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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1979)
THE BATTALION MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1979 Page 3 wsU.S. opposes Iranian coup J United Press International extend the crisis indefinitely. IfldS WASHINGTON — The United Secretary of State Cyrus Vance ites has appealed to Iran’s mili- said Thursday Shah Mohammed us shuttle buiy leaders to back the new civilian Reza Pahlavi will form a regency swerediscoDVernment and give up any idea of council “within a few days,” which les stops neajbup d’etat against the regime that would take over his largely ceremo- ver-Memorial'uld take over when the shah nial monarch’s functions in the civi- fwo buses will v es the country. lian government. six minutes is Mimbers of the State Depart- Vance said the shah would then ;added totbe ! 'it task force on Iran say the com- leave Iran “on vacation.” However ; Olin Teague! few days will be crucial for Iran, U.S. officials believe that it wmdd kwiseandone Prime Minister-designate be difficult for the shah to return to s, faculty, aud^hpour Bakhtiar tries to win polit- Iran under any foreseeable circum- l approval for his Cabinet. stances. The public U.S. appeal to Iran’s Some Iranian military leaders told . , litary leadership was delivered by American officials they would leave IlCTCd lte l^ e P artn ient spokesman Hod- the country if the shah did. T' ig Carter III: Sources in Iran said the regency , . . , ‘We have urged the military to council would be in place by Jan. ' ' '' e its full support to the new gov- 15, meaning the shah would leave , ' II iment. We do not believe that a the country soon after that. ' " , litary takeover would resolve The State Department has said T i J n 1 nl problems. The Iranian people the shah would be welcome in the u( ( "iter: /e su jj' eiec | greatly in the past United States. His mother had been 11 1 “arpnd it is urgent that peaceful staying at the Palm Springs, Calif., k g.oupu lc *j ons B e restored.” estate of millionaire publisher Wal- ImvC- ,J Td underline that message, U.S. ter Annenberg, where she was '' Force Gen. Robert Huyser, has moved after Iranian students tried be America: ;n or dered to remain in Tehran, to storm her daughter’s home in Be rn by Juneol , eril)nent sources said. Huyser verly Hills. i B. Kitnsoi asked to maintain contact Annenberg told UPI, “If the shah ilic Acimmis- ^ j] le Iranian military leaders and were to come to this country, I’d ition them against a coup the certainly offer him the hospitality I Bpdrninistration believes would received from him when I visited Iran. It would be a normal thing.” listed layton may ;s have been _ # _ • sxoust opposition ested by late: JL JL r, while an United Press International speaker’s “team” programs during 21 namedin AUSTIN — Speaker Bill Clayton his two years as a chairman. I think with y|remove two or more House The former chairmen of the Ag- ulon said, nmittee chairmen who opposed riculture, Higher Education, 1 ^-election to a third term or Transportation and Ways and ed to go along with many of his Means Committees all have left the •grams in the past two years. House, leaving Clayton to choose Jffcs said. replacements for those choice spots, mother four House committees The Ways and Means chairman- . |||et new chairmen for the 1979 ship, vacated when Rep. Joe Wyatt, prices don because the members who D-Victoria, was elected to Con- sided over them last year have gress, is considered the most signifl- , citing risin ted or moved on to other gov- cant committee opening, and Reps. ; increaseso mi nt positions. Bob Davis, R-Dallas, and Tim Von ce increased miong those most likely to be Dohlen, D-Goliad, are the front- and Jeeps a: ims of Clayton’s realignment of runners to succeed Wyatt, en, in its firsttmittee assignments are Reps. Davis currently heads the Insur- .7 percent on L Sullivant, D-Gainesville, who ance Committee, and Von Dohlen || been chairman of the has been chairman of the Constitu- rironmental Affairs Committee; tional Amendments Committee. . > Reyes, D-Houston, chairman of mpaiff Rules Committee; and John -w—^ son, D-LaGrange, chairman of I B 1^11 CJf C | V* s to be given Health and Welfare Committee J—3 A AAA for the costof| sess i°r 1 . iseatthestaitphivant mounted an abortive P"?A publicfinancjker campaign against Clayton IC ■ | /\ ■ one that waT die end of the 1977 legislative ■ • m. igress. Candipk then dropped out of the nent to matdWt when it became apparent he "I £ ■ O atching fundi 11 d chance to unseat the incum- AA At | A“ A* | ff ^ £ Bieyes has sided with a House "p opposed to Clayton on a iber of issues, and Wilson failed United Press International so| along with several of the WASHINGTON — The CIA, worried about how to “dispose of m C blown agents, exploited defectors ^and defecting trainees,” considered ieet using memory-erasing techniques A • including drugs, electric shock and >y Vietnam’s1G3.V0 it brai , n s ^gery in the early 1950s. would meet The problem, one document d negotiatea ■ said, was how to avoid the expense ared the lastly V" 'WPlfll ° f kee P in g these people in forces of the j ^ -*• ^ maximum security isolation for long . The United United Press International periods to keep the secrets from Saturday to fONG KONG — Vietnam the enemy, e immediate arday called nationwide elec- Documents released under a Foung threw fs for the first time in two years Freedom of Information Act request peakerswhol announced a “humane policy made by the Church of Scientology ityfavoreda t would allow Vietnamese explored the various alternatives. )led by imperialists and reac- The church wants a Justice Depart- laries” to flee the country at their ment investigation. [ t One of the documents, a heavily \0Sl£^tl£[ ore ^ n Minister Nguyen Duy censored CIA memo dated March 7, ® nh said many of the nearly 1951 > is t itled > Disposal of reportedly Vietnamese who have left Maximum Custody Type Defectors iah and pave ccmRry since the Communist °f AT Categories, ran, several 5ov cr in 1975 were “instigated It said the “problem” was: :hed peace- f <)0 fe d by the imperialists and “To dispose of blown agents, ex death to the 5ri | a Honal reactionaries — ploited defectors and defecting s, shops and M s terms for the United States trainees who have such sensitive fChina respectively. knowledge of our operation as le blamed the exodus on the makes it necessary to hold them in igressive war and the maximum custody until either (a) •colonialism regime which operations have progressed to a •ught havoc on South Vietnam point where their knowledge is no • said Hanoi’s decision to let its longer highly sensitive or (b) the sens leave reflected a humane knowledge they possess in general Phis mom- :e policy in accordance with will be of no use to the enemy.” High today teams laws. The “conclusion,” some of which rain today those staying behind, Hanoi was censored, said: ounced voting on May 31 to t officials for 2-year terms to the “We are faced with either setting ————•'pie’s Councils — the first na- up a very difficult and expensive wide elections in two years. The mechanism for the holding of defec- 1 ncils, similar to local legisla- tors in maximum custody over a :sj serve city precincts, provinc- period of time or of developing a capitals, districts and villages in drug which would not cause perma- irovinces and cities. nent harm to the taker for the pur- sm congress rinli’s announcement on ref- poses of arriving at the same end re gies was viewed by many diploma- suit, i.e., a secure situation for ex- Li Z fifobservers as a turnabout in tremely sensitive defectors.” tor Andv ^nam's policy. They said it may The apparently ruled out DavidBfflthe country to a massive, or- , . , ^ Jamieexodus in contrast to the hel- A year later, an unidentified CIA Stevikclter escapes which have /1 i rP nnri _ ...Debbie P*racterized the recent flight of p ar ts‘of which were blfcked out - in „ „ u*' S ' . • ! w on a conversation he had with an Karen Roger he country s present population a£e doctor concernimr exneri- Scott Pendl'stimated between 40 to 50 mil- c . . ^ ^ Michelle ScJpeople and it was expected that C S ' U an SU 1JeC S ' • , Lee Roy L^east 500,000 will depart under “The subjects would be primarily Stone new policy. individuals whom the agency Do ^ |he outpouring of Vietnamese wished to do away with,” it said. k igees since the Communists “(Blank) cited specifically that there ° G^' mcd victor y hi 1975 over the were (blank) of all types where 3 (. backed regime in Saigon has plenty of subject material could be nlrecently marked by the tragic had.” "idering of “boat people’’ — a (uni-pro/Kfe-seeking Vietnamese traveling The very latest ideas would be aerated h\l s^Wgo ships which have not been used including electroshock, lyser- mumtij lu’itff wed to land in Hong Kong gic acid, drugs, electroencephalo- linetl i){i the 1 ' 1 the Philippines. graph, hypnosis, etc, etc.” WE BRING IT BACK ALIVE Custom Sounds and Pioneer CUSTOM UNDS the OrD moixieenr stereo ensemble COMPLETE WITH A PLACE TO PUT IT! ini Included in this system: SA-6500 II INTEGRATED STEREO AMPLIFIER delivers a continuous power output of 30 watts per channel, minimum RMS at 8 ohms from 20 to 20,000 Hz. with no more than 0.1% total harmonic distortion. 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