(UNTITLED)

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000100410009-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 14, 2003
Sequence Number: 
9
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 10, 1967
Content Type: 
OPEN
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000100410009-0.pdf139.83 KB
Body: 
T ebruary 24 - Narch 10. 1967 vu as f;tculty Of cvi4il?Ilr~dl9~tote~le+atse 20~Y~'/1cl~~f-Ro~rS`le~OaQ01 i i i h \ gifit trat Vti as t e 0v Slroo An c ,li, almost incredible that he should' be permitted to occupy the dais in Mc- Cosh 10 at Princeton University to defame our country, its industrial corporations, economic and social system, and political leaders without Cllr ti:i9'\+ : m1 sire k ks lik' an angel with pink-and-white complexion and long flowing, wavy golden hair. "I am a revolutionist," she told an elderly woman during lunch hour. 'Not just a Marxist, a revolution- ., st. Miss black discussed with a ~ there having been present to chat-~t~;')l'cw1friends-all very much in the in- Icnge him anyone from the Prince. ,,._,_ en . - tees, or student government. Granted that most of the young people in 11cCosh 10 were well aware of and in sympathy with Magdoff's Marxist- Leninist views, there seemed to be present a few young men and women at the Leftist radical Ramparts Mag- azine, and said she is,_now -doing"- some -research with four 0 five people" that will ix~ake J4c..,.current revelations about the Central Intelli- g g y seem insignificant. who, like the uneasy, questioning Co- re working on quite a few-situ- lumbia student. were troiihtari nt Wh-t ations, . she said, and added with a they heard. Had its objectivity been effectively disputed' by a Princeton University faculty member or re- spected Princeton official, perhaps the uncertain young people might have been enlightened and would have quit the conference. sweet smile, "They'll rock the na tion." She said the job done on the National Student Association and other "reformist" groups was easy. "What we're working on now is go- ing to blow the whole CIA works." When shot said '.'we're doing re- seyalch ~tln it;' the average American\ "Cherchez La Femme A bAe achievements of re- s and around NACLA who am in toigci- with 3v'caga^' its and with the SDS Radical Education Project, a general situation substan- tiating the boast printed in the orig- inal REP document issued by SDS at Ann Arbor, Michigan last year that SDS had established an "inter- national intelligence network." (See page 6, U.S.A. Magaziuue, Vol. XIII, September 16, 1966, No. 19-special report on the Second Annual Con-. ference of Socialist Scholars.) About 300 registrants were pres- ent at the SDS-REP conference at Princeton during the February week- end.: It would be very, very foolish to estimate their true strength by their number. University adminis- trators and trustees should have learned by now about the danger of the New and Old Left radicals on ' campus, a militant minority capable of disrupting and even destroying the majority. Even while the Princeton confer- ence was taking place, a grave crisis . er r en s are doing research an economies. She quoted but twisted i eve at ions about the we place the question of control as CIA and "bring down" the 'reac- , the most important thing, the thing the meaning of a statement by Itionary" governments of several we have to ask for all the time is George Moore, president of the First Latin American countries., National City Bank, to prove her control." point, and pronounced his name as ? To judge by what the Ramparts At Princeton University and at the if it were that of the devil himself. Magazine clique already have accom- University of California at Berkeley, plished in damaging U.S. national at Cornell, Harvard and Yale, at It was astonishing to hear the lit- prestige through the CIA revelations, 'Stanford and Columbia, an impor- tle blonde speak, so coldly. about eco- . it would be most unwise to discount _tant political and academic thing '' ~' i a group called NACLA," : SDS's aim : "The issue is control," Latin nations' failure to produce for North American Congress on Latin he said. "The issue of control is the home market. What U.S. in- ' America. There was. talk at the the one issue that exists. To ask vestment in Latin America does, she SDS-REP conference at Princeton for question of control is to ask for charged, is to set up "foreign en- of creating a new NACLA magazine the most radical thing. If as radicals claves" in the underdeveloped Latin' o "blow" more r w ma eras and coil- J. erry enney, quarters of the National Council of a co-author of the new "Port Au- sumers of U.S. manufactured goods. Churches, a recipient of CIA funds) thority Statement," summed up the This exploitation, she said leads to will- q pendency there on the e ui ing that houses many about the goals, of Students for a porters of ra t 1 part of ex- religious institutions, including head- Democratic r_ Societ T ai investments in Latin on the 9th' floor at 475 Riverside There is not the slightest doubt America create a new form of de- Drive 11-1, b Id' mg to deliver a paper harshly critical. It seems Miss Edith Black is a boasted from the dais in McCosh- of American enterprise in, Latin very hard worker. She not only at- about the SDS triumph in Iowa America and especially in Brazil. ? tends classes at Union Theological Seminary but also works in a cubicle The Issue Is Control q1- s 'd TT S ' e P program, she intellectual tribute to Harry Magdoff. vert, new SDS National Secretary, mounted the dais on Sunday morn- . loolang as innocent as the driven .. s tea y means by to high student government ofpicc of research was made clear to, the a radical SDS member at the Uni- snow on the campus outside the ' REP conference participants while versity of Iowa plunged its admin- Chapel 'across from McCosh Hall.'' she was on the dais and with charm- ? . istration into a situation with omi- Though not listed as a speaker on ing feminine deference paid highest nous future imlications G C I the .'m 'l SDS RE however - '" t?.tite the riowers bloom in., cars confronted the University of , was a beautiful pint-sized May and snowflakes dance in Decern- Wisconsin. Elsewhere, the election. .blonde dressed in pale lavender and her But what 1, 11 ~A I S U.S:A.' h f i d -