Big Blue ootball special inside! POWELL'S PREDICAMENT See Editorial Page c I J I/ ht Sict 43u aiIt1 STICKY High-77 Low - 58 See Today, Page 3 Vol. LXXXVIII, No.*9 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 17, 1977 Ten Cents 10 Pages plus Supplement Footballfans Bugles, bann By PATTY MON 'But if the six-pack is dis- creetly wrapped in a brown bag, it's okay , . . Twelve-pack toters, bugle ers and football fanciers, bew Gate attendants aren'ts ticket at today's Michigan-D ging anything larger than a nine to unfurl a twenty-foot m AS PART OF A NEW POL and designed "to crack dow coming into the stadium," A tor Charles Harris warns tha a one-quart thermos bottle o won't make it past the gate. Neither will portable bar backpacks. And if you don't b posted today around the stadi University is serious about clutter. ace the blues: rsbeer taboo ITEMURRISince alcohol is prohibited in the stadium, fans shouldn't bring in a Stroh's six-pack anyway, let -blowers, banner boost- alone the bulky twelve-pack. are! supposed to take your BUT IF THE SIX-PACK is discreetly wrapped in a uke game if you're lug- brown paper bag, it's okay. "We don't get involved in six-pack cooler or plan- the business of searching," explained Harris. essage to Mom. With crowds of 100,000 expected to cheer at every .ICY adopted last spring Wolverine home game, stadium officials are con- vn on the size of items cerned that every fan "have a seat, that their legs ssistant Athletic Direc- aren't rubbing against some cooler and they can get t "anything in excess of through the aisles," according to Harris. r larger than 12x12x14" Customer complaints about cramped seating led to the new policy. rs, banners, horns and Fans will have to see for themselves how string- believe Harris, the signs ently the ban is enforced. Gate attendants are also ob- um will confirm that the liged to ask for student identification for entry with a curtailing spectators' student ticket, but most folks know they seldom do. Ask any scalper. GATS 3 law Lance questioned on FBI probe 5 Eagleton defends OMB head WASHINGTON (AP) - Budget Director Bert Lance ran into tough questioning from a Senate panel yesterday over whether he delayed a routine FBI probe, into his past and whether bank overdrafts during his 1974 gubernatorial campaign gave him an unfair advantage. But he also picked up some vocal support as Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.) claimed that Lance was being smeared by the same broad brush used so effectively by the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy. "An the 1950s. we had guilt by asso- ciation," Eagleton said. "Sen. Mc- Carthy made it into a fine art. In 1977, we have guilt by accumulation." McCARTHY, a Wisconsin Republi- can, made headlines during the 1950s with largely unsubstantiated accusa- tions of widespread Communist infil- tration in the United States. Some of the harshest questioning of Lance came from Sen. Charles Mathias (R-Md.) who claimed the ability of Lance's campaign commit- tee to write overdrafts on the See SENATE, Page 2 .. .1 have noth- ing to be ashamed 0J, nothing hide . . to -B'ert Lance MEDICAL MA TTERS ON AGENDA: Re ents o ka St. Joe dea The point of the matter ... ... is that Scott Trepod (left) and Gary Pash aren't dueling on Diag, but demonstrating their "on guard" techniques in an open-air battle. The rivals are members of the University Fencing Club. South African Visitor scorns force for political change blasts apartheid By DAVID GOODMAN When Louwrens Pretorius arrived on campus Wednesday, he found himself the center of a controversy which had sharply divided the Inter- national Center and she African Stu- dents Association. Pretorius is a political science lec- turer at the University of South Afri- ca in Pretoria. touring the U.S. under the federal government's Interna- tional Visitors Program. WHEN AFRICAN-students learned Pretorius was coming to the Univer- sity and that the International Center was coordinating the visit, they were furious. They demanded assurances that he was not a supporter of apart- heid - South Africa's policy of racial segregation and white domination. African Student Association lead- "THE BASIC POSITION of the party is there should be no discrim- ination on the basis of race in all areas of life. That means one man, one vote," he explained. "What the PRP is trying to do is call for the "politics of negotiation." "It's time, if not past time, that white and black leaders get together and work out a solution. There's no way white leaders can continue to work out 'blue prints,' "he added. The PRP holds 19 seats in the 170-member South African parlia- ment - not enough to influence gov- ernment policy. "I don't see much hope of change happening in South Africa through the electoral process among.whites," Pretorius said. INSTEAD, PRETORIUS believes By BRIAN BLANCHARD and PATTY MONTEMURRI Business didn't range far from the health field at yesterday's Regents' meeting as board members unanimous- ly approved a new health program, the construction of a new medical library and the purchase of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.I It doesn't have a specific purpose yet, but the St. Joseph Hospital property, on the corner of Catherine and Ingalls, is being studied by University Hospital administrators. The University is hur- rying to create enough options to justify the six-million-dollar bill it will send to the state legislature in October. The Regents discussed methods for clearing a financial path through the tangle of mortgage and budgets at- tached to the purchase. St. Joseph has a two-and-a-half-million-dollar mortgage that the Regents will accept with the building. Later, the group breathed life into a new office to consolidate health care programs between University Hos- pital and the Medical School. In what President Robben Fleming called a "distinctly plus move," 370 students in health studies outside the professional health schools will now find their ac- tivities under the "administrative; fiscal, and programmatic" influence of a new position and committee. The Regents also approved the schedule, described by Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff, to begin construction of a new medical library at the beginning of nett year. The structure, on Catherine Street, will cost from legal costs in a court battle this year. Governmental immunity granted by the state to government agencies "sim- ply means there can be no malpractice suit against the University; the in- dividual doctor can still be sued," stressed Fleming. See MEDICAL, Page 3 0 l to study. SAfrican holdingfs, By MICHAEL YELLIN Regent Thomas Roach -(D-Detroit) said yesterday he expects the Uni- versity to hold a forum this fall on the future of its $40 million investment in firms with ties to South Africa. Two other Regents said they wanted to examine the University's South Afri- can investment policy. Their statements to the Daily came two days after,a unanimous decision by the University of Massachusetts trustees to sell all that university's stock in corporations doing business with South Africa - a move to pro- test the government's policy of racial segregation. k,: _: asM