The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 24, 1986 - Page 3 Safety warnings in Beirut sa igor says WASHINGTON (AP)-U. S. military commanders ignored warnings which could have spared the lives of many of the 241 killed in the 1983 attack on Marine headquarters in Beirut, the Pentagon's former top counter-terrorism official has charged. Instead of paying attention to the warnings of a five-member Special Forces team which recommended ways to make the Marines safer, "the report was swept under the rug," wrote Noel Koch. The commanders were more worried about bureaucratic infighting, said Koch, who resigned earlier this year as principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs. In that position, he oversaw the Pentagon's counter-terrorism efforts. Koch's charges are contained in a letter sent to several members of Congress in support of proposals to unify the Pentagon's special forces within a single military structure, rather than keeping them scattered throughout the services. The letter was made available yesterday to The Associated Press. Robert Sims, the Pentagon's chief spokesman, said yesterday he was sure Koch's allegations would be reviewed by the Defense Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but said the former official seemed primarily interested in "influencing legislation on Capitol Hill." "Noel Koch's advocacy for the Special Operations Forces is well known," said Sims. "I suspect whatever he has written is aimed at gaining support for legislation." Koch wrote that he had never before spoken about the Beirut bombing "because it could only cause more pain to people already suffering the unbearable pain of the loss of people they loved." The attack came shortly after dawn on October 23, 1983, when a suicide terrorist drove a bomb- laden truck into Marine headquarters near the Beirut airport, killing 241 U.S. military U.S. oficial personnel. Six months earlier, on April 18, 1983, a similar suicide car bomb attack destroyed the U.S. embassy in Beirut, killing 63 persons, including 17 Americans. After the embassy attack, Koch wrote, he headed a Pentagon team sent to Beirut to review the safety of the Marines who were at the airport as part of a multi-national peacekeeping team. Koch said, "I satisfied myself that we had serious shortcomings, particularly in managing intellingence related to the terrorist threat." A five-man team went back later in the summer of 1983 to Beirut, wrote Koch, who maintained members of that unit were not taken seriously because the team was created outside the normal chain of command. Ten weeks after the bombing, a Pentagon commission criticized flaws in the military chain of command and security at the Marine barracks. But its criticism was nowhere near as strong as Koch's. The team sent to Beirut by Koch made a number of specific recommendations, according to the source. Chief among those recommendations were imporved communications among the various military agencies in Beirut about terrorists threats. "There was a lot of specific stuff, but it wasn't getting to the right people," he wrote. Marine officials complained after the attack that the intelligence was too general and not specific enough, but the former team member said the warnings were far more specific than U.S. military officials have admitted. Koch's letter was written in support of a proposal pending before the Senate, which would consolidate all the Pentagon's special forces. Those units, including the Army's Green Berets and the Navy's SEALS, are scattered among the services, as is planning for their use. Critics say the planning and use of special forces is poorly coordinated. Doily Photo by PETE ROSS On cue Residential College freshman, Ben Schneider shoots away his free time at the Union Pool Hall. Passive student attitudes cause problems at CRISP (Continued from Page 1) or which particular departments even allow wait lists. As to the idea of letting juniors register immediately after Sseniors, Hardy said, "I know this idea is something that the registrar's office has been checking into, but I don't know whether or not it will be implemented." THE PSYCHOLOGY department is one of five or six departments that are especially troubled by the problem. Because vast numbers of non-psychology majors take classes in the department, it's difficult to predict enrollment. Lorraine Nadelman, the chairman of undergraduate psychology, said long wait lists must exist before the administration can even begin hiring new professors and opening new sections. "We're really working as thard as we can to correct the Ssituation, but it does take time," she said. "WE'RE very aware of this problem," Nadelman added. "We added 60 spots to five sections this summer. But for some reason, each time we add more spots, even more students enroll." In the fall, the psychology department added 465 spots, but 495 new students wanted to enroll. Students in other departments also havenchronic problems getting into classes. LSA sophomore Catherine Babbit watched a senior in one of her English classes beg to switch places with anyone who was already enrolled in the class. "THERE were 20 spaces, and she was the 21st. She needed the class to graduate and didn't get in," Babbit said. One professor announced to his Psychology 444 class that anyone who wasn't a senior or one of the first 10 on the wait list should simply give up. "Thirty to 40 people stood up and left," said LSA senior Steve Schmidt, who stayed in the class. "I think when you come to the University, you're supposed to get pa great education, and all of the best classes with the best professors end up being too popular to get into." Where does the blame lie? Kellerman said the problem is more with the fundamental system of the University than with individual departments. "I feel that the University is too focused on research, and I think it's about time that it becomes more geared to making the student number-one priority," she said. Kellerman added that more students should become involved in forcing those changes. Lucas attacks Blanchard's tax plan LANSING-Republican guber- natorial nominee William Lucas called Democratic Gov. James Blanchard's property tax plan a $180 million tax increase yesterday. "The Lucas plan will turn Michigan from a high-tax, low- growth state into a land of great opportunities for entrepreneurs, businesses, workers and most importantly, families," Lucas told a group of small bus- inessmen. The candidate seeking to become the nation's first elected black governor repeated his claim that Blanchard, who raised income taxes in 1983 to erase a $1.7 billion state debt, would raise taxes again. "Jim Blanchard has a $180 million tax increase waiting for you right now," Lucas charged. "It's masquerading as property tax relief." Lucas said Blanchard's plan to close tax loopholes on banks and insurance companies will mean "new taxes that you and I will have to pay." However, he said his package, much of which he's proposed before, would solve the problems blocking the state's economic expansion. He said his plan would save a Detroit family of four with $25,000 income and a $25,000 home $39 in income taxes and $337 in property taxes. A 10 percent increase in the value of their home would make that family $2,500 wealthier, he said. He said some of the revenues lost from cutting the income tax rate would be- made up from federal income tax revisions, with more coming from eliminating tax abatements and homestead property tax credits. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 'U' Rennaissance expert -9 1I I I Campus Cinema Club De Femmes (Jacques Deval, 1936) CG, DBL/7:00 p.m., Nat Sci. A doctor helps a group of young women in Paris. French with subtitles. The Baker's Wife (Marcel Pagnol,1938), CG, DBL/8:40 p.m., Nat Sci. A fueding village must band together to find the baker's unfaithful wifetso he'll start making bread again. French with subtitles. Network (Sidney Lumet, 1976), Hill St., 8:15 p.m., Hill St. Briliant satire about a washed up newsman who becomes a "mad prophet of the airwaves" after threatening to commit suicide on national TV. Peter Finch grabbed a posthumous Oscar for this one. Atlantic City (Louis Malle, 1981), Med, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., MLB 3. Burt Lancaster is a former big shot who tries for one last, big score. Susan Speakers Dr. Jesus Estanislao -"Business Conditions in the Philippines," 11:00 a.m., 130 Lane Hall (luncheon, consultation, $20.00). Mark M. Meerschaert- (Albion College) "Regular Variation and Domains of Attraction," 4 p.m., 451. Mason Hall. Coffee at 3:30 p.m., 1443 Mason Hall. Meetings AIESEC -International Business Club - 5:15 p.m., K1310 Kresge. Michigan Alliance for Disarmament -- 7:30 p.m., 2013 Angel Hall. Science Fiction Club -8:30 p.m., Michigan League Conference Room. United Jewish Appeal -Student Mass Meeting, 7 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. Undergraduate Political Science Association -Mass Meeting, 7 p.m., Pond Room, Michigan Union. Furthermore Videoconference on "Alzheimer's Disease and Other Memory Disorders," 11 a.m. -3 p.m., Education Center at was scholar (Continued from Page 1) Faculty Award and was repeatedly a member of the "Honor Roll," a list of the top- rated University faculty determined by student evaluations. "He took an absolute, authentic delight in teaching undergraduates," saidRobert Weisbuch, an English professor. "He brought the same energy to everything he did. He was a hell of a guy." PATRIDES was born April 20, 1930, in New York City. When he went with his parents to their native country of Greece, he and his family were caught when the Nazis invaded the country. During the Nazi occupation, Patrides served as a messenger in the Greek underground resistance. He was later decorated by the Greek government for his actions. Patridesreturned to New York after the war and finished high school there. After graduating, he earned his B.A. in English at Kenyon College in Ohio and earned his Ph.D. from Oxford University. He taught at the University of California-Berkeley and York University in England before Considering Abortion? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Family Life Services 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (Any Time) p----------. en*a IILES Campus 20 minute YPSILANTI drive from PLASMA I campus. . CENTER I i People I Receive Helping People.' I $13.00y Plasma g on first You Help * Extend ! donation , . and teacher coming the University in 1974. "He was really what a professor ought to be: much loved and respected by his colleagues and students," Bornstein said. Patrides is survived by his sister, Lambrothea Hatzapolou, and his mother. His sister arrived in the United States in AugustfromGreece to help care for her brother. A prayer service for Patrides will be held at the Muehlig Funeral Chapel tomorrow at 11 a .m. RELAXER SPECIAL 10% OFF ALL CHEMICAL SERVICES (offer good until 10-1-86) free 8 oz. shampoo with service S555 East Wilam ** _ ~Tower Plaza " Suite 100 Ann Arbor, Ml 48104 __-' - = 313/995.5733 Announcing: 2 x4 w a The English Composition Board's RESIDENCE HALLS WRITING WORKSHOP: FALL '86 In addition to the daily Writing Workshops at 1025 Angell Hall, the English Composition Board provides Writing Workshop services for undergraduates in their Residence Halls (Alice Lloyd, Couzens, and West Quad). Like the main Workshop, the residence Halls Writing Workshop provides assistance on all aspects of the writing process (from discovery to grammar to revision) on LS&A course papers and on personal writing projects. The Writing Workshop, however, is not a proofreading service. ECB Lecturer Ted Lardner is staffing the Residence Halls Writing Workshop Program this semester. FALL SCHEDULE Alice Lloyd: West Quad: Tuesday Nights, 7:00 to 9:30 Red Carpet Lounge Annex Beginning Sept. 23, 1986 Wednesday Nights, 7:00-9:00 Group Study Room: Court Floor, Wenley House Beginning Sept. 24, 1986 Sarandon. . I I I