LETTER TO LEONARD R. SUSSMAN FROM DENNIS BEREND

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CIA-RDP88-01315R000200520001-8
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September 14, 2004
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February 8, 1978
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Approved For Release 2004/10/13: CIA-RDP88-01315R00 PUBLIC AFFAIRS Phone: (703) 351-7676 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Leonard R. Sussman Executive Director Freedom House Wilkie Memorial Building 20 West 40th Street New York, NY 10018 Dear Mr. Sussman: WASHINGTON. D. C. 20505 c=3 8 February 1978 Thank you very much for your quick response to my request for information on freedom of the press around the world. The material you sent was most useful, and I'm keeping it on hand for future reference. Reimbursement for the material is to be provided by another office in the Agency. Please let me know if you have not received it. STADT/DCl/PA/D Thank you again for your help. /JW Dist: Orig-addressee 1-CM w/basic 1-DB file Sincerely, SAT Deputy Assistant for Public Affairs to the Director of Central Intelligence Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-s 1315R000200520001-8 S C STAT STAT Approved For trtm T-171200520001-8 at the Willkie Memorial Building 20 West 40th Street, New York, N.Y. 10018 Programs to strengthen the institutions of freedom Research, publications, advisories on domestic and foreign affairs Comparative Survey of Freedom in every nation Freedom at Issue, a bimonthly ? Book program in Asia. Africa, Latin America Deputy Assistant for Public Affairs to the Director of Central Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 Dear (212) 730-7744 January 17, 1978 In response to your call today I am pleased to enclose the following information on our estimates of the level of press freedom around the world. As I indicated, our judgments under civil rights/liberties in the several tables are determined in large measure on the actual independence of journalists from the regime (whether or not independence is proclaimed in con- stitutions, etc.; and whether or not communications media are operated or regulated by the government, as in the case of the BBC). I also enclose Mass News Media and the Third World Challenge and other articles on this related subject. Please let me know if we can be of further assistance. im enclosures John Richardson, Jr., President Philip van Slyck, Chairman of the Executive Committee Leon Levy, Treasurer *Ned W. Bendier, Jr. Karl R. Bendetsen ZbIgniew Brzerinski, on leave Sol C. Chaikin John Diebold Wayne Fredericks Richard Gambino BOARD OF TRUSTEES Caroline K. Simon, Assistant Treasurer John W. Riehm, Secretary Roscoe Drummond, Vice-Chairman Executive Committee: above oMcers and at-large members. Richard N. Gardner, on leave ?Norman Hill William C. Lewis, Jr. Nathaniel L. Goldstein Sidney Hook Gale McGee Roy M. Goodman Jacob K. Javits Daniel P. Moynihan Ztappd For RelM1.01/4/10i13 :XI/VR:1AM- Arthur L. Harckham William R. Kintner Norman Redlich William E. Simon Francis Pickens Miller. Trustee Emeritus Rita E. Hauser Aaron Lowenstein Gerald L. Steibel ' Whitelaw Reid Leonora FL Sussman. Executive Director Sincerely, L?iard R. Sussman Executive Director Margaret Chase Smith. Chairman-Emeritus Harry D. Gideonse, President-Emeritus Leo Cheme, Honorary Chairman Whitney North Seymour, Honorary Chairman *Burns W. Roper Herbert Swope Richard R. Salzmann Robert C. Keever Howland H. Sergeant Eugene P. Wigner 013151100.01P0t20001.CuV:.:P7swimprhehner 7g=/91=P., Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200520001-8 0 9 ( FR PUBLIC AFFAIRS Phone: (703) 351-7676 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Leonard R. Sussman Executive Director Freedom House Wilkie Memorial Building 20 West 40th Street New York, NY 10018 Dear Mr. Sussman: WASHINGTON, D. C. 20505 8 February 1978 Thank you very much for your quick response to my request for information on freedom of the press around the world. The material you sent was most useful, and I'm keeping it on hand for future reference. Reimbursement for the material is to be provided by another office in the Agency. Please let me know if you have not received It. Thank you again for your help. C4nnevineklt, Deputy Assistant for Public Affairs to the Director of Central Intelligence DA/DCl/PA/D Berend/JW Dist: Orig-addressee 1-CM w/basic 1-DB file Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88 01315R000200520001-8 SAT Approved For at the Willkie Memorial Building 00520001-8 20 West 40th Street, New York, N.Y. 10018 Programs to strengthen the institutions of freedom Research, publications, advisories on domestic and foreign affairs Comparative Survey of Freedom in every nation Freedom at Issue, a bimonthly ? Rook program in Asia, Africa, Latin America Deputy Assistant tor Public Affairs to the Director of Central Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 Dear I F (212) 730-7744 January 17, 1978 In response to your call today I am pleased to enclose the following information on our estimates of the level of press freedom around the world. As I indicated, our judgments under civil rights/liberties in the several tables are determined in large measure on the actual independence of journalists from the regime (whether or not independence is proclaimed in con- stitutions, etc.; and whether or not communications media are operated or regulated by the government, as in the case of the BBC). I also enclose Mass News Media and the Third World Challenge and other articles on this related subject. Please let me know if we can be of further assistance. im enclosures John Richardson, Jr., President Philip van Slyck, Chairman of the Executive Committee Leon Levy, Treasurer *Ned W. Handler, Jr. Karl R. Bendetsen Zbigniew Brzezinski, on leave Sol C. Chaikin John Diebold Wayne Fredericks Richard Gambino BOARD OF TRUSTEES Caroline K. Simon, Assistant Treasurer John W. Riehm, Secretary Roscoe Drummond, Vice-Chairman Executive Committee: above officers and at-large members* Richard N. Gardner, on leave *Norman Hill Nathaniel L. Goldstein Sidney Hook Roy M. Goodman Jacob K. Javils Sydney Gruson Nathaniel R. Jones AA; ittilXireae r ..For Releati2144047117/13 Rita E. Hauser Aaron Levenstein William C. Lewis, Jr. Gale McGee Daniel P. Moynihan Bess Myerson : trAAWF,8?8-01 Whitelaw Reid Sinceiely, Leo4ard R. Sussman Executive Director Margaret Chase Smith, Chairem.m-Emerims Harry D. Gideonse, President-Emeritus Leo Cherne, Honorary Chairman Whitney North Seymour, Honorary Chu'rtnan *Burns W. Roper Richard R. Salzmann Howland H. Sargeant Robert A. Scalapino 315WEVQ,020001 Gerald L. Steibel Herbert Swope Robert C. Weaver Eugene P. Wigner Roy Wilkins Itecgues D. Wimpfbeimer Viands Pickens Miller, Trance Einerim, Leonard R. Sussman, Executive Dire, tor THE 'BOSTON PHOPINTX Approved For Release 20)34/1110/14I: CWRDP88-01315R00020 By Jim Kostrnan and Bob Katz Last. year, the Rockefeller Commission investigated al- legations of illegal domestic spy- ing by the CIA. Composed large- ly of men with previous ties to the US intelligence community, the Commission concluded that some abuses had occurred and made limited recominendations to prevent future ones. Presi- dent Ford's recently anrounced pjans for dealing with this prob- lem include the formation of a three-man Intelligence Advisory Board. It too is compoaed omen long associated with sovii: Most ? interesting of these is -' Leo Cherne, described in press accounts as a proiessional econ- omist and head of the Research Institute of America. For aome 25 years, Cherne has been chair- man of the International -Rescue. Committee (IRC), r. stthnglY anti-communist organization with the ostenshre oo?iaeose of setting up relief, opeteitio s in foreign countries wale ?sed.n.ing refugees from atier.s?iain :h have come under cornmuniS,e7contr0l. With this brief bac!aero?.nd in mind. it is noteworthy that in January, 1962, a young Amer- ican former Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald,- who had defec- ted to the Soviet Union in 1959, wrote to the MC asking for financial aid for his intended re- turn to the United States. In December, 1961, Oswald had in- ' formed the American embassy in Moscow that he wished to re- turn to the USA. The State !. Department then contacted the IRC and ft Texas chapter of the .' Red Cross about helping Os- wait!. At the suggestion of the embassy, Oswald wrote twice to the IRC, initially 'requesting 7. $800; then upping- it to $1000. "After all this time our visas have finally been granted, thank ? at a C. 0Avald wrote the IRC on -Jan. ..?6. 1962, "but our troubles are not :Thancial, only if your oeganieaLan in." The IRC never stepped ii- They informed the.State Depart- - mem that "as a strongly anti? commun;st organization, we would hatri-:y he the appropriate agency for -an Americarr who went :o Ruse 'a to live there.'''' The MC never even .replied to Oswald. but the State Depart- ment eventually came through - Mtn 8435, apparently the sum . Oswald required to sail to New . York. The Warren Commission Re- port states only that Oswald at- tempted between Feb. 6 and May 1 to procure aid from the RIC. But this account. is in con- ? flict with the evidence con- tained in the 26 volumes of hear- ings and exhibits published by the Commission. These docu- ments show that Oswald con- tacted the IRCa before Feb. 6, an- Oswa. s letters from the spring of 1962, prior ? to May 1, reveal that he had already been asseteed of the State Dept. mon;:iy. If Oswald continued to .cOarespond with the. MC until May 1, there is no record of it. Thera are many curious as- neets Of Oswald's attempt to get help from the 1RC. In the .early stages of his attempt I:a get aid, Oswald wrote to his mother and got her, with the help of the Red Cross, to contact the MC. When the IRC wrote hack to fhe Red_ Cross, they said that the State Dept. had already been in touch with them about the Oswald case. The whole affair, in- eluding the fact that the State Dept. wound up financing the re- turn of this one-time defector, is one reason why many-people sus- pect that Oswald went to Russia as an agent of the U.S. govern- ment. In fact, when Mrs. Marguerite Oswald alleged that her son was a government, agent, she cited the IRC/State Dept. enistale, ? A few clays afti point ment, the connections to 'th subject of a Nei article by Joh Crewdson's story at least some of lion dollars raise the MC comes at ly from the CL2 quoted Fra man Foundation was approached i by a "mysterio, asked to pass ab the MC for a a project in the ? Andrew Norman. the Norman Form called the incident but said the money .vas ear-marked for an unspecified Latin American ef- fort. Tiu.? Times noted that the Norman Foundation was rine of 1 many instittions identified in 1967 disclosures as a tonduit fox- CIA funds. The Tirrres? reported that the J.M. iKaplan Fund, also identified as a CIA conduit, has given money to both the IRC and Freedom House, an organiza- tn" which publishes infor- mation on the alleged surpres- sion of freedom in socialist coun- tries, and of which Cherne is chairman of the executive com- mittee. Crewdson's report, if true, would have established the first definite link between the CIA and the MC. But the next clay. Crewdson reported that Weil had retracted the original story, saying that he had "misre- called" the crucial episode. Free- dom House, apparently made nervous by the publicity, wrote the CIA mid asked if they had ever ben a direct or indirect re- cipient. ,of CIA islands. CIA director Geoeao Bush assured- Freedom House they were clean. When Che-ne was :asked by Cee. Times why he never checked the . Norman Foundation grants to the IRC for possible CIA influ- ence. he replied, "That's the sil- liest question I've ever heard." gence organization that pre ceded the CIA. But we don't. want to make to much f this. Cherne himself ba said that. the IRC is just a hobby Men entruued with keeping tab on the spy agencies should b evauated for impartiality on th basis of all their past endeavor hke the Citizen's Contriitte for a Free Cuba. Founded in Th ..nring of 1963, its membershi included Charm,- Clare Boot Luce, General S.L.A. Marshal'. Christopher Emmet, also of th TalC and head of the America. Friends of the Captive Natiom usavell as Jay Lovestone and Ii ving Beown, of the American Jr stit.ote for Free Labor Develor ine7 t., which has served as a CE, froht- for manipulating .Coreig? . labor unions. In a report put !jailed-. - Cherne's Freedor House. &le new committee cane for a new national policy to libel ate Cuba "by all means nece This 'meant encouragt ment of hit-and-run raids o rather than 'direct IT taiElary intervernioniThe repoi sue:eta:dad that these raids woe; .oat endanger world peace if cat tied or from hasea. outside U. territory. The report also cane for ass.istance to the antiCastr Cuban underground 'in Cub "through every possible char nel." Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RbP88-01315R000200520001-8 LPtiztz Iity Doi rulai',S Approved For Release 2p,y4/36.pil : (ykRDP88-01315R0002t!pp Busti. Says Freedom House Did Not Get C.I.A. Funds( In response- to , a request made three weeks ago, Free- dom House,' an organization that monitors, the degree of freedom enjoyed by the citizens of various countries; has re- ceived from the: Central Intelli- gence Agency .an asSurance that the C.I.A. has never passed funds to the organization. The assurance came in a letter dated March 2 from George Bush, the Director of Central Intelligence. Freedom House hash request- ed the assurance after.its name appeared in published :reports saying that. C.I.A. funds had been channeled in the 1960's to the International Rescue Committee, a humanitarian organization headed by Leo Cherne, one of President Ford's appointees to a new intelli- gence oversightboard. Mr. Cherne is also 'chairman of Freedom house's executive] committee. ?1-8 e 14. 2A-1 1 4.) !?,a, Gr_4?.ce Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200520001-8 S. Approved For Release 2004W/41.-CIA--Rim88,-01315R00 _mm-v?,_, 21 FEBRUARY 191b 1200520001-8 Cherne-Unit Not Tied to C.I.A Fund By JOHN M. CREWDSON spedai to The New York Vales . WASHINGTON, Feb. 20? .1-:rank Well, president of the lklanhattan - based Norman Foundation, said today that he erred in his assertion yesterday that the Central Intelligence Agency had passed about $15,- 000 through his organization to the International Rescue >Committee in the mid-1960'S. r.Mr. Well ?said in a telephone linterview that on checking the 'foundation's records, he had .s diacovered that none of the .$27,000 it gave to the I.R.C. ;rom 1961 to 1965- had been r?,...vided by the intelligence agency. ? - , He said that the $50,000 in 'C.I.A. funds passed through the foundation in that period had gone instead to four other orga- nizations- ?the American So- ciety of African Culture, the ,African-American Institute,. the 'Pan American Foundation and the International. Development ,Foundation.: . , - ? Leo Cherne, one of President Ford's three appointees to a . new intelligence ? oversight board sat up to check for pos- sible abuses of authority by the C.I.A. and other intelligence agencies, is board chairman of the ; ? ) Mr. Cherne,-,a . professional I.R.C.'s work involves assistance to political refugees round the world. The I.R.C. project funded by the Norman Foundation was a medical-service unit set upiBoard, created by President in the Belgian Conteo to aidlEisenhower in 1956, is a group Angolan refugees and others, of private citizens responsible Mr. Well said today that he for reviewing the functions of "misrecalled" himself yester- the Federal intelligence corn- day in recollecting that "a mys- munity and reporting to the terious gentleman" from theiPresident on the conduct of C.I.A. had approached him in1those agencies. 1963 or 1964 with a specific' The United States Intelligence request to pass agency moneyiBoard was a high-level coordi- to the Congo medical project.lnating group within the intel- . He said he had also errediligence community, presided in recalling that the fOundationiover by the director of Central had agreed to serve as a pass-lintelligence: In the past It met through for the funds only afterl as often as each week to co- deciding that the I.R.C. project ordinate intelligence data avail- would have been worthy ?Ilable from all members of the a contribution from its own endowment. Was Wrong' community. . ? In -a -related development Freedom House, an organiza- ..?eLet me make it very clear,' Ition with which Mr. Cherne he said . in the interview, )has also been closely associated made a mistake. I was wrong. 'for many years, asked George Although he spoke to Mr-Bush, director of Central Intel- Cherne. last night and againdigence, whether the C.I.A. had this. morning, he said, Mr.ever given it funds "directly Cherne "did not ask me to do anything" with respect to setting the record straight. He is amending his earlier state- ments because "harm has been done," he emphasized. Mr. - cherne was appointed ki 1973 to sit on the President's Foreign -Intelligence Advisory Board, which The New York Times. reported- erroneously to- day-. was abolished by Mr. Ford this eweek,..it . was .the . United States Intelligence -Board that was abolished by executive or- der on Wednesday. The President's Intelligence or through any other ? entity." The request was in a letter sent to. Mr. Bush that men- tioned a report, also in today's !Times, that Freedom House re- calved $3,500 from the J. M. Kaplan Fund between 1962 and 1964. The Times article quoted exe- cutives of the Kaplan Fund as having said that while they had ? passed C.I.A. money- to the now-defunct Institute for International Labor Research, all . the funds paid bye them to Freedom House or to the had been their own. ? ? ? . ? ? ? ? ? STAT Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200520001-8 . _ ? AT Approved For ReleaNc10044003IVA:ROK3841: 315R0002005200014(6 roup Lcd by C.I.A. Board Nominee Roportedly Got $15,000 From Agency ? 'I . i- nc Norman lotircinion for-. its sources of financing to ma :e. Mr Cherne is chairman or s By JOHN I'd'. CREWDSON s;s--..i:.e 1,,-r? :';...,: York. l'^ - WASItINGTON, Feb. It) ? A private humanitarian organiza- tion headed by Leo Cherne, one of President -Ford's appointcs to a new committee that will investigate possible abuses of. authority by the Central Intet-i ligence Agency, reportedly re- ceived some S15,000 of C.I.A.i funds. in the mid-1960's that; were channeled , througli a; New York City philanthropic organization.. i ------Frankie-Wek.--i-President --iofi the. Manhattan-based Norman! Foundation, said in a telephone; interview today that he was1 approached by "a mysterious, -gentleman" from the -C.I.A. in 1953 or 1004 and asked to pass about S15.0(6i0 in :Govern:neat funds to the International Res- cue Committee, of v. '-h l`.Ir. Cherne was then chairmen ofi i the board . . -? --- Mr_ Well ....called. that thc. funds had been earmarked for -.a medical services pro: .:t in: iwhat was then the BLIi;iani !Congo that was being suppriecd; by the rescue committee. Ilittl he said he was uncertainl whether Mr. Cherne or anyone. else there had been told that the money was from the C.I.A. and not from the foundation's endowment. - Mr. Cherne, reached at his New York City office, said that neither he "nor any official of the I.T.C.. had the slightest knowledge that any of those funds were C.I.A. funds." He said that the committee, which he has headed since 1951, had "never sought C.I.Al funds" and would not have "welcomed" them if they had been offered overtly. ... On Previous Board President Ford announced on Tuesday that he was naming Mr. Cherne to the newly estab- lished intelligenco oversight board, set up as part of Mr. Ford's reforms . of intelligence community operations to moni- tor the C.I.A.'s ? activities for possible illegalities or impro- prieties.. Mr. Cherne had previously been a member of the, Presi- dent's Foreign Intelligence Ad- visory Board, which Mr. Ford abolished yesterday. _ . . n,t.r.y Ka.ov,in as the Aaron h. certain twit tie committee h.td Freedom House s executive 1, ;Norman Ford, was among the not unwintingle ta!-:en any C.I.A. committee, and has been asso- . i!nstitiv-ions i'..lentifir'd nahhcl?.- re-inev, :k.tr. Clierne i ephed thet elated cc oh the organize, tion,? ;in 1957 as these ti-iat I.:R.6 that WaS th,-. "siii:st question since :served. as "conduits" for C.I.A. I've ever heard." ! An executive of the Kaplan -financing of a number of do- It would havo been next to Fond said today, however. that -ineia.iie-orrii,iii-lons-,--principal-'. iraoossible, he said. to cult the his foundation's coJperation ly the Nationed Student. Asso-, contribution records of an or-- with the intelligence' P-2.-;;IcY ;ciation. ! gani,ation that raised in the had been limited to the under-. l Those disclosures promoted neighborhood 1 $:3 Toillico each.writing of a single program . President J&inS0(1 (0 es t:Mlish Year to examine them for dona?ethe 16{30's. and that none of .an- investigating. committee to to that might have initiated :the S21,500 _given lry it to the, ilook into the agency's relation-i.wiith.the C.I.A. but. reached the.:rescue committee or the Sl.3.500 sI ips v,iith domestic gronos.i cominittee-'two or-three times given to Freedom llonse had, .and Mr.- Johnson eill:isequently' removed." . . - i - lbeen supplied by the intellei '.ordered all Federal rewneicis to 7,1.r..Cherne,,who sounded dis--lgence agency. - ? .halt theircovnt ftetling of , tressed at the disclosure hes1 The Kaplan Fund. according! ,..- ,such org,anizmions. 1 , Mr. Well, later spoke with Gil to tax records compiled . by,: I ;the -Committee as one of his \vim bed dc:scrt whi--mt the . Norma v is acti n money i.--v itie o pr f s f ivate ounda-i . ;es, whom he identifted as Group Research, an orgarnza-,E the I.P. C. fund-raise throug,hition here that monitors theit Keeping Independence Mr. Cherne, an Fo hobbies. s aid tha t he hac l t d a rie .: i...e.iecl, and teinorted that Mr. lions, gave the I.R.C. 810.000' ,. ' Ione.; hd r' ,t t o 'he foggiest!' in 19(3S for assistan o ce t reful 111 IIrnel:ItilnYtIoleveht.i.detiple;2:1,:.:-.11tr3 : st"a tliarc,,th at ti e Nei-Iriu nd ee fleeitag Cz oslovaki e-'ns ecea. tus" of the organization, say-- . source of the moneY. 112d not been the initial zifter the Soviet invlSion Ill it.! August. freedom from government as-. Mr. Cherne is an economist The cormnittee,rec..e.h.,--e.....d an- in gthat he believed that its sociations was crucial to its- ..cie .profession and exectitivc other $11) 090 fr- work abroad. i -director of -the' Research Poi- 1971 for 'assist'n'n'c'ilel-t.'c'r P""ernclgairi ,..,.... , , n the wake of. tune of 2\merica, which peb- refugees displaced by to., 1-3,-,i,i, r\ 't why i . .? ,_ 1,1,,, di,dosures, .1,.e i.h,d .?!h..es newsletters and us ice stani ar, P.nd l-,i'l,f)Ociii, 1-9i,3:?;.'to essm mt asked the 1.1t.C. to recheck .Pal.rii-.?'.';!ets for has cc - itid refe ne Sr e- in u'e " ? -- .e. , .) ti. I. ? ki, ill ..u..-i. \.',RS vice chairrnan W in - T 7 , eil Is Disputed . .-- . 197'2 of Democrats for Nixon l'ilr. Weil's recolicction that and lias been associated with the C.I.A. money gieen to the such crganizations ris thoCiti- committee had be""- userf to ices' Committee for a. Free support the Belgian Congo Cuba. the Council Against Corn- medical program, winch offered rininist..Aggression and the ? Chi:ie.:1s' Committ-e for Perp,icce. with Freedom in Vietnam, .?;:es:ila:s:irci. n\i'lii.:IL:le't others cttlti eobr;;Aiil.:n:tIraite1;%;iv rrer(01:r11-,.. Nor- cording to the records of Grouoiman, also an officer of the Research.. Foundation. One of the foundations i a rla den- - 6'6 Mr. Norman said he recalled tified in 1067 as has nag co- that the agency money gassed operated with the CIA. 1'1'1 co- . efforts was .,.,, through his fonndetion to the vert financing t J. M. Kaplan Fund, also of some effort 1-."` I.R.C. had gone to support. Nev.' York, and which over the tT,,,"'edectVI.1,1: oi,f11 \L.Icv-h Ahricl.e'ls-la'2fad'! years has. contrib:.ted not only , Elle could not remember, and; tothe rescue 9,(1.1 00 but aiscr an organ i' the amount. invoiced hadi to Freedom Ho,:ise,.6 rlt been a "maximum of S15.000.". zation that monitors and re-? ports on the degree of freedom that exists in other countries . of the world. .. . STAT Approved For Release 200,4/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200520001-8 Approved For ,Release 2004/10/1p CIA -K 488-01 DI-4100200520001-8 - . Vito e c FREEDOM I-10U STAT Executive Registry WILLKIE MEMORIAL BUILDING 20 WEST 40TH STREET. NEW YORK, N. Y. 10018 IN181181t5M1121M11)=Str,;d1 ( 212 ) 565-3344 September 5,.1973 Mr. William i. Colby, nirector Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D. C. 20505 Dear Mr. Colby: We are pleased to transmit this copy of guidelines for government officials and newsmen prepared by a representative group of news media persons and present and past government officials. We hope that you will find these guidelines useful and will share them with your colleagues. Sincerely, Le cmvikifa4m4 .usettitieffoPhitt Zecutive Director ac encl. tIn!t-s(...10W*11.1ZA244/ 1:30AREi OF TRUSTEES: Margaret Chase Smith, Chairman . Roscoe Drummond, Vire Chairman . Harry D. Gideonse, President . Leo Chcrne, Chairman, Executive Committee ? Philip Van Slyck, Secretary . Rex Stout, Treasurer . Mrs. Andrew Jackson, Assistant Treasurer . Whitney North Seymour, Honorary Chairman . Anthony 13. Akers . George Ilackcr . Ned W. Bandler, Jr. . Karl R. Bendetsen . Edward W. Brooke . Zbigniew Brzezinski ? John Diebold . Chrktopher Emmet . Seymour Fogel . Richard N. Gardner ? Nathaniel I.. Guldst,in . Roy M. Gondinan . David L. Guyer . Arthur t,. Harckham . Paul G. Hoffman . Sidney Hook . acob K. javits . Nicholas dell. Katzcnbach . William R. Kintner . Maxwell A. Kriendlcr . Aaron Levenstein . Francis Pickens Miller . John A. Morsell . Edgar Ansel Mowrer . Daniel 1'. NI ovnihan ? Bonaro W. Overstreet . Whitelaw Reid . Francis E. Rivers ? Burns W. Roper . Howland H. Sargeant . Robert A. Sealapino . Paul Sealmry . Carl inc K. Simon . Max Singer . Gerald L. Steibel . Herbert 13. Swope, Jr. . Rohort C. Weaver ? William L. White A i5v6dAftr RdreAjel2004f101/3`YiefAIRDP89101315R1300213052001W-8 c,472:-.0371