The Michigan Doily - Wednesday, March 25, 1987--- Page 5 Lawma By STEPHEN GREGORY1 Lawmakers yesterday presented the state legislature with proposals" Surging the state to withdraw investments from companies con - ducting business in South Africa. Four bills, two in the house and two in the senate, call for the withdrawal of $2 billion in investments which fund state pension programs. The pension programs aid retired state employees. State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) and Rep. Virgil Smith introduced the legislation to the Iu I Kers propose to house, while Sen. Jackie Vaughn supporting divestment. (D-Detroit) and Sen. Dan DeGrow LAST year's Republican con - (R-Port Huron) presented it to the trolled state senate voted against the senate. passage of a similar package of The bills propose a five-year bills in December. Divestment bills withdrawal of investments and have been proposed since 1977; guarantee that pension-dependent none have passed. residents will continue to receive State Rep. Claude Trim (R- their monthly source of income. Waterford), one Republican who If divestment causes the pension now favors the bills, said he program to fall short of sufficient opposed previous legislation funding, the difference will come because it did not allow the state to from the state's general fund. continue investing in companies Bullard is optimistic the that were attempting to implement legislature will pass the bills the Sullivan Principles. because more Republicans are now The principles, named after divest from S. Africa Philadelphia minister Leon Sulli - van, outline steps that businesses operating in South Africa should follow to integrate their South African affiliates. Trim supports the new legis - lation because the Sullivan principles have been ineffective in achieving their goals, he said. According to Bullard, Sullivan has written a letter which calls for companies to divest their interests from South Africa because his principles have failed. DeGrow, one of the bills' sponsors, feels the bills have a good chance of passing because popular support favors divestment. "People think we have to move," he said. "The state treasurer has got five years to get us out of there," DeGrow said. S T A T E Treasurer Robert Bowman said divesting from companies involved in South Africa in five years is a reasonable request and that any losses in the pension fund due to divestment would be "very minimal." He said, "(the proposal) marries financial concerns and moral concerns better than any other state that's already divested." Smith, another sponsor of the legislation, said Michigan State University has increased investment revenues since it divested five years ago from businesses involved in South Africa. MSU divested when the state legislature passed a law requiring all state-supported colleges to divest their holdings. The University of Michigan still has $500,000 invested in companies that do business in South Africa. It is now suing the state, contending the 1982 law violated the University's autonomy. George Trainor - a spokesman for the Ford Motor Co., which hay holdings in South Africa - feels the legislation will harm South Africans by withdrawing money from companies that could employ them. Soviets permit BY SCOTT BOWLES home April 15 af After ten years of pleas, for a heart attack demands, ant even a hunger strike, of his recupera Yuri and Nelli Shpeizman have threaten their per gained permission to leave the Adopting a Soviet Union, possibly by this entails writing le April. ican and Soviet The Shpeizman's victory also pressure them marks the second successful cam - family. But the si paign by the University's Student decided to carry t Struggle for Soviet Jewry further: On Nov organization. The group sponsors members began families, called refuseniks, that which the 50 m have been denied permission to fasting for 24 ho emigrate from Russia. THEIR actio Last November, the SSSJ last Thursday decided to "adopt" the Shpeizmans government after the group's co-chairperson, Shpeizmans that Yael Rubanenko, an LSA junior, the country. Th visited the couple in Russia and hunger strike Mo learned they wanted to join their The first W daughter, Rita Levin, in Israel. The initiate a campa Shpeizman's case seemed urgent, couple's behalf Rubanenko said, because Yuri has Ritasue Charles leukemia. Park, Pennsylvan "I'm so happy, I'm so happy," The Charlesi Nelli said in a telephone interview Rubanenko, bec from her home in Leningrad. She the plight of refu said her husband would be returning the Soviet Unio refuseniks to emigrate fter hospitalization . She felt the delay ation would not mission to leave. family normally tters to the Amer - I governments to into releasing a tudent organization he campaign a step vember 18, 1986, a hunger strike in embers took turns curs. ons were rewarded when the Soviet notified the t they could leave e group ended the nday. estern citizens to aign on the Soviet f were Gary and stein of Melrose nia. teins, who knew ame interested in useniks and visited in in 1981, when they met the Shpeizmans. The Charlestein's worked with Rubanenko in efforts to free the Shpeizmans. Gary Charlestein said government pressure combined with Yuri's ailing condition helped the family's cause. "Think about how cruel the Soviets would seem in the eyes of the world if they did not let someone dying of cancer leave the country to be with family," he said. He said the couple may be eligible to leave as early as April 22. Aaron Frank, an LSA freshman and member of SSSJ, said the group hadn't expected a positive response this soon. "We were definitely planning to continue the strike to the end of the term," he said. The organization was established in September 1985 by eight students who returned from a trip to the Soviet Union where they met with several refuseniks. The group's goal is to increase the visibility of Soviet Jews so the Soviet government will allow Jews to emigrate. T H E SSSJ's first adopted group, the Bogomolnys, was released in September 1986. The SSSJ will decide on their next adopted family at its meeting next week. Jerry Wish, an LSA junior and co-chairperson of the group, said that although a hunger strike was an effective symbolic gesture, he doubts the group will use it again in the near future. "If you do it too often," he said, "you trivialize it. Sending letters to Congressmen has been very effective. It's also important to contact local commu - nities and attract public attention." Gary Charlestein said the Shpeizman's release indicates a "liberalizing trend" in Russia. "Something is going on in the Soviet Union," he said. LAZERGRAPHICS- COPYING U PRINTING U BINDING FORMS aIphgraphioos Printshops Of The Future COPIES Open 7 Days GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 663-6816 715 N. UNIVERSITY (2nd Floor) Located at: S. STATE & N. UNIVERSITY Read U68 CIhoogied I K The Roots of Terrorism A Speech by Dr. M. Northrup Beuchner Prof. of Economics, KC St. Johns University THURSDAY March 26, 8:00 pm Room 1270 'K U-M Business School .K Sponsored by KC U-M Students of Objectivism Power shocks University community (Continued from Page 1) a doctor's care and was taking medication. The medications and treatments were helping to bring her back." "Every indication was that she y had this ailment under control," he added. Baker acknowledged that recent publicity about racism at the University may have been a factor 'in Power's suicide. "No one knows the private pressure that anyone is enduring, but I do know thatsthere has been a lot of pressure upon the University and the regents in the [ past couple of weeks," Baker said. "I can't speculate on what happened - it certainly came as a shock to me," said close friend and State Senator Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor). "The University is deprived of a regent, and I am deprived of a great friend and colleague," said University President Harold Shapiro in a press release. Although Univ - ersity regents are elected, Gov - ernor Blanchard appoints a successor in ifistances of sudden V v . death. POWER was first elected to the Board of Regents in 1974, and re- elected to a second eight-year term in 1982. Educated at New York University, in Paris, and at Vassar University, she first became active in the University in the early 1970's. Before she became a regent, Power served as Assistant Director of the University Commission for Women and as Associate Director of the University Institute for the Advancement of Women. "She was a very generous person who did a lot for the University and for women," Pollack said. Power was also instrumental in state and national affairs for the Democratic party. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter appointed There was an error on The Greek Week page which appeared in the March 20 Weekend Magazine. The "Drink a Toast" ad should have included: We apologiszfor any incivenierce this may have caused. her to the position of Deputy Assistant Secretary in the U.S. State Department's Bureau of International Organization Affairs. "Sarah's legacy at the University is that she represented the conscience of the University," said Molin. Power is survived by her husband and her five-year old son. Her father-in-law, Eugene Power, was a former regent. No funeral arrangements have been announced. 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