NO PROSECUTION FOR DISCLOSING CIA FINANCING

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00001R000200120005-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 22, 1999
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 20, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00001R000200120005-8.pdf111.52 KB
Body: 
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH Approved For Release9Q9 ~9/Q37 -RDP PROSECUTION DISCLOSING DING :,tom Post-S match wire Services :'WASHINGTON, Feb. 20-The i ecute students who told of their relationship with the Central Lteiligence Agency, says the gneral counsel for the spy or- oanfzation. Lawrence R. Houston said that "these boys were pushed into -a corner" by disclosure that: the CIA had financed in- ternational activities of the Na- tional Student Association. He said intent to breach na- tional security must be shown before a prosecution can be achieved. I1Iowover, Houston said in a te,; phone interview last night .ii-t--the students did not have carte. blanche to tell everything about their dealings with the CIA. "But I can't conceive the :Government would prosecute any-of them for what they have said:so far," he said. Threats Reported Some NSA board members said last week after the link was revealed that they had ocen threatened with jail sen- tences for breach of security otitis if they disclosed the CIA dealings. Apother allegation in the far- Teaching case was made yester- day. by The Nation magazine, which said grants from CIA- backed foundations went to op- erations and Policy Research, ?Inc.,'a subsidiary of the United States Information Service. Along list of foundations and organizations, ranging from the World Assembly of Youth in Brussels, Belgium, to the Amer. dean Newspaper Guild AFL-CIo In Washington, have been named as involved with the CIA. CPYRGHT CPYRGHT Some, such as the newspaper union, have denied any knw!-, edge of the link. The New York Times said an organization headed M H by Richard i unt, an assistant dean of the Harvard University gradu- ate s h c ool oftd ars an sciences, had 'received mone f y rom a foundation identified as a chan- nellfor CL4 funds, '" Received $25 nnn on , rec d `ile at the Massach usetts attorne - eral's office in y gen dicate, Hunt's or-~ ganization, the Fund for Inte r- e national Social and Economic Education of Philadelphia, re- ceived $25,000 from the J. Fred- I. erick Brown Foundation of Bos- on. The fund, its brochure i says, finances workers' educa- tion projects, scholarships and research work for trade union- ists, and social studies scholars from Africa, Asia and Latin America. The money received from the Brawn Foundation was used for undisclosed work in Latin America. Hunt's organization has also received money from the pap_ C Pas haritable Trust of Boston, which has given funds to other groups that have been regularly obtaining money from CIA con- duit foundations. Hunt acknowledged receipt of the funds from the Brown, and Pappas foundations but said he had no knowledge that . the money was -from the .intelli- rar as he know the money was from "private sources." he said his organization had no rela- tionship with the CIA. ......... .... ... FOIAb3b Harvard's Position' A?' spokesman for Harvard said the university did not ac- cept contracts for "research Projects that cannot be pub- lished. But an individual rnem- ber of the faculty can.make his own decision about the use of his own time." Hd e sai the university might have accepted money from.the CIA for publishable research projects, but he did not know of any such incident. The: International Market In- stitUte, a private organization Harvard Business School for seminars, has been accepting grants from the Independence Foundation of Boston, another CIA,conduit. A;j; b u t 500 middle-ranking business executives from So' countries have attended the summer seminars on market- ing"-techniques. Twii more Senators said yes- terda1 that Congress should keep : closer h k c ee on the CIA . Some' congressmen have called or "an investigation . ; $i'nator Jacob K. Javits (Rep.), New York, said that "things that should have been open Were Clandestine. You've put 'the public in the kind of doubt that should never arise " . He said President Lyndon B. Johnson should have supervised ,,the agency more closely and "legislative oversight." .viA should be required to re- port on its activities more reg- ularly to an overseer such as a congressional committee. He, too, said Government ',support to organizations such as NSA should be open. Senator Gale McGee (Dem.), iWyonving, said, however, that the CIA's action in subsidizing ~ student groups was an "ugly necessity for the realities of the times." He said deception was "par (or the course" in intelligence gathering and said there prob. ably still was a need for such Approved For Release 1999/09/07 : CIA-RDP75-00001 R000200120005-8