Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 24, 1985 I 1 t i t t Fraternity placed The Vanderbilt chapter of the Phi from trying to force Barry to drink an and rea Delta Theta fraternity was placed on alcoholic beverage. ferenti probation by the Interfraternity council Potter, however, stated that this was sole sto (IFC) April 3 after active members of an individual incident and as such did Thed the fraternity were caught "hazing" not require judicial action through the poratio their pledge class. IFC. - The Vanderbilt Hustler at the e Mark Reuss, IFC president, Kalamazoo considers in Sout described the hazing as "unnecessary bines fu and unpleasant acts to the pledge S. African divestment with c class." Kalamazoo could divest all city funds issues. The general probation requires the from corporations and banks operating UI n in South Africa and still not lose money, according to Edward Swan, a senior diVe C ovice president of the Boston-based in- Thel .l g e S vestment firm Franklin Research and "compi Development Corporation. ment o Swam spoke before a group of about in Sout fraternity to develop a pledge program 25 students, faculty, and Kalamazoo guideli which will have to be cleared by the residents last week, asserting that working university, the IFC, and the national divestment is morally right and finan- The g fraternity. In addition, the Phi Delts cially sound. The South African six rul will not be allowed to have a Fall pledge Solidarity Organization II(SASO II) Sulliva class. sponsored the lecture. place c K.C. Potter, dean of residential and Swan said Kalamazoo has over $49 tices di judicial affairs at Vanderbilt, described million invested in pension plans, with Unive the reprimand as "fair" but "lenient," $19 million in banks and corporations Preside adding that future pledge programs that give loans and operate in South said tha "will not involve throwing food" at the Africa. The Kalamazoo City Com- has app pledges. Pen Caldwell, Phi Delt munity Relations Board has recom- in 40 co president, declined to comment on the mended to the City Commission that the busines issue. city divest the $19 million. from th One incident of hazing involved John Responding to a common fear of or sev Miles, a Phi Delt alum, who caused Jeff divesture, Swan said there is no comply Barry, a then-Phi Delt pledge, to problem finding new stock to replace Mah( dislocate his shoulder during a fight at the divested stock.' He suggested that law,t the fraternity house which stemmed Kalamazoo acquire foreign securities evalual 1 1 i i on probation al estate and diversify into dif- industry groups to make up for ck. divestment issue has forced cor- ns and cities to take another look thics of their investment policies h Africa, and Swan's firm com- undamental investment analysis ompany practices on social - Western Herald nay be forced to st S. African stocks Iowan Senate has passed a romise" bill calling for divest- d state funds from corporations h Africa that do not adhere to nes of non-discriminatory gg conditions. guildelines are a voluntary set of es, collectively known as the rn Principles, relating to work- onditions in a country that prac- scrimination. ersity of Iowa Associate Vice ent for Finance Casey Mahon at June 1984 figures show the UI proximately $2.4 million invested ompanies "we believe are doing ss in South Africa." RPnnrt e companies show that about six en of the 40 companies are not ying with the Sullivan Principles. on said that if the bill becomes the UI "will get another tion" of its holdings, and "we vest." ough the compromise is a red-down" version of the al, the amended bill is still "a forceful statement against eid," said Sen. Charles Bruner es). But Doug McVay, a mem- he IU student committee against eid voiced disapproval, calling mended bill an "unacceptable omise which we will accept as a ling." 'ersity of Iowa African ation President Moyisi Majeke red with McVay, but added that ullivan Principles can't work in Africa" because paying blacks hites equally is not allowed there. -The Daily Iowan e students rally to est federal aid cuts Lt 500 students rallied last week Cross Campus at Yale Univesity test efforts by the Reagan ad- ration to cut spending on lly funded student loans. akers, who included Yale dent A. Bartlett Biamatti, essman Bruce Morrison, and History Prof. Gaddis Smith, expressed an unanimous contempt for the gover- nment's attempt to cut back student loans in an effort to balance the budget. Giamatti stressed the need for students not to appear complacent when defending educational oppor- tunity and then related the financial issue to the ideal of opportunity, noting that "this country stands for in- clusiveness, not exclusiveness." Gaddis Smith, speaking next, ac- cused the Reagan administration of "having little knowledge of the past and no sense of responsibility for the future." Congressman Morrison also condem- ned the loan cuts, receiving loud ap- plause when he said that "great univer- sities like Yale should not be populated only by those people rich enough to pay their own way.". The rally drew extensive media coverage, and organizer Phil Leider said he was "extremely satisfied" with the speeches and the turnout. Mel Powell, another rally organizer, affir- med that "it is possible to make a dif- ference." -Yale Daily News Texas parade erupts in anti-gay violence A round-up parade at The University of Texas at Austin exploded into a barrage of beer bottles and firecrackers last week as represen- tatives of a gay students organization passed by a private dormitory. The Gay and Lesbian Student Association (GLSA) parade entry was nearing the end of the parade route when onlookers began lobbing cans and beer bottles into the street from the balcony. Alex Bernal, chairman of the GLSA, said the group first encoutnered trouble when attempting to enter the parade. "As the parade started, people from otherfloats kept saying, 'get bumper to bumper. Don't let thim in,' " Bernal said. Bernal said the only injury suffered in the melee was by one of the car's riders, who was hit in the head by a beer bottle, although the injury required no medical treatment. "This is the worst display of anti-gay and lesbian violence I have ever seen," Bernal said. No arrests or fines were reported. -The Daily Texan Colleges is a Wednesday feature of the Daily. It was compiled by Daily Staff Writer Tyler Paetkau. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports South African police detain three black activist leaders JOHANNESBURG, South Africa-Police locked up three black leaders yesterday in a crackdown on the main alliance opposing the white gover- nment. Vandalism and violence spread through South Africa's black ghet- tos. CCS - COLLEGE OF ART (~F~d(AND DESIGN L b . O A D D S I N L . C EN TER FO R C R EA TIV E STU D IES 245 East Kirb~y Detroit, Michigan 48202 Summer Extension Program June - August Programs are available for adults, college students, high school students and youth. Join us in the summer fun in: . painting - printmaking " illustration - photography " drawing * sculpture Sindustrial design graphic communication Conact I "crafts and much more! TO ALL PERSONS GRADUATING AT SPRING COMMENCEMENT Spring Commencement Exercises at the University of Michigan will be held on Saturday, May 4, at 1:00 p.m. The Exercises are scheduled for the Michigan Stadium. In case of rain, they will be held in Crisler Arena. It will be announced on the local radio stations (WUOM, WPAG and WAAM) at 11:00 a.m. on May 4 whether the Exercises will be held at the Michigan Stadium or in Crisler Arena. will div Alth( "water origina very aparth( (D-Am ber of t aparth the ar compr( beginn Univ Associ concur "the S South and wh YaI prot Abou on the ( to prot minist federal Spea Presid Congr A police spokesman said the three blacks detained without charge, all from the multiracial United Democratic Front, were Patrick Lekota, public- ity secretary; Popo Molefe, the general secretary, and Moses Chikane, a Front official in Johannesburg's Transvaal province. He said they were un- der investigation in connection with cases of unrest near Johannesburg eight months ago. Police reported dozens of incidents of stone-throwing and arson by crowds near Johannesburg in the north, Bloemfontein in the center of the country and Port Elizabeth in the south. Riot police used tear gas, rubber bullets and shotguns to scatter hundreds of black youths, but reported no injuries. The spokesman at national police headquarters in Pretoria said 482 teen- age boys and girls were arrested in Sebokeng, near Johannesburg, for holding an illegal meeting in a school to protest rent increases for gover- nment housing. Most paid fines and were released, he said, speaking on con- dition he not be identified. First Ladies meet for summit WASHINGTON-Nancy Reagan is bringing together the wives of prime ministers and presidents from around the world for the White House's first "first ladies summit" on drug abuse this week. "It's very historic-a major undertaking," said James Rosebush, the Fir- st Lady's chief of staff and organizer of the event. "This is the first time in history there has ever been a first ladies' summit." Not since the signing of the Panama Canal treaties under the Carter ad- ministration have so many representatives of foreign governments been at the White House at once, Rosebush said. About 17 women-representing nations ranging from Mexico to the tiny island nation of Mauritius-will attend the two-day conference, which begins today at the White House. President Reagan will drop by to greet the conference as it opens. Today, the women fly to Atlanta, where they will attend another conference spon- sored by the Parents Resource Institute for Drug Education, or PRIDE, an international organization aimed at fighting drug abuse. Congress set for confrontation with Reagan over Contra aid WASHINGTON-Senate Democrats abandoned all efforts at compromise yesterday and Congress headed for a confrontation with President Reagan on whether to release $14 million in aid to the Contra guerrillas battling the leftist Sandinista government in Nicaragua. Debate opened in the House and Senate on an issue which has bitterly divided members of both political parties and invoked painful memories from the early days of the Vietnam War. As votes approached in both houses, Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State George Shultz met with Senate Republicans who emerged almost completely unified behind the president's Contra aid proposal. Sen. Richard Lugar, (R-Ind), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, predicted Reagan would win in the Republican-controlled Senate. But defeat for tlie president's plan in the Democrat-controlled House was virtually assured. Court pernits alcohol price ads LANSING-The Michigan Court of Appeals yesterday backed Attorney General Frank Kelley in his fight to legalize beer and wine price advertising in Michigan. Retailers may resume advertising in 21 days unless critics of the practice obtain an order blocking the appeals court decision. The long-awaited decision was a victory for Kelley and a setback for the Michigan Beer and Wine Wholesalers Association, which strongly opposes price advertising. "The court of appeals made the right decision," Kelley said. "Michigan citizens have a right to know what retailers are charging for beer and wine." Aides predicted resumed advertising will bring down prices. Patrick Laughlin said his wholesalers association is "disappointed (and) confused" by the decision, noting it comes in the face of a national movement toward restricting the promotion of alcoholic beverages. "We're trying to be a responsible industry,'trying to police ourselves, yet we're gettin clobbered from both sides." Coca-Cola to sweeten soft drink NEW YORK-Coca-Cola, the world's No. 1 consumer product, said yesterday it was changing its secret recipe for a sweeter taste in a move company officials said would make the familiar soft drink even better. Officials for No. 2 soft drink Pepsi-Cola countered its long-time com- petitors' hoopla with a full-page advertisement in the New York Times saying Coke is "withdrawing their product from the marketplace, and is reformulating brand Coke to be 'more like Pepsi.' "After 87 years of going at it eyeball to eyeball, the other guy just blinked." Every day, 270 million servings of regular Coke are sold around the world. Officials for Coca-Cola, a symbol of American good living that has held its spot as the world's most popular soft drink for almost a century, explained the sudden change was an effort to make "the best even better." STie Sxrbthian lBuilg Vol. XVC - No. 163 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: through April - $4.00 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 outside the city. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate, and College Press Service. 9 I 9 '41 MA Beyond all boundaries... The Hamilton Standard Story 'fS L . sot E . 7 /) ,.'> :< a ,.. ,, 'I ;,, Ih * y i : S -j From the propeller that carried 2 Lindbergh to Paris.... to flight controls for the most advanced aircraft ... to major achievements in space explora- tion...our history's one of pushing beyond traditional boundaries. Today, we're extending technology's reach in a diverse range of sophisticated systems for the Electronics, Aerospace, and Commercial/Industrial markets. Our exciting programs involve Environ- mental Control Systems. Digital Flight Management Systems. Electronic Engine Controls. Space Suit/Life Support Systems. 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