Page 10-Wednesday, September 14,1977-The Michigan Daily SALC OPPOSES'U's INVESTMENTS: Hospital, med school plan unit South African teach-in planned By PAUL SHAPIRO The Southern African Liberation Committee (SALC) initiated a cam- paign Monday night aimed at encour- aging the University to drop its invest- ments in South Africa. SALC leader Marty Fries told the group of 35, "The University Regents have been amply informed on the atroc- ities happening daily under the South African regime, and they are aware that they have over $40 million invested there. Yet they continue to reap profits of discriminatory investments." THE UNIVERSITY owns $43 million of stock in more than 30 corporations which operate or have affiliates in South Africa. SALC agreed to organize a teach-in this year and continue protesting to University Regents. Members of the mostly student or- ganization, some of whom appeared at the May Regents meeting to lodge pro- tests against the University's invest- ments, are part of a larger corps of stu- dents nationally who have been calling for disinvestment of South African re- lated stocks. LAST MAY students demonstrated at Stanford, Princeton, Rutgers, and the Universities of Wisconsin and Minne- sota, protesting their schools' invest- ments in companies doing business with South Africa. The demonstrations resulted in the arrest of 294 students at Stanford and a state attorney general's ruling that new investments in South African cor- porations by the University of Wiscon- sin were in violation of a state law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of race. For the most part, Regents here have expressed opposition to divesting the University's South African interests in corporations which include General Motors, Mobil, Ford, ITT, Firestone, Goodyear and IBM. By BRIAN BLANCHARD TheBUniversity Hospital and the, Medical School, in an effort to consolidate health care programs, will ask the Regents to bless the birth of a new office tomorrow. But, unlike most bureaucratic babies, the proposed office and accompanying committee requested in a report by a combined Medical School/Hospital task force, won't gobble up any extra money. FUNDS for the modest organiza- tion, which has no formal name, would be transferred from the Medi- cal School's existing Office of Allied Health Education. They will be used to eliminate overlapping jurisdic- tions in certain health care fields. "For many, many years there has been activity" leading up to the consolidation proposal, according to Marjorie Becker, assistant director of the hospital. The "management scheme", as Becker describes it, would affect only the 370 students in the so-called "allied health" programs - those programs outside the professional schools of medicine, nursing, dentis- try, pharmacy and public health. "Allied health" includes such unitsi, as Physical Therapy, Medical Tech- nology, and Social Work in Health f PROJECT OUTREACH Psych. credit for Community Involvement MASS MEETING Wed. Sept. 14 7:30 p.m. Hill Auditorium S. African prof's welcome uncertain Care. JUST HOW the reorganization would touch those students is not clear. The report charges the "cen- tralized unit" with "administrative, fiscal, and programmatic responsi- bilities." But Charles Votaw, asso- ciate dean for curriculum at the Medical School, said he isn't sure what changes will be made. "I can say that there are no s p e c if i c recommendations for changes to occur immediately," explained Votaw, who chaired the task force with Becker. Some degree of change, however, would be "very likely" under the proposal, according to Thomas De-! Kornfeld, -former director of the Allied Health Education Office. FOR INSTANCE, someone will have to be assigned to the new double role of Allied Health Professions Education head and Assistant Dean for Allied Health. Reasons for creating the new office, listed in the task force report, include "scarce teaching and clinical resources," lack of responsibility for current programs, and "uneven qua- lity among programs and students." The Regents are expected to discuss the proposed office at their monthly meeting tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. in the Regents' Room of the Administration Building. By MICHAEL YELLIN University of South Africa Prof. Lourens Praetorius is not welcome here - at least not by the Univer. sity's African Students Association. Talk of the political science profes- sor's alleged expense-paid visit to the University has sparked criticism from some of the association's members. Praetorius had planned to visit the University, but added: "I hope the University is not closed to anybody." Director of the International Cen- ter, Jon Heise, said a decision will be made by 10 a.m. this morning whether the professor will be wel- comhed to the University by the center or turned away to avoid ,conflict. between students and administra- tors. --