NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 14, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS Walgreen Center naming ceremony will honor Miller A tribute to Arthur Miller, the legendary American playwright and University alum, will be held at 10 a.m. in the auditorium of the Rack- ham Graduate School today. The University's School of Music is sponsoring the event, which will also celebrate the naming of the Walgreen Drama Center and the Arthur Miller Theater. Japanese anime film to be shown at Lorch The Center for Japanese Studies will sponsor a screening of the Japa- nese anime movie "Cowboy Bebop" tonight at 7 p.m. in Lorch Hall's Askwith Auditorium. The animated film, which is in Japanese with English subtitles, is being screened for free. 'U' to celebrate families of its employees A celebration of the 15th anni- versary of the Work/Life Resource Center will take place on the Diag from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today. The event will celebrate the Univer- sity's commitment to employees and their families. CRIME NOTES Video player lifted from EECS building A DVD/VCR combination player was taken Wednesday from the Elec- trical Engineering and Computer Sci- ence Building on 1301 Beal Ave., the Department of Public Safety reported. There are no suspects. Dorm room burglarized while student sleeps A burglar broke into a room in the Lee house of Vera Baits Resi- dence Hall and stole the resident's computer, backpack and wallet, DPS reported. The owner of the stolen goods was asleep in the room while the burglary occurred. THIS DAY In Daily History New Law Library off-limits to non- Law students Oct. 14, 1981 - With the con- struction of the University Law School's new underground library, the Allan F. and Alene Smith Law Library Addition, new constraints on use by University students arose. Undergraduates and non-Law gradu- ate students were no longer allowed to study in the new building. Beverly Pooley, director of the Law Library, emphasized the need for Law students to use the Law Library's resources on a daily basis without being interrupted by non- Law students. Pooley said the presence of non- Law students in the old Law Library often precluded Law students from performing their work. "It was like a zoo down there," Law student Ron Klein said of the library when populated with under- graduates. Nonetheless, the restriction did not prevent non-Law students from entering the new facility altogether. With a professor's note or a visitor's pass, other students would be able to conduct research or peruse the Granholm wants to keep Delphi jobs LANSING (AP) - Gov. Jennifer Granholm told Delphi Chairman and CEO Robert "Steve" Miller during a half-hour, private meeting yesterday that her administration will work hard to keep Delphi jobs in Michigan. "The governor made it clear to Mr. Miller during that meeting that she and we will go anywhere, at any time, do anything to keep Delphi jobs in Michi- gan," Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said. "All you have to do is look at Governor Gran- holm's track record ... with companies that have gone through crisis, whether it's Kmart or Electro- lux, to know we will do whatever we can to keep jobs in this state," Boyd added, referring to the retail giant that went through bankruptcy and a Greenville refrigerator plant that will shut down later this year. The meeting came five days after Granholm said in response to Delphi's bankruptcy filing that she was "deeply disturbed" by the automotive parts supplier's decision and what it would mean for the nearly 15,000 Delphi workers in Michigan. "I am angry that this action occurs one day after headlines blared that Delphi employees were being asked to accept brutal, draconian pay cuts while upper management is being offered golden para- chutes," the governor said in a statement Saturday. "Globalization is ravaging Michigan's manufactur- ing job base." Granholm has taken hits this week from Michi- gan Republicans, who say the governor isn't doing enough to persuade Delphi to keep at least some of its Michigan workers in the state as it looks to reor- ganize. Instead, Republicans are praising Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels - a Republican and President Bush's former budget director - as a better example of leadership. "The Indianapolis Star highlights the dif- ference between Gov. Mitch Daniels aggres- sive and early approach (to working with Delphi) and Granholm's 'holding pattern' of high unemployment, complete inaction, blame- shifts and temper tantrums," the party said in a statement Thursday. "Maybe ... Granholm could have spent time learning about leader- ship from Daniels." Boyd said the governor is working with Delphi leaders and getting the Michigan Economic Devel- opment Corp. involved to see what the state can do to keep Delphi plants here. "The governor requested this meeting with Mr. Miller. The MEDC has requested a meeting with Delphi staff. We will be anxiously awaiting their restructuring plan. But we will be putting things in motion," Boyd said. Earlier this week, Michigan GOP Chairman Saul Anuzis criticized Granholm's husband, Dan Mul- hern, for telling The Saginaw News that low-skilled workers are part of Michigan's economic problems. "Jennifer Granholm chooses to criticize Michi- gan workers rather than offer solutions to protect their jobs," Anuzis said in a statement. "With tens of thousands of Michigan jobs on the line, families are looking for solutions, not callous remarks and shameless blame shifts." Boyd said such remarks were just partisan pot- shots, noting that "Republicans have taken advan- tage of tough times in the lives of more 14,000 Michigan workers for cheap political gains." "Rather than sending out press releases promot- ing Mitch Daniels and criticizing Governor Gra- nholm, the Republicans ought to be getting their Republican leaders in the Legislature to pass the governor's economic plan," she said. AP PH( Delphi Corp. Chairman and CEO Robert Miller, left, answers a question during a news conference at company headquarters as Rodney O'Neal, president and chief operating officer, listens Wednesday. High school newspaper adviser to gt tlousands after settlig awsit FRANKLIN, Ind. (AP) - A former high school newspaper adviser who was removed after the paper printed a story about a student being charged with murder stands to collect $74,000 to settle his federal lawsuit against the school district. The lawsuit claimed the school district violated Chad Tuley's First Amendment rights by removing him as adviser after the story appeared. Tuley, 26, hopes to return to the classroom next fall and eventually to oversee another student news- paper - but not in Franklin Township Schools. A settlement finalized this week bars him from ever applying for a job in the school district. Tuley will remain on paid leave until May 30, when his resignation takes effect. After that, the district will pay an additional $40,000. The district suspended Tuley with pay Nov. 12 after the newspaper printed the story about a 17- year-old junior who was arrested at school on charg- es he fatally stabbed and beat a 67-year-old man. A letter from the school district cited insubor- dination as the reason for the suspension. District officials said the story should not have been published partly because the sister of the student who was arrested still attended the school in southeastern Marion County. They also said Principal Kevin Koers had directed Tuley not to print it. Tuley disagreed, saying Koers expressed con- : cern beforehand but did not bar Tuley from pub- lishing the story. Tuley also said then that he felt the story was newsworthy and that students were .< > talking about the arrest. > Franklin schools Superintendent E.B. Carver has said Tuley lacked a proper journalism teaching. . .* license and that his removal from the adviser posi- f tion was because of his conduct - not the story. "This was never about a First Amendments. right," Carver said this week. "It was a person- nel issue. Any time you settle for money, you're{ never too strong about your First Amendment rights." Tuley and his attorney, Ed DeLaney, declined to respond specifically to that comment, citing a clause in the agreement barring any statementsp< about the matter. y The settlement agreement also prohibits either side from releasing it publicly unless required .~ by law. The Indianapolis Star obtained a copy . Tuesday after sending a public records request x ~ to the school district k Dennis Cripe, executive director of the Indi- ana High School Press Association, has sup-MK HLEBfDaI ported Tuley in his lawsuit. A "fairy door" In Sweetwater Cafe on Washngton Street Yesterday A number of local businesses "Sayng tis ase asnt abut he Frst have put the tiny doors in and around their buildings. Local illustrator Jonathan Wright leaves a Amendment is like saying the American Revo- journal at each location. Visitors are Invited to leave messages for the fairies. lution wasn't about freedom," Cripe said. GOT A COMPLAINT ABOUT THE DAILY? E-MAIL DAILY EDITOR IN CHIEF JASON Z. PESICK AT PESICK@MICHIGANDAILY.COM. THEN CHECK HIS WEBLOG, THE EDITOR'S PAGE, FOR HIS PUBLIC RESPONSE. FIND THE DAILY'S WEBLOG NETWORK AT WWW.ICHIGANDAILY.COM. m