SPIES ON CAMPUS

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01315R000300090003-0
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RIPPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Sequence Number: 
3
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MAGAZINE (OPEN SOURCE)
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Approved For Release 2006/07/27: CIA-RDP88-01315R000 PENTHOUSE ARTICLE APPEARED October 1979 ON PAGE !--w- The secret alliance between ccllege professors and administrators and the CIA has destroyed the independence and integrity of the American academic community. BY ERNEST VOLKMAN n the early spring of 1976,- Harvard University President Derek Bak began readinga 651-page green paperbound book with the forbidding title, "Foreign and Military Intelligence: Final Report of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities" (more popularly known as the Church Committee Report). Like most other prominent academics, Bok was aware that for years some members of the academic community and the CIA had joined together in a secret relationship to turn many of America's university and college campuses into virtual espionage centers. He was aware that a number of professors and administrators were secretly working for the CIA, recruiting prospective agents among students, spying for the agency while overseas, sometimes helping to spy on "troublemaking" students, and using the cover of research institutes and other projects to gather intelligence. And, most important, Bok was aware that people at Harvard were -involved. He did not know how many or who they were, but he wanted it stopped. Because the Church Committee had spent more than a year in investigating the CIA's domestic operations, including involvement with academia, Bak carefully read through the committees final repot, looking for facts-facts that would allow him to write up guidelines for the university to set strict limits on such work for anybody who worked there. But the report was a disappointment. On page 189. Bok found, instead of facts, this general statement: "The Central Intelligence Agency is now using several hundred American academics, who in addition to providing leads and, on occasion, making introductions for intelligence purposes, occasionally write books and other mate- rial to be used for propaganda purposes abroad. Beyond these, an additional few score are used in an unwitting manner for minor activities: "Those academics are located in over 100 American colleges, universities, and-related institutes. - The report went on to recommend that the universities and col- leges themselves "set:the professional and ethical standards of its members," and. that federal legislation prohibiting CIA activities on MORI/CDF campus an intru3i the Amer Bok di( of that se siderabie link, inck when the the CIA fc violently. ' ficials sa agency's and it woo under cc trump car with acac tary" any would bE gave way watered-( relations!" But to watered c tee was t munity to ing it whz So Bok the procc battle bet tle that Bc has raise CIA in fac battle ha; now, and deal abot ca's camp a shadow, never recc Shortly u,, u ......._.. .____ _ Church Committee report, he gathered to- gether a small group of men to take a close look at the CIA-Harvard link and come up with guidelines for the university governing such activity. Bok made no public an- nouncement of his action, despite the fact that his group included some Harvard heavyweights with extensive Washington experience. Among them was Archibald Cox, ex-Watergate special prosecutor, and Don Price, then dean of the university's Kennedy School of Government and an old Washington hand. (Ironically, Harvard's School of Government has provided many of the most infamous presidential advisers Henry Kissinger, who was in charge of all covert operations for most of the Nixon ' years; McGeorge Bundy, a Harvard dean who performed the same function for John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson; and Samuel Huntington, now on Carter's Na- tional Security Council.) Approved For Release 2006/07/27: CIA-RDP88-01.315R000300090003-0