The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 12, 1985 - Page 5 Berkeley students urge divestment (Continued from Pag cupation grew larger as people walking through Sproul Plaza joined the protesters - mostly students - on the steps. A HASTILY-organized rally yester- day attracted about 300 demonstrators, with more than 100 people joining the' occupation on the steps in front of what the protesters called "Stephen Biko Hall." Biko was a black South African student killed in prison in 1977 after protesting against the South African government. The UC Divestment Coalition's list of demands calls for a public hearing before April 24 to allow members of the university community a voice in the report on divestment to be submitted to the regents. THEY ALSO demanded that the report be submitted at the May 16-17 regents meeting in Berkeley rather than at the June 21 meeting in Santa Cruz, as currently planned. The coalition also demanded that the regents move the May meeting from the Lawrence Hall of Science to a cen- tral campus location to make it more accessible to concerned students and community members. Finally, they asked to meet with one of the regents. Five demonstrators discussed the demands with Assistant Vice Chancellor B. Thomas Travers, Vice Chancellor Watson Laetsch, and John Cummins, executive assistant to Chancellor I. Michael Heyman. Cummins said the university officials discussed the demands but told the protesters that the regents must make any decision about divestment. He said he would forward the demands to University of California President David Gardner. Cummins called the meeting . "friendly and non- confrontational" and said "everyone wants to keep it like that." University spokesperson Ray Colvig said UC police locked Sproul's front doors Wednesday as "safety precaution." Sinice the demonstrators have not blocked all entrances to Sproul, the action is not illegal, Heyman said the protesters have not violated the university's rules concer- ning conduct during demonstrationos and that the university would take no disciplinary action unless they violated these guidelines. Shaprio is a staff writer for The Daily Californian. Sen'*'O citzenAssociated Press, Senior citizen^*''-- Laverne Stokes, 64, of Toms River, N.J., waves to the crowd after winning the fifth annual MS. Senior America pageant Wednesday in Atlantic City. Stokes tap-danced her contestants. way to the title, defeating nine other Tutu phones Columbia (Continued from Page 1) "The situation is getting more and more serious," said Baloyii, "hopefully (the restraining order) will give both sides a chance to get together and work things out." JONES SAID he was hopeful that violence could be avoided. "I'm op- ptimistic," she said, "that the school will divest its stocks." Jones said that administration is playing a waiting game but has been frustrated by increasing support and cohesiveness among the protesters. "It's grown every day," he said. "It began as 20 people who were going to sit for three hours but then more and more people have come to support it." TONY GLOVER, 23, a Columbia graduate and one of the protesters, agreed that a waiting game is being played. The administration is trying to divide students, he said. Last week court injunctions ordered 14 protesters to appear in court. "It's interesting that while the majority of court injunctions were given to blacks the majority of people in front of Hamilton Hall are white. But there's been a lot of togetherness and multiracial movement," he said. A spokesman for the administration denied that the university'is trying to divide students. In any case, students doubt that police will be used when the' restraining order runs out Monday af- ternoon. Teach-in draws 500 By JACKIE YOUNG Special to the Daily NEW YORK-The educational system for blacks in South Africa is "designed to create a bunch of slaves," Jose De Sousa, a student from South > Africa who is studying at Columbia University told a crowd of about 500 gathered for a teach-in at the school's McMillan Auditorium in Dodge Hall. The teach-in yesterday at Columbia University was part of the protest by students at the school who are opposed to the school's investments in com- panies doing business in South Africa. THE SCHOOL HAS $39 million in- vested in such corporations. Protesters want the school to divest from these holdings. In South Africa, De Sousa said that he was forced to get up at 4 a.m. to attend school and that before going to school he had to sell newspapers to earn money to pay for school uniforms and tuition. "I was taught to become an element of the workforce that would secure white majority rule," he said. 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