CIA 'FIXED' DRAFT FOR STUDENTS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000800150025-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 19, 1999
Sequence Number: 
25
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 15, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000800150025-4.pdf118.37 KB
Body: 
Sanitized - Approved For R?I: 'YRGH 71,u1C ~. ya r L v J Yl~ ~:7 ~-t nonce :. ncy not on I y at craft deferments fog N _'.'s o:::ccrs and s t a f f vii nbe':s. This is another al egation in e ,larch issue of "ainparts ,zinc containing the expos- are of CIA's $1 million contri- ;utions to the student g r o u p troin 2932-G G. The ...vas w(-re concealed by chu.... "i.^ ,'ro -. from the CIA five p;.ivate foundations L;, he ?' were a'u:,nittedly user.;, send :'.i icrican students live lc t a.c1 ::e influ- "~i\r, , r? ?!' .a 4' tr~ .. 'n in c v,1 we for cessation of bombing in Viet- Pentagon canceled a $1.1 ;nil- nail. - contrary to U.S. policy. lion research project kno~-n as Sen. M i l t o n R. Young (R- "Project Camel+)t" in 1961. R President Philip Sher nlr ne wenti senator "watchdog" committee to see Selective Service Dd?ee-I that reviews CIA activities, de- tor Lewis B. Hershey -;1(i the fended. the payments. inductions s t o p p e (i. Sionei "IL v is jhst a means of charged this was a r r r. n " di , COtin-er iii he Co mniiillst po- with the the NSA 's con;;ecronsi ~iticii alra lsrescuting an Allier'- with th CIA. ]can lilt it of view," Y o u n g The article says Lhar NSA s id ; e "a r . was no o rer way h" leaders went to Vice President "' dciub it." Hubert H. Humphrey in an ef- fort to cut off the CIA support Young said the "watchdog" and replace it with contributions! unit was told that none of the from business and labor SMUT-I in o n e y was spent within the es. I-Iumphrey's office iecliiediUnited States and the students to comment on the report. were not hired as spies for the rifer o Coi; .i.: sC o-1 'I groups + CIA. Y g l 1,cant.lnic, eight of the III(;-,t iii: n'G: d aSSCP1 JliCS. ll I d 1 ,sei:.str:e of the CIA's iat- T cs. ,il sh ii5'. ?artici.;ation in affairs c U.S. organiza- rmns Was. expected to weaken if net .r oy - the NSA. it is the oldest and largest col- lege student ~roalp in the na- tion. amparts magazine that was :_., S.i..ia, a Now York elial,ed the CIA had disclosed a year ago how b71ch- i d y, , 140 to s e e liberal Democrats ill the Aouse ei sona asked President John;on io funds con-,o irons some o t h e r ' Young added. "Other order an inquiry into ilea il,e sc iirce of CIA funds by the >.ude.t senators 'clt as I did that there group. ,i as tiro much spending of this sort by the CIA." ""It represents an wncrias_ nil The episode revived the issue able extension of power by an of (CIA's involvement in - or in- agency of government." t 11 e"luencc upon - foreign policy. eight congressmen said. 'i C e ylit R spokesman .amputts maga-m se and corrupted the \SA.;igan State University was used i i t i l A O1 i z nc, sn he art n c e appearing 1 o Republican, Donaldlas a "cover" to conceal CIA ac on 11ews:;t::nds ;,ext %vicek would E. (Buz) Lukens, said the Pity- tivities in South Vietnam. charge that. students sent abroad menus were "shocking and scan-1 Five CIA agents were on the .often were, in effect, agents for dalous" primarily because of "faculty" of an MSU project for ?the CIA. NSA's foreign policy stands that trailing anti-insurgency forces. There was considerable co- Lukens said helped the Cominu-I "It may not have been right .. . ordination on policit and reports nists. but we were caught and had to back to the CIA," Stone said in "It would be downright hinny follow through," an MSU spokes- . a telephone niervlew. 1 if it were not so serious," Lukens, man said at the time. Ile aside:, that almost prom added. ,the start of CIA subsidies to' U.S. officials said only t w of Foreign Affairs Quarterly NSA the latter group's top offi-iNSA officers each year were also published an article on cersand staff received blanket aware of the CIA bank-11h, of, (lie Viet Cong by George A. eferments from the draft. global activities. The organiza-' Carver Jr., a full-time enl- W1c i several men classified Lion was not controlled, .the o fi- ploys of CIA, without reveal- IA were raker, `nto service in class said, and records show it! inn his connection with t h e 1965.66, Stone said, former NSAiopposedU.S. ntervcntion in dies agency. ?r^.7 r mac':~ through an American univ?,sity group, to obtain inform ,tied on possible causes of unrest or ,ev- olution in South Americar na- tions. Sen. J. William F'ulbrigh:: (D- Ark.), a critic of CIA's n ;ora- tions, has said: "The way things have developed in t Ii e world has brought the CIA into far more activities Blau was con- templated when it was c] ea.ed." The agency was for;nerl in 1947 primarily to "correlate and evaluate intelligence reining to national security." So far, spokesmen for R a, in- parts magazine have n a in e d only two foundations involv 'd in the CIA-NSA affairs. They are the Independen-e Founa ior, and the Sydney aid Esther `:able Charitable Foundation, botr of Boston. In their statement, NSA ficials said: "Tie funds i ,.in the CIA supported a mar or iii projects, assisting stiuh'nL groups abroad and parti dly supporting the staff necessary to maintain continuing conact with student organizations in other countries." They added that NSA leaders decided in 1965 to break of; the "intolerable" secret link with the federal agency. . "We deeply regret that a ;last subrosa relation";hip inevitably will jeaopardize (NSA) activities and cast doubts on the thousands of students here and abroad who have worked with NSA in i;c faith," they added. 1'N Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000800150025-4