FOREIGN POLICY ASSOCIATION OF HARRISBURG

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00901R000100230045-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 6, 2001
Sequence Number: 
45
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 1, 1979
Content Type: 
MISC
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PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00901R000100230045-6.pdf323.48 KB
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FOREIGN POLICY ASSOCIATION 'OF HARRISBU#Proved For Release 2003/04/02: CIA- P.O. Box 2651 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17105 DINNER MEETING, THURSDAY, FEB. 22, 1979 Mr. Robert J. Sugarman - Chairman - United States Section - International Joint Commission, United States and Canada - will be our speaker in February. Mr. Sugarman received his law degree from Harvard in 1964 after attending Brown and Stanford Universities. Mr. Sugarman is a well-known speaker, speaking on "Environment", "Civil Rights" and "Lawyers and Social Change". I know you will welcome Mr. Sugarman to Schindler's on Thursday, February 22, 1979 at 6:00 p.m. Dinner (at $6.50) will be served at 7:00 p.m. Arrangements for special diets may be made with Mrs. Neubold. For reservations, call Mrs. Frances Neubold - 545-9267, Mrs. W.B. Conner - 766-9244, Mrs. Edwin G. Davis - 761- 4949 or Mrs. Joan Arnold - 737-4737. A social hour and refreshments will conclude the evening meeting. MEETING OF JANUARY 25, 1979 The Honorable Adriano Amaral of the Brazilian Embassy was our speaker in January. He said that a country is not always ready to be a democracy. Brazil is striving toward that goal, but neither the level of education, nor the level of economic development is high enough to support it. At present, restrictions on personal freedoms are necessary to control that large country and populace. Brazil is not in a position to be concerned about world opinion on this point; but must do what it thinks is best for Brazil. MEETING OF MARCH 29, 1979 Our speaker for the March meeting will be Mr. Ted D. Toubeneck - Director, International Finance, Rockwell International. Mr. Toubeneck will speak on multinational corporations. Apparently not everyone who paid their 1978-79 February 1979 We have 93 paid-up units - some individual, some family - one family at least has seven members - so Foreign Policy is growing. SPOT-LIGHT ON PEOPLE Our Vice President, Mrs. Joan Arnold, is a native New Yorker, a graduate of West Orange High School of West Orange, New Jersey, and of Dickinson College with a bachelor's degree in Psychology. She is employed at Historical Times, Inc. as assistant circulation director. Her husband, Mr. James Arnold, is an attorney with the firm of Arnold, Slike and Bayley. The family includes three children, a daughter who is a graduate of Dickinson College, a son who is a sophomore at Duke University and a son in high school. They reside at 1905 Cooper Circle in Camp Hill. Joan is an avid equestrian and a dedicated skier. MEMBERSHIP - FROM THE BY-LAWS Annual membership dues shall be payable on July first of each year and shall be applicable to all persons joining the Association prior to February first of each year. Persons who were not members the previous year and join after February first of the current membership year shall pay one half of the annual dues for the current year. All memberships shall expire on the last day of June of each year. NOMINATIONS FOR OFFICERS Nominations for officers will be presented at the March meeting and elections will be held in April. TRAVEL The World Affairs Council of Philadelphia is planning two more trips. March 3-10 Columbia - Gold Museum, Fishing Village and Colonial City. membership received cards. If you did not, stop March 8-20 E pt - Pyramids, trip on the Nile by the memberApipr6ed RbrtReleasb BOMD #O2rtdClkWkWd Q91krA93ARR30045-6 pick up your card from Joan Prescott. Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 MAIN TABLE AT DINNER Emmett Welch, ex-Army Intelligence STATINTL President, Keystone Chapter, AFIO I ex-CIA (DDO--EA Division) Vice Presi ent, Keystone Chapter, AFIO Barry Ryan, ex-FBI Secretary/Treasurer, Keystone Chapter, AFIO wife -- Elaine wife -- Roberta wife -- Jacquelyn Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 HARRISBURG NEWS 4 May 1977 - News says secrecy unfortunately builds a mystique that shrouds activities of operatives. Applauds CIA and Adm. Turner for firing the two employees accused of purchasing detonating devices for a former CIA employee for a private firm. 22 August 1977 - In light of the MKULTRA releases, the News says Congress and the Administration have an obligation to the American people to never play with the lives of citizens again. Harrisburg Patriot (M) 46,878 Harrisburg News (E) 67,516 Sunday Patriot-News 162,729 Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 HARRISBURG, PA. 11E WS FEW PEOPLE would groups and their anarchist .. tral . Intelli,g nc aency to To the CIA's credit, it un- c`onc uct a large part of its. covered the scheme. But it is --business in secret.::But, unfor- indeed unfortunate and,, per- ' tunately, -secrecy=;;.-helps in _ -haps, to a certain extent una- "building a'. mystique that voidable, that the agency's. shrouds otherwise peculiar method of maintaining secre- behavior with. a coating of ra- _.-:.. cy not only protects legiti- tionality and acceptability. mate undercover, operations, This was demonstrated it also conceals criminal activ again last week in connection With the firing of two middle- ,level CIA employes by Starts- :..field Turner, the head of the serve as a warning to other gency. The two are accused employes of the agency, the ..of aiding a former CIA opera- CIA appears to have encour- tive, Edward P. Wilson, to ob- . aged a lax attitude by. permit- Main explosive devices .and ting Wilson to market his un- other materials for sale over- usual, skills through his own seas. It is alleged that one of consulting firniwhile still em- the fired agents unknowingly ployed by the agency. He con- helped Wilson purchase so- tinued in what might be de- phisticated detonation devices; scribed as the "rent-an-agent" he had 'contracted to sell to business after he left the CIA Libya. The owners of the pri-' and while he was with Naval A 4 N ti N a ak II ti the . Palestinian terrorist WHILE Turner's dismissal of --?the two CIA agents may tives are doing: Approved For Release 2003/04/02.: CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6 vate companies that manufac- Intelligence for five years. ture these explosives natural-" Now he is., 'completely. self- ly thought Wilson was acting' employed in behalf of the CIA. Thus. he :: The government has be- had no difficulty- in securing latedly come to the conclusion: the murderous little ~ mecha- that Wilson's private en nisms that can be - pre-set to > terprise left something to he' explode anytime within a. desired. It is starting to ask year. He is alleged to. have questions, and so it - should smuggled - 500 of them into;, Secrecy has gone too-Jar- Libya, one, of the chief sup- when not even. the govern- porters and arms suppliers of anent knows-what its opera-v HARRISBURG, PA. 74,624. AUG 2'2 1977, THE CIA's MKULTRA ex-' perirnents ? of the.1950s and early 1960s; only now coming. to light, have a fantasy quality. about them that almost sug- f gets they were lifted from a James Bond laboratory for dirty tricks.. The spy=thriller `script is familiar except for one thing -- the tricks were played on mostly unwitting ` Americans with no connection what- soever with Cold War espionage -and disruptive actions. Rather, they were- terminally ill cancer patients and diabetic. patients, in the case of MK'IJLTRA, and stu- dents, CIA underlings ~ and subway riders, most of them .unsuspecting, who happened. to be in the wrong place at the, wrong time,- in other, previ.;' ously disclosed CIA experi- ments. The patients were the guinea pigs for CIA mind con--', trot .;experiments.. For "pur poses of evaluating their. reac -: tion to ;certain drugs,; the subjects -were . administered ,._"knockout;'' , pills, stimulants, . depressants,.% bulbocapiline,>t which results in a state of sus-' pended... animation and,, cane cause schizophrenia, ,and.- chemical. ? compounds to un- , derstand the effects of poison- -,inf. . ..t.tt Eighty public and private institutions were involved in .the '.:;experiments some knowingly and some not. Ac- , cording to documents made: public. last week by the CIA under the Freedom of Infor- , mation' Act,- the experiments were.: conducted with : the; knowledge and approval of'-i then-CIA :Director:.,-Allen Dulles and. futur-e~ director:. Richard Helms; among other.-; high level agency officials. Helms ordered the destruction of. more complete records. of A he experiments in 1973. -_ THE. -.INTENTIONAL ::.ex-. posure of unsuspecting per-I sons to mind altering drugs and, infectious diseases, : re. vealed some time ago, is a base and horrendous violation of individual rights. Human rights begin with; the-individual's mind. and body-'- the sanctity -of the person. In its perverted sense- of mission, the CIA has shown: our 5-u~.~= r >r, ; no respect for the most ele- mental. rights of the people on= their, side of.. this international' game of mischief: Indeed, the. foul business the CIA,:has in.~, _-flicted 6n the Amer~,can public and its-government is, appdr.,? ently so endless and of such a dubious _:, nature --that r...it . is enough to make one wonder it the CIA-is in fact working for, -i- tKI is no aenying that `the nature of the times de- mand a competent intelli- gence gathering agency. But it is clear from this and other. :instances of the CIA running amok through :. its. secrecy, unrestrained power and virtu-: ally unlimited funds that the agency's purpose has often been subordinated to the re- finement of methods, if not completely disregarded. The result has been that an un- - known number of Americans have been the-victims of an agency, created: for-their pro- tection. tinned its experiments o Americans in the mid-1960s -But the question remains, in the government brought thi -footloose bureaucracy unde control and implemented saf guards to insure that this typ of activity,.wiil never rec Congress"and the administra .-tion have an: obligation to thej American people to make cer- tain that the-CIA, orany othe ;agency,. .,never again- play .with the lives' of citizens as i `they were laboratory mice;. Approved For Release 2003/04/02 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000100230045-6