U.S. considers charges in death plots Associated Press WASHINGTON — Justice Department of ficials are still weighing whether to bring charges against those involved in the assassination plots described by the Senate intelligence committee. Department officials are studying a series of statutes for possible use in any prosecution, in cluding a cover-up charge. A spokesman says thatAtty. Gen. Edward H. Levi will either seek indictments or publicly explain why not in a report on his department’s investigation into all categories of alleged CIA wrongdoing. In its 346-page report made public Thursday, the committee said U.S. officials had instigated at least eight assassination plots against Cuba’s Fidel Castro and had launched another scheme to kill Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba. The panel also described the U.S. govern ment as implicated in the killing of Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo. Of the nine foreign leaders mentioned in the report, only Fidel Castro and his brother Raul are still alive. But the committee said, “No foreign leaders were killed as a result of assassination plots in itiated by officials of the United States.” Ford, CIA didn’t comment Neither President Ford nor the CIA co mmented on the report. The panel noted with surprise that “there is presently no statute making it a crime to as sassinate a foreign official outside the United States” and urged Congress to enact such a law. Its report told of a CIA official at the agency’s old Washington headquarters who was asked to develop plans to kill Lumumba in 1960. The report raised the prospect “that conspiracy to commit murder being done in the District of Columbia might be in violation of federal law. ” A second official, Richard Bissell, then head of the agency’s clandestine services, “airily di smissed” the prospect, according to evidence submitted to the committee. Justice Department officials say they are ex amining the possibility of prosecutions based on any cover-up) of the assassination plots. To bring such a charge they would first have to decide that a crime had been committed. In considering that decision, the law that Ju stice Department officials are examining most closely makes it a felony to instigate, support or take part in “any military or naval expedition or enterprise” against leaders of a foreign country with which the United States is at peace. Department officials say the key legal ques tion in determining whether that law was vi olated is the definition of a military enterprise. Prosecution directly under this law would be limited to those acts committed within the last five years, and only one incident in the co mmittee report falls in that time period. But a cover-up can extend long beyond the original crime. The department is studying federal conspiracy laws and the possibility of referring a matter for prosecution under state laws on which the time limit for prosecution may not have run out, such as conspiracy to commit murder. Levi last June said: “If we were talking about assassinations, I guess we really don’t, have a statute of limitations.” for legislation making it a crime for any U.S. official or citizen to conspire, attempt or engage in the assassination of a foreign leader. The Senate committee report, fruit of a still- incomplete, six-month investigation, was re leased by the panel after the Senate spurned appeals by the President to keep it secret. Ford wrote Senate leaders Thursday that publication would not be in the national interest. In a closed session of nearly four hours, the Senate debated how to handle the report, but ultimately took no votes, either to block or en dorse the document. In addition to the Castro and Lumumba plots and the Trujillo affair, government officials also were aware of plots against South Vietnamese president Ngo Dinh Diem and Chilean army chief Rene Schneider where “the risk of death” existed, the committee said. The 11-member panel also said it came across “evidence of CIA involvement in plans to as sassinate President Sukarno of Indonesia and ‘Papa Doc’ Duvalier of Haiti.” Assassination plots against Castro “sometimes contemplated action against Raul Castro and Che Guevara” as well, the committee found. According to the report, there was enough evidence “to permit a reasonable inference that the plot to assassinate Lumumba was authorized by (then) President Eisenhower” but stopped short of a finding that “the President intended an assassination effort.” The committee also said “there was insuffic ient evidence” that, while in office. Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy or Lyndon B. Johnson or any of their close advisers authorized the assassination of Castro. However, the committee held out the po ssibility that various presidents may have pu rposely obscured their role in assassination and added, “Each must bear the ultimate re sponsibility for the activities of his subordinat- The committee “found concrete evidence of at least eight plots involving the CIA to assassinate Fidel Castro from 1960 to 1965” using a variety of devices that “ran the gamut from high-powered rifles to poison pills, poison pens, deadly bacter ial powders and other devices which strain the imagination.” On at least two occasions the plots “progressed to the point of sending poison pills to Cuba and dispatching teams to commit the deed,” the re port said. Today’s high 55 Today’s low 27 Tomorrow’s high 55 Chance of precipitation today None Chance of precipitation tomorrow None Cbe Battalion Vol. 69 No. 48 College Station, Texas Friday, Nov. 21, 1975 Light freeze expected to night. Cold today and to morrow with winds 15 mph. Candidate security strained, U.S. says Associated Press ! MIAMI — The Secret Service, faced with two attacks on President Ford and one on president ial candidate Ronald Reagan within three months, is “over-extended" by the current large field ofpresidential candidates, says a top service official. "It’s going to get worse, and there are more candidates on the way,” said Bob Newbrand, special agent in charge of the Secret Service office in Miami following the attack Thursday on Reagan by a young man wielding a toy gun. Newbrand said that the service was au gmented by agents from U.S. customs and other federal agencies, but “we’re very thin right now. “We’re over-extended at this stage and we’re a couple of months from the first primary,” he said. In Washington, Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner said, “I just have to place that as one supervisor’s opinion ... I would not say our manpower is over-extended. I would say in this period the Secret Service manpower will be ut ilized to its upmost capacity. Warner said the agency had budgeted with die expectation of protecting 10 to 14 candidates. There now are 12 announced presidential ca ndidates, 10 Democrats, Ford and Reagan. Secret Service protects candidates. Warner said the agency is now protecting six candidates in addition to Ford and Reagan. They are Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace; R. Sa rgent Shriver, 1972 Democratic Vice President ial candidate; Indiana Sen. Birch Bayh; Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter; Arizona Rep. Morris Udall, and Texas Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen. The young man with the toy pistol Thursday was about a yard from where Reagan was shaking hands with well wishers. He was identified as Michael Lance Carvin, 20, of Pompano Beach, and was charged with intimidating a presidential candidate and as saulting a federal officer, Newbrand said. Ma ximum penalties are one year in prison and a $1,000 fine on the intimidation charge and three years in prison and $5,000 fine on the assault charge. See Security, Page 3. Reagan undaunted by toy-gun episode Associated Press MANCHESTER, N.H. — Ronald Reagan, undaunted by a toy-gun incident in Miami, fi elded questions about some of his favorite topics from a New Hampshire audience and then co mpleted his first day of presidential campaigning with a 30-minute autograph session. Security was tight as Secret Service agents checked handbags and tape recorders of the more than 900 persons entering the convention hall in Bedford, N.H., where the former Ho llywood actor and California governor pa rticipated in what campaign aides called a “Ci tizen’s Press Conference.” Reagan remained overnight in New Ha mpshire, which has the nation’s first primary Feb. 24. He was to fly to Charlotte, N.C., and then on to Chicago and Los Angeles today, end ing his first campaign swing after announcing formally Thursday his challenge to President Ford for the GOP nomination. Reagan flew to New Hampshire from Miami, where he encountered a man wielding a plastic toy pistol as he shook hands after the first rally of his campaign. The man, identified as Michael Lance Carvin, 20, of Pompano, Fla., was gr abbed by Secret Service agents and Reagan was hustled away. See Reagan, Page 3. Campus “BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SU NDANCE KID”, starring Robert Redford, Paul Newman and Katherine Ross, will be shown Fr iday and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Th eater. Admission will be $1. THE STUDENT ‘Y THANKSGIVING se rvice will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the All Faiths Chapel. Rev. Malcolm Bane, Pastor of the First Baptist Church of College Station will of ficiate; music will be presented by the Century Singers. Everyone is invited. FORMER TEXAS GOV. JOHN CO- NNALLY said yesterday in Houston that Ronald Reagan’s entry into the battle for the Republican presidential nomination will create “some in terest’’ and he wouldn’t be surprised if Reagan wins the primaries in New Hampshire and Fl orida. He spoke at a meeting of the National Industr ial Traffic League and said he does not view a challenge to President Ford by Reagan as a divis ive factor in the Republican party. City THE ANNUAL CHRISTMAS parade will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. down Texas Ave. from University Dr. to Villa Maria. The parade will feature local high school bands, the Texas Aggie band and floats. Before the parade, tire downtown Bryan me rchants will sponsor an air show and ping pong ball drop. Ping pong balls will be dropped along Texas Ave. Each ball is wroth a 10 per cent discount off any one purchase at participating stores in Bryan Saturday. Forty of the balls will be worth prizes of up to $30 in cash. World strike yesterday after the moderates in office suspended government in a bid for military back ing. Within hours of the call, an estimated 50,000 workers demonstrated outside of Pr esident Francisco da Costa Gomes’ palace. The suspension of government was aimed at pressur ing Costa Gomes into giving the moderate ad ministration the foil support of the politically split armed forces. RUSSIAN SPACE OFFICIALS left the Jo hnson Space Center today, ending a series of meetings over the past three years in both co untries which made possible the first manned international space misison. Professor Konstantin D. Bushuyev, Russian technical director of the flight said at a news conference at the space center yesterday that he regrets that the two countries will not have an other joint mission until 1980. The United States plans no cooperational space missions until the space shuttle program is ready. • THE SOVIET-BACKED Popular Movement army in Angola, reportedly strengthened by Cuban reinforcements, has baited a spectacular advance by its opponents from the south, the Johannesburg Star said yesterday. In Luanda, informed sources recently said that 2,500 Cuban combat troops have been flown to the country to bolster the MPLA. Ticket time ope springs eternal in Aggieland. Despite the cold, played in Kyle Field, November 28. At times the lines Aggies turned out in force Thursday for the honor of extended into and along the street, waiting in line for tickets to the A&M-UT game to be Staff photo by David McCarrolI It was play army time again Thursday for the Corps. This the day. The chopper used the polo field as a base of HC-53 helicopter, full of Corps Cadets, could be seen operations, churning its way through the skies of Aggieland most of NYC may get state tax help Recent Soviet nuclear tests spew debris Associated Press ALBANY, N. Y. — The state legislature ap pears ready to enact a $200 million New York City tax-increase package — including a 10 per cent hike in city residents’ income taxes — that it believes necessary to get President Ford’s ap proval for federal help to permanently rescue the city from default. State officials also said late Thursday they are “very near” completing a $150 million financial arrangement to help the city avert a possible default next week. The city survived a near brush with default on Thursday, when the state’s Municipal Assistance Corp. scraped together $100 million and rushed it to the city treasury to help meet a $127 million payroll. But before that transaction, the city had br iefly held up delivery of tens of thousands of paychecks to city employes. The checks, which eventually were distributed, were dated today, but traditionally the city has defivered them a day ahead of time. A similar confrontation with financial collapse is now threatened for next Tuesday, when of ficials say the city is short about $60 million needed to meet various obligations. But Gov. Hugh Carey said Thursday that of ficials were “very close” to gathering some $150 million needed to clear that hurdle and keep the city afloat until Dec. 11 — enough time, Carey hopes, for Congress and the President to agree Houston firm charged with unfair dealing Charges have been filed in Brazos County Court against a Houston company for deceptive business practices by its local branch. County Attorney Roland M. Searcy said Th ursday the charges allege that Mobile Home Brokers, Inc., at 3300 S. Texas Ave., “made materially false and misleading statements to a prospective purchaser of a mobile home.” The customer, Robert L. Bradberry of Huntsville, relied on these statements and purchased a mo bile home from the company, Searcy said. If convicted in county court, the firm could pay a fine of up to $2,000. The charge is a Class A misdemeanor. Searcy said his office has received numerous complaints about misleading and deceptive pr actices. “Our policy is to thoroughly investigate the charges and vigorously prosecute businessmen who knowingly and recklessly take advantage of Brazos County consumers,” Searcy said. on some form of federal loan guarantees or other aid to keep the city from foe jaws of default. The governor refused, as in the past, to say what the sources of that $150 million would be. But a spokesman for Comptroller Arthur Levitt, who previously had refused to commit state em ploye pension funds for the money, said “a va riety of state funds” would be used. With Ford administration sources hinting that the President will agree to federal aid if the state legislature authorizes some $200 million in city tax increases by early next week, Carey co ntinued pressuring the legislators Thursday to agree on such an increase. The first two approaches offered for new taxes — a boost in income and commuter taxes re commended by Democrats, and a one-cent in crease in the city sales tax to a combined city- state levy in New York of nine cents on the dollar as favored by Republicans — were jilted by the hard partisan divisions they prompted. Associated Press WASHINGTON — Two of Russia’s re cent big underground nuclear tests ap parently have spewed some radioactive debris into the atmosphere, U.S. in telligence sources report. Radioactive gaseous debris was collected outside Russia’s territory following a 3.8- megaton test on Oct. 18 and a two-megaton blast on Oct. 21, sources said. A megaton is the equivalent of one million tons of TNT. The tests were conducted on the Soviet island of Novaya Zemlyla in the Arctic. Both the United States and the Soviet Union are pushing underground testing of larger nuclear weapons so they can co mplete development programs before next April when a new treaty goes into effect. Operatic soprano Marilyn Horne flaunted her skill before a relatively sparse audience in the Rudder Auditorium Thursday night. Horne was presented by OPAS.