The Michigan Doily-Thwrsdy, May 4, 1978-Pege 15 MORE PROTEST EXPECTED OVER 'U'INVESTMENTS: South African debate continues (Contnued fromPage3) . year. CORPORATE GIFTS and grants to the Unviersity in the fiscal year 1976 totalled $6 million. According to the report if -in 1976 the University had not invested in corporations operating in South Africa it would not be able to ac- cept gifts or grants from those same corporations. The University weld tehn have accepted $1.6 millien less in corporate gifts. Although all voting Regents favor maintaining ties with South Africa, one Regent emeritus, Allen Sorenson who served on the Board in the 60s, wrote a letter to University President Robben Fleming expressing his disappointment with the decision not to divest. In his letter, Sorenson wrote that the Regents now serving place too much faith in American corporations' ability and willigness to change the political system of South Africa. According to Sorenson, to end apartheid, "radical measures will be needed, measures which severely affect the South African economy." SORENSON WROTE that while divestiture is only a symbol, it is the most the University can do and he urged the Regents "to proceed ex- peditiously with divestiture." At the April Regents meeting, Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) member Kate Rubin reported to the Board that a large majority of students favor divestment. In the recent MSA election, 72.7 per cent of the voters approved a~referen- dum which states that University students oppose financial ties to South Africa and therefore urge the Regents to withdraw investments in those cor- Carter backs (Continued from Page i) Department of Energy by the private, non-profit Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City. "NO CARTEL controls the sun," Car- ter said inan apparent reference to the Arab oil embargo of 1973-74. "Its energy will not run out. It will not pollute our air or poison our waters. It porations conducting business there, she said. RUBIN ALSOK presented the Regen- ts with a MSA resolution calling for the establishment of a permanent "In- vestments Advisory Committee" charged with investigating cor- porations doing business in South Africa and in which the University has investments. Besides Detwyler there were seven other speakers at the meeting who favored divestiture and, if need be, the establishment of the MSA-suggested oversight committee. Detwyler urged the Regents to accept their "social responsibility." As directed by the Regents in their March meeting, James Brinkerhoff, University chief financial advisor, sent letters to all corporations which do business in South Africa and in which the University owns stock. ACTING AS the Regents' represen- tative, Brinkerhoff stated in the letters: "We are strongly opposed to apartheid and racial injustice." In the letters he asks the corporations to: * Affirm the Sullivan principles; (a corporate policy which provides equial treatment of blacks and whites within the corporate facilities.) * Endorse political, economic and social rights for all corporate em- ployees in South Africa; " Make regular reports to publicly disclose corporate progress in these matters. However in his letter to Fleming, Sorenson wrote: "The assumption that improved working conditions ina given factory will affect the government's policy against equal pay or against blacks in supervisory positions over solar energy is free from stench and smog. The sun's power needs only to be collected, stored and used. "The question is no longer whether solar energy works," he added. "We know it works. The only question is how to cut costs so that solar power can be used more widely and set a cap on rising oil prices." whites is naive." table, but the racial inequalities will not According to Sorenson, the result of be changed." the Regents' action is that, "some "At that time, the next step in the years will pass in which attempts are Regents' program, divestiture, may be made to exert influence which is taken, and the intervening time in assumed feasible, and after that time, which the more effective course might some corporations' facilities for black have been in effect, will be lest," he employees will be made mere comfor- said. MichiganDoGily-Clasifieds Bring Results I -Call 764-0557 p I ARMY SURPLUS Two-Man Nylon Backpackers.Tent Reg. $28.98--NOW 19 Svea 123 Backpacking Stove Reg. $31.98-=NOW 2,e98 Tioga Hol lowf il l 11 Sleeping Bags...... 26.98 210 E. Washington at Fourth-994-3572 - VISA OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-6, -R A EV N I Q