4-n -4 DIVESTMENT .See Editorial Page Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom :4Iati RAY High--690 Low-40 See Today for details' I Vol. LXXXX, No. 15 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 22, 1979 Ten Cents Eiyht Pages Regents alter S. Africa policy slightly Doily Photo by LISA UDELSON PROTESTERS MARCH around the Regents' table in the Anderson Room of composed primarily of students, renewed its efforts to persuade the Regents to the Michigan Union yesterday afternoon before leaving peacefully. The group, sell University stock in corporations that conduct business in South Africa. CAR TER ANNOUNCES PACT: By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The University Board of Regents yesterday approved minor changes in its policy on South African investments which will result in closer monitoring of those holdings. The policy was amended to add bonds to the University holdings affected by the March 1978 resolution. Previously it covered only stocks and bank deposits. THE UNIVERSITY'S policy calls for the sale of investments in firms doing business in South Africa which do not respond to the University's requests for affirmation of the anti-discriminatory Sullivan Principles or their equivalent. The principles are designed to ensure more equitable treatment of employees in South Africa. That country maintains a system of apartheid, or institutionalized racism, which has aroused the long-standing concern of many campus activists. The meeting's quiet atmosphere sharply contrasted that of the last two such gatherings at the end of Winter term when more than 200 pro- divestment demonstrtors disrupted the proceedings to protest the Regenst' policy. AMONG THOSE present. at yester- day morning's meeting were members of the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA), which has pushed for total divestiture since early 1978. Discussion focused on a faculty- student report on the South African issue requested by the Regents last spring in the face of heavy protest. Daniel Moerman, professor of an- thropology on the Dearborn campus, made a presentation on behalf of the Senate Assembly Advisory Committee on Financial Affairs (SAACFA), as did Bob Stechuk, a member of the WCCAA. After each presentation, Regents responded with questions to the representatives from both groups. AFTER THE dialogue ended, the Board proceeded to vote down motions and amendments consecutively, until it finally approved the inclusion of bonds in its existing policy. Little debate preceded votes on the wide-ranging proposals, on which the Regents presented a spectrum of opinions. Regent David Laro (R-Flint) proposed that the Board rescind the. March 1978 policy "in total." "NONE OF US here in any way con-, done the oppression and racism in South Africa," Laro said.. He added, however, that he was "disappointed because he had not heard any position See S. AFRICA, Page 5 Uncertain. effects of'U divestment spur de bate .p By MITCH CANTOR Even after years of protest and debate, two basic questions have yet to be answered in the divestment con- troversy. If the University were to sell all its stocks in companies that do business in South Africa, what would be the effects on that country's apartheid system, and, how would the University's in- vestment portfolio fare? DIVESTMENT ADVOCATES have See UNCERTAIN, Page 2 U .S.topurchase From AP and Reuter Mexican gas WASHINGTON-Climaxing two years of difficult negotiations, the United States and Mexico have agreed on the sale of Mexican natural gas to U.S. pipleline companies, President Carter announced yesterday. Carter said the pact is a "significant step toward supplying a new energy source for the United States." HE ALSO SAID, in a brief announ- cement before newspersons, that the understanding is a breakthrough in mutual respect . between the United States and its southern neighbor. The price, Carter said, was a fair one for both countries. At a news briefing, Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher said gas will begin to flow after the Mexican state oil and' gas company, -PEMEX, has negotiated commercial contracts with U.S. natural-gas pipleine com- panies. Christopher represented the U.S. at the negotiations in Mexico City. HE SAID THE agreed upon initial price would be $3.625 per one thousand culbic foot, well above the $2.80 the U.S. now pays for Canadian gas. The price is sharply below Mexico's original demand of $4.95. However, the new agreement provides for future price hikes, keyed to an index that ties gas to the price of fuel oil. The purchase price of the Mexican gas companies with a current American market price of about $2.25. But another government official said the price impact of the deal on American' consumers would be negligible. "Originally, Mexico wanted the price tied to the cost of high grade heating oil delivered to New York. The equivalen- ce is calcualated by determining how much gas would be required to match the potential heating power of a barrel of oil. UNDER THAT FORMULA, of- ficials say, Mexican gas would have been priced at about $4.95 per thousand cubic feet., Former Energy Secretary 'James Schlesinger balked at that price last year, in part because the Carter ad- ministration was then trying to per- suade Congress to set a much lower controlled price for American producers. The stalled negotiations were resumed following a Carter visit to Mexico City in February that under- scored a variety of emotional issues dividing the two hemisphere neighbors. U.S. NEGOTIATORS succeeded in persuading Mexico to peg the price of gas to an index that incorporates residual oil, which is less expensive saturday 'The Wolverines-back at square one after last week's 12-10 loss to Notre Dame-take on the hapless Kansas Jayhawks at Michigan Stadium this afternoon. See story, Page 7. " A2 starving artists are holding a sale at Canterbury Loft today with prices to meet a star- ving student's budget. See story, Page 5. * The U.S. Senate met behind closed doors yesterday to discuss the resumption of a peacetime draft. See story, Page 3. SReed the Today column, Page 3 than high grade heating oil. . The initial volume of natural gas deliveries will be 300 million cubic feet per day, approximately equivalent to 53,000 barrels of oil per day. The amount is about one half of one per cent of total U.S. gas consumption and eight per cent of total U.S. natural gas imports. , The United States uses about 18 million barrels of oil a day, about half of which is imported. The U.S.-Mexico arrangement is designed to help the United States cut down on foreign oil imports, a condition Carter consistently has said is a threat to national security. Soviet withdrawal from Cube 'unrealistic and unnecessary' African president oust~s ditator from wire services PARIS-Forces of "democratic liberty" backed up by French troops took control of the Central African Em- pire late Thursday night after 14 years of bizarre and bloody rule by Jean- Bedel Bokassa, a onetime army sergeant who styled-himself as a new Napolean lording it over a poor and backward land. Former President David Dacko staged a bloodless coup and unseated Emperor Bokassa I while the dictator was reportedly in Libya. His liberated subjects surged into the streets yester- day and ransacked his family's shops. BOKA5SA, WHO holds a French passport based on his service in the French Colonial army, arrived in France in his personal jetliner last night seeking political asylum. But French authorities told the self-styled emperor to refuel at the military base at Evreux and then leave the country. The 58-year-old Bokassa was the third African dictator to be toppled this year, after Uganda's Idi Amin and Equatorial Guinea's Francisco Macias Nguema. Dacko, 49, was the country's first president after independence from France in 1960. He was deposed on New Year's Eve 1965 by then-Col. Bokassa, who headed the army at the time. IN DECEMBER 1976 Bokassa proclaimed himself emperor and the Central African Republic an 'empire. A year later he crowned himself -in a multi-million-dollar ceremony modeled after his idol Napoleon's imperial coronation. He gained his greatest notoriety around the s world, with recent disclosures of a massacre of schoolchildren in Bangui. But over the years there were persistent reports of human rights violations. Bokassa instituted such medieval penalties as cutting off ears or hands for crimes. In 1972, he reportedly led a detachment of soldiers armed with clubs to a jail and ordered them to beat 45 men imprisoned for theft. Three died. Bokassa's former Ambassador to France, General Sylvestre Bangui, who set up a government in exile earlier this month, last night said he was ready to cooperate with the new Central African regime. Bangui said he welcomed the over- throw of the emperor. "What Mr, Dacko has done is a good thing because we all wanted Bokassa to go," he said. WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States has not asked the Soviet Union to withdraw its combat brigade from Cuba because it would be "unrealistic" to expect the Russians to leave, Carter administration officials said yesterday. Instead, they said, the current negotiations between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. are aimed at eliminating the combat capability of the Soviet troops. THE OFFICIALS, who asked not to be named, said the administration feels that demanding withdrawal of the troops would be "unrealistic and unnecessary." They refused to specify exactly what steps the ad- ministration feels would eliminate the combat capability of the Soviet troops. But in the past weeks, the administration's definition of combat capability, while vague, has centered on the com- mand structure of the troops and the equipment that allows them to perform combat roles. The Soviets have insisted publicly that the'troops are only advisers to Cuban forces, that they have been in Cuba since 1962, and that they have a right to be there. The United States traditionally has accepted the presen- ce of Soviet advisers in Cuba. The current uproar started last month when U.S. intelligence decided that the.Soviet troops in Cuba had formed a combat brigade of 2,000 to 3,000 men. SINCE THE announcement of that finding, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin have held five negotiating sessions in an effort to resolve the issue. The dispute over the troops has stalled Senate con- sideration of SALT II, the new strategic arms treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union. Boat people benefit to bring back the Beatles?! From AP and UPI UNITED NATIONS-The suffering of the "boat people" might do what pleading fans and show business promoters have failed to achieve in nearly 10 years-bring the Beatles back together. A U.N. spokesman confirmed yester- day that the four Liverpool boys, who have not all played together in a decade, are being urged to play a benefit for the refugees of Southeast Asia and elsewhere. U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim would sponsor the event. DIRK SUMMERS, an independent Los Angeles concert producer who reportedly was handling negotiations, told Garden City, N.Y., radio station WLIR that three of the Beatles-Paul, George, and Ringo-had agreed to per- fom together on the same stage in 'U' Hospital budget may be cut by $30 million By JOHN GOYER rVU- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ n.u if--n lrrmrofphn estimate. REIZEN SAID he expected his 12.' a