The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 25, 1975, Image 6

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    Page 6 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1975
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CIA illegally opens
mail sent to Nixon
Union proposes; a
job-creating p/aj
' Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The CIA secretly and il
legally read the mail of many prominent Ameri
cans and opened at least one letter addressed to
Richard M. Nixon before he became president,
the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Com
mittee said Wednesday.
persons in those nations.
He said the mail files on prominent persons
included single letters in some cases and a series
of letters in others.
Later in the day, the panel agreed unanim
ously to ask Nixon to testify in its wide-ranging
probe of improper activities by U.S. agencies.
“These names were never on the CIA watch-
list, so it is obvious that in the opening of mail
they have gone very far afield indeed.
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Chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, said
committee members felt Nixon himself was the
“best witness ’ in a number of areas, including
questions surrounding the short-lived Huston
plan to give intelligence agencies sanction to
break the law at times.
Church turned to James Angleton, the CIA s
former counter-intelligence chief, to ask why
the agency found it necessary to open the letter
to Nixon.
“I would say it was very much in error, Ang
leton replied.
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Nixon is not being called under subpoena,
and Church would not say when or in what
manner Nixon might appear.
Earlier, Church disclosed that in June 1968
the agency opened and read a letter, which
commented on Nixon s prospects in that year’s
presidential election, written by Nixon
speechwriter Raymond Price while traveling in
the Soviet Union.
But Angleton insisted the overall operation
had been valuable. He cited leads it provided in
the still unsuccessful pursuit of Kathy Boudin, a
woman allegedly seen running from an explo
sion which destroyed the Greenwich Village
bomb factory of the Weathermen, a radical lef
tist group, on March 6, 1970.
And Church said that one of his own letters,
written to his mother-in-law from the Soviet
Union, was included in correspondenee found
by his committee’s staff while probing the CIA
mail-opening operation — a project which was
begun in 1952 and not closed down until Feb.
15, 1973.
“When we went back through the mail prog
ram letters we found she had written from Mos
cow 30 to 40 letters to people in the United
States, Angleton said. “These were the only
leads the FBI had. She’s still a fugitive. It raises
in anyone’s mind the question of whether she’s
iri Moscow.
But Church said the program’s value must be
balanced against the harm it did to the constitu
tional rights of American citizen.
Church’s first statement on the matter Wed
nesday morning offered no detail but implied a
wider scope to the mail surveillance than he
later outlined.
The possibility of calling Nixon by subpoena
to testify was raised by Sen. Gary Hart,
D-Colo., who said the former chief executive
was the best source as to whether his administ
ration indulged unlawful domestic spying.
In part he said, “We want to know why the
CIA opened the mail of organizations such as the
Ford Foundation, Harvard University, and the
Rockefeller foundation or why mail to and from
persons such as Federal Reserve Chairman Ar
thur Burns, Rep. Bella Abzug, Jay Rockefeller,
Martin Luther King Jr., Richard Nixon himself,
Hubert Humphrey and Edward Kennedy . . .
should have been regularly opened and
scrutinized by the CIA.”
But Vice Chairman John Tower, R-Tex., said
after the decision was made in closed session
that the panel did not wish to “escalate the
rhetoric and possibly provoke a court case by
issuing a subpoena.
A Nixon lawyer, Herbert J. Miller Jr., said he
would not speculate as to whether Nixon would
appear before the committee voluntarily. Miller
said he would meet with the committee’s coun
sel to discuss the matter.
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — AFL-CIO President George
Meany told Congress Wednesday it can reduce un-
employment to between 4 and 5 per cent next year by
enacting organized labor’s $21 billion job-creating prop,
ram.
The program includes public works projects, ex
panded public service employment, tax cuts, federal aid
to both private industries and cities and closing of tax
loopholes.
Sen. PeteV. Domenici, R-N.M., said it was the first
time anyone had suggested unemployment could be so
dramatically reduced by such a spending program.
The nation’s unemployment rate was 8.4 per cent in
August. Reducing that to 4 to 5 per cent means the
creation of between three million and four million jobs.
The Ford administration projects a decline in the
unemployment rate to between 7 and 7.5 per cent by the
end of 1976. The drop would result in the addition of
about one million jobs.
Meany said labor’s program would increase tbe fed
eral budget deficit for fiscal 1976 to between $90 billion
and $95 billion, but added that the size of the deficits
should not he the major concern in the budgets.
“I’m here to ask you to measure it in terms of people,
instead of dollars,” Meany told the Senate Budget Com
mittee.
The budget committee is taking testimony prior to
recommending a final 1976 budget to the Congress. Con
gress already has enacted a preliminary budget that limits
the deficit to $68 billion, compared with the Ford ad
ministration’s deficit of $60 billion.
Meany, however, expressed disappointment with
Congress’ first attempt at budget-making, and accused it
of being “hypnotized" by the White House.
‘The congressional budget represented little more
than an endorsement of the administration’s priorities —
five solid years of massive unemployment," he added.
Meany did not outline the 11-point program in de
tail, but said it included restoring the nation’s railroad
track and track beds at a cost of about $2 billion. It also
calls for extending the 1975 individual tax cuts through
1976.
Although he previously had disclosed the program,
Meany’s testimony Wednesday marked the first time he
forecast such dramatic employment results by late 1976.
Chairman Alan Greenspan of the President ’s Council
of Economic Advisers told the committee Tuesday it is
possible that new spending programs might reduce un
employment, but he said the chances that it might also set
off serious new inflation are too great to justify the risk.
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An aide subsequently questioned by repor
ters said at first that Nixon mail had been
opened both before and during his tenure as
president — and that mail of other presidents
had been scrutinized as well. The aide later
withdrew that statement, saying he had misun
derstood committee investigators, and Church
himself confirmed the narrower version.
Church said that all the letters intercepted by
the CIA were either sent from Communist Bloc
countries or mailed from the United States to
Also on Wednesday, Nixon was ordered by a
federal judge to answer questions under oath in
a civil suit brought by former national security
aide Morton Halperin, who was wiretapped for
21 months.
Nixon’s attorneys said in that instance they
would check with the former President to see if
he wanted to appeal the ruling.
11 fI) r»
iA '.f>i
1976 AGGIELAND
Class Picture Schedule
SENIORS & GRADUATES
FRESHMEN
Sep 22-Sep 26
Sep 29-0ct 3
Oct 6-0ct 10
N-S
T-Z
FISH MAKEUPS
Oct 13-0ct 17
Oct 20-0ct 24
Oct 27-0ct 31
Nov 3-Nov 7
Nov 10-Nov 14
A-F
G-K
L-0
P-S
T-Z
Nov 17-Dec 19 MAKEUPS FOR SENIORS
AND GRADUATES
JUNIORS AND SOPHOMORES
Jan 19-Jan 23
Jan 26-Jan 30
Feb 2-Feb 6
Feb 9-Feb 13
Feb 16-Feb 20
Feb 23-Mar 12
A-G
H-M
N-R
S-V
W-Z
MAKEUPS FOR SOPHOMORES
AND JUNIORS ONLY
Dress: Civilians — Coat and Tie
Coeds — Optional
Corps (Fish & Soph) — Class A Winter
Corps (Jrs. & Srs.) — Midnights
ALL STUDENTS SHOULD BRING THEIR FALL SEMESTER
FEE SLIPS.
Photographs are taken on a drop-in basis, 8-5 weekdays
and 8-12 Sat.
For further information contact
University Studio.
115 college main« 846-8019* p.o. box 2•college station, texas 77840
Moore
(from page 1)
The FBI said it ended its contact
with Mrs. Moore in June after she
publicly admitted her year-long ef
forts as their informant.
In the 48 Kours before the shot
was fired at Ford, Mrs. Moore
hinted to police what was on her
mind.
Police inspector Jack O’Shea said
he talked to her by telephone on
Saturday. “A red light went off in
my head, he said, when she men
tioned going to hear Ford speak.
Authorities confiscated her .44-
caliber gun and detained her until
the chance to kill Ford at Stanford
slipped by.
Monday morning, Mrs. Moore
drove off as usual about 8 a.m. to
take her son Frederick to a private
school 15 miles away.
Then she drove 45 minutes across
the San Francisco-Oakland Bay
Bridge to Danville, where she
purchased a nickle-plated .38-
caliber Smith and Wesson Chief
Special for $145 from Mark
Fernwood, a gun collector.
Then, she later told a police of
ficer, she rushed back along the
freeways to San Francisco struggl
ing to jam some target bullets —
known as “wad cutters — into her
revolver.
At about 3:30 p.m., Mrs. Moore
pointed her newly purchased gun at
the President as he emerged from
the St. Francis. An ex-Marine
named Oliver Sipple deflected her
aim, and the President was not in
jured.
AGGIELAND
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money saving trick?
Buy a pizza at the Krueger-Dunn Snack Bar and eat it there or take
it anywhere you wish. Prices are right, and the pizzas are great.
Before Thanksgiving Special
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Pepperoni Pizza $1- 2 9
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