'C ~~&t ww rwr veaner ay: Partly cloudy. High 34. Low 23. ,marrow: Sunny. igh 41. One hundred nine years of editoria freedom Tuesday November 30, 1999 linton signs budget, closes divisive session Anand Giridharadas aily Staff Reporter The bitterly divided Congress that faced off er impeachment - and went on to squabble er everything from gun control to HMO form - adjourned this month with a remark- moderate budget deal. a ceremony in the White House Rose arden yesterday, President Clinton signed the nal $385 billion spending package to the cers of members of Congress and his cabinet. "I am proud to sign a bill I believe will give us stronger, better America in the 21st Century." e said, tabling partisanship to congratulate both arties on overcoming division and adjourning amicably. On Capitol Hill last week, each side claimed victory. Republicans touted increased funding for the Pentagon, an across-the-board spending cut at federal agencies and the return of control to local school districts. Democrats hailed the defeat of the GOP's S792 billion tax cut plan and the salvation of Social Security and Medicare. But beneath the flurry of rhetoric, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle left town -- and one of the most divisive sessions in recent memory - with striking proximity on fiscal issues. "It was a pause from the fights of the year," said Marshall Wittman, who tracks Congress for the conservative Heritage Foundation in Washington. "That's as good as it gets when you have an executive and a legislative that loathe each other." On an array of funding questions, from educa- tion to the environment, Democrats and Republicans met halfway, each side tempering - but ultimately adopting - the other's proposals. Their final reconciliation illustrates how a year of scandal and stalemate in Washington - and an increasingly wary electorate - weak- ened party leaders politically and forced them to shelve lofty goals for clean compromise. It also shows how a booming economy and federal budget surplus have made some sem- blance of compromise possible, by giving poli- cymakers an unprecedented opportunity to avert hard choices and pursue once-exclusive goals concurrently. "The parties feel the economy is so good that they can both spend more and still show a sur- plus," said Bill Frenzel, a scholar at the nonpar- tisan Brookings Institute in Washington who represented Minnesota in the House of Representatives for 20 years. The final budget package, adopted over- whelmingly in the House and Senate and signed into law yesterday, reflects three fiscal approach- es - budget cuts, increased spending and deficit reduction - that make for strange bed- fellows. The 13 bills totaling S609 billion that com- prise the budget for the 2000 fiscal year - five of which were' lumped together and cleared to close the session on Nov. 20 - provide a wind- fall of funds for each party's favorite projects. Democrats secured S86 billion in discre- tionary spending and $229 billion in mandatory spending for Medicare and Medicaid programs and restored $12 billion that had been cut from the programs two years ago. In a nod to environmentalists, Democrats also won passage of S470 million for government purchases of scenic or environmentally sensitive land that is threatened by development. See BUDGET, Page 7 U' Predicts ecine in inority umb ers Report of minority nrollment to be eleased as soon as omorrow y Michael Grass aily Staff Reporter fer delaying the release of its rehensive enrollment report for ore than a month, the University ould release the report sometime this eek. University spokesperson Julie Peterson said Minort the report ( r could be Slfnl repert released per- f the Uiversty hapsas early reflcts recent as tomorrow. ds, minority P e t e r s o n enrollment h said the delay been drpn can be tied to sincee1995 by t iems ~perct1each year problems - processing 1ercent' additional x99:14 perent data for the q: 13 percent report. 8:3pe rt " W e' ve t1 9 12 perCent tried to O he incorporate some new eterson said. Preliminary enrollment informa- ion released in June indicates that the umber of minorities applying to the niversity dropped from 1998 to 1999. Since the initial report is based on pplications processed before May 17, he final numbers could change terson could not say whether the 1 numbers are reflective of the ini- ial report. If the preliminary numbers hold true, inority enrollment has been decreas- ng since 1995. In 1995, underrepresented minori- ies comprised 15 percent of the stu- ent body while in 1997 and 1998, nderrepresented minorities made up 13 percent of the student popula- The University defines black. Native American and Latino/a stu- dents as underrepresented minori- ties. According to the preliminary report. the University received 21.01 1 applications from prospective students hoping to enter the current first-year class. Out of that number, 2,260 appli- cts were underrepresented minori- From the total applicant pooi, the University admitted 13,351 students into the current first-year class, with 1,520 underrepresented minority prospective students. As of May 17, 5,841 paid deposits weesent to the University by students planning to enroll in the current first- year class. ~he University uses the number of pd deposits as an indication to class size. From that number, 662 students were from underrepresented minorities, less than 12 percent. For the final report, which will include additional information on the Warming up Goss creates Athletic Dept. CFO position By Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter The University Athletic Department announced yesterday that Athletic Director Tom Goss has hired an execu- tive director of athletic business opera- tions to handle the departments fiscal affairs. Jason Winters will come into the posi- tion after two years as vice president and corporate controller for Ann Arbor-based Captec Financial Group. "I am extremely excited to have Jason join our staff," Goss said in a written statement. "He will not just look at the financial picture but he will oversee all cost centers." Winter's position is most similar to that of a chief financial officer of a cor- poration. The creation of the position comes on the heels of a controversy involving the Athletic Department's reported $2 million budget deficit for fis- cal year 1998-99. The Athletic Department maintains a budget separate of the University's gener- al funds. At the July University Board of Regents meeting, Goss announced there would be a budget surplus of $880,000 for fiscal year 1999-2000, with additional revenue coming from four more home men's basketball games and a non-student football tick- et price increase. In September, the department announced that an audit revealed an additional deficit of $756,000. Athletic Department spokesperson Bruce Madej said the hiring was not in direct response to the shortfall, rather it grew out of advice from various con- sultants. "This has been in the works for a while. We've been looking at differ- ent ways of finding revenue streams for the Athletic Department," Madej said. The Athletic Department used its estimated $20 million reserve fund to cover the budget shortfall. The budget See CFO, Page 2 JESSICA JOHNSON/Uaily A member of the University School of Dance shows off her moves during a class yesterday at the Central Campus Recreation Builing.. tudent, faculty express disgustobacco stock By Nika Schulte Daily Staff Reporter Considering its reputation as a nationally acclaimed research institution, many students and faculty question why the University would place its dollars and cents in tobacco companies. About 20 students, faculty and community members told of their disgust for University funds being linked to tobacco companies at a forum in Rackham Auditorium last night. Biology Prof. Lewis Kleinsmith, vice-chair of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, said such investments go against the University's goals. Kleinsmith said the University's missions of being a rep- utable research and health care provider are contradicted if it ignores the "enormous scientific body of evidence" indi- cating that tobacco products are lethal. "If the University respects research, perhaps it should act based upon it," Kleinsmith said. The eight-member student, faculty and staff Advisory Committee on Tobacco Investments scheduled the event to allow the public to express their views. The committee formed in September after being appointed by University President Lee Bollinger and Chief Financial Officer Robert Kasdin. In 1997, SACUA passed a resolution calling on the University Board of Regents to divest from tobacco investments. The group was charged with the task of determining whether the investments are conducive to the mission of the University. Law Prof. Kyle Logue, who serves as chair of the commit- tee, said that as of Aug. 31, the University's investments in tobacco stock totaled approximately $17 million. The amount is about .05 percent of the University's investment portfolio, Logue said. LSA and Music first-year student Jocelyn Frank said she is against the University being a share holder in tobacco companies because people focus on financial benefits of tobacco and ignore the negative health risks. Frank said she does not smoke but is bothered that she See DIVESTMENT, Page 2 JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Physics Prof. Martin Einhorn speaks out against the University's investment in tobacco stocks at a forum last night at Rackham Auditorium. Student-planned AIDS Awareness Week kicks off with film screening By Hanna LoPatin Daily Staff Reporter Not everyone in the 50-plus member audience knew what they came for when they sat down in the Michigan League Underground last night at 8 p.m. Many came to see the University a cappella groups Amazin' Blue and The Gentleman - performers for the evening. But as the LSA senior Riya Saha wel- comed the audience to the kickoff of the ":r . A . -vih -, inA TT'C AwnaiPnPcc and University Activities Committee Special Events planned yesterday evening's activities as a way to introduce the audience to AIDS Awareness Week. "I think it would be best to start with something enjoyable and fun," Saha said. The hour-long concert was followed by a screening of the Academy Award-win- ning film "Philadelphia." The entire evening was sponsored by the Michigan League Programming Board and the movie was co-sponsored by the Office of I ehian Gav. is "to get rid of the 'it can't happen to me' mentality that college students seem to have - especially here." LSA sophomore and The Gentlemen member Rob Humbracht said he hoped his group's participation would "draw as many people here as possible for a cause." He added, "If adding our name to the venue helps in any way, then we've accomplished our mission." LSA and Music senior. Anna Gleichauf came to sing as a member of Amazin' Blue. "If (AIDS) is not