CIA TRIED TO USE GEORGETOWN MEDICAL CENTER IN 1950S

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CIA-RDP88-01315R000300030004-5
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
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4
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NEWSPAPER CLIPPING
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Approved For Release 2006/12/19: CIA-RDP88-01315R Trioed to Us,-", once of operation and decision mak- ing." "They didn't approach us above board or by open declaration," he said. "They apparently. utilized foun- dations and institutions of repute and through them obtained the services of scientists, but never with any disclo- sure to the institutional leadership re- sponsible for the conscience and eth- ics of Georgetown and otlier?universi- ties." He said he probably never will be fully informed about events of 15 and 20 years ago, long before his arrival here in 1969. In. part, he said, this is because sev By Victor Cohn and John Jacobs tVashinaoa Past Staff Writers The Central Intelligence Agency in the `1:S5Os sought to use Georgetown University Medical Center to hide "a cover or:,anization.'o.r highly sensitive -projects"in `bicw>icai, chemical and radiologiea1 warfare,'.' it was learned ..? , yesterdays ,-? `lop. secret 'CIA documents made avajlab;e to The, Washington. Post dis- closed this purpose without mention- in- university's name..They spoke, too,'' W ',plans for research in "psychochemical fields," "natural toxla psychosis" and "what makes peo- . plcxpass from mild disorientation into delirium and coma"_ -- all fields that fit at;that time into the CIA's .aim to investigate mind. control. Ali h oriiied source said these aiid other. "` documents referring to 'research' on ter-minaUy.ill cancer pa- tiei:js' pertained at least in part to CI:I"aims ht Georgetown University here. The documents provided some of the first specifics on CIA goals at Georgetown since the disclosure last week that in the mid-1950s the CIA _? channeled funds through the Ge- schickter Foundation -- a foundation directed by a Georgetown professor - to establish a secret base for sensitive studies. Dr. Matthew F. McNulty, head of the Georgetown University Medical Center, yesterday said.. nearly two weeks of research and Interviews have turned up no evidence that any re-' search ever was done on medical cen- ter premises on the CIA's_ behalf or with hidden CIA financing. But he also conceded that he is still far from completely informed or sure of what happened there in the 1950s and '60s. . . The evidence, he said, is that the CIA indeed tried to establish a secret mind-control research center. at the _ university. - And he called this "an abuse of an institution's integrity and independ- ,?l';TIC?L1:_i t!Y*-LL THE l,'AS1iINGTON POST U.ti`PAGE , 7 August 1977 era! officials of that day are dead and in part because the university de- stroys most research files after 7 to 10 years, to save space. In addition, he said, the university still has been unable to reach Dr. Charles Geschickter, the reported middleman in an apparent 1957 CIA- Geschickter-Georgetown transaction. Geschickter was a distinguished pa- thologist and cancer researcher and- I largely in a private medical practice not on Georgetown premises-a doc- tor who treated cancer patients. rtYntil the late 1960s he was also the medical center's director of clinical (medical treatment) laboratories, one of any hospital's most important units. A 1959 university publication called him the head of "one of the most pro- lific cancer research laboratories in the country," and a man ? whose "fertile mind knows no limits." He became emeritus in 1971, but still retains, a small office and labora- tory in the medical center's Gorman Building, the last of a connected string of buildings comprising George- -town University Hospital. Geschickter Is now 76. Georgetown professors say they have seen him very little in the last few years. McNulty said he can be sure, from the testimony. of present CIA Direc- Stansfield Turner,. that the CIA tor gave the Geschickter Foundation $375,000 to make use of some universi- ty's facilities without. the university's knowledge. The foundation then openly gave Georgetown University its "gift" of $375,000 at the time the school was putting tip three new buildings--a dormitory, a nursing- school and the Gorman Build ing. The $3,035,000 Garman Building was to house Geschickter's new clinical laboratories. as well as offices and fa- ellities'for several other departments. McNulty said- rero iining university records fait to show exactly which building the $375,000 helped build but it was apparently Gorman, which. was begun in 1957 and dedicated in March 1959. - - .NIeNuity, I)r. John Gillespie. a for- mer Geschickter colleague and other sources agreed that Geschickter saw few patients at his Gorman laborator- ies. "He.didn't.even have an examina- room there," Gillespie said. tion McNulty maintained that: "I've in- terviewed all the people who worked with him; and they say all his inter- ests were in cancer therapy. 1've talked to technicians who wored'.a next to him at the laboratory bench,, where it would be almost impossible to conceal anything. and they saw, nothing of the subjects described by the CIA." - . As a private medical pratitloner,,, Geschickter maintained an office on Connecticut Avenue, near the Wash Ington Hilton Hotel- 'Ire mostly treated cancer or unu-r sual diseases with unusual treat-, ments," Gillespie said. "He had a lot of patients, and a lot of them were very grateful. _ "Ile is a very bright and very gener-. ous man. He is a very responsible' man. I'd like to see him come forward. now: Geschickter has been out of-reach for the past two weeks, _Isince-report ' erg began phoning him to ask -clues-. tions. He lives in Lorton, where fam- ily members have regularly been say Ing, "Iie's out of town. We don't know when he'll be back." - r Approved For Release 2006/12/19.: CIA-RDP88-01315R000300030004-5