NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, ctober 26, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS Performances to raise money for Dance Marathon As part of the Standing Room Only variety show, performances by dance groups, a cappella groups, theater troupes and bands will take place today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Co-sponsored by Hillel and Dance Marathon, the event will take place from 8 to 10:30 p.m. All money raised will be donated to the charity program of Dance Marathon. Improving climate of disabled students focus of speech Daniel Heumann, a motivational speaker and educator, will be giving a speech about "Creating Inclusive Aca- demic Environment for Students with Disabilities." Sponsored by the Coun- cil for Disability Concerns, the event will take place today from 3 to 4 p.m. in the Michigan Room of the Michigan League. Jazz ensemble to perform at Rackham Director Dennis Wilson will con- duct the Jazz Lab Ensemble in a per- formance at Rackham Auditorium today. Sponsored by the School of Music, the event will start at 8 p.m. No tickets are required. CRIME NOTES SS Careless fire started in front of Art Museum A fire started in front of the Universi- ty Museum of Art on State Street when a person threw a cigarette into a trash can on Monday around 11:40 a.m. The fire was extinguished with water before the Department of Public Safety officer arrived. Student assaulted by stranger A female student reported to the Department of Public Safety that a man was shoving and yelling on Monday around 3:15 p.m. She described the sus- pect was a male. The victim sustained no injuries. When DPS arrived, there was no one on the scene. Staff reports LCD monitor stolen A staff member in East Hall reported on Monday that a LCD flat panel moni- tor had been stolen on Oct. 12th. There are no suspects at this time. The moni- tor is worth $1,100. THIS DAY In Daily History State Senate approves business tax cuts Democrats criticize Republican- controlled Senate for the legislation to slash $1 billion in taxes LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Senate approved a plan yesterday to cut business taxes by $1 billion over six years and tie the potential for even more tax relief to limits on state spending. Over Democratic objections, the Republican- controlled Senate sent the legislation to the state House, where Republicans passed their own tax package in August. One bill would reduce the state's main busi- ness tax rate from 1.9 percent to 1.84 per- cent in January, saving companies about $50 million over nine months. Other bills would create a nonrefundable credit for property taxes paid on industrial equipment and base a company's taxes solely on sales rather than the current combination of sales, payroll and personal property. Another $1.4 billion in tax cuts would be tied to a measure that would limit the annual growth in state tax revenues to no more than the inflation rate plus 1 percentage point. Business would get the additional cuts if tax revenues - excluding federal dollars - exceeded that rate plus another $50 mil- lion. Some of the extra money would go into the state's rainy day fund. In the last 20 years, revenues have gone above inflation plus 1 percentage point 11 times, though the last increase occurred in the 1999-2000 budget year. Most increases came during the boom years of the 1990s. Sen. Michael Switalski, (D-Roseville), criticized Republicans for passing legislation he said would starve government of funding even when revenues improve by basing future appropriations on current spending, when state revenues are in a trough. "It is a vision that says, 'Now that we have starved state revenue, let's drag it into the bath- room and choke it to death,"' he said. But Majority Leader Ken Sikkema, (R-Wyo- ming), said he is more concerned about another trough: job loss. "That's real," he said. "Our unemployment rate is above the national average. ... We need tax relief for the job providers of this state if we're going to have a growth economy." Critics point to problems in Colorado that have arisen because of spending caps there. But Sikkema said Colorado has a constitutional limit on govern- ment revenue and spending. The Senate measure is a regular bill, giving lawmakers more flexibility to address problems. Nothing in the proposal would prevent state or local governments from raising taxes, Sikkema said. Republicans and Democrats also disagreed over how to structure business tax cuts. Democrats said the GOP's plan is weak com- pared with a tax restructuring proposal offered by Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm. The gover- nor's plan would drop the single business tax rate from 1.9 percent to 1.2 percent next year, balancing the cut with increases on insurance premiums that would make it revenue-neutral. "This will not create jobs," Sen. Buzz Thomas, (D-Detroit), said of the much smaller rate cut in the GOP legislation. "We are saying to Michigan manufacturers that we are not in line to help you." Sen. Alan Cropsey, (R-DeWitt), responded that Granholm's plan is a "tax shift" rather than a tax cut. Granholm has said that three-quarters of Michigan companies would pay less under her plan, while under a fourth would pay more. Delphi wants UAW to slash wages, benefits Company wants to cut base wages to $9.50 or $10.50 an hour DETROIT (AP) - Delphi Corp., which filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this month, is asking the United Auto Workers to agree to cut hourly workers' pay by more than 60 percent and give up health and pension benefits and vacation time, according to a sum- mary of the auto supplier's proposal dis- tributed to union members in Indiana. The summary was posted yesterday on the website of UAW Local 292 in Kokomo, Ind., as well as a website run by Kokomo-area union members. According to the summary, Delphi wants to cut base wages to $9.50 to $10.50 an hour for production workers and $19 for skilled trades workers. New produc- tion workers would start at a base rate of $9 an hour. Right now, Delphi hourly workers make $27 an hour or more. Under the proposal, Troy-based Del- phi would eliminate a jobs bank that gives full pay and benefits to around 4,000 laid-off workers, which Delphi says costs it $400 million each year. It also would have the right to sell, close or consolidate any plant. Delphi's pension plan would be fro- zen and accept no new participants after Jan. 1, according to the sum- mary. Delphi also could reduce retiree benefits or terminate the pension plan, but no further details were given in the summary. Delphi and its former parent, General Motors Corp., are still settling how much GM owes Delphi's retirees. GM has said it could be liable for up to $12 billion in pension obligations but expects to pay much less. Hourly workers would be asked to pay health care deductibles for the first time, of $900 per individual and $1,800 per family. Dental and vision care would be eliminated. The proposal would drop annual paid holidays from 16 to 10, including a paid week of vaca- tion between Christmas and Jan. 1. It also would eliminate annual cost-of-liv- ing adjustments. Neither Delphi nor UAW leadership has officially released details of the proposal, since bankruptcy court Judge Robert Drain granted Delphi's request to keep its contract proposals confiden- tial. Delphi is scheduled to appear in bankruptcy court tomorrow. A message was left yesterday evening with a Delphi spokeswoman. A spokes- man at the UAW's Detroit headquarters said he wouldn't comment yesterday, but union leaders did blast the proposal when Delphi presented it to them last week. "Delphi's proposal is designed to ha$- ten the dismantling of America's middle class by importing Third World wages to the United States," UAW President Ron Gettelfinger and Vice President Richard Shoemaker said in a joint statement. The UAW represents most of Delphi's approximately 34,000 U.S. hourly work- ers. Delphi Chairman and CEO Robert "Steve" Miller has said he understands workers are angry, but the company is paying wage and benefit packages worth $65 an hour, which is two to three times more than its competitors. Miller has expressed optimism that a deal with Delphi's unions can be reached by mid-December. If an agreement to cut wages and benefits isn't reached, Delphi could ask the bankruptcy court to void its contracts. The court could then impose new contracts in the first part of next year. Todd Jordan, 28, who works at a Del- phi plant in Kokomo, said there is no way he and his- wife, who also works for Delphi, could support their two children on the proposed wages. "We're going to have to declare bank- ruptcy," Jordan said. Yesterday in Dayton, Ohio, approxi- mately 70 Delphi workers, local UAW leaders and city officials marched from a plant to a union hall to protest any possible plant closings. The Day- ton area has five Delphi plants that employ 6,000 people. Parks's death sparks talk on civil rights movement Diwali will commemo _ The Associated Press The death of Rosa Parks underscores that the generation responsible for the key victories of the civil rights move- ment is fading into history, leaving its survivors with the challenge of keeping the movement's memory and work alive even as today's youth often seem disen- gaged. "As people get older and people pass, it becomes more and more difficult to have that sort of firsthand knowledge" of the fight for integration, said U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat who first met Parks as a 17-year-old student and activist. "It becomes a little more difficult to pass it on." Lewis, who once headed the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, added that the social challenges of today - persistent racial gaps in poverty, educa- tion and wealth, among others - highlight the continued need for activists and teach- ers to honor Parks' spirit. "Her life should inspire a generation yet unborn to stand up," he said. Parks is one of a handful of civil rights figures, along with Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, whose name most young people seem to know. But many are more familiar with "Rosa Parks," the hit song by the hip-hop group OutKast, than her full story, said Renada Johnson, a 25-year-old graduate student at Bowie State University in Maryland, who met Parks in 1997. "Young people definitely know who she was, but all we were taught in school was that she didn't get up because her feet were hurting," Johnson said. "They don't know her whole story." In 1955, Parks was a seamstress and longtime sp-cretary for the local NAACP who defied segregation laws aid refused to give up her seat in a whites-only section of a public bus in Montgomery, Ala. Then 42, she inspired tens of thousands of working-class blacks - led by King - to boycott the local buses for more than a year. Finally, the Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that declared Montgom- ery's segregated seating laws unconstitu- tional. The effort highlighted persistent bias against blacks across the nation. After she died Monday at age 92, Parks was remembered as a quiet woman of steely resolve, whose simple act helped spark the biggest movement for social change in American history. "But that was 50 years ago," said Bruce Gordon, president of the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People. "A lot has changed in 50 years." Many young people either don't know civil rights history or don't know why it matters, he said. Parks, who worked to educate youth about the struggle of black people, once chuckled that children some- times asked her if she knew Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, former slaves who lived generations before her. And now with the median age of Afri- can-Americans at 30, according to the Census Bureau, more than half of the nation's black community was born after the end of legally sanctioned racial dis- crimination. Parents who were active in the move- ment say they sense a disconnect when speaking with their children. "I remember my son once said to me, 'Why did you sit in the back of the bus? Why didn't you just go up front?' I said 'I didn't want to get killed,"' said Earl G. Graves Sr., 70, publisher of Black Enter- prise Magazine. "He looked at me and blinked." "Young people have to be reignited," he added. Said Gordon: "It ought to renew in people the recognition that individual actions make a difference." Lewis lamented that, in the last month, several women civil rights pio- neers have died: C. Delores Tucker, the first black women to be Pennsylvania's secretary of state; Constance Baker Motley, the first black and the first woman to serve as a federal judge in the southern district of New York; and Viv- ian Malone Jones, who defied Alabama Gov. George Wallace as one of the first black students to enroll at the University of Alabama in 1963. "And now Rosa Parks," he said. "It's so important for people to tell their sto- ries over and over again." rate the Hindu new year Oct. 26, 1995 - In celebration of the Diwali holiday, more than 100 Univer- sity students assembled at Stockwell's Blue Lounge. Diwali, which means the "Festival of Lights," commemorates the Hindu new year. The purpose of the holiday is to pay tribute to Lakshmi, the goddess of prosperity. According to the Hindu epic Ramayana, Diwali also rep- resents the day that Ram, a Hindu hero, returned to Ayodaha after defeating the demon king Ravana. For many students, the event represents a time to feel at home. "We celebrate this at home every year," said LSA first-year student Vinay Jindal. "It's something I can do at school and not feel away from home." Hosted by the Hindu Students "Don't let your H A I R SHWIlL EA3C i