IYU SEE ENES ltAPEN CALL DA1r ) 0 We 're back While the Daily won't always be as large as this special edition, we do publish smaller issues every day except Monday. Today's issue is an updated version of one that was mailed last month to new students. Our regular editions will contain state, national, and world news from wire services in addition to articles written by Daily staffers. To have the Daily delivered to your dorm or doorstep, call 764-0558. For those interested in joining the Daily's business, news, sports, or arts staffs, stop by to see us at 420 Maynard or watch the paper for announcemen- ts of special meetings. Take ten On September 6, 1969 plans to renovate the Michigan Union were already underway. On that date University officials proposed the for- mation of a student-faculty committee to study various uses of the Union that would encourage more students participation and improve its financial status. One of the plans under consideration was to move to the Union students organizations such as the Student Government Council, which at that time occupied the Student Activities Building. The change was eventually realized. See the story on Page One about current plans for Union renovations. Whose plaza? Famous as the home of the rotating "cube," the concrete plaza surrounded by grass in front of the Administration Building last year became the setting for a lengthy showdown between University sign painters and a rebellious group known as MARVIN (Michigan Anar- chists Rarely Viewed in Nepal). As proclaimed by a blue sign, the area is officially called the "Regents Plaza," but the covert MARVIN claimed responsibility for changing the sign to read "People's Plaza." University painters would dutifully change-the sign back to its original The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 6, 1979-Page 3A S. African divestment likely to be active 4 By MARK PARRENT Fierce debate is likely to continue this fall over the issue that garnered the most publicity on campus last fall: the question of whether the University should sell its holdings in firms that do business in South Africa. All sides in the debate agree on at least one thing: the system of in- stitutionalized apartheid practiced in South Africa is repulsive, and measures campus issu should be taken to change the situation there. The Washtenaw County Coaliton Against Apartheid (WCCAA), a group composed primarily of students, favors the University selling its stocks and bonds in any company that has busines operations in South Africa. The group organized a demonstration at a Regents meeting last March that forced the Regents to go to court for an emergency order allowing them to meet behind this fall 0 // C locked doors with only members of the press and other selected individuals allowed to attend. THE PROTESTERS had earlier chanted loudly whenever a Regent or administrator tried to continue the meeting. After the Regents had retreated to their upstairs meeting, the group agreed to leave the Regents' Room when Interim University See DIVESTMENT, Page 7 4 611 Church Street Ann Arbor, Mi. 996-2747 delightfully delectable 11 diversion. ,f ..... ' j - EVERYTHING YOU NEVER EXPECTED FROM AN APPLIANCE STORE. form every time the rebels altered it until a stalemate developed with the sign remaining blank. In a prepared statement issued at the time, MARVIN announced its dedication to "causing disorder withih the University community" because the "anarchists" felt the University had "developed an enivironment too staid to stimulate.thoughtful scholastics." The group . also submitted a list of demands to the University as follows below. (MARVIN was not the first group to use the'sign-painting tactic, however. A group earlier in this decade at- tempted to rename the sign in a similar fashion.) * Change the sign permanently to read "People's Plaza." '4Because that's what it is, not a Regents plaza," according to the group's spokesperson)); * fill the Fishbowl full of water; " shorten the hours of the library system to free students so they can develop into concerned, aware people; " ban Stanley Kaplan from campus-his school serves merely to reinforce misguided professional anxieties; * force professors to emphasize learning not grades, teaching not research; * increase support for WCBN; end the 'students only' limitation, pipe free radio into University buildings, e arrange for round the clock showings of "Twilight Zone"; * purchase lightweight plastic trashcans to replace the cement soap box cans presently on the Diag; " spring, and subsequent hiring of dog shit removal squads; " end mediocrity. Happenings FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Coming Home, 7 and 9 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. Cinema Guild-Monsieur Verdoux, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. (below CRISP). SPEAKERS School of Metaphysics-Sarah Bassett, regional director, "Meditation", 7:30 pm., 2191/2 N. Main (Call 996-1363 to register for class that also begins tohight. MISCELLANEOUS University Sailing Club-Slide show and introduction to sailing, 7:45 p.m., Physics and Astronomy Bldg. (Dennison Bldg.). On the outside The prospects of oncoming classes and long book lines won't be the only thing to sweat over today as temperatures are expected to climb into the sweltering mid-80's. The September skies will be partly cloudy and the low temperature will be in the 60's. THE U of M MEN'SOGLEE CLUB It' more than a club- It's an adventurel WE'RE LOOKING FORA FEW GOOD MEN Freshmen, Sophs., Grad students . . everyone! AUDIIONATOUR MASS MEE lNG SEPT 10, 7PM, ANDERSON RM., . t the MICIII UNION Elm