a The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 1, 2010 - 3A mw The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, February 1, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING * Granholm: Obama stimulus plan gave Michigan 42K jobs President Barack Obama's eco- nomic stimulus plan has created 42,000 jobs in Michigan in the past six months and deserves a chance to succeed, Gov. Jennifer Granholm said. Granholm, who appeared yes- terday on political talk shows on CBS and CNN, said Obama's ini- tiatives to create jobs and reward new U.S. manufacturing jobs with tax credits is creating hope among Michigan and other man- ufacturing-dependent states that have been hit hard by job losses. "Now we see over 3 million jobs being created by the stimulus," she said on CBS' "Face the Nation. "And just quickly, one of the things that is unique to Michigan * and maybe to some other states who have our problem with the loss of manufacturing jobs, what he has done is given us hope to transform and diversify." Granholm, speaking on CNN's "State of the Union," noted Michi- gan is "the poster child of the glob- al shift in manufacturing jobs." WASHINGTON Pentagon to begin ending gay military service ban The Defense Department starts the clock next week on what is expected to be a several-year pro- cess in lifting its ban on gays from serving openly in the military. A special investigation into how the ban can be repealed without hurting the morale or readiness of the troops was expected to be announced Tuesday by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. While the review is likely to take the better part of this year to complete, and even more time to implement, its initiation will advance President Barack Obama's goal of repealing the ban and bring a divisive issue for the military back to the fore. At the White House, officials continued reviewing options to repeal theClinton-era poliqy that the president vowed to repeal. The administration still believes that any repeal should start in Con- gress and have the backing of top military leaders. MEXICO CITY 13 students killed at * party along violent Mexico border Armed men stormed a party in a violent Mexican border city, kill- ing 13 high school and college stu- dents in what witnesses thought was an attack prompted by false information. The deaths in Ciudad Juarez were part of a total of 24 people killed across Mexico since Satur- day in violence caused by ongo- ing turf battles between powerful drug cartels. About two dozen teens and young adults were hospitalized following the late Saturday assault in Ciudad Juarez, one of the dead- d liest cities in the world located across the border from El Paso, Texas. RECYCLING From Page 1A Lawyers Club contains an area of office space called Block P. The Law School is temporarily rent- ing the space from the Lawyers Club for use while its facilities are being expanded and renovat- ed over the next two years. Though the office spaces in Block P produce a lot of paper waste just like any other office would, there currently aren't any means to recycle there either. Officials from the Law School and Lawyers Club disagree on who is in charge of overseeing recycling in Block P. Law School officials claim the responsibility for recycling in Block P falls on the Lawyers Club. But Lawyers Club officials said because the offices are a part of the Law School, it's the school's responsibility to moni- tor the recycling program. Nafranowicz said there are currently plans in the works to install recycling bins in Block P, though she couldn't specify a timeline. Aliza Cohen, a second-year Law student and president of the Law School Student Senate, said that recycling has "been a concern of the student body for a while." But, she added that the Senate has only been minimally involved in the recycling issue. "Student Senate has largely been aware of the issue, but we've been also aware that the Environmental Law Society has CENSUS From Page 1A ject.org, each uncounted citizen causes his or her community to lose around $1,200 a year in fed- eral funding. Neidert said in the past, stu- dents have typically had low response rates to the census. "The main reason I think is that there is a misunderstanding about the census residence rules," Neidert said. She explained that most stu- dents do not realize they need to fill out a census form based on where they're living at the time. "Let's say you're from New Jersey, you would be counted in Ann Arbor, and you would not be counted on your parents' census form," she said. "You are counted where you are living and eating most of the time." The census is meant to count people who are living in a spe- cific location on April 1. Neidert said this might be a problem if students think they should fill out the form based onowhere they will be living after the semester is over. Neidert added that interna- tional students often experience some confusion with regard to the census, because they think they are exempt from filling it out since they aren't U.S. citizens. "Our census is one where everyone is counted, so you don't have to be a citizen," she said. The University's census cam- paign aims to clear up these mis- understandings. The hope is to been working on it as a part of their initiatives, so we haven't been really doing much," Cohen said. Edward Schexnayder, a sec- ond-year Law student and an officer in the Environmental Law Society, wasn't willing to disclose any details, but he said the group is working with the Lawyers Club to improve the recycling situation. "We are hoping to work with (administrators) in coming up with a way for students in the Lawyers Club to have more immediate recycling access," Schexnayder said. Schexnayder has never lived in the Lawyers Club, but agreed recycling in the building is a problem. "In order to recycle, you have to take all of your stuff out of the quad and walk it all the way over (to the central recycling loca- tion), which can be a significant hurdle," Schexnayder said. Carl Margrabe, second-year Law student and former Law- yers Club resident, shared simi- lar sentiments. He said students tend to throw away materials as a mat- ter of convenience, rather than traveling across the Law Quad to recycle. If bins were around the area, Margrabe added, then people would use them. "I'm sure most people want to recycle," he said. "It's just not something you're going to go completely out of your way to do." improve the low response rates from University students in the last census. While the national response rate was 67 percent and Ann Arbor's response rate was 76 per- cent for the 2000 census, one Ann Arbor neighborhood - made up of predominantly student-based housing - had an approximately 38-percent response rate. The U.S. Census Bureau sends out follow-up investigators - called census takers - to low response areas in late April after the census forms are due, but since students tend to move out of housing around that same time, many of these efforts are ineffec- tive in college towns. While students will be study- ing for finals and making gradu- ation plans around the time the census is due, Neidert said stu- dents shouldn't be concerned about the amount of time needed to fill out the form. She estimated that students living in residence halls on campus can expect to answer only five or six questions, while students living in off-campus apartments or houses will only have to answer a few more than six. Neidert said it's important for students to fill out the forms because answering about 10 questions for roughly 10 minutes can give the Ann Arbor commu- nity about $10,000 per person in federal funds over the next decade. - Daily News Editor Stephanie Steinberg contributed to this report. Obamas $3.8 trillion budget heading to Congress today Proposed budget would see increased taxes on the wealthy, spending freeze WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Barack Obama's proposed budget predicts the national defi- cit will crest at a record-breaking almost $1.6 trillion in the current fiscal year, then start to recede in 2011 to just below $1.3 trillion. Still, the administration's new budget to be released today says deficits over the next decade will average 4.5 percent of the size of the economy, a level that econo- mists say is dangerously high if not addressed. A congressional official provided the information, which comes from a White House summary document circulating freely on Capitol Hill and among Washington's lobbyists. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the spending proposal was not supposed to be made public until today.. Details of the administra- tion's budget headed for Congress include an additional $100 billion to attack painfully high unem- ployment. The proposed $3.8 tril- lion budget would provide billions more to pull the country out of the Great Recession while increasing taxes on the wealthy and imposing a spending freeze on many govern- ment programs. Administration projections show the deficit never dropping below $700 billion, even under assumptions that war costs will drop precipitously to just $50 bil- lion in some years instead of more than three times that this year and next. White House spokesman Rob- ert Gibbs said the administra- tion believed "somewhere in the $100 billion range" would be the appropriate amount for a new jobs measure made up of a business tax credit to encourage hiring, increased infrastructure spend- ing and money from the govern- ment's bailout fund to get banks to increase loans to struggling small businesses. That price tag would be below a $174 billion bill passed by the House in December but far higher than a measure that could come to the Senate floor this week. Gibbs said it was important for Democrats and Republicans to put asidetheir differences to pass abill that addresses jobs, the country's No. 1 concern. H1N1 From Page 1A were more cases documented because not all ill students visited the health service for treatment. "We were only seeing the tip of the iceberg at the health service," Winfield said. Winfield said the number of H1N1 cases seen at UHS has reduced significantly since its peak in the second week of September, when up to 52 cases were seen each day. Five months later, during the first two weeks of January, there were aboutoneto two casesperday. However, there was an increase last week, when UHS saw around seven cases each day. Winfield said the CDC recom- mends that people do not see a doctor unless they're actually sick and said that UHS encouraged stu- dents to follow that policy so that the health service could accommo- date those who were sick. "We were trying very hard not to overwhelm ourselves," Winfield said. Despite the decrease in the number of cases since September, Winfield advised students to con- tinue to get vaccinated, adding that they shouldn't grow complacent. He said UHS anticipates a third wave of the H1Nlvirus in February or March of this year. According to Winfield, approxi- mately 8,000 H1N1 vaccines have been administered on campus since November. Students receive the vaccine for free, while faculty and staff have to pay an adminis- tration fee set by the government. UHS will continue to give out vaccines for students and Univer- sity employees who stilliwant to get vaccinated. While much of the hype around the virus has appeared to die down on campus, Winfield said he doesn't think the University over- reacted in preparing for it. Unless students were sick, Winfield said they weren't directly affected by policies related to the virus. He added that the University could have suspended classes, but it didn't, and flu prevention efforts went as planned. "We had prepared for some- thing more severe, but we certainly don't think (we) inconvenienced campus," Winfield said. "I'm pretty pleased with the way things worked out." Like Winfield, national public health officials remain cautious, as they do not want to repeat mis- takes made duringthe 1957 flu pan- demic, which killed 70,000 people in the United States. Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, said in a press conference last week that the spread of the flu dropped in December and January during the 1957 outbreak. She said health officials at the time thought the worst of the pandemic was over and stopped encouraging people to getvaccinated. As a result, there was an unexpected increase in the number of hospitalizations and deaths due to the flu in March 1958. "Flu is unpredictable," Sebelius said in the press conference. Dr. Stephen Redd, director of the Influenza Coordination Unit at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in the press conference that health officials know that flu pandemics come in waves, and cited spring and winter waves that occurred in the 1918 and 1957 flu outbreaks. But this time, officials say they are prepared. Sebelius said in the press con- ference that there is a lot of the HIN vaccine still available, and it is imperative for peopleto continue to protect themselves and get vac- cinated against the HIN virus if they haven't already. As of Jan. 28, more than 118,000,000 have been shipped to hospitals, clinics and health departments in the country. Even if people get a mild case of the virus, Sebelius said they can pass it on to more susceptible people like pregnant women and children with asthma. The H1N1 virus was first detect- ed last April. It continued to be transmitted through the summer, during the time of year when flu is not normally spread. Redd said in the press conference that there was an increase in the virus in late August, around the time when col- lege students went back to school. Redd added that the virus is still circulating around the country. Among children and college stu- dents, an estimated one fourth of the population has been infected with the virus, he said. This figure is much higher than what is usu- ally seen in the normal period of seasonal flu. Fellowship Opportunities The Center for Ethics in Public Life is pleased to announce its Fellowship Programs for the 2010-11 academic year. Fellowships are available for University of Michigan Doctoral candidates, Pre-candidates, and Undergraduates. The Dissertation Fellowship Program provides summer support for doctoral students who have achieved candidacy and who are writing dissertations that engage ethics in public life. The Pre-Candidate Fellowship Program provides summer support for pre-candidate doctoral students who plan to incorporate ethics in their dissertations. The Undergraduate Fellowship Program provides support for undergraduates to develop, explore, and pursue research or activities related to ethics in public life for the UM community. Fellows will receive a stipend of $4,000. Applications are due February 22, 2010. For further details and application materials, please visit www.ethics.umich.edu. FAN THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK AMMAN, Jordan MCAT COURSES START AS SOON AS FEB 7! M sOq-2tewisw Prinset Revtawvcom Jordan authorities C. . niei.. Fo.e" arrest militants linked to attack 5 A Jordanian security official says authorities have arrested dozens of Muslim militants in connection with a failed bomb attack on Israeli diplomats. 8 7 5 4 1 The official said yesterday that dozens have been detained in a police crackdown mostly on Salafists - militants who seek to revive strict Muslim doctrine dat- 6 9 5 4 1 2 ing back to the era of the 6th Cen- tury Prophet Muhammad. He said the crackdown was continuing across Jordan. The official declined to pro-7 vide other details and insisted on anonymity because he was not 8 6 3 allowed to speak to the media. No one was killed or injured in T the Jan. 14 attack on a convoy of Israeli diplomats heading home T for the weekend. It was the first 1 6 4 5 roadside bombing in Jordan and exposed a security gap for Israeli 8 diplomats. - Compiled from Daily wire reports