The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 2, 1978-Page 3 School bill passes committee By RENE BECKER SpecialtoThe Daily LANSING - A state House bill which could ultimately force the University to sell its investments in corporations which do business in South Africa was approved by the Civil Rights Commit- tee here yesterday by a 7-1 margin. House Bill 6341, introduced by Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) would make it illegal for all educational in- stitutions in Michigan to maintain in- vestments in corporations that practice or condone discrimination on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin or sex. The bill would take effect July 4, 1979. Bullard said the bill is intended to force universities including the Univer- sity of Michigan to sell stocks and bonds in corporations with South African sub- sidiaries. The University owns more than $90 million of stocks and bonds in those corporations. Though it faced minimal opposition yesterday, Bullard said the bill was in for a tough fight on the House floor. He said it may be attacked on the basis of constitutionality. However, even if it passes the state legislature, observers say universities still may not be forced to divest. That eventuality is contingent upon an interpretation by State Attor- ney General Frank Kelley. A similar law in Wisconsin was interpreted to force the University of Wisconsin to divest. An amendment sponsored by Rep. Edgar Geerling (R-Muskegon) which would have covered corporations which operate in countries which violate the United Nation's Human Rights Declaration was defeated 6-2 in com- mittee. David Wiley, the director of the African Studies Center at Michigan State University who testified before the committee said a bill with t a scope would be less likely to pa becomes law, he said, it would difficult to enforce. In response to queries abc financial burden education stitutions would have to bear as of the bill, the committee testimony from University geo professor Thomas Detwyler. Detwyler said according to a developed by the University's ment office, the University wou lost about $1 million in earning 1970 if it had divested then fro porations with ties to South Afric Rep. William William Bryant, Grosse Point Farms), the only p tee member to vote against thel Geerlings, who passed, critici: proposed legislation. They que its ability to affect change in Africa and were leery of the financial burden the bill would p oo wide educational institutions. ass. If it But Mark Clodfelter (D-Flint) asked, be too "Do we sit back and do nothing or do we, at the state level, find ways that we out the can affect change?" al in- a result Bryant asked Wiley why schools heard should divest only from those cor- graphy porations which do business in South Africa. He asked why schools shouldn't report be forced to sell stock in those cor- invest- porations which operate wherever ld have there is a disregard of human rights, s since such as Cambodia, the Soviet Union or Dm cor- Uganda. a. Jr. (R- Wiley said South Africa can be ommit- singled out of the crowd because bill and discrimination on the basis of color is zed the legal there. He said South African con- stioned stitution does not off:- blacks or South "coloreds" the opportunity to change heavy the system. lace on Wiley also argued that it was hopeless to expect the American cor- porations in South Africa to be, "a major force for social change." He said they employ only two per cent of the population and have little effect if any on the life of those outside of the com- Spany. American corporations support the repressive South African regime by importing technology and capital which provides the government with the power to militarily control the population, Wiley said. Detwyler called the committee's ap- / proval "a concrete first step for the state's institutions of higher learning to recognize and honor human rights around the world." In a recent interview, University President Robben Fleming said Bullard's bill fosters, "a very serious constitutional question of whether the legislature could, by an act, require the University to divest." He said the bill conflicts with, "the constitutional power of the Regents to govern the University." But Fleming claimed that Bullard's AP Photo real purpose for introducing the bill, was "purely one of getting attention for Port of that problem." Birth of a dock Vancouver pile worker Jdavad Sabahi stands in a growing forest of concrete piles that will support a new dock at the] Vancouver, along the Columbia River. today Well, that's one way*... The cabdriver who received a call to go to the Washington State Penitentiary thought he was taking three businessmen to the airport . .. that is, until the police caught up with the cab about two miles away from the prison.' It seems that he had three convicts dressed in business suits. The three had sdawed their way out of the visitors room at the pen, where they had been tidying up for a Jaycees meeting. They then used a pay phone near the en- trance to the prison and called the A-1 cab company. When the driver didn't appear right away, they called back, requesting that they be picked up without delay. It seems they were ina hurry. *.. And that's another In Richmond, Virginia, a boy about twelve or thir- teen years decided to relieve a classroom of girls from thei 'final-exam tediu'm'. Outsi de'the room, down the hall of St. Gertrude's High School, the boy ambled by Carol Hafer's class wearing nothing but a suntan, on which, said Hafer, "he had a pretty good start". He then exited out the building front, stopped and posed, and walked out of view. When the incident was reported to police, they had trouble keeping a straight face. "Everyone seemed more amused than upset," said Hafer. Happenings .. ... today are rich with variety. At 3:30 p.m., the Argo Park Canoe trip leaves from the International Center. Canoe rental is $2.75 for two hours; trip returns at 6:30 ... And Nobel Prize winner Rosalyn Yalow Ph.D., co-inventor of the radio-immunoassay with her late partner Dr. Solomon Berson, ad- dresses the graduating class of the Medical School at Hill. Aud., 4 p.m.... the Astronomical Film Festival presents the film Mercury: Exploration of a Planet, at 7:3 p.m. in MIB Aud. 3 ... the Socialist Party and Friends of Independent Political action present a film o Eugene Debs at 8 p.m., Con- ference Room 6 in the Union . . . and, at last, Astromony Visitors' Night features Jill Rugare speaking on "Radio Stars-A Rare Occurence?" at 8:30 p.m. in Angell Aud. B. On the outside .. . We will have today something that the weather service likes to call "variable cloudiness" . . . your guess is as good as ours . . . but there will be, at any rate, a goodly chance of afternoon showers, so don't bother watering the grass. The high temperatures will climb to 70', which is certainly a lot nicer than the awful, sticky weather we've been having the last few days . . . it's terrible. . we just sweat and sweat, and drink lots of lemonade .. .sops, that's 'perspire'... well-brought-up people don't say nasty words like 'sweat' .. . wwwo £wdM} ale wS?:+Akx.# qrM wt M,.dAY".# #x+ ._: * .±MIM i. , .'