* The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 14, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS COPENHAGEN Activists push for carbon levels at 350 parts per million As police cracked down on cli- mate protesters, church bells tolled 350 times yesterday to impress on the U.N. global warming confer- ence a number that is gaining a following, but is also awash in con- tradictions. Conference negotiators went behind closed doors in talks to pin down an elusive new pact on climate, talks in which the figure 350 looms as a goal for true believers, but one that appears impossible based on progress so far. It refers to 350 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the highest concentration that some leading scientists say the world can handle without sparking dangerous climate effects. "It's the most important number in the world," said Bill McKibben, founder ofthe environmental activist group 350.org. "It's the line between habitability on this planet and a real- ly, really desolate future." Not everyone buys into that. But an entire environmental group has sprung up around the number, pushing 350 as a goal, sporting it on T-shirts and flags waved by throngs of protesters that marched to the conference center over the weekend. DETROIT Granholm: Obama helped Michigan's ,manufacturers Michigan Gov. Jennifer Gra- nholm is praising President Barack Obama, saying his administration's efforts to boost the economy helped safeguard the manufacturers that are the backbone of Michigan's economy. During an appearance yester- day on NBC's "Meet the Press," Granholm lavished praise on the administration for its role in help- ing the Detroit Three. Granholm says the administra- tion made it a priority to help the economy's manufacturing sector and that without that the recession "would have been so much worse." Michigan has the highest unem- ployment in the nation, 15.1 per- cent, and has been in an economic tailspin far longer than the rest of the nation. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Grand Rapids could return rapids to Grand River 0 Grand Rapids is considering returning some rapids to the Grand River in downtown. The Downtown Development Authority on Wednesday approved nearly $30,000 to study and engi- neer changes designed to make the river more navigable. The aim of the project is to boost tourism and out- door activities. The Grand Rapids Press reports $4,980 was approved for an engi- neering firm to come up with a pre- liminary design to create a portage for canoeists and kayakers to exit the river upstream from the Fourth Street Dam. Separately, the authority voted to contribute up to $25,000 to the nonprofit group Grand Rapids Whitewater for engineering and marketing efforts needed to modify downtown dams to create a navi- gable whitewater course. NEW YORK Samuelson, Nobel laureate, economist dead at 94 Economist Paul Samuelson, who won a Nobel prize for his effort to bring mathematical analysis into economics, helped shape tax policy in the Kennedy administration and wrote a textbook read by millions of college students, died yesterday. He was 94. Samuelson, who taught for decades at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, died at his home in Belmont, Mass., the school said in a statement announcing his death. President Barack Obama's chief economic adviser, Lawrence Sum- mers, is his nephew. In 1970, Samuelson became just the second person, and first Ameri- can, to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, created in 1968 by the Central Bank of Swe- den. The other Nobels have been awarded since 1901. Afghanistan policy before cadets at the U.S Military Academy at WeE President Barack Obama speaks aboutis N.Y. on Tuesday, Dec t, 2009. Obm:Afghan success will be evident in a year LAWSUIT From Page 1A already filed two previous sum- mary dispositions, both denied by Giddings. His decision in Jan- uary will determine the outcome of the third. At the hearing Friday after- noon, attorneys for both sides of the suit argued the validity of the evidence that allegedly shows that multiple votes cast against Hammer's tenure status were based on discrimination. Seryak and Hammer's attor- ney, Phillip Green, argued over the correct number of votes cast at the tenure hearing. The argu- ment stemmed from conflicting documents about the vote count. Seryak said there were 32 ten- ured law professors present at the panel to decide Hammer's tenure, with a final vote of 18 "yes" votes and 14 "no" votes., But Green said, however, that the records of the voting panel showed only 30 tenured law pro- fessors were present when the final vote was cast, leaving the vote with 18 in favor and only 12 opposed. Neither tally surpasses the law school's tenure threshold, which requires that a professor must receive a two-thirds vote of ten- ured law professors to be granted tenure. Judge Giddings said he would review all the documents pre- sented in order to make a decision on the total number of official votes cast. Seryak said, according to his numbers, five opposing votes would have to be invalidated to grant Hammer tenure. And, of the seven votes Green is calling into question for discrimination, Seryak said none of them were rooted in prejudice. One vote called into question was that of University Law Prof. Richard Friedman concerning his actions prior to and during the vote. Friedman was helping Ham- mer look for other professorship options at Ohio State University, sending e-mails to contacts he had there with kind words about Hammer, Seryak said. Just before going to the tenure vote, Seryak said Friedman called Hammer to wish him luck. But Green said that at the ten- ure meeting, Friedman spoke out against Hammer, stating he wasn't a "mover and shaker," which Friedman previously admitted to. Hammer's lawyer also brought the vote by former University Law Prof Jeff Lehman under scrutiny. But, Seryak said Lehman, nowdean of the law school at Cornell Univer- sity, was "responsible for bringing gay faculty to the University." The votes of law professors Kyle Logue and Bill Miller were also called into question Friday afternoon. Logue, who Hammer claims was a friend before the lawsuit, is a Sunday school teacher at a Baptist church that denounces homosexuality on its website, according to Green. Seryak said that participation in such a church does directly show cause for his vote to deny Hammer's tenure. Seryak said that Miller could not have been discriminatory because he had mentored an openly gay woman in the past. But Green argued that Miller's discrimination was only toward gay men. In the Lansing courtroom Friday, Giddings promised to have a decision made by late January 2010. This is the third request for summary disposition by the Uni- versity on this case. If Giddings denies the disposition, a trial date will be set. The University could file for the case to be dismissed again after the decision is made, in which case a trial will once again be delayed. Calls to the University's Office of Public Affairs this weekend were not returned as of Sunday evening. President says effect of new troop surge to be known by end of 2010 WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Barack Obama says he'll know by the end of 2010 if his Afghan strategy is working, and pledges to change direction if the U.S. mili- tary is not on course "in terms of securing population centers" from Taliban militants. The president also says his Dec. 1 speech ordering 30,000 more American soldiers and Marines into the 8-year-old war "hit me in the gut" emotionally more than any he had given. After doubling the U.S. force in Afghanistan in March, just two months after taking office, Obama raised the stakes further by order- ing a nearly 50-percent troop increase in a speech at the U.S. Mili- tary Academy at West Point, N.Y. He issued the orders even as support for the war was crumbling among the public and opposed by many fellow Democrats in Congress. Many observers said Obama appeared overly analytical and emotionally detached in order- ing still more Americans into an increasingly violent mission against the Taliban to prevent their takeover of the Afghan gov- ernment and a feared return of al- Qaida terrorists. Not true, Obama told CBS's "60 Minutes," in an interview taped Dec. 7 for broadcast yesterday night. "You knoNw, that was actcs- ally, probably, the most emotional speech that Ive made, in terins of how I felt about it," the president said, "because I w as looking out over a group of cadets, some of whom ere goingto e deployed in Afghanistan. And potentially some might not come back." Obama also answered critics who saw ambiguity in ordering the big troop increase while then say- ing some of them probably would begin coming home in July 20t1. That's the date when U.S. military forces plan to start handing securi- ty responsibility to Afghan soldiers and police sho would undergo intensive recruitment and training. "We then start transitioning into a drawdown piase," Obana repeated, noting that specifies were conditional. "How many U.S. troops are coming out, how quickly, will be determined by conditions on the ground." And in gave himself a ksophole. "If the approaci that's been recommended doesn't work, then yes, we're going to be chassg- ing approaches," let said. Obasma quickly added that the deadisne was necessary to alert the Afgain leadership that the United States was not goingto make Afghanistan an American "protectorate." Gen. Stanley McChrystal, tise U.S. commander in .Afghanistan, agreed to the mission of secur- ing the population, saying success would mean "over time they (the Taliban) become irrelevant and ineffective." M'cChrystal had sought 40,000 additional troops for the war. Obama eventually settled on 30,000 after an intensive three- month study of the mission and how best to achieve goals. Most of the shortfall between what McChrystal sought and what Obama approved was expected to be made up from U.S. NATO allies and other countries that have sent forces to the conflict. Obama and McChrystal said the idea was to mimic - to some extent - the Bush administra- tion's troop increase in Iraq that deflated the Sunni insurgency there by bringing many of its fight- ers into the U.S. fight to de-fang the al-Qaida forces. 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