PLAN FOR PANEL TO OVERSEE C.I.A. PASSES SENATE COMMITTEE TEST

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP01-01773R000100130070-3
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 22, 2012
Sequence Number: 
70
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 13, 1966
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OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP01-01773R000100130070-3.pdf348.68 KB
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-'=- `-.-.,. w...- wwu s Vuu&ese regllW _ _. . .... ...... ............?.... __ __ __ _ ._-,--_ 1ueJ1tJ. LWLVWeQ au 61L'LLIj,'111. Jl t'ta..-et?_~ ~v..a ?e ~_.__ .__. a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/22 : CIA-RDPO1-01773R000100130070-3 id emu spring Was traditionally beenlplete confusion." He grinned e ? hadfree r n of one bf the biggest seasons for broadly at the uproar of laugh- of them women women had free run of the huildin?. Administration of- The big drop cant at the The procurement memoran-lrtciats stayea sway' 1v,Luwu5 Etheir own prearranged plan to which today reported car sales off 24 per cent.,) The Chrysler Corporation was down nearly 14 per cent. The . Ford Motor Company said its total for the period was up 4.5 per cent, to 59,065 from understood to have outlined procedures that may have led the Joint Chiefs into thinking that they would have to request "contract definition funds in- volving development money in A company - by - company' morally to approving full-scale Ylbreakdown for the first thirdlproduction. of the month is ~s follows: i This, Mr. McNamara made y h -- May 1-10 May 1-10cleP today, was an erroneous 1966 1965 impression. ---- Dore motor Go...t...OY.uoa oO,ollo -'-?'---?-'/ .?-"_ ".-- ---- -- fin Lne DWLPn15. General Motors ..4...96,640 127,194 Chiefs had not sought funds. The incident hrew the cam- New car sales,' a key element,for "full development" of theipus into a turmoil with indica- , Continued on Page 26, Column S I Continued on Page 9, Column 1 tions that stud t demands for r- la stronger voic7in policy mak- 3~M) COMPLEX: Governor Rockefeller and Mayor Lindsay of buildings at left-that would be bout on lfHed-ta land wars at center Ism those of the proposed World Trade Center. avoid incidents that would lead to arrests and newspaper and television pictures. Janitors Manned Building Great Hall between the college they were unable to comment onlStates president and the students be. Peking's protest. flown gan as an orderly exchange, but There were growing indica- during it ended angrily when Dr. Gal- Lions, meanwhile, that the Unit- betwee lagher was forced to leave for ed States was increasing its air Pipyn a meeting of the faculty. raids" on North Vietnam. but If t1, Several students raced for a high officials said they had re- clash i microphone, shouting insults ceived no reports, about an inci- be t#e and demanding that Dr. Gal- dent, or even the possibility of an t 1-1- sta . near or be to continue the incident ond the , y y This morning when the debate. Chinese frontier. IPIUM weary studentS blocked the air !a "Gallagher's actions are lure- The officials said they had no The doors in what amounted to al " d sponsible, one student asserted evi ence to support or refute barricade the word went out to "He has a responsibility to thelthe Chinese charge and had to stay away. Mai ning the build- students." await the results of a special ing were only 4 few janitors, "He hasn't met our de- investigation. three public relations men, andmands," another shouted. 'Let's The Administration was re- switchboard Operators who just go up there and sit in." ported by a number of officials were needed bcause the cars-+ Several students began toito be close to a decision to ing was becomi g an issue co- equal with the draft question. In the first floor lobby of the building, professors participated in the sit-in dis ussion on both' sides. Tonight, Prof. Gerhard E. O. Meyer, a economist who left Germany in 1933, called the sit-in a "self-d eating tactic." He said his a perience made him oppose " iticalization of Continued on ge 4, Column a 28 Seized vt Dawn InL.I.BO kieRaids By RON OBANA Special to The w York Tnes Scores of N men swarmed North Shore o6 I., May 12 - County police- unities at day- est 28 persons to have taken a year. Among those Ing many who from pajam clothes, were sional golfer, barber and a h at the suspects ments too costl ous means of their homes ii'e Head. Syosset; and Sea Cliff. ad to change into street vel company, ve in environ- for their obvi- East Nor9Hch Continued on P e te, CNumn e turned to their seats at the re-(Vietnam, possibly including the quest of leaders. oil depots near Haiphong. Dr. Gallagher contended that The American, attacks on Continued an Page 3, Column 1 bond desalt Ch" ineI n act of Johaeo: . The . abroad cats ti imasedi what .- l Plan I r Panel to Oversee C. I. A. 1> Pas es enate Committee, Test nose ;>cl arv Wit By TOM MCK) B WASHINGTON, May 12-A In that year, a' or M" . 1 enat, proposal for ?a new and Mansfield, Dem Yon. broadened Senate committee to tans, now the leader, .i oversee the Central Intelligence brought a resoluttol-" br a joint AWV* gency won a surprisingly ens to-Hotue , oversight east. victory today in a test vote in mittee to the Senate floor with, the Foreign Relations Commit- 34' co-sponsors. Ultimately, "-t tha Opponents of the proposal prevented its final approval only when Senator Frank J. Lausche, Democrat of Ohio, walked out of the meeting room and left no?quorum present. Senator Stuart Symington, Demoirat of Missouri, then exercised a parliamentary right and objected to a vote when a quoruln was not present. final action was this pc t- poned until Tuesday, wliep the committee meets again. The test vote was 11 to ? against tabling, and thus kill- ing, a resolution by Senator Eu- gene J. McCarthy, Democrat of Minnesota. I The resolution would establish a formal Senate committee of nine members, empowered to employ a staff, to oversee the nation's foreign intelligence op- erations. Its tentative approvil by the Foreign Relations Committee was the ? strongest mew to, wai(rd strengthened Congreselon- }l oversigkt.ot-the C.I.A. Since 1 ifs resolution was beaten, ae to 27, with-14 of the sp ? rs than, _ The likely .prospeet is that cCarthy remrtioa also . . see a hard fight on tee flee , with defended "'or the Pmt V' "watchdog". system rlo~ected. Prevail. The. riiate n*. has two ,in- formal 3abeemnutte6s, 'one of 4 the Armed Forces Ca"ttee and another of the'Appropria+$aa=t Lions Committee, that meet to. *k-fill gether to review'C.LA' aetivl emit t ties. Senator Riche $.. us. now sell, Democrat of Georgia, is the alak? senior menbir of the nine- man "watchdog" group, which em- ploys no staff. Several weeks ago, Senator J. W. Fhlbright' .of Arkansas, dulirmpn of the Ford" RNs, ANA ..... tjons Cahmmittee, propose4. that Must three nimbus 'of his committee ale . be added N,to-- the watchdog Cwtalre group. Senator Russell rejected [dulls the proposal, ina letter not yet flow Tat made public. ru"o The 19eCarthgrs'esolution went tea b W Continued in Pags S, Colman 1 pen Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/22 : CIA-RDP01-01773R000100130070-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/22 6. L TIMES, FRIDAY, A C.I.A. CHECKREIN Rep. Mills Dooms W WINS SENATE TEST will Most offer ed T Time' doetlnued PY'om Page 1, CdL 7 BiQ J?IluaoR warmed beyond the Fulbright proposal. By JOHN W. FINNEY In effect, it would replace apdat to Tip Ni. York Timm the Informal watchdog group WASHINGTON, May 12 - With a nine-man stassding corn- The Administration's proposal mittee with three members to liberalise trade with Com- ` ? each from the Armed Forces, mental nations of Eastern Eu. Appropriations and Foreign Re. rope was dealt an unexpectedly latioas committees, swift and fatal blow in Con- The committee would have grass today by. Representative urisdiftic+a Over all of what is Wilbur D. Mills, chairman of Inown here as 'intelligence the House Ways and Meaty community." dttton to the Comm ittee. C.I.A., that include the The influential Arkansas Defense Intelligence Agency, Demccrat announced that he the Bureau of Intelligence and would not introduce the legisla. Research of the State Depart. tion, submitted yesterday b meat, and other Government the State. Department on ehalf agenda dealing in foreign In. of the White House. Further- te Bence or counterintelligence. more, Mr. Mills ruled cot any The Federal Bureau of In- committee hearings 'on the legs Vestigation would be included, islation this year. . too to the extent that it deals , "I want to make my position with intelligence mattel clear," he told reporters. "I ant Proponents of the resolution, not for it." long restive at what they col He later added the qualifica- extensive sidered the lax operations of tin that he was not for the sioft as p the watchdog group, conceded legislation "af this time." process d that the major significance of Mr. Mills's negative. stand on the bpposi their move would lie in getting the proposed legislation came as to passag the Senate to approvQ the estab- a.distinct disappointment to the next year, lishment of a formal committee Administration. The leg that would include' Foreign The Administration had no eonsiderat Relations members. hopes that the legislation would tration, They said that if the resole- be.-passed at this session of dent discr Von was approved, they would not necessarily press for the employment of a staff, which Senator Russell and the pres.; The siz, Presumably would also be privy ant watchdog grou might se.+ tabling t the chan c to the anes' lassified nformati norets ~davod floor debate~aboutrthe~sibleswhe The proponents contend that C.I.A., its activities and the! proxy vo the senior members of the Ap- efficacy of Congressional col Senators propriations and Armed Forces trol procedures. I ruing and1' committees on the sent It was more widely believed, I necticut, b watchdog group are too Pro- however, that Mr. Russell would! had genet+ tectlve and do not sufff entry be able to. muster the votes to reluctantI inquire Into the effect of the defeat the resolution on the system. agency's activities on the sin- floor. No proposal to broaden All of. ~t tion's foreign relations. . Congressional oversight of ? the were Deer Some sources suggested that intelligence agency has been ap- Lausche si if the Foreign Relations Com- proved since Congress estab- oppositio mittee approved the resolution fished it and the informal watch- olution wqe{ Tuesday, as it is expected to, dog group in 1947, tors Bourk Trading With the Red b? . ? delayin 'adios Then M IA Noose Lder 0 tt `io PPssaI-lob~ected tp furs Tariffs for 'Eastern Bee tae whole matte CIA-RDPO1-01773R000100130070-3 THE NEW YORK er tariffs to the Soviet. Union mein he tha and Communist entries in shment of theire Eastern Europe-with the. esc- would "tend to mo caption of East Germany.Aby of the C.I.A. uain granting them "most favored of the C.and d nation" tariff treatment. step toward beta In submitting the legislation with the agency. Vol with ht on Dean Rusk sSecretary of aid the authority and Mr. es rulbright would give the United States Jo tabling resolution an important political tool in John Mansfield, D Eastern Europe. Albert G Gore oore of Ter" From the start the Adminis- oho tration realized that bec8tise of Clarkh of of Pesibsyl the war in Vietnam the political borne Pell of R>iod elimate on Capitol Hill was Wayne Morse of hostile to any move toward in. Democrats. creasing peaceful trade with the . Senator Clifford Communist bloc. New Jersey, a Rey TG. it" York Ttma It was largely for this reason stained from votln bnr J), bgjp, that the White House hesitated bling motion: for weeks in submitting the legislation, romised by But It had 'hoped' for President J hid State West EtlrOpe hearings and discus- of the Union M Ties With'eAntirr it of an educational The Administration,, however, bsigned to overcome apparently underestimated the s0ed.r to 2%0 new I Lion and lead the way extent of the political opposi- VIENNA,' Ha of the legislation tion. Illustrative of the adverse members of 15 We poiftical reaction was the fact pslation, long under; that it was still uncertain ' rhich Communist pantie ion by the Adminis- Representative was going to three-day secret me ould give the, Presiintroduce the bill fo the Ad- a statement today etionary authority to;ministrati6n. liances with "anti forces " including E ties and Roman of the vote against+Iowa, Frank Carlson of Kansas, ganizations. McCarthy resolution John Williams of Delaware and The statement a sing. It was made pos- Karl Mundt of South Dakota, pose of the meet Mr. McCarthy cast Mr. McCarthy, long a critic investigate p s against tabling for of the C.I.A. and of the Russell alliances wit ;ale McGee of Wyo-1group, offered the resolution ashorganizations i'homas Dodd of Con-'a substitute for another that rope. oth Democrats. They{would have provided $150,000 It noted p Lily been regarded as for an investigation of the for- allowing new o change the present:eIgn t! policy effects of C.I.A. ac- conditions dti sis' in the hose against tabling ' Mr. Hickenlooper moved to Treaty Organ ocrats. Joining Mr.;table the McCarthy motion, and Common Mar id Mr. Symington in lost. Mr. Lausche then moved The Aust to the McCarthy res- to send it to the Rules Com- party distr'ibp re Republican Seca- mittee, which ultimately will the discussicr e B. Hickenlooper of have to consider it and approve ference. AnAmericanwayof life L. I Ln aa at PnEs Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/22 : CIA-RDP01-01773R000100130070-3