The Michigan Daily-Monday, September 14, 1987- Page 9 Crowd sizes Blame it on the weather, television or because it's the second time, but Pope John Paul II's pilgrimage is drawing smaller-than-anticipated crowds. The pope, however, can take some consolation as protests that were threatened for each of his stops have been tiny. For the fourth day in a row Sunday, the crowds coming out to see the pope on his second tour of the United States were smaller than organizers had hoped. An estimated 300,000 people attended John Paul's open-air Mass in San Antonio, Texas, the fourth stop in his nine-city pilgrimage. That was the largest crowd yet to see him so far this trip, but far fewer than the half-million organizers had hoped for. The papal tour has been bedeviled by the weather since the start. Even in San Antonio, where skies were clear Sunday, bad weather had left its mark last week when a windstorm toppled two 21-story towers erected as part of the altar for the Mass. In Miami, for the first time on one of John Paul's 36 foreign trips, worshippers were sent home during a Mass. This happened Friday when the Secret Service low for Pope advised that winds and lightning during a thunderstorm posed a potential hazard to the people gathered in Tamiani Park. Attendance at the Miami Mass was officially estimated at 250,000, but the Miami Herald reported Saturday that 150,000 was a more realistic figure, based on analysis of aerial photos and detailed grids. Later Friday, crowds were sparce along the pope's route through Columbia, S.C., where city officials had braced for 250,000 visitors. City officials said Saturday that the totoal turnout was about 1000,000, counting some 60,000 who attended an ecumenical prayer service at the University of South carolina stadium. The bad weather kept up Saturday in New Orleans, where a thunderstorm drenched 150,000 people awaiting the pope's arrival to celebrate Mass. Organizers had hoped as many as 277,000 would turn out for the Mass at the University of New Orleans, but Tom Finney, spokesman for the New Orleans archdiocese, said church officials were not disappointed. 'Wizard of Oz' producer dies BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Oscar-winning Mervyn Le Roy, who produced "The Wizard of Oz" and directed scores of films including "Mister Roberts," died of heart failure Sunday, his manager said. He was 86. Le Roy died in his sleep at his Beverly Hills home, said his business manager, Given Eaton. Le Roy had Alzheimer's disease and had been ill since Christmas with respiratory problems, Eaton added. "I would say he was one of Hollywood's greats." said Eaton. Le Roy won a best director Oscar in 1942 for the film "Random Harvest," an honorary Oscar in 1945 for the short subject film, "The House I Live In," starring Frank Sinatra, and the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award in 1975. It was Le Roy who introduced Ronald Reagan to Nancy Davis. 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