0ne hundred ni'z e years of edi~nz~dfreedom Mondav. Mav 22. 2000 www.michigandaily.com . . ... . ..... ("w T OL 'dwmvl u s two, "S"N' 100 111 HO bud== t F46OO' The Michigan House Of Representati ves Higher Education 2001 Subcommittee Michigan , presented its S1.8 Educator million budget Budget recommendation for the Fiscal Year 2001 to the full House last week. The amount of money used in the budget remained close to the Senate's recommenda- tion, but some large deviations in the distrib- ution caused five Democrats on the commit- tee to vote against it. While all of the state's 15 universities received well above the governor's original 2.5 percent recommendation, the University took a cut from 6.9 percent in the Senate bud- get to 5.4 percent. "We're pleased with the overall increase," University Vice President for Government Relations Cynthia Wilbanks said. "I hope that in conference committee we might tweak it a little more." Sen. John Schwarz (R-Battle Creek) said he will fight for changes when the bill goes to conference committee. "U of M took the biggest hit. That's not acceptable," he said. The figure does meet the number the University reported would be necessary in orler to keep tuition increases down to three percent. The Senate Budget Committee had asked what each school would need to keep tuition increases down to 2.8 percent. The University joined five other schools in getting the lowest recommended increase with Grand Valley State reaching the maxi- mum at 15 percent. Michigan State University recieved a 10 percent increase -3.1 percent more than the Senate budget. See BUDGET, Page 3 Prof. Donald Lopez stands In his Ann Arbor home yesterday. Lopez a s elected to the National Academy of Arts and Sciences. Pair elected to national cademy Colleges more selective than ever By Rachael Smith Daily Staff Reporter By Ahmed Hamid Daily Staff Reporter * The University announced last Monday that the Academy of Arts and Sciences elected two University faculty members to become Fellows next April. Donald Lopez Jr., the Arthur Thurnau Professor of Buddhist and Tibetan studies and chair- man of the department of Asian languages and cultures, and ?rovost Nancy Cantor, who is also executive vice president of student affairs and a psychology professor, were elected. Lopez, who will serve on the Philosophy and Theology Section of Humanities at the Academy, said he was "certainly very honored to be elected to the Academy" Lopez and Cantor are among 154 new Fellows and 15 for- *ign honorary members elected tn recognition of their disttn- guished contributions to sci- ences. scholarships, public affairs. and the arts. The mem- bers will be inducted at a formal ceremony at the House of the Academy in Cambridge, Mass. on October 14. University President Lee Bollinger said in a written state- ment that he was "pleased for both Donald and Nancy, and for the University." "This is a stellar honor for what we value most - out- standing academic achieve- ment" Bollinger said. Candidates are nominated by incumbent members of the Academy and are not notified until they are elected. "It came as a very pleasant surprise," Lopez said. Lopezjoined the University in 1989 after teaching at the University of Virginia and Middlebury College and has authored several books. He is the recipient of many awards includ- ing the Templeton Foundation Award, Levehulme Research Professor, University of Bristol, UM Faculty Recognition See ACADEMY, Page 3 Universities across the country are reporting a large increase in the num- ber of students applying. and as a result, higher numbers of rejected stu- dents. According to U.S. News Online col- lege guide section, even those students with 4.0 grade point averages, involve- ment in an average of five extracurric- Ular activities and holding jobs are being rejected from their schools of choice. This University is no different, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. "We are in the unique position of having so many well-qualified students applying," Peterson said. "Fifty percent of freshman had 4.0 GPAs as seniors," Peterson said, referring to the University's applicant pool. "It is clear to us that we are part of a national trend." The trend Peterson referred to is the recent growth in both numbers and quality of first-year applicants. "It's a pretty widespread trend," Peterson said, "because it's driven so much by demographics." As the children of baby boomers reach college age, the number of appli- cants has been on the rise for the past decade. More hirth school seniors means more Fifty percent of this year's freshmen had a 4.0 GPA In high school, showing the Increased difficulty of getting in to the University. applications, but the number of applica- tions is rising faster than the number of students accepted. "More students aspire to college," Peterson said. The greater number of applications has resulted in demographic changes for col- leges across the country. Highly selective institutions have become even more selective, and less selective schools have been able to attract an academically stronger group of stu- dents. allowing them to also become more selective. See ADMISSIONS, Page 8 'Greed'y student Electronica Party's over Sarah Niemiec, an LSA junior, tried her luck on Richie Hawtin headlines the Detroit Softball bows out of NCAA tourna- he game show 'Greed.' Electronic Music Festival. ment with two losses to DePaul. N'WS, Page 2 ARTS, Page 10 'PORTS, Page 14