The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Economy will get worse before it gets better, Obama says President-elect Barack Obama said the economy seems destined to get worse before it gets better and he pledged a recovery plan "that is equal to the task ahead." Obama also said in an interview broadcast yesterday that the sur- vival of the domestic car-making capacity is important, yet any bailout must be "conditioned on an auto industry emerging at the end of the process that actually works." Less than six weeks before he takes office, Obama said that help for homeowners facing foreclosure is an option as part of his plan. He sidestepped a question about when he plans to raise taxes on wealthy Americans. Obama's interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" was his most extensive since winning the White House more than a month ago. "The economy is going to get worse before itgetsbetter," he said twice in the early moments of the interview, taped Saturday in Chi- cago. CHICAGO Dodd: GM chief should step down A senator who will help deter- mine whether the auto industry gets a$15billionbailoutsaidyester- daythattheheadof GeneralMotors should step down, telegraphing what could be a congressional demand for a top-line shake-up in Detroit in exchange for financial life support. Rick Wagoner, the chief execu- tive of GM, "has to move on," said Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Com- mittee. He spoke on CBS' "Face the Nation." "I think you have got to consider new leadership," Dodd said. Asked if that should be a condition of any bailout, he added, "I think it is going to have to be part of it." "I think it's clear GM is in the worst shape," Dodd said before specifying the need for Wagoner to BEIJING Nations meet to discuss N. Korea's nuclear program Envoys from the United States and five other nations gathered today for talks on mothballing North Korea's nuclear program, amid dour predictions for prog- ress in the negotiations. The six, who also include South Korea, North Korea, China, Japan and Russia, were to hold bilateral meetings before sitting down for formal talks Monday afternoon, a South Korean official said. He declined to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to the media. North Korea - which tested a nuclear bomb in 2006 - agreed last year to disable its main reactor in exchange for aid. But the North recently said it would not allow inspectors to take samples from the nuclear complex to verify its past activities, casting doubt on the chances for progress in negotiations on methods to vali- date the North's accounting of its nuclear programs. NEW YORK Scientists say brain pills can be used by healthy people Healthy people should have the rightto boost their brains with pills, like those prescribed for hyperac- tive kids or memory-impaired older folks, several scientists contend in a provocative commentary. College students are already illegally taking prescription stim- ulants like Ritalin to help them study, and demand for such drugs is likely to grow elsewhere, they say. "We should welcome new meth- ods of improving our brain func- tion," and doing it with pills is no more morally objectionable than eating right or getting a good night's sleep, these experts wrote in an opinion piece published online Sunday by the journal Nature. The commentary calls for more research and a variety of steps for managing the risks. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Pakistan targets Mumbai suspects ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Pakistani troops seized a camp used by the extremist group blamed in the Mumbai attacks and arrested more than 12 people, mil- itants and a security official said Monday. The raid was the first known action by Islamabad in response to the attacks, which have sharply raised tensions between nuclear- armed rivals Pakistan and India and raised concerns in Washing- ton over its campaign against al- Qaida in the region. India says the Mumbai siege was carried out and plotted by Pakistani militants belonging to MARIJUANA From Page 1A vices Bureau, a process likely to take months to complete. "The program is expected to begin on April 4, but until then, everything is the same as it was in June, in July, in August," McCur- tis said. "And it will remain the BUSINESS SCHOOL From Page 1A phen Ross. The reception drew hundreds of students, many who were eager to see the inside of the new facility for the first time. Many students at the event said they were excited for the Business School to have a new building. Business School senior Justin Killion said while he's excited to use the new facilities, he's less than impressed with the build- ing's exterior. "Honestly, I think the burnt orange, while I understand the tiles are for energy efficiency, is pretty ugly, but it is growing on me slowly," he said. "The carpet choice leaves much to be desired in the main area. It looks a little like someone used it for a drop cloth while they were painting with some pretty hideous colors." Featuring a cavernous three- story glass atrium named the Davidson Winter Garden, the grandeur of the new Business School becomes apparent as soon as you walk in the door. From the deeolv stained hard- the banned Laskhar-e-Taiba. It and the United States are demand- ing Pakistan crack down on the perpetrators. Troops briefly exchanged fire with people at the camp during Sunday's raid close to the town of Muzaffarabad in the Pakistani part of the disputed Kashmir region, the militants said. A senior intelligence official confirmed the raid and arrsts. He said the detainees were being questioned over any possible links to the Mumbai attacks and several injured people were being treated at a military hospital. He spoke on condition of ano- same until the medical marijuana program is officially put in place." The patient ID card or, if neces- sary, a caregiver, will be enough to protect patients from prosecution for one year, after which re-appli- cation to the program is required. LSA junior Chris Chiles, execu- tive director of Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, said the pro- posal's passing was great news for wood halls and staircases to the walls adorned with over 200 pieces of contemporary artwork, including paintings and sculptures from the Ross Art Collection, the building is more reminiscent of a home than of a typical academic building. The exterior of the new Busi- ness School sports sharp lines and a deep orange fagade, while the interior features thousands of square feetofwindows,brand new classrooms and a 7,500-square- foot fitness center. Business School senior Amy Zeng said she is looking forward to using the building's new state- of-the-art facilities. "I'm particularly excited for the new gym to open," she said. "It is so much nicer than the IM build- ing and the CCRB." The new facility houses 12 large classrooms that seat 85 or more people, five smaller classrooms, a 500-seat auditorium and numer- ous group study rooms, each with a flat-panel television. Students can reserve the study rooms using touch screens mounted on each study room door. Killion said the new classroom facilities will definitely be an nymity because of the sensitive nature of his job. The militants said the camp was used until 2004 by Laskhar-e-Tai- ba to train recruits to fight Indian rule in its section of the Kashmir. More recently, it was used by Lashkar's parent organization Jamaat-ud-Dawa for education and charity work, they said. The militants spoke on condi- tion of anonymity because they belongto an illegal organization. Analysts say Lashkar-e-Taiba was created the with help of Paki- stan's intelligence agencies in the 1980s to act as a proxy fighting force in Indian Kashmir. patients who had been waiting to legally use marijuana as a way to ease pain. "Doctors are able to make rec- ommendations to treat or alleviate patients' debilitating conditions, which isgreat," he said. "The thing about this is that it's not a prescrip- tion - it can't be written on a little pad. The doctors are really just the gatekeepers in this." upgrade from what the Business School currently uses. "All of the classrooms were really nice," he said. "Comfortable chairs, nice whiteboards, flat screen plas- mas and projectors were every- where, so using the new facility will be a breath of fresh air after hav- ing to deal with using the cramped classrooms that we currently have." The facility is also environ- mentally friendly, with expansive skylights, high-efficiency electric lighting. The building also has living roofs covered in a drought- and cold-resistant ground cover called sedum, and instead of syn- thetic padding, cork underlying the floors and walkways. There are two living roofs on the new building and one was added to the Kresge Library. All three are ther- mally efficient and should help to reduce heating and cooling costs while allowing for gutterless rain and snowmelt management. A significant portion of the building was constructed using recycled materials. Fifty percent of construction-related debris and 94 percent of demolition-related debris was recycled, making the new building one of the greenest on camous. ENDOWMENT From Page lA Such a rolling average payout pol- icy helps compensate for volatility in the financial markets by taking into account a longer span of time and financial performance for the endowment. Many other colleges and uni- versities use more current market values for their endowments to determine payout amounts. The University endowment's payout policy is currently 5 percent of the seven-year average market value. The seven-year average helps stabilize the University's spend- ing and shields it from swings in the market. Rather than paying out a percentage of the endow- ment's total current value, the University instead pays out a percentage of the endowment's average value over the last seven years. Since recentlarge spikes in the endowment's value weren't accompanied by large increases in spending from the endow- ment, the University won't have to make deep spending cuts to account for the endowment's decline. Although the University's endowment reported returns of 6.4 percent in the fiscal year that ended June 30, the full effect of the ongoing global financial crisis was not felt in full until the cur- rent fiscal year began, and espe- cially in the past two to three months. These losses, though, were not entirely unexpected for officials in charge of managingthe Univer- sity's endowment. In a September meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, a University of Michigan faculty governance board, Chief Investment Officer Erik Lundberg said he predicted the next two to three years would be "rough" and "slow going" for the endowment. Some of the losses suffered by the endowment have likely come from the fund's stock holdings, Monday, December 8, 2008 - 3A which, as of June 30, made up just over 27 percent of the $7.8 billion endowment. Between July 1 and Dec. 1, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped from 11,382 to 8,149 points - a loss of about 28 percent. During the same period, the S&P 500 - an index of the val- ues of 500 widely-held U.S. stocks - dropped by about 36 percent, from 1,284 to 816 points. The endowment as a whole con- sists of more than 6,000 separate funds, including stock holdings. Investments in bonds, venture capital, private equity, real estate and energy also comprise the endowment's- overall portfolio, which is managed by Lundberg and Chief Financial Officer Tim Slottow. The news of the endowment's losses comes as officials try to cut expenditures throughout the;Uni- versity to deal with the difficult economic climate in the state and nationwide. The University says it has cut expenditures in the general bud- get by nearly $120 million over the past five years and plans to increase that total to $135 million with cuts to the budget for the current fiscal year, according to a report released by the office of the Provost. Cost-cutting measures include renegotiating contracts with Uni- versity suppliers to reach more favorable terms, new buildings that are more energy efficient, encouraging behaviors that save on energy costs, and the use of financial gifts to aid the Univer- sity's general fund. Given the volatility of the cur- rent financial markets around the world, and the prediction that the ongoing financial cri- sis could stretch far into 2009, University President Mary Sue Coleman discussed in an Octo- ber interview the idea of further lowering the endowment's 5 per- cent payout. "I'mnotconvinced weshouldn't go lower," she said. "If we're gonna have super volatile times, would we be better off at four-and-a-half (percent)?" L$AT Prep Course eSmall Classes Expef Instructors SHyperLearning( and Accelerad C urses *Satisfaction Guaranteed* A isiopinoetonreview.mom Reserve your spot nowl Test-taking Courses Start- January 10th cOtO 800-2evie I Prncetn~eviwxomCA" w S U D 0 KU SENISIS: LAST CHANCE TAKE YOUR SENIOR PORTRAIT and be pictured in the Michiganensian Yearbook Tsdav AND Tsmsrrow. Bring this coupon with you and get $2 OFF your Sitting Fee!!! 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