TRIP TO AUSTIN, TEXAS TO ADDRESS THE AUSTIN COUNCIL ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND FRIENDS OF THE LBJ LIBRARY
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP89G00720R000800040002-7
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
28
Document Creation Date:
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 24, 2013
Sequence Number:
2
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 24, 1988
Content Type:
MEMO
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP89G00720R000800040002-7.pdf | 1.2 MB |
Body:
STAT
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24 May 1988
MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: William M. Baker
SUBJECT: Trip to Austin, Texas to Address the
Austin Council on Foreign Affairs and
Friends of the LBJ Library
1. This is background information for your trip to Austin on 26-27 May
to address the Austin Council on Foreign Affairs (ACFA) and Friends of the
Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) Library, and to attend a reception and dinner.
The event will take place at the LBJ Library, 2313 Red River Street, on the
campus of the University of Texas. Bill Devine will accompany you on the
trip. Contact phone number: (512) 482-5986 or (512) 471-4441 x256.
2. Arrangements for your Address: You are asked to be at the LBJ
Library at 5:45 p.m.-- or the time that your arrival allows-- on the 8th floor
in the offices of the Director of the LBJ Library,-ffarry, a. Middleton.
Mr. Middleton and Admiral Bobby Inman will meet and escort you to the
Frank C. Erwin Atrium for your address. Mr. Middleton will give opening
remarks and you are scheduled to speak at 6:05 p.m. Admiral Inman will
introduce you. The suggested format is 25 minutes of remarks followed by
30 minutes of questions and answers. Adjournment is at 7:00 p.m. and
Admiral Inman will give closing remarks. A microphone and podium will be
available on the dais. Mr. Middleton and Admiral Inman will be seated in the
front row. DCI security is taping your remarks for the Agency's historical
files. The LBJ Library is videotaping the program for its records and with
your consent will release it to Austin Cable TV and to the Ford Forum in
Boston. Prior to release you will be sent a copy of the tape for approval.
As long as we have the right of refusal, I recommend that we agree to this
broader coverage. A still photographer will be available to take
photographs. Any quotes published from your speech in the Friends's
Newsletter are to be reviewed by this office.
Approximately 500 members of the Austin Council on Foreign Affairs and
friends of the LBJ Library will be in the audience. The attendees represent
leaders of the business and university communities interested in foreign
affairs. Although the media has not been invited to cover the event, a
reporter could be in the audience. The organization does not know whether
foreign nationals will be present. Mr. James T. McInnis who is the Agency's
Officer-in-Residence at the University of Texas will attend. (See tab for his
biography.)
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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3. Reception and Dinner: After your speech, you are asked to proceed to
the wine and cheese reception in the Great Hall on the 2nd floor of the
Library. There will not be a receiving line. At 7:30 p.m. Admiral Inman will
escort you to the private dinner in the Presidential Suite on the 8th floor.
The following will be attending the dinner:
WY\
Admiral and Mrs. Bobby Inman (Nancy)
Dr. William Livingston (Lana) Vice President, University of Texas and
Dean of Graduate Studies
*Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Middleton (Miriam) Director, LBJ Library
*Mr. and Mrs. Walt Rostow (Elspeth)
Mr. Bill Devine
*(See tab for biographies of dinner attendees as well as other University
officials that you may meet during the event.)
4. Background: The Austin Council of Foreign Affairs has a membership
of approximately 400 business, community, and academic leaders. (See
background tab for list of the Council's Board of Directors.) Friends of the
LBJ Library have a local and national membership of 1600. In many cases,
members belong to both organizations. The Council and the LBJ Library have
joint meetings when the lecturer for the program speaks on foreign affairs.
Since 1971, the Friends have had a distinguished lecturer program.
Michael Dukakis, John Kenneth Galbraith and General William C. Westmoreland
have addressed the organization recently. (See tab for list of speakers.)
A half million people visit the LBJ Library museum exhibits and displays
each year. The building and grounds of the LBJ Library, the first to be
located on a university campus, were donated by the University of Texas and
are operated by the National Archives of the General Services Administration.
(See front pocket for brochures.)
The climate toward the Agency at the University of Texas has not been all
positive. Recently, our Agency's Officer-in-Residence James McInnis was
challenged on his role as a lecturer at the University and accused of helping
"recruit college students to work for CIA." On March 22 Art Hunlnick was the
keynote speaker of a three-day program on campus about the CIA which included
a speech by John Stockwell. About a week later when our recruiters were on
campus there was an anti-CIA demonstration involving about 150 students who
"pounded on office windows and doors where CIA recruiters were interviewing."
Since the University is on break, no demonstrations are expected. (See tab
for news articles.)
Office of Personnel reports that
work for the Agency.
alumni from the University of Texas
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
WV>
William M. Baker
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urriulm. UML-I
DDCI SCHEDULE/CONTACTS
AUSTIN, TEXAS -
26-27 May 1988
Thursday, 26 May
1:00 p.m. EDT Depart, National Airport
Agency aircraft
5:30 p.m. CDT Arrive, Austin Airport
5:45 p.m. Arrive,- University Of Texas
Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) Library
Office of the Director,, 8th floor
2313 Red giver Street
Phone: (512) 482-5986 or (512) 471-4441 X256
Met by Admiral Bobby Inman
President of Austin Council of Foreign Affairs (ACFA)
Mr. Harry J. Middleton _
Director, LBJ Library
6:UU p.m.
Frank C. Erwin Atrium, 8th floor
Opening remarks, Harry Middleton
Introduction, keynote speaker
Admiral Bobby Inman
6:05 p.m. Address
The Honorable Robert M. Gates
26 minutes of remarks and 30 minutes of Q&A
7:00 p.m. Closing remarks
Admiral Bobby Inman
7:05 p.m. Reception, Great Hall, 2nd floor
I:30 p.m. Private dinner, Presidential Suite, 8th floor
9:30 p.m. Adjourment
Remain overnight
Friday, 27 May
Depart midmorning, Austin Airport
Agency Aircraft
Arrive, Wichita, Kansas
(Contact for arrangements: Assistant Director LBJ Library Charles Cockran
Phone: (512) 482-5137)
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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ADDRESS:
POSITION:
HISTORY:
HARRY J. MIDDLETON
DIRECTOR
LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON LIBRARY
2313 RED RIVER STREET
AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705
REPORTER, ASSOCIATED PRESS, NEW YORK, NEW YORK.
NEWS EDITOR, ARCHITECTURAL FORUM MAGAZINE
(TIME, INC.) NEW YORK, NEW YORK
WRITER AND DIRECTOR, THE MARCH OF TIME
FREE-LANCE WRITER AND CONSULTANT. ASSIGNMENTS INCLUDED:
STAT
ARTICLES AND STORIES FOR VARIOUS MAGAZINES (READER'S
DIGEST; SPORTS ILLUSTRATED) COLLIER'S; COSMOPOLITAN;
LIFE).
-- PUBLICATION OF THE COMPACT HISTORY OF THE KOREAN WAR,
BY HAWTHORN BOOKS, INC., 1965
-- PUBLICATIONS AND MOTION PICTURES FOR GOVERNMENT
AGENCIES AND COMMERCIAL CLIENTS
PUBLICATION OF A NOVEL, (PAX), RANDOM HOUSE, 1958
PREPARATION OF REPORT OF PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON
SELECTIVE SERVICE (1966-67)
JANUARY 1967 TO JANUARY 20, 1969:
STAFF ASSISTANT TO PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON
IN THE WHITE HOUSE.
WROTE SPEECHES FOR THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
AND MESSAGES TO THE CONGRESS DELINEATING NEED FOR
NEW LEGISLATION.
JANUARY 20, 1969 TO MAY 18, 1970:
SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE FORMER PRESIDENT.
WORKED WITH PRESIDENT JOHNSON IN THE PREPARATION
OF HIS MEMOIRS OF HIS PRESIDENCY, THE VANTAGE POINT.
WROTE DRAFT OF THE CHOICES WE FACE, BY PRESIDENT JOHNSO
WROTE SPEECHES FOR THE FORMER PRESIDENT.
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WALT WHITMAN ROSTOW
Mr. Rostow was born October 7, 1916, in New York City. He
received a B. A. degree from Yale University in 1936; Ph. D. from Yale in
1940; attended Balliol College, Oxford, England, 1936-38, as a Rhodes
Scholar.
His career as an educator began in 1940 when he became an instructor
of economics at Columbia University. During the Second World War (1942-45)
he served as a Major in the OSS. After the war Mr. Rostow joined the State
Department as Assistant Chief of the German-Austrian Economic Division.
He later returned to teaching, as the Harmsworth Professor of American
history, Oxford University, England, 1946-47.
In 1947 he became the Assistant to the Executive Secretary of the
Economic Commission for Europe. He returned to England in 1949 to spend
a year at Cambridge University as the Pitt Professor of American history.
From 1950-1961 Mr. Rostow was Professor of Economic history at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and from 1951-1961 he was also a
staff member of the Center for International Studies, M. I. T.
In January 1961 President Kennedy appointed Mr. Rostow as Deputy
Special Assistant to the Presidetitlor National Security Affairs. . He served
in that capacity until December 1961 when he was appointed Counselor of
- the Department of State-and Chairman of the Policy Planning Council,
Department of State; in May 1964 the President appointed him to the additional
duty of United States Member of the Inter-American Committee on the
Alliance for Progress (CLAP) (with the rank of Ambassador). He served in
these latter two capacities until early 1966, when President Johnson called
him back to the White House as his Special Assistant for National Security
Affairs, where he remained until January 20, 1969. In February 1969
Mr. Rostow returned to teaching, at The University of Texas at Austin, as
Professor of Economics and History. Mr. Rostow is the Rex G. Baker Jr.
Professor of Political Economy.
Mr. Rostow received the Order of the British Empire (honorary,
military division)(1945), the Legion of Merit (1945), and the Presidential
Medal of Freedom (with distinction)(1969).
He was a member of the Board of Foreign Scholarships, January 1969
to December 1971.
Member of the Elizabethan Club, New Haven; Massachusetts Historical
Society; Cosrros Club; American Academy of Arts and Sciences; American
Philosophical Society; Austin Council on Foreign Affairs .
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Mr. Rostow is the author of:
The American Diplomatic Revolution, 1947
Essays on the British Economy of the Nineteenth Century, 1948
The Growth and Fluctuation of the British Economy, 1790-1850,
with A. D. Gayer and A. J. Schwartz, 1953, 1975
The Process of Economic Growth, 1953, second edition, 1960
The Dynamics of Soviet Society, with A. Levin and others, 1952, 1967
The Prospects for Communist China, with others, 1954
An American Policy in Asia, with R. W. Hatch, 1955
A Proposal: Key to an Effective Foreign Policy, with M. F. Millikan,
1957
The Stages of Economic Growth, a Non-Communist Manifesto, 1960,
second edition, 1971
The United States in the World Arena, 1960
(edited) The Economics of Take-off Into Sustained Growth, 1963
View From the Seventh Floor, 1964
A Design for Asian Development, 1965
East-West Relations: Is Detente Possible?, with William E.
Griffith, 1969
Politics and the Stages of Growth, 1971
The Diffusion of Power, 1972
- How It All Began, 1975
The World-Economy: History and Prospect, 1978
Getting From Here to There, 1978
Why the Poor Get Richer and the Rich Slow Down: Essays in
the Marshallian Long Period, 1980
British Trade Fluctuations, 1868-1896: A Chronicle and A
Commentary, 1981 (Dissertation, 1940)
Pre-Invasion Bombing Strategy: General Eisenhower's Decision
of March 25, 1944, 1981
The Division of Europe after World War II: 1946, 1981
Europe after Stalin: Eisenhower's Three Decisions of March 11, 1953,
1982
Open Skies: Eisenhower's Proposal of July 21, 1955, 1982
The Barbaric Counter-Revolution: Cause and Cure, 1983
Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Foreign Aid, 1985
The United States and the Regional Organization of Asia and
the Pacific: 1965-1985 (1986)
Rich Countries and Pbor Countries: Reflections from
the Past, Lessons for the .Tuture J1987)
Essays on a Half Century: Ideas, Policies, and Action
(forthcoming)
Mr. Postow is married to the former Elsoeth Vaughan Davies.
They have two children: Peter and Ann.
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r T ? FACULTY - STAFF INFORMATION
rHE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
Information Service ? Box Z, University Station, Austin, Texas 78712
Elspeth Davies Rostow, former dean of the Lyndon B. Johnson School
of Public Affairs at The University of Texas, holds the Stiles
Professorship in American Studies and also is a professor in the LBJ School
and in the Department of Government.
Her principal scholarly interest is the institutional analysis of
American government.
Mrs: Rostow has held a number of administrative appointments since
coming to UT Austin in 1969. She was acting director of the American
Studies Program, 1970-71; chairman of Comparative Studies, 1972-74;
acting dean, 1974-75, and then dean, 1975-77, of the Division of General
and Comparative Studies, and dean of the LBJ School, 1977-1983.
Between July 1983 and July 1984, she and her husband, Dr. Walt W.
Rostow, who holds the, Rex G. Baker Jr. Professorship of Political Economy,
were on leave from the University, lecturing in 34 countries around the
world under auspices of the U.S. Information Service. During Oct. 1983,
they also were Distinguished Fulbright Lecturers in India.
For the academic year of 1984-85, Mrs. Rostow was one of 13 scholars
in the U.S. serving as a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, an appointment
that entailed presenting guest lectures at several out-of-state colleges
and universities.
For more than a dozen years, she was chairman of a planning committee
which brought to the campus national and international authorities from
many fields to participate in symposia sponsored jointly by the LBJ School
of Public Affairs and the LBJ Library and Museum.
Mrs. Rostow previously has been a director of the Lyndon Baines
Johnson Foundation, trustee of the College Entrance Examination Board,
. .
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2--UT--Elspeth Davies Rostow
Commission for a National Agenda for the Eighties.
Currently, she is a member of the American Enterprise Institute's
Advisory Committee on Competing in a Changing World Economy, the Texas
Philosophical Society and the board of directors of the Saliburg Seminar.
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Barnard College, Mrs. Rostow earned an
M.A. degree from Radcliffe College and a second M.A. from Cambridge
University. She completed requirements for the Ph.D. degree, short of
thesis, at Radcliffe.
She has a wide background in the social sciences and has taught at
major universities in this country and abroad.
Her teaching career has included appointments at Barnard College,
Sarah Lawrence, College, the Salzburg Seminar in Austria, University of
Zurich, Cambridge University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
American University and Georgetown University.
She has been a lecturer for the Department of State in Europe and
formerly organized and conducted a "Seminar for Diplomats" for the State
Department. She is a former lecturer for the Foreign Service Institute.
In addition, she has been a lecturer for the Air War College
(1963-76), Army War College (1965, 1968 and 1969), National War College
(1962, 1968, 1974, 1975), Industrial College of the Armed Forces (1961-65)
and Naval War College (1971).
During World War II, Mrs. Rostow was a research associate with the
Office of Strategic Services, 1943-45. She was the Geneva correspondent
for the London Economist, 1947-49.
Her publications include "Europe's Economy After the War" (1948),
"The Political Economy of Partnership" (in "America Now," 1968),
"Realignment for Whom?" (in "The Coattaillers Landslide," 1974), and
articles, reviews and poems.
Mrs. Rostow is a native of New York City. She and her husband are
the parents of two children, Peter Vaughan Rostow and Ann Lamer Rostow.
1985
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Lyndon Baines Johnson Library
CHARLES W. CORKRAN
2313 Red River Street Austin, Texas 78705
Currently Assistant Director, Mr. Corkran has
been with the Library since November, 1968. This
followed a year's service as Director of the
Archives Division, Texas State Library. Before
that he was an archivist with the Herbert Hoover
Presidential Library in West Branch, Iowa. Mr.
Corkran holds an MA degree in history and a BA
degree in government from The University of Texas
at Austin. He is married and has a son and a
daughter.
A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Recontc Administration
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11130Q? ? ?
HOBBY, WILLIAM PETTUS, state official, broadcast executive; b. Houston.
Jan. 19, 1932;s. William Pettus. and ?yea (Culp) H.; m. Diana Potcat Stallings,
Sept. II, 1954; children: Laura Potcat (Mrs. John Scckworth), Paul William,
Andrew Purefoy, Katherine Pettus. B.A., Rice U.. 1953. With Houston Post
Co.. 1957-83; vice chmn. Channel Two TV Co.. KPRC Radio Co.. Houston,
- 1970-83, chmn.. chief exec. officer, 1983?; chmn. bd., chief exec. officer
Channel Five TV, Nashville. 1975?, Channel Four TV, Tucson. 1982?,
KCCI-TV. Des Moines. I985?. WESH-TV. Daytona Beach. Fla.. 1985?;
prcs. H & C Communications.- Inc., 1979-83, chmn. bd., chief- exec. officer,
' 1983?; It. gov.. Tex., 1973?; Chmn. Nat.. Conf. Lt. Govs.. 1976-77;
, Parliamentarian Tex. Senate, 1959. Served to it. (j.g.) USNR. 1953-57. Mem.
Tex. Hunter and Jumper Assn. (dir. 1953?.-- pres. 1959-60). Houston
Symphony Soc... Jefferson Davis Assn.. Hobby Found.. auto Found.. Houston
C. of C. Office: State Capitol Austin TX 78711 Office: H & C Communications
Houston TX 77056
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Austin Council on Foreign Affairs (AGFA) Board Members
PROF. BARBARA ALDAVE
MR BOB ARMSTRONG
MS AUDREY BATEMAN
DEAN BILLYE BROWN
MR ROY BUTLER:
MS. LIZ CARPENTER
MR. GEORGE CHRISTIAN
MR WILLIAM CROOK
MS. JOY DAVENPORT
DR. PETER FLAWN
THE HON. WILL GARWOOD
THE HON. TOM GEE
MR. JIM GEORGE
MR. JOHN HARMON ?
MR. BEN T. HEAD
MR WILLIAM B. Htt.GERS
MR. LEROY HILLER
OR. WAYNE INGRAM
PROF F.?TOMASSON JANNUZi
MR. LARRY JENKINS
MRS. LYNOON B. JOHNSON
MR. AND MRS. MARTIN KERMACY
MR. JOE KILGORE
MR JOHN KING. SR.
MS. TINA KL:NKHAmER
MR BOB LANE
MR AND MRS. FELIPEA.ATORRE
MR. LOWELL LEBERMANN
PROF WINFRED LEHMANN ? -
MR MICHAEL LEVY
PROF. RAY MARSHALL
PROF. JANICE MAY
MR. FRANK W McBEE. JR.
MR. HARRY MIDDLETON
MR CRAIG PEDERSEN
MR. NASH PHILLIPS
,,MR; PIKE-POWERS .
MR. ROBERT PRESENT
THE HON. THOMAS REAVLEY
PROF MARSHAL ROSE NBLUTH
PROF. W W ROSTOW
PROF ELSPETH ROSTOW
MS. CAROLE KEETON RYLANDER
MRS. GREICHEN SABIN
MRS. Jar MANNING SCOTT
DEAN MAX SHERMAN
MRS. 0 J SIBLEY. JR
MR. JAY SMITH
PROF. HARLAN SMITH
PROF. ROMAN SMOLUCHOWSKi
MR NEAL SPELCE
MR LARRY TEMPLE
DEAN JIM VICK .
MR. MACK WALLACE
MR JOHN WATSON
PROF LOUISE WEINBERG
PROF. STEVEN WEINBERG
RF NATr10 0 A ? ritA ??n
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LBJ LIBRARY
DISTINGUISHED LECTURERS
Prime Minister Harold Wilson
Averell Harriman
Elliot Richardson
Sam Ervin
Henry Kissinger
Dean Rusk
Martin Blumenson
Clark Clifford
Wilbur Cohen
John Wickman
Matthew J. Bruccoli
Richard Fenno
Douglass Cater
H. Wayne Morgan
William Leuchtenberg
James Rowe
H. Wayne Morgan
(USA 1880s exhibit speaker)
Allen Schick
Martin Blumenson
Virginia Durr (Evening With)
James L. Sundquist
George Reedy (Evening With)
Dean Rusk (Evening With)
David F. Powers
Horace Busby (Evening With)
Spring 1971"
December 7, 1972
January 31, 1974
March 3, 1975
November 7, 1977
March 10, 1978
May 5, 1978
March 30, 1979
May 9, 1979
May 11, 1979
November 1, 1979
April, 1980
October 29, 1980
April, 1981
November 4, 1981
March 1, 1982
April 16, 1981
April 28, 1982
April 29, 1983
February 13, 1984
February 17, 1984
March 7, 1984
April 16, 1984
May 16, 1984
September 17, 1984
5/17/88
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-Distinguished Lecturers Page 2
L
John Gable (speaking on
Lewis Gould Theodore
Kathleen Dalton Roosevelt)
October 15, 1984
John B. Connally October 29, 1984
(First Frank Erwin Lecturer)
Bess Abell (Evening With) December 13, 1984
Madame Jehan el-Sadat February 1, 1985
U. Alexis Johnson (Evening With) March 6, 1985
Ramsey Clark (Evening With) March 19, 1985
Charles B. MacDonald May 9, 1985
John Kenneth Galbraith December 6, 1985
(Evening With)
Robert S. Strauss December 12-, 1985
(Second Frank Erwin Lecturer)
Benjamin Netanyahu February 14, 1986
(Evening With)
General William C. Westmoreland March 10, 1986
(Evening With)
William P. Bundy March 19, 1986
(Evening With)
Liz Smith April 17, 1986
(Evening With)
Joseph A. Califano, Jr. April 22, 1986
(Evening With)
Eliot Wigginton April 24, 1986
(Evening With)
Barbara Jordan May 7, 1986
Virginia Durr
(Evening With)
(Replaced by John Henry
Faulk & Cactus Pryor
presenting a sampling
from "Dobie")
May 27, 1986
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Distinguished Lecturers Page 3
David M. Oshinsky
(D.B. Hardeman Prize. winner)
Ann Landers (Eppie Lederer)
(Evening With)
David McCullough
(Evening With)
Larry Temple
(Third Frank Erwin Lecturer)
J. Patrick Moynihan
(Evening With)
David & Julie Eisenhower
(Evening With)
Chuck Robb
(Evening With)
Brian Urquhart
(Evening With)
Art Buchwald
(Constitution symposium
dinner speaker)
Robert Flynn
(Evening With)
Barry Goldwater
(Evening With)
Jack Anderson
(Pearson exhibit opening
guest speaker)
Joseph Biden
(Evening With)
William Seale
(Evening With)
Betty Ford
(Evening With)
Robert Divine, Lewis Gould
& Clarence Lasby
(Evening With)
September 19, 1986
September 29, 1986
October 22, 1986
November 18, 1986
December 8, 1986
December 10, 1986
December 29, 1986
February 16, 1987
February 19, 1987
February 25, 1987
March 5, 1987
April 3, 1987
April 6, 1987
April 21, 1987
May 20, 1987
July 28, 1987
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Distinguished Lecturers
iz Carpenter
(Evening With)
Patricia Schroeder
(Evening With)
Dan Fenn
(Evening With)
Horace Busby
(Fourth Frank Erwin Lecturer)
Horace Busby
(Evening With)
Raymond Daum
(Evening With)
Rosalynn Carter
(Evening With)
Lawrence Wright
(Evening With)
Michael Dukakis
Horace Busby
(Evening With)
(in Washington, DC)
Forrest McDonald
(Evening With)
Lewis Gould
Lawarence O'Brien
(Evening With)
Philip Bobbitt
(Evening With)
John Kenneth Galbraith
(Economics symposium
keynote speaker)
Paul Light
(DB Hardeman award winner)
Donald C. Bacon
(Evening With)
August 27, 1987
September 15, 1987
September 30, 1987
November 18, 1987
November 19, 1987
December 9, 1987
February 16, 1988
February 23, 1988
February 26, 1988
March 7, 1988
March 9, 1988
March 27, 1988
March 30, 1988
April 4, 1988
April 14, 1988
April 20, 1988
April 21, 1988
Page 4
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Distinguished Lecturers Page-5
William C. Westmoreland
(Korean War conference
keynote speaker)
FUTURE LECTURERS:
Evening with Robert Gates
May 26, 1988
May 11, 1988
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The Washington Post
The New York Times
The Washington Times
The Wall Street Journal
The Christian Science Monitor
New York Daily News
USA Today
The Chicago Tribune
MEM; -&-rgu,-;i
Lv7i 7/1)
Date ?:23 riMtie
CIA speaker encouraged
by student turnout at talk
By SUSAN SOREN - require clandestine action, but
Daily Texan Staff nothing illegal."
.Hulnick said the CIA is often a
More than 800 students packed visible symbol that students pro-
into the Texas Union Building Ball- test against - without understand-
room to listen-to-and,-in -some cas- --ing the agency's actual activities.
es, challenge the opinions of the "Our visits have stirred protests
Central Intelligence Agency's chief among students that are opposed
college recruiter Tuesday night. to the policies of -the administra-
Arthur Hulnick, CIA academic bon," he said. "But we're not the
coordinator, spoke for more than ones they should be protesting."
two hours about college recruiting Hulnick said "in order to get
and CIA policy, devoting the last things done," protesters should
part of the lecture to a question- contact their congressmen.
and-answer 'session.
"They'll really listen, they really
lain encouraged by the turn-
will," he said.
out and the interest this University
obvious' has in the CIA," Hul- Bill Fason ? CIA subcommittee
nick said. chairman for the Texas Union Stu-
Hulnick said dent Issues Committee, which is
the CIA does presenting the symposium ? said
not break the he expected Hulnick to "give the
law, does not party line," but thought the
assassinate speech would generate debate.
people - and "That's why we brought him
does not con- here," Fason said.
duct domestic
surveillance. Fason said he encouraged all
"We are not students to attend the other two
an illegally run days of the three-day symposium
Hulnick organization," to hear alternate viewpoints about
he said. "Some of our operations the CIA.
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Yisiting UT lecturer
denies CIA recruiting
By SUSAN BOREN
- c The Daily Texan, 1988
A Central Intelligence Agency of-
ficer working at the University as a
visiting lecturer denied Tuesday he
was directed to help recruit college
students to work for the CIA, al-
though an official document states
otherwise.
James McInnis, who lectures at
the Lyndon B. Johnson School of
Public Affairs, said he refers all stu-
dents who request recruitment in-
formation to an authorized re-
cruiter.
"I have the phone number (of the
recruiter]and I'll give it to them,"
McInnis said. "I don't want to be in
the recruitment loop at all."
McInnis is a participant in the Of-
ficers-in-Residence program, which
drafts senior-level CIA officers to
lecture and conduct research at uni-
versities, he said.
But a CIA document dated July
21, 1987, from Stanley Moskowitz,
chairman of the CIA Training Selec-
tion Board, stated "the (Officers-in-
Residenceiprogram serves ... to en-
hance CIA's recruiting efforts" and
"to counsel interested students on
career opportunities with CIA."
Moskowitz-could not be.reached
for comment.
McInnis said he had not received
any directive from the CIA ordering
him to recruit students and said that
recruiting was not a part of his du-
ties as a visiting lecturer.
"Nothing like that has passed by
me. That's not what I'm here for,"
he said.
Arthur Hulnick, aA academic
coordinator, said McInnis has not
received any orders from the CIA to
recruit college students.
"I haven't talked with him, but I
suspect he would say the same
would," Hulnick said. "It's
OIC to pass people on to recruiters,
but not to try and indoctrinate them
on the spot."
Hulnick, who oversees all CIA
college recruiting, said UT student,
interested in applying for jobs with
the CIA should contact Kent Cargile
in the Dallas branch and not pres-
sure McInnis for information about
career opportunities.
"Recruiting is a specific job. Any
agency officer can tell you a little bit
about his job, but recruiting is an-
other matter," he said.
Jamie Otis, national coordinator
of the Association for Responsible
Dissent, said the conflict between
,.the document and the "official line"
aoes not surprise him.
"He's not just here to educate, to
research, to inform," Otis said. "He
4-,7it here to
FFo rs
Otis said the CIA should be ex-
pelled. from the campus because "of
this unabashed deceit."
"If they lie about this, what else
do they lie about? How can we trust
that they are just here on some kind
of educational mission?," he asked.
Otis said that active CIA officers
were bound by rules of conduct that
prevents them from expressing
points of view that vary from estab-
lished CIA oolic-v.
In an earlier interview, Hulnick
said Mdnnis was "unqualified and
tirE...t,thorized" to recruit collette
de
The Washington Post
The New York Times
The Washington Times
The Wall Street Journal
The Christian Science Monitor
New York Daily News
USA Today
The Chicago Tribune
"ThZ-Zi.gd Mir ii?V(41/S1740
Date .23 ZDAR /fer
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? Rally against CIA
ends in violence
By SUSAN BOREN
Daily Texan Staff
A demonstrator protesting
against the Central Intelligence
Agency was handcuffed and
dragged into a room in Beauford
El. Jester Center after an anti-CIA
rally turned violent Wednesday.
UT police Lt. Rollin Donelson
said Robert Ovetz, government
Junior, was subdued after he at-
tacked a student who was inter-
viewing with the Central Intelli-
gence Agency. The name of the
interviewee could not be released,
he said.
A "pushing match" had ensued.
between Ovetz and the inter-
viewee on the second floor of Jest-
er Dormitory, Donelson said, and
when police attempted to separate
them, Ovetz tackled the inter-
viewee.
"That's when police stepped in.
It had gone far enough," he said.
"Ovetz was much more volatile
than the other guy. So the police
restrained him," Donelson said.
After Ovetz was restrained, offi-
cers dragged him into a nearby
room. Protesters jammed into the
doonvay but were forced back by
police.
UT police blocked the dosed
door after Ovetz was taken inside
and refused to admit reporters or
other protesters.
Police then attempted to locate
the interviewee to ask him if he
wanted to press charges, Donel-
son said.
Ovetz said during the time he
was held, he remained handcuffed
and was told to stay quiet.
"They told me essentially to
shut up or I'd be sorry," Ovetz
said.
Donelson said the interviewee
told officers he would not press
charges, and police released
Ovetz, who was arrested by UT
police March 23 during another
anti-CIA protest and charged with
disruptive activity.
The charges are being handled
administratively by the Office of
the Dean of Students.
Ovetz, whose rinse died in in the struggle, said he bit an
.officer's finger after the officer put
a hand in his face.
"They cuffed me and bent my?
arms behind my back almost to the
point of breaking," said Ovetz,
who added he will file charges
against the UT officers involved.
"They can't get away with this,"
he said. "They can't drag me
away, threaten me and then get
off scot free. No way. I'm nailing
these bastards."
Donelson said Ovetz did not re-
quire Medical treatment after he
was subdued, but one police offi-
cer, Jerry Jordan, was treated for
minor cuts and bruises at Seton
Medical Center and discharged.
"It's funny. It was supposed to
be a peaceful rally, but when it
turns violent, the only guys that
are hurt are the police," Donelson
said.
Ovetz said he thought the CIA
Interviewers escaped the throng
by crawling through the ceiling to
another room.
"They ran. They're out of here. I
didn't see how they got out. Did
you?" Ovetz asked.
.17 police Capt. Leonard Young
said CIA interviews were canceled
for the remainder of Wednesday
because of the confrontation.
"I guess they decided to let
things settle down," Young said.
The anti-CIA rally began with a
march up the West Mall to the
Main Mall. While the protesters
marched, they chanted "CIA off
campus" and "No war, no CIA,
no fascist U.S.A." and displayed
posters reading "CIA is DOA"
and "The CIA and UT ? Partners
in Crime."
The group of about 30 conduct-
The Washington Post
The New York Times
The Washington Times
The Wall Street Journal
The Christian Science Monitor
New York Daily News
USA Today
The Chkago Tribune
"ThA-,4 9 IL y row/ (Ritsrii)
Date LT/ ',MP 1968
ed a "teach-in" from the steps of
the Main Mall featuring guest
speakers and more chanting.
From there, the protesters and
their audience, numbering about
150, marched to Jester Center and
pounded on office windows and
doors where CIA recruiters were
interviewing.
Robert Church, a graduate of
the University of Maryland, said
the "anti-American" demonstra-
tion was damaging to freedom and
democracy.
? "I think they hive every tight to
demonstrate. It's fine for them ,to. ?
protest policy, but this kind ofiel-
ly degenerates quickly into vio-
lence," Church said. 'Nobody
wants that."
Church, who is the Students for
America chairman in Maryland,
said he has experienced "disrup-
tive, unpositive" rallies on the
University of Maryland campus.
"I came down here to look for
members [for Students for Ameri-
ca] and to tell these people that
they are wrong. We need the
CIA," he said.
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The Washington Post
The New York Times
The Washington Times
The Wall Street Journal
The Christian Science Monitor
New York Daily News
USA Today
The Chicago Tribune
.29/ Ly 7-smitirkism)
Date e9 3 i,9,? P9Rfr
Police arrest 2 students at speech
By DANNY CALDERON
Daily Texan Staff
A CIA official's speech at the Texas Union
stirred up more than just heated argument
when UT police arrested two UT students
Tuesday night.
Miles Andrew McCauley, 19, and Robert
Frank Ovetz were charged with disruptive
activity after they refused to leave the Texas
Union Ballroom during a speech given by
Arthur Hulnick, academic coordinator for
the CIA. McCauley, an engineering fresh-
man, was released Tuesday night.
After the initial arrests, Ovetz, a govern-
ment junior, also was charged with failure to
identify himself after he refused to tell offi-
cers his name, said UT police Lt. Ronald
Thomas. Ovetz was taken to Travis County
Jail, Thomas said.
Witnesses'said both men had fliers protest-
ing possible CIA recruitment on campus.
Police said Union officials called police af-
ter McCauley was asked to stop handing out
pamphlets at the speech and he refused to
leave.
Ovetz walked up to officers in the ball-
room while they were asking McCauley to
leave.
"They were asked to cease handing out
pamphlets. They didn't do that. Then they
were asked to leave. They didn't do that ei-
ther, so we arrested them," said one officer
at the Union.
Thomas said an official of the Office of the
Students told UT police before the arrests
that students could not hand out pamphlets
inside the Union because it might disrupt the
speech. Students were free to hand out pam-
phlets outside the building, he said.
"I am filing a complaint against every offi-
cer here," Ovetz said as he was handcuffed
and carried away by three officers. "I'm not
violating any University rules. You're violat-
ing University rules."
The charge of failure to identify against
Ovetz is a Class C misdemeanor punishable
by a maximum fine of $200.
"The disruptive activity charges will be
handled administratively," probably by the
Office of the Dean of Students. Thomas cairi.
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nem ieffir?ce,
WASHI GTON, D.C. 20005 %.
Front
Page
E t Other
Page Page
a 3 1987
AUSTIg 1EX9 ?
AMERICAN-STATESMAN
160,526
S - 1)1,O6
I3elief grows: Casey knew
There is a lot of controversy over
Bob Woodward's new 120k,
particularly the brief deathbed
ihterview with QTA director William
J. Casey in which Woodward says
dasey admitted knowledge of the di-
version of Iran arms sale money to
the Contra rebels.
It couldn't have happened, for
medical reasons, says one doctor. Ca-
scy's family also says the interview
couldn't have happened. Actually, it
hardly matters. The circumstantial
evidence developed by official inves-
tigators leads almost inescapably to
the conclusion that Casey knew.
' The chairman of the House panel
ipvestigating the Iran-Contra affair
eays he believes Casey was "a prima-
kir actor" in the funds diversion. Rep.
Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., says he came
tb the conclusion gradually, since
former White House aide Lt. Col. 01-
iver North testified that the diver-
sion was largely Casey's idea.
"Yes, I believe he was aware of the
diversion," Hamilton said, adding
that Casey had deceived him about
the scheme in numerous conversa-
tions while Hamilton was chairman
of the House Intelligence Committee.
He pointed to North's words in de-
scribing a "self-sustaining, off-the-
shelf' covert action capability,
"words that were not characteristic
of a combat infantryman, and
seemed to me more the vocabulary of
a New York corporate lawyer, as
Casey was.
Hamilton's Senate counterpart,
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Rawaii, said
he wouldn't be surprised if Casey
were in on the diversion, but said that
question will not be of primary im-
portance in the committee's final)/
report.
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AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN (TX)
16 December 1986
FILE OfiLt
U.S. aiding both Iran, Iraq?
Awire service story reports that
the Central Intelligence Agen-
cy has berlracretly supplying
Iraq with intelligence to assist its
bombing raids on Iran while the ad-
ministration has been secretly selling
arms to Iran to free U.S. hostages.
This development, if true, could- ei-
ther demonstrate the incompetence
of current U.S. foreign policy or re-
veal a Machiavellian cynicism at con-
siderable variance with the
administration's public posture.
The Washington Post account,
written by Watergate-era reporter
Bob Woodward, quoted an adminis-
tration official as saying on Sunday
that any intelligence assistance to
Iraq was for "defensive" purposes,
designed to keep either side from
winning the war. This is in stark con-
trast to the content of a Nov. 13
speech by President Reagan, in
which he spoke of how the adminis-
tration opposed "the slaughter" of
?.
the Iran-Iraq conflict. "We sought to
establish communications with both
sides . . . so that we could assist in
bringing about-a cease-fire and even-
tually a settlement," Mr. Reagan
said.
Supplying arms to Iran, for what-
ever reason, could only enable it to
kill more Iraquis. Supplying intelli-
gence to Iraq at the same time could
only enable that nation to kill more
Iranians. That does not lead to an
end to "the slaughter," or, once re-
vealed, help establish communica-
tions with both sides or help bring
about a settlement.
If true, it is either an example of
the administration's inability to
speak or act with a coherent voice or
of the most despicable sort of cyni-
cism, not to mention duplicity. In ei-
ther event, it is not a development
that will help U.S. foreign relations,
either among its allies or among its
current set of Middle-East enemies.
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/t11.1,0".,,, ? .A-?i
FILE ONLY
21 December 1985
PolygFaph test order poses
nettling problem for officials
The presidential order requiring
government employees who
have high-level security clear-
ances to undergo lie-detector tests al-
ready is causing trouble. Secretary of
State George P. Shultz, no less, says he
would resign before agreeing to have
his loyalty checked by submitting to a
polygraph test.
Shultz' public denunciation of the
program resulted in a veritable flood
of words from the White House clarifi-
cation machine, all of which made it
more unclear how the presidential di-
rective is to be carried out.
The problem as Shultz sees it is that
the polygraph is not reliable. "From
what I've seen," he told reporters, "it's
hardly a scientific instrument. It tends
to identify people who are innocent as
guilty and misses some fraction of peo-
ple who are guilty of lying. It is, I think,
pretty well demonstrated that a pro-
fessional spy or professional leaker
can probably train himself or herself
not to be caught by the test." He added
that use of such tests as a "broad-
gauged condition of employment
seems to be to be questionable. That is
my viewpoint."
The immediate problem for the
White House is how to keep both
Shultz and its lie-detector, test, de-
signed to weed out spies and news
leakers. The first thing that happened
was the disappearance of the news-
leak segment of the program. White
House spokesman Ed Djerejian
claimed the program is aimed at
catching spies, not chasing down leaks
to reporters. That's not what the
White House was saying a week ago.
Then, the program was to be aimed at
both spies and news leakers.
Thursday, spokesman Larry
Speakes said the program would be
administered on a department-bpde-
partment basis under guidelines being
worked out by a task force. One ad-
ministration official suggested Shultz
will have some say over how the pro-
gam is carried out at the State Depart-
ment. Another said that it would be
highly unlikely that Shultz would be
asked to take a lie-detector test unless
he were suspected of espionage. It
sounds as though Shultz won't be
asked. But what of other officials who
might react as Shultz did? Will wheth-
er they are made take the test or be
fired depend on how valuable they are
seen to be to the administration? Or
what?
The ca issued a statement defend-
ing the use of polygraphs, calling them
the best deterrent to the misuse of sen-
sitive information, and pointing out
that thousands of intelligence commu-
nity officials routinely take poly-
graphs in recognition of the need to
protect secrets. And the polygraph
does have its uses.
But if nothing else, Shultz' public
threat to resign has at least focused
White House attention on the very
real problems with the presidential di-
rective. It is too vague, too broad-
based, too susceptible to misuse. The
test ought to be limited, both in scope
and in use, to the highest level, for se-
curity purposes only ? and as only
one of many anti-spying devices. /
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AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN
14 November 1984
iIA manual 'whitewash'
should not be permitted
president Reagan believes that a
slap on the wrists of some CIA
employees involved in the pro-
duction of the manual that advocated
the assassination of Nicaraguan offi-
cials should end the matter. But it
shbuld not, and Congress should pur-
sti# its own investigation.
..-
-Before the election, Mr. Reagan
said any government official involved
irr:the preparation or approval of the
manual would be dismissed. But now,
after the election and after a sympa-
thetic "investigation" by the Central
Ineelligence Agency's inspector gen-
era/ and the oversight board, that no
lorfger holds.
..
presidential orders dating back to
1975 have forbidden assassinations.
The manual advocates "neutralizing"
Sandinista officials, and almost no one
does not understand what that really
means. Yet the President now says,
"neutralizing" means only removal_
from office,;much as "dismissal" of
any CIA employee involved in the
manual now means "disciplinary
action."
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
1)-N.Y., vice chairman of the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence, is
not buying the new line. "The inspec-
tor general repeatedly asserts that the
manual did not intend what it clearly
did intend," he said. "The report keeps
saying, `No, we didn't mean assassi-
nate and, no, we didn't mean creating
martyrs,' when, of course, that is
exactly what they meant."
Both the investigators and the ad-
ministration seem to think that
playing word games will alter the
facts and that, in Moynihan's words,
removing the weekend privileges
from some sergeants for a month will
satisfy the President's earlier pledge
and stop further investigations.
The Congress should not allow the
administration to get away with a
whitewash, almost an offhand dismiss-
al, of an apparently serious violation
of presidential policy and the orders of
Congress. No one seems to know for
sure just what the President wants the
U.S. to do concerning the Sandinista
regime. Still, if he wants any biparti-
san support at all in his efforts in that
region, Mr. Reagan will have to do bet-
ter than emulate Vice President
Bush's perusal of the dictionary in
search of semantic loopholes. But as
the chief executive plainly intends his
latest statement to be his last word on
the subject, the Congress should put on
the pressure by conducting its own
thorough probe of the manual.
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e' PAGE 5
? 111 1987 The Washington Post, December 24, 1987
HEADLINE: Mr. Kosygin Shook Hands Too
BODY:
How many times these past few weeks have I read or heard that General
Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev's plunge into the crowd on Connecticut Avenue to
"press the flesh" was, for a Soviet leader, "unprecedented." Not quite,
The LBJ Library in Austin, Texas, contains a White House secretary's vivid
notes on the 1967 "summit" meeting in Glassboro, N.J., between President Johnson
-and Soviet PremierAlexei Kosygin. The following is from the account for June 23:
"4:40 p.m. The president to front porch of the house -- facing barrage of
cameras and press and large, large crowd with Chairman Kosygin beside him.
Remarks -- giving report on what the two men had discussed. Chairman Kosygin
then replied. The president then escorted him to his car and stood by the front
steps of the house at the chairman's motorcade, and the chairman smiled and
waved at the president. As the chairman's car reached almost the rear of the
house, he responded to the screams of the crowd and got out of his car and,
almost like the president does, went to the fences touching hands." BENJAMIN S.
LOEB Bethesda
TYPE: LETTER
LEVEL 2 - 4 OF 4 STORIES
Proprietary to the United Press International 1987
December 1, 1987, Tuesday, PM cycle
SECTION: Domestic News
LENGTH: 120 words
HEADLINE: PAPER DEBTS
BYLINE: By WILLIAM C. TROTT, United Press International
KEYWORD: People
BODY:
John Connally, the former Texas governor and Nixon Cabinet member, has given
his historical papers to the LBJ Library at the University of Texas but there
may be complications. Connally, who was wounded in the assassination of John
Kennedy, donated the papers shortly before he filed for bankruptcy brought on by
$93 million in debts. There could be a legal controversy over whether Connally,
70, had a right to give the collection to the school or if he should have sold
it to help pay the debts. His lawyer, Myron Sheinfeld, says the law prohibits
individuals from donating paintings or other property to a museum within 90 days
of filing for bankruptcy but that historical documents may fall into another
catagory.
LEXIS? NEXIg LEXIS? NEXIS'
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ER 1246X 8L,
Lyndon BainesJohnson Library
March 18, 1988
Mr. Robert M. Gates
Deputy Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Mr. Gates:
2313 Red River Street Austin, Texas 78705
On behalf of the Austin Foreign Affairs Council and at the
suggestion of its president, Bob Inman, it is my pleasure to
extend this invitation to you to speak at the LBJ Library on
May 26.
The format we propose is a presentation at 6:00 P.M., followed
by a reception. If you are willing, we would then like to cap
the evening with a small dinner party in the Library.
We will, of course, cover your expenses and try to make your
time here interesting.
If you are receptive to this invitation, I will be delighted
to work out the details-with-any member of your staff.
Sincerely yours,
V\xi
Harry J. Middleton
Director
HJM:lam
A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Recordc Administration
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