THE BATTALIONWEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1981
Page 7
National
Antonio,! about i d a mei is not m
denies charges of illegal stock practices
CIA operations chief resignsUnited Press International
25 jj WASHINGTON — The CIA’s chief of secret operations resigned Tuesday, but insisted that published charges that he engaged in improper or illegal stock market practices in the mid-1970s are “unproven and untrue.’
Max Hugel, 56, stepped down as deputy director of operations, which handles clandestine agents and operations, following a Washington Post report on accusations made against him by two former business associates.
"fK CIA Director William Casey immediately appointed John Stein, a veteran intelligence career officer, as Hugel’s permanent replacement.v Hugel, who came to the agency fresh from work on the
Reagan election campaign committee and with Centronics, a computer and electronics firm, told Casey in a letter the charges against him, “although unfounded, unproven and untrue, have become a burden which I no longer believe is fair to impose on the administration, the agency, my family, and the splendid men and women who work with me.
“Under present circumstances, I feel I can no longer effectively serve you or the agency,” he said.
Hugel joined the CIA last February as Casey’s personal choice for the key position as chief of the agency ’s clandestine services.
A CIA statement said:“Mr. Max Hugel, CIA’s deputy director for operations,
Tuesday tendered his resignation. Mr. Hugel said he had concluded that, although allegations made in respect to certain business activities seven years ago are unfounded and untrue, the allegations have become a burden which he believes is no longer fair to impose on the agency.
“Mr. Hugel wishes to emphasize that the allegations against him concern his private life and have no connection whatsoever with his association with CIA or to its activities.”
Casey’s letter to Hugel accepted his resignation with “deepest regret,” and told Hugel he had “deservedly earned the respect of the those with whom you have worked.”
Mobil criticizedUnited Press International
ALBANY, N.Y. — Extortion, intimidation and deception are some of the words political leaders used to describe Mobil Oil’s three-cent-a- gallon hike in gasoline prices.
Mobil, in announcing the price increase, said the boost was a result of the new tax package passed by legislators to aid mass transit.
The package is intended to keep New York City’s 75-cent bus and subway fare from jumping to $1.
Faced with a torrent of criticism for its price hike, Mobil appeared to soften its stand on the price increase. A Mobil spokesman was quoted in the Albany Times-Union Tuesday saying the company “is looking at it (price increase) again.”
David Langdon, spokesman for Assembly Speaker Stanley Fink, said, “We find no economic substantiation for that.
A spokesman for Gov. Hugh Carey said it would be deceptive to attribute a 3-cent price hike to the new taxes.
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Japanesedetentionstudied
United Press InternationalWASHINGTON — The head of
a commission re-examining the internment of 120,000 Japanese- Americans during World War II said Tuesday her group will explore the motives behind the action and how to prevent human roundups in the future.
“We need to understand (why) the nation’s military and civilian leaders decided to evacuate and confine 120,000 people for no’ reason other than their ancestry,”' Chairwoman Joan Z. Berstein said.
In a statement prepared for the opening of the first hearing by the ’ government’s Commission on: Wartime Relocation and Intern-1 ment of Civilians, Berstein said:
“We need to examine what protections the law offered, and whether those protections need to be expanded. Only with this knowledge can we devise ways to strengthen protections for our citizens and to prevent similar events in the future.”
The commission was created by Congress last year to conduct the first official U.S. investigation into the detention of Japanese- ’ Americans and Japanese aliens, as • well as the relocation of 1,000* Alaskan islanders.
After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Japanese on the West Coast were told to leave their homes and businesses, and were taken to armed camps under an executive* order issued Feb. 19, 1942, by' President Franklin D. Roosevelt.-
About 1,000 Aleuts living in the ' Aleutian and Pribilof Islands were ’ relocated at federal installations after the Japanese took over their * land.
When the United States reoc- - cupied the islands, the Aleuts, instead of being allowed to return' home, were kept at federal instal- • lations until the end of the war. The commission wants to determine why.
“Evidence submitted to Congress indicates that these native \ Americans were interned under difficult conditions,” Berstein said.
As for the Japanese civilians on the West Coast, Berstein said, , “They were "detained without trial, without hearings of any kind.”
She noted “military necessity was said to require this unprecedented treatment,” but her commission, under its mandate, , will review the decision-making process as well as the impact of the r detentions.
In 1948, the Evacuation Claims Act was passed, giving those, Japanese held in the camps a , chance to file claims against the government for loss of property. A total of $38 million was paid out — a figure the commission said was . merely “10 cents per dollar lost.”
For the Aleuts, Roosevelt authorized the allocation of $10,000 in 1944 to cover damage claims.
“The commission will provide a forum for discussion on the difficult but crucial issue of redress,” Berstein said. “There are no easy answers, but the commission will • explore all possible remedies for • the wrongs done.”
“This country’s honor and com- ; mitment to civil liberties demand nothing less,” Berstein said.
The commission will hold a < second day of hearings Thursday 1 in Washington.
Additional hearings are planned for Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Anchorage, Alaska, the Aleutian Islands and Chicago.
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