Page 4-Sunday, January 29, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Fredoin 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 99News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Will S. Africa forum work? U' investment forum 0 Go B EGINNING TOMORROW the Uni- Administrators are. now giving us the versity will be doing what it feels opportunity to be heard, and we would necessary to resolve fairly the con- be fools to ignore such an opportunity. tinuing debate on its corporate invest- Attend the University's Forum on ments in South Africa. South African Investments. If you Officials have organized a four-day can't go to all sessions, at least drop in "forum" on the issue, bringing in a on one of them. Read the reports on the variety of speakers representing a Forum in the newspapers, and express variety of interests. Somehow, it your own thoughts, in writing, to seems, administrators are hoping all professors, administrators and the speeches, seminars and national figures as well. discussions will randomly fall together Here is a chance to effect construc- by Thursday evening to present an un- tive change-not just in the policy of distorted perspective on the South this University, but in the quality of life African dilemma to an interested for blacks and coloreds in apartheid-. public on campus. ridden South Africa. But what actually happens at thez forum may well be in complete con- trast to what the University hopes will happen; that is, an increase in con- fusion may result on the investments ( question instead of a decrease in con- sion. One can almost be certain of oneEDITORIAL STAFF hing though. Attendance at the four- ANN MARIE LIPINSKI JIM TOBIN ay forum is likely to be sparse, and in GEORGE LOBSENZ..Ed....s-..-.h....Managing Editor way, this fact is more self-defeating STU McCONNELL ................. Managing Editor PATRICIA MONTEMURRI .................. Managing Editor han any additional confusion the event KENPARSIGIAN .......... ..... Managing Editor ay re tehee.BOB ROSENBAUM............. Managing Editor ay crea LINDA WILLCOX ............................ Managing Editor The University will not be impressed MARGARET YAO...................... Managing Editor do withdraw all of its investments from SUSASundy Magazine E iN south Africa unless enough voices are ELAINE FLETCHER TOM O'CONNELL 1ieard on campus telling it to do so. Associate Magazine Editors : : : :::: ::: ::: :::: ::: ::.:: ::.:: :::: .: : :. . : :: : : : :: : : : :: : :: : : : : :: ::: :: : : : :: : ::. S Editorials which 'appear without a by-line represent a con-' sensus opinion of the Daily's editorial board. All other editorials, as well as cartoons, are the opinions of the individuals who sub- mit them. _ R -*- -...-.....:::.::.:::.. . :.. ::::::::::::::: - ii' .. ii 1~3 .4T By RENE BECKER A four day forum on the University's investments in cor- porations operating in South Africa will begin tomorrow. It will be the first concrete measure taken by the administration to resolve that nine-month question of whether the University should withdraw its funds from that country. The-key to making any suc- cessful "forum" is participation. For that reason the outlook for the success of the "University Forum on Corporate Investment in South Africa" is dismal. BECAUSE, despite the seriousness and depth of the South African investment debate, the general attitude on campus toward the issue has been apathetic. The events leading to this University-sponsored forum havebeen uninspiring to say the least. In May of last year Denis On- deje, vice-president of the African Students Association (ASA) asked the Regents to in- vestigate all ties the University might have with South Africa. Ondeje demanded that when the full extent of the University's association, both financial and educational, were made public it be cut completely. THIS MEANT the University would divest all holdings in cor- porations operating in South Africa. In addition, all programs the University might have with educational institutions there would be ended. The reason behind the request for divestiture is founded in politico-economics. Trans- national corporation, such as Ford Motor Co., GM, and IBM, are the backbone of the apartheid regime now controlling South Africa. Apartheid is a system of discrimination and segregation indiginous to South Africa which provides the white-owned cor- porations operating there with a vast pool of cheap black labor. DENIS BRUTUS, a black South African who aided the United Nations in developing an anti- apartheid program, said these trans-national corporations give Vorster "his muscle and his money... without which he could not survive." To those groups such as ASA, the South African Liberation Committee (SALC), and the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA), who are demanding divestiture the situation is simple. The University can refuse to di- vest and thereby remain party to apartheid-or the University can divest and help destroy the system which denies blacks and coloreds in South Africa their basic human rights. ON THE OTHER hand, the administration questions the value of such logic. Many on the administration side have argued that there is a whole range of solutions between divesting and not divesting. Administrators often mention the Sullivan statement, a set of principles which will provide equal pay for blacks and whites, desegregated working areas, and some upward mobilization for blacks and coloreds, something which is now illegal in South Africa. Eighty per cent of South Africa's private sector is either totally or partially foreign owned. American corporations UNLESS BLACKS are allowed the same educational benefits granted whites, blacks will never have the chance to take advan- tage of upward mobilization programs in American factories and offices. Ondeje's summertime request lay dormant in a corner like an old dog until the middle of July when University President Robben Fleming reactivated the Com- mittee on Communications. Another sleeping dog, the Committee on Communications is a group of two students, two t University Forum on Corporate Investment in South Africa SCHEDULE Monday, January 30, 1978 8:00 p.m. Ted Lockwood, Washington Office on Africa Topic: "The Nature of United States Policy and Investment" Place: Rackham Lecture Hall, First Floor, Rackham Tuesday, January 31, 1978 4:00 p.m. Selby Semela, Former Treasurer, South African Student Movement Topic: "Current Socio-Economic Conditions" Place: Modern Languages Building, Aud. 4 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion: Dion Erasmus, Donald DeKieffel, representatives of South African Embassy, Washington, D.C.; David Wiley, director, MSU African Center; Vern Terpstra, prof of International Business Topic: "Current Socio-Economic Conditions" Wednesday, February 1, 1978 4:00 p.m. Timothy Smith, director, Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, National Council of Churches Topic: "Alternatives for Stockholder Action"~ Place: Modern Languages Building, Aud. 4 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion: Timothy Smith; Thomas Pond, director Overseas Public Relations, General Motors Corporation; Gunter Dufey, prof of International Business; Joel Samoff, assistant prof of Political Science Topic: "Alternatives for Stockholder Action" Thursday, February 2, 1978 Time and Place to be announced Seminar: For all participants, including members of University community, to organize viewpoints and select platform participants for evening session. 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion: Timothy Smith; Prexy Nesbitt, American Committee on Africa; Members of University community selected at afternoon seminar Topic: Summary and Conclusions Also appearing, although exact times and places are yet to be arranged, will be representatives of the African NationalCongress. ultimately decide on the matter of ties with South Africa. COMMITTEE members have voiced concern over their role. Alfred Meyer, a faculty represen- tative on the committee, said at a meeting last December, "I feel we are caught here in a process of symbolic politics." But while the Committee on Communications was struggling to get started the Senate Ad- visory Committee on Financial Affairs (SACFA) was getting ready to make their recommen- dation to the Regents. SACFA is a subcommittee of the faculty senate and is under the office of James Brinkerhoff, chief financial officer of the University. IT IS''not clear how much weight a -SACFA recommen- dation will carry with the Regen- ts but it seems undemocratic that the only University-sponsored recommendation to the Regents should be from such a limited section of the community. This suggests that unless the Regents attend the forum this week, everything-the trouble in establishing the Committee on communications, and assembling the forum-was for naught. When the ASA held a teach-in on South Africa last November the turnout was very poor-Regents and SACFA mem- bers were conspicuous by their absence. It will be a surprise to see a good showing at this week's. forum. It will be a greater sur- prise to see any Regents in atten- dance at all IN AN era when most people muddle through their days without cause or conscience, life and death struggles on another continent seem uninspiring. The issue South Africa represets is more complicated than pro-apartheid or anti- apartheid, invest or divest, stay in or get out. The questions raised by the aSouthAfrican problem are intricate and require everyone's consideration because everyone is affected, directly or indirectly. The principles or philosophy that should come out of the SouthsAfrican investment debate will unavoidably be applied other investments. The University, like other institutions, needs a flexible policy to use for its in- vestments. The University must find a conscience to promote its high ideals. Even as an investor, the University must not blindly rake in its profits at the expense of others. Rene Becker, a Daily staf- fer, has been covering the South African in vestmen ts debate at the University. there account for 17 per cent of all foreign investments. DESPITE THIS fact American concerns do not employ enough people, let alone blacks, to make a significant dent in the socio- economic prison of apartheid in which 85 per cent of that coun- try's people are condemned to live. Even with the heavy foreign investment, and the industry it brings to South Africa, unem- ployment among blacks is run- ning about 40 per cent. And while the Sullivan statement does provide for up- ward mobilization for blacks and coloreds, only 35 per cent of South Africa's people are literate. There is an overwhelming per- centage of blacks who are illiterate. administrators, and two faculty members who provide channels of communication on controver- sial issues for all members of the University community.' THE COMMITTEE was established by Fleming in the late sixties but became inactive after a couple of years service due to lack of interest. Because the method of choosing members for the com- mittee is so complicated, it wasn't until the beginning of November that it was in the position to perform its assigned function. The efficiency of the Commit- tee on Communications ranges from nil to slight. The committee, according to Regent's bylaws, can not make any recommen- dations to the Regents, who must Music and money don't mix 00 PM) 4AL xROW 7. By JACQUELINE THOMPSON Pacific News Service A resounding "dis-chord" between professional string players and the collectors of antique stringed instruments is disrupting the nor- mally harmonious mood of the music world. The controversy concerns the ownership of rare instruments that bear such illustrious signatures as Antonio Stradivari, Joseph Guar- neri Del Gesu, Carlo Bergonzi and Nicolo Amati. To well-healed collectors, who fervently defend their purchases and proclaim them- selves the conservators of the finest examples of classical craftsman- ship, these instruments are "cultural artifacts." TO THEIR opponents-an international coterie of professional musicians-these instruments are the finest "tools" available. The musicians decry what they regard as the collectors' money-grubbing attitudes and insist that aesthetics must be served-regardless of the big money to be made speculating in antique violins, violas, cellos and basses. Indeed, prices for the disputed instruments have skyrocketed. The finest 17th-century Italian strings, for example, are now worth over $250,000. The rampant speculation has forced most professional string players to settle for the only instruments they can still afford-usually relatively modern strings in the $3,000-$15,000 category. The only musicians who are exceptions are the big name soloists, like Heifetz or Stern, to whom the more magnanimous collectors will sometimes loan the finer specimens in their collections. WHO ARE these collectors? According to New York Philharmonic violist Eugene Becker, consortiums of Japanese businessmen have recently made substantial purchases of instruments that they hoard in sealed vaults where they never get played. "The whole experience is degrading," he says, I know musicians who have turned down the chance to play a few bars on a $100,000 in- strument because they know a few bars is all they'll play. Professionals, like myself, are tired of contributing to greedy collec- tors' ego trips." IF COLLECTORS would limit themselves to wind instruments there would be no argument. Old flut'es, trumpets, horns and the like are usually non-functional relics with outdated fingering systems and make better conversation pieces than music. But bowed stringed instruments are another matter. The more they're played, the better they sound because, by some inexplicable miracle, the vibration of the bow on the strings eventually changes the molecular structure of the wood-although it may take 50 years before the improvement becomes audible. Furthermore, the older in- struments have a higher-quality varnish that modern craftsmen are hard-pressed to duplicate. Musicians cite the above facts, among others, to justify why these rare old masterpieces-over half of which are currently owned by a handful of museums and collectors-should, at the very least, be loaned to string players for regular use. MUSEUM curators and collectors counter that their instruments are played occasionally (the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C., has access to the Stradivari violins owned by the Library of Congress, for instance). Besides, they claim they are more careful than the average musician would be to avoid damaging the in- struments, knowing that a tiny scratch can reduce their value by thousands of dollars. Harry Duffy, a Miami dealer who doesn't want to lose customers from either camp, offers a compromise solution: Let the seldom- played mint-condition strings that have not attained the tonal ex- cellence one might expect from, say, a Guarneri, remain in the care of uPOI S(OTA$. " 4*TO IT FA~(P 10(rH '60T WHAT A~t )P M, lf !9V-ow Auv 5ETRICTS 4; A1~ FZKST MY o6veiI A5PROD- Pe~evF Wb~lllVAFFI RH-