REQUEST BY BEN H. BAGDIKIAN
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80B01676R000600120023-0
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
10
Document Creation Date:
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date:
January 16, 2003
Sequence Number:
23
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 21, 1965
Content Type:
MF
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Body:
Approved r Release 2003/05/05: CIA-RDP80 76R0006001-26023-0,
21 May 1965
RANDUM ?OR TEE DIRECTOR
8UBJBCT. Request by Ban H. Ba tikian
1. This memorandum is for information only.
2. Ben H. Bagdikian, a contributing writer for the SAY
EVENING PORT, telephoned me to renew a request he had made several
weeks ago to abr. Chr#tien for an interview with you. This, he ex-
plained, is for an article he has been asked to write for the NEW
YORK TIM 1L4Ar,.E.
3. 1 told him that you were very busy and I did not know whether
you could an him. He said that the editors of the per had been in
contact with him again about this. They had informed him, he added,
that if he was unable to see you personally they planned to put together
an article on you from their backgro files.
4. Mr. Bagdikian has also requested an interview with Mr. Helms
to discuss "the position of the Central Intelligence Agency in history,
now that it has became a well-eestablisheed organization. "
5. Attached is an article written by Mr. Bagdikien for the NEW
YORK TIMER KAGAr;INE in 1963 which you may find of interest.
.. -Assistant
cc : J X (attention In invited to Para 4)
Ex.Vir. ,-Comet .
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STAT
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HUSH-HUSH HEADQUARTERS-The C.I.A. used to operate out
of offices kept so secret that former President Eisenhower once got
lost trying to find them. Now, under businessman John McCone
(left), it is quartered in this new $50-million building in Langley, Va.;
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C
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j said C.I.A. was behind the revolt of
French Army officers against Charles
BEN H.. BAGDIKIAN is a veteran Washington GRADUALLY the C
IA has risen;
.
de
repprter now with The Saturday Evening Post.' ,
to high visibility Today it occupies one Gaulle.
WASHINGTON. of the most imposing new buildings in
the Washington area. Its once awe- ON the other hand, the C.I.A. is j
ALAPEL button being sold inj
some initials have entered the language credited with predicting the launch-
Washington drug stores these in of Sputnik, the anti-Nixon riots
days reads, "My work is so of satire: Cuban refugees in Miami i in g
"Cuban Invasion South America, the rise of Khru- ,
t
d f
th
an
or
e s
secret I don't know what I'm doing. say y shchev to Soviet power, and the Anglo
This has been used as an accusation .by Authority," and in 1960 the Soviet In-, French invasion of Suez. Harry Howe
some members of Congress and others., formation Bureau used the initials for Ransom, of Harvard University, the ?
who want to turn a permanent flood- a book on the C.I.A. called, "Caught leading academic student of C.I.A., says
light on the most glamorous citadel 'in the Act." such events are "the top of the iceberg
of secrecy in the capital, the Central Public knowledge about the C.I.A. of a vast secret intelligence program.".'
Intelligence Agency.
is a blend of rumor, third-hand infor-, According to Professor Ransom, the
Though the C.I.A. has been under in- United States spends $2 billion a year
creasing criticism for more than three mation and a few hard facts, which on intelligence operations, of which
years, the present Congressional agi- the agency officially never, confirms C.I.A. spends over half a billion." It'
tation is considered the most serious. or denies. It has been accused of har- is the only agency of Government
Some critics would like to keep the boring geniuses, of which it has more
agency under constant Congressional , than its share, and also an assortment whose books are not open to the Gen-.
surveillance. Others want to dismem- of nuts, dolts and screwballs, and these eral Accounting Office or even to Con-
her it, to separate its three functions, also are not unknown. The late Sena- grass. It has about 10,000 employes in
-collecting information, evaluating it ! tor Joseph R. McCarthy said it was. Washington and maybe as many more
and carrying out secret operations. packed with Communists, and liberals I. elsewhere. In the past it has drawn',
The immediate provocation is the 'have said it is riddled with rightists. i heavily on Ivy League circles for lead-;
furor in South Vietnam, where at One reason for the wild speculation ership but today it employs. a wide
times the President of the United:. is lack of certain knowledge. Its basic 'variety of bright young lawyers, both'
States and the C.I.A. seem to be at statistics are not announced. Its budget ? r Ivy and non-Ivy, and acute business-
. , cross-:purposes. Ambassador Henry Ca- is. not printed where the public men, plus some middleaged foreigners
hot Lodge, under the impression,'which ' can see it, going through Congress in who know how to parachute from air-
.is correct, that C.I.A. men in foreign', fragments hidden in appropriations for , planes.
countries are supposed to do what the other Government activities. The num- If the American public knows little'
: Ambassador tells them, almost openly her and kind of its employes is an
challenged the C.I.A. chief in that official secret. A few of its grievous
area. The Saigon episode is the cul- failures have been fairly well docu-.
1 mination of a series of C.I.A. crises mented, its successes usually unan-
in recent times, most notably the crash nounced. There are true heroes and
of the U-2 plane in Russia just before ' undoubtedly some villains, but you
the summit conference of' 1960 and can't tell the players without a score-
card and no scorecard has ever been
the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of printed.
Cuba in 1961. There have been resolu- i Representative John V. Lindsay, of.
tions to put a rein on the agency in New York, one of the Congressmen
the last 10 sessions of Congress, but proposing a legislative watchdog com-
this year the possibilities of success are mittee over C.I.A., said in a speech re-
greater than ever before. cently that the agency failed to pre-
The C.I.A. finds itself under fire at dict the entry of Red China into the
an uneasy time in its history as a Korean War; that in 1956 a C.I.A.
secret agency. Its existence has al- agent told President Nasser to ignore
ways been known, of course, from the
time it was created by Congress in 1947,
a State Department message the
Egyptian leader was about to receive;
was deeply involved in
I
A
that the C
.
.
.
present form, its three chiefs-Gen., the East Berlin, Poznan and Hungarian
Walter Bedell Smith, Allen Dulles and
John McCone-have all been public fig- rebellions in the 1950's; that it was in-
ures. But only recently has the C.I.A. ; strumental in overthrowing the Mos-
taken on the aura of a conventional i, ' sadegh regime in Iran in 1953 and the
Government bureau. It used to live in' Arbenz regime in Guatemala in 1954,
drab anonymity in barrackslike build- The C.I.A. has come under fire for'
ings scattered around Washington's fostering the illusion that there was a
Foggy Bottom, behind the cover, "Gov- 3-to-1 missile gap between the Unitedl
ernment Printing Office." Its head- States and Russia in the nineteen-fif-'
quarters were so unpretentious that, ties when in fact there was not. Rafael
President Eisenhower and his chauffeur Trujillo's former chief of secret police
once got lost trying to find it and had said ? the -Dominican dictator was as-
to stop and telephone Allen Dulles for sassinated in 1961 with C.I.A. weapons,
instructions. and planning. And French newspapers.;
about the C.I.A., foreign- in-?
4telligence agencies honor It:
with unrelenting scrutiny.,
During the Korean war an im
portant but officially anony
mous C.I.A. executive, whom,
we will call Scattergood, was
,walking by the door of the'
Czech -Mission in Washington
when the doorman bowed and
'said gravely, "Good morning, :
'Dr. Scattergood."
It is a truism that 80 per,
,cent of intelligence is pure'
analysis of conventional doc-,
~uments to provide the basic.
,picture illuminated by shafts
,of less orthodox light sent in'
.by secret, agents. Most of its:
work is a boring battle of
routine words and numbers,'-
but upon it depends the reli-
ability of the world-wide in-
telligence report the C.I.A.
hands the President every
morning and its estimates of
national power aid intentions
at critical moments.
LHE present controversy,
though, is not concerned so
much with eith'sr the secret
agents or'the wan, specialists
reading foreign budget re-
ports. It. is over the 'more or
less secret,`,C.I.A. men abroad
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who work ofit of American em-
bassies. At the middle ranks world at a serious disadvan the era of "massive 'retalia-
of American 'diplomats, the case, a high State Depart-, tage. Its tradition, more than tion." There was a feeling'
political-officer 'level, about ment official wanted a few that of most powerful foreign that with the Strategic Air
half the men in an embassy I thousand dollars to back an offices,, was genuinely in favor Command a State Department
may be C.I.A. employes. If important union in danger of of open and correct foreign was unnecessary. The crown-
there are guerrilla oT other , being taken over by Marxists, relations. As the official del- ing catastroph? was the emer-
there ilitary operations, sev-. but the source`;pf money, the egation to regimes in power, gence of Wisconsin's Senator
eral hundred of the experts C.I.A., demurrA. Thus C.I.A. it had to show extreme deli- McCarthy whose attacks 'on
may be from C.I.A. does not make policy in any cacy in making contact with the department sent its pres-
f
Career diplomats have a
common complaint about
C.I.A. reporters abroad. They
are, say Foreign Service men,
not sufficiently sophisticated
but they have money to spend
and so have incomparably
...W-
more freedom and power than that it is more accurate to ing under 'a series of shatter- lion was eased by the fact.
regular diplomats. The C.I.A,: say it has expanded into areas ing blows. Under -President' that 'after 1953 Allen Dulles,
traditionally pays for infor unfilled by any ? other Ameri- Truman's Secretary of State, served as head of C.I.A., while
mation, though not necessar-' can agency. The post-war Dean Acheson, it was attacked, his older brother led the
ily in cash but through per- years brought a rude awaken- by Republicans and other crit-. State Department. In general,
sonal friendships that make' tog to the United States. The ics, and Acheson was held' they agreed to the new divi-
cars, and apartments easy to world was filled with' deadly up as an example of a striped- - sion of labor.
find, thereby cultivating a'. serious intrigue and manipula- pants, pussy-footing, cookie- As guerrilla warfare broke
sense of obligation and sym-' tion in which foreign socie- pushing diplomat aflutter be-, out in a number of areas,
'pathy. The C.I.A. rates its in- ties were no longer stable. Dy- fore the cynical toughs of Com-., the C.I.A. enlarged its mili-
formation on a scale from "1" I namic change was the by-word muniam. This was, particularly tary function. This was a novel
for absolutely reliable to "6" ' and many of these societies for Acheson, ridiculous criti- ' and unwelcome activity as far
,for unreliable and thinks this were on- the verge of becom- 'cism. But charges became po-: as the American military.
scale quite stringent (legend . big part of a global system litical issues with a national 'was concerned, particularly'
has it that -a report of Allen hostile to the United States. '.cry to "clean out" the State since the' Army was already
-Dulles was once rated "2"). Intervention, always a nasty Department. being reduced to a shadow .by~
But career diplomats think word in American diplomatic ;nd the domi-.:
free information is usually a history, even when it was budget cuts and
Eisenhower's vic- ' Wane of the Air Force and
lot better, and that the masses: practiced, became a major
of data 'collected by free- , technique of international re- tory, Acheson.was succeeded Navy, which had little interest
'! lations by John Foster. Dulles. He in petty fights on the ground.,
C wheeling C.I.A. men fall most- made no secret of his dislike of , By the time of the Bay of,
ly in the 2-3-4 categories while The State Department en- most of the State Department' Pigs, ' the C.I.A. ' was in ' the
the limited cables and pro- tared this unpleasant new career, apparatus. This was' 'paramilitary business 'on a
fessional perceptions of For-
Bien Service ffi fairly large scale, but this fi-.
i cers are
..;~ its men and Junctions. Tney
T.
were turned over to the De-
DOES the C.I.A. make poll t F partment of Defense. There
All
n D
ll
e
u
es in his new ?
. p* is now emerging, some ob-
.book, The Craft of Intelli servers think, significant ten-
"
l
~
gence, ca
ls this the most
sion between Defense and
harmful myth about C.I.A C T A as
ci .ll., ...141?' +1?d
p
et
uch m
_
m
ay .singe on ha4 ?:
is meant by "policy: tecreation lligence oAgency, Defense
may
C.I.A. certainly does not set
beginning of one
' be the of
national goals or make foreign ~ !~ ., ~?~~ t ~ `; *,,,,~e 1.,+en1?o,,.._ wia.ol.dne ??
such
goals and ,~' which the trade is prone.
?`
policy are usually general arfd
their implementation is left THE C.I.A. has its own
!unspeciJ'ied, permitting vast +?
discretion as to how best to problems, now that it is under
fire. In the time scale of the
achieve national. goals. The bureaucratic lii`esPan it is a
head of C.I.A. sits in the small P-
and crucial Executive Com- proaching middle-aged -
,mittee of the National Secur- s tability. The most dramatic.
.ity Council; the President has sign is the agency's new "Spy
many advisers but few get as Palace," a sparkling $50,000,-
respectful attention as he. 000, seven-story, million-.
T square-foot edifice of contem-;
IN the field C.I.A. men are porary design in Langley, Va.
Even his friends think that
'nominally, but not necessarily
the building is one of Allen,
In practice, under orders of Dulles' few serious errors and
the U.S. Ambassador. They refer to it sadly as "Allen's
ma
decid
which union
t
y
o
e
s
Folly." They feel it makes'
back, which opposition par- ; *'surveillance by enemy agents
SUPERSPIES"
-U
d
it
l
t
h
f
n
er
s
as
two c
ie
ties to subsidize, which new
s
s, General Walter Bedell easier. It is also a revelation
;papers to strengthen. In one Smith (left) and Allen W. Dulles, the C.I;A. attained great power. t. of the C.I.A.'s size and power,
ormal way out it is a major opposition groups, And it con=?' tige in Congress plummeting,!.
influence in the shaping of fronted the post-war diplo- demoralized its workers and!'
national behavior abroad. matic revolution during one damaged its influence abroad.,
Supporters of C.I.A. think of the saddest periods, in its' It-was during this it unfair to accuse' the agency history. g period:'
that the C.I.A. was born and'
of usurping State Department ..At precisely this time they hired its first 30,000 employes.
Approved For Release 2003/05/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R000600120023-0 ?
Continued
4
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;? a auu cum.ros the spenaing or of Congressional surveillance.
money. A joint committee ?of'The heaviest spectre that
oers nave been both deferen- Intelligence operatives re-
SUBCOMMITTEES of the,
CRITIC--Disturbed by C.I.A. activities in Vietnam, Ambassador House and Senate Armed Serv-
HenryCabot Lodge challenged the agency's authority there. ices and Appropriations Com-4'
that will raise the covetous,into a new era. Dulles grew mittees have nominal jurisdic-
hackles of other agencies - up in?the?middle of its history, tion over C.I.A. but they, too,
the State Department and De- took an 'active par', in interna- have acted gingerly. The at-
fense Department. look drab, tional drama, loved intelligence titude was epitomized by Sen
by comparison - and it makes
a dazzling target for Con-
case work and was fascinated ''Lur ieverett baltonstall, of
by the men who were in the Massachusetts, a member of
that. C.I.A. employes will be McCone, a businessman, be- said, after the U-2 affair, that
encouraged to feel pride in lieved to be far more rigid and he hesitated to probe too far
conventional bureaucratic; doctrinaire, and valued for his because "we might obtain in-
status rather than in an aris- unsentimental talents as an' formation which I personally
tocracy of silence, unorthodoxy" organizer rather than for his would rather not have."
and anonymity, stimulation of creative indi- The House C.I.A. subcom-
The emergence of the C.I.A. viduals. mittee meets about five times'
as a visible political fixture There- is an irreparable flaw a year and each session lasts
'goes on in small ways and in any defense C.I.A. makes less than three hours. The
large. A few years ago it! for itself: It is, in the best Senate subcommittee has had
,was not even listed in the: of circumstances, contrary to' about the same schedule for
Washington telephone book I conventional American demo-
but now it is, along with the ? cratic philosophy. The Ameri-
address of its, employment of- can ethic calls for self-deter-
fice in downtown Washington. mination by people abroad,
(This office, incidentally, is left with no outside interference,
scrupulously unmarked). The and it calls for an enlightened
C.I.A. recruits college gradu- electorate at home. It is
.ates (starting salary usually against secrecy in govern-
around $5,000) competing with,ment, its own and others.
the Peace Corps and General : Needless to say,, this ethic
to provide better pensions for, but it puts 'secrecy and inter-
spies. And the agency has par- ; ference on 'the defensive. The.
ticipated in two of Washing- C.I.A., more, than any other,
ton's most authoritative ritu- single agency, represents the.
als of bureaucracy: it has been, dilemma modern America
picketed (by pacifists) and it faces in a world where it pro-
has been beaten in a zoning claims the Democratic ethic the last ten years. It Is not
fight (b:y, among others, Mrs.. but where the consequences of ' likely that there is a thor-
Kennedy's stepfather). nuclear miscalculation and, ough review in 15. hours a
surprise are intolerable. year of an agency that spends,
THE retirement of Allen It is into this scene of con-, more than $500,000,000 in over,
Dulles and the appointment of , fusion and anxiety that Con- .70 countries.
John McCone symbolized for, gress is now moving, to ex-,: But intelligence executives
many the passage of C.I.A., ercise .its instinct to watch are appalled at : the Idea
both chambers has been pro- hangs over them is that of the
posed, to act as a select set late Senator McCarthy. But
of supervisors in the manner 'their fear is even deeper. No
of the Joint Committee on intelligence network in the
Atomic Energy. ' Nothing re- ' world operates in ; public. In
motely like the -surveillance ! its operations, lives are at
of atomic-energy matters now stake, policies are In balance
exists for intelligence opera-;'and crucial relations with both ,
tions. Secret operations of friendly and hostile nations
C.I.A. are under the jurisdie depend on discretion. The
tion of a special committee. agency must move quickly in.,
of the National Security Coun-i crisis,' and report to the Pres-
cil, but this is a highly secure' ident in utter candor no mat-
Presidential unit, hardly a * ter how unpopular its mes-
public overseer. There is also gage, -
a Presidentially appoint-` "I wouldn't mind a man like
ed board of consultants,. Mike Mansfield," one experi-
consisting of distinguished cit-. enced C.I.A. man said, "but
izens, but in its first six years when I think of a wrecker or
It has had a staff of nnly nna ~~-L~~~ ? u . a...- ~.~__~
member "Tawny Pipit," code
name for a C.I.A. operation
which McCarthy and his ally,
,.Senator, Pat McCarran, both
ruthless witch hunters,' helped
to break up., John Paton Dav-.
les, in 1949 a leading State
Department expert on the Far
East, devised the plan. It ,
would have created an Ameri-
can study group on China
made up of distinguished schol-
ars, including some pro-Com-
munists (as well as an unan-
nounced C.I.A. man). -The
group would inevitably make
contact with Red China; -the
pro-Communists . would be-
come the Red Chinese-Russian '
contacts- inside the study,.
group. Then . the ? C.I.A.
would introduce phony Intel-'
ligence about Russia to help.
sow dissension between the
two Communist allies. ?
M
. _cCAR,THY, to `publicize
his attacks ass Davies, used thin
as. "evidence" of Davies'' --pro..
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Continued
Approved
Communist" sympathies.
When General Smith- of the.
C.I.A. told McCarran's Inter-
nal Security Subcommittee the
'trutln, it was too late to save
either Davies or "Tawny Pi-
pit."
One alternative to Congres-
sional surveillance is more ex-
pliclit responsibility by the
President and the Secretary of
State. But this, too, presents
a problem. The C.I.A. is a
"dirty" operation and the.
President and the Secretary,
of State have to stay "clean."
Unpleasant things done in a
cynical world are rarely ad-
mitted by heads of state. And
two, exceptions, the , U-2 af-
fair' and the Bay of Pigs,
both harmed the position of
'the President of the United
States.
As the glamour of the black
arts decreases,. the boldness of
Congress will grow. Yet the
dilemma has no completely
satisfactory` solution: secret
intelligence is ? defeated by
publicity; democracy is de-.
feated by not enough.
Release 2003/05/0?: CIA-RDP80B@76R000600120023-0
7
PICTURE CREDITS
P. E NEW YORK TIMES
EOROe^^ TAMES AO.
TOGRAPH rC5' INC
19-TFIE'_171' V `V TIMES
(GEORGE TAMES)
20.21-HCNRI CARTIER-BRESSON
FROM MAGNUM; UPI
22-BETHLEHEM STEEL COMPANY
23-CONSULATE GENERAL OF IRAN
24.25-THE NEW YORK TIMES (PAT
BURNS); THE NEW YORK
ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY
26-RUTH BLOCK
H. BRODERICK, PUBLISHED BY
AVALON PRESS
41,44-DRAWINGS BY ROY DOTY
51-GERTRUDE SAMUELS-
55-56-DRAWINGS BY J. LEONE
58,61,66,68-DRAWINGS BY ARNO
COURTESY ALFRED A. KNOPF
INC.
-86-DRAWING BY ALICE GOLDEN
91-DRAWINGS BY DAVID PASCAL.
94-THE NEW YORK TIMES (SAM ]
FALK)
96-97-BROWN BROTHERS
98-ACME PHOTO
100-101-WN BC-TV
104-ABBY ALDRICH ROCKEFELLER
FOLK ART COLLECTION
105,106,107-DRAWINGS. BY ARNn
114,115-THE NEW YORK TIMES
(GEORGE TAMES)
116-CHARLES STEINHEIMER;
HORACE- BRISTOL FROM EAST
WEST. PHOTOGRAPHIC AGENCYI
117-PERKINS ENGINES LTD.; RENEI
BURRI FROM MAGNUM
121-PARIS MATCH 'FROM PICTORIAL;
PARADE
)24-SABINE WEISS FROM RAPHO. ;
GUILLUMETTE
0
STERNGLASS
70.71--COURTESY SMITHSONIAN
INSTITUTION
Oct. 27, 1963
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28 January 1965
STAT
STAT
STAT
hM emythin'g was. a sa14 fine.
*s acting on behalf of the OwarswaR
. Be said they Were
a
't t cloud = .
/A
~
and SOW frei a. He said they
STAT
XDWRAMM FOR TU) C?OR
aBJEcT: Tel en van from
1. This a r um is ?oz' information of y.
2? rphone this i rnom . t first a aot
with this orlA" 24 sien vmelcs . co rsat .an,, monitored by
gay secretary, Vent as tollcm:
were intaxest It vin$ t+hetbw Y x. *WOW *igbt be
ave+-Usbie to Saar' bef t'"e them. He sa.i m Wt of their
stuff is for' baskgtouM and it would be i Acre only
affair. ' said he had W. them that he vmga Apt in
touch with us to 9" if tblre is a than" of Mr. one + s
doing this. Pit told that he am" tU11 him right
now Out his mmover wou no. sa#d h had tam
up this sort of request with the DOI btftm.
Pata2 N. mien
Assistant to l retor
for Public At sirs
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STAT
--Approved F~ ase 2003 7Q5 CFA-RDP80BO 00069
+a.- i I
6 Jan"" 1965
M ODIUM FUR: Assistant Deputy DiwiWtor/Support
Director at Sec rrity
Assist at to the Director for
Publk Affairs
SUBJZCT
0120023-0
1. It bass been my objective for some years to try *0 give
the Agency & batter agsat as a "neighbor. fir When we first r" W"
the building I verged haves on. or two ?s, houses" sad inviting prom -
iness citizens in Fairiaa county to come and *so the building. I also
thought we might has *e a sir day for the fatMILUMs of Agcy employ*".
but at that time the r*e was so mach aaerrv ouo ss I-beut possible p licity
that I coul `t sell erlt iS of th " prOSMMs.
L Now that we have Whitt tins bless rrg fear off-thr-vecord
discussions with i tsi essm nt sad other pe+ ai citla about the
Agcy and what it does, I consider it nwot important that we should
start a regular sovies at visits to the bapldtag by fain de said neighbors
in the Washington saps with whom we dealilaerg.. TOW pis,
the 100 VwIV tartriti s r-gssw I mod- dine are sponsor" by
the Agency at Howarrd, Georg, Catholic, Aaaerso cans. Maryland and
Johns Hopkins Univstrsitdes. In nearly every Uw"Oes very senior
to aid in the iustan c, of
essay were presernt. All of
these people would dearly love to come out to the boUding for lunch, and
I plan to invite them. I also $"I that we slued have a lunch or l .has
for the local law aauf eat agencies who do so rawk to help the
Agency, and we x7aw 1"d this an by a lh for oil" Jame Layton Who
has recently takes ever the D. C. Metropolitan Ferrous. You may
recall that the last tlni* we
Mr. ])all" gave a hmeb for them following my ftsk to the International
Assaciatdon Of Chiefs Of Police in 1960. I also **U*" that we should
have the local ge rro t OAli+cilais such as the Fade u County lkwwd of
r s+ars said the mayors at to larger inure ocipa i r said the
principals of 14401 high schools, as well as o &w prrrami citisens.
All *I Me let directed tow and giving them a better Imp owsr on of CIA
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of AS g*irfas How Ge intss en.
^nd a recognition that we are ree sibiea a tiseas who wish to psrUciD -
in cs awafty airs. In regard to the lsttea. I belie" we show"
swc r employees to s.rve on nonpolitical bodies wboro they t
be of help to the c tlr. and would saute that I sin a T of the
Fait ax Hospital Association of ORR is a member 25X1
3. 1 would 10e to ask the three of yes to ceostltete, with
myself. As informal c Ir to work en We and to *"seaatveiy posh
it.
(signed) Lyman B. Kirkpatrick
Lyon I. R hest k
Eggs PI Ista
LBK:drm
Distribution:
Original and 2 - Addressees
U- ER
1 - ExDir
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Approved Fooelease 2003/05/05: CIA-RDP80BO11 68000600120023-0
1964
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