DOCUMENTS LIBRARIAN HAS WORLDWIDE CONNECTIONS
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-01137R000100190001-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
15
Document Creation Date:
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date:
August 10, 2001
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 6, 1985
Content Type:
NSPR
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CIA-RDP90-01137R000100190001-8.pdf | 1.15 MB |
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s9FATrrITt
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MO ALLEN MONITOR (T'X)
6 April 1985
Jiocuthents 1ibrarian has
TorIdwlde connections
KY MCKONE "For a S25 'deposit, anyone statistical information."
:
.By JER
.
j Public Information Office can get a library card," he said. The three researchers do all
Pan American University ~ "They can check out three items of the "accessing" to the system,
EDINBURG - Bill Tinsman at a time, for two weeks at a and periodically they go to
is a man with good connections. time.." - - Houston to get more . training
.From is o lice in the Pan The library' currently has and update their knowledge
American university library, he 292,000 books, .:monographs, re- about the DIALOG system,
has a direct line to the Centrals. ports, periodicals, and state and , which is owned by a subsidiary
intelligence Agency, the 'United federal government documents. of Lockheed Corp. of Palo Alto,
rates- Senate, the epartrnent Some are in - the periodicals Calif.
of State, and the FBI. department and the book collec- Fisher helps the researcher
Want. to know the name and tion, and 114,000 are on microf- develop a strategy for,, the
background of the fin.-nee min- iche. search, and to decide what data
is-,,er- o: the Republic o aka'? The documents section of the bases to seek, what key words
Ask Tinsman, a government' library has recently been moved or ideas to ask the computer to
documents i rarian. from the third floor to the east retrieve. -
I He'll hei you look it U'n in Side of the first door. ' "You can intersect ideas. It
the A's reference book, Tinsman has a' bachelor of will bring articles together that
biers of State and Cabinet science. degree in psychology come up' with. two or, three
emners of Foreign Govern- from Kent State University and ideas, so this has great power,"
ments. . master of library science from Fisher
.._-., ..
r ' ` library" - can
t to know how the fed. the University of Kentucky.' Patrons- of the
erat government might reduce: If government documents and start their 'searches by lookink -
poverty? Or about persecution",". the entire Pan American Ii-: = in the Blue Book; a compilation
of .Baha'is in Iran, airline brary are not enough; the re- 5 of blue sheets that gives infor _.
safety, - breast cancer homeless searcher can access the world's mation on each data base.
people,', or social ,_,_securityr-re- ,. largest, most comprehensive`, ev can d justtbrowse through'.
1 form? storehouse . of information' room an
Just ask Bill Tinsman. '--~ through a computer. _ - = the book and get an idea of.
1n-all probability, the U.S. Through DIALOG' Informa= ` what data bases are good for
`Ameri- the social sciences or the hu
~--goverhment. has studied the tion Services, Inc.,'Pan
problem and published its find ' can library users have access to manities and so forth,''-' he said.
in approximately . 200 data bases . The searcher will receive ar-
'
A
And Bill Tinsman probably!. on a wide variety of subjects; titles or citations .in either of
haz-the study on. file. , including agriculture and nutritwo ways.
"We try to get the documents lion, chemistry, current affairs, _--_., ."You, can get it `on line'
that support the courses offered education;: medicine, and many immediately;? or you- can have-
at-Pan American or items that others. the citations printed 'off line'
relate to the Valley, like Mexi- Dr. David Fisher, -reference and it will take five or six
I can-Americans, immigration,. librarian, Tinsman, and Susan working days for. it to arrive by
import.-export, and most of the -- Hancock, head public affairs- mail from California," Fisher
business topics" Tinsman said. librarian, have been trained to said. "They come in a very nicei
The library doesn't get all the help reference-seekers with all.. format "?,.
topics it is a "selective" aspects of knowledge: Fisher said each data base
-." has an hourly cost, and the
depository library "You can get; citations of.:.=
We choose the 'items' -we - published articles .. from - very .
want,"-" Tinsman said. "We get - popular magazines or. very
tliem - free, but they are still scholarly magazines, or profes-
~rt1
government property -; sional and trade magazines: or_--
;U'se' of the library is not journals," Fisher said. .
limited to Pan American stu- "You can get book references,,
dents;= faculty," and staff-' ? - ? ' or bibliographic information, or
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FROM A TO Z - Got a question? There's hardly a question or problem the federal government' hasn't studied,,. and-1:
Bill Tinsman, Pan American University's government documents librarian, holds the keys to those reports, including
transcripts of congressional hearings, FBI, CIA and State Department reference books. Government documents are-.'-.
an often-overlooked source of facts and a wers, Tinsman says. (PAU Photo)
patron is responsible` for bear- Spanish from Washington=Uni=` library'. She usually, sees groups
ing the. cost. Some of the data'.:= ve-rsity his master's in library of students for two sessions, one
bases are $25 an hour, but some science is. from he, University giving an overview, and the.
second one a laboratory expert-;
t
t
i
d hi
d
ora
e
n
s
oc
are as high as $100 and $150 of Missouri, an
an hour, Fisher said. educational media is also from ence with work sheets and prac-:
"It can be as cheap as S5 if` ? Missouri. _? tice in looking up information:`..
job -',and .. "I , work., through'. a? sample
you retrieve five or six articles t -? Part of Hancock's
.
in 20-30 seconds," he said. the part she likes the most - is _ literature, search as if I had
Fisher's A.B. degree is in; teaching people how to use the been assigned to-write `a- re-.
search paper. I'just take a topic.:,
:that I enjoy. The one I'm using
this time.. is space warfare,
!Hancock said-
Hancock's ' classes- usually;
begin during the second week of_
a semester, "and they, get heavy
%in the third and fourth weeks:
During the peak, I work 12- oz:
13 hours' day:. 1, come in at
night for graduate classes."
~,. Hancock.. earned- her, under -
sgraduate degree a bachelor.
j~of arts in history and govern.-
ment. -. from Pan . American
University, taught fourth grade
for a year, and then. went to
Indiana. University for a- mas-
ter's in library science, 'which
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,_~
LP I LL ~ ..,Wove ftI Nype 20 10 ifi2r! G14 ROPQ
hookworm Holds Courtin
By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr.
5pedal to The New York Topes
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 - Mate
Hari? "A damn fine dancer but prob-
ably a lousy spy." Maj. John Andre?
"A `caseworker' in our language,"
not a proper spy at all. John le Carte?
"I resent his anti-intelligence attitude
for a man who was in it. I wouldn't
touch him with a 10-foot pole."
George Washington? A man with su-
preme appreciation for the craft,
"really a bear" on, intelligence.
Walter L Pforrheimer - biblio-
Washington's retired -intelligence
corps - offered these considered
opinions as he wandered through the
-Watergate aparunentthat houses his
memento-filled library, one. of the.
world's best private collections of spy .
literature. Now and again he -would
borne in on just the right book or docu-
ment to make his point. .
Reaching into a briefcase packed
v: ith items he would use in the litera--
turc of an intelligence class that he
would teach next day at the Defense
His memorabilia Mae Nm X , T.=
could form
of of lfteratm~e.
for U
museum.
.
Frank ("The lady `or the Tiger?-) - 00lecting- books ch
heimer extracted an original letter Stockton. His Stockton f it the P~
tockton material is helmet family, which founded a Wall
-written by Washington. Dated July4 definitive, having bought out the- Street brokerage. The Moliere collect
2C, 1711, it reads, "AU that remains fly at auction. . tion, said to be the finest in
private
-for me to -add is that you keep the;'- His spy memorabilia could form hands in the corm m
- whole m a t t e r a s secret as ble s' was a gift $
the basis for a national museum, an his father on his Zlst birthday. .
for upon secrecy success depen in idea that Senate committee is put- In World War II, Mr. Pforrheimer,
most enterprises of the kind." -suing ' tly with Mr. Pfom who grew up in Purchase, N.Y., sent
This, Mr. Pforzheimer says, is per- heimer's encouragement. - phis 'collection to Yale, his alma
haps the best statement of its kind by . There are four. p
rb= mater, for safekeeping, but when he
one of history's ablest practitioners. ; done by -Col. 3theolf .Abel. the Soviet tbouglit about lea
The letter, now enclosed in a plastic spy whose cover-Occupation vwas .it there when
s.
case, was the inspiration in the late I ? mercial artist, while h he e was was held co in n The , retriewar ve it. "It ended, was a persuaded
l
1940's for a world-class collection that l the Atlanta Penitentx Po he says.
ary.'In the bath- : "They. said I wouldn't work " work on it, un-
ha_s grown to more than 5,000 works mom are blown-up pictures of Soviet ? less nagged by its proximity. Some
on intelligence-gathering and spies_ missile installations in Cuba. Them is day the library, which he describes as
Originator of the Mole, a rare transcript of the trial of "John "the core of my life," will return to
trig Painter" Aitkein, the oni Amer- Yale for good.
?
Then Mr. Pforzheimer, a baldish ican convicted of sabotage man partial to plaid shirts in the, Revolutionary d r, Mr. spends mosteo a lifelong
time bacho
and tweed jackets, heads for the vault Mata Hart's last visa War. Jlfiq~re is lot. most of f his time eatal-
to extras an Elizabethan treasure enter France, going the collection, a a long-neglected
demonstrating that Mr. le Carte was . cuted in 191. where she was axe- job that may take years because he
not the originator of the term "mole," has only goes to the C's in the spy
for an undercover agent in the God TelephODe Directory part, preparing testimony for Con-
enemv's camp. No, he says trium. Another prized item is Hermann gress, writing book reviews and keep.
mg up with the intelligence literature.
pliantly, "it's Francis Bacon-11 Goring's wartime telephone directo-
his achievements has been to One of Mr. Pforzheimer. the first legisla- r5'. with bandwn additi, that
from scratch
the
library at the
"I create
tive counsel of the Central Intelli- Mr. Pforzheimer> ova is
eII1
g
.
Intelligence
Central
Agency.
genre Agency, has been active in the ' took that out of the German Air
field .for over 40 years. He also has Ministry myself," he says, "for safe- continued
outstanding collections of Moliere, keeping, of course.."
with royal French bindings, and
.:Walter L. Ptorzbelmer-seated is his library,?one of the world's best private collections
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CMA-T"
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P,RTT
. CT
ON PAGE L ~.. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
1 June 1981
;Soviets; CIA: same library card
;~ r . .- . Lindsborg, Kan. .
- The Central Intelligence Agency. (CfA1--
and the Soviet Union have at least one thing in
common = they both -are .customers of the
Bethany- College library _ in,, this= .cehtraL-
Kansas town:
As part of-an interlibraryloansy-stem,. the-
libraryryrecently-sent.the_Sovigts.a book-titled
' Head librarian pixie Lanning said the vol
ume does not-.contain any atomicsecrets, but
is .an -art book.. about,. pop= culture r..,and't_art
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J d iversit
-01 O-N -0
3y Carla Wheeler
,opyright 1981
Minnesota Daily
hespite the decline of 19705 radical-
cm, the Central Intelligence Agency
CIA, remains active on college cam-
nrses- The University of Minnesota is
ro exception.
CIA involvement on campus has in-
luded possible attempts to recruit
tudents to spy on each other, CIA-
li.mried research experiments, and
If-briefing of facultyreturning from
1511s overseas.
[IA questioning of University proles-
.ors who have visited the Soviet
-mon or other socialist nations is a
-ommon occurrence; according to a
Jniversity professor who asked not to
)e named.
Debriefing is one means the CIA uses .
o get information about a country,
ie professor said, and it is perfectly.
Legal. - I!
onathan Rosner, a physics teacher,
was questioned by a CIA agent in
1770. Rosner remembers the agents'
visit clearly.
rhe man came into the office and
:los-ad the door. Rosner said. Hewas
'hush hush" about thevisit, he
added.
The CIA agent then handed Rosner a -I
list of technical questions to answer.
..The questions concerned Soviet labo-
ratories Rosner had visited on his trip:
"I didn't notice a lot of things they
asked about;" Rosner said. Rosner r
fused to specify what the CIA wanted
to know: That would be "a breach of
MINNESOTA DAILY
13 February 1981
Five minutes after the agent's arrival,
talking with the CIA because he had
told some of his colleagues in the de-
partment about the agent's upcoming
visit, and somehow the word leaked
out to the-students. Th.e agent had,
told Rosner that telling friends about
the CIA's visit "is not to your advan-
"I got a little anxious at that point,"
:.Rosner said he told the agent-he was
annoyed by the secrecy surrounding
the visit, but was told the Soviets
question their scholars too. The agent
accused the Soviets of many unethi=
Rosner'-said tjle CIA has-not con-
tacted him since that day in 1970,
"Legitimate data gathering by the CIA
is understandable, but not all-this se-r
"
Rosner.s.aid: This
crecy nonsense,
type of activity is "not good for free
conferences," he said-
Talking with the CIA about an over-
seas trip hurts a scholar's contacts
with colleagues in other nations and.'
affects other academics, said Burton
-
Paulu, retired professor and director.
of Media Resources at the University'
CIA contact'"lowers the credibility of
reporters, researchers, and teachers,"
said Paulu, who has been questioned.
"have to be above suspicion," he
said. Providing the CIA with informa-
tion "affects the objectivity of schol-
ars of the media," he said. -
Paulu agreed to talk to the CIA in
1958 after a visit to the Soviet Union.
The CIA agents asked about "my ge,n-
eral impressions of the trip," Paulu
-
said
In 1965 agents phoned Paulu after an-
other visit to Eastern Europe. "I
would not talk to them," he said.
Paulu said he told the agent to read a
book he was about to publish.
Paulu returned from a three`-month
teaching engagement in the Soviet
Union last Daccmber, and a CAA
a3cnt called him again. "I relused to
!alk to them," Paulu said.-
CIA agents usually contact depart-
ment chairpersons and ask who has
been abroad recently and if the chair
person thinks the professor will talk
to the CIA, said Erwin Marquit, asso-
ciate professor of physics, who ac-
companied Rosner to the Soviet
Union in 1970.
"They're (chairpersons) acting as
fingermen" for the CIA, Marquit
said. The chairpersons "don't want to
be in aposition of not cooperating
with government agencies," he said-
A record of non-cooperation could
hurt their careers, Marquit added.
Marquit and several other University
professors wrote an opinion article in
the Minnesota Daily in early 1971
calling for an "end to University in-
volvement in intelligence activity."
"The administration and regents must
make it clear to the federal govern-
ment that the use of University by in-
telligence agencies is harmful to the
national interest and can only inter-
fere with the University fulfilling its
proper role,"the opinion piece said-
"graduate students and faculty are
scared of having their,
iews known,"
Marquit said. "This is a very evil situ--'
ation."
"I don't think University should offi-
cially cooperate with the intelligence
community,' said University Presi- .1.
dent C. Peter Magrath in an interview
with the Daily on Wednesday.
"I believe that much of that informa-
tion that probably comes from dis-
cussions of that kind (debriefings) are
really pretty innocuous kinds of basic-
information," Magrath said. "I think
that it is very damaging, potentially,
to University researchers if they are
believed to be-involved in some way,
not so much with spying, but with
things related to the intelligence com-
munity."
But people can't be prevented from
talking to somebody about their re-
search, Magrath said. "I sincerely be-.
lieve it's a tough area to regulate," he
said.
confidence,'' he said. ? :: ;.
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(As received)
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ARTiaE APPRAIC Approved For Release THE 203//04/02 CONSTITUTION
QN PAGE f.-
I~ 2 JUNE 1977
ppp000 6O0: 0 oooo DODO 60+D
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s , trying just-the
WASMGTON (UPI) -The, CIA is official are to decide
cbniing'partway in frarzi the cold and join visitors will be allowed- to see and what
idg.the Washington public.tour ciicuit.- .
- e iiibits"-might be appropriate for display.
r-:.A 'spokesman said -Wednesday. the.-?r said the plan is still -fatAhe drawing.
pnbliaty-shy spy agency; getting. in step board stage" and no inaugural date has been
wit:.Jiimmy Carter's preference for "open-, set for the toursy which will take place only
government,"-will. soon:-allow -private citi. on. Saturdays
zens to take carefully controlled tours of its ,: 7:The visitors, presumably, would require
headquarters lia suburban Langley.- Va: ' ?~ ? _' speriat tickets: perhaps to be doled out by
This-is-quite a step for: an outfit that, ._theircongressmen.
until. just -a few years ago,.-played. the any case, the spokesman ssaid,'visi-.
"cover" game'- to the-- point -that highway.. tors will--not be-"allowed too roam: freely
signs identified -the CIA -exitonly as-'7he -. -through an office building -occupied by many
Bureau of Public Roads.' .. _ ;=- _;, who de. not rare. to-be;=seen much less
..The- spokesman said Adis Stacsfield =photographed.
Turner, appointed by President Carter as ;- _ The -tours will probably- start with a
the agency's new director, decided`the taboo -film`or -Iecture on the.::histoiy of: the U.S.-
against visitors should be relaxed slightly.- : -intelligence'effort .in an auditorium known
"lIe instituted amore open policy," the ? as=-"The Bubble;"_- then- proceed- through a?
spokesman said.: 'He thought it would be" a tunnel- into the- lobby- where 33 gold stars,
good idea." ==. j.?r::, graven into the marble walls, honor agents
"The WhiteHoase don s:it ?The-FBY Ykilled in the line of duty:
jt. Why not us?" he quoted Turner as saying: -: 7 z--- Other stops, the spokesman said, might
But lettingtourists-into the- modem;--;include the library and`-the- cartography-
guarded, seven-story headquarters - of .-U.S r_- room, where maps are made-by- computers. -
intelligence;: where men- with : mysterious - -- - But as for all .the other'spaces behind.
i/~
tea war spy capers, s :.. ` ? ._
?.;.
proble :!! ;. - ?'" "Offlcex," tiie spokesman said. Just
Right noon the spokesman said`- aiieacv` `'.tirdiaar~r offices with neoole." - -
STATINTI
CTO
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ST. LOUIS 'POST-DISPATCH
19 MAY 1977
By RICHARD DUDMAN
Chief Washington Correspondent
of the Post-Dispatch
WASHINGTON, May 19 - Americans
are soon going to begin hearing a lot
about their friendly Central Intelligence
Agency.
And if their children are among the
lucky ones, they will get a tour of the big
secret spy headquarters at Langley, Va.,
just like their trips to the white house,
the Capitol.and the Smithsonian Institu-
tion.
The CIA has tried to polish its image
occasionally in the past, but the public
relations campaign now getting under
way is by far the biggest and most open
in the history of the spy business.
Adm. Stansfield Turner, President
Jimmy Carter's choice to head the
agency, set the new tone by answering
questions from a small group of report-
ers yesterday for 30 minutes and then
sending them on a short tour of the:
building, including the CIA library. An
aid said it contained, among other
things, every telephone book in the
world.
Turner said that as director of Central
Intelligence, he would be keeping a close
watch. over the activities of still more
secret agencies in the intelligence com-
munity, such as the National Security
Agency and the Defense Intelligence
Agency.
In his own shop, he says he wants to
"lift the mystique."
"I hope to dispel some of the myths
that people are running around here with
cloaks and daggers and long fangs and
black hats, whereas many of the people
out here are serious students who are
reading and writing," he said.
Not a cloak was to be seen. Most of the
men walking along the: corridors and
chatting in a lounge at the library wore
ties and loud sports jackets.
Turner reminded the visitors that no
such session would he possible with the
director of Britain's Overseas Intelli- 1
Bence agency, b1I 6. In fact, his identity
is not generally known.
The CBS television show "60 Minutes"
will start filming a segment on the CIA
early next week. Turner said.
Other news and entertainment organi-
zations that have been given a foot in the
door were listed by the CIA spokesman
Herbert E. Hetu, although he lapsed into
the old spy lingo to say that he wondered
whether jt was fair to "blow 'their
cover."
Time magazine is going to do aitake
out on what's happening to intelligence,
Hetu said. The Sunday newspaper sup-
plement Parade has an article scheduled
and soon will be shooting pictures for it.
As for the television talk shows. Turner
has been on "Face the Nation" but is
stalling repeated requests from the To-
day show out of concern over what
public relations experts call over-expo-
sure. He also is as
and Answers" -
Personal appe;
Turner is trying
stone to that of ce
says, the head of
puts the director
times a day instea
- "We don't want
Adm. Turner," He
Grade school a
given conducted t,
behind a guarder
Potomac River fn
Other groups wi
program, Hetu sa
tickets from their
used for White Ho
"We'll probably
Saturday, and se,
have a briefing at
or slides - in 'the
the main entrance
"Then the grot
past photo exhibi
main building nt
exhibits in the big
"It will be tas,,,..-..J - .,,,, Y?~Yc~?v?-a ~,
anything like that - and then we can wind it .up with
Cokes or iced tea."
The exhibits will probably include aerial photographs
from the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, showing the missiles
being installed and later being removed: A British
intelligence picture of the bridge over the River Quai
could be included among historical items.- . I- i
. Other-items for display, to be considered in a meeting
today, could even include photographs of Soviet
territory from the U.S. U-2 spy plane,_ which later was
shot down, he said.
.letu, a retired Navy captain, served much of his
naval career in public relations. He met Turner when he
was special assistant for public affairs to Secretary of
the Navy John Chafee in 1970 and 1971 and the admiral i
was Chafee's executive assistant and naval aide.
"Turner's philosophy is that in this day and age things
are just open," Hetu said. "Things are not going to go
backward. and we'd better do it in our own-way and at
our own rate. If we don't, it's going to happen anyway, a
la Freedom of Information Act."
=
Openness will cause some problems. Hetu says it will
make A lot of people unhappy, or at least uneasy.
"They are all good Americans out here, but they've
been taught for 30 years to keep their mouths shut.". he
said.
Many agents, moreover, are under cover, have been
under cover, or will be under cover again, he said, They
don't want to be seen or photographed. They will have
time to get out of sight when areas of the building are
"sanitized" before the visitors come through.
The employes' bulletin board is already sanitized.
Agents who have posted notices about homes for rent or
articles for sale give onl th ? f r It
names and
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Thus, "Spike" wanted to sell his motorbike, and
"Doug" was offering his "Bundy flute, repadded" and
F,ic