1 Page 6 OFF jssass if Scien rs and nust taV lesday. Departi ry Depj “partnn Deixut irmatioi tion, cl tion of of Scie ing Ser 8553S SI i you i no mbe NE-i UR I .lOB] 6-821 1 IALS S35S F 5£BS «5S= ;-x-:v 80 colt [!; Dodgf talk p 1974 , 9161 1974 . 693-1 I 1 OIK 8550 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22, 1975 ai§a mjmz* s Pre-picnic preparations Alpha Phi Omega and the married students. Members Apartment Council com- of both organizations put bined efforts for some out- finishing touches on 10 door living furnishings for picnic tables Saturday. Mail opened illegally with CIA knowledge Organizations combine efforts in table project SERVICE CENTER Associated Press WASHINGTON — The CIA opened more than 215,000 letters over 20 years knowing it was illegal and despite an internal study that showed the operation was poorly run and of marginal intelligence value, according to evidence made public yesterday by the Senate In telligence Committee. The disclosures came after it was learned the CIA opened and read at least three and perhaps eight letters written by committee Chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, during and after a 1971 trip he made to the Soviet Union. Church confirmed in a telephone interview Monday that copies of two letters he had written to the Soviet Union “thanking our hosts for their courtesies” had been found in CIA files. The senator authorized release of the two letters to The Associated Press. Statistics provided by the Central Intelligence Agency and made pub lic by the committee today showed that envelopes containing more than 2.7 million letters to and from the Soviet Union and passing through the New York City post of fice had been photographed and that 215,820 of these were opened. Thomas Abernathy, formerly with the CIA inspector general’s of fice, told the committee he pre pared a study in February 1961 showing that “no tangible opera tional benefits have accrued” to the agency’s Soviet division from the mail-opening operation. Abernathy also said he found a lack of coordination among the vari ous CIA units involved in the prog ram and that he had recommended reconsidering its value and prepar ing of a cover story should the oper ation be publicly disclosed. “We assumed everybody realized it was illegal, testified John Glen- non, a former CIA official who con ducted a study in 1969 that found no evidence that the operation “pro vided significant leads or informa tion which would have proved a positive operational help.” Gordon Stewart, who headed the inspector general’s office in 1969, told the committee he had briefed then-CIA Director Richard M. Helms on the mail-opening project and that “it was my understanding that Helms knew it was illegal.’ Helms, now ambassador to Iran, was sitting in the committee audi ence while Stewart testified. The former director is scheduled to tes tify before the committee on Wed nesday. The mail-opening program began TOM PADGITT’S HI-FI & STEREO DISCOUNTS 693-5143 AFTER 4 P.M. ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac SALES - SERVICE 'Where satisfaction is standard equipment" 2401 Texas Ave. 823-8002 SCHWINN "Built To Last" • SALES • SERVICE • ACCESSORIES COMPLETE REPAIR ON ALL MAKES the a Wheel a Wbrld 846-9490 811 S. TEXAS AVE. ACROSS FROM TEXAS A & M ON HWY. 6 in 1952 as a legal mail-cover opera tion in which the outside of en velopes were photographed, but it soon expanded into an operation in which the mail was opened. The program was not ended until 1973, when then-CIA director James Schlesinger ordered it stopped. The Apartment Council and student chapter of Alpha Phi Omega completed a coopera tive project Saturday. They contributed 10 picnic tables for married student use in the College View and Hensel apartment area. Apartment Council members and APO joined up in the work. It took four Saturdays and sev eral hundred board feet of lumber from the old College View apartments. Judy Stearman, council pres ident, said paint, nails and other materials cost about $50. She said the 14-member council hopes the project will help show apathetic apartment dwellers how the governing group can be of service. Vice President Ron Epps said that in a recent election, all of ficer candidates were uncon tested and no one filed for the secretary post. APO’s Xi Delta chapter pitched in labor on the project. Richard Scruggs* project chairman for APO, said about 10 people including council mem bers worked each Saturday. APO conducts numerous campus service projects, many so regularly that they tend to be taken for granted. The chapter rises, early Saturdays on major event weekends to set up American flags on the MSC drill field. The national service frater nity chapter conducts Campus Chest drives at football and bas ketball games, runs a ticket ex change in the MSC on home football weekends, helps run student elections and twice a year conducts the Aggie Blood Drive, among other projects. TEXACO PERMANENT ANTIFREEZE $ 3 99 GALLON to go Goodyear Heavy Duty Shocks 4 lor *50°° INSTALLED GOODfirEAR 3706 TEXAS AVE. 846-1139 n */it-//,4 mmm SaJ SKAGGS ALBERTSONS ^ DRUGS & FOODS 301 So. College Store Hours: Monday thru Saturday 8AM-12PM Sunday 9AM10PM EFFECTIVE DATES: WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. OCT. 2273.24,25 ililiilllii COLD CAPSULES CONTAC STAYFREE MAXI-PADS FOR TEMPORARY RELIEF OF COLDS & KAY FEVER NO BELTS NORMS TNE ULTIMATE PROTECTION PERSONNA DOUBLE II FIRST DOUBLE EDGE TWIN BLADE SYSTEM JOHNSON & JOHNSON BABY POWDER CLEAN FRESH SMELI KEEPS BABY DRIER! TROL SHAVE CREAM USED BY BARBERS CHOOSE FROM REG.. LIME OR MENTHOL TOSSY LIPSTICK & EYE CRAYONS 8 MIX OR MATCH YOUR CHOICE CARTRIDGES 39*. T9*; 2*1 BLACK MAGIC HOUSE PLANT MIX "MIST ADO WATER" 10 02 PRAM FURNACE FILTERS MORE SURFACE AREA. MORE HOI DINK P.APATITY ASST SITES MAGIC-CLING TRARSPARENT SHEET HOLDS BRUNSWICK AIR HOCKEY THE FASTEST GAME ON AIR. 511* 2*1 11149 nlL LNIIHL 1 LI’LJUDD GOBLIN GOBS ORANCE A CHOCOLATE FLAVORED 100 INDIVIDUAL TREATS 1 LB 4 OZ WARD CANDY KISSES A KID’S FAVORITE TREAT 125 ASSORTED NET VFT. 15'/2 02. BEWITCHING BUYS LIFE SIZE 3 DIMENSIONAL SKELETON 101 COUNT DUM DUM DROPS A SPECIAL TREAT FOR HALLOWEEN FLAVORS 1 LB. 4 02. 2SIN FLUORESCENT ORANGE FOR DOOR DECORATION YOUR CHOICE “A TANGY CANDY” SWEET TARTS 70 INDIVIDUAL PACKAGES BITE 'EM FORA BURST OF FLAVOR! ORACH'S PARTY PACK 70 INOIVIOUAL PACKAGES TRICK TREAT 1 LB. 7 02. DOUBLE OUBBLE BUBBLE GUM THE RIGHT TREAT FOR HALLOWEEN KIDS FAVORITE TREATS GO PIECES SAVE NOW!! BATTERY BOOSTER CABLE SET 12-fT. HEAVY DUTY FOR AUTO. MARINE t COMMERCIAL USE 41 17 O' BIG SELECTION OF HALLOWEEN COSTUMES FOR THAT VERY SPECIAL GHOST OR GORLIN va. FOR THOSE BEWITCHING HOURS CORNNUTS BRAND TOASTED CORN WRIGLEY’S PLENT-PAK THE TASTE THAT GOES KCHARUHNCH R 11 STICKS YOUR CHOICE Of 3 RAVORS HALLOWEEN MASKS If 1101 T*xas