Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom E Lit 43& iE ai1t Misty Rainy days and Sundays always get me down. Cloudy with a chance of rain. High in the mid 50s. Yr Vol. XCIV-No. 41 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, October 23, 1983 Fifteen Cents Eiaht Pnna - ..,--y...y Bergeron boot burns Iowa, 16-13 Fumble recovery sets up last minute drive By CHUCK JAFFE Three words and a Michigan win. "Bergeron, go kick." Michigan placekicker Bob Bergeron took coach Bo Schembechler's advice and kicked a last-second 45-yard field goal that upended a determined Iowa team, 16-13, before 104,559 rain-soaked Michigan Stadium fans yesterday. BERGERON'S FIELD goal, with just eight seconds left in the game, allowed Michigan to remain tied with Illinois as the only unbeaten teams in the Big Ten, and set up a Champaign showdown for next Saturday, when the Wolverines travel to play the Illini. "I got a very good foot into the ball," Bergeron said of his winning kick. "I like to do all my kicks under pressure. I was confident." But Bergeron almost did not get a chance to be the hero yedsterday. Earlier in the game-winning drive, quarterback Steve Smith ran for 17 yar- ds to the Iowa 49, but Michigan was penalized for clipping on the play and was set back into Michigan territory. When tailback Rick Rogers went 24 yards with a screen pass to the Iowa 35 two plays later, Michigan was just within field goal range - for kick-off specialist Todd Schlopy. WHEN ROGERS picked up seven yards to put the ball on the Iowa 28 with 12 seconds left, and Schembechler sent Bergeron, instead of Schlopy, out to win the game. "If the kick had been a little further, it would have been Scholpy's kick," said Schembechler, whose team im- proved its record to 6-1. "His leg is a lit- tle stronger than Bergeron's, and Bergeron's range is pretty much around 50 yards. But the little devil kicked it through." "He just said 'Bergeron, go kick,' " added Bergeron, a senior walk-on who was second-string to Schlopy when the season started. "I was trying to keep it See LATE, Page 8 Fans claim police-man beat the-m after game By NEIL CHASE Two University students who were arrested after Michigan's game- winning field goal yesterday said -the arresting officer was "way out of line" and beat them unnecessarily with his nightstick. Students Michael Adams and Chris Gordon said they were arrested after they tried to stop an Ann Arbor police officer from hitting a third student, senior Greg Salahge See FANS, Page 3 ')aily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Wolverine kicker Bob Bergeron (19) and holder Dan Decker (9) watch as Bergeron's game-winning 45-yard field goal attempt sails through the uprights with just eight seconds remaining yesterday. More peopl4 By BARBARA MISLE president of "The gene The nation's affinity for taking people goes up in to court to settle differences hasn't left Anyone tha the University's own legal department old reflex ac untouched in recent years. As the num- Revisions ber of lawyers nationwide has shot up workers cor so too has the number of suits. 10 years an And almost proportionately, the taken away PUniversity has found it necessary to used to spend more money to defend itself in University court. Since 1971, University legal In additi budgets have more than tripled - from Daane call. $179,000 12 years ago to $541,000 this skyrockete year. "SOME N "OF COURSE we're getting sued or plaintiffs more," says.the University's chief at- abuse the s torney Roderick Daane, who in 1970 are really t was one of only two University attor- cupying ti neys. "Every institution and large em- judge," said ployer has more litigation than they did At the pr 10 years ago." involved in To handle all that litigation, the crease from University now employs seven lawyers standard and spends three times what it used to compensati on outside legal help. changed th In addition to three lawyers in stitution. Daane's Office of the General Counsel, The Unil the University employs two patent at- flawless re torneys and two lawyers for the Uni- which Dua versity hospitals alone, and his staf IN TERMS OF its legal obligations, have repr the University is no different than any University other large business, said Joel Boyden troom taler Gunmnan arrested in eorgia after, kidnapping Reagan aides ETo DAY- Dirty laundry S0 YOU ALWAYS wanted to get published in the Wnll rrniv~~a vntr rhrL. Th tfn~n frn L. e sue ' f the State Bar of Michigan. ral litigiousness of society terms of defense costs. t does anything wrong, the ction is sue," he said. in several civil rights and rmpensation laws in the past d court decisions that have immunity state institutions enjoy have made the more vulnerable to lawsuits. ion, the number of what s "frivolous lawsuits" has d. MEMBERS of my profession representing (themselves) system by filing cases that trivial and shouldn't be oc- he time of a full-grown d Daane. esent time, the University is 388 claims, a 45 percent in- n 1971. The suits range from malpractice or worker's on suits to cases that have he basic policies of the in- versity has a practically cord of winning its cases ne credits to strong suits If's skill. But attorneys who esented clients suing the say it is more than cour- nt that puts the University '; legalC ahead in its cases. (See related story this page.) THE CASES Daane considers frivolous include those in which studen- ts sue because they were unfairly ex- pelled or denied a degree. Many of the suits keep the University in courts for several years. One such case which eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court involved a group of Native Americans who charged that the University should pay their childrens' osts soar secondary education costs under a 160- year-old treaty. The University won last year. Yet the University is forced to defend itself even in cases it might consider frivolous to preserve its reputation, said Peter Davis, a local attorney who defends the University in most of its civil action suits. ALTHOUGH many people are "out to get" the University and use their cases See LEGAL, Page 3 'U' lawyers win suits: Skill or selectivity? By BARBARA MISLE Leona Reiner has had the University in court for almost nine years. A former doctoral candidate in the School of Library Science, Reiner was denied a PhD for allegedly plagiarizing data for her thesis. Without an attorney, Reiner sued the University - and like most people who take on the University's powerful legal counsel she doesn't have much chance of winning. RECOGNIZED by their colleagues as a top-notch group of lawyers, the University boasts a near-perfect record in court. While University attorneys attribute their success to skill, critics charge the wins reflect selectivity in choosing which cases to litigate, unlimited ac- cess to the University's coffers, and perhaps even favoritism among judges toward the University. Chief general counsel for the Univer- See CRITICS, Page 5 From AP and UPI AUGUSTA, Ga. - A man "brandishing a pistol" and demanding to talk with President Reagan was arrested yesterday after holding Reagan's personal aide and four others at Augusta National Golf Club. Reagan. who was spending the weekend here, was playing on the 16th fairway and Secret Service officials said he was never in direct danger The gunman, identified as Charles Harris of Augusta, rammed a pickup truck through the club's No. 3 gate at midafternoon. HARRIS, CARRYING a .38 caliber pistol held the five hostages in the pro shop for two-and-a-half hours before surrendering. He fired one shot into the floor but no one was hurt. Officials said Harris is a policeman's son who was divorced from his wife last year. White House aides described him as "crazed.' His motive was unclear. Witnesses said the man rammed his blue four- wheel drive truck through the lightly guarded iron gate while Reagan, Secretary of State George Shultz, Treasury Secretary Donald Reagan and former Sen. Nicholas Brady (R-N.J.) were playing the 16th hole of the championship course. WHITE HOUSE spokesman Peter Roussel said Harris forced his way into the pro shop and held five people at gunpoint. He said two others fled into another room, where they were trapped throughout the ordeal. Harris said "perhaps someone would be killed" if he didn't get to talk to the president in person, accord- See GUNMAN, Page 2 Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON Wash-out Eric Calub gets a blast of cold, clean water from Liz Shuler after the annual Mud Bowl game on the corner of Washtenaw and South University. Phi Delta Theta fraternity beat Sigma Alpha Epsilon 12-6. they're submitted by 10 p.m. Friday. So call soon - time is running out. One Dollar Nvme," D0iy Daily? Ha, ha, ha THE YUCKSTERS, AND pranksters from the Daily's fellow student publication, the Gargoyle, are at it again. The first issue of the school term - the so-called "har- dcore" college humor member - will be on sale tomorrow through Thursday on the Diag and at all reasonably reputable retail outlets around Az. This Gargoyle features the usual hack-bow-down-to-local-interests contents like the news articles and fake ads, as well as a photo-story with a on this date in history: * 1963 - Ivan C. Karp of New York's Castelli Art Gallery told a University audience that an appreciation of pop art involves a recognition of things we are used to, the distasteful, and that which we don't realize exists. * 1968 - The Pro Black Organization, a black student- community group, informed the University Activities Cen- ter it would not recognize UAC's choice for that year's Homecoming queen charging that the contest was discriminatory. The judges had picked 1968's queen from I