Page 4-Tuesday, June 6, 1978-The Michigan Daily Gmichigan DAILY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 24-S News Phone: 764-0552 Tuesday; June 6, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Discrimination bill versus S.A. ties A BILL WHICH could ultimately force the University to sell all investments in cor- porations doing business in South Africa passed out of committee last week and now heads for a tough struggle on the floor of the Michigan House of Representatives. House Bill No. 6341 would make it illegal for any educational institution in Michigan, public or private, to "encourage or condone" discrimination. The bill is aimed at discrimination in the form of investments in any corporation which practices or condones, "through its actions or inactions" discimination on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin or sex. Although the bill in its present form would not force the University to divest immediately, it could be interpreted that way by Frank Kelley, the state attorney general. And Kelley would have a precedent to follow. The Wisconsin attorney general's inter- pretation of a similar law in that state forced the University of Wisconsin Regents to "prudently" sell all investments they held in corporations operating in South Africa. While House Bill No. 6341 cannot directly attack the problem of University investments, it lays essential groundwork for the solution for a com- plex problem. Passage of the bill would bring to an end the dilemma of all administrators at state institutions of higher learning who have voiced concern about the wisdom of cutting ties with the only country in the world which practices, legalized discrimination and segregation. Some have questioned the constitutionality of the bill, saying it infringes on the rights of private institutions. While the bill may have to be limited to pertain only to public institutions, passage of the basic legislation is essential. Both black and white South Africans have said that, for the benefit of those in their country, the University should divest. House Bill No. 6341 is a small but concrete step to ending that suffering known to most as apartheid. TAT FLAKE WHO N T I CAGE AD T 0CORTWL OT AT H 6 NAME TO A NUMBER UCH A FRVOLOUS PETTION YOu MA CHANGE YOUR NAME PIT OK' HOWAOUT 5HAEU ONI, TD ANOTHER NAME T1IGPEN TALLYWACKER . ER TAT' MORE LIKEIT! RFK: A missing igure By John Ellis Have you ever thought of writing to the New York Times? When Anthony Lewis took apart California Governor Jerry Brown in a column last January, I finally wrote to the editors. It was Lewis who replied, and in the end our exchange was about Robert Kennedy. Anthony Lewis had not under- stood Jerry Brown, I wrote. The governor was bringing ideas from the periphery into American politics. I said Lewis' description of Brown as "arrogant, ambitious, contem- ptuous, mean" reminded me of attacks on the late Senator Robert Kennedy by people who did not know or understand him. THE TIMES never printed my letter. But about a month later I heard this from Anthony Lewis: in a new age The train left Penn Station CERTAINLY MOST students around noon after services at St. at the University today remem- Patrick's Cathedral. All of the ber some of this. But I am afraid politicians had been there, even they do not know or remember Johnson, and most of them got on why Robert Kennedy was mour- the train for the trip which should ned so. have taken four hours. It took The following remarks are eight. taken from a speech Kennedy That was because the tracks gave at the University of Wit- were lined with people along watersrand in Johannesburg, most of the route. In the cities, we South Africa in 1966. It was an had to go ten miles an hour to be address to students who were sure people weren't on the tracks. protesting the apartheid policies As the train passed, they made of the South African government. signs. Some waved; some put President Fleming and the their hands over their hearts. Regents would do well to read OLDER MEN wore Veterans of this and reconsider their decision Foreign Wars caps and saluted. on University investments in There were hundreds of South Africa. But this quote of American flags and many people Robert Kennedy's is mainly for were crying. students. The train tracks ran through "IT IS FROM numberless the poorer sections in many diverse acts of courage and belief places. The people who lived that human history is shaped. alongside came out to catch a "Each time a person stands glimpse of the casket of someone up for an ideal, or acts to improve Robert Kennedy leads a motorcade down Detroit's Woodward Avenue as he campaigns for the 1968 election. "The editors showed me your who talked about their problems. letter about that Jerry Brown They had thought he would help, column. I do not know whether and now he was dead. A band on they will use it, but there was one the platform in Baltimore played thing on which I wanted to com- "The Battle Hymn of the ment. That was the parallel you Republic" and breaking voices drew between Brown and Robert sang as we passed. Kennedy. It was difficult for the Kennedy "Kennedy was a person with staff to comprehend that it was extremely deep feelings for his body we carried. In many human beings: his family, ways, the funeral train was like children everywhere, friends, the whistlestop train tours of just ordinary people. He cared: Kennedy's brief presidential that is what people sensed in him, campaign of 1968-like the He often tried to hide his feelings; Wabash Cannonball in Indiana he was shy, and he did not like to and one through the California seem soft. But I knew him very San Joaquin Valley. well, and I know what people sen- sed was there.. ." IT WAS AFTER winning the LEWIS WENT ON to further California primary that Kennedy villify Governor Brown on the was shot on June 4th. Many of us basis of having had "two exten- had already gone on to New York ded conversations with him and for the next primary. observed and read all there is to So when he died, little over a read." I still think Lewis is wrong day later, we began feverish about Brown, but I agree about preparations for this last trip. Robert Kennedy, who died ten The Secret Service arrived and years ago today. never ,again would a presidential On the day of his funeral, June candidate travel without them, 8, 1969, there were over 1,000 even this dead one. We con- people riding with Kennedy's sidered every angle, except no body on the funeral train from one predicted the crowds, or the New York to Washington; I was looks on their faces. among them. It was dark wpen we got to the THERE WOULD be no need to capital; the TV crews had hastily retell this for my college class, erected lights at the station and which had its commencement on at Arlington Cemetery. Millions that day. But most students in watched on television as the old college now were ten years old cardinal from Boston, who had en.. I am, afraid they won;t also burikis bnr e pn aid the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he or she sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of op- pression and resistance. "Few are willing to brave the disapproval of their fellows, the censure of their colleagues, the wrath of their society. Moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle of great in- telligence. "YET IT IS the one essential, vital quality for those who seek to change a world that yields most painfully to change. And I believe that in this generation those with the courage to enter the moral conflict will find themselves with companions in every corner of the globe." In the ten years since Robert Kennedy's death, few have been able to inspire such feelings. But we are still the hope of which he spoke. John Ellis was a member of Robert'Kennedy's Senate and campaign staffs and is now at Canterbury House in Ann r- ..Ine wore o~oet~ ne~ R.,::. : ~s . a