Page Eight
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Sunday, September 21, 1975
Cardiac team stands by
(Continued from Page 1)
off its fourth year of medical
assistance to fans.
But despite the weather, the
only major medical problems
were more than 15 bee sting
victims.
SHIFT supervisor Jay Bleth-
en said yesterday, "We've been
lucky in the past, but we're al-
ways ready."
The seven-person cardiology
staff which presides at home
games works centrally. from a
well-equipped ambulance where
the severest of heart patients
are treated.
Inside, the ambulance has a
47-lb., $4,000 instrumentthe size
of a stereo speaker. Called the
life pack, or more formally, the
DC Pulse Defibrillator Cardio-
scope, it is the cardiology staff's
major piece of equipment.
THE LIFE pack contains an
EKG, a DC shock device and a
defibrillator.
The defibrillator stops the
heart when there is a quivering
of the heart muscle, explained
EMT Steve Foster. Ineffective
blood flow results from the
quivering and the heart must be
re-started manually.
THE MOBILE unit is also
packed full with seven stretch-
ers, a "jump box" containing
stethoscopes, intravenous ma-
terial and other small equip-
ment, a drug box filled with
cardiac related medications;
oxygen tanks and several blan-
kets.
Yesterday's staff of seven,
covering the main unit and a
standby unit, kept in touch with
each other by means of two-way
radios. About fifty Burns Secur-
ity men are scattered through-
out the stands during each
game, fifteen of whom are sup-
plied with communications de-
vices to alert the staff of heart
troubled fans.
The staff has never been
called on to treat a cardiac ar-
rest in the stands. "A lot of
spectators would be pissed off'
if we did," said Blethen. Most
cases are treated at the units
outside of the stadium or in the
first aid shack.
"IF THE patient requires
hospitalization, the ambulances
are immediately available to
go to the emergency room of
University Hospital where more
definitive care can be institut-
ed," said Dr. Richard Sorkin, a
'U' Hospital cardiologist in his
third year with the stadium pro-
gram.
In the past, most heart prob-
lems among older fans have oc-
curred during the tense, import-
ant games. Dr. Sorkin recalls
the stalemated Ohio State match
two years ago.
VA: The story a month later
(Continued from Page 5)
places." Instances of drug mis-
use can and have occurred
elsewhere.
In May of this year, Lee Roy
Hargrave was sentenced to life
imprisonment in Petersburg,
Virginia for administering a
drug in lethal dose to a 73-year-
old woman. The former nursing
aide worked in a coronary unit
of Petersburg General Hospi-
tal where six patients died
from unauthorized doses of the
heart depressant, lidocaine.
-UT THE PRESENCE of the
FBI appears effective as a
deterrent against further inci-
dents. In fact, not a single poi-
soning has been reported since
the pavulon was first detected
on August 15. "I think," Mc-
Whorter speculated, "that since
they've started this security through that they'll find the
thing around here, the guy ei- person who did. Yes, I do think
ther got scared with all the they'll find the person."
federal agents around, or he Calhoun also regarded the in-
done upped and took a powder." vestigation as a mere elimina-
But the FBI works on more tory process. "The FBI has
than idle speculation, and it talked to many people ,and we
appears they will stay at the have given them staffing re-
VA until some conclusive evi- cords," he said. "So far it's all
dencb is found. circumstantial evidence, but it
The agents have set up tem- does kind of limit it to a cer-
porary headquarters in one tain area. They'll first look for
wing of the VA. Quietly, but someone in ICU and someone
systematically, they monitor on the P.M. shift since that's
the hospital for suspects. They when it all happened."
have given certain members of RUT THE FBI, though suc-
the staff lie detector tests and cessful of late, does not al-
conducted routine questioning. ways win, and their investiga-
Now, five weeks after their ar- tions are painstakingly time-
rival, the agents have become consuming. For the hospital
an almost accepted fact of hos- this could mean a long, dark
pital life. tunnel - months of unanswer-
"To tell you the truth," Gu- ed questions. Yet hospital staff-
lickson said, "we hardly ever ers have to believe the ans-
see them. Every once in a wers will come. Though the
while they come in here ask- memory of the incident may
ing for time schedules or help dim, the fear, in time of crisis,
in interpreting data. But they could always return.
are very unobtrusive."
Hospital personnel are logic-,
ally dependent on the federal 0
investigators. All seel con-
vinced that the FBI's diligence
will deliver the poisoner. "It's
tion,"said Burns, expressing a
typical staff viewpoint. "They'll
find out who didn't do it, and By ED LANGE
- - _The Mi__hio________ ____ - ln
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I
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,'
Italian
marriage
laws
chiange
(Continued from Page 1)
and to be divided equally in
cases of separation and divorce.
Each spouse is responsible for
the debts of the other.
The law also establishes the
minimum age for marriage at
18, raising it from 14 for girls
and 16 for boys.
Before the law took effect,
dozens of under-18s rushed into
marriage Friday, including a
20-year-old soldier on leave to
marry his 12-year-old fiancee.
"Waiting another six years was
impossible," said the soldier,
Zaccaria Gallo.
Fourteen-year-old girls and
boys of 16 can still marry in
church, but their union will lack
recognition by the state.
The law also accords legiti-
macy, especially in inheritance
matters, to children born out of
relationships at a time when
either the man or the woman
was married to someone else.
Such offspring will no longer be
known as children of "adulter-
im" but will be classified as
"natural."
Did Patty Hearst plan
her own kidnapping?
By AP and Reuter
SAN FRANCISCO - Police
yesterday hunted the alleged
helpers of Patricia Hearst. the
heiress who turned revolution-
ary, while a top prosecutor said
he wasstill studying whether
she connived at her own kidnap-
ping.
U.S. Attorney James Brown-
ing, the chief prosecutor in the
case against Hearst, who was
captured on Thursday after 19
months on the run, said he had
not ruled out the possibility that
she connived in her abduction
last year.
"I have never ruled out the
possibility - and I underscore
the word possibility - that the
kidnapping may not have been
authentic," Browning told Reu-
ters in an interview yesterday.
Friday he convinced a court to
revoke bail for Hearst because
of fears that she may try to
flee.
For almost two years, the
SLA spouted its slogan: "Death
to the fascist insect that preys
upon the life of the people."
Its emblem was an ancient
symbol, a seven-headed cobra.
WITH the capture of Hearst
and three SLA comrades Thurs-
day, authorities believe they
rounded up the last of the heav-
ily armed rag-tag revolutionar-
ies.
Two others were convicted of
murder and six died a year ago
last May i na firefight with po-
lice in Los Angeles.
The SLA was a self-styled re-
volutionary group dedicated to
violent overthrow of the Ameri-
can system.
WITH Hearst as its gun-tot-
ing showpiece, the SLA robbed
a San Francisco bank of $15,000
in April 1974 "to finance the
revolution."
The group surfaced in NNo-
vember 1973, when it murdered
Oakland schools Supt. Marcus
Foster in a fusillade of syanide-
tipped bullets.
It said the respected black
educator was killed because the
SLA opposed student identifica-
tion cards being instituted in
the school system .
Its founder was an escaped
black convict, Donald De-
Freeze.
After DeFreeze escaped, he
fled to Berkeley where he was
. horbored by a feminist, wrote
the founding SLA documents
and drew a following of the
young and disaffected.
He took the name "Cinque"
after the leader of an 1839 slave
ship devolt. In his first bitter
tape recording to Miss Hearst's
parents, he said:
"Speaking as a father, I am
quite willing to lose both my
children, if by that action I
could save thousands of white,
AT ONE SLA hideout in Con- black, yellow and red children
cord, Calif., police found an from a life o fsuffering, ex-
SLA "death list" of public andp atand muderg x
corporate officials marked for potaion and murd.
kidnaping and execution. The group took its name
They found detailed maps of from the word "symbiosis" a
remote areas, marked with' beneficial mutual dependence of
trails cabins wells. tunnels different organisms.
L Q3., Q 11a, V 11 , U114.
and mines. Its members train-
ed in the use of firearms, ex-
plosives and guerrilla warfare.
It demanded that Patty
Hearst's father, Randolph
Hearst, give free food to all of'
California's needy persons as a
condition for her release.
At a time when other radical
groups were moderating their
tactics, the SLA was widely
criticized for alienating large
nnumbers of people by its glori-1
fication of violence.
Its members were mostly
young, white and college edu-
cated men and women like Ms.
Hearst and the SLA comrade
she loved, William Wolfe, son
of a Pennsylvania doctor.
But it sprang from the black
orison movement in California's
Medical Facility at Vacaville.
The group professed lofty
ideals and said the seven heads
of its cobra emblem represent-
ed "self determination, cooper-
ative production, creativity, un-
ity, faith, purpose and collec-
tive responsibility."
The SLA always seemed a
jump ahead of authorities who
discovered several of the ter-
rorists's hideouts just after the
group moved on.
The group suffered its great-
est blow in May 1974 when six
members, including DeFreeze,
were killed in the Los Angeles
shootout.
The terrorists refused to come
out of their bungalow arsenal
and some authorities believed
they chose suicide rather than
surrender.
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i e xicngan water polo team I
fell to a stubborn Indiana sciuad
11-10, in double overtime at Matt
Mann Pool yesterday. The Wol-
verines never trailed through
regulatior play, but couldn't
shut the door on the Hoosiers
as John Halliday tied the con-
test up at 7-7 with 32 seconds
left.
At the end of the first over-
time period, the Blue led 8-7,
thanks to a goal by Richie
Yawitz on a pass from Brian
Wylie. Unfortunately, Midwest
Intercollegiate Water Polo Con-
ference rules require two over-
times for tied contests, and it
was the final overtime -that
proved fatal to Michigan.
Yawitz bagged a goal only
27 seconds into the four min-
ute period as the Blue opened
up what looked to be a safe
9-7 lead. Then the roof caved
in as the visiting Hoosiers
slammed home four markers
to Michigan's one. Dan Green
bagged the winner on a pen-
alty shot with 19 seconds left
in the game.
Michigan jumped out to a
quick 3-1 lead in the first period
with the goals going to Yawitz,
John Daly and Rick Pepper. IU
picked up their goal on a power,
play shot by Jeff Boss.
The second period was a com-
bination of good defense and
shoddy play by both teams.
Michigan failed to score. Hal-
liday scored for the Hoosiers,
blazing one by Blue goalie Jim
Firestone half-way into the
period.
Michigan led 6-4 at the end of
the third period as Yawitz con-
tinued his phenomenal play with
two scores. Dick Brown also
scored for the Blue with Hali-
day and Tom Beir scoring for
IU. With a two goal lead, 6-4, it
looked like all Michigan had to
do was wait for the final gun.
Indiana, however, had other
ideas. They outscored the Wol-
verines 3-1 in the final period
to take it into overtime. Dan
Green, Mel Nash and Halliday
tallied for the Hoosiers while
Gord Downie scored the Blue's
lone goal.
"We just weren't intense
enough," explained a dejected
Stu Isaac. "I told them all week
that Indiana was going to be
tough but they really didn't
believe it."
Richie Yawitz was invincible
for Michigan. The senior from
St. Louis scored five times and
assisted on three others. "He
played a great game," said
Isaac. "He's just a super pres-
sure player."
Michigan will try to pick up
the pieces next Saturday as they
entertain Cincinnati at Mann
after the football game.
-i
at 3 & 8 p.m. '" ILove And Marriage
Advance ticket sales and information: Ticket Office,
Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby, (313) 764-0450
Tickets Available through Hudson's
Quality Cotton
RugbySr $15
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v4
Sports of the Daily
Boo ters blanked
Special To The Daily
The Michigan Soccer Team fell to Oakland University yes-
terday afternoon, 3-0. The match, played in Rochester, Michigan,
was the Wolverines' first of the season.
Michigan coach Steve Berman commented, "Oakland has a
really good team with a couple of all-Americans. We had good
play from a freshman Mike Moitz. Besides that our defense
looked good but our offense wasn't so good."
Michigan's next encounter is Saturday at Central Michigan
University.
Rugger~s clean up
By PAUL CAMPBELL
The Michigan Rugby Squad opened their home season with
great success yesterday as the "A" and ,"B" teams defeated their
counterparts from the Toledo Rugby Club by the respective
scores of 45-0 and 9-4.
The impressive victory by the "A" team represented a team
effort, as 8 of the 15 players on the field broke through for some
type of score.
Pete Maglocci and Al Markman each scored 2 tries to
lead the assault.
Chipping in with one try each were Al's brother Mike Mark-
man, Keith Stone, Bill Conway, and Angelo Tocco. Kicker Ja
Gore split the uprights with 5 successful conversions, and the
scoring was rounded out by a Cleland Child field goal.
The first half of the game opened slowly, with both teams
playing conservatively and trying to develop a game plan. The
ice was broken 6 minutes into the contest by a Wolverine goal.
The rest was all Michigan, and by halftime they had built a
25-0 lead.
The second half was more of the same, as the team
coasted to it's second straight victory of the season. They
have already outscored their opponents by the impressive
margin of 78-6.
The "B" team victory was also their second straight. Ed
Darien scored the only try for the Wolverines. Billy Chung con-
verted successfully, and also kicked a field goal to lead the
scoring.
The double win had club president Angelo Tocco brimming
with enthusiasm over the team's prospects. "I'm very encour-
aged by the turnout and enthusiasm. Barring an unusual amount
of injuries, I could see us going undefeated this fall."
The only dark spot was a possibly broken arm sustained
by starting wing Tom Raboyne, which would sideline him for the
rest of the1 season. Besides the usual assortment of bumps,
bruises, and mild sprains, the other players survived the game.
After an intraquad game next Saturday at Wines field, the
ruggers travel to Detroit the weekend of Oct. 4 to participate
in the first annual Michigan Union Tournament. The tournament
will last two days and will involve teams from throughout the
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Everyone likes to keep snapshots.
We'll snap the ones you can't.
state.
T h o u g h league stand-
ings aren't kept in the fall,
Tocco feels he has one of the
best teams in the midwest.
When asked to comment on the
future of the squad, he said,
"With the team we have now,
I think we have a good chance
to take the Big Ten in the
spring."
DISCOVER A WEALTH
OF POTENTIAL
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