Ige 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1981 'i: National ' • . - - , ... . .. . - - , Senate committee says CIA director not unfit for job United Press International day cbnclucled CIA Director Wil- attentive to detail.” Tuesday, was not unanimous, as members in voting against the re- financial disclosure forms he filed sure statement before his confir- WASHINGTON — The Senate liam Casey is not unfit to hold The committee released the re- had been expected. port. when he joined the administration mation hearings. The committee * V I 1 a I Y a ~Y f * J rn ( S V aa\ a a \ a ^ ^ a ^ \ ^ \ 1 a a 1 k o ✓ V M K 1 a a a a a a«a .a . a A. i i . ^ a 1 a . a . a 4. * 2 — a la I 1 I f O / \ I • 1 T / ^ 1 f \ * A I r A r » S T 1 ^ k A A 7 / \ T f a k T a a r a B a a ~a B a K ^ a ^ 1 a a a 1 Y ^ . 1 f A A la a a a- 1 "A a-a — a_a a a a-a aa.a A a a a ■ ala a a a a a a .a a*a . I la Z aa . a a-a a a aa a a'. A. a a^a aa - — A aa a a .a a a-a aaa »a a aaa aa 1 1 • * I ' I'll . United Press International day cbncluded CIA Director Wil- WASHINGTON — The Senate liam Casey is not unfit to hold elligence Committee Wednes- office, but was at the least, “in- Dennis Ivey's Lakeview Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing' Thursday “rvickle Beer Night! Lone Star Draft Beer SC a cup $2.00 Pertton ... r or $1.00 a pitcher (We altto serve Ixme Star Longneeks!) Music by Dennis Ivey and “The Waymen” Saturday IVight JOHNNY BUSH! and “The Randeleros $5.00 Person For Reservations Call 823-0660 Doors Open 8 p.m. Dancing B p.m.-l a.m. W IS-YEAR-OLDS — WE ADMIT MINORS! 3 Miles North of Bryan on Tabor Road attentive to detail. The committee released the re sults of a four-month review of Casey’s past business and legal affairs. The six-page report, adopted by the committee late Tuesday, was not unanimous, as had been expected. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., who had pushed from the outset for a thorough investigation of Casey, was alone among the 15 3 a uocal music Concctl^ > members in voting against the re port. Other Democrats who en dorsed the findings, including Senators Walter Huddleston of Kentucky and Patrick Leahy of Vermont, were sharply critical of Casey. Huddleston said there was enough evidence for President Reagan to consider asking Casey, his 1980 campaign manager, to resign. Leahy told United Press Inter national Tuesday he could not give his approval to Casey because something incriminating kept showing up every month or so since the probe began in July. Leahy said the report “was damning him (Casey) with faint praise.” Even a strong Casey defender. Sen. Harrison Schmitt, R-N.M., said the whole situation is not flat tering to the CIA director. The committee looked into Casey’s private dealings, his acti vities while heading the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Export-Import Bank, the financial disclosure forms he filed when he joined the administration and his appointment of campaign aide Max Hugel as head of CIA covert operations. It was Hugel’s forced resigna tion July 15 — prompted by alle gations Hugel had engaged in stock manipulation — that brought Casey’s past business dealings under scrutiny. The report said the committee had found that Casey had not been careful with details, particularly on two disclosure forms required by the Office of Government Ethics and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. But the panel also concluded: “Having reviewed the facts obtained in the course of its four- month investigation, the commit tee reaffirms its July 29, 1981, statement that no basis has been found for concluding that Mr. Casey is unfit to hold office as dire ctor of Central Intelligence. ” When it began its probe, the committee learned Casey had not filed a complete financial disclo sure statement before his confir mation hearings. The committee approved his nomination, andtlie Senate confirmed him, 95-0, on Jan. 28. The original answers omitted it least nine investments valued at more than a quarter of a million dollars, personal debts and contiii. gent liabilities of nearly $500,0(10, a number of corporations oi foundations on whose board Casey served, four civil lawsuits inwhici he was involved in the last five years and more than 70 clients!^ had represented in private pact tice in the last five years, i Among the clients he failed to list, were the governments d South Korea and Indonesiaandao oil company controlled by the In. doncsian government. The report noted the govern ment ethics office asked Caseyfa a list of clients from the pastN years, while the committee re quired one covering five yean, Casey failed to note the Senate requirement, it said. Brown & Root leaves nuclear plant jot /Auditorium ttloniau JDtc. z, 1981 8-00^ < United Press International HOUSTON — In compliance with its contract. Brown 6c Root Co. has ended its six years of con struction work on the South Texas Nuclear Project, leaving the work force at about one-third of its ori ginal strength. Officials said Tuesday a further reduction to 650 workers will leave a caretaker crew to carry out maintenance and security until a new contractor takes over. Houston Lighting 6c Power Co., the project manager that set the Dec. 1 deadline last month for Brown 6c Root to leave the con struction site, said it hopes to pick a new contractor by Jan. 1. But officials said it will take about six months before construc tion resumes on the half- completed nuclear power plant near Bay City. HL&P’s decision to removt Brown 6c Root forced the Nuclei: Regulatory Commission’s liceiu ing lioard to cancel a specialhea: ing scheduled for next week in A& stin. The NRC wants toknowhot quality control would be m® tained on safety-related construc tion while the builder was phased out of the project. 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