The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON After locking up GOP race, McCain gets Bush's backing John McCain got a White House embrace from President Bush yes- terday, along with the party perks that go with sewing up the Repub- lican nomination. The endorsement has baggage, though, remindingvot- ers of the drawn-out Iraq war and the nation's economic woes under an unpopular GOP president. Bush, who defeated McCain in a bitter 2000 primary campaign before winning the presidency, said the Arizona senator's "incredible courage and strength of character and perseverance" carried him to the nomination this time. Those characteristics, Bush said, are-what the nation needs in a pres- ident: "somebody that can handle the tough decisions, somebody who won't flinch in the face of danger." JERUSALEM Rice convinces Palestine to resume talks with Israel The moderate Palestinian lead- ership agreed under heavy U.S. pressure yesterday to resume peace talks with Israel, dropping a demand that Israel first reach a truce with Islamic Hamas militants acting as spoilers. The announcement gave Secre- tary of State Condoleezza Rice a modest accomplishment for a brief troubleshooting mission. It left open the question of how both sides will eventually confront Hamas militants in charge of the 1.4 mil- lion Palestinians - nearly half the population - living in the sealed- off Gaza Strip. "The peace process is a strategic choice and we have the intention of resuming the peace process," Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said. He did not say when talks would restart, but U.S. and other officials predicted it would be in about a week. LANSING Michigans jobless rate drops in December Michigan's unemployment rate improved in January. The state's seasonally adjusted jobless rate fell to 7.1 percent, or three-tenths of a percentage point from 7.4 percent. December's rate originally was higher but was revised down- ward, state officials said yesterday. Michigan's December rate was the highest in the nation. The national jobless rate in January was 4.9 percent. State officials say January was a relatively stable month for the labor market. Total employment rose by 33,000 and unemployment fell by 19,000. WASHINGTON FBI admits to improperly accessing records The FBI acknowledged yester- day it improperly accessed Ameri- cans' telephone records, credit re- ports and Internet traffic in 2006, the fourth straight year of privacy abuses resulting from investiga- tions aimed at tracking terrorists and spies. The breach occurred before the FBI enacted broad new reforms in March 2007 to prevent future lapses, FBI Director Robert Muel- ler said. And it was caused, in part, by banks, telecommunication com- panies and other private businesses giving the FBI more personal client data than was requested. An audit by the inspector gen- eral last year found the FBI de- manded personal records without official authorization or otherwise collected more data than allowed in dozens of cases between 2003 and 2005. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 3974 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identi- fied yesterday. TENURE From Page 1A University doesn't discuss ongo- ing tenure reviews. Once they are evaluated at the departmental and collegiate level, tenure applications are sent to the Office of the Provost and then the University's Board of Regents. The decision is not final until approved by the regents, but deci- sions are rarely overturned once they reach the provost's office. Faculty can appeal the board's decision through the University's grievance procedures. In a letter sent to LSA Dean Terrence McDonald before the college's decision, more than 30 faculty members from the Women's Studies department said MCCUE From Page 1A Rhodes, who now teaches lin- guistics at the University of Cali- fornia at Berkeley, said McCue didn't even have his GED when the two began working to build the program. But during their time together between 1972 and 1986, Rhodes and McCue successfully incorporated Ojibwe into the vari- ous other language programs at the University. McCue also played a major role in the researching and writing ofRhodes's widely cited and renowned Eastern Ojibwe-Chip- pew-Ottawa dictionary, which closelyexamines twodialectsofthe complex Ojibwe language. When Rhodes left the Univer- sity ofMichigan in 1986 for a job at Berkeley, he made sure before his departure that the Department of Linguistics kept McCue to keep running the Ojibwe program the two had created 15 years earlier. "I went into the Dean and said,'Look don't let this thing go. I don't care he doesn't have all the requisite degrees. He's the guy to keep the TRIP From Page 1A Michigan State University officials announced plans to open a branch campus in Dubai. Though plans for this phase of Coleman's trip have been in the works for some time, they weren't announced when Coleman officially unveiled her plans to visit sub-Saharan Africa at February's meet- ing of the University Board of - Regents. "The Dubai trip grew out of the invitation she received to speak at the conference," Con- nell said. While most of the Univer- sity's 12-person Africa delega- tion will return to Ann Arbor today, Mark Tessler, director of the University's Internation- al Institute, will accompany Coleman to the U.A.E. Today in Abu-Dhabi, capi- tal of the Persian Gulf nation, Coleman will meet with the nation's Minister of Higher Education, Sheikh Nahayan Mabarak Al Nahayan, to talk about "possible collaborations" between the University and colleges in the U.A.E., Connell said. Coleman and Tessler are slated to tour the campus of the United Arab Emirates Univer- sity in Al Ain tomorrow. CAMPERS From Page 1A "Wildlife is also kind of interesting, just hearing ani- mals come up to the tent," Fry said. This is the first time Pike has held a charity camp-out. Fry, the chair of Com- edy Night, said he chose the unorthodox fundrais- ing method because it would allow the rest of the frater- nity brothers to be directly involved in the fundraising. Fry said Pike chose to raise money for Michigan Reach out! because of the relation- ship between the two groups. Members of the fraternity mentor children in the pro- gram. "It has close ties to our house - over 130 brothers have been involved. It's also a great charity for the Ann Arbor community," he said. "We can bring out all the mentors and bring out some of the kids." Fry said living in the great outdoors has had at least one other added benefit. "Part of the thing is that we can't watch TV all week, which is actually good, because we're going to be a lot more productive," said Fry. they "note(d) a concerning pattern emerging in general in a number of negative decisions in tenure cases of women of color faculty across LS&A." The letter cited Smith's femi- nist activism and her impressive academic record - including a nomination for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize - as accomplish- ments that merit her receiving tenure. Smith declined comment, say- ing she was disappointed with the decision, but that she didn't want to jeopardize her case for tenure. Candidates in the six-year ten- ure process are evaluated by a tenure-review panel from their department. In Smith's case, because she is jointly appointed, the panel consisted of two units Ojibwe language program going,"' Rhodes said. Rhodes also said McCue was courageous for advocating the study of Ojibwe at the university level, considering the prejudices against Native Americans in the United States at the time. "He was really someone who overcame the negative portrayals in the society," Rhodes said. "He lived through the period when it was really bad to be an Indian into the time when it was OK to be an Indian." Although McCue taught only as a lecturer during his career at the University, many of his most recent colleagues credit him with making Ojibwe scholarship a sta- ple of language studies at the Uni- versity and generating significant student interest in the language. American Culture Prof. Mar- garet Noori, who teaches Ojibwe language and literature, said the University's Ojibwe program - with about 150 - is much larger than Ojibwe programs at other Big Ten schools, which she estimated to include about 10 to 25 students each. - one from the Women's Stud- ies department and one from the American Culture department. The American Culture unit recommended her for tenure, but the Women's Studies unit did not. Women's Studies Prof. Maria Sanchez, who was also recently denied tenure, said she doubts that Smith's decision will be over- turned. "As I understand it, the provost just rubber stamps the College's decisions, so both Andrea Smith and I understand that our careers here are done," Sanchez said in an e-mail interview. Tensions over the tenure pro- cess have run so high in the Wom- en's Studies department recently that the department has enlisted the help of two third-party orga- This interest, she said, is a prod- uct of McCue's passion for the lan- guage and genuine interest in the well-being of his students. "You just don't see people dedicate that kind of focus to undergraduate education at an institution of Michigan's stature," Noori said. McCue was also a favorite teacher of many student-athletes. Noori said one of the most mem- orable moments of the past semes- ter in McCue's class was seeing football players including Jamar Adams, Jake Long and Mike Hart sing "Hail to the Victors" in Ojibwe after McCue had taught them the proper translation. American Culture Prof.Vicente Diaz said he remembered McCue not only for his scholarship at the University, but also for the cultur- al scholarship he took part in out- side of Ann Arbor's city limits. "Hap was instantly recognized as an important figure, and feted as such in all the communities we visited," Diaz said inan e-mail. Never one to lose sight of his heritage or his culture, McCue frequently participated in Native nizational consultants to allevi- ate the hostility, one of whom has been working with the depart- ment's chair since January. Smith's supporters also claim that instructors who work between two different depart- ments are less respected under tenure procedures. American Culture graduate student Jessi Gan said relatively new scholarly disciplines like women's studies and American culture may be more difficult to evaluate than traditional fields like math or English. American Culture grauate stu- dent Matthew Stiffler agreed. "A joint appointment for a junior faculty member in general is a dangerous position to be in," he said. American traditions and activities throughout Michigan. Punkin Shananaquet, who works for the Gun Lake Band of Potawa- tomi Indians in southwest Michi- gan, said McCue would deliver the opening invocation in Ojibwe each year at the Dance for Mother Earth pow wow, which is a gathering for Native Americans from throughout the Western Hemisphere. Many of the people who studied or taught with McCue offered one final message for him in Ojibwe - McCue's native language, to which he devoted a lifetime of scholarship and passion. "Pane igo kaa pakwenmi- go maampii kchi kinomage- gamigong," they said, which translates into "We will always remember you at the University of Michigan." Services will be held at Mue- hlig Funeral Chapel on 403 South Fourth St. in Ann Arbor, as follows: a firstvisitation on Thurs- day from 4 to 8 p.m and a second on Friday from 3 to 7 p.m. The funeral services will be held at Muehlig Funeral Chapel on Satur- day at 10 a.m. Thursday, March 6, 2008 - 3A Oficials in Mich., Fla consider new primaries WASHINGTON (AP) - Officials in Michigan and Florida are show- ing renewed interest in holding repeat presidential nominating con- tests so that their votes willcount in the epic Democratic campaign. The Michigan governor, along with top officials in Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign and Florida's state party chair, is now sayingthey would consider holding a sort of do- over contestbyJune. That's achange from their previous insistence that the primaries their states held in January should determine how the their delegates are allocated. Clinton won both contests,but the results were meaningless because the elections violated national party rules. The Democratic National Com- mittee stripped both states of all delegates for holding the primaries too early, and all Democratic candi- dates - including Clinton and rival Barack Obama - agreed not to cam- paign in either state. Obama's name wasn't even onthe Michiganballot. Florida and Michigan moved up their dates to protest the party's deci- sion to allow Iowa and New HaMp- shire to go first, followed by South Carolina and Nevada, giving them a disproportionate influence on the presidential selection process. But no one predicted the race would stillbe very close at this point in the year. Ironically, Michigan and Florida could have held crucial primaries had they stayed with their tradi- tional later dates. They may yet do so if they decide to hold new con- tests as Clinton and Obama compete to the wire. Clinton has been insisting that the desires of more than 2 million people who cast Democratic ballots in the two states should be reflected at the convention, which would help her catch up to Obama in the race for delegates. Obama has said he wants the delegates from the two critical swing states participate, too, but not if Clinton is rewarded for victories in boycotted primaries. Now the Clinton campaign has begun expressing openness to a do- over. "Let's let all of the voters go again if they are willing to do it," Clinton adviser Terry McAuliffe said Tuesday night on MSNBC. Man-made flood unleashed in Grand Canyon PAGE, Ariz. (AP) - Four arcs of water unleashed from a dam coursed through the Grand Can- yon yesterday in a flood meant to mimic the natural ones that used to nourish the ecosystem by spreading sediment. More than 300,000 gallons of water per second were released from Lake Powell above the dam near the Arizona-Utah border. That's enough water to fill the Empire State Building in 20 min- utes, said Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne. "This gives you a glimpse of what nature has been doing for mil- lions of years, cutting through and creating this magnificgut canyop," Kempthorne said after he pulled the lever releasing the water from Glen Canyon Dam, upstream from Grand Canyon National Park. The water gushed from two of four giant steel tubes in parallel arcs into the Colorado River. By afternoon, water poured from all four tubes, creating a churning pool beneath the sheer, sandstone can- yon walls rising hundreds of feet. The water level in thc Grand Canyon rose 2 to 15 feet in some places. After the flood ends Friday, officials hope the water will leave behind sediment and restore sand- bars as it goes back to normal. ii So. You want one good reason to earn a pharmacy degree from the University of M ic h igan? Here are 12 good reasons, for starters: 1. Respect: 50 percent of the students admitted to our professional degree (PharmD) program are cross-campus transfers - many from LSA 2. Unparalleled career choices 3. Financial support unequalled by any other U.S. pharmacy school 4. continuous growth potential 5. Outstanding pay 6. Job security in economically uncertain times 7. The power to apply medical knowledge at the forefront of technological innovation 8. Life and career mobility 9. Membership in an influential alumni network spanning the globe 10. The prestige of owning a degree from one of US News & World Report's top-ranked pharmacy schools 11. Unlimited opportunities to improve people's 12. One-to-one learning with world-renowned faculty If you've had health-care patient experience, and if you've taken Chemistry 130, 210, 215, or 260; Biology 171, 172, 173, or 305; Physics 125, 126, 140, or 240; or Calculus 115 or 116, you're already on your way to a pharmacy degree at U-M. To learn more about the PharmD program at the University of Michigan, visit the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy Web site at www.umich.edu/-pharmacy. Or contact Assistant Dean Valener Perry at 734-764-5550 or by e-mail at vlperry@umich.edu. Your future never looked brighter. I