Page 10-Saturday, May 31 1980-The Michigan Daily Pentagon report cites miscues in Iran hostage rescue attempt 4 WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Pentagon report has blamed the failure of the Iran hostage rescue mission on inadequate helicopter maintenance and pilot training and a faulty weather report, it was reported yesterday. The Scripps-Howard News Service reported the conclusions were drawn in a Pentagon critique based on inter- views with more than two dozen mem- bers of the aborted mission to rescue the American hostages held in Iran sin- ce Nov. 4. ' THE CRITIQUE ALSO disclosed an unpredicted fog bank of dust - not a sandstorm as earlier reported - had a direct impact on the mission, Scripps- Howard said in its dispatch from Washington based on information from Pentagonsources. The Pentagon, however, denied existence of the critique. OLD MASTERS KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)-A selec- tion of 90 "Old Master" prints from a distinguished collection of graphic works will be on display at the Nelson Gallery of Art through June 15. Among the works shown are 27 et- chings by Canaletto, the Italian master, and three engravings by Albrecht Durer. Also included are works by Alt- dorfer, Van Dyck, Ribera and Schongauer. The selection is from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Weil, Jr., of Mon- tgomery, Ala. "No such document exists," a spokesman said. "The after-action inquiry has not been completed and no critique of the rescue mission has been drawn up. The Scripps-Howard story is a mishmash of erroneous rumors and speculations that have previously been knocked down by the facts." DAN THOMASSON, editor of Scrip- ps-Howard News Service, stood by the story. "We have seen the critique," he said. Three helicopters broke down and eight U.S. servicemen died on a remote Iranian desert before the April 24 mission was ordered aborted by President Carter. The top-secret critique said crews for the helicopters used in the mission never did any practice flying during bad weather such as sandstorms when theywere training in an American desert. IT SAID the crews assumed if they encountered bad weather, the mission would be canceled, Scripps-Howard said. It also said the Air Force weather service, which predicted a clear night for flying, could not explain how it failed to note such a large fogbank. And the critique questions why more spare parts, particularly a critical component like a hydraulic pump, were not carried on the mission. It notes thattthe last helicopter to fail could have been repaired at the desert refueling site if a hydraulic pump had been available, Scripps-Howard said. 7- SOLUTIONS TO YOUR PROBLEM Use these numbers to call the Michigan Daily Billing ............764-0550 Circulation ........ 764-0558 Classified.........764-0557 Display...........764-0554 News ............. 764-0552 Sports............764-0562. Composition .......764-0556 Not impressed AP Photo Four-year-old Ann Oakar, niece of U.S. Congresswoman Mary Rose Oakar (D-Ohio), is apparently not too enthused about being held by President Jimmy Carter at a private reception Thursday. Carter campaigned in Columbus and Cleveland. Ohio in preparation for the state's June primary. Good prison facilities for elderly in-mates m ay save tax m~oney By BONNIE JURAN THE IONIA FACILITY, which was. opened in the beginning of 1978, was Providing elderly prison inmates originally designed for the criminally with safe, sanitary facilities and insane, the researcher said. Elderly upgraded health care may actually inmates were transferred to this save taxpayers money, according to a facility when it became apparent the University assistant professor of ar- other state prisons were overcrowded, chitecture who- last year completed according to Gail Light, public research on geriatric inmates, relations director for the Michigan Prof. Ernest Moore, who interviewed Department of Corrections. 52 "low-risk" prisoners between the Light noted that the only con- ages of 50 and 80, said inmates who are sideration previously given to elderly generally more satisfied with their en- inmates specifically was housing them vironment tend to break prison rules on the first floor so they did not have to less. frequently. Therefore, he con- climb steps. tinued, the need to employ security Moore said he initiated his research guards is reduced. I- in the spring of 1978 because he was in- MOORE ALSO SAID prisoners who terested in studying a group of people are content with their surroundings about whom virtually nothing was have decreased stress levels and thus known. He said his completed report require less medical attention. was referred to the Department of The prisoners whom Moore inter- Corrections and the Institute of Geron- viewed were transferred from the State tology. Prison of Southern Michigan at Jackson THE RESEARCHER noted that to a smaller, more specialized facility because of his work, the Department of at Ionia. The Ionia prison, which houses Corrections has made it easier for cer- approximately 600 people, is the first of tain inmates to receive specific sundry its kind in Michigan, according to items for which they previously needed Moore. The researcher said it is a a prescription. "medically oriented facility" which Moore said that in the future he would provides private rooms, special diets, like to do research on the "plight of and conveniently located health care women prisoners."According to public facilities to its inmates. relations director Light, there is only The elderly prisoners at Ionia are one women's prison facility in Michigan "less anxious about being assaulted and it houses approximately 270 in- and having things stolen from them," mates. according to Moore. "They feel a cer- Light added there is a possibility a rain comraderie becauseof their age," "new women's facility will be built in he added. -tLansing in the next few years. I I I I 40