Pope Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 21, 1976'I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 21, 1976 .r...... . oil 1. 1 ,4qw FRI.-SAT.-SUN. S N 0'R MAN BLAKE A brilliant musician, a warm and genuine performer $3.00s ;; f : ': o-.; > :.. V"- ; w . .s. , . Dr. Paul C. Uslan ! OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548' CHUJRCH ST. 663-2476 NFORMATION ABOUT ALL ISRAELI. PROGRAMS Come to HILLEL Wed. 3:30-5:30 or CALL 663-3336 House intelligence committee Council, Mayor to disclose full CIA report may receive pay i i WASHINGTON M)-The House1 Congress," Pike told reporters. tions in advance, according to By RICK SOBLE THURS. JAN. 29: "DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES" Documentary film on Spain w/Soul Wellman, speaker 1421 H ILL ST. 8:30 761-1451 intelligence committee appear- ed ready yesterday to disclose details President Ford sought to keep secret on U.S. intelli- gence operations. Under a compromise worked out with the committee after an earlier conflict, Ford moved last week to block release of separate reports on CIA aid for Angola and Italian politicians. BUT MEMBERS including chairman Otis Pike (D-N.Y.) contended yesterady the com- promise can't keep the commit- tee from disclosing that infor- mation - and other secrets - in its final report. "I think there is no right of the executive branch to censor a report from a committee of Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.) pre- dicted the committee might vote as heavily as 9 to 4 that what- ever agreement had been made before cannot apply to the com- mittee's final report to thej House. THE 340-PAGE report dis- closes details not only on-the Angola and Italian political money operations but on several others, including Navy subma- rine spying on Soviet missile firings. It says among other things that Secretary of State Henry Kissinger did not notify the Na- tional Security Council's 40 Committee of one operation un- til a month after it began - even though the 40 Committee is supposed to approve opera-E sources. It also says U.S. intelligence agencies spent $10 billion a year abroad with inadequate super- vision, according to sources. IT CONCLUDES that U.S. aid to Angola is far higher than the $30 million figure used by the Ford administration, because weapons have been undervalued. For example, it says, .45-cal- iber pistols have been valued as low as $5, and .30-caliber semi- automatic carbines at-$7.55. But a source with military spending expertise said the re- port fails to mention that some of the weapons may be from U.S. excess stocks-which would make such prices about right. The source said the real ques- tion becomes whether the U.S. weapons being supplied to An- Golan fighting forces really are from excess stocks as they are claimed to be. The Basketball Hall of Fame was incorporated in 1959. + - Use Daily Classifieds + Ann Arbor's Compensation Committee last night recom- mended that salaries for the mayor and council members beG incorporated into the city budgetc beginning April 1. The mayor would receive $10,000 and the councilpersons $5,000 each. The recommendation to pay will become law after 30 days unless eight council members decide to vote it down. THE RECOMMENDATION in- cluded an observation that only "wealthy people have been well represented on counci,'' since the job requires so much time and effort and offers no pay. Committee members hope that low-income people will now have incentive to run for Council. Council has no option to amend the recommendation of the seven man Compensation Com- mittee, which it established in December. AT THAT time Council was ASP -FOR gue Bowling Featuring: CHEAP TRICK -PLUS- STUDENT NIGHT All Students With I.D. Pay Only 50c Cover Charge Every Wednesday. 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 divided along partisan lines on the issue of salaries, with the minority Republicans refusing to sunport a compensation com- mittee. F "There has been direct evi- dence that the citizens are not willing to have their taxes di- verted to pay for council sal- Pries," said Roger Bertoia (R- Third Ward),. Bertoia was referring to a popular vote taken four years ago which defeated an amend- ment to the city charter pro- posing to pay council members. HOWEVER, Democrats are pleased with the recommenda- tion, which they hope will allow neonle with inflexible working hours to hold council seats with s-l4ries. Edward Pierce, a Democrat who served on council in 1964, criticized the current reliance of part-time councilpeople on the city administrator for in- ?nrmation concerning legislation. "I think if you're going to r-present the people you have to go out yourself and do some snooping. That entails having the time to devote, which i'n turn entails being paid," he said. PTERCE asserted that only the wealthy could have enough time to devote to non-paying council duties. Bertoia responded that "it has' not been my experience that people have been precluded by time or responsibility from run- ning for council or mayor." LAST G) Mixed Leag Sign up at Union Lanes WE ARE IN DEMAND Tomorrow Could Be Too Late! Michigan Union Lanes I FENI-- - - - -- - ., Em i A D L 4 L- I