The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 25, 1981-Page 7 CIA requests inquiry exemption Dan Fogelberg Joe Vitale Kenny Passarelli Ross Kunkel -# WASHINGTON (AP)- CIA Director William Casey asked Congress on Thursday to exempt all U.S. intelligence agencies from the federal Freedom of In- formation Act. Casey told a Senate Judiciary subcommittee that the FOI law has seriously jeopardized U.S. relations with other nations and put the intelligence agency's network of covert agents "in jeopardy." THE LAW-which permits scholars, journalists and citizens to obtain information about government operations-"has never been an effective method for oversight of the intelligence community," Casey testified. Critics of efforts to partially or completely exempt U.S. intelligence organizations from the information act disagreed. Morton Halperin, a former official of the National Security Council, told the subcommittee that the CIA "is a better institution and . .. is more responsive to the dictates of the Constitution" because of the law. HALPERIN, WHO testified on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the information act has brought public disclosure of valuable infor- mation about the CIA, including new revelations about the Bay of Pigs operations in the 1960s, use'of mind, drug experiments and illegal surveillance of Americans. Halperin is now director of the Center for National Security Studies, which publishes reports on in- telligence abuses. Sen. Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.) has introduced legislation to partially exempt the CIA and other in- telligence agencies from FOI cOverage. BUT CASEY, arguing that intelligence organizations should be free of all requirements of the act, said, "it has seriously impaired the operation of the intelligence apparatus with no significant public benefit." Since 1974 when Congress enacted provisions requiring CIA compliance with the law,'the agency has been overburdened with the need to give sensitive handling to an increasing number of requests for in- formation, Casey said. He said the agency has handled 1,212 FOI requests at a cost of $3 million. T 6 Mike Hanna Mark Hallman Barry Burton Senate moves to halt aid to El Salvador WASHINGTON (AP) - Rejecting appeals from President Reagan and the president of El Salvador, the Senate voted to stop military aid to the Central American country unless it carries out political, economic, and human rights changes. The Senate rejected, 51-47, an ad- ministration-backed amendment to turn (he conditions merely into goals. THE CONDITIONS, set Wednesdays, will halt U.S. military aid to El Salvador unless Reagan certifies to Congress that El Salvador is protecting human rights, moving to control its security forces, implementing economic reforms and is committed to free elections and willing to negotiate for peace. Calling the conditions "an unaccep-? table imposition on a government friendly to the United States," El Salvador's President Jose Napoleon Duarte wr9te the Senate, "The rationale reflected in, the conditions coincides with my own stated objectiv- es, but the government and the people of El Salvador would consider legislative conditions as unwarranted." Other features of the bill cleared the way for the administration's planned $3 billion aid program for Pakistan, removed a ban on U.S. aid to Argentina and Angola, with a requirement that the president report to Congress if he decides to help Angola. IN OTHER congressional business: " The Senate Finance Committee voted unanimously to restore the minimum $122 monthly Social Security benefit for current recipients, except for those persons getting government pensions over $300 a modh. The com- mittee also voted to allow the main Social Security retirement fund to borrow from the disability fund, but not from the hospital insurance fund. * The Houise approved a limited ex- tension of federal aid for- interstate highway construction, 377-25, and sent the bill to the Senate. The bill also gives' the federal government authority to withhold highway funds from states that have weakened penalties for violating the 55 mph speed limit.. SING A SONG' with the U-M WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB1 Positions still available for fall 1f T I OCT. 11 CRISLER ARENA-8 PM Tickes are $11.50) and $10.50 and gao on sale Monda, September 21, 9:301 a.mn. at the Michigan U n ion T icket Off~ice and all C ICout let's. call665-7408 -~~ A MAJOR L*VTh PRi Sl:X.-l7TION _J