2A - Wednesday, November 27, 2013 MONDAY: This Week in History Professor The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-410-4110 ext. 1241 anweiner@michigandailyxom kvoigtman@michigandailycom Student victim of hate crimes A San Jose State University Adolf Hitler. student who is Black alleges that A fourth student was suspend- he was racially harassed and ed Friday. tormented by three of his suit- emates, who will be arraigned MSU researchers develop Jan. 6 for charges of battery and advanced microscope hate crimes, The Spartan Daily reported Friday. Michigan State University The three students alleg- researchers are developing a edly put a bike lock around the microscope that will be able to victim's neck and told him they capture the movement of atoms didn't have the key. In another and molecules down to one mil- incident, they allegedly tried to lionth of a billionth of a second, wrestle him to the ground, injur- The State News reported Monday. ing him in the process. They also Currently, high-resolution are accused of blockading the electron microscopes, while pow- VIRGINIA cOZANO/Da y victim in his room five times. The erful, cannot capture movement The Campus Jazz Ensemble of non-music majors, apartment was decorated with of individual molecules, Chong- directd by Dave Sayers, perforrns at the School of racially charged items including Yu Ruan, associate professor in Music, Theatre & Dance Tuesday. a Confederate flag and pictures of physics and astronomy at MSU CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Picture this Not so iii-eal Spanish Solo organist WHERE: Mason Hall WHERE: North Campus lunch hour performance WanHMe E tn dr-ywrt 1.K arn in ldrr i riras and research team head, told The State News. This complicates the study of the relationship between cell structure and function. "When you want to study mol- ecules moving around and bind- ing, it happens at high speeds in the frames you look at," Martin Berz, physics and astronomy professor and member of the research team, said in the article. "You're so zoomed in, and (mol- ecule movement is) happening so fast. But this microscope can capture very fast processes with a very quick exposure time. You can see molecules bind together without any blurring: a super sharp image." - CAROLYN GEARIG T H114F EET INGS YI)U SIIGII I K'N(W TOPAY 1The World Health Organization redacted its report that about half of new HIV cases in Greece were self-inflicted, Fox Business reported Tues- day. These cases, they said, were only anecdotal. Since the cuts in fed- eral spending triggered by sequestration, the University's team in D.C. has to work harder than ever to advocate for research dollars and favorable policy. " FOR MORE, SEE THE STATE If Afghan President Hamid Karzai does not sign a long-term secu- rity agreement, The Washington Post reported Tuesday, the U.S. could remove all troops from Afghanistam by the end of 2015. Newsroom 734-418-411s opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaiy.comr News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters tolthe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com wni: ivon ay at :~i p.m. WHAT: A video projector was taken from a third- floor room, University Police reported. The pro- jector is thought to have been taken between 2 p.tn. Friday and 10 a.m. Monday. There are no suspects. We need a doctor WHERE: University Hospital WHEN: Monday at about 1:05 p.m. WHAT: A subject reported- ly exposed himself to a staff member, University Police reported. The suspect was arrested and released pend- ing warrant authorization. cecreation u n WHEN: Monday at about 9:40 p.m. WHAT: A subject snuck into the building, avoiding staff, University Police reported. He was allegedly a student who did not have his ID with him, and was directed to leave until he had identification. WHAT: A conversational group for those looking to practice their Spanish occurs every Wednesday. WHO: School of Nursing WHEN: 12 p.m. to 1p.m. WHERE: Nick's Cafe in 300 N. Ingalls WHAT: Director of Music and organist of St. Clare of Montefalco in Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. will preform the organ. WHO: School of Music, Theatre and Dance WHEN: 12:15 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. WHERE: School of Pub EDITORIAL STAFF Matthew Slovin Managing Editor ' mjslovin@michigandaily.com AdamRubenfire ManagingNewsEditor arube@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: AliciaAdamczyk, Katie Burke, Peter Shahin, K.C. 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Both vehicles were damaged, but no injuries were reported. m e nBlood Battle: Ohio State Un WHAT: Those grappling 32-year-old tr with academic, professional WHO: Bloodl or athletic performance WHEN: 8 a.m issues may benefit from this WHERE: Mit common concerns meeting. CORRECTIONS This workshop will focus onC mindfulness. WHO: Counseling and * Please rep Psychological Services error in the I WHEN: 4:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. correctionsC WHERE: Michigan Union gandaily.com ay is the final blood in the against The iversity, a radition. Drives United . to 11:30 p.m. chigan Union MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? ' Get more online at michigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire Port any Daily to Zmichi- n. U.S. spewing 50% more methane than EPA says French prostitution bill aimed at fining clients 40 Livestock, oil drilling are sources of extra emissions WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States is spewing 50 per- cent more methane - a potent heat-trapping gas - than the fed- eral government estimates, a new comprehensive scientific study says. Much of it is coning from just three states: Texas, Oklaho- ma and Kansas. That'means methane may be a bigger global warming issue than thought, scientists say. Methane is 21 times more potent at trap- ping heat than carbon dioxide, the most abundant global warm- inggas, although it doesn't stay in the air as long. Much of that extra methane, also called natural gas, seems to be coming from livestock, including manure, belches, and flatulence, as well as leaks from a v _ Your Yogq/with a rope! $70 build \ $7 $70day STRENGTH _ 30 days unlimited , eleuse classes strss russayog.com 215 s. state ann arbor H-, refining and drilling for oil and gas, the study says. It was pub- lished Monday in the Proceed- ings of the National Academy of Science. The study estimates that in 2008, the U.S. poured 49 mil- lion tons of methane into the air. That means U.S. methane emis- sions trapped about as much heat as all the carbon dioxide pollu- tion coming from cars, trucks, and planes in the country in six months. That's more than the 32 mil- lion tons estimated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Administration or the nearly 29 million tons reckoned by the European Commission. "Something is very much off in the inventories," said study co- author Anna Michalak, an Earth scientist at the Carnegie Insti- tution for Science in Stanford, Calif. "The total U.S. impact on the world's energy budget is dif- ferent than we thought, and it's worse." EPA spokeswoman Alisha Johnson said her agency hasn't had time to go through the study yet, but hopes it will help "refine our estimates going forward." While the world has a good handle on how much carbon dioxide is pumped into the air, scientists have been more baffled by methane emissions. They have had to use computer models to estimate how much methane is going into that air. This study, however, was based on nearly 13,000 measure- ments from airplane flights and tall towers, the most used in any such research. The information was collect- ed in 2008. Scientists have yet to analyze their data from 2012, and that will capture more of any impact of the natural gas boom from hydraulic fractur- ing, Michalik said. Studies recently have shown conflict- ing results about how much methane escapes during frack- ing and other forms of fossil fuel drilling. Proposed law will decriminalize soliciting on the street PARIS (AP) - France's gov- ernment is pushing one of Europe's toughest laws against prostitution and sex trafficking, and other countries are watch- ing closely. Advocates hope that a draft French law going to parliament Wednesday will help change long-held attitudes toward the world's oldest profes- sion - by punishing the custom- er and protecting the prostitute. The bill, however, is facing resistance in a country with a libertine reputation and a Medi- terranean macho streak, and has prompted petitions defending those who buy sex. Signatories include screen icon Catherine Deneuve -who played a pros- titute in the cult film "Belle de Jour" - and crooner Charles Aznavour. Prostitution is currently legal in France, but brothels, pimping and soliciting in public are ille- gal. The bill has prompted debate about sex and sexism in France, where former International Monetary Fund chief Domi- nique Strauss-Kahn is facing charges of aggravated pimping. He denies wrongdoing, though his lawyer has defended Strauss- Kahn's free-wheeling sex life. It has also called attention to the evolution of the sex business, as the number of foreign prosti- tutes, especially from Asia and eastern Europe, has soared in recent years. The proposed law would introduce a 1,500-euro ($2,000) fine -rising to 3,000-euro at the second offense- for the clients of prostitutes. They could also be forced to attend classes aimed at highlightingthe harms of prosti- tution. The bill aims to decriminal- ize the estimated 40,000 pros- titutes in France, by scrapping a 2003 law that bans soliciting on the streets, and making it easier for foreign prostitutes to remain legally in France if they enter a process to get out of prostitu- tion. One of the bill's authors, Maud Olivier, says it's about "getting rid the consequence of unequal and archaic relation- ships between men and women." Other countries such as Ger- many, Switzerland and the Neth- erlands, where brothels are legal, are especially interested in the French experience. "If France moves, that could be the turning point for other European countries," said Gre- goire Thery, secretary-general of the Mouvement du Nid, an organization which says it helps 5,000 prostitutes in France each year. The proposed law-writtenby a group of lawmakers from both right and left and backed by the Socialist government- follows the example of Sweden, which passedsimilarlegislationin1999. A report commissioned by the Swedish government showed that the number of people involved in street prostitution in Sweden's three largest cities dropped from around730 in 1999 to 300-430 a year in the 10 years after that. At the same time, street prostitution in neigh- boring Norway and Denmark increased. The Netherlands went the other way, legalizing prostitu- tion in 2000. But the policy has come in for criticism for playing into the hands of criminals and human traffickers who exploit women. The government is now aiming to crack down on human traffickingbytighteninglaws. Supporters of the French draft law argue that it could reduce sex trafficking and empower prostitutes. "The current law is not on our side so we keep being trapped in that system, and the client knows that, he plays with that. When we hear about 'prostitution by choice,' I think that it is still prostitution as violence toward women, and we cannot keep tol- erating that violence anymore," said Rosen Hicher, 57, who was a prostitute from 1988 to 2009. "One day, a client told me: 'If you don't accept to do it without condom, I will call the police,"' she told a news conference. "I was able to say to him: 'clear off'. But another one wouldn't because she would be under con- trol of a pimp or would be sold by her husband, her father or her brother." Opponents of the French bill argue the opposite, and fear that cracking down will push prosti- tutes into a dangerous position: Being forced to hide, they would be even more at the mercy of pimps and violent clients, and cut offfromthe organizations ableto help them. "More clandestine practices means we would find ourselves in 'ei more secluded places, and there- fore subject to possible violence," Thierry Schaffauser, a 31-year old escort and spokesman for sex workers' group Strass, told The Associated Press. And in dealings with the cli- ent, he said, prostitutes would "have less power because when you make less profit, you might have to accept clients that you wouldn't normally accept, accept doing something you might not have accepted before." A contentious open letter titled "Hands off my whore" was released last month by a group of men, including a lawyer for Strauss-Kahn, in favor of a man's right to buy physical pleasure. And earlier this month, a petition emerged, signed by 60 celebrities, including Deneuve and Aznavour, saying: "With- out supporting or promot- ing prostitution, we reject the penalization of those who pros- titute themselves and those who buy their services, and we ask for a real debate without ideological prejudice." I r rA r A