THE THINK TANK OF THE LEFT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00845R000100120014-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 23, 2010
Sequence Number: 
14
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 26, 1981
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00845R000100120014-9.pdf138.39 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/12/23: CIA-RDP90-00845R000100120014-9 -04 YORK TIMES MAGAZINE 26 APRIL 1981 By Joshua !uruvchi c ? When Richard J. Barnet and Marcus G. Raskin, co-found- ers of the Institute for Policy Studies and its co-directors for i 14 years, met in 1961, they dis- covered they had two things in common. Both men felt a. growing sense of disillusion- ment. "They 'wondered whether the major institutions of American life had not-be- cone inimical to the- life and safety of the Republic," re- calls one I.P.S. brochure. But they also shared an under- standing of how the system worked. "Modern nations -run on ideas," was the way Raskin put it. I t was an-? insight not grasped by most other radi- cals of the 1960's who sought to bring about fundamental change. Many of them became intoxicated with the-romantic attraction of direct action. A. few consumed themselves in revolutionary violence. Barnet and Raskin established athink tank. regular publications include a weekly, In These Times, and two - quarterlies, Race and Class, co-published with the Institute of Race Relations in London, and the Transnational Information Exchange Bulle- tin, co-published with the -World Council of Churches. Of the-institute's dozens of books, many are widely reviewed and enjoy substantial sales. I.P.S. fellows write frequently for The New Yorker, Harper's and The Nation, as well as for major newspapers. I.P.S. also produces fi:-ns, one of which, "Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang" - about the perils of nuclear radiation - won an Emmy in 1979. LP.S.'s principal source of financial support is the Sam- uel Rubin Foundation. founded by the owner of Faberge cos- metics. When Rubin died in 1978. he was eulogized by Mar- cus Raskin as one of those "who- dare call themselves revolutionary." Since 1978, his daughter, Cora Weiss, has been=president of the founda- tion. Her husband, Peter, is vice president of the founda- tion-and chairman of the I.P.S. board of trustees. The founda- tion has supported education- al, medical and cultural projects, but its main activity is described in the "Founda- tion Center Source Book" as "grants primarily for pro- grams concerned with the pur- suit of peace and justice, the search for an equitable reallo- cation of the world's re- sources, and the fullest imple- mentation of social, economic, political, civil and cultural rights, for all the world's peo- ple.'._~,._ . ::. . Today, the -Institute- for Policy Studies is flourishing. Its annual budget has- in- creased eightfold - to- nearly $2 million - since 1963, the year I.P.S. was' founded. It employs about 75 fellows (full- time scholars), visiting fel- lows, research and- staff as- sociates, administrators-and part-time associate fellows in its Washington headquarters and its European office, the Transnational Institute, set up in Amsterdam- in 1974. Its In its most port, I.P.S. d "Washington' search institu ter for "radi Says Robert succeeded B as director o became head tional Insti I.P.S.'s Ame "almost com of a liberal, sophical be , European contingtm ainnvsL completely comes out of a Marxist or at least a liberation basis." Race and Class, the journal co-published by I.P.S. in Europe, has featured arti- cles celebrating Communist victories in Laos and Angola, warning that England and West Germany are heading to- ward fascism, and, lauding progress toward women's lib- eration in China, Cuba and within the People's Front for the Liberation of Oman. Like Washington's other think tanks - the Brookings Institution, the American En- terprise Institute and the Heritage Foundation - I.P.S. seeks to influence not only the climate of ideas but also Gov- ernment policy. Its Washing- ton School, founded in 1979, draws several hundred stu- dents each year from Capitol Hill, the public-interest com- munity, the Federal Govern- ment and universities. Accord- ing to its brochure, the school "has assembled a learned, dis- tinguished and committed fac- ulty, dedicated to the central task of education: to secure world peace, human freedom and social justice." Some of the several dozen faculty give only one or two lectures;. -+U- ? rem.-?, a,il ~~o... Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/12/23: CIA-RDP90-00845R000100120014-9