The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 15, 1983 - Page 5 Druse attack fails to oust Lebanese army from ton BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Druise artillery set a Christian military stronghold in the Chouf Mountains ablaze yesterday, but the Islamic militiamen failed in another attempt to drive the Lebanese army out of a moun- taintop town overlooking the U.S. Marine base in Beirut. . Saudi and U.S. diplomats tried in Damascus to arrange a cease-fire in the 11-day-old resumption of Lebanon's civil war. Syria and radical Palestinian factions vowed retaliation if U.S. planes intervene in support of the Lebanese army. IN ANOTHER CIVIL war develop- ment, the Christian radio station charged that Druise militiamen massacred 84 Christians last Friday in the mountain town of Maasser el-Chouf. Druise leaders denied the claim, and it was impossible to prove or disprove it. The Druise artillery pounded Mechref, a hilltop stronghold of the Christian Phalange Party's militia 101/2 miles south of Beirut, with an intense barrage at midday. A large fire and thick columns of smoke could be seen an hour later. Mechref overlooks the coastal high- way from the capital to south Lebanon, and the Phalangists have a major barracks in a high school there. But it could not be learned if it was hit. EARLIER YESTERDAY, the Lebanese army's U.S.-trained 8th Brigade held fast to the mountaintop town of Souk el-Gharb, which comman- ds the U.S. Marine zone at Beirut's in- ternational airport. Soldiers there said they defeated a three-prong Druise onslaught during the night, inflicting heavy losses in lives and equipment on the militiamen. It was the fourth day of attacks on the town, which also is within range of President Amin Gemayel's suburban palace and the nearby residence of U.S. Ambassador Robert Dillon. Since capture of Souk el-Gharb would give the Druise another position from which to attack the U.S. Marines, there Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Need a lift? Tim Auisis drives and operates a new University-owned bus for handicapped students and faculty. Soviets condemned for shooting plane was speculation that it could become the first test of President Reagan's new policy, announced Tuesday, allowing American naval and air support fe Lebanese army if an attack on it d a threat to the Marines. THE SOVIET UNION charged at Reagan's order was issued in preparation for "direct seizure'-of Lebanon, and Syria's government-con- trolled media charged the United States was heading for another Vietnam., The Syrian state minister for forign affairs, Farouk Chareh, said Syiia would "help the Lebanese nationalist forces, the Druise and other ; nti- Phalangist Christian and Moslem; fao- tions since this is vital to our security.,'4 Also in Damascus, Nayef Hawatme , head of the Democratic Front for ,t44e Liberation of Palestine, one of the eight PLO factions, met with Druise le$4r Walid Jumblatt and assured hir.pf Palestinian backing "in the event fp) direct American involvement in, the Lebanon fighting." ing award of M made a mistake," Samoff said, "and I still think so." Just after he was denied ten,, Samoff received a distinguished ,er- vice award for his contribution%3tp scholarly life at the University. During the tenure controversy,ifs backers charged that he was denikit tenure because of his "Marxist politfl. views." Students formed the Samoff Student Support Committee which heldrallie, addressed the University's Regents( and boycotted political science classes to protest the professor's denied tenure. Former 'U' prof gets teach (Continued from Page 1) ternational recovery efforts and "unequivocally apologize" and "fully compensate" the families of victims. It passed unanimously although two members, George Crockett, (D-Mich.) and John Conyers (D-Mich.) voted "present." A spokesman said Crockett felt the resolution was too "strident" and he was "very troubled" that it was being used as an excuse for greater military spending. Conyers was not immediately available for comment. "It is the least we can do to express our outrage," said Rep. Clement Zablocki (D-Wis.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. "What is even more horrible is the Soviet refusal to apologize or provide reparations for the families of the vic- tims," he said. There were 61 Americans among the 269 passengers aboard the plane which was shot out of the sky by a Soviet fighter on Sept. 1 after it strayed over Soviet territory. One of them was Rep. Larry McDonald (D-Ga.). As the vote approached, the floor rhetoric by more than 50 House mem- bers grew even more severe than the language of the resolution itself. The attack, said Rep. Claude Pepper, (D-Fla.), was a "deed of infamy to be recorded in the annals of time." Speaker after speaker demanded that President Reagan impose tougher san- ctions and penalties against the Soviets than he has so far. "If we don't do more than talk and blow out hot air, then they are going to do it again," said Rep. Elliot Levitas, (D-Ga.). "This is all windup and no pitch," said Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.). "It really doesn't do anything." Hyde urged quick action on legislation authorizing Reagan's rapid military buildup as a signal to the Soviet Union that the United States will not tolerate any future similar attacks. He urged quick action -on legislation authorizing President Reagan's rapid military buildup as a signal to the Soviet Union that the United States will not tolerate any future similar attacks. Rep. Frank Annunzio, ( D-Ill.), called on Reagan to deny entry visas to Soviet athletes scheduled to compete in the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. "The Soviet Union has had a long history of barbarous acts," said Annunzio. He called for suspension of all travel by Americans to the Soviet Union and a full-scale trade embargo, including sales of grain to the Soviet Union. At almost the same hour, the Agriculture Department announced yet another purchase by the Soviets under terms of a new grain deal that takes effect Oct. 1. The Reagan administration, Annun- zio said, has adopted "a policy of wrist slapping." Similarly, House Republican leader Bob Michel of Illinois said, "It is only a beginning. The Soviet leaders fear only power, raw power." And there was a call from Rep. Mary Rose Okar, (D-Ohio) for tough economic sanctions limiting Soviet im- ports as diverse as $75,000 sable coats and metal alloys. (Continued from Page 1) DURING HIS career at the Univer- sity Samoff was a professor of political science, Director of The Center for Afro-American Studies, and also lec- tured in the Residential College. English Prof. Alan Wald, who suppor- ted a drive to protest the decision to refuse Samoff's tenure, said Samoff was a strong supporter of student par- ticipation. "In the opinion of many people, in- cluding myself, Joel (Samoff) had sur- passed the standards for tenure," Wald said. "I personally think what offended a lot of people was that he was so pro- student." THE ISSUE, Wald said, is the method of tenuring faculty. He said students should be more involved in the process if they want to retain faculty who are "pro-student." In a telephone interview yesterday, Samoff said the University's political science department never gave specific :reasons for denying him tenure. "They just didn't judge the quality of the work to be high enough," he said. Samoff said he is much happier teaching political science at Stan- ford's school of education, but added that his perspective on the University of Michigan's tenure decision has not changed. "I THOUGHT from the beginning U 5 I 'g~ v i I I --A "g- New booklet details nuclear catastrophe SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A city- sponsored booklet that describes in vivid detail how the city would be destroyed if a one-megaton bomb falls on City Hall started going out to every household in San Francisco yesterday. Some officials, however, think the 13- page booklet, which also advocates a bilateral nuclear freeze, is a waste of $27,000 in public money. ' Wendy Nelder, president of the board of supervisors, says the money could be better spent. She also fears the frightening booklet could push some stress-frazzled San Franciscans over the edge into mental illness. "The city has not put out a booklet for all people like this on the potential for earthquake damage and that is something that happens fairly regularly," said Ms. Nelder, who said she may suggest such a booklet. "The Nuclear Threat to San Fran- cisco" graphically describes the effects of a relatively small nuclear attack, a one-megaton bomb dropped on City Hall. "Almost every child, every woman and every man would be killed within 1.5 miles of the blast, the booklet says. "The Civic Center, the Opera House and most of the elderly housing nearby would disappear as a crater 20 stories deep was formed ... "Nothing recognizable would remain from the Old Mint on Mission to St. Mary's Cathedral and Japantown," it adds. Farther away, sports fans at Can- dlestick Park would suffer third-degree flash burns in heat which would set their clothes afire. Throughout the San Francisco Bay area, many people would be permanently blinded and deafened and would suffer genetic mutations, the booklet warns. It goes on to say a real attack on the militarily important region would probably be much larger - and the ef- fects much worse. Voters are urged to support a bilateral nuclear freeze and to "make sure those persons for whom you vote will do all in their power to promote peace and avoid nuclear war." The booklet is adapted from one sent to residents of Cambridge, Mass., in September, 1981 - a pamphlet that served as a model for similar efforts in Toronto, London, the state of Vermont, Marin County, Calif., and cities across the United States. "The purpose of this book was to let the public know a nuclear war will not leave the surface of this planet the way it was before," said Marilyn Smulyan, an aide to Supervisor Nancy Walker, who introduced the measure calling for the booklet. Ms. Walker was away Wednesday on a trip to China. "I don't think people really under- stand the implications it (nuclear war) would have on their lives," Ms. Smulyan added. "I don't think it ad- vocates a particular political line," she said. "It doesn't advocate any par=. ticular person, platform or political party." -. Ms. Nelder, one of three supervisors opposed to the booklet, said her main objection was not the pamphlet's ad- vocacy of a nuclear freeze, but that it is unnecessary. English teachers? AP Photo Lansing teachers may need a lesson in spelling before they decide to "sponser" their next sign. .4!) i :>fl - .- ,g * P,;' AreYou Good Enough To Join The Best InThe Nuclear Field? 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