The Michigan Daily-Friday, April 20, 1979-Page 7 A2 maintains South African investments By ELISA ISAACSON floor. In East Lansing, sentiment for THE WASHTENAW County Coalition divesting South African holdings was Against Apartheid (WCCAA), the group first reflected in their City Council's most vocal in encouraging divestment policy initiative which the Michigan of University support holdings in South State University (MSU) Regents Africa, has not addressed the city on echoed with similar.action. Ann Arbor's the matter. Heidi Gottfried, lawmakers have not pioneered the spokeswoman for the WCCAA, said the divestiture path, however, and they do group plans to work for city divestment not appear likely to do so in the near at some point, but that it would rather future. concentrate its energies on the Univer- Mayor Louis Belcher readily admits sity at present. he does not know enough about the issue According to Assistant City Ad- to comment on it in detail, and City ministrator Patrick Kenney, the city Council overturned two divestment currently holds six month certificates proposals last year. of deposit, worth hundreds of thousands IN MARCH 1978, only four days after of dollars each, in Ann Arbor Bank and the University Regents voted not to Trust, Ann Arbor Trust, Michigan divest from corporations doing National Bank, Huron Valley National business in South Africa, City Council Bank, National Bank and Trust, defeated Councilman Ken Latta's (D- Michigan National Bank, First First Ward-divestment porposal. Latta National Bank of Chicago, Irving Trust, proposed amendments to the new city and Bank of America. investment policy requiring Ann Arbor According to a Corporate Data Ex- to withdraw support from banks change, Inc. handbook, three of these making loans to South Africa and from banks were involved in South African corporations doing business in that financing from at least 1972 through country. mid-1978. The three are First National When his proposals were rejected Bank of Chicago, Irving Trust, and Latta declared he would reintroduce Bank of America. them-at a later date. "That probably The mayor explained he was unsure won't be until after the election," he as to what constituted investments in said at the time. "It depends on the South Africa. "Every bank does composition of the Council." business with the Federal Reserve," The city election that year, however, Belcher said. "The Federal Reserve featured the inauguration of a Council does business in South Africa. Does this even more Republican-dominated than mean every bank does business in the previous one which rejected Latta's South Africa? I don't know." amendments. This year's election Latta pointed out that, while the city produced a partisan replica of last cannot own stocks in corporations, Ann year's Council, and Latta has said he Arbor does business with firms that will not reintroduce the divestment deal with South Africa. One of those proposal until he feels they have a good corporations, Latta said, is the Ford chance of passing. Therefore, it will Motor Company, from whom the city is probably be at least another year considering the purchase of an entire before the issue returns to the Council police car fleet. Intl. Center offers help on foreign study, travel By MITCH RUBENSTEIN FOR STUDENTS wishing to travel, Thousands of students walk by the In- the center has information on student ternational Center every day, just as identification cards, Youth Hostel car- they walk by every other building on ds, and transportation discounts. The campus. However, the International office also contains abundant materials Center is no ordinary University on the background of particular building. cultures, guidebooks, and notebooks Located at 603 E. Madison St., the In- with helpful comments from students ternational Center aims to help studen- who have travelled abroad. ts survive in study programs abroad. For students who plan to work over- Its counseling office provides infor- seas, the center provides material on mation on traveling, working, and the types of jobs available, howto ob- studying in every country outside of the tain them, and details on such possible U.S. See CENTER, Page ] ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 1935 THE 39 STEPS ROBERT DONAT and MADELEINE CARROLL in the comic thriller that still sets the standard for fast pace. Donat, as a young Canadian in England, is the victim of every circumstance imaginable by Hitchcock, including having a stranger stabbed in his apartment, stumbling to the podium of a political rally to escape the police, and being hand-cuffed for the night to a woman who can't stand him. Thank you Mr. Memory. SHORTS: FOR THE ROAD-John Robertson (Multiple Documentation) & READOUT-RobertZieball. (Stimuli on overload). MARX BROTHERS DOUBLE FEATURE SAT: DUCK SOUP (PLUS KRAZY KAT CARTOONS AT 7 & 10 A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (AT 8:30 ONLY) * Look for CINEMA GUILD'S spring-summer schedule * FIRST WEEKEND OF SHOWINGS: (FRIDAY) MAY 4: Chaplin's LIMELIGHT (SATURDAY) May 5: Bogart in THE MALTESE FALCON (SUNDAY) MAY 6: MR.HULOT'S HOLIDAY TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. CINEMA GUILD 7:W&9.. $1.50