FROM INTERVIEW

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
238
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 22, 2001
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 21, 1978
Content Type: 
OUTLINE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4.pdf52.6 MB
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Approved For Reese 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554RgQ 700390001-4 21 January 1978 1. No? Cuts needed to be made 55/45 Inefficient - morale debilitating -, costly No one disagrees How? No easy way - those RIF'd have another way - one would not lead to his RIF 2. Major purpose promote future of CIA/DDO Can't do w/o people Need rewards/incentives Open clogged promotion system Average age all top executives w/in 3 years Disaster ahead Must open up No lateral entry Future DDO bright Technical leads to human Must be complementary 4. Optimism Media lagging facts General recognition changes last 9 mos. necessary/desirable Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Rise 2001/09/05: CIA-RDP80BO1554RJW700390001-4 5. Accomplishments Policy-makers involvement; community coord; realign pol actn to intell; emphasis on evaluation; successes in DDO collection & evaluation; moves to pers policies; public confid due openness; public debate; oversight 6. Goals Product more attuned to times Integration of community efforts CIA Personnel management Openness Oversight Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 ~ Approved For Rse 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554Rq~'70039;1J-4AN *1978 DAVID MARTIN 1. Threat to secrecy of DDO ops from "so-called" intelligence professionals who expose intelligence to "defend" Agency, redress Agency wrongs or for personal gain. 2. Personnel policies were leading to institutional suicide. Can no longer count on the abundant supply of dedicated old hands. 3. Headquarters duty is stifling -- rather little direction needed or can be given -- 55/45 ratio out of line -- demotivating. 4. Personnel system built on concept of dedication and self- abnegation. Admirable but not up with times. Need incentives and recognition. Means more internal competition. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 DAVID MARTIN INTERVIEW Major reshaping - necessary if CIA to continue erve needs of nation, Emerged from cold war focus on military aspect of Bloc less 10 nations to world of Constructive involvement and concerns in military, political and economic relations with over 100 nations. For CIA -- 1. Major shift from political intervention, covert action to one of intelligence reporting Political action Paramilitary in VN Political in Angola until Tunney Various mil/pol actions against Cuba One reason for personnel reductions 2. Personnel management needs to shift 30 years relied on cold war motivation Relied on dedication and self-abnegation of people joined from OSS or-'height of cold war. Today must move with times -- Can't rely on same abundant reservoir of talent -- running out Can't rely same admirable dedication Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Ruse 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554RQ2700390001-4 Need incentives and rewards, recognition Must prove elitism by internal competition that leads to quality Also must eliminate extreme sense of protection of own people Have hung onto some whose: Performance marginal Reliability questionable Cold war could afford risks and embarrassments Today cannot -- Either country or CIA Can't have/don't want people such as those who "know" better than constituted authorities and go to press with complaints Must have a screening process in personnel system Small % As was this cut Must have rules 3. Greater openness Want public have better understanding Want public have benefit Want stay closer touch with public attitudes Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Releasse 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554ROW00390001-4 4. Greater controls Forthrightness with Congress MKULTRA disclosure V. Greater emphasis on expanding horizons of CIA analysis Not just CIA HUMINT sources DOD/State tech/HUMINT sources Wider expanse of national concerns Satisfy needs of variety of consumers Summary CIA updated -- Shift from political action to intell. personnel policies to attract/retain high quality people CIA strengthened -- Excess personnel removed Overseas ratio shifted from 45/55 to 55/45 CIA under firmer internal/external controls Not easy adjustments Morale not affected product Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Reh se 2001/09/05: CIA-RDP80B01554Rq 700390001-4 DAVID MARTIN 1? Threat to secrecy of DDO ops from "so-called" intelligence professionals who expose intelligence to "defend" Agency, redress Agency wrongs or for personal gain. 2. Personnel policies were leading to institutional suicide. Can no longer count on the abundant supply of dedicated old hands. 3. Headquarters duty is stifling -- rather little direction needed or can be given -- 55/45 ratio out of line -- demotivating. 4. Personnel system built on concept of dedication and self- abnegation. Admirable but not up with times. Need incentives and recognition. Means more internal competition. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For R se 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554RQW700390001141 JAN 1978 POINTS FOR MARTIN 1. Look at prospective accomplishments -- not just problems 2..,-Adjusting CIA/Intelligence to times a. Objectives b. Methods c. Personnel management d. Openness e. Oversight 3. Objectives Covert action vs. intelligence Not primary before Personnel cuts Economics - new countries 4. Methods New technical means -- complement Requires coordination Role as DCI 5. Personnel End of era -- demobilization Must plan attraction, retention 6. Openness 7. Oversight Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Re,Ise 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554RW700390001-4 DDO CUTBACKS 1. Have any of those affected taken legal action, individually or collectively, to fight their ouster? 2. What, if anything, will you do differently when the next notifications are issued? 3. Do you know whether any of those who are losing their jobs have found work elsewhere, (a) in the Agency, (b) in the Intelligence Community, (c) in the private sector? 4. We know many have gone to the U.S. media to air their gripes. Are you surveilling them to be sure they don't sell out to the other side (KGB)? HUMAN VS. TECHNICAL COLLECTION Is there something to the allegation that you got rid of a lot of spies because they have in fact been replaced by technical means? MORALE 1. Has the storm over the ouster of DDO personnel died down? 2. Please assess current morale in the Agency. 3. What can or will you do to raise morale? 4. Do you think there was a way to do what you feel you had to do without creating a morale problem? INTERNAL CIA REORGANIZATION 1. In what way is removal of the old DDI and NIO from the CIA proper an improvement? 2. Do you plan any further organizational changes in the Agency. bout major personnel changes, such as those o~ lim W Will you put in your own DDA, DDS&T, IG, OLC,, etc.: Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For l lease 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554QR02700390001-4 -2- AGENCY EFFECTIVENESS 1. Is the CIA today as effective, overall, as it was a year or two ago? 2. Is the DDO as effective? (A former CIA official said on a recent newscast that he estimates the DDO people are working at only about 50% efficiency right now.) DCI PERSONAL 1. It has been said and written that you came to the CIA with a distrust and distaste for the Agency. Is this true? 2. Please name some things that you feel you have done well at the Agency, and can you also name some that you feel you have done not so well or even poorly? 3. Please describe how you view your owro style as a mamager. 4. Is the frequent claim that you want to be the t/JCS or ?N? valid? 5. How de yew view yeor two fatvre! CARLUCCI NOMINATION 1. Is it true that President Carter nominated/selected Ambassador Carlucci to straighten out the morale and other problems that have arisen in the Agency recently? 2. Will Carlucci, like his predecessors, concentrate on running the Agency or will he have a strengthened hand as your deputy in your role as DCI? 3. How do you view the role of the new fltl? 4. What qualifications are/were you looking for in making a choice for DDCI? Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R4 700390001-4 -3- BUDGET 1. What is the status of releasing a single budget figure for the Intelligence Community? 2. Why are you waiting for Senate action? Since you favor the release of a single budget figure, why don't you just do it? That isn't prohibited by any current law of Exaawti're irder, is it? RELATIONS WITH THE MEDIA 1. Will foreigners working for foreign media remain fair game for the CIA? 2. If the foreign media remain fair game, what are you doing to minimize the risk of "domestic fallout" or "blowback?" 3. Please discuss the spirit and intent of your new isaiia policy. 4. Under what conditions would you grant an exaaatioi to that policy? 5. Would that exception be entirely at your discretion or would you consider asking/telling the oversight committees, for example? 6. Can we assume that this exception would be considered a secret? SNEPP CASE 1. What is the status of the Snepp case? 2. Have you done all you are going to do, or can do, in this case? 3. Did Snepp's book, aside from the violation of the secrecy agreement, actually disclose national security information? 4. Have you read the book? 5. Why did you make an issue out of this case--to dissuade the DDO people who now have to leave from writing exposes? Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Rpase 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554PW2700390001-4 -4- ASE 1. Your representative in recently fired, says he was a "whistle-blower" and that 4 W d for this reason. Is this true? 2. Wky VA! Ise fired? Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 SO 102 1 NO I(-)NI1iSVM -62O 31dwr5 ** ZZZ 0000 .:r improved For aeeed~e 001/09/05: CIA-RDP80B0l 4R00 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 ]...Copy Available THROUGHOUT FOLDER Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 BAD BIT. THE MOST ' SUCCESSFUL. IMPORTED CAR INTRODUCTION I ~.A AF~.Iir +u 1A1 AM 'E i v{ i t? `P ? C,3{{? B r y`~.t L ?L"=w.,?E"OF ""`""",`" Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 'ROAD & TRACK. JUNE 1975 I-Automatic Transmission Allstate Homeowners insurance for property protection. To protect your house and most belongings, you need Allstate Homeowners Insurance. Allstate's Deluxe Homeowners policy protects against loss from fire, lightning, hail, smoke, windstorm, vandalism, theft and many other hazards. But this still leaves you vulnerable. Allstate Mortgage Protection Life Insurance. Another major calamity can occur when the owner dies before the mortgage is paid. Allstate Life has Mortgage Protection Life Insurance to help pay off the mortgage and give your family a debt-free home if you die. The premium is low, considering what your family is getting. See your Allstate agent about both kinds of protection. Your Allstate agent can put the two together. You're in good hands. Allstate Deluxe Homeowners Insurance available in most states. Allstate Insurance Company ? Allstate Life Insurance Company ? Northbrook, Ill. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 Too many ads like this start out pointing with pride, but wind up pointing the finger. Being in business, we naturally believe in competitive enter- prise. Just as naturally, we think everybody should. So each year, the business community invests more money in ads that point with pride to the accomplishments of business and the competi- tive enterprise system within which it operates. When we find that our story isn't getting across, we tend to blame the other guy. We point the finger at government. At the media. At educators. At young people. At everyone, in fact, except ourselves. Yet business is as much to blame as anyone else for the anti-business mood of the public. When we're not busy talking to our- selves, we're trying to arm-twist people into accepting the one-sided proposition that there's nothing at all wrong with the way our system works. We're also inconsistent. We rail against govern- ment regulations, for example. Except regulations to protect us from foreign competition. We oppose government handouts. Except handouts to rescue a company (or even an industry) from its own mistakes. Unfortunately, people see these incon- sistencies. They no longer accept on faith the traditional business defense of business. They don't really believe us anymore. Since survival of our system depends on the credibility of business, we think it's time to stop pointing the finger. And time to try a totally new approach: Candor. We hope it catches on. Pennwalt Corporation, Three Parkway, Philadelphia,' Pa. 19102. For 127 years we've been making things people need-including profits. ON PE1NWtLT CHEMICALS ^ EQUIPMENT HEALTH PRODUCTS Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 Top of tl Teekeiease 2001/09/05: CIA-RDP80B01554R0027003A&wsweek A New idly Page 52 Uganda's President Idi Amin celebrated his sev- enth anniversary in power last week with a parade in the village of his birth. Newsweek's, James Pringle was on hand to hear the burly Amin (right) vow that he had turned over a new leaf - after seven years of terror. "I have no bad intentions from now on- ward," the self - styled "Conqueror of the British Empire" told his under- standably wary subjects. Close Call Page 14 A Soviet spy satellite tum- bled out of orbit last week and plunged to earth, bear- ing a deadly cargo of nu- clear fuel. Fortunately it came down over a desert- ed area of northern Can- ada. And while airborne experts searched for radio- active debris, the incident raised a worldwide wave of concern about man-made dangers from outer space. NATIONAL AFFAIRS ...................... 14 Close call from a Soviet satellite's crash NORAD, U.S. eye on the sky The Midwest's killer blizzard The CIA: how badly is it hurt? (the cover) How Stansfield Turner runs his ships A talk with the new director New battle on abortion A plan for cleaning up city water INTERNATIONAL ......................... 41 The Carter-Sadat summit at Camp David An interview with Moshe Dayan The newest Mideast arms race Indonesia: Suharto cracks down Europe's latest kidnappings Great Britain: murder in the Highlands A Saudi princess and her husband are executed A new, new Idi Amin MEDICINE ................................ 57 Did an A-bomb test cause leukemia? Hepatitis: an occupational disease for M.D.'s The CIA Story Page 18 After three years of pub- lic exposure, the CIA is a troubled agency. Many dis- gruntled operatives have quit, hundreds have been fired and many more won- (ter how to reconcile the country's legitimate needs for espionage with demo- cratic values. The new di- rector, Stansfield Turner, has gained power but is himself under fire for be- ing abrasive and unin- formed in the craft of spy- ing. The Newsweek cover package includes an analy- sis of CIA troubles, a Turn- er profile and an interview with the embattled chief. (Cover photo by Bill Ray.) Flying Furs Page 80 Not so long ago, fur coats seemed about to become an endangered species. But now sporty new designer styles and two unusually frigid win- ters in succession have made mink-and even raccoon and fox-more popular than ever. Paper Buildings Page 76 Once scorned as a scribble, the architectural drawing is stirring in- terest as an art form. Exhibitions range from the Museum of Modern Art's show of historic Le Corbusier drawings to one in Jacksonville, Fla., which spans 200 years and proves that some of the best build- ing has happened strictly on paper. BUSINESS ............................... 59 Carter's economic plan: a long way to go The Soviet oil squeeze Drilling on the Atlantic coast Explosive grain elevators "Car Wars"-fun in the auto showrooms Perfumes: the boom in common scents EDUCATION ............................ . . 69 Crisis in the liberal arts JUSTICE ................................. 70 Decision on the Wilmington Ten A top cop's view of the police mystique LIFE/STYLE .............................. 80 Furs-fashion's high flyers SPORTS ................................. 89 Will the Rangers get two Swedish stars? THE ARTS DANCE .................................. 72 Three extraordinary new ballets ARCHITECTURE ......................... . 76 Architectural drawings as an art form ENTERTAINMENT ........................ 79 Peter Allen-a liberated Liberace BOOKS .................................. 81 Seven new novels for winter reading MOVIES .................................. 86 Lina Wertmuller's "Night Full of Rain" "Coma": horror show "The Boys in Company C": war Hollywood style THEATER ................................ 90 "Echelon": a Soviet drama comes to Houston "Molly": a floundering femme fatale OTHER DEPARTMENTS Letters ................................. 4 Update ................................. 9 Periscope ...............................13 Newsmakers ........................... 36 Transition .............................. 37 THE COLUMNISTS My Turn: Michael S. Kramer, M.D. ....... 11 George F. Will .......................... 92 ? 1978 by Newsweek, Inc., 444 Madison Ave- nue, New York, N.Y. 10022. All rights reserved. 3 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 a~ a~ `ate e on-~s tir ~o~ea~o 0 C - o ao c ~~e a ~w V \ e 4 ~~e e c, CU Ue Z+ 5oQo THIS WEEKEND INSTEAD OF EGGS BENEDICT FOR BRUNCITL. COME TO MONTREAL. And let it snow. Let it snow. Let it snow. While you dine on duck a l'orange and mousse au chocolat. Share cognacs in a cozy little bistro. Relax in luxurious hotels. And later, take a side trip to the Laurentian mountains, only 45 minutes away. Drive the scenic route or call your travel agent or airline today for special hotel weekend packages. To take full advantage of the favourable exchange rare between the U.S. and Canadian dollar, we suggest that you exchange your U.S. currency or travellers' checks at a Canadian bank. Canada `The Happy Warrior' The coverage of Hubert Humphrey you provided at his death (NATIONAL AFFAIRS, Jan. 23) made me realize for the first time the magnitude of the loss our country has suf- fered. He was a man who will be sorely missed. ^ In our rush to pay tribute to the late Hubert H. Humphrey, who was in many ways a great and remarkable marl, let us not twist reality over who was betrayed cluring Vietnam. In his consistent support of the Administration, Humphrey deserted the very ideals he es- poused throughout his political life. It is his tragedy, and our own as well, that during this period he was forced to put loyalty above justice-and then found himself unable to understand why his followers would not do the same. ^ Thank you for running that particular photo- graph of Sen. Hubert Humphrey on your cover. That is just how [ will remember him: even when he struck a reflective pose, you could always discern the ever-present twinkle in his eyes. ^ I can't help thinking how different the course of history would have been had Hubert Humphrey only received the 500,000 addi- tional votes he needed to defeat Richard Nix- on in the 1968 Presidential election. PAMELA BRADFORD Roselle, Ill. ^ Hubert Humphrey may have been a very nice man. However, sorrow at his death should not obscure the view that he did this nation irreparable damage by helping foster the notion of a welfare state. A. K.BREELEY ^ So what if Hubert Humphrey never made it to the Presidency? He left more of a mark for good on this country than any President in memory has managed to do. FRANK WILLARD RIGGS Montgomery, Ala. Fiddler's Gold Your picture of "struggling violinist" Rich- ard Wexler and his pedigreed companion (BUSINESS, Jan. 9) brought a vivid memory to mind. Some of my hard-earned, closely budg- eted money was wholeheartedly tossed into his battered violin case so that he and his dutiful friend-which I mistakenly thought to NEWSWEEK, February 6, 1978. Volume XCI, No. 6. NEWSWEEK is published weekly, $26 a year, by NEWS- WEEK, INC. Printed in U.S.A. Second Class postage paid at Los Angeles, Calif., and at additional mailing offices. Registrado come articulo de segunda clase en la Ad- ministracion Central de Correos de esta Capital, con fecha 17 de marzo de 1944, Mexico. D.F. POSTMASTERS: Send form 3579 to NEWSWEEK, The NEWSWEEK Building, Livingston, N.J. 07039. 4 M Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 "We think Amway's a picture of growth and service you Cant ignore! "When Amway began eighteen years ago, we distributors offered only one product- L.O.C.? liquid cleaner. From this single multi-purpose liquid house- hold cleaner, the Amway? product line has grown to more than 150 home and personal- care cosmetic, and food-supplement products. "And there are 250,000 of us to serve you wherever you live. "Each of us is eager to show you how to get the most out of every Amway product and to make sure of your satisfaction. "With such a record going for Amway-- and us- shouldn't you make Amway products part of the picture in your home?" The Amway story has many chapters. If you want to know more, talk to your Amway distributor today. If you need help in finding a distributor, dial 800-253-7501 (Michigan res- idents dial 800-632-9623) toll-free. Do it now and get the whole story. Amway Corporation, Ada, MI 49355; Amway of Canada, Ltd., London, Ontario, N6A 4S5. Get the whole story. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 The Third Generation Monte Carlo. Opening new dimensions in atforciable luxury. Welcome to the third generation of Chevrolet's more usable trunk space, too, And for the first highly successful personal luxury car. Although time, there's a roof with available removable thoroughly redesigned, its personality remains panels of tinted glass. The Third Generation Monte uniquely Monte Carlo. It is leaner, trimmer, and Carlo. Drive it soon. You'll discover surprisingly roomy, In fact there's more rear seat that you don't have to be St; head, leg and hip room this year than last. There's extravagant to be elegant. SEE WHAT'S NEW TODAY IN A CHEVROLET Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Apprnx/ lease 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 be a starving mutt-could eat. Thanks to NEWSWEEK I now learn that my simple ex- pression of brotherly love has turned out to be just another ripoff. So, to Richard with his Gucci loafers, $400 watch, Bermuda vacation, etc., I'd like to say, "Thanks for helping me with one of life's lessons.- n Richard Wexler is awfully cute, but I hope your article ruins him. West Hollywood, Calif The New Man My eighteen-month-old son looked at your cover story about "How Men Are Changing" (SPECIAL REPORT, Jan. 16) and immediately said, "Daddy." Actually, I do most of the cooking in the family because I like to and I'm better at it. And now my son helps, so for Christmas my wife and I bought him a dump truck and a play stove. Thank you, NEWS- WEEK, for recognizing men who have changed-and those of us who never thought life was otherwise. JIM HRISTAKOS Omaha, Neb. ^ The feminist movement is the best thing that ever happened to the American male. Men's liberation is not a backlash movement at all; it is a bona fide struggle for identity whose cause is equally as valid as feminism. BRIAN STANLEY PAPPAS Minneapolis, Minn. ^ For shame, NEWSWEEK! That you should perpetuate such prattle! First, the proposition that rating one's lovers' bedmanship is in any way consistent with being a liberated single is ludicrous. Second, any "troublemaker" wom- en whose unreasonable demands on their men to (get this, girls) give them an orgasm are believed to stem from reading the "Hite Re- port" must have been reading that hook up- side down. And last, women have always known about orgasm-what could we possi- bly mistake it for? NANCY VAN ALLEN-MEZZO Madison, Wis. ^ I consider your selection of Ted Koppel as a househusband a poor choice. Getting the kids off to school and one-half hour of housework do not a househusband make. I strongly sug- gest that the maid who did "some" of the heavy housework did it between the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. R. J. GARDINER Fort Wainwright, Alaska ^ A minor point in this liberated age. Grace Anne and I were married in 1963, not 1964 as you reported. That seems to be of some impor- tance to our oldest daughter, Andrea, who was born in November 1963 and is a little old- fashioned about the implication of your error. TED KOPPEL ^ "How Men Are Changing" was generally on target. One statement I challenge: "It was the Industrial Revolution that separated the sexes We went toTiffany for our temporaries. It seemed only appropriate. We wanted to give special recognition to our very special people: Manpower Stand-out Stand-ins. Office temporaries with outstanding skills and experience. More important, they've achieved consistent records of superior on-the-job perform- ances as evaluated by our customers. Evaluations that cover job factors like adapta- bility, self-motivation, atti- tude, and quality and quantity of work. It called for a special award. And it is: a sterling silver necklace by Tiffany. It identifies the best in temporary help. The people to ask for when you need a stand-out stand-in. From secretaries and typists to bookkeepers and key punch operators, we'll provide an award winner. Or someone who's on her way to becoming one. Qmmpowm TEMPORARY SERVICES Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001 /0 Off R 1 pp 0 EBIIJ1D?5 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 A PIPELINE TO THE SUN One solution to the energy shortage comes up every morning. The sun. And what's the most practical way to put solar energy to work in heating and cooling? At Owens-Illinois, we think the answer is our SunpakTM solar collector-a glass "pipeline" to the sun. This patented system uses 0-I's proven evacuated glass tubing technology to convert sun- light into useful heat. Since it is vacuum insulated, Sunpak collects and retains heat even in high winds and winter cold. And, because it collects both direct and diffuse light, Sunpak also performs efficiently on overcast and hazy days. Most advanced technology Owens-Illinois has installed Sunpak solar collection systems in a variety of industrial and institutional applications in diverse climates across the U.S. Sunpak, a second generation development, represents a quantum improvement in solar energy collection technology. It has promising potential for broad spectrum heating, cooling and industrial process applications. We're now in an advanced development phase, refining this unique system for wider scale application. Laser glass at Livermore And Sunpak isn't all we're doing in the field of energy. Another major 0-I involvement is in laser technology. Owens-Illinois is the world's largest producer of precision laser glass components for a variety of industrial, medical, and scientific applications. One of the most exciting is in fusion research. At the University of California's Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, for instance, 0-I compo- nents are the heart of the world's largest glass laser. It's used in research aimed at harnessing thermonuclear fusion for inexhaustible energy. Owens-Illinois, Inc., Toledo, Ohio 43666 The Scientific Company From solar energy, to laser glass, to Kimble? precision laboratory ware- Owens-Illinois has a broad-based involvement in the world of science. Which may come as a surprise to people who only know us as The Packaging Company. THE SEARCH FOR CLEAN ENERGY. Laser glass components by 0-I are used in this 25-trillion watt Shiva laser system at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. This laser heats a small amount of hydrogen to the temperature of the sun, producing a thermonuclear reaction. Each of the laser's 20 arms is as long as a football field. 4DI OWENS-ILLINOIS THE PACKAGING COMPANY THE CONSUMER COMPANY THE SCIENTIFIC COMPANY THE INTERNATIONAL COMPANY Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 .pare it with any Iinehauleron the road today. III lw yes arasa_aarmni_i ---i--_a ""doom wwWM*QMwt.w~ ?ia~;amJ4 - iii ~Whiii!!!ii!W?! ~11~~. aY!f !~XNlip!!lliAill~O/Mwiln+ra.. --ftm ?.-._!!i_ii1a _~IIIPa1I~INCU.?aiatgac tames_!_!_insue!ssarses sear 'fil~?_i iiaas_??i?r aarr.i .seas ' aw?!!!!!!!sue!errasr irisaeu? 4 easerme cap relieets the overall quality. Compare driver eoanf? Prt ? Roomy, Ltndsoiuel y finished interior ? Unique clin _ate control ? First fCl air-ridgy cab suspen%i,: n opt IOU Compare design eiiici ney ? Aerod4namic tough ail- :a.l>aniinum cans ? L( w %, t~i ht for high pavlo . ds ? Diesels to ti(ll) SAE .'-oss e-sz]' hp. Compare tewures uo ijeln minimize glowntime Modular e:~yctricIt.. ?l air systems ? Plu_ in Lau; s and switches ? Lift.-Ur,.' triile. 2Compare it. RUCKS 1 1-777 RD DIVE I iN [2. w a31~.1 RD MEANS BUSINESS BIG TRUCKS Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approve(LWeWle into the tender and the tough ... men acquired a lonely new authority as breadwin- ners in the harsh world of factories and found- ries." Industrial Revolution cottage indus- tries, mines and factories also enslaved women and children, through Victorian times and well into this century. Many children saw daylight only now and then, and women toiled in garment sweatshops for sixteen or eighteen hours a day for $5 or $6 a week. EvAN LODGE ^ Social-studies students have been reading NEWSWEEK for years at Sycamore High School, and we were pleased to see one of our teachers (photo) on your cover. Mark Pel- to more places than that, you should probably have your own plane. Until then, call your Travel Agent, Transportation Depart- ment or British Airways. We'll take good care of you to Britain. Europe. The World. I The whole point behind physical education in our schools today is to improve the way people live. All slca / Th t' h 1h h 1 Math instructor Pelczarski in the kitchen: A mod- el for the cover? C) Saxon czarski, our computer-math teacher, likes to cook, too. He wants to know if illustrator Saxon used a model for his cover. MARK JENKINS ^ Real men aren't changing. They don't have to; they've never had the ridiculous hangups your article describes. So-called men who are changing aren't changing so much as they are allowing themselves to be cowed and brow- beaten by a minority of lesbians, feminists and other female impersonators. The Free Men group has the right idea: women are hardly the only people who have it tough. RORY FORAN Glen Burnie, Md. Dinner in Arabia Your article about "The Grand Tour" of President Carter (NATIONAL AFFAIRS, Jan. 16) suggests that, at the President's request, King Khalid's wife and Rosalynn Carter broke prec- se W ?ta9Re V 9d fti `7df Ito more places than youve business going to. You may not have known it, but British Airways flies to more cities and countries in the world than any other airline. We've more flights to London from more of the U.S. than anyone. And from London we'll whisk you along to almost 100 cities in Europe and the Middle East. If you've business peop U. CE 0 w y e new p y education puts the emphasis on the individual ... so that every child learns how to get a lifetime of bene- fits. Learn more about it. Write for a free folder, "What Every Parent Should Know About: The New Physical Education." p'D- Physical Education Public Information American Alliance-for Health, Physical Education- & Recreation 1201 16th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 Newsweek, February 6, 1978 7 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 200,1/0 pQ CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 "WE SOLVE PROBLEMSG IF YOU THINK THE AUDI 5000 IS BEAUTIFUL, SO MUCH THE BE TI'~R` AN INTERVIEW WITH HERBERT BROCKHAUS, HEAD OF STRUCTURAL TESTING Are you saying that beauty wasn't your prime concern? Brockhaus: With is, styling and engi- neering go hand in hand.They are one and the same. When I look at the car, I can see all the parts underneath. Like x-ray vision, if you will. The styling is an essential part ofthe engineering and viceversa, whichisas it shouldbe. If the car is attractive, it is basically because of the ele- gant engineering solutions. Isn't it a bit pompous to say you solve problems? Don't all car manufacturers? Brockhaus: Some car manufacturers are more like plastic surgeons -they change the skin. But for us, you might say solving problems is our driving force. So we built the Audi 5000 from the ground up. We have all the necessary equipment and testing facilities. At Audi a surprisingly high per- centage of our total budget is allocated to Research and Development. All right, what problems did you solve with the Audi 5000? Brockhaus: Overall, we solved the problem of making a large, lively car that is comfortable to drive with re- markable handling and performance. To do this, we had to develop totally new ideas, from the first 5-cylinder gasoline engine to a new concept of interior design utilizing psychology. Five cylinders? Brockhaus: Extreme? No. Innovative, Psychological perhaps. That's my point about solving design? Sounds problems-we needed an engine with extreme. efficiency, like a 4 and performance, like a 6. So we were the first to make a 5-cylinder gaso- line engine. We knew from psychological testing that harsh interiors could make a driver more aggressive. So we developed cheerful interiors which would be comfortable and pleasing and help the driver to remain calm and relaxed. Were all your Brockhaus: No. But they are equally solutions important. For example, we not only so innovative? are concerned with the exterior finish of a car, but the interior protective finish, as well.There- fore, we designed particularly large openings inside the doors, and other body panels, so that we could get suffi- cient layers of protective coatings into all the normally hidden body areas. Attention to a thousand minor de- tails like these makes for a better car overall. What's a minor detail, for example? Brockhaus: Well, a nice little detailwas the radio speakers. As an option,wede- veloped a new radio installation that achieves a real high fidelity sound with excellent fre- quency response over the entire audible audio range. I doubt that many of your readers would find this impor- tant. But it mattered a great deal to us because it was an interesting challenge. Is everything in the car brand new? Brockhaus: No, no. We continue to use front-wheel drive, as we have for over forty years. Front-wheel drive gives excellent tracking stability in rain, ice and snow You really should try the Audi 5000 in bad weather; you will be pleased with how it feels. Do you think there's a 'better car? Brockhaus: You can't ask the question in this form. There are cars that cost $48,000.Theymaywell.be "better,"but are they realistically what one needs in normal driving situations? I don't think so. What about cars twice as expensive as the Audi 5000? Brockhaus: You have to ask yourself whether they can have double the worth. The Audi 5000 costs about $8,500"' in America and it's the largest German car you can buy for the money. As a matter of fact, some of my colleagues thought a much higher price would have been justified. Then why would someone pay up to twice as much for another car? Brockhaus: That's a very good ques- tion. Until now, if they wanted a large German car like the Audi 5000, per- haps they had to pay double. Come to think of it, they still can. But now there's a choice so we've solved that problem too. 'Suggested 1978 retail price $8450, POE, transp., local taxes, and dealer delivery charges, additional. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 lb altern A Zov jF~elease ~?l09/5 : CIA-RDP80BO114ROg27O0390001-4 ~ /~' ~ - i ++ e+rs C rmie Milwaukee I'd ?w Oir4eans New York City 1'hNadelphia 9oanoke Salt Lake City an Francisco n,rg s 'ftr7 a ik 3 i[ ra , i Thar roti tree rz,,ho. 800-323-7500 (except in Winr tr 800-942- 74f)() ryh,rs ? a.; ,a 800-201-63; i, I-ra,,,ra e Approved For , X1/09/05 : CIA-RDP80B0 NMW Us' The Money Manager iz~ Alt If you want answers to international money problems before they threaten you, TELL IT TO THE MARINE The problems a corporate treasurer faces in doing business internationally are enough to keep anyone up at night. And part of the problem is that there are no answers that work every day. Rates move, regulations are rewritten, and governments change. Frankly, there are so many problems that your corporate treasury team could probably double in size and still not have all the resources you need. That's where we come in. Marine's International Treasury Management Group of foreign exchange advisors, money market experts, accountants, and economists has 15 proven systems to help you protect earnings per share and cash flow. We can not only advise you on what you might do, we can tell you in very realistic terms what will happen if you do it. Or don't do it. And we can execute any decisions you make. For example, MARINFEX, one of Marine s computer models, lets you precisely calculate the impact of fluctua- tions on earnings under FASB 48. And our foreign exchange exposure management service helps you define your global exposure and then devise strategies to opti- mize it, including daily tactical consultations. What's more, Marine's International Treasury Management Group can help you with day-to-day trading decisions and longer-term hedging, with funds flow, with alternate financing, with short-term money investments, with leading and lagging strategies, with international cash management, with world-wide tax consequences, with currency monitoring, with specific currency studies, and with foreign exchange forecasting. In short, with all the international money problems that can plague you. Just tell it to the Marine. MARINE MIDLAND BANK Buffalo, New York City (212-797-5963), Beirut, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Caracas, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Jakarta, London (011-441-628-2230), Madrid, Manila, Mexico City, Nassau, Panama, Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Rome, Sao Paulo, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney, Tehran, Tokyo, Toronto. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 uess who was just voted the No.1 color picture overAmerica's p five 19"and 25" brands. guess again. ou probably c ant goes isle sec -)n1 t Y'p ej*fE.r ve'II tell ou Tie twin"ier the Sylk anta Hers:-t =at's rig r t. -T h ~ a rSylvar a Su:,erset ves 'ed No. I aver Zerjr' . GE, ar .`,t?. a ~e am fender >r thisct a thous i t r r l e v .e 'to loo it f r? for pic it b. S yp = : ~e--~stover )! ,ry ;ra fear wir , .1 the ivivanir rC i c;F~I C I. ( r r 31c- : tAl a+ 'forE' =Ir,-1V r? dove r .Syk/ = r nd I, r; t t I-~cy (~ ~I that r,tr rr~; f4x Copt "u'.~ %nmac Side r --, c^rlfii S'LVANIA SJPERSET ' by side we beat them alp. YLV NIA is 80B01554R002700390001-4 Update Approved For Release 2001/0A/05-~gp A $600 000 Defector programs "decadent' -particu- larly musical shows where the When Chinese Squadron Comdr. Fan singers "wriggle too much." Yuan-yen dived away from his unit on a Worst of all, he says, is the em- reconnaissance flight over the Taiwan phasis on materialism. "Some- coast last July and landed his MiG-19 at times I wonder if Taiwan hasn't the nearest airfield, he became the first adopted too many things from high-ranking Communist airman to de- the West," Fan sighs. He says feet to Nationalist China since 1965-and he would like to give up what he perhaps the country's leading celebrity. now considers an embarrass- Since then, he has starred in a TV talk ment of riches-the reward is show on life in Red China, given count- earning $4,000 a month in inter- less interviews and been mobbed by est--but the government won't autograph hounds. A civic center in Tai- let him give it back or donate it pei even put the clothes he was wearing to charity for fear of what Com- when he defected on display, underwear munist propagandists would and all. Well-wishers have showered Fan make of such a move. with expensive gifts, including tailor- Hands Off: Though Fan insists that he doesn't regret his defec- t h h e a made suits and $5,000 in cash. Not t lacks for funds; Fan received the long- tion "at all," he worries constantly that standing reward offered any defectorwh,, the Communists will persecute the wife delivers a MiG-19 into government and three children he left behind. He has hands: $600,000 in tax-free gold bullion. written to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance But, despite the fame and fortune-or for help in getting them off the mainland, perhaps because of it-Fan is having but Vance decided not to intercede. Ac- some problems adjusting to his new life. cording to one State Department official, The 42-year-old defector remains a he was convinced "that doing so would man of simple tastes. He lives in Spartan not achieve the result that Fan desired." quarters at a government hostel, rarely Fan received an air force commission dons a jacket and tie, and watches TV by shortly after his arrival, but has never the hour. Though he likes "Bionic Wom- flown a Taiwanese plane and he is not an" and "Hawaii Five-O," he finds many likely to get the chance. The government Melinda Liu Fan and Taiwan fans: Embarrass- ment of riches UPI points out that he is unfamiliar with Taiwan's advanced, American-designed aircraft and, in any case, he has a full schedule of interviews and lectures. But seasoned observers in Taiwan speculate that the government is actually afraid that Fan might be captured-or redefect to Red China. / 1 1 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 TWA introciuces Round-Trip Check-In Check in once. Fly twice. ,,heck in once, fly twice. /itl?t Round-Trip Check-In. tart f ; it ii 'I v('vo!.i a (1(_..in .ir an day n. 1ch as H days iii a,vat select your seat on any flight- in advance- Now n TEA ?oil ca sf>ii ( ind reserve th tole sea' you Ni H- n . .fvance. set asid( a ;Fat, on i ,'. wnecla]v posy. i?1 01' t" it), ?:._.akV "MI! 1ht i : rs 'eill yoti sr $ ne? ~, ir`d~iw cf'at i i r -~ri reservr !is ._ ... ir. 1baricer;f all , )[1 mil, I'll 0(1 i., shc;v 1W ai he 'irr r ?t adt rct w on tlHGrl t to a Vii-. l"i illh tint; trr riilt l\;-our sfe (i that ltr+ t ,i VIM Ivan' VA' : iiing t~ you. Lion r.1l1 vr-: r Prrivel Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 When copies go out of your office with your let- terhead, they have to make a good first impression. If they don't, you may not gel: a second chance. So any copy you send out has to arrive sharp, dry and unsmearable. That's why Toshiba created the BD-601 copier. Toshiba's BD-601 is an economical, compact, precision plain paper copier that delivers clean, sharp, dry impressions with extraordinary consistency. Unlike others in its price range, the Toshiba uses dry loner No messy liquids. No special-finish duplicating paper. Toshiba's BD-601 is a true plain paper copier. This means that like other Toshiba copiers, it'll make completely dry copies of just about anything on letterhead, colored stock, graph paper - just about any paper in your office. The! BD-601 is fast (first copy in I I seconds) and handy (it fits on a desk). Ii ,F '., t TOSHIBA AMERICA, INC. BUSINESS EQUIPMENT DIVISION. P0. BOX 846. BELLMORE. N Y 11710. PLEASE TELL ME MORE ABOUT THE TOSHIBA BD,601 COPIER NAME- FIRM NAME ADDRESS- CITY STATE_ "Suggested retail value solely for purpose of information Perfect for a small firm. Or a larger one ready for a decentralized copying system. Business is competi- tive. And if your corre- spondence looks better than the competition, it could be the edge you need. The Toshiba BD- 601. For $ 3, 15 0? no other copier copies all its features. TOSHIBA Toshiba America, Inc. GET THE TOSHIBA BD-601. IT MAKES DRY COPIES ON JUST ABOUT ANY PAPER. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 se 2!09/05 : CIA-Ron 54R 0001-4 hulliNg rDUIa LION not ruing on one ei rge. I fhilric you're taking Your /oh as a aria Tncpecror a little too .ceriouslv" karnada +:4uaiity Inspector check into a n. unannounced, he examines it From top to or 298 touch standards. he sure everything is just right, out- managers t their inns daily. You see, we know th.-It our most t inspection comes when you check in. ert vermillion. Peter Wehr Kenneth 'A oodward. ,)crate Editors: C - so Arsen,. anneth Bn yin,' Be+=y '":~rEar, a i iii a [3asnell, Manic erfersor, E ,en KFerdoja, tephen kindel. . mn ctway.. Ann Rag hnarin, r Gttnr , D Mau, Ma 'et Montag' ~, S~.usan arcing Moran, Bit:, Palmer ?v Schwartz. Juart A. Seinel, lean ';gmann, Diane ' Slier Salrv W Smith, (',','stance 1-'JJey -ire - ? IIe!ison, Fay Will-. (Den is A William,, Get-,< n Zelman anerh Sarvis, Ste. ar Shebad Nob Spitzer, ... eph t r uitrnan, Marpne V sin n r Editorial Asst ints Jcse Ali Juddh 3imoau ed r_k r3r,wd, Barbara F rite John urke FdwaM l_ na,l,;,,,? Juarg, Donna M note Don .!.1 D t arrido. -r cha^t 'W F. EI"If \ff) I J VS, Ot P ACC SAM CON IL-IF r')r:7 11 TH T I , I I It: L.isie, Susar Meaans F'.-ink G MoCusk>r Her'??rt P,> I Sethi, Dar Shanirc F men+t Ellis Simi ns Rahn u S, 3tadiman R- monde 5,,, ,If, Elsie B. fl . r ih?+gri-, r:eh ?,.~;olin. cirnriai Assistants. i J. Ab: roam, Pamela e..brarrwn Jame:; V 3aker Sharon L Becl iy, Yvette F 3enedek, Gretc hen Ennui e M in AlbertJ Cass lick Chen 'iarxni Decter, ifarbara H iiiMitt i.i. Jar Dougherty. Dot, la Dzolan3ary Faulkner, Sandra .,a, y, Jon don. Frank Hoey Michael R -+udsor. Tenl_. Ann Jack n I in ,Ja Christine Ket, Nancy W ne. Margaret E Malnne, ,;v liar, 1) :+ch, Joan IVICH:. Ruth Mrt -wn. Tessa Narnuth. Jane F jtr.~.., S;u nits, Albert Is' SJSanm. Wi :..Jam Slate, Cnm hs van,+e% ae, ...I- ^gelsang, Rich and A. Zelrr i s ?iclures: Jarne:= i Kenney ?hoto Editor), W 3Iter Be' , fin-,- -is eggy Clause- Robert Co,-en, Dorean Davis Delp OF Jm ,,: -n : ngels, Henry rs-,nn, Berner 1. Gotfryd, Myra (rerman, I icber 3 fJrsy IbOhlsson, F'itricia A. Par-ridge, Anthony!'iollo, Char !,=:, B, ia. s=nh Roman, Bar Nothstein, A..:?drea K. Senig: Susan J lwer,:t. .,:.: i Whelan, David ,II yland. niestic Bureaus: WASHINGTON Mel Elfin, James Dc-,,-, Dr.,I e limper, Evert Clark, Eleanor Clift, Nilliam J. Cons- Jeff B. CspKe la -d, homes M. DeFrank. 3hirlee Hof` san, Lucy Howard, Henry A' Hi =a"d, John J. Lindsay Mary Lord, avid C. Martin Thelma M?:;Mahor. n,crma Milligan, Lars-,_rik Nelson, _.oyd H. Norman, Elaine Shannon cr?,ward W. Smith, Sr. It Sullivan, Rich Thomas, ohn Walcott, Jane lii itntore, Amanda Zirorrierman; idly (McNamee Susan T NcElh ii.. ,0 (photographers)-ti, TLANTA: a, seph B. Cummi ig Jr Holv Caryl: vein E Smith. BOSTON: Phyllis to"3larrud Richert. Manning, CHICA- -C. Fank Maier Chn< J Harper sylvester Monrc e, Elaine 3c rolsir _-" Lowenthal (photourapher). DE'l ROrr: James C Jones, Jon Low ?r. -IOOUSTON: Nicholas r'roffitt. Lea _,onosky. LOS ANGELES: Mart',: rt a ?ndorf, Dewey Cr, ;in, Janet Heck. Lester Sloan (photographer' ~A?:'nr YORK: Tony Full, =National ( orrespondent} 3usan Anr.-st SAN i NCISCO- Gerald '~. Lubenow 5teohen H. Ga,, a M rhos, Ree..,; .? ,:. ) Wilson. UNq? ED NATIONS: 'Raymond Carroll Bureaus: LONCON: Anthr, Cnllirrga, Mali ohs Use,"'pars:. 1Aayer. PARIS: Fizabeth 'eer, lane Fri,dr+ric a-res J ~sborough, Charley Mitchelrnce _BONN: Paul Martin nimorn~, Sydney Liu. BUNOS AIRE'S: Ron --4.-rear'. V -" Edited-, Controtte .lesenh F Mar? IN` , RNAT IONA'....EDITION Managing Editor F,-hard M. Srrlith Assistant Maiming Edit,-' Anrfrew N-::gt'eeL' Regional 'Editor' Pd''.' rid !9enr (FUrr-:,e) _nitorial Prod,,: lion Mana? _er:lrr:eoh A Newewee.... Ink. _.... .___ Dawn Auchincia'; P,,?,. 1ur,- uur 1 ,, 4'iit, F E Dates lames lays... ,,r E. Oar, taped Jr ni L Decker a,? ark hi .rr Ito, F nherq, Jerome Luntz Rk?,ird W !ynch Suss I . SA?Ivir Todd S. Rankin, V, dram :-i. Sr;..anr.;an Fdwa?,+ Approved It's understanding how passengers think that's helping us get more of them. When you call Eastern Airlines Reservations, we know you want pleasant helpful service, and we know you're in a hurry. So our goal is to answer your call quickly-and in most cases by a real person, not a recording. Your call to Eastern Reserva- tions is our first chance to take care of you, and that's exactly what we're going to do. There are over 3, 000 special- ists in 12 Eastern Reservations Centers, handling more than 150, 000 calls a day, one at a time. Reservations is a big job. It's not just to sell seats. It's to answer questions about airfares, hotels, car rentals. It's to get you on the right flight even if we have to put you on another airline. 4 EASTERN THE WINGS OF MAN Simply said, Eastern Reserva- tions people are there to help you. It's this kind of attitude that helped win us 2 million more passen- gers last year than the year before. Look, there are a lot of airlines out there you could fly besides Eastern. So if we want you to fly Eastern all the time, and we do, we have to earn our wings every day. Every day. On the phone. At the airport. On the plane. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05: CIA-RDP80B0155R02700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 "It's 52?below zero up here, buttraz~ as it sounds we need this machine to keep the ground frozen:' "When you drill for gas north of the Arctic Circle, the way we're doing here at Canada's Mackenzie Delta, you expect a lot of problems," says Bob Toole, drilling superintendent for Gulf. "But this one's a real fooler. It's a freezing unit. Even at 52? below zero, we need it to keep the ground around the wellhead frozen. comes up from the bottom of the hole, maybe a mile down, it's hot enough to melt the permafrost that's hold- ing up the whole rig. "If the permafrost melted, the hole would get bigger and bigger, and the operation would have to come to a halt. Frozen pipes "Our freezer keeps the top thirty feet of the casing around the drill pipe at temperatures below freezing, so that doesn't happen. "This country is probably one of the toughest spots on earth to drill for natural gas. But we're drilling the wells. We're Meeting the challenge." Not mud "The problem is that when the drilling mud Left to right: Bob Toole, roustabout Jacob Kuhoktak, and the freezer. Gulf Oil Corporation Gulf.. Gulf people: meeting the challenge. "At temperatures as low as this, you have to invent new ways to do almost everything." Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 design. Over the years, Lar performance means rack a exceptional. lanr I1 Coupe. Sedan L-ng ant daily ental arr th'-.41 y'ur I.irtk I q lealrr i ~n_~a o1 A menu u..on o/ F.1 Motors of No,th M.- a. !rx I? he;n, R Age k- d Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : Cl Newsweek, February 6, 1978 JORDAN ROLLS ON. Because of his distaste for a palace guard, Jimmy Carter has rejected ad- vice from Bert Lance and domestic adviser Stuart Eizenstat, among oth- ers, who want him to name a chief of staff and thus bring order to an often disorganized White House. But Car- ter took his own approach last week by quietly increasing the authority of Hamilton Jordan, his No. 1 aide. Be- sides being put in charge of political and policy coordination, Jordan will now hold meetings of the senior staff as well as a "senior senior staff " of himself, Jody Powell and three other topsiders. Jordan will also sit in on the Friday-morning foreign-policy breakfasts now attended by Carter, Walter Mondale, Cyrus Vance and Zbigniew Brzezinski. BELL TAKES THE RAP Attorney General Griffin Bell seri- ously considered resigning over the case of David Marston, the Republi- can U.S. attorney whose ouster from his Philadelphia post caused some sharp criticism of the Carter Admin- istration. Though he doesn't think there was anything improper or un- ethical about his dismissal of Mar- ston, Bell concedes that it was han- dled clumsily-and thus was a source of embarrassment to the White House. Bell didn't offer his resignation (which Jimmy Carter wouldn't have accepted anyway), but he assumed full blame for the Marston affair at a Cabinet meeting, apologizing to the President and ex- plaining that his justice Department staffers hadn't kept him adequately informed on the matter. WAS OSWALD A SPY? Investigative author Edward Jay Ep- stein's forthcoming book, "Legend: The Secret World of Lee Harvey Oswald," will make news by sug- gesting that Oswald was once a Sovi- et spy, and that the FBI and the CIA have tried to suppress this informa- tion for years. Contrary to a pub- lished report, Epstein's book doesn't claim that Jack Ruby is still alive, nor P80B01654R002700390001-4 arve Pool S. Conklin Bell: An apology for Carter AP Oswald: Charges of a cover-up does it offer any new assassination theory. Epstein believes that Os- wald killed President Kennedy, but doesn't know the motive. Despite Oswald's Russian link, Epstein doesn't think he carried out the as- sassination on Soviet orders. MEXICAN EXODUS The U.S. plans to add nearly 300 guards to its Mexican border patrol to help control a burgeoning influx of illegal aliens. Even with the addi- tional guards, about 1.5 million Mexicans are expected to slip into the U.S. in 1978, as against 500,000 to 800,000 border jumpers in recent years. More Mexicans are leaving because of their country's continu- ing economic slump, which is now so severe that half the work force is either unemployed or reduced to part-time jobs. A DOVE IN THE KREMLIN The cause of world peace gets a lift from Leonid Brezhnev in a memoir about to be published in Novy Mir, a Soviet literary magazine. The Com- munist boss contributes some remi- niscences of World War II, from which he emerged as a decorated general after four years on the front. Brezhnev writes: "If I were asked today what is my main conclusion after passing through the war from its first day to the last day, I would say, `There should be no war again. War should never occur again'." JIMMY'S PANAMA STOP If the Senate ratifies them in time, Jimmy Carter may deliver the Pana- ma Canal treaties in person by add- ing a Panama stop to his swing through Africa and Latin America in late March and early April. Such a visit would cap the President's good- will tour-and give him his first look at the canal, which has become a favorite subject for Carter lately. He stayed up until 4 o'clock one morn- ing reading "The Path Between the Seas," David McCu]'.lough's book on the Big Ditch. Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 , THE SC VIET SATELLITE %UREAKS UP AND BURNS AS IT AE-ENTERS EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE df hac 1n the- xmtr, aist rirrf,d a few c- in lAtin I I-tl tIIII li(-nrV 6f'Il(1iiI 111' !1;, . . }?:: I. 1C ;Y1s Itlitili \ 't it tleifilGl n;d tn;l. ?;, tit ti AT ('tt l; ItS,i)S I I IOS 0-3-t Vt-( a,i It ti ::I I,t0- ,..) I. nl :11)i?t'ci tl(ie In f',5 'i t 1.l..!f (t1 ;i Sii . Flt :' llilttAl't t;i 11O1t1,- :. >(i% is ('Ili l,O,Ii -d . tri,lt- tory. And it the craft is in a relative-(v low orbit, he systii-n-, produce's .in "1cnpactfor< cast"-.iroughindicati(>n of where and when the hardware might re-ei or the .rmosphere, The orbi-d calculations-although not the imp ct fore(:I st -are ' ecurate to within st 'onds. ('Fins N()1S k[) st,!- dom bothe s to it heck th, artriil positions (E high-'?yin.r, rti,.ces ,,f Space junk ".iat ha,,.- no strategic siip- Oificance. lioweve- low'altit,ide v,L.- hioles, who e lifet-ties in smite are plainly limited, an, monitored frr- OiLently; an;l satellites that NORAl) deems to ,e of trti( nlar signifi- ('ance-such as 'is,n'vs 9)4-a-1-- tr>icked by the Stir'illia,lce I et~~n?k ;is often as ice a (I iv NOR.tF) an i-- Ivsts try to identif',. the nnrnnge if such "satell tes of' iterest'' 1,v paring their orbits ith those ofnri viou.siy identified -lft. in tt c 1 a".I r;il aster i~ ia'inc 11 (,Osi;ios 9'.4 tabbed s a spy ..atPllife t a+(- o-- ;eat a nit e:er re; .'tor. Anil he fay t tii,it, unlike ts three mmi'tliar Tire(1- n'sors, th reacto" flit not ,'.parat- rod been fired i -o a 'high,'r orbit three we-'ks aftt the 1,1111 41 con- li.:ned prey:lus rer .rc rhat tit erai aeas in trout- e. Rescue: W at is th, -isk far, play c,f the Cosmos crisis:r sir' small sati .',1'")RAD an;. sts. F -altlion(TI: tw,er,- satellites with r:uli, ai'tive power ;rnits rernaii, aloft, ucincting 'lever, ,infilartoCc,ino s9-i1,,,.llaretiving>it sigh high ;. titiirles that thee won t t.ut to fall eartF for nndieds of ears. By ti time. It y- hegt; their l(-scents, SC rntists silt spa( a'shut- I,-, will lit at:aila ie to ph Ik th, altering era Our of tie sky an I carr', harm(, siv ha. i, to the e?irth -''ETER GWYN'E N&, EVE'T LARK in ~1,ashinqtcn prohibell On h tiitnr( c,ite:iit=s .1 Carter ,aid that the aJ S ,i-'onlti, see 'w agree onic w `n tt`e So let I ~., reduce h. da,, re. ,f f"u tier, .as;, cidents- I'he U.S it torn,- i ,nr halt no : ntin- uency plan tclr deal g with th,' phiii of :i renegade .atellit,' nr other heprt Ir,,ri, space. But, -aid Na'-'vol nSecurity ( nun- i'il adviser Benjamin Finhe-'nan. wa( chaired th,' Cosm, i crisis ta.m `rut st,inding(( nrn[tte( .s ',till rita' di rig 11( (sided that 'le srrot nti.rht.st Pace for ?Ome tit .,'"..-to eI"ar nr 1-n- (Iinlomatic nil not t;il fa.iloi t fror< 1is r peek's close enrol ter "`'!CHARD STErLE with E-', ?-RT (LARK -na LAPS-ERIC NELSON in V.' lshington, OWE?Y GRAM Frlw- -- ,n in,i ANDREW SZENDE in Or':' a Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 CIA: How The spy named Hook slumped into an overstuffed chair in the old Mamounia Hotel in Marrakech to wait for his contact-and think things through. His best Arab sources seemed to be ducking him these days. Even the British weren't talking to him more than they had to-not that the bloody Brits had much to say anyway. Back home, the President and Congress were watching the CIA more closely than ever before. Young guys were getting out of The Company and heading for fat advances from publishers in New York. Old guys, his friends, were getting pink slips right and left. And they said the new director seemed to trust electronic gadgets in the sky more than men who knew how to keep an ear to the ground. "How the hell are we gonna stay ahead of the KGB?" Hook thought. He waited, but his man didn't show up. Strike three. Finally he got up, walked slowly back to the station, filed yet another no-news-is-good-news re- port to Langley and started thinking about his wretched pension. Hook is a fiction, but his prob- lems are very real facts of life around The Company these days. "For the first time in my experience the CIA is demor- alized," says former Deputy Director E. Henry Knoche, a career man who resigned last summer. Some nor- mally tight-lipped spies now charge an- grily that the CIA's director, Adm. Stans- field Turner, is an abrasive martinet who doesn't understand the first thing about spycraft. Others around the agency's Langley, Va., headquarters maintain that squeaky-clean new rules set by Carter and Congress to control the old and often dirty business of espionage are seriously hobbling the CIA's covert operatives, weakening its network of foreign spies and straining its relations with friendly intelligence services. Said one worried spook: "It's a total disaster." That damage assessment was probably exaggerated, but the deeper issues it raised troubled Carter Turner and their critics alike. Turner meets with top aides at Langley: The munity-were making things better, not worse. "This place is producing," he said (page 29). Outwardly, atleast, there seemed to be ample evidence of that. As usual last week, sophisticated U.S. spy satellites scanned the remote corners of the earth, giant electronic "ears" drew signals and secrets out of the airwaves, computers at CIA headquarters purred and the agen- cy's daily intelligence briefing landed on Jimmy Carter's desk each morning around 8 o'clock--right on time. To give the President a cloak-and-dage bility, NEWSWEEK leArn- keeps in reserve covert operati- perts. And t agency may flow much harm has three years of unre- lenting public exposure of CIA misdeeds and mistakes done to the agency? Has the intelligence community got its sensitive machines and sophisticated staff pulling together or against one another? What can be done to cut deadwood from the CIA? And, most important, how should Car- ter-or any President-square legitimate needs for espionage and covert capabili- ties with the country's fundamental democratic values and processes? "We want an accountable structure," Vice President Walter F. Mondale promised recently. And Turner told NEWSWEEK that tighter controls and more coordina- tion around the CIA-and the rest of the nation's supersecret intelligence com- 18 Approved For Release 2001/09/05 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R002700390001-4 ,v,u rovi-r (l rn a 0rdt near Iookina fur vi(?tirn, '' Lsant. tii~rF 'inds hlev: two 111( tor)n ..a ;c, lder~. s wa.rteri intr. the OInL) River .,ty" 11- k* I 1 1e1l state ,i(, suutf) of (hi(tt O, ~atl); I Weather Strt is (-?ftiorlf 1Volhgntan andwom- 1000,i.ile "Ville hliazarcf e ' u['Fte o a( .Lth in twii- SLL1)whorin(I most ! (tense r-e('o ?i ' t ;hto ; vil 1~a) an, tF e 1, (dv ofa.n 80-voar- Fare s ~. ftho~fa~s F)i(. )re iphicaily ,,oPalflni~; rna i in )nelsnowrno- The st:,rm_ he said ;i11er as, t ._, L .~ ii511, + in (i, u.th. ky And ) rural Ve I t Ian,Itl temperature (y as t ? (le,zrc r 2001/09/05 CIA-RDP80B01554R002700390001-4 A ktII~?i gizzard g~.onug at o ini~C .in,1 the ;irrlillf' Koine f roke down. Ili, har ,n, .tom I -A ,k -, _n to t,t,r tl nrtg no,vdrifts to a tinn i,f snow s a yy i r,, IS I i. L, [: d l s+ nrro * .;Lek. she dis -- visihiIir,. zero and sent Lhe it cI r, ill Ih,! I th"v nsnzilty 10( ked (fo%.I'ri I took ire?re rhaii 70 )ivf?s. "I .till) r10 ma 1104'lure(f I' k. aire'a(ly (O1r, ()i)i, f, .liiua ;Lill! t, Kti ky u;F.n (,I.).e,? Some of 0:11tr, I!' ),as'. ah!e6fr,'tch., - ;and even Jimiuy Carter knows the ,i Ti, celty in findin, good interpreters -SP days. In one East European court- -n fact, there are reports that are inning number of dissident Coinmu- ies won hi like to t;tlk with CIA officers t met because :dl the station's lin- its leave been recently fit-ed. 11 tMI N'I' expert_, have scored a share victories over their counterparts lit a oaf inlortnation SIGINT) and cotn- ,_'nncatioies (COMINT). A HUMIN'I' rive J, and there is no indi. teem it w i it it w ill he ignificantly epandec' 'I );it was be just as well. Whila the ( IA lid score covert victories in t -uatei n,i(a nd Inn, in the 1950s, it is Bette r know i to ors ens?'rt failures in Cuba, ( bile and e a'- whe re. In Africa, for ei , uecple_ ci a,,r ope-'atives subtly prompt ii the -?:,eve rn- mett of Burundi to send Koine b, itt- blit g Russian ambassado, To the C \ s disr.rav, however, the ti essian,- t n posed a crack diplomat. tied re I tti lies between rice Burundis at if the Gov is grev more cordial than t- 'r. "1 ,m ,r- evc-' overwhelmed by re,' nuni llei ut vet. fine people who flavt been d'.lu int'wastingtheirhvesice htsbetstee safe one very candid cos it-actii it tau in s'ashington. E yen so, neither Cured for th, Pi t- dei t intends to give ie -overt Ic ,~n The c seen." tee be p'uclt nt For ee natiog nstant piepielarity e'ith leadership " muses Vi( ' Achn. Robert Monti e about the CIA ipri,ar ), er his frienit and t+. nnis partner tit,.ulstield Turn:-. Monroe doesnt think things necewarily wcirkthatw.,y. A gci st lc-ad" er lit ass,-s,i'sw hatIei'eelstoI;'done when the issec-s are not all th,t clear, and 1.;.s the strength to ??arrv tie'ni out what ?.;er obstacles exist" Th,)itgh the jury is still out on the clan ite of*Tort 'r's e isiou as hetiurns the CIA nside ot, hardly uryone doubts his v; 11 to pcrfornn. A 'narked star as long t,o as hi-; Na" al Ai adorns elays in the ' Hs-''sc far- uheael of it' t'iat we never consitic reef lain' a conrpe:itor or even t peer,' according to classmate Jirnn i Carter-Turner, now 5-1. went on to inc ;ever-ilpward Navv c.ueer that carne -l 'tiro ,c)iur stars at ,it, -.Tuiike many hotshots, l true' distii,Cnislied hiins~ if in a variety of dissimilar jobs- battle c?orninand, systems analysis, stra- tegic t)launing, huilget inch manpower man