NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 14, 2005 - 3A ON CAMPUS Festival totreflect Rhythms and Roots, a festival fea- *turing various performing groups on campus, will be held tonight from 5 to 7 p.m. in Ingalls Mall by the Michigan League. This new program, which hopes to reflect the diversity of the Univer- sity, will include the Irish Dance Club, Groove, TASA Influx and the Michigan Raas Team. The cost is free. School of Music to present tale of 1940s Hollywood The School of Music will host "City of Angels" tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Power Center for the Performing Arts. "City of Angels" tells a witty tale of glamour and treachery in 1940s Holly- wood. Tickets are $15 to $20 for general admission and $9 for students. Tour held to teach students about H IV and AIDS The Road to Hope Tour is making a stop in Ann Arbor tonight from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the University Club in the as well as how to fight the disease. The event is sponsored by the Stu- dent Global AIDS Campaign. For mnore information, visit www.Iwpes- voice.org. Teens reported for throwing rocks, * harassing workers A caller reported to the Depart- nment of Public Safety Tuesday that approximately four teenagers in the were idingskateboads, haasing the staff and throwing rocks at the building. The suspects were gone when officers arrived. :Residue damages vehicle in car port A caller reported to DPS Tuesday that on April 8 some kind of residue in the Fletcher Carport dripped on to her car and damaged the paint. ODrop box in Angell flall destroyed A caller reported to DPS Monday that a drop box outside of his office in Angell Hall was destroyed. There are no suspects at this time. T H IS D AY I n D a ily H is t ory University denies admitting Japanese American students April 14, 1942 -- As Japanese Amer- icans were being evacuated from the West Coast, the University said no Japa- nese student evacuees had been admit- ted at the University. After receiving a letter from Universi- ty of Washington Prof. Robert O'Brien, 0 the Deans' Conference discussed the matter, but said it had reached no defini- tive conclusion. An article that ran April 12 alleged that the University was one of the nine inland institutions allowing Japanese students to seek refuge. University President Alexander Ruthven said, "The newspaper report ;that the University of Michigan has agreed with West Coast institutions to accept students of Japanese blood from the evacuated areas is incorrect. aIt is the policy of the University to dis- Wcourage such students from seeking Bill aims to defend smokers' U lruer bill, employers can still ban legal activities that inierfere with job requirements LANSING, (A P) - Workers would be pro- tected from getting fired for what they do on their own time - as long as it's legal - tinder a bill introduced yesterday in the state Senate. The legislation was drafted in response to four workers losing their jobs at a suburban Lansing business because they didn't quit smoking outside of "Our opil But the legislation would employe have broader implications, bar- ring employers from adopting need an) a similar policy for just about any legal activity as long as it restrictic doesn't impinge on their work. 1 "This is America," said bill regUILiC sponsor Sen. Virg Bernero, (D- their abil Lansing). "Your personal time should be your own." run the I Okemos-based Weyco Inc., a health benefits administra- tor. instituted a policy Jan. 1 that makes it a firing offense to smoke - even off the company's premises on employees' own time. The policy had been announced in late 2003. More than a dozen employees quit smoking with the help of a cessation program. Bernero said four women were fired because of the rights policy, but the company says the employees left shortly before the policy took effect. The policy was designed to encourage employ- ees to take better care of their health and to cut down on health care costs. "Our opinion is employers don't need any more restrictions and regulations on their ability to run the business," David Houston, an attorney repre- senting Weyco, said yesterday in response to the legislation being introduced. "This legislation would be guaranteed to cause nion is rs don't Tmore ns and ~ns on lity to business," David Houston Attorney additional litigation, from employers and employees B"ernero's legislation also would prevent employers from not hiring employees or dis- criminating against workers because of their legal conduct outside of work. Several other states have similar laws, Ber- nero said. Michigan is one of 22 states that doesn't have a Jaw say- ing workers who smoke can't be discriminated against for that reason, according to the Washington-based Bureau of National Affairs. Bernero's legislation has both Democratic and Republican co-sponsors. The bill also is endorsed by the American Civil Liberties Union, which says the legislation would protect workers' privacy rights. MI residents injured in Cairo bombing *Meni are seriously hurt andi may not be able to return to U.S. for several days BER L1N (A P) - Three southwestern Michigan men injured in a deadly bombing at a Cairo tourist bazaar were admitted to a U.S. military hospital in Germany for treatment, a hospital spokeswoman said. Erik Mirandette, 22, Michael Kiel, 21, and Kristopher Ross, 22, were injured in the April 7 blast that killed t wo French tourists and an American identified by The Grand Rapids Press as Mirandette's brother Alex, 18, from Kentwood, Mich. The three injured men arrived by military transport at Ramstein Air Base in Germany yesterday morning and were taken to Land- stuhl Regional Medical Center for treatment, hospital spokeswoman Marie Shaw said. Mirandette was in the intensive care unit. The others underwent medical procedures that were completed yesterday afternoon and were listed in stable condition, Shaw said. It might be several days before they can be moved back to the United States. Several relatives have flown to Germany to be with them, Shaw said. Further information on the nature and extent of their injuries was not immediately available. Shauna Niequist, a spokeswoman for Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville, Mich., the church attended by the four Michigan men, told the newspaper for a story published yes- terday that the friends were on a four-month motorcycle tour of Africa. They stopped at churches, orphanages and AIDS clinics along the way to donate their time, she said. "They're still in a very serious situation,"' Niequist said of the three injured friends. "We're not talking at all about when they're coming home." Erik Mirandette previously traveled throughout Africa for about a year and a halt, doing outreach work for Mars Hill with other churches and organizations. But he and his motorcycle companions were not on a mission for the church on this trip, Niequist said. "It says a lot about their character that the official trip was over, but even on a recre- ational (trip) it was still important for them to be helping people and building relationships along the way," she said. A total of 18 people were injured in the blast at Cairo's Khan al-Khalili bazaar. Suspected bomber Hassan Rafaat Ahmed Bashandi, who was 17 or 18, died in the attack. Police have detained 30 people in the bomb- ing, including the suspected bomber's mother, three brothers and 16 other relatives. hitch out bids partners for MotorCity Casino Delphi under investigation for DETROIT (AP) - State gambling officials yesterday approved Marian Ilitch's bid to buy out her partners in MotorCity Casino and become sole owner of the venture, which takes in more than $400 million in revenue annu- ally. The Michigan Gaming Control Board voted 4-0 to approve the sale. One board member was absent. MotorCity, one of three Detroit casi- nos, is to be sold because of the pending merger between MGM Mirage Inc. and Mandalay Resort Group. MGM Mirage already owns Detroit's MGM Grand Casino, and Michigan law prohibits the company from owning more than one casino in the city. The sale is contingent on the com- pletion of MGM Mirage's acquisition of Mandalay, expected by June 30. Although it gave its approval to the deal, the Michigan board is expected to fur- ther scrutinize the financing and other details in the coming months. I litch, who already owns 25 percent of MotorCity, is paying $525 million for the 53.5 percent stake owned by Man- dalay Resort Group. She also is buying an 11.5 percent stake held by Atwater Entertainment, a group of more than 100 local investors, for $106 million, and the remaining 10 percent from another local investor, Tom Celani, for an undisclosed amount. Ilitch told the gaming board yesterday she didn't plan big changes in Motor- City's management. "I've been around a pretty long time to know that you don't break up a win- ning team," she said. Ilitch and her husband, Mike, began their business empire in 1959 with the opening of a pizza parlor in suburban Detroit. That first Little Caesars restau- rant flourished into one of the biggest national pizza chains. The Ilitches' com- panies, which include hockey's Detroit Red Wings and baseball's Detroit Tigers, had combined revenue in excess of $1 billion last year. Yesterday's meeting lasted about an hour and 15 minutes. The board did not have to consider Ilitch's suitability as an owner because she is already licensed because of her 25 percent stake. Instead Ilitch's team answered questions about the intricacies of the deal and the financ- ing for it. Ilitch said afterward she was sur- prised there were no questions from the public. She told reporters that buying the casino was an important part of her family's commitment to Detroit's eco- nomic revival. "I have a passion for this city. I was born and raised here," she said. "It breaks my heart that our city has come down." Ilitch said she remained committed to MotorCity's planned expansion. All the Detroit casinos were built with the under- standing they would soon be replaced by permanent casinos, complete with hotels. MotorCity opened in December 1999. "My hope is I'm not just going to put up a hotel. I'm going to have a top-class hotel," she said.Construction has been delayed because of a lawsuit from the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Supe- rior Chippewa Indians, which claimed Detroit's 1997 casino selection process was unfair. MotorCity and Greektown Casino have agreed on a settlement with the tribe but are waiting for an injunction to be lifted before beginning construc- tion. DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. is turning over documents to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commis- sion as part of the government's inves- tigation of auto supplier Delphi Corp., a GM spokeswoman said yesterday. Troy-based Delphi announced last month that the SEC and the Justice Department are investigating accounting iriregularities at the company. An internal investigation at Delphi already has led to the resignation of two executives, CFO Alan Dawes and controller Paul Free. The documents relate to two transac- tions between GM and Delphi, which spun off from GM in 1999 and now is the world's largest auto supplier. GM spokes- woman Toni Simonetti said GM is fully cooperating with the SEC and is confident it accounted for the transactions correctly. 'After Delphi disclosed that its accounting was problematic, we reviewed our accounting of these transactions and are satisfied that they are correct," Sim- onetti said. Delphi paid $237 million to GM in 2000 for expenses related to vehicle recalls. GM credited the payment in the third quarter of 2000 but didn't report it, Simonetti said. Simonetti . said the payment covered expenses that GM had booked in previous quarters, so the accounting Was correct. The second transaction was an $85 million credit that GM gave Delphi in the fourth quarter of 2001, mostly for retiree benefits. GM booked the payment against equity, instead of treating it as a regular expense, because it was related to the spin-off, Simonetti said. Simonetti said it took several years for the adjustment because Delphi retirees were given some time to choose their retirement plan and then the two compa- nies had to agree on the final cost of GM's liability. But she said it was appropriate to consider the payment as part of the expenses related to the spin-off. Delphi shares were down 5 cents to close at $3.91 yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange. GM shares were down 67 cents to close at $28.33. ' >44 4' 4 ~4 '.4 >*> ~ 4 44~4 4>' ,4,>'4N '4''> 4 /* *< 4 .4~,< *4 <' >44*'<' / * 4, <4< ," '~ 4, ,/,.~ *<4 ~ ~4N'<'4,4>,4' 4. .' < ;'< 4, 44 4, / /4 < '<, <~><> / ~ ix 'i" ~, <, . 1 YOWl IMAGINATION TO 0000 1$EC >~4' "1,<' /4 .~ ',~ / A4 , ~' 40< 4' 74>4<4 '~ flu .4.4 ... . ~ flnuas~ ' ,, <'>4 <'4< 44' ats' >~ *0> 4< / Ww~n !~ 4~~' i/i,' WinW'~ *..s ,,, %~~AflJIT '22t WRITE 4 4 ~'. ~ qivAtvIu 763~~1L~4F$9, ~" '''><~>> OR $10? DY.420 MAVNARa Sr. "" 77' 4 4<>"'' ' FOIl 3&tr~tk<. 0,4 444 4 *~><>'44 IWORt unr~se' 44< '' / < 44 ' 4' 4 4 4 '4 ..4.i <'44< '', ' < '4 > > N~4 <4,> <'>'42<'4>'> >4. ,> '4 4 >4, > 4 / '4 ' '' 4 4 / 4 / 4 >4'?'>' ~ >' '< '44, 4 / 4'' ' 4 44, U U FOOD FOR THOUGH T PTSD U-