THE CIA AND ITS INVOLVEMENT WITH FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS

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CIA-RDP90-01208R000100200039-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 2, 2011
Sequence Number: 
39
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Publication Date: 
August 22, 1974
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OPEN SOURCE
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/04: CIA-RDP90-01208R000100200039-9 r?,1q,ru5% ;32, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL t;tr>.tioa proecc. More recently. local units been cooperating with government agen- ci s in prowtutng child care services. For ex Paola, a cars center in San Francisco V, ;s:hes -'he Tederal funds it receives through 01, S:,n Friuct?co Department of Social _riices; T e Y' in Aurora.. Ill., operates a her nrdar cont not with the state. or?-,?, vroriotional efforts h `.Ia'.rotlc?li:.:n Life Insurance Co. has ;d "i:ulussr",''s Share in Day Care" and n, , ?? Cara, V; ^ 3 t and Why." The first of these r-c, n.otior.a' outlines industry's role etp`u, to accelerate the development of `d:v; G_:e prcgTacss. The second sum- r:art::'ti't'e tsatu:vs necessary for P. good pro- Sn End ..-x: es brieSy the different !rinds Of pr "3. of America National Trust and S ~,n s _-cciation of Sam Francisco has de:Oted u: hate of its "Small Business Be- corter" u : i:istar prospective operators of d:iv nurseries on the necessary steps to fol- 1?rv in establishing such businesses. 5EL5CIEO .:~5`=tttNCES ON DAY CARE Amaicamated Clothing Workers of Amer- ica, BAitiriore Regional Joint Board, Health anti Welfare Fund. The Facts: The Problem: The Solution. Baltimore, McI. - - Bank of America National Trust and Sav- ings fu.xlation. Day Nurseries for Pre- z. hoolers. Small Business Reporter, July 15; 1369. - Child Welfare League of America. Inc. Child Ca:e and Working Mothers: A Study of Arra;tgemecas Made for Daytime Care of Florence A. Ruderman. New York, 19%:,3. Day Clare ,_nd Child Development Council of A:nerica? Inc. Resources for Day Care: A La; of ? tbl:c:tors. Washirgton. September (t,i:: ~,t :aiy s';ppl_rneat:s to be issued). Ceoartrnent of Heap and Mlen- tal H'v'4 sne. Pro,e_ntive Medicine AdminlS- I:.,..ion, ?da:arnal and Child health Services. !:rl Day Care: A Guide for Cead Care in a Part-Day or Full- iitc: Cc tie:. :r,pr;la.tn Life Insurance Co.:. Day 'what :. d Why. 1972. Industry's Share D%/ Care. L471. i?-:tl:.on it Cnu -cil-of ;ewish ' iorien. Win-; "n Care: A Report d,tsed on Find- ^c: o; National Council of Jewish Dublin 5eyserhrg New York, 1'.1. "I p:irl[Icent Of Health. Cducation, and Soc: t, and ttehabili ...ion .service. cu^au. and U.S. Department of T t or.,,,...> .x1 Labor Sta.rtda:c s Adnlir?.i;- ttuu, men's 3uroau. C:..Id Care Ar- ttc i'R?;~::,I Ste:~s. Setr Low itau reu,iG. S-c>~n;tIsr. :, ..:idr?~n's Bureau Pub. No. -;8i- Z-.5. I) -t:t:hen: of Labor, _tnptoynnent :i, -,.:.ministration, Woraerl'3 Bu:eau: C;':i:' C nre 'errs es Provided by hospitals. ...c,. ln;n D?:y Clare Services: Ir:?:1ust:p's Ict?r,t. .., ,: .. Suit. 296. 1971. i'ederal Funds ProlectS. Pamphle' 14. 1972. Christian Association, ce Ccorer on Women. Child Care. A Plan ~; a,v York. 1972. FOJINOTSS C.` . 7?? trr.c.ent of Heal, Education. rn' '. vial and Rel!abattution derv- C =:u:eau, and U.S. Departcn' st and Labor Stancl.,r `s Admin- Bu:enu. Child Care Ar- o; . orkinc Mothers in the rein Los kind Pearl G. ',... C. ..d-en's Bureau ' u:b. Diu. 461- 0..1,1 '. _.'ir sea of America. Child of Ar- for Daytime "!re of Chil- C In._;'71,,. . it. "I derman. ?,-.v York. 1968. March 1971 prelim 31 Department of Heslt fare. Further details ar Day Care Projects, T- by the Women's Bure ard3 Administration. Labor, 1372. 5Follow Through is supplement the gains dren who have partic sic!ilar preschool tr their participation It hensive instructlona psychological, social volvemer-t services. I kindergarten and grades. See page 7 for 4- -These are being x a U.S. Deoertment Standards Adrninistr. Day Care Services: Bull. 295..1971. 9 Center now called Cr istu s AaSucan .,.,..--- dren's Center. LO J.S. Department of Labor,. Wage and Labor Standards Administration, Women's Bureau. Child Care Services Provided by Hospitals. Bull. 295. 1970. . - itFurther Information may be obtained from Associate Professor Bernard Greenblatt, School of Social Policy and . Community Services, State University of New.York, Buf- falo, New York 14214. . I' National Council of Jewish Women. Win- dows on Day Care: A Report Based on Find- ings of the National Council of Jewish Women. N13.ry Dublin Seyserling. New York, 1972. - STRIP PM WING IN ARIZONA Mr. FA,~Ii IN. Mr. President, we have engaged in many discussions recently about the value of strip m inin_o and its effect on people and the environment. It has been nV contention that strip .ma- ins is necessary and it can be conducted in a manner which is not detrimental to the environment. In Arizona we have a prime example of how such mining can provide jobs and how proper steps can be taken to restore and preserve the land. - On August 8, 1974, a member of my staff, Richard. Thomas, toured the Pea- body Coal Mines at Black Mesa on the joint use area of the Hopi-Navajo land _ J..rthcn torn 11r4-ono in a memoran- dUIIiLo me,'-YLi. Thomas iepo s: After touring the facility and inspecting it thoroughly from the ground and air, I wish to report that the company is doing an out- standing job of providing coal for electrical power generating plants at Page and near. Bullhead City while also protecting the en- vironment and providing high-paying jobs for : 1a7aJOS. - On the latter point, the Black Mesa andt nayenta mines employe 204 Navajos who earn the United mine Workers pay scale of between X341 and $50 per day for a 71/2 hour day. Actually, some of the Indian employees earned as much as $18,000 last year with overtime. One Navajo employed by the coal company had never earned more than 5800 annually prior to the opening of the mine. IV Mr. President, Mr. Thomas found that the efforts to blend the facilities in with tile terrain and the work to restore the mined land were extremely effective. Mr. Thomas described it this way: From the air it would be very easy to completely overlook the mines, pipeline fa- SIiri3 a. ing opera- 's from it ~O. The road clad by the had been re- :ec::. rcyi:u:cu. '11 the mined scent natural rpe: amen ti ng in the proc- the Navajos earlier plant- a Rood start. citing statis- t operation is g the best of tan resources. a where the _zed in the mans have tall incomes. the mining oegau ruined and made uninhabitable. It appears to me that just the opposite has happened. Indians who were locked into poverty in the- past now have the.op?ortunity to earn middle class wages. The land is yielding the coal which our country needs, and It is being restored to a con- dition that is as - good as-perhaps better-than before. Mr. President, I have argued that it is possible for us to utilize the rich re- sources of this country and at the same time preserve the environment. It ap- pears to me that this is being proven on the Black Mesa. THE CIA AND ITS INVOLVEMENT WITH FOREIGN G(JV -LAMENTS Mfr. ABOURZK.:fir. President, in the August 19 Washington Post, Mr. Jack Anderson in his column reported the op- position of the Central Intel igence Agency to my amendment No. 1511 to the Foreign Assistance Act, which pro- hibits the use of U.S. foreign aid for as- sistance to any foreign police or security forces. This amendment was approved several days ago by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.. Certainly it is no news that the CIA relies on friendships with police or In- telligence networks in other countries; ? however, it bears reitcrattcz that the CIA, is tlgriL.y 112 oived. otteu eiiiviigii other U.S. agencies, with some of the most unpopular governments in the world. It is my strong opinion that we must start drawing the line on these relationships as we begin to actively use human rights as a factor in foreign policy decisions. I ask unanimous consent that Mr. Anderson's article be printed In the Rscoan. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: CIA ADxrrs Usnro FOP---,,N Por.rrz (By Jack Anderson) The Central Intelligence Agency has ad- mitted in an extraordinary private letter to Sen. J. W. Pulbright (D-Ark.) that the agency has penetrated the police forces of friendly foreign countries. The remarkable confession by CIA Director William Colby came in the course of a dis- creet but inrenslve lobbying effort to keep trt' . Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/06/04: CIA-RDP90-01208R000100200039-9