelnis, Alex Wolk, Kimitsu Yogachi. ONLINE Satadru Pramanik, Managing Editor EDITORS: Toyin Akinmusuru, Rachel Berger, Paul Wong STAFF: Amy Ament. Angela Cummings, Dana Goldberg, James Schiff, Peter Zhou. DESIGNER: Seth Benson BUSINESS STAFF Mark J. Thorford, Business Manage I