LETTER TO ADM, STANSFIELD TURNER FROM ROBERT BOROSAGE, MORTON H. HALPERIN, PEGGY SHAKER
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
21
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 22, 2004
Sequence Number:
5
Case Number:
Publication Date:
January 26, 1979
Content Type:
LETTER
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0.pdf | 1.78 MB |
Body:
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R0003001
CAMPAIGN FOR POLITICAL RIG
TS
End Covert Operations Abroad End Political Spying and Political Harassment in the United States
STEERING COMMITTEE
Afrikan Peoples Party
American Civil Liberties Union
merican Friends Service Committee
Americans for Democratic Action
Assassination Information Bureau
Association of Arab-American University
Graduates
Black Panther Party
Center for Constitutional Rights
Center for National Security Studies
Church of Scientology, National
Commission on Law Enforcement and
Social Justice
Citizens Energy Project
Clergy and Laity Concerned
Commission on Social Action for Reform
Judaism
Committee for Public Justice
Counterspy
CovertAction Information Bulletin
Department of Law, Justice and
Community.Relations of the Board of
Church and Society of the
United Methodist Church
Environmental Policy Center
Federation of American Scientists
Friends Committee on National
Legislation
Friends of the Earth
Fund for Constitutional Government
Grand Jury Project
Indian Law Resource Center '
International Indian Treaty Council
Jesuit Social Ministry, National Office
La Raze Unida
Leonard Peltier Defense Group
Middle East Research and Information
Project
National Alliance Against Racist and
Political Repression
National Committee Against Repressive
Legislation '
National Committee to Reopen the
Rosenberg Case
National Conference of Black Lawyers
National Emergency Civil Liberties
Committee
National Indian Youth Council, Inc.
National Lawyers Guild
National Organization for Women
People's Alliance
People's Business Commission
Puerto Rican Socialist Party
Puerto Rican Solidarity Committee
Repression Information Project
Supporters of Silkwood, Inc.
Unitarian Universalist Association
United Church of Christ, Commission
for Racial Justice
United Church of Christ, Office for
Church in Society
United States Student Association
Urban Policy Research Institute
Washington Office, United Presbyterian
Church USA
Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom
Women Strike for Peace
January 26, 1979
Adm. Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
Washington, D.C. 20505
We invite you*to attend a special "Preview" of "The Intelligence
Network" - a new film produced by the Campaign for Political Rights.
Tuesday, February 13, 1979 Folger Theater
4:00pm Second and East Capitol Sts.
(Doors will be open at 3:45pm) Washington, D.C.
This new documentary combines expert analysis with personal accounts
of political surveillance in a 35-minute study of U.S. intelligence
agency activity at home and abroad. Based on information obtained
through Freedom of Information requests, citizens' lawsuits and
Congressional investigations, "The Intelligence Network" reveals
past and current abuses of local, state and federal intelligence
agencies.
The "Preview" is by invitation only. Those invited include
representatives of the administration and the intelligence community,
members of Congress and the press, as well as critics of the
intelligence agencies. This special viewing has been scheduled to
provide you the opportunity to see the film prior to its nationwide
distribution.
"The Intelligence Network" makes an important contribution to the
continuing national debate over intelligence agency reform. The
film raises issues which are of great concern: the proper role of
the intelligence agencies in the post-Watergate era, the legitimate
information requirements of government and the protection of political
rights in this country and around the world.
We hope that you will join us to view this film.
STAFF Institute for
Peggy Shaker, Policy Studies
National Coordinator
Sahu Aiken,
Field Organizer
Hal Carideo,
Morton H. Halperin Pegaker
Director Nati al Coordinator
Center for National Campaign for
Security Studies Political Rights
Speakers Coordinator R.S.V.P. 202/547-4705
Linda Lotz,
Press and Publications
n Woods,
Camp suCoordinattor *You or a member of your staff.
201 Massachusetts Ave. N.E.
Room 112
Washington, D.C. 20002
202/547-4705 Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
A new documO*Onqvfi GYIke1taIV,QOO4/11/01 CI
an extensive intelligence-sharing net-
work of over 100 agencies at the local,
state, federal and international level, in-
cluding the FBI, the CIA, local and
state police and private organizations.
Personal experiences are interwoven
with expert accounts revealing the
deliberate violations of political rights
from the CIA's disruption of political
activity around the world to spying and
harassment by intelligence units of
local police departments.
Documented by recently-uncovered
files from the intelligence community
itself, this important new film is an
introduction to the large, secretive net-
work that today continues to carry out
political surveillance and harassment at
home and all ved For Release 2004/11/01 : Cl
Atoao11
~twork .
e n e igence
General Baker
Vernon Bellecourt
Morton Halperin
Bonnie McFadden
Gary Mundt
Timothy Redfearn
Doc Sachel
Patricia Schroeder
Ethel Taylor
Kathleen Taylor
Auto Worker; Detroit
A National Coordinator,
American Indian Movement;
White Earth, NM
Director, Institute for Policy
Studies; Washington, D.C.
Minister, United Methodist
Church; Chairperson, Alliance
to End Repression; Chicago
Attorney, Alliance to End
Repression; Chicago
Director, Center for National
Security Studies;
Washington, D.C.
President, Chile Committee for
HumanRights, Chilean Fellow,
Institute for Policy Studies;
Washington, D.C.
Director, El Centro De
La Raza; Seattle
Attorney; Detroit
Aide to U.S. Representative
Patricia Schroeder; Denver
Ex-FBI Informer; Colorado
State Reformatory
Former Minister of Health,
Black Panther Party; Chicago
U.S. Representative from
Denver; Washington, D.C.
National Coordinator, Women
Strike for Peace; Philadelphia
Coordinator, Coalition on
Government Spying; Staff,
American Friends Service
Committee Surveillance
Project; Seattle
yy~~
-RDFn-b) A 1 A300' ' kc4r3tcP,Pea e Council;
6;ave~dW(f- tare k-2004/11/01: CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
16 mm, 35 minute,
color documentary film
Produced by
Campaign for Political Rights
Directed by
Chris Redford Films, Inc.
Purchase Price: $350
Rental: $45iday (including normal
shipping) Rental price may be applied
to purchase if rental takes
place within the month of purchase
Contact Campaign for the name
of a distributor near you
el~ Bence
r
A 22 by 28 inch, two-color poster showing
the information-exchange network of local,
state, federal and foreign governments and
private organi/ations. Based on a chart
which is used as a reference throughout the
film.
A
New
Documentary
Designed to he used as a promotional aid for Film . . .
the film and for sale at film showings.
$3.00 each: $2.50 for 10 or more.
(Two copies of 1$o Fr%t se 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
with every film purchase.)
Approv FQ Release~~2^004/1 01 : CIA-RDP88-0.1365R00 0 0
'" ?wa og -~_xx~ e r - -~IIC\ two
Approved For Release 2004/11/01: CIA-RDP88-0 5FM?Hh 1P ONetwork
PAoDoro Rd For. Release 2004/11
The Campaign for r ical ig is is a coalition
of over 80 civil liberties, church, environmental,
labor, educational, litigative, women's, black,
latino and third world groups. Organizations
affiliated with the Campaign are committed to
An End to Covert Operations Abroad
An End to Political Spying and
Harassment in the United States
T be Campaign is an information clearing-
house which provides speaker-scheduling ser-
vices, local and campus organizing assistance,
press and publicity advice and national organi-
zational referrals. Through regular publica-
tions, press releases, phone work and meetings,
the Campaign keeps local, regional and
national contacts informed and up-to-date on
the issue of intelligence abuse.
For further information, to schedule a speaker,
establish a local group or coalition -for press,
publicity or organizing assistance, contact
,aii)I)awn for oliimcai i%-w ii
201 Massachusetts Avenue, N.E.,#112
Washington, Apprrove
(202) 547-4705 d For Release 2004/11
Sp 102
App e r Release 2004/114i1 : CI DP88-0 5R1 0300110005-0
acerials pis
Campaign for Political Rights 12/78
This listing has been prepared to facilitate the dissemination of information about surveillance and harassment for political reasons by U.S. govern-
mental agencies. It differs from a bibliography in that all materials can be currently obtained from the organizations and individuals listed. Please
request materials from the noted source, and only from the Campaign where listed.
Presence of an item in this listing does not imply approval or promise quality of information.
CAMPAIGN MATERIALS
(Single copies of all Campaign materials are available free of charge,
bulk copies at cost plus postage.)
SPEAKERS PROGRAM Lists available Campaign speakers, describes
topics and scheduling information. 2 pages; 1979.
READING LIST ON NUCLEAR POWER AND CIVIL LIBERTIES.
Lists current materials; an expanded version of the listing in this docu-
ment. 4 pages; 1978.
SURVEILLANCE OF NUCLEAR POWER OPPONENTS (flyer) Reve-
lations of surveillance by local police, FBI and private corporations dur-
ing the past five years. 2 pages; 1978.
WOMEN: TARGETS OF POLITICAL SURVEILLANCE (flyer). How
women are affected by government spying, including recent incidents.
2 pages; 1977.
Organizing Guides
ORGANIZING AGAINST GOVERNMENT SPYING. How to begin
and sustain activities to stop political harassment in your community,
including research, coalition building and publicity possibilities.
8 pages; 1977.
SPYING ON CAMPUS ORGANIZING GUIDE. Strategies, tools, and
methods of organizing around the issue of political surveillance and
covert recruitment by U.S. and foreign intelligence agencies on Ameri-
can campuses; includes advice on use of the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) and the Buckley Amendment to obtain information. 8 pages;
1977. (updated, January, 1979)
HOW TO SCHEDULE A SPEAKING EVENT. Basic steps to plan a
local event around a speaker. 2 pages; 1977.
HOW TO USE THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT TO
ORGANIZE. Various ways to raise and create greater interest in the
issue; materials and groups to contact for assistance. 8 pages; 1978.
MEDIA FACT SHEET. How to get media coverage, sample press
releases and public service announcements (PSA's), including a listing
of media directories and publications. 12 pages; 1977.
Organizing: The Intelligence Agencies
and the Academic Community
INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES AND THE ACADEMIC COMMUNITY:
ORGANIZING PACKET. Articles and organizing aides specifically
relating to the activities of intelligence agencies on American cam-
puses; guidelines adopted by various universities; relevant sections of
the National Intelligence Reorganization Act of 1978 (S. 2525); and tes-
timony presented by academic leaders at Congressional hearings.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS RES-
OLUTION ON COVERT INTELLIGENCE OPERATIONS OF THE
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. Resolution, adopted by the AAUP
at their 1976 Annual Meeting, declaring "its firm opposition" to any
involvement by academics in intelligence operations. 1 page.
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION GUIDELINES ON CIA AND
THE ACADEMIC COMMUNITY. Policy adopted in 1977 by the Board
of the ACLU stating that all research, consultation or other activitiesfor
the CIA by academics should be made public. (ACLU, 22 E 40th Street,
10th Floor, New York, NY 10010)
CIA'S CAMPUS RECRUITMENT: SECRETS FROM WHOM?
Morton Halperin, reprinted from the Washington Post, September 6,
1978. Analysis of the reasoning behind the CIA's decision to ignore
Harvard University's guidelines preventing secret recruitment of stu-
dents and other activities. 1 page.
THE CIA ON CAMPUS, Anne C. Roark, reprinted from the Chronicle of
Higher Education, September 26, 1977. Summary on a school-by-
school basis, of the CIA's secret drug testing program of the 50's and
60's. 1 page.
CLOAK, DAGGER AND GOWN: CIA IN ACADEME, Janet Karsten
Larson, reprinted from the Christian Century, October 19, 1977. Secret
research projects and the need to end secret ties between the academic
community and the intelligence agencies. 3 pages.
ESPIONAGE 101: THE CIA AND THE CAMPUS CONNECTION,
Mark Fritz, reprinted from the Student Lawyer, November, 1977. Intro-
duction to the CIA's activities on US campuses. 2 pages.
FACE THE NATION. Transcript of interview with CIA Director
Stansfield Turner on the CBS network, October 22, 1978. Turner pub-
licly reconfirms that the CIA will disregard the Harvard guidelines.
MICHAEL T. KAPSA V. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. An
FOIA lawsuit filed by representatives of the Ohio State University stu-
dent newspaper, the Daily Lantern against the CIA for deleted informa-
tion. 1978.
THE NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION'S RESOLUTION ON
CIA PRESENCE ON CAMPUS. Resolution, passed at the 1976 NSA
(now United States Student Association) conference, stating that all
operational use of academics and students should be condemned.
1 page.
CAMPAIGN ACTION
COMMITTEE MATERIALS
(Single copies of all Action Committee materials are available free; bulk
copies available at cost plus postage.)
ORGANIZING NOTES Monthly newsletter for local organizers,
researchers and reporters covering the intelligence issue. Including
local campus, and national organizing activities, updates on relevant
news, current materials, upcoming events and other information of
interest. 16 pages, plus frequent "Organizing Inserts."
GRASSROOTS LOBBYING ON INTELLIGENCE LEGISLATION (an
organizing guide). How to work on national intelligence legislation at
the local level, including ways to research representatives' positions,
preparation of materials on bills, and publicity suggestions, 8 pages;
1978.
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
GE NER'A`f0dffff IVC7/11/01 : ClVW borMbY1 RMATION
INFORMATION ACT
CETA, THE COMPREHENSIVE EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING
ACT. How to obtain a CETA grant to hire one or more unemployed
persons. Also available, a newsletter on CETA-related activities. 28
pages; 1978; $1.50 per copy (Center for Community Change)
CITIZEN INVOLVEMENT IN THE LOCAL BUDGET PROCESS. A
tour of the annual budgetary process, including ways to influence local
expenditures. Helpful for people seeking to limit red squad activities. 28
pages; 1978; $1.50 (Center for Community Change)
DEVELOPING SKILLS IN PROPOSAL WRITING, Mary Hall. How to
assess a group's potential for funding, and how to write a proposal that
will match a potential funding source's priorities. Each chapter includes
a bibliography. 399 pages; 1977; $10 hardback (Continuing Education
Publications)
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING: INFLUENCING LOCAL BUDGETS
Again, helpful in keeping revenue sharing funds from being used to
support red squad activities. 28 pages; 1978; $1.50 (Center for Com-
munity Change)
THE GRASSROOTS FUNDRAISING BOOK, Joan Flanagan. Organ-
izing as well as financial potential of a wide range of possible activities,
including door-to-door solicitations, and deferred giving. 219 pages;
1977; $5.25 (The Youth Project)
MEETING FACILITATION: THE NO-MAGIC METHOD, Berit Lakey.
How to plan and carry out productive meetings; the roles of facilitator,
vibes watcher, and process observer. 6 pages; 1975; 30C (Movement
for a New Society)
THE NEIGHBORHOOD ORGANIZER'S HANDBOOK, Rachelle B.
Warren and Donald Warren. Neighborhood dynamics and how to tap
energies for organizing efforts. 248 pages; 1977; $14.95 (University of
Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556.)
A NONVIOLENT ACTION MANUAL: HOW TO ORGANIZE NON-
VIOLENT DEMONSTRATIONS AND CAMPAIGNS, William Moyer.
The theory of nonviolent direct action campaigns; practical, detailed,
step-by-step procedures for organizing campaigns and demonstrations.
20 pages; 1977; $1.25 (Movement for a New Society.)
ORGANIZING FOR ACTION. How to organize around a specific issue.
1978; free (Unitarian Universalist Service Committee)
THE RESOURCE MANUAL FOR A LIVING REVOLUTION, Virginia
Coover, Ellen Deacon, Charles Esser and Christopher Moore. A collec-
tion of tools used in numerous social change activities. Describes skills
that can help a group develop an analysis, vision and strategy; build
community support; and educate and train people for action. Extensive
bibliographies. 352 pages; 1977; $5.70 paper (Movement for a New
Society.)
Requesting Files
A CITIZEN'S GUIDE ON HOW TO USE THE FOIA AND THE PRI-
VACY ACT IN REQUESTING GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS. The
basis for requests under both acts, including important information on
exemptions in the laws. Sample requests, appeals procedures, and the
need for initiating suits to obtain information. 1977; $2.00. (Order
number 052-071-00540-4, U.S. Government Printing Office.)
THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT: WHAT IT IS AND HOW
TO USE IT. Discussion of the Act and the nine exemptions under which
information can be withheld. Short sections on the Privacy, Sunshine
and Advisory Committee Acts. 1977; Send SASE. (Freedom of Informa-
tion Clearinghouse.)
USING THE FOIA: A STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE. Examination of the
entire FOIA process. Contains detailed instructions, sample letters,
addresses and what to expect from a large number of agencies. 1978;
$1.00 per copy, bulk available. (Center for National Security Studies.)
HOW TO USE THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. The use of
the Act, what to expect, and the full text of the act. 1977; $1.50 per copy.
(The Council of Scientology Ministers.)
YOUR RIGHT TO GOVERNMENT INFORMATION: HOW TO USE
THE FOIA. Details use of the Act. Send 25C and SASE. (ACLU, NY.)
FOIA Litigation and General Information
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION CASES. An alphabetical and cumula-
tive listing of FOIA court decisions, annotated as to exemptions and with
topical index; prepared by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of
Legal Counsel. Reprinted in Litigation Under the Amended Federal
Freedom of Information Act, see below. (U.S. Government Printing
Office.)
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT, U.S. Senate Judiciary Commit-
tee hearings related to oversight. Held September through November,
1977. 1042 pages. (Committee or Senate Document Room.)
LITIGATION UNDER THE AMENDED FEDERAL FREEDOM OF
INFORMATION ACT, Christine M. Marwick, Editor. A technical man-
ual containing detailed outlines and reprints numerous important refer-
ence materials. Free descriptive brochure available upon request.
1978; 200 pages; 4th Edition; $7.00 nonprofit organizations and law
faculty students. (Center for National Security Studies.)
A SUMMARY OF FREEDOM OF INFORMATION AND PRIVACY
LAWS OF THE 50 STATES. Briefly summarizes laws affecting records
of public meetings, personal privacy and regulation of information sys-
tems. 1978; $11.00. (Access Reports.)
SEE: Local Legislation-FOIA law in Maryland
Newsletters-FOIA Digest. Access Reports
Campus-Krupsa v. CIA
Campaign Materials-Using the FOIA as an Organizing Tool
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
L1frGAYIFbl-ielease 2004/11/01: CIA-RDP88-013659191MIMA
PLEADINGS, DISCOVERY AND PRETRIAL PROCEDURE FOR
LITIGATION AGAINST GOVERNMENT SPYING. Manual address-
ing issues and techniques involved in an anti-spying lawsuit. Based on
the experiences and court papers in Chicago class-action suits. 1977;
$15.00, $7.50 for tax-exempt groups. (Better Government Association,
360 N. Michigan Avenue, #1118, Chicago, IL 60601.)
POLICE MISCONDUCT LITIGATION MANUAL, Michael Avery and
David Rudovsky, editors. Covers the steps in successfully preparing and
pleading a police misconduct civil rights action. 1977; $35.00 individu-
als, $45.00 for libraries. (National Lawyers Guild, 1425 Walnut Street,
Philadelphia, PA 19102.)
RAISING AND LITIGATING ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE
CLAIMS AND CASES. National Lawyers Guild Special Projects Staff.
Fully annotated, biennial supplements. $15.95. (Lake Law Books, 142
McAllister Street, San Francisco, CA 94102.)
Lawsuits, Motions, Decisions
For other samples, contact the attorneys or organizing committee work-
ing on specific cases. They will usually publicize recent developments in
their newsletters or docket reports, and will often be happy to provide
copies of legal documents at cost to people working on parallel cases.
UTILITIES COMMISSION COMPLAINT. Keystone Alliance et al. v.
Philadelphia Electric Company, filed 9/78. Complaint before the Pen-
nsylvania Utilities Commission charging that the local utility surveilled,
maintained files on and provided information to others regarding activi-
ties of nuclear power opponents. Available at cost of copy. (David Kairys,
1425 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102.)
OBTAIN LEIU FILES. A memo prepared by David Power(Spring, 1978)
for use in the Carlos Montes case, provides background information for
legal workers preparing a motion to obtain LEIU file information in a
criminal case. (Citizens Commission on Police Repression, 633 S.
Shatto Place, Los Angeles, CA 90005.)
DECISION IN SPYING LAWSUIT. Order, Judgment and Decree in the
Memphis case of Chad Kendrick et a l v. Wyeth Chandler et al. provides a
sample settlement in a surveillance lawsuit. Decided 9/78. (Center for
National Security Studies.)
MODEL OFFER OF PROOF SHOWING INTELLIGENCE INFORMA-
TION RELEVANT TO CASE. The offer and memo were prepared by
Jack Schwartz for use in the Skyhorse-Mohawk case. States that
groups including the FBI and LEIU had internal documents that would
show selective prosecution in an effort to imprison members of the
American Indian Movement. 1978. (Jack Schwartz, 2804 S.E. 27th
Street, #2, Portland, OR 97202.)
SEE: FOIA-Litigation Under the Amended Freedom of Information Act
Comprehensive-Freedom and National Security
Newsletters-many of the listed publications provide updates on
recent court activities. (See especially First Principles and Organizing
Notes.)
Approved
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES: WHO PAYS FOR THEM, WHO RUNS
THEM AND WHO PROFITS FROM THEM? Ideas for investigating
educational institutions. Helpful in investigating outside funding for
academic work. $2.50 each. (Public Citizen, PO Box 19404, Washing-
ton, DC 20036.)
CRIMINAL EVIDENCE, L. C. Waddington. Written for police officers,
this book gives guidelines for evidence admissible in court. Helpful for
people documenting police abuses, as well as people who experience
frequent harassment because of minor violations of the law. 1978;
$13.95. (Glencoe Publishing Company, 17337 Ventura Blvd., Encino,
CA 91316.)
RESEARCH INTO LOCAL POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITES:
SOME SUGGESTIONS, Jim Jacobs. Some ideas for the beginning
researcher, including books and local information sources. Free, send
self-addressed, stamped envelope (SASE). (Michigan Coalition to End
Government Spying.)
SECRETS OF A PRIVATE EYE, Nicholas Pileggi, reprinted from the
New York Magazine, October 4, 1976. Many simple ways to do back-
ground checks. (Campaign.)
SEE: Campaign Materials-each organizing guide includes re-search
information.
CIA-Dirty Work (article on "How to Spot a Spook")
Newsletters: Covert Action Information Bulletin (How to Research
and Expose CIA personnel)
LOCAL AND STATE
LEGISLATION
COMPILATION OF STATE AND FEDERAL PRIVACY LAWS. Cit-
ations and descriptions of 400 state and federal laws governing surveil-
lance and information collection. Texts of representative laws are
included. 166 pages; $14.50. (Privacy Journal.)
FOIA. A sample Freedom of Information statute, to be used at the state
level. (FOIA Clearinghouse.)
FOIA. The new Maryland state FOIA, passed in 1978, can also be used
as a sample state Act. (Maryland Attorney General's office, Baltimore,
MD.)
MICHIGAN FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. Citizen's Guide to
Open Records in State and Local Government, Perry Bullard, state
representative who sponsored the bill. (Perry Bullard, State Capitol,
Room 303, Lansing, MI 48909.)
SURVEILLANCE. The proposed guidelines of the City of Seattle, intro-
duced in Fall, 1978, seeking to protect individual rights from intelli-
gence activities by the city police. Critiques also available. (Seattle
Coalition on Government Spying.)
SEE: Newsletters-Access Reports, Organizing Notes
'w 3 Local Publications
For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
FE D E RA9pre jjfS etKyj (11 /01 : CIA-RDP88-01 t6n0003 Gode Reform
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS
AND REPORTS; EXECUTIVE
ORDERS
Copies of all bills, hearings and reports are available from the House or
Senate document rooms.
A LAW TO CONTROL THE FBI. Proposed national legislation to end
domestic political surveillance. February 1977; 35 pages; $1.00. (Com-
mittee for Public Justice, 22 East 40th Street, New York, NY 10016.)
COMPARISON OF PROPOSALS FOR REFORMING THE INTELLI-
GENCE AGENCIES. Contrasts five documents: Carter's Executive
Order #12036, S 2525 (Senate Intelligence Committee's proposed for-
eign intelligence charter, 1978), the Church Committee Report, the Pike
Committee Report, and HR 6051. August 1978; 71 pages, $2.00. (Cen-
ter for National Security Studies.)
INTELLIGENCE REFORMS: LESS THAN HALF A LOAF, David Wise.
Reprinted from the Washington Post, April 23, 1978. Critiques of S
2525, the Senate Intelligence Committee's proposed foreign intelli-
gence charter. 1 page; Send SASE. (Campaign Action Committee.)
MISSING INTELLIGENCE CHARTERS, George Lardner, Jr. Re-
printed from The Nation, September 2, 1978. An account of how Con-
gress has been dragging its feet about instituting any meaningful
reform of the intelligence agencies since the Church Committee's reve-
lations. Send SASE. (Campaign Action Committee.)
TESTIMONY ON S 2525. Printed text of all 1978 Senate Select Com-
mittee on Intelligence hearings on S 2525, the Foreign Intelligence
Charter, available from the Senate Document Room. Hearings include
testimony from: Thomas Emerson, Yale Professor of Law Emeritus;
Morton H. Halperin, Director of the Center for National Security Studies;
Louis W. Schneider, Executive Secretary of the American Friends Ser-
vice Committee; Ethel Taylor, National Coordinator of Women Strike for
Peace; Richard M. Gutman, Chief Counsel for plaintiffs in Chicago red
squad lawsuit, Alliance to End Repression, at al. v James Rochford, et
al.; and Jerry Berman and John Shattuck, American Civil Liberties
Union.
CONTROLLING THE FBI. Testimony of the ACLU on FBI charter legis-
lation before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Jerry Berman, Mortor
Halperin and John Shattuck. April 25, 1978. A 44-page, heavily-
documented analysis of the FBI's past record and the need for statutory
controls. (ACLU, DC.)
FBI STATUTORY CHARTER. Hearings by the Senate Committee or,
the Judiciary, Part I. April 20 and 25, 1978. Includes ACLU
testimony cited above and an FBI organization chart with names of
division directors.
Wiretap Bill
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE ACT OF 1978-CON-
FERENCE REPORT. U.S. House of Representatives, Report No. 95-
1720. Final version of the wiretap bill as approved by the full Congress
in October, 1978 with 16 pages of explanation.
GUTTING THE FOURTH AMENDMENT, Christopher M. Pyle.
Reprinted from Inquiry, July 24, 1978. Assessment of the improve..
ments as well as the inadequacies embodied in the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act of 1978. Send SASE. (Campaign Action Committee.)
S 1566-FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE ACT OF
1978. Hearings, U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, July 19
(The criminal code reform bills have had different numbers in different
Congresses, e.g., S. 1 in the 94th and S. 1437 in the 95th.)
OUR-WORK FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE WILL NOT BE SILENCED
BY S. 1437. Brief description of the potential effects of the Criminal
Code Reform Act of 1977 on freedom of assembly. (NCARL)
READ IT AND ACTT Testimony of Professor Thomas Emerson of Yale
Law School before the House Criminal Justice Subcommittee. Docu-
ments the threats to individual rights contained in S 1437. (NCARL)
S 1437. A one-page flyer on Section 1301 of the proposed Criminal
Code Reform Act, its broad definition of obstructing a government func-
tion by fraud. (Ad Hoc Coalition Against S 1437/HR 6869, 633 S. Shatto
Place, Los Angeles, CA 90005.)
SCENES WE'D RATHER NOT SEE. Highlights in comic book style of
some of the repressive sections of S 1437. (Bay Area Coalition to Stop
Senate Bill 1437, PO Box 5929, San Francisco, CA 94101.)
ANNUAL REPORT. Select Committee on Intelligence, U.S. Senate,
December 1978. Review of Committee's work, particularly during past
year, on wiretap and charter legislation.
ANNUAL REPORT. Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, U.S.
House of Representatives, October 14, 1978. A72-page review of Com-
mittee's work on wiretap legislation, charters, budget disclosure, covert
operations, oversight hearings, intelligence community structure and
terminology, and related information.
EROSION OF LAW ENFORCEMENT INTELLIGENCE AND ITS
IMPACT ON THE PUBLIC SECURITY.U.S. Senate, Committee on the
Judiciary, Subcommittee on Criminal Laws and Procedures, Parts 1-4,
July 1977 - February 1978.
EXECUTIVE ORDER #12036. President Carter's Executive Order on
U.S. Intelligence Activities, released January 24, 1978. (Available from
the Office of the White House Press Secretary, The White House,
Washington, D.C.)
INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY: CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT.
U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Issue Brief
No. IB77079. History and chronology of all hearings and legislation.
1978; 25 pages.
NATIONAL SECURITY SECRETS AND THE ADMINISTRATION
OF JUSTICE. U.S. Senate, Select Committee on Intelligence, Subcom-
mittee on Secrecy and Disclosure, released October 10, 1978, 80
pages. Includes recommendations regarding leaks and the need for
secrecy in trials involving classified information.
WHETHER DISCLOSURE OF FUNDS FOR THE INTELLIGENCE
ACTIVITIES OF THE UNITED STATES IS IN THE PUBLIC INTER-
EST. U.S. Senate, Select Committee on Intelligence, Sen. Rept. 95-
274, June 16, 1977.
SEE: Campaign Action Committee Materials-Grassroots Lobbying
Intelligence Legislation
Newsletters-Civil Liberties Alert, First Principles (carries numerous
analyses of current legislation, executive actions, etc.)
Organizing Notes (each issue includes a legislative update)
and 21, 1977 and February 8, 24 and 27, 1978. 4
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
THE I IV`TfCLJtJEIer 2004/11/01: CIA-RDP88-01365INWRAWN
COMMUNITY
THE AMERICAN POLICE STATE, David Wise. The full extent of the
domestic activities by intelligence and police agencies. 1976; 417
pages; $ 12.95 hardback, also available in paper. (Random House Press,
201 E. 50th Street, New York, NY 10022.)
FREEDOM VS NATIONAL SECURITY: SECRECY AND SURVEIL-
LANCE, Morton H. Halperin and Daniel Hoffman. How the courts have
dealt with national security claims when these compete against the
rights of American citizens. 1977; 589 pages; $15.00 hardback. (Chel-
sea House Publishers, 70 W. 40th Street, New York, NY 10018 and the
Center for National Security Studies.)
THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY. History, Organization and
Issues. Compiled and edited by Tyrus G. Fain. Extensive information
about the many national intelligence-gathering agencies, including a
lengthy discussion of covert actions abroad. List of acronyms, glossary
of terms and bibliography included. 1977; $35.00 hardback. (R.R.
Bowker Company, 1180Avenue of theArnericas, New York, NY 10036.)
THE INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT, David Wise and Thomas Ross. CIA,
NSA and other intelligence agencies' activities and their impact on
other governmental actions. 1974; 380 pages. (Bantam Books, Random
House, 457 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10022.)
THE LAWLESS STATE: THE CRIMES OF THE US INTELLIGENCE
AGENCIES, Morton Halperin et al. Crimes of the CIA, FBI, NSA, IRS
and grand juries. 1976; 318 pages; $2.95 paperback. (Penguin Books,
New York or the Center for National Security Studies-250 extra for
handling and postage.)
NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS: GOVERNMENT SECRECY IN
AMERICA, Norman Dorsen and Stephen G illiers, editors. Based on the
proceedings of a conference on government secrecy held in 1973.
1975; 362 pages; $2.95 paperback. (Penguin Books, New York or the
Committee for Public Justice.)
POLICE OPERATIONAL INTELLIGENCE, Donald O. Schultz and
Loran A. Norton. The historical aspects of military and police intelli-
gence activity, including current police intelligence theory. 1973; 230
pages; $10.50. (Charles C. Thomas, Springfield, IL.)
TECHNO-SPIES: THE SECRET NETWORK THAT SPIES ON YOU -
AND YOU, Ford Rowan. Expose of the massive invasion of privacy by
the federal government's use of computer and telephone systems.
1978; $ 10.95 hardback. (G.P. Putnam Sons, 200 Madison Avenue, New
York, NY 10016.)
TOP SECRET: NATIONAL SECURITY AND THE RIGHT TO KNOW,
Morton H. Halperin and Daniel N. Hoffman. The need and right to know
important information upon which foreign policy is based. 1977; 158
pages; $3.95 paperback. (New Republic Books, Washington, DC or Cen-
ter for National Security Studies.)
0
ABSTRACTS OF DOCUMENTS RELATING TO INTELLIGENCE,
FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL DEFENSE. Updated listing of
materials released under the FOIA, lawsuits, etc. by various agencies.
These previously secret documents have not been published, but are
available from the CNSS library. $2.50. (Center for National Security
Studies.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF INTELLIGENCE LITERATURE. An annotated
listing of what the Defense Intelligence Department considersthe most
significant English language works on intelligence and related topics.
1977; 71 pages; Fifth Edition. (DIA, U.S. Department of Defense,
Washington, DC 20301.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY ON PRIVACY SUBJECTS. (Privacy Journal.)
SPIES AND ALLTHAT ... INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES AND OPER-
ATIONS, Ronald M. Devore. Bibliography. 1977; 71 pages; $3.00.
(Center for the Study of Armament and Disarmament, LosAngeles, CA.)
SEE: Newsletters-especially those listed as specializing in this issue.
Spying by Local Police-Garden Plot article
SELECTED READINGS:
REPRESSION IN THE U.S.
THE GREAT FEAR, David Caute. Discusses the anti-Communist purge
under Truman and Eisenhower. 1978; $14.95. (Simon and Schuster,
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.)
J. EDGAR HOOVER'S DETENTION PLAN: THE POLITICS OF
REPRESSION IN THE UNITED STATES, 1939-1976. Caroline Ross
and Ken Lawrence. Follows the scope of groups targeted by Hoover and
the FBI for possible detention. 1978; 21 pages; $1.00. (Mississippi Sur-
veillance Projectc, AFSC.)
POLITICAL HYSTERIA IN AMERICA, The Democratic Capacity for
Repression, Murray B. Levin. Deals with the underlying forces that
create repressive periods such as the Red Scare of the 20's and the
McCarthy days of the 50's. 1971; $8.95. (Basic Books, Inc., 10 E. 53rd
Street, New York, NY 10022.)
POLITICAL PRISONERS IN AMERICA, Charles Goodell. From the
I.W.W. to present, the author follows the reasons American political
activists are jailed. 1973; $8.95. (Random House, New York.)
POLITICAL REPRESSION IN MODERN AMERICA, 1870 to the
Present, Robert Justin Goldstein. Government, corporate and other
pressures brought to bear on political activists through the years. 1978;
574 pages; $6.95 paperback. (Two Continent Publishing Group, LTD, 30
E. 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017.)
SPYING ON AMERICANS. Political Surveillance from Hoover to
the Huston Plan, Athan Theoharis. FBI, Justice Department and Execu-
tive Branch memos form the "paper trail" followed in this account of
accelerating programs of wiretaps, security indices, mail openings, and
break-ins directed against Americans exercising their civil liberties.
1978; 360 pages; $15.00. (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, PA
19122.)
SEE: Spying on Groups and Individuals-Cold War Political Justice
and Rosenberg pamphlets
5
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
CENTRAIIV1 LrLYMNEV/01 Sppecific ecific Countries : CIA-RDP8 o or
r (;E Regions
AGENCY
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. Packet includes background
information. Ask for the chart of the Director of Central Intelligence
Command Responsibilities for helpful flow chart. (U.S. Central Intelli-
gence Agency, Washington, DC 20505.)
THE CIA AND THE CULT OF INTELLIGENCE, Victor Marchetti and
John Marks. Famous expose on the workings of the CIA and other intel-
ligence agencies. The first book in American history to be censored prior
to publication. $1.95. (Dell Books or CNSS.)
THE CIA AND THE SECURITY DEBATE, 1975-1976. Judith F.
Buncher, Editor. Reprints of newspaper articles from around the coun-
try on the CIA and the Presidency; CIA foreign covert operations; FBI
dirty tricks; and the Senate's investigation and reports. 1977; two
volumes. (Facts on File, 119 West 57th Street, New York, NY)
CIA: THE PIKE REPORT. Original version of the Congressional report
prepared in 1975 by Rep. Pike's investigating committee on global CIA
covert actions. President Ford wanted to censor it, but itwas eventually
published in the Village Voice.284 pages; $6.00. (Spokesman Books,
England or Carrier Pigeon, 88 Fischer Avenue, Boston, MA 02120.)
CLEARING THE AIR. Daniel Schorr. Memoir of the former CBS
reporter who leaked the Pike Report. Includes a section on that event.
1977; $11.95. (Houghton-Mifflin, Company, 1 Beacon Street, Boston,
MA 02107.)
CRIME AND COVER-UP: THE CIA. THE MAFIA AND THE DALLAS-
WATERGATE CONNECTION. Peter Dale Scott. 1977; 80 pages;
$3.00. (Westworks, Berkeley, CA.)
HISTORY OF THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. Anne
Karalekas. Originally prepared in April, 1976 and appearing in Book IV
of the Church Committee Report, it is a comprehensive history of the
Agency. 1977; $7.80. (Aegean Park Press, Laguna Hills, CA.)
IS ANYBODY WATCHING THE CIA? David Wise, reprinted from
Inquiry Magazine, November 27, 1978. The author questions whether
"oversee" is now considered the same as "overlook" by the Congres-
sional Oversight Committee. Send SASE. (Campaign.)
OSS: THE SECRET HISTORY OF AMERICA'S FIRST CENTRAL
INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, R. Harris Smith. 1972; $10.95. (University
of California Press, 2223 Fulton Street, Berkeley, CA 94720.)
THE PENTAGON-CIA ARCHIPELAGO. The "Washington Connec-
tion" and Third World Fascism, Noam Chomsky and Ed Herman. Ana-
lyzes Carter's "human rights campaign" and US counterrevolutionary
violence and subversion in Third World countries. The authors also
explain why the U.S. population is unaware of its government's role.
1978; $12.00 hardback; $5.40 paperback. (South End Press, Box 68,
Astor Station, Boston, MA 02123.)
UNCLOAKING THE CIA, Howard Frazier, Editor. Collection of 25
essays by Victor Marchetti, John Marks, Hortensia Bussi de Allende,
Frank Donner and others. 1978; $12.95. (The Free Press, MacMillan
Publishing Company, Inc., 866 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022.
THE BLACK BOOK OF AMERICAN INTERVENTION IN CHILE,
Armando Uribe. Describes ITT, CIA and 40 Committee intervention to
overthrow Allende. 1975; 154 pages; $9.95 hardback; $3.95 paper-
back. (Beacon Press, 25 Beacon Street, Boston, MA 02108.)
A CALL FOR IMMEDIATE ACTION: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
URGENT ACTION ON CIA COVERT ACTIONS IN CHILE. William
Wipfler. How $8 milion in covert action money was used to destabilize
Chile after Allende was elected. 1974. (NewYorkLatinAmerican Work-
ing Group, National Council of Churches in USA.)
THE CIA's AUSTRALIAN CONNECTION, Denis Freney. Reviews
CIA intervention in Australia during the 1970's. 1977. (P.O. Box A 716,
Sidney, South NSW 2000, Australia.)
DECENT INTERVAL, Frank Snepp. A former CIA officer describes the
Agency's failures to prepare for the evacuation of Saigon in 1975. 1977.
(Vintage Books, New York.)
DIRTY WORK: THE CIA IN WESTERN EUROPE, Philip Agee and
Louis Wolf. Compilation of articles, a guide on "spotting a spook,' and a
listing of 700 alleged CIA agents in Western Europe. 1978; $24.95,
$10.00 discount if purchased from Covert Action Information Bulletin
with a subscription order. (Lyle Stuart, Secaucus, NJ or CAIB.)
HIDDEN TERRORS, A.J. Langguth. Study of how the CIA, the Pen-
tagon and hundreds of U.S. police advisors encouraged military takeov-
ers in various Latin American countries. Features Dan Mitrione, who is
remembered as the protagonist inStateofSiege. 1978; $10.00. (Pante-
hon, 201 E 50th Street, New York, NY 10022.)
IN SEARCH OF ENEMIES, John Stockwell. The former head of the
Agency's Angolan Task Force criticizes the CIA's role in the Angolan
war. 1978; $12.95. (Norton, 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10036.)
ITT/CIA PAPERS: SUBVERSION IN CHILE. Reproduces internal
memos from the ITT Corporation, documenting its attempt to block the
election of Allende in 1970. An 18-page introduction provides back-
ground information on the papers. 116 pages; $4.00. (Spokesman
Books, England or Carrier Pigeon, 88 Fischer Avenue, Boston, MA
02120.)
JORDAN: A CASE OF CIA/CLASS COLLABORATION. This booklet
describes CIA involvement in Jordan. 1977; $1.00. (Counterspy, Box
647, Washington, DC 20044.)
U.S. MILITARY INVOLVEMENT IN SOUTHERN AFRICA. Western
Massachusetts Association of Concerned African Scholars, editors.
Documents the role of US government and multinational corporations
within a Western strategy of supporting white-minority rule. Among the
articles included is "Covert Operations in Central and Southern Africa."
1978; $12.00 hardback,$5.40 paperback. (South End Press, Box 68,
Astor Station, Boston, MA 02123.)
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
CIA and Huma&F1I#+c~#Y WePM eAyAMt01 : C # ~~' Q of Trade Union Impe-
CIA COVERT OPERATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS. Basic introduc-
tion to the relationship between the CIA's secret actions abroad and
human rights violators. 1978; 24 pages; available in bulk. (Center for
National Security Studies.)
CONSULTATION ON DEVELOPMENT FROM THE PERSPECTIVE
OF THIRD WORLD PEOPLE. Discusses many issues relating to devel-
opment for third world countries, including meddling by theU.S. milita-
ry/CIA complex. 1974; 16 pages. (National Council of Churches, U.S.A.
Commission on Justice, Liberation and Human Fulfillment.)
HUMAN RIGHTS ACTION GUIDE. How to organize around the
human issue; includes a segment on the CIA. 1978; $.10 single copy;
bulk prices available. (Coalition for a New Foreign and Military Policy,
120 Maryland Avneue, NE, Washington, DC 20002.)
THE LOGISTICS OF REPRESSION: A REPORT ON THE VOLUME,
FORMS AND FUNCTIONS OF U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE TO
THE MARTIAL LAW REGIME IN THE PHILIPPINES. Includes a sec-
tion on the role of CIA in supporting counter-insurgency activities.
1975; 23 pages. (National Coordinating Committee of the Anti-Martial
Law Movement, Philippines Information Bulletin, 14 Glenwood
Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139.)
SUPPLYING REPRESSION: U.S. SUPPORT FOR AUTHORITAR-
IAN REGIMES ABROAD. MichaelT. Klare. U.S. government agencies,
including the CIA, help key human rights violators stay in power. 1978;
$2.00. (Institute for Policy Studies.)
TOURING THE EMPIRE: U.S. MILITARY AND POLICE OUTPOSTS
IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Joseph E. Mulligan. CIA and US mil-
itary influence, including support and training of the police, help to
maintain the current repressive government. (1846 W. 17th Street,
Chicago, IL 60608.)
AFL-CIA. Reprint from the Pacific Research World Empire Telegram.
10 pages; 75 source footnotes on the American Institute for Free Labour
Development. $.50. (Research Associates International.)
THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN LABOUR CENTER AND THE CIA, Rod-
ney Larson. Booklet reprinted from series in the Black Panther Party
INS, with added information and bibliography. The founder and key staff
of the Center, which distributes tens of millions of dollars to 40 coun-
tries, "were known to have extensive CIA connections." $.50.
(Research Associates International.)
AN ANALYSIS OF OUR AFL-CIO ROLE IN LATIN AMERICA, or,
Under the Covers with the CIA. Fred Hirsch and others. 61 pages;
$1.00. (Research Associates International.)
THE CIA AND THE LABOUR MOVEMENT. Fred Hirsch and Richard
Fletcher. How the CIA uses its network to intervene abroad. $2.50.
(Spokesman Books, England, or Carrier Pigeon, 88 Fischer Avenue,
Boston, MA 02120.)
THE CWA AND THE CIA. Cynthia Sweeney and others from the Com-
munications Workers of America (AFL-CIO). Details of the background
and current programs of the CWA and the relationship between the
union and the State Department, multi-national corporations, AID and
the CIA. $1.00. (Research Associates International.)
LABOUR COUNCIL FOR LATIN AMERICAN ADVANCEMENT,
THE CIA COMES HOME. Former overseas CIA labor operatives are
now working in and forming ethnic groups in the U.S. trade union move-
ment. $.10. (Research Associates International.)
PARTNERS, LABOUR AND THE CIA. Sidney Lens. Reprinted from
the Progressive Magazine, February, 1975. 8.50. (Research Associates
International.)
rialism, Don Thomson and Rodney Larson. Reviews attempts to hinder
trade unions; and the role the CIA played in European, Chilean and
other unions to achieve anti-communistic goals. 1978; $2.00. (War on
Want, England, or SUBS, 343 S. Dearborn Street, Chicago, IL 60604.)
CIA - Mind Control Testing
HUMAN DRUG TESTING BY THE CIA. U.S. Senate Committee on
Human Resources, Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research.
Hearings held September, 1977. 219 pages.
THE MIND MANIPULATORS. Alan W. Scheflin and Edward M.
Opton, Jr. Reviews the CIA's and U.S. Army's behavior modification
experiments. 1978; 539 pages; $14.95 hardback. (Paddington Press.)
OPERATION MIND CONTROL. W.H. Bowart. The CIA's MK ULTRA
and other secret testing programs carried out in the 1950's. 1978.
(Dell.)
SEARCH FOR THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. John P. Marks.
The history of the CIA's drug and behavior control programs post-World
War II. February, 1979; 275 pages. (Quadrangle.)
WAR ON THE MIND. Peter Watson. Survey of psychological research.
1978; $17.50, hardback. (Basic Books.)
Memoirs by Former Employees
THE CIA'S SECRET OPERATIONS: ESPIONAGE, COUNTER-
ESPIONAGE AND COVERT ACTION. Harry Rositzke. 1977. (Readers
Digest Press, Pleasantville, NY 10570.)
THE CRAFT OF INTELLIGENCE. Allan W. Dulles, first CIA director,
1963. (Harper and Row, 10 E 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022).
HONORABLE MEN: MY LIFE IN THE CIA. William Colby, former CIA
Director, and Peter Forbath. 1978; 493 pages; $12.95 hardback. (Simon
and Schuster, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.)
INSIDE THE COMPANY: CIA DIARY, Philip Agee. Description of his
12 years with the CIA. Written in diary form. $4.00, paperback. (Penguin
Books or Center for National Security Studies.)
THE NIGHT WATCH: MY 25 YEARS OF PECULIAR SERVICE.
David Atlee Phillips. 1977. (Athenum, 122 East 42nd Street, NewYork,
NY 10017.)
PORTRAIT OF A COLD WARRIOR. Joseph Burkholder Smith, a
former covert operator. 1976. (G.P. Putnam's and Sons, 200 Madison
Avenue, New York, NY 10016.)
SECRETS, SPIES AND SCHOLARS, BLUEPRINT OF THE ESSEN-
TIAL CIA. Ray S. Cline, former Deputy Director of Intelligence. 1976;
$10.00. (Acropolis Books, Colortone Building, 2400-17th Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20009.)
SILENT MISSIONS. Vernon A. Walters. 1978; 654 pages, hardback.
(Doubleday and Co. Inc., 245 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017.)
UNDERCOVER-MEMOIRS OF AN AMERICAN SECRETAGENT.
E. Howard Hunt. 1974; $8.95. (Berkeley Publishing Corporation, 200
Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016.)
SEE: Legislation-Charter Reforms
Newsletters-Counterspy, Covert Action Information Bulletin, First
Principles, Internet, Organizing Notes
Films-The Intelligence Network, The Battle of Chile, The CIA Case
Officer, The CIA's Secret Army, Controlling Interest, The Paper Pri-
son, Que Hacer, Rise and Fall of the CIA, The Spook Who Sat By the
Door
Slide Shows-Sharing Global Resources
Cassette Tapes-CIA on Campus, Dialogue Conspiracy,Inside the
CIA
7
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
TERROR ISMpXteKq,fieg;Xt;2601p/01
FOR POLITICAL
SURVEILLANCE
CRUSADERS, CRIMINALS, CRAZIES: TERROR AND TERROR-
ISM IN OUR TIME, Frederick J. Hacker. How government policies and
reactions to terrorism are half the problem. 1976. (Norton, New York.)
CONTEMPORARY TERRORISM-SELECTED READINGS, J.D.
Elliott and L.K. Gibson, editors. Anthology of articles on terrorism,
including sections on controlling political terrorism in a free society and
terrorism and the intelligence function. 1978: 318 pages; $17.25.
(International Association of Chiefs of Police, 11 Firstfield Road, Gai-
thersburg, MD 20760.)
DISORDERS AND TERRORISM. Report of the Task Force on Dis-
orders and Terrorism. This official report suggests standards and goals
for civil authorities, legislatures, police and others. Appendices include
information about "international terrorist" experiences, 100 page chro-
nology of alleged domestic terrorist activities and a lengthy biblio-
graphy. Prepared by the National Advisory Committee on Criminal
Justice Standards and Goals. 1976; 596 pages. (U.S. General Printing
Office.)
EXPLOSIVE INCIDENTS. 1977 Annual Report. Incidents of bomb-
ings for "protest" reasons (where the motive was known, according to
ATF) are said to have jumped from four in 1976 to 45 in 1977. (Depart-
ment of Treasury, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Intelli-
gence Branch, Washington, DC 20226.)
POLITICAL VIOLENCE, Ted Honerich. The moral and philosophical
arguments that have been offered for and against political violence. 128
pages; 1977; $8.95. (Cornell University Press, 124 Roberts Place,
Ithaca, New York, 14850.)
TERRORISM: A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY, G.D. Boston. The con-
cepts and definitions of terrorism including topics such as "prevention
and response': "strategies" and "terrorist philosophy and motivation".
1978; 70 pages. (National Criminal Justice Reference Service, National
Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, Washington, DC
20531.)
TERRORISM AND THE LIBERAL STATE, P. Wilkinson. Implications
of terrorism to democracy, including "strategies of prevention, deter-
rance, and counteroffensives open to governments and security for-
ces." 1978; $14.95. (Halsted Press, a Division of John Wiley and Sons,
605 3rd Street, New York, NY 10016.)
THE TERRORIST AS SCAPEGOAT, Frank Donner. Reprinted from
The Nation, May 20, 1978. Official fears of European-styled political
terrorism coming to the U.S. and their connection to the growing official
concern that non-violent nuclear power opponents and other political
activists are potential terrorists. $.25. (Public Eye.)
U.S. GOVERNMENT AND
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE
AGENCIES
DINA, SAVAK, KCIA, OUR ALLIES' SECRET AGENTS HAVE
COME TO THE UNITED STATES. 100; 80 each over 10 copies.
(Clergy and Laity Concerned, 1322 18th St., NW, Washington, DC
20036.).)
CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
U.S. PARTICIPATION IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL POLICE
ORGANIZATION (INTERPOL). U.S. House of Representatives, Com-
mittee on the Judiciary, hearings held March 30, 1977. 204 pages.
THE SECRET WORLD OF INTERPOL, Omar Garrison. Report on
investigation of the private international police organization. $13.95.
(Ralson-Pilot Publishers, Church of Scientology.)
THEY EDUCATED THE CROWS: AN INSTITUTE REPORT ON THE
LETELIER/MOFFITT MURDERS, Saul Landau. Update on the inves-
tigation into and indictments for the 1976 killings of former Chilean
Ambassador Orlando Letelier and Ronni Karpen Moffitt. 1978; $2.00.
(Institute for Policy Studies.)
SEE: Newsletters-/ran Free Press, Resistance, Chile Legislative
Bulletin
CIA
FBI
COINTELPRO: THE FBI'S SECRET WAR ON POLITICAL FREE-
DOM, Nelson Blackstock. The FBI's plot against the Socialist Workers
Party. Introduction by Noam Chomsky. 1976; 216 pages; $2.95. (Vin-
tage, New York or Political Rights Defense Fund.)
THE COMPLETE COLLECTION OF POLITICAL DOCUMENTS
RIPPED OFF FROM THE FBI OFFICE IN MEDIA, PENNSYLVANIA.
This special edition from 1971 originally revealed COINTELPRO. $ 1.50.
(WIN Magazine.)
FBI, Sanford Unger. In-depth study of the Bureau, including back-
ground information on many FBI officials. Includes important FBI, COIN-
TELPRO acronyms, glossary and bibliography. 1977; 665 pages; $7.95.
(Little, Brown and Company, 34 Beacon Street, Boston, MA 02106.)
THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION: AMERICA'S POLIT-
ICAL POLICE. The FBI's record of surveillance and harassment, tech-
niques they used, authority cited, where to go for help. $.35 each.
(CNSS.)
FBI OVERSIGHT. US House of Representatives, Committee on the
Judiciary. Hearings held June and November, 1977. 239 pages.
HEARINGS ON THE CONFIRMATION OF JUDGE WILLIAM
WEBSTER AS DIRECTOR OF THE FBI. Before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, January 30, 31 and February 7, 1978. Copies of the full
hearings are available from the Committee. Reprints of testimony sub-
mitted by Ted Glick of the People's Alliance. (People's Alliance,
PO Box Peter Stuyvesant Station, New York, NY 10009.)
INVESTIGATING THE FBI: A TOUGH LOOK AT THE POWERFUL
BUREAU, ITS PRESENT AND ITS FUTURE. Robert Sherrill, Victor
Navasky, Thomas Emerson and others. Introduction by Tom Wicker.
Taken from presentations on the FBI at a 1971 conference. (Doubleday
and Company or Committee for Public Justice.)
JOURNALISTS AND G-MEN, Chip Berlet. (The Chicago) Reader,
6/2/78. COINTELPRO included a mass media program which "functi-
oned from 1956 to 1971 in more than 25 cities and involved more than
300 journalists." $.25. (Public Eye.)
MR. BELL AND INFORMERS, Adrian DeWind and Marie B. Abraham.
Reprinted from The Nation. 1978. (CNSS and CPJ.)
TIMELINESS AND COMPLETENESS OF FBI RESPONSES TO
REQUESTS UNDER THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION AND PRI-
VACY ACTS HAVE IMPROVED. U.S. Controller General. 1978; 93
pages. (General Accounting Office, Washington, DC.)
SEE: Spying on Individuals and Groups
Legislation-charters
THE POLITICAL POLICE IN BRITAIN, Tony Bunyan. The Official Newsletters-most newsletters will provide periodic reports on FBI
Secrets Act, and police and intelligence agencies operations. $15.95. surveillance activities
(St. Martin's Press, Inc., ApprovednFor Release 2004/1/018. CIThe Dp8 nd1133i 5r-00 a~cTO~rBr-b
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
GRAND JURIES AND LOCAL AND STATE POLICE
POLITICAL SPYING AND SPYING AND HARASSMENT
HARASSMENT
ANNALS OF LAW: TAKING THE FIFTH, Richard Harris. Reprinted
from the New Yorker Magazine. (Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
BRINGING DOWN THE CURTAIN ON THE ABSURD DRAMA OF
ENTRANCES AND EXITS: WITNESS REPRESENTATION IN THE
GRAND JURY ROOM, Emma Hixon, reprinted from the Spring, 1978
issue of The American Criminal Law Review. (Coalition to End Grand
Jury Abuse.)
THE GRAND JURIES: AN AMERICAN INQUISITION, Judy Mead,
reprinted from The Lawless State. 500. (Grand Jury Project and CNSS.)
THE GRAND JURY, A TOOL OF THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT.
Background on use of the Grand Jury. 1978; 15 pages. (Committee for
Grand Jury Reform.)
GRAND JURY ABUSE PACKET. Relevant and current pamphlets on
Grand Jury abuse. $2.00. (Grand Jury Project.)
THE GRAND JURY, A HISTORY OF REPRESSION, Jim Reif. An
overview of Grand Jury abuses in the 1970's. Reprinted from Grand
Jury, 1 /76. $.10. (Grand Jury Project.)
GRAND JURY FACT SHEET. Winter, 1978. Why you should be con-
cerned, what you can do, where should your letter go. (Coalition to End
Grand Jury Abuse.)
KANGAROO GRAND JURIES, Frank Donner and Richard Lavine.
How the Nixon administration turned the Grand Jury into an arm of the
intelligence-gathering apparatus. Single copies free. (Coalition to End
Grand Jury Abuse.)
KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: THE FBI AND GRAND JURIES. Abuses by
the FBI/grand jury and our rights. $.10 each. (Grand Jury Project.)
THE MODERN GRAND JURY: THE ABUSE OF A PEOPLE'S
TRUST. How grand juries violate the Constitution and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Features a mock grand jury script that can
be used in local organizing. 1978; 15 pages; $1.00. (Committee for
Grand Jury Reform.)
THE NEW GRAND JURY, Paul Cowan. Reprinted from the New York
Times Magazine. (Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
GRAND JURY AND POST WATERGATE AMERICA, Fred Solloway.
Reprinted from Trial, a national legal news magazine. 12/74. (Coalition
to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
SO YOU'RE GOING TO BE A GRAND JUROR. Provides essential
information for a person who will sit on a grand jury. $.50. (Coalition to
End Grand Jury Abuse.)
TESTIMONY PRESENTED TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES discussing grand jury abuses and reform,
presented by representatives of the Coalition. Single copies
free. (Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
TESTMONY PRESENTED TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES on grand jury abuses and reform by the Grand
Jury Project. Available at cost of xeroxing and postage. (Grand Jury
Project.)
WILL THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN-A PEOPLE'S GUIDE TO THE
GRAND JURY AND THE FBI HARASSMENT. General guide to the
issue. $.25 each. (Grand Jury Project.)
SEE: Newsletters-National Committee Against Grand Jury Repres-
sion Quash
Women-When Women Become Massively Political
Posters-You, Your Rights and the FBI, Alto,- A la Del Grandurado/
FBI
AMERICA'S SECRET POLICE NETWORK, George0'Toole. Reprints
from Penthouse, December, 1976. Although dated, provides helpful
background information and a membership list of the LEIU. (AFSC, Sur-
veillance Rights Project.)
CHICAGO RED SQUAD PACKET. Includes the complete text of the
1975 Cook County Grand Jury report on Chicago police spying as well
as reprints of four relevant articles. $1.00. (Richard Gutman, 407 S.
Dearborn, #505, Chicago, IL 60605.)
THE CONDUCT OF LOCAL POLICE INTELLIGENCE, JamesJacobs.
Doctoral dissertation, includes extensive footnotes. 300 pages; 50 per
page or free through a legal services program/attorney. (Clearinghouse
Review, National Clearinghouse for Legal Services, 500 N. Michigan
Avenue, Suite 2220, Chicago, IL 60611-Cite Number 21,195.)
COPS AND REBELS. A Study of Provocation, Paul Chevigny. Argues
that police almost inevitably provoke violence when infiltrating black
groups. 1972. (Curtis, New York.)
GOALS AND OBJECTIVES IN COMBATTING POLICE REPRES-
SION. Kenneth E. Tilsen. Reviews organizing and litigation aimed
against repression. Reprint of a speech given at the National Confer-
ence on Government Spying in Chicago, 1977. (National Lawyers
Guild.)
THE IRON FIST AND THE VELVET GLOVE. Study of the paramilitary
nature of U.S. police departments. $3.75, bulk copies less. (Center for
Research on Criminal Justice, 464 19th Street, Oakland, CA 94612.)
NATIONAL POLICE NETWORK DISSEMINATING POLITICAL
INFORMATION. Xerox copies of actual LOU face cards, obtained in
the ongoing Chicago spying lawsuit, Alliance to End Repression v.
Rochford, show that information on political activists was circulated in
the secret police network. September, 1978. (Campaign for Political
Rights.)
POLICE INTELLIGENCE, Anthony J. Bouza. Study of Bureau of Spe-
cial Services from the police perspective. Details internal workings of
the New York City red squad; also discusses liaison with the FBI and
CIA. 1976. (AMS Press, Inc., 56 E. 13th St., New York, NY 10003.)
STATE POLICE SURVEILLANCE: REPORT OF THE SPECIALTASK
FORCE ON STATE POLICE NON CRIMINAL FILES. Describes sur-
veillance methods employed by the New York State Police in assem-
bling dossiers on hundreds of citizens in the 1960's. 1977. (New York
State Assembly, Room 419-20, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY
12248.)
SEE: Newsletters-Organizing Notes, Spotlight on Spying
Local Newsletters
Surveillance of Nuclear Power Opponents
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
HARASS ME dtj7eOr 1pFC1/01 : C E~gp&LOF 19NkV89WQR10R2;E2Y. Elvis offered to be an
ORGANIZATIONS OR
INDIVIDUALS
THE AMERICAN INQUISITIONS: U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY
HARASSMENT, RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION AND ABUSE OF
POWER. Prepared after the FBI raids on two offices of the Church of
Scientology to document the harassment and infiltration over the past
twenty years. 1977; $5.00 paperback. (Council of Scientology
Ministers.)
ARE THESE AMERICA'S POLITICAL PRISONERS? Ward Sinclair
and John Jacobs, reprinted from the Washington Post, January 8,
1978. Review of the cases of the people designated by Amnesty Inter-
national as political prisoners. The FBI and other intelligence agencies
are implicated in mostof the cases. $.25. (AFSC Surveillance Rights
Program.)
THE CASE OF SAMI ESMAIL. Packet of information includes Palesti-
Palestinian Human Rights Bulletin, news clips and documents
relating to the arrest, trial and imprisonment of Esmail, an American of
Palestinian descent. (Palestine Human Rights Campaign.)
COLD WAR POLITICAL JUSTICE: THE SMITH ACT, THE COMMU-
NIST PARTY AND AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES. 1977; 322 pages.
(Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut.)
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE. A Documentary Look at America's
Secret The FBI's COINTELPRO against Black, Native American, and the
Chicano/Mexicano movements, including copies of FBI documents.
1978; 80 pages; $2.50. (NLG Task Force on Counterintelligence and the
Secret Police, 343 S. Dearborn, Room 918, Chicago, IL 60604.)
AN FBI INFORMER WITH THE WEATHERMEN-Bringing Down
America, Larry Grathwohl as told to Frank Reagan. Grathwohl,
allegedly the only FBI agent to go underground with members of the
WUO, talks about his experiences during that time. 1970; $7.95 hard-
back. (Arlington House Publishers, 165 Huguenot Street, New
Rochelle, NY 10801.)
FINAL REPORT ON SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COM-
PANY. Texas Senate, Subcommittee on Consumer Affairs. Investi-
gates allegations of illegal wiretapping by Bell Telephone which
surfaced during an internal Houston Police Department investigation.
1976; 147 pages. (Texas Senate, Austin, TX.)
FREEDOM FOR AMERICANS: 1976. Based on documents received
under the FOIA from eleven government agencies. 18 pages; 500 per
copy or 500 for over 10 copies. (AFSC Surveillance/Rights Program.)
THE FRIENDS AND THE FEDS, Margaret Bacon. How the American
Friends Service Committee has been harassed by federal intelligence
agencies. Reprinted from The Progressive, December, 1976. 30 each.
(AFSC Surveillance Rights Program.)
INTERCEPTION OF WIRE AND ORAL COMMUNICATIONS FOR
LAW ENFORCEMENT PURPOSES. Without advance notice, the
DOD has promulgated an elaborate scheme for the authorization of
electronic surveillance of civilians and service members both abroad
and within the U.S. April 3, 1978. (Directive 5200.24, Department of
Defense, Washington, DC 20301.)
JUDGE GRIESA'S HISTORIC CONTEMPT RULING AGAINST
GRIFFIN BELL in Socialist Workers Party v. Attorney General Bell.
Includes the full text of the ruling against Bell, for refusing to turn over
the names of FBI infiltrators. 1978; $1.00. (Political Rights Defense
Fund.)
THE KAUFMAN PAPERS. U.S. Government documents obtained
after litigation under the FOIA show personal involvement of the trial
judge in the Rosenberg-Sobell case in the 1950's. 1977; $1.00.
(National Committee to ReOpen the Rosenberg Case.)
informant on entertainers such as the Beatles and Jane Fonda. This
booklet reproduces FBI documents covering the entertainer's career,
including internal memoranda regarding his offer. 1978; $4.95. (MEM
Publishing Co., Box 5714, Chicago, IL 60680.)
PALESTINE HUMAN RIGHTS BULLETIN. The Case of Sami Esmail.
Reviews events in the case of the American citizen of Palestinian des-
cent who was detained by Israeli authorities. Information was provided
to Israel by the FBI about Sami's lawful political activities in the USA.
February, 1978. (Palestine Human Rights Campaign.)
PRESS COVERAGE OF THE SOCIALIST WORKERS PARTY.
(Volumes 1 and 2.) A complete picture of the SWP v. Bell case, with a
chronology, relevant newspaper articles and editorials. $35 each. (Pol-
itical Rights Defense Fund.)
THE ROSENBERG CASE, REOPENING THE PAST IN LIGHT OF
THE PRESENT. The fight to reopen the famous spy case and the impact
of revelations about intelligence agency abuses on the case. $.25.
(National Committee to ReOpen the Rosenberg Case.)
TAPS, BUGS AND FOOLING THE PEOPLE, Herman Schwartz. Indi-
vidual copies free. (Field Foundation, 100 East 85th Street, New York,
NY 10028.)
SEE: Newsletters-most listed carry specialized articles relating to this
topic
Surveillance of Blacks
Surveillance of Native Americans
Surveillance of Nuclear Power Opponents
SURVEILLANCE OF
NATIVE AMERICANS
HEARING BOARD REPORT OF THE MINNESOTA CITIZEN'S
REVIEW COMMISSION ON THE FBI. Findings and recommenda-
tions; includes discussion of extensive harassment of Native Americans
in Minnesota and surrounding states. 1977. (Minnesota Citizens
Review Commission on the FBI.)
VOICES FROM WOUNDED KNEE. An account of the events leading
up to and during the occupation at Wounded Knee, South Dakota as told
by the participants-and residents of Wounded Knee. 1976; 264 pages;
$5.00. (Akwesasne Notes.)
SEE: Newsletters-Akwesasne Notes (See especially article "True
Mission of the FBI")
Guild Notes, Organizing Notes, Spirit of the People
Right Wing- National Police Network Disseminating Political Data
SURVEILLANCE OF WOMEN
WHEN WOMEN BECOME MASSIVELY POLITICAL. Reprinted from
Quash, this article describes the impact of grand jury harassment on
women. (Grand Jury Project.)
SEE: Campaign Materials-Women: Targets of Surveillance
Newsletters-Majority Report, Organizing Notes, Quash, Supporters
of Silkwood, Counterspy
10 Films-rhe Intelligence Network
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
SPYING OIV IV V4LCNK04/11/01 : CIA-RDP888Qa Vff UQQ OF
POWER OPPONENTS BLACK AMERICANS
ABSTRACT, Bob Alvarez. Summary of the Barton Report which recom-
mends various nuclear safeguard measures on civil liberties in the Uni-
ted States. 9.25. (Environmental Policy Center, 317 Pennsylvania
Avenue, SE, Washington, DC 20003.)
FEDERAL RESPONSE PLAN FOR PEACETIME NUCLEAR EMER-
GENCIES (INTERIM GUIDANCE). 4/77. (U.S. Federal Preparedness
Agency, Washington, DC.)
HUMAN BEINGS: AN ENDANGERED SPECIES. Map showing
existing facilities, illustrating the enormous possibilities for govern-
ment officials who want to infiltrate anti-nuclear and other political
groups. $.10. (Women Strike for Peace.)
INTENSIFIED NUCLEAR SAFEGUARDS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES,
John H. Barton. Report which spells out for the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission safeguards necessary to thwart attacks on nuclear facili-
ties. October 1975; 45 pages; Contract number AT (49-24)-0191.
$3.75. (NRC, 1717 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20555.)
JCP & L PHOTOGS ADMIT POSING AS NEWSMEN, Jan Barry.
Daily Record, Northwest New Jersey. Photographers covering a local
action were actually representing a utility rather than newspaper.
8/13/78. (SEA Alliance, 324 Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair, NJ
07042.)
NEW HAMPSHIRE STATE POLICE FILES ON THE CLAMSHELL
ALLIANCE. Information supplied by the U.S. Labor Party and Informa-
tion Digest regarding the Clam's occupation in 1977. (Public Eye or the
Clamshell Alliance, 62 Congress St., Portsmouth, NJ 03282.)
OVERSIGHT HEARINGS ON NUCLEAR ENERGY SAFE-GUARDS
IN THE DOMESTIC NUCLEAR INDUSTRY. Hearings held February
26-27, 1976. House of Representatives, Committee on Interior and
Insular Affairs, Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment.
THE POTENTIAL FOR NUCLEAR TERRORISM, Brian Michael Jen-
kins. Discussion of the possibility of criminals or terrorist groups resort-
ing to the use of nuclear devices. Concludes that they would find this an
unsuitable method for obtaining their objectives. $1.50. (Publications
Department, the Rand Corporation, 1700 Main Street, Santa Monica,
CA 90406.)
SPECIAL KAREN SILKWOOD EDITION, WIN Magazine, November
1978. Series of articles about the Silkwood case and related issues.
$.50 each; bulk copies 9.20 each plus shipping. (Supporters of Silkwood
or WIN Magazine.)
A SPECIAL SAFEGUARDS STUDY, David M. Rosenbaum. Prepared
for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 1974.
THE THREAT OF NUCLEAR THEFT AND SABOTAGE, Senator
Abraham Ribicoff. Statement recorded in the Congressional Record,
4/30/74. (Congressional Record found in most libraries.)
THREAT TO LICENSED NUCLEAR FACILITIES. The "need" forsur-
veillance to protect facilities, prepared by the Mitre Corporation for the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. September, 1975; 230 pages, 80 per
page plus tax. (NRC.)
SEE: Newsletters-Critical Mass Journal, People and Energy, Organ-
izing Notes, Public Eye, Supporters of Silkwood newsletter.
Litigation-Keystone Alliance Lawsuit
The Right and Private Surveillance Groups-Anti-Nuke Movement
Spooked
CODE NAME "ZORRO". The Murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Mark Lane and Dick Gregory. Evidence claiming to show that James
Earl Ray did not act alone in killing Reverend King. It questions the FBI
role in surveilling and challenging the power of King before his death, as
well as its "investigation" of the killing after April 4th. 1977; 308 pages,
available in paperback and hardback. (Prentice Hall Publishers, NY.)
THE FBI AND BLACK WORKING CLASS ORGANIZING IN
DETROIT, Martin Glaberman. Paper describing the impact of COIN-
TELPRO activities on Detroit organizing. Delivered at the American
Sociological Association meeting, September, 1978. (Glaberman, c/o
University Studies, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202.)
NOTHING COULD BE FINER, Michael Myerson. Studies racism,
repression and resistance in the south, with special attention to cases
in North Carolina. 1978; $12.00 cloth; $3.95 paper. (International Pub-
lishers, 381 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10016.)
SEARCH AND DESTROY, Ramsey Clark and Roy Wilkins. Detailed
discussion of the killing of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark. 1973. (Harper
and Row, 10 E. 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022.)
WHO KILLED MALCOLM X? George Breitman, Herman Porter and
Baxter Smith. Factors coming to light during the investigation of the
death of Malcolm X. Includes article "FBI Plot Against Black Move-
ment." $1.95. (Pathfinder Press.)
CIA-FBI SPYING ON BLACK STUDENT UNIONS THROUGHOUT
THE U.S. Collection of articles documenting surveillance and disrup-
tion by both agencies. Reprinted from the University of California Pay-
back from May, 1977 to September, 1978. 14 pages; $1.40. (Murv
Glass.)
FBI DISRUPTION AND MURDERS OF BLACK PEOPLE. Murv
Glass. A series of 5 articles from Santa Barbara publications. 5 pages;
9.50. (Murv Glass.)
THE FBI PLOT AGAINST BLACK LEADERS, Iris L. Washington.
Reprinted from Essence Magazine, October 1978. COINTELPRO sought
to prevent the rise of a leader who might unify Blacks in America; a good
survey of the FBI's activities under the program. 8 pages; 9.25. (AFSC
Surveillance/Rights Program
INFILTRATORS, WIRETAPS, BLACK MUSLIMS. Simeon Booker,
reprinted from Jet Magazine, July 15, 1976. (Murv Glass.)
NMRLS NOTES. An investigative report on attempts to harass the
Northern Mississippi Rural Legal Service (NMRLS), a group which
defends the United League of Mississippi and other Black Groups.
October, 1978. (NMRLS, PO Box 928, Oxford, MS 38655.)
A POLICE SPY'S STRANGE STORIES. Reprinted fromtheSanFran-
cisco Chronicle, October 18, 1971. LouisTackwood, who infiltrated the
Black Panther Party and other groups, alleges that the Los Angeles
Police Department and the FBI sought to create disruption within politi-
cal groups. (Murv Glass.)
SEE: Newsletters-Black Panther INS, First Principles, Guild Notes
Organizing Notes, Public Eye
Harassment of Specific Organizations and Individuals-Are These
America's Political Prisoners
11
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R0003001 00
THE RIGHT AND PRIVATE NEWSLETTER 9 BY LOCAL
SURVEILLANCE GROUPS SURVEILLANCE COALITIONS
ANTI-NUKE MOVEMENT SPOOKED, Rory O'Connor. Reprinted
from Rolling Stone, June 1, 1978. The Moss Subcommittee on Over-
sight was investigating the surveillance of nuclear power opponents by
various private groups, including Research Westand LEIU. $.25. (Public
Eye.)
BROWNSHIRTS OF THE 70's. The U.S. Labor Party's background,
tactics, and apparent goals. Updated version was part of the first issue
of Public Eye. $1.00. (Public Eye.)
FBI USED RIGHT WING TO HARASS DETROITERS. Reprinted from
the Detroit Free Press, August 16, 1978. $.25. (Public Eye.)
HOW THE RIGHT WATCHES THE LEFT, Harvey Kahn and Eda Gor-
don. Reprinted from W/NMagazine. June 7, 1977; 7 pages; 8.50. (Pub-
lic Eye.)
INFORMATION DIGEST. Report on the Information Digest, its con-
nection with the New York State Police, and its designation by the State
Police as a confidential informant. June 8, 1976; 19 pages. (New York
State Assembly, Office of Legislative Oversight, Albany, New York
12248.)
THE PRIVATE SECTOR: RENT-A-COPS, PRIVATE SPIES AND
THE POLICE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX, George O'Toole. 1978; 250
pages; 810.95. (W.W. Norton and Co. Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, NewYork,
NY 10036.)
SPOOKS: THE HAUNTING OF AMERICA-THE PRIVATE USE OF
SECRET AGENTS, Jim Hougan. Study of how private agents, often
former CIA employees, now provide services for Howard Hughes, ITT
and others. 1978; 478 pages, 812.95 hardback. (William Morrow and
Company, 105 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016.)
THE US LABOR PARTY'S RADICAL CRUSADE. Reprinted from
Business Week, October 2, 1978. $.25. (Public Eye.)
SEE: Newsletters-Pub/ic Eye, Organizing Notes
Local Publications-Police Spying in Michigan
Surveillance of Nuclear Power Opponents
POLICE SPYING IN MICHIGAN. Recent events and revelations in
Michigan and elsewhere. Published bi-monthly by the Michigan Coali-
tion to End Government Spying. $3.00 per year. (MCEGS.)
QUIT SNOOPIN'. Issues of police brutality, surveillance, political
harassment and intelligence activities in Mississippi and beyond. Pub-
lished periodically. (Mississippi Surveillance Project, AFSC.)
NEWSLETTERS
Specifically on the Intelligence
Abuse Issue
COUNTERSPY. Covered variety of issues
including CIA in Jamaica, Chile, South America; CIA use of unions over-
seas and the League of Women Voter's Overseas Fund; GardenPlot
(national emergency plan). Selected issues, $1.50 and xerox copies
(cost) available. (Public Eye.)
COVERT ACTION INFORMATION BULLETIN. Following in the foot-
steps of Counterspy, this periodical has included articles about CIA
activities in Jamaica, research ideas, and CIA recruitment of foreign
officers. Published bi-monthly; $10.00 a year in U.S., $16.00 overseas.
(CAIB)
FIRST PRINCIPLES: National Security and Civil Liberties. The ways
that intelligence operations and security claims have undermined fun-
damental political rights. Special emphasis on the problems of reform-
what government proposals are, what's wrong with them, why they
might be dangerous. Includes, in addition to articles, news events, new
publications, court actions. 16 pages; 10 issues per year, $15; special
student and hardship rate $10.00. (CNSS.)
NATIONAL COMMITTEE AGAINST GRAND JURY REPRESSION.
General and grand jury repression of Puerto Rican and Chicano/Mexi-
can peoples in the U.S. Available for a donation. (National Committee
Against Grand Jury Repression, 2403 W. North Avenue, Chicago, IL
60647.)
THE ORGANIZER. Covers a range of cases eminating from political
repression in the U.S. (National Alliance Against Racist and Political
Repression )
THE PUBLIC EYE. Repressive surveillance by a myriad of groups in the
past, present, and future. Past issues have covered the U.S. Labor Party,
Information Digest, COINTELPRO, terrorism, and nuclear power and
civil liberties. $8.00 per year, published quarterly. (Public Eye.)
QUASH. Updates recent grand jury and FBI activities, discusses legis-
lative and political strategy, supplies general information and features.
Published bi-monthly; $6.00 per year. (Grand Jury Project.)
SPOTLIGHT ON SPYING. Local AFSC surveillance program activities
are highlighted; also included, information about local police red squad
activities and events of national importance. (AFSC Surveillance/Rights
Project.)
Approved For Release 2004/11/011:2CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Li"gWv W Base 2004/11/01: CILA 9VIUA17k,WR JW -a rtes recent disclosures of
surveillance on nuclear power opponents, and general updates on
The' following periodicals vary in their coverage of the intelligence nuclear power issues. $10 a year. (Box 6, Turners Fall, MA 01376.)
issue; some carry a number of articles in each publication while others
have in the past carried one or more stories of note.
ACCESS REPORTS. Action on FOIA and Privacy Acts by the courts
and the bureaucracy. Biweekly; $127 a year. (Access Reports.)
AKWESASNE NOTES. A quarterly journal for native and natural peo-
ples. See especially article "The True Mission of the FBI", September,
1977. Free upon request, donations appreciated. (Akwesasne Notes.)
THE BLACK PANTHER INTERCOMMUNAL NEWS SERVICE. Cov-
ers revelations of government activities against the Black Panther Party
and others. $10.00 a year. (Black Panther Party, 8501 E. 14th Street,
Oakland, CA 94621.)
CIVIL LIBERTIES ALERT. Covers legislation under ACLU scrutiny,
including intelligence-related bills. (ACLU, DC.)
CIVIL LIBERTIES REVIEW. Covers various civil liberties issues. Pre-
vious issues have included articles on Hoover's creation of intelligence
powers; undercover police, the ACLU and the FBI, and wiretapping.
$17.50 a year. (ACLU, NY.)
CLANDESTINE AMERICA. Reviews news on the assassinations of
Robert and John Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.; touches on FBI
and CIA investigations and related activities. (Assassination Informa-
tion Bureau, 1322 18th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036.)
FOI DIGEST. Roundup of FOIA litigation, legislation and rulings at
state and federal levels. Published bi-monthly. (Freedom of Information
Center, University of Missouri School of Journalism, PO Box 858,
Columbia, MO 62505.)
FREEDOM. Includes articles on FBI harassment of the Church of
Scientology, grand jury abuses, and government misconduct uncovered
by the Church. (Church of Scientology.)
GAY ACTIVIST. See especially their March, 1977 issue describing the
efforts of the GayActivist Alliance to obtain its FBI file. (GAA, PO Box2,
Village Station, New York, NY 10014.)
GUILD NOTES. Covers current surveillance/harassment litigation, as
well as updates on the Guild's own suits against the government for
organizational files. See especially the 10/77 issue for articles on the
FBI's NLG file. (National Lawyers Guild, 853 Broadway, New York, NY
10003.)
IRAN FREE PRESS. Bi-monthly newspaper on events in Iran and the
U.S. See especially series prepared by a UPI reporter which the wire
service refused to run. 8 pages each, English and Iranian. (Iran Free
Press, PO Box 883, Washington, DC 20044.)
INTERNET. Serves as the communication link in a world-wide network
of people concerned about human rights. Periodically covers meetings,
publications regarding the intelligence agencies' impact on human
rights. (Internet, 1502 Ogden Street, NW, Washington, DC 20010.)
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT WATCH. Examines Department (including
FBI, ATF DEA) briefs, budgets, policy statements and reports. See espe-
cially articles reviewing Attorney General Bell's record, howtheJustice
Department protected CIA crimes, and Can the Justice Department
Police Itself? $15.00 for 8 issues a year. (Committee for Public Justice.)
MAJORITY REPORT. Back issues follow political harassment of
women, including the FBI's file on the Women's Liberation Movement
and the grand jury harassment of lesbian communities. (Majority
Report, 74 Grove St., New York, NY 10014.)
MARION BROTHERS NEWS REPORT. Outlines ongoing prison
abuses at the Marion, Illinois Federal Prison. Leonard Peltier and other
"political prisoners" are jailed there. (National Committee to Support
the Marion Brothers, 4556a, Oakland, St. Louis, MO 63110.)
PRIVACY JOURNAL. Privacy in the computer age. Includes summar-
ies of recent court and legislative actions affecting privacy in U.S. and
abroad. $45.00 a year. (Privacy Journal, PO Box 8844, Washington, DC
20003.)
Approved For Release 2004/11/01
RESISTANCE. SAVAK and CIA activities in the US and other coun-
tries, as well as other Iranian issues. (Iranian Students Association, PO
Box 268, College Park, MD 20740.)
RIGHTS. Follows cases litigated by the National Emergency Civil Liber-
ties Committee, many of which involve surveillance or political harass-
ment activities. Published quarterly, $7.50 year. (National Emergency
Civil Liberties Committee, 25 E. 26th Street, New York, NY 10010.)
SPIRIT OF THE PEOPLE. National newsletter of the Native American
Solidarity Committee, periodically addresses politically-inspired cases
of harassment by FBI and other government officials. Quarterly; $7.00
year. (Native American Solidarity Committee.)
SUPPORTERS OF SILKWOOD. Events and issues regarding the
Karen Silkwood case. Published twice a year; available for a donation.
(Supporters of Silkwood.)
WASHINGTON WATCH. Includes range of issues, in addition to intel-
ligence abuses. Recently carried story on SAVAK activities in U.S. pre-
pared by UPI reporter that the wire service failed to run. (Washington
Watch, South Point Plaza, Lansing, MI 48910.)
Note: for current information, see magazines such as WIN, Inquiry,
High Times, Rolling Stone, Nation, etc. and major city newspapers,
such as the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and the Washington
Post. Organizing Notes and other specialized newsletters carry a list-
ing of "current materials" each month to help readers keep up-to-
date on such articles.
13
CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Affe ftor Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
THE POMEROY FILE. Bob Pomeroy, a Texas-based pilot spoke against
THE INTELLIGENCE NETWORK. A documentary film which exposes
an extensive intelligence-sharing network of over 100 agencies at the
local, state, federal and international level, including the FBI, the CIA,
local and state police and private organizations. Documented by
recently-uncovered files from the intelligence community itself. 16mm;
35 minute; color. $45.00 rental; $350 purchase. (Campaign for Political
Rights.)
THE BATTLE OF CHILE. Winner of several international awardsfor its
depiction of the last days of the Allende government, CIA involvement in
the takeover, and the actual coup. 1976; Part I, 100 minutes; Part 11, 91
minutes; black and white. (Tricontinental Film Center, 333 6th Avenue,
New York, NY 10014.)
THE CIA CASE OFFICER. An in-depth character portrait of John
Stockwell, a former CIA officer who served in Vietnam and Africa. 37
minutes, color. $65.00 rental; $650.00 purchase. (Institute for Policy
Studies.)
THE CIA'S SECRET ARMY. Explores the history of the CIA's illegal,
undeclared war against Cuba in the early 1960's. CBS correspondent
Bill Moyer focuses on the secret underground army, largely composed
of Cuban exiles, which was recruited and trained by the CIA to over-
throw Fidel Castro. 1977; 90 minutes. (The University of Michigan AV
Education Center, 416 Fourth Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. $45.00
rental. Or the Syracuse University Film Rental Center, 1455 E. Colvin
Street, Syracuse, NY 13210. $55.00 for three days.)
CONTROLLING INTEREST: THE WORLD OF THE MULTINA-
TIONAL CORPORATION. Centers on runaway shops, the erosion of
union bargaining, and the impact of US corporations in other countries.
A brief comment by Philip Agee concernsthe role of the CIA in "stabiliz-
ing" countries to maximize US corporate profits. 1978; 45 minutes; 16
mm color. Rental $60.00, with discount available to groups with limited
income. (California Newsreel, 630 Natoma Street, San Francisco, CA
94103.1
FRAME UP: THE IMPRISONMENT OF MARTIN SOSTRE. The
owner of a radical bookstore is place under police and FBI surveillance
and is subsequently arrested and convicted of inciting to riot. 1975
American Film Festival winner. 30 minutes; 16mm color; $50.00 rental
(includes shipping); $450.00 purchase. (Pacific Street Films.)
GUILTY BY REASON OF RACE. Looks back to the detainment of
22,000 Americans of Japanese descent in 1942. Thirty years later
these people still wonder at how, as good Americans, they were stripped
of their constitutional rights. 51 minutes, color, 16mm. $40.00 rent,
$550 sale. Videocassette, sale $385. (Films Incorporated, 1144
Wilmette Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or rent $17.40 from the Univer-
sity of Michigan Audio/Visual Department; 416 Fourth Street, Ann
Arbor, MI 48103.)
INCITING TO RIOT. The government's harassment of radical groups
at an American university. Documents the intent to infiltrate and des-
troy an organization. Part documentary, part fiction. 35 minute, black
and white, 16mm. $45.00 rental; $400.00 purchase. (Pacific Street
Films.)
THE LONG ARM OF DINA. Examines the international operations of
General Augusto Pinochet's secret police, which reached into Argen-
tina, Rome and Washington, DC to commit political assassination. Doc-
umentary, 26 minutes, color. (Institute for Policy Studies.)
THE PAPER PRISON: YOUR GOVERNMENT RECORDS. The use
and abuse of information amassed by government agencies on US citi-
zens, often without their knowledge, to which the FBI and CIA often
have greater access than the individuals involved. Produced by Paul Alt-
mayor, ABC News; Frank Reynolds reporting. 56 minutes. Rental
$55.00; $600.00 sale. (Macmillan Films, 34 MacQuesten Parkway,
South, Mt. Vernon, NY 10550.)
a proposed nuclear power plant at an open meeting. The Texas Public
Safety Department then opened a file on him and started investigations.
Pomeroy found out and publicized the investigation, revealing a web of
private, state and corporate security forces. Prepared for CBS 60 Min-
utes. 17 minutes, 16mm color. $215.00 purchase; video $1 10.00; Ren-
tal $25.00.(Time-Life Films, Time and Life Building, New York, NY
10020.)
QUE RACER (WHAT IS TO BE DONE). Includes CIA agents, Peace
Corps volunteers and the election of Allende, with both documentary
and fictional footage. Won critical acclaim at Cannes and other festi-
vals. 90 minutes, 16mm color film. (Institute for Policy Studies.)
RED SQUAD. Often satirical, this documentary looks at the red squad
activities of the New York City Police Department, Special Services Div-
ision and the FBI New York office. 45 minutes, black and white, 16mm.
$50.00 rental, $450.00 purchase. (Pacific Street Films.)
RISE AND FALL OF THE CIA. Historical exposition of the activities of
the CIA; gold medalist at the 1975 International Film Festival. 81 min-
utes in three sections. Color. $125.00 rental. (Grove Press Films, Nor-
theast Division, 440 Park Avenue, South, New York, NY 10016.)
THE UNQUIET DEATH OF JULIUS AND ETHEL ROSENBERG.
Probes the case some twenty years later-who were the Rosenbergs,
and was there really an atomic secret? Produced by PBS. 16rnm;
$125.00 maximum rental, flexible prices. (National Committee to
ReOpen the Rosenberg Case.)
THE SPOOK WHO SAT BYTHE DOOR. Portraysa Blackwhojoiristhe
CIA, is a model agent for five years, and then leaves to teach the spy
trade to a revolutionary group. Based on the book by Sam Greenly. Full
length feature film. (Transcontinental Films, 3701 Stocker Avenue, Los
Angeles, CA 90043.)
SURVEILLANCE-WHO'S WATCHING? Examines the Chicago red
squad's activities in the 1960's and early 70's. 60 minutes, black and
white, 16mm. $30.00 rental per showing. (AFSC, Surveillance/Rights
Project.)
UNDER SURVEILLANCE. Philadelphia's red squad. Produced byCBS
news in 1970. 60 minutes, black and white, 16mm. $30.00 rental.
(AFSC, Surveillance/Rights Project.)
WILMINGTON 10-USA 10,000. Directed by Haile Gerima. Reviews
the case, demonstrates the impact of the incarceration on the families
of "The Ten" and the Wilmington community, and reminds viewers that
American jails hold many other prisoners of conscience. 1978.90 min-
utes, 16mm color. (Positive Productions, 4310 22nd Street, Washing-
ton, DC 20018.)
Z. An investigation into the death of a charismatic Greek leader points
toward high government involvement; and ultimately creates a scandal
until heavy repression eliminates more opposition leaders. Stars Yves
Montand and Irene Papas. 1969; 128 minutes, color. French with Eng-
lish subtitles. $125.00 rental. (Reggane Films and O.N.C.I.C. Distrib-
uted by Cinema V., 595 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10022.)
Approved For Release 2004/11/01
14CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
VI D E GeAGS?T 8 2004/11/01: CIA-RDP88-00ARSIPMERO AP E
MINNESOTA CITIZENS REVIEW COMMISSION. Testimony pres-
ented to a panel of community leaders, their responses to the commis-
sion, and a detailed view of how FBI surveillance affects the lives of
people. 30 minutes, black and white. $25.00 rental. (Minnesota CRC.)
THE MURDER OF FRED HAMPTON. Investigates the murder of the
leading Black Panther Party leader in 1969 by the Chicago police.
$175.00 rental, two days. (Videotape Network, 115 East 62nd Street,
New York, NY 10021.)
THE OGLALA INCIDENT. Excerpted from the Minnesota CRC hear-
ings, describesthe events of June 26,1975,when two FBI agents and an
Indian man were killed. (Minnesota CRC.)
PUNISHMENT PARK. Fictitious police state where youths must
endure a desert trial in order to survive. $175.00 rental for two days.
(Videotape Network.)
ROCKFORD FILES. With James Garner. Rockford is called before a
grand jury and learns first hand about grand jury abuses. 50 minutes,
videocassette. (Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
TECHNIQUES FOR SECURITY AND PRIVACY IN COMPUTER
SYSTEMS. Professor Lance J. Hoffman discusses possible safeguards
which can be applied to both software and hardware. Intended for stu-
dents and professionals in computer sciences. Three black and white
videotapes, each under 60 minutes long. (University of California Exten-
sion Media Center, Berkeley, CA 94720.)
THE TRIAL OF LEONARD PELTIER. Also taken from the Minnesota
Citizen's Review Commission. (Video Center, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, MN 55455.)
THE USE OF INFORMERS. How the U.S. government has used infor-
mants against the Wounded Knee Legal Defense/Offense Committee,
the Honeywell Project, the MinneapolisTabicab Drivers Guild, the Black
Panthers in Chicago and the Sovereignty Movement. (Minnesota CRC.)
SEE: Films-Guilty by Reason of Race
RECORDINGS
All available for broadcast, quality, times and cost vary. Many organiza-
tions carry cassette recordings-this list is limited.
CIA ON CAMPUS. Morton Halperin, DirectoroftheCenterfor National
Security Studies, in an address at the University of Pennsylvania.
October, 1977. (Campaign for Political Rights.)
DIALOGUE CONSPIRACY. Programs by Mae Brussells on FBI, CIA,
Nazi and other conspiracies. Write for list and prices. (Mae Brussells,
World Watchers International, 25620 Via Crotalo, Carmel, CA 93923.)
I AIN'T GONNA TESTIFY. On the subject of Grand Jury Abuse. Pro-
duced by the Feminist Radio Network. 30 minute tape. $5.00 purchase.
(Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
INSIDE THE CIA: FUNDAMENTALS OF COVERT OPERATIONS.
K. Barton Osborn, former CIA consultant, speaking at the National
Organizing Conference to Stop Government Spying. September, 1978.
(Campaign for Political Rights.)
ORGANIZING: A LOCAL PERSPECTIVE. Ali Shabazz, formerly with
the AFSC Surveillance/Rights Program, at the National Organizing Con-
ference to Stop Government Spying. September, 1978. (Campaign for
Political Rights.)
POLITICAL SURVEILLANCE: RECENT DECISIONS IN THE
COURTS. Linda Backiel of the Grand Jury Project,at the National
Organizing Conference to Stop Government Spying. September, 1978.
(Campaign for Political Rights.)
RED SQUADS: AN HISTORICAL OVERVIEW. Frank Donner, Direc-
tor of the ACLU Research Project on Political Surveillance, at the
National Organizing Conference to Stop Government Spying. Sep-
tember, 1978. (Campaign for Political Rights.)
***The Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse is now completing produc-
tion of 30 minute tapes and public service announcements (psa's) on
grand jury abuse, for use on commercial and public radio stations. (Coa-
lition to End Grand Jury Abuse.)
SLIDE SHOWS
THE QUESTIONS YOU ASK. Current issues for Native and other
Americans. Prepared and distributed by the Native American Solidarity
Committee. Speakers can be scheduled to accompany the program.
(Native American Solidarity Committee.)
SHARING GLOBAL RESOURCES. The impact of U.S. multinational
corporations abroad, with a short section on CIA activities. 35 minutes;
$10.00 per week rental, available in Spanish. (NARMIC, AFSC, 1501
Cherry Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102.)
POSTERS
THE INTELLIGENCE NETWORK. Shows the information-exchange
network of local, state, federal and foreign governments and private
organizations. Based on a chart which is used throughout the movie of
the same name. 22" x 28", 2 color. $3.00 each; $2.50 for 10 or more.
(Campaign.)
ALTO: A LA REPRESSION DEL GRANURADO/FBI. Printed in
Spanish. $.50. 14" x 20". (Prepared by the New York Committee
Against Repression, available from the Grand Jury Project.)
YOU, YOUR RIGHTS AND THE FBI. Prepared by the Grand Jury Pro-
ject. 14" x 20". $.50. Black and white. (Grand Jury Project.)
SEE: Film and other audio-visual contacts for posters to accompany
films, tapes and slides. 15
BUTTONS
FREE THE WILMINGTON 10 and others (National Alliance Against
Racist and Political Repression.)
I AM KATHY POWER. $1.00 each. 2" diameter. (Coalition to End
Grand Jury Abuse.)
QUESTION AUTHORITY. (Local anti-nuke groups or Clay Colt, PO Box
271, New Vernon, NJ 07976.)
WE WON'T TALK. $.50 each. (Grand Jury Project.)
WHO KILLED KAREN SILKWOOD? and others. (Supporters of
Silkwood.)
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Approved For Release 2004/11/01 : CIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0
Sources of information listed more than once ... SASE indicates Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
Michigan Coalition to End Government Spying
Privacy Journal
22 East 40th Street
(MCEGS)
PO Box 8844
New York, NY 10016
234 State Street, Room 808
Washington, D.C. 20003
Detroit, MI 48226
Public Eye
E
lvania Avenue
S
600 Penns
Minnesota Citizens Review Commission (CRC)
PO Box 3278
.
,
.
y
Washington, D.C. 20003
c/o Minnesota Church Center
Washington, D.C. 20010
122 West Franklin, Room 320
Pacific Street Films
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
Minneapolis, MN 55404
280 Clinton Street
Surveillance Rights Program
NY 11201
Brooklyn
1501 Cherry Street
Mississippi Surveillance Project, AFSC
,
Philadelphia, PA 19102
PO Box 3568
Palestine Human Rights Campaign
Jackson, MS 39207
1322 18th Street N.W.
Center for Community Change
Washington
DC 20036
1000 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.
Movement for a Nevv Society (MNS)
,
Washington, D.C. 20007
4722 Baltimore Avenue
Research Associates International
Philadelphia, PA 19143
c/o R. Larson
Center for National Security Studies (CNSS)
4a Compton Terrace
N
E
122 Maryland Avenue
National Alliance Against Racist and Political
.
.
,
Washington, D.C. 20002
Repression
London, N2, England
150 Fifth Avenue, Room 804
Seattle Coalition on Government Spying
Church of Scientology
New York, NY 10011
2101 Smith Tower
Council of Scientology Ministers
Seattle
WA 98104
5930 Franklin Avenue
National Committee 1,o ReOpen the Rosenberg
,
Hollywood, CA 90028
Case
Senate Document Room, #S-325
853 Broadway
U.S. Capitol
Coalition to End Grand Jury Abuse
New York, NY 10003
Washington, D.C. 20510
105 2nd Street, N.E.
Washington, D.C. 20002
National Committee Against Repressive
Supporters of Silkwood (SOS)
Legislation (NCARL)
317 Pennsylvania Avenue, S.E.
Committee for Grand Jury Reform
1250 Wilshire Boulevard
Washington, D.C. 20003
Association of Scientologists for Reform
2125 S Street, N.W.
Los Angeles, CA 90017
Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
Washington, D.C. 20008
(UUSC)
Committee for Public Justice (CPJ)
501 C Street, N.E.
U.S. Program
22 East 40th Street, 10th floor
Washington, D.C. 20002
78 Beacon Street
NY 10016
New York
Boston, MA 02108
,
National Council of Churches (NCC)
Covert Action Information Bulletin (CIB)
475 Riverside Drive
U.S. Library of Congress
PO Box 50272
New York, NY 10027
Congressional Research Service
20004
D
C
Washington
'
First and E. Capitol St.
.
.
,
s Guild
National Lawyer
Washington, D.C. 20540
1 reedom of Information Clearinghouse
853 Broadway
110 Box 19367
New York, NY 10002
U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, DC 20036
Washington, D.C. 20402
Native American Solidarity Committee (NASC)
Project
Grand Jur
Women Strike for Peace
y
PO Box 3426
201 Massachusetts Avenue
NE
.'53 Broadway, Room 1116
St. Paul, MN 55165
,
Washington
D
20002
C
New York, NY 10003
,
.
.
Plus Publications
WIN Ma
azine
douse of Representatives Document Room
f Access Reports)
g
Capitol
ITS
503 Atlantic Avenue
.
2626 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
NY 11217
Brooklyn
Washington, D.C. 20515
Washington, DC 20037
,
Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)
The Youth Project
Political Rights Defense Fund (PRDF)
ONI)
(The Fundraising Book
1901 Clue Street, N.W.
Cooper Station, Box 649
,
Box 988
Washington, D.C. 20009
New York, NY 10003
Hicksville, NY 11802
Please forward copies and descriptive information of items not included in this listing to the Campaign for inclusion in the next edition of the "Materials
List" and Organizing Notes.
Campaign for Political Rights
201 Massachusetts Avenue, NE, Room 112
Washington DC 20002
Approved For Release 2004/11701 : GIA-RDP88-01365R000300110005-0