Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, Apri l 11, 1971 'U' investment: Profit or morality? (Continued from Page 1) At Harvard, Yale, Princeton, the because we felt it improper on University of Pennsylvania a n d public health grounds, but because Stanford - all schools with large it just wasn't good business." endowment funds for investing in Likewise was a previous decis- corporations - student-faculty ion not to invest in companies committees have been set up to making alcoholic beverages, says examine how university stock Griffiths. "Most of those firms proxies should be voted - espec- just don't have the growth." Itally focusing on businesses t h a t Conger and Griffith sum up have dealings in South Africa. their opposition to groups like Though only a handful voted with Campaign GM and the Angola campaign GM last year, with the Gulf Project - opposition shared subsequent addition of other or- by most of the Regents - by ganized campaigns - such as the criticizing their "indirect ap- Gulf Angola Project - increased proach:" pressure is expected to be put "If Dow Chemical (a company on universities to either sell con- in which the University currently troversial stocktor participate in owns $500,000 worth of stock) stockholders' campaigns against hadn't made napalm, someone else would," says Griffith. "T h e s e unpopular corporate policies. people have made the investment For example, the University of "The closest we ever came to making an in- vestment decision on moral grounds was when we declined to invest in tobacco," Conger says. "The decision that tobacco investment was not necessary was made not only because we felt it improper on public health grounds but because it just wasn't good business." *. *:" :M. . . f. : .*.:": :t::;".*.* ........... . . .f".A" * . ".. . .*... . i~l:::":'!:~l:"i:':}:":t:1iti":"..Y:}':''YJL ....................................... ...... . question a symbolism and they're Pennsylvania recently divested it- trying to use it as a political lever." self of $1,597,270 of General Mo- Notwithstanding this criticism, tors stock after the propriety of Campaign GM and the Gulf An- holding such stock was widely gola Project have been organizing contested because of, among other for several months, supported in things, its plants in South Africa. part by the National Presbyterian Next week, besides getting their and Episcopal churches. Concen- monthly report on University in- trating on universities with large vestment transactions, the Re- investments in General Motors gents may also review Campaign and Gulf Oil Corp., they are try- GM's collected General M o t o r s ing to push through provisions at securities with Campaign GM. upcoming stockholders meetings to "open up" the corporations' rul- Although the Regents have ing boards to input from outside agreed to listen to a debate on the company stockholders. And, this question at 4:30 p.m. Thurs- though judging from Campaign day, most observers feel it unlike- GM's proposals' overwhelming de- ly any substantive changes will feat last year - they received be made in the standard regental only 2.7 per cent of the vote - policy of supporting management the outcome may be "symbolic" policy. but is attracting increased sup- Campaign GM's current pro- port from many universities. posal would alter the following as- dM Mea, Feast opens Monday. ie f :rn1XeS 1 _ 1and drama pects of General Motors manage- ment: -Voting procedure. General Motors would be required to list on its proxy candidates nominat- ed by shareholder petitions; and, -Selection of management di- rectors. General Motors consum- ers, dealers and employes (e v e n though not stockholders) would be allowed to select three of the board's directors; and, -Publication of statistics. Gen- eral Motors would be required to publish exact data on its progress in pollution control, safety and minority hiring. The Gulf Angola Project pro- posal, which was only recently pre- sented to the University, a s k s the University to vote its over $600,000 worth of Gulf Oil Corp. stock to terminate Gulf's opera- tions in "colonial controlled areas suchdas Angola" and expand its board of directors to include non- shareholders. Most observers feel this pro- posal stands little chance of be- ing considered, let alone passed, by the Regents. I Chances for the full proposal being passed by the Regents ap- pear so minute as to be almost negligible. Even the more liberal Regents appear only lukewarm to a proposal that would necessitate careful revision of their policy of voting with management, and would open up sensitive issues of University involvement in social issues roughly analogous to the debate over recruiting policy the Regents, just faced. In February, the Regents modi- fied a rule passed by the Office of Student Services Policy Board which barred discriminatory com- panies from using University placement offices. The Regents' decision in "clear-cut" cases, b u t how stringently it will be enforc- ed remains doubtful. Despite a hesitancy on this lev- el, Brain Mistrust, a radical eco- nomic research group, charges that the Regents are, by b a c k- ground, biased towards business concerns and are satisfied w i t h profit alone. "The Regents argue that we should invest only on the basis of what brings in the most profit", a recent Brain Mistrust statement read. "In other words, no matter the effect on the lives and liveli- hoods of peoples throughout the world, they think the UniversityI should invest only with an eye toI what profits the University most." However, a more basic consid- eration might be the effect of such policy changes on the gift giving that forms the basis of Univer- sity investments in the first place. Investment officials, like the Re- gents during the recruitment pol- icy debate, are wary of making changes "social and moral" judg- ments lest alumni support drop of f. Drawing over $6 million in div- idends on University investments in the last year alone - usually earmarked for a donor's special project or concern - University finances could be significantly handicapped by an investment police which forced liquidation of securities more conservative alum- ni gave as gifts. i As Conger says, "Voting s t o c k this way could backfire. Alumni might in turn try to use their monetary gifts to influence us." Meanwhile, there appears to be at least some awareness in gov- ernment of the long-range mag- nitude a shift in universities' in- vestment policies might have. Sen. Lee Metcair (D-Mont.), particu- larly interested in universities' growing interest in buying elec- trical power and energy stocks, has proposed - groups of universities band together "to work within the system to check corporate exces- ses." Such stocks comprise 27 per cent of all University securities. How his proposal is greeted by those who would like to remove universities from the corporations remains to be seen, but both groups agree with Metcalfs state- ment on the Senate floor t h a t "universities - as institutions ra- ther than as groups of students and faculty - are very much a part of the corporate orbit today." Thus, the debate over how this University invests its money in corporate America stands to in- crease before it subsides. This campus, having one of the largest endowment funds of any state- supporteduniversity appears head- ed for an investment dilemma as long as unpopular corporations hold sizeable chunks of Univer- sity money. Women march on .Pentagon (Continued from Page 1) The 11 hour rally at the De- fense Department followed a police-escorted march10 abreast from the Justice Department. "Hey, hey ho, ho! Male suprem- acy's got to go," chanted the marchers, as they p a s s e d the White House. Along the way and at t h e Pentagon, the women performed guerrilla-theater skits depicting the United States as an aggressor nation enslaving peoples around the world. At the Defense Department, a succession of speakers demanded an immediate withdrawal of a 11 U.S. troops from South Vietnam and an end to all "repression" - including alleged male domination of women. For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright j Tads Sebring State Street at Liberty, Join The Daily Couzens Hall presents TOLKIEN OR What's Happening ii Middle Earth? A LECTURE BY CLYDE S. KILBY. Professor Kilby spent a summer working with J.R.R. Tolkien on the Silmarillion, a trilogy set in the First Age of Middle Earth. MONDAY, APRIL 12 7:30 p.m.-Couzens Assembly Room _. l l ' t i I f DIAL 662-6264 at State & Liberty ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE! 1:10-3:45-6:15-9 P.M. mm" I ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE 'BEST FOREIGN FILM' -INTERNATIONAL FILM AWARD WINNERS ---CATHERINE DENEUVE, BEST ACTRESS -LUIS BUNUEL, BEST DIRECTOR "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST -Vincent Canby.N.Y. Times -Andrew Sarris. VillageVoice-RoM Greenspun.N.Y. Times -ReinReed, Holiday M e& -N.Y. Film Critics Society-Leonard Harris CBS-TV IS SUPER B! A MARVELOUSLY COMPLEX AND FUNNY MOVIE. . IT S NOTHING LESS THAN THE 9UINTESEN1IL RUNUEL FILM OF ALL TIME; s -Vincent Canby,N. Y. Times Released by Maon flIms Lmited o PTH FOPM SUN.-3, 5, 7, 9 FIFTH AVENUES AT LIwtTY MON.-7, 9 D~~ OWNTOWN ANN AP 01% INFORMATION 7519700 adults $2.00 child 75c In deeping with the Fifth Forum's tradition of fine film enter- tainment, we will soon be showing another Academy Award Nominee for 'Best Foreign Film,' "INVESTIGATION OF A CITI- ZEN ABOVE SUSPICION" S NOTE SPECIAL SHOW TIMES! BIG MAN" Panavision.Technicolor* * 2ND HIT WEEK* 4 I I I amme ..... ame momomr The Feast Family, tenuously of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, will be presentingatheirtheatrical off- spring, "Feast" at Canterbury H o u s e this week - tomorrow, Tuesday and Thursday at 8 p.m. Written by Shubert Playwrit- ing Fellow Lewis Black, "Feast" weaves conventional drama w i t h the imaginative use of film to de- pict the childhood and . adoles- cence of Delaney, a boy coming to maturity in upper middle class America. But "Feast" is far more t h a n REWARD Two bicycles were s t o l e n from outside The Daily offices y e s t e r d a y afternoon. They were a green Schwinn "Var- sity", license number 0029 and a brown Raleigh "S u p e r Course." These bikes belonged to two kids who don't have the money to buy new ones so if you see them or know where they are, please call e it h e r Geoff or Steven at 662-4648 or 663-1770. There will be a re- ward for the return of either bike. just another play about the "gen- eration gap." Taking a broader focus, "Feast" is a parable about modern America. Centered around the banality of a modern kitchen, "Feast" moves from the breakfast table to a post-midnight snack as it unfolds the story of Delaney from 5 to 20. Although written byuBlack, "Feast" is also a communal ef- fort. ; Calling upon; the collective experience of the Feast Family, Black fashioned a play expressly for them which is, in a sense, a group auto-biography. First presented at the - Univer- sity of North Carolina last Decem- ber to an ecstatic response, t h e three performances at Canterbury House will be the play's first pro-= duction outside of North Caro- lina. is loaded with protein A professional ABORTION that is safe, legal & inexpensive can be set up on an outpatient basis by calling The Problem Pregnancy Referral Service 215-722-5360 24 HOURS-7 DAYS for professional, confidential and caring help Gfea Ge Q t' bo wQ A ° ce - ' ekV. 0I the FEAST FAMILY* brings you FEAST the drama of Delaney from 5 to college . . . "an insane dream"-Lew Black E 1IWllBUNY iO Monday, April 12 8 m I Tuesday, April 13 TI8 pT i. 0 g TICKETS $.00 Thursday, April 15 AT THE DOOR a nonprofit theatre group from UNC at Chapel Hill LAS1BI REVOLUTION in four films for 60c plus My Lai interviews short (9:30 p.m.) * ANGELA DAVIS new interview by Muhammed Speaks (7:30 p.m.) " VOICES color documentary of Jean-Luc Godard (8:30 p.m.) " PEOPLE'S WAR documehtary of North Vietnam (10 p.m.) " CHINA Felix Greene's color documentary (11 p.m.) "radical politics" ain't last night TONIGHT 331 Thompson St. University of Michigan Film Society (ARM) 761-9751 DISCOUNT SERIES ON SALE Monday-Friday 10-1, 2-5 Mendelssohn Lobby I I 1 I L AST BIG DAY! SEX RITLIILS OF OCCULT BOUNDS OF THE IMAGINATION people who know no limits in a search tor erotic sexual ecstasy t4ne EniU/Mb I I 7W1 I 73W I cORRIS o STARTING TOMORROW " " ANLYT 4 sexual ,bruta ltyan NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS7 BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTRESS G B"ST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY BEST ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE P I 3 a i I 1 i { k } t f i ' f t / \ Si i / V ti 1/ 6 Y A U1 IU urder a garden ' sensuality esmnteenie color t 1 1P M. D aIY a CINEX film cinema "* illT-~ liE1 Ali MaCraw* Ryan O'Neal A HOWARD 6MINSK ARTHUR HitLER Production John Marley&Ray Milland ~... . . . . 603 E. Liberty AUSTIN DIAMOND 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 ,Doors Open 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Free List Suspended cinema 4ese o . IIUIO A11 I 1209 S. University 663-7151 I r 'Vln -II m v ICI I , [ %MICHIGRM 9TH WEEK I1 1 =O i- DIAL 8-6416 4?N M' DOORS OPEN 1 2:45 SHOWS~ AT 1357-5 i II I' ATTENTION Classified Advertisers All Classified Ads must be prepaid during the :;+ E.....v~ A CP*af*t~. "f:i.";". ::>:{ .. f"4}<:u : Y