DINNER WITH PRESIDENT OF TIME, INC.

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CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8
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K
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12
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March 9, 2004
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8
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Publication Date: 
May 10, 1977
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MF
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Approved For Rose 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A.4001200088 .9 May 1977 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intellig FROM SUBJECT ? ? Herbert E. Hetu Assistant to the Director (Public Affairs) L'Igistry : Dinner with President of Time, Inc. 1. You and Mrs. Turner will dine with Mr. and Mrs. James R. Shepley at 7:30 p.m., Monday, 9 May in Suite 416 of the Watergate Hotel. Others in attendance will be Mr. and Mrs. Barry Zorthian and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hetu (Peggy and I). 2. Attached is some miscellaneous biographical information on Shepley and background on Time, Inc. 3. Other information: a. Shepley: He has a long interest in the military and intelligence. Had his beginnings as a UPI correspondent in Pennsylvania. Worked his way up the Time, Inc. chain through Life, Fortune and Time magazines. Took a leave of absence to work on Nixon's campaign in 1960. He wrote the article in Life magazine which established the term BRINKSMANSHIP. He has been the publisher of both Fortune and Time. Has held present position since 1969. He and his wife (his second -- but has been married to her for some 20 years) love Washington and spend a great deal of time here. He wants very much to become involved in some way in the activity here in Washington -- particularly something having to do with the military or intelligence. I'm sure he would have wanted to be a member of the PFIAB. He would be a prime candidate for some advisory role -- perhaps he's the one who should put something together to look into the matter of the "Media and Classified Information -- Individual Responsibility or Criminal Penalties". b. Zorthian: A long-time government public affairs person. Well liked and highly respected. Was the Minister-Counselor of Information at the U.S. Mission in Saigon from February 1964 to July 1967. Hosted the daily "Five O'Clock Follies" (daily press brief in Saigon) with skill and good humor. Has been Vice President/ s of Time, Inc. since 1969. Enc. Herbert E. Hetu Approved For ReIese2004/03L 'IARDP80 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8 Approved For Release 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8 Approved For ase 2064/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M0016 1969 Time Inc. Reorganizes Alredy Choinman, roNod aid Ex:cativo? ?tiara Mips a Prt, Its HENRY RAMONT Andrew Hoiskell sins named! executive officer of lime yesterday in a macr irristrattve reorganizadon that, 'lowed the resignatiora,--'03; . es It- Linen as the corn-i, s president. ... ..Tvetg/xitilled t axt fan spring. to :dieted of his iitj es because of his r is-' -Lev 1%7 2400120008-8 N? 234-69_12 anagemen Traclizinati-Comistate great to see Oa Luce, Y *cireierl ta rats fizgchip.t. : i'l senior effiror 41' Time zine said Tester. day.""Tkere4ie ce. -as always thee one fdo Istins.-.1are a. ? _diesel./ Wer iw t:Med vte=wa zz .t:, _.:11, ?his trodiaknt.' -A. ? t 4 1M'ar linl s itl; .4.iestr:ttir' of varks? ni eivinkoha of ei " had canna, ration that t' ''',-,,- ':' SnYzk -, ...n a tishetr Life. Sports =too ,.?-: 71,..0. h, ,t zsd ada' wide range ofHst.". wstly. ..3 anti . sells zrem'Ost,-ertscr.,,,,,. -opt.wes.a. a vssices. etforazi,ortaa. . matelfan: _.,..ci a km, of railer 3114 ?4;111 rnClaM" (M. "OiaC t C 17-m new esecinive vice mai." !remit St/wk. etits zre Bern-fard M. :,orrnerlysenior vice ;vete. ,,stere.y. cl,?4?,,,,:jart,, who wit he Mt. Site tefey ? 'S deputy ,_ mar, . - ? T., wfor. erixaairk.l.rost=e;Mirmiro....., Art Loir, T-4 k-4 pplw,.-icirc. who will Cnniez taro- :_rvir,prifia, Bum daction and. ektrtlidtkis nocene. Leip.,,,?,,Iseek Life 'tag -al Inaichena -tion..1 of aii numb:bin M'xidtels.s. "wirror the-Time Si Life- lind..Ving. arid Rift. ,-,t .Ainvied, vixe- xest.- p -;.tbe, board of directors also elect nt and foroierfy ublic h er fif d rarres Sh Nfileer 7i.r.i-z-Life socks. who wa be ;media, i - maeurne..ra- succeed! re:cocas:1>hr rm.- book. record and - .. f. -6.. ceated tbree new ex- _ Cre24`4' aparriAtmenrs risted'in....1'7--GML21'77. 'emit r. I-act. an Aetion, One Tft os film aritiction? .1-lye vice pretridend'es and 1.1 numn-r.--andurn weret :: ;4117-2 , niSne, sewn other high corpo- itPutraty Wente fl-etd. tram as--- V.--1. 3'..iriT, perand, 'robe appointments. ,L -sistant pubfisher of' Ede. bee te=t-d..io.ei. ha. deiskell. vita at L-- ,c-rs, -,i-e comes. pooficieft- a Fir?-.taie. '7":"",..`,...."?: for ,nsirm.so ofi has haea part oil Arthur W. Keyktir. iternitesii. ..r , ?act tea ? if:Weilfet- fietrer.' asmciate $,'--7the sar-.?._,- .,... publisber of Trme-Lffe ficolts. ', "ii",. Los` ,mairt publishing corporation. our; -lead of 7)?? and corici'rministar; . . .. ,.. ., _ ?,-- :=ed......__itab.-__ =emirate that ruied the ? res r rqd 3 d-ep ap-- succeeds Mr_ Ai--stell as 1.......- .- - - 1 tI the death of its iotc.re,..t.?1 plc:Ay. it requiTeS talc kin.a, predation for the Joh he has ,r, at that divicattrop, ivut-1,2ew nave gaerary,R.? /pee. in )warchs, 1967?i,of Change iZI structure. It wit done as president since lgSfi."1 - ellArcennoPaficar.aztO toesi...' -1=114",,,,,..-' The ?the. rnernb,s. were mr.i;give us a better opportvaity. Mr. Linen. who is 57, wit "deiit, win heitiase assistaaa to: ;,ilLra '"74,...&' Linen and Heineyfionovan.whalicen?,,, arM and Manage ner ?Petserve as chairman ?I tl'e fr`111`I'Mr. Heiskell. : remains as editor in chief cifil,?12-" ',____________ -" panY's executive osimoittee.i ,,,....:: _--....,,---?r :,.., ? The Genera/ all Mane inc. publications. ,- -"-i? t 'flangy.'s come al a thine, 'rhe committee is respon.Whie,__??"'"Y -'.1'.11.91t.. ''..?Egairittve.' f tiordiart.. a __ , _ ywheu the $550-mil I ion- a-y ear! f or approving all . maior cos- _.'aall-e. P.s.ecia121;- ?a -- sTataa'Vte. i 11,..!teGennTalitpu - . , . . ,. publishing -company is strug-iporate dcisiuns, such as accui...,survoefoust, la SC ; His -new title of chef execa--,,gling to overcome die financialsition of new properties or ex-- of that' ' It; : and tive officer?bestowed for the of the magazine in-:pension of prewnt ones, lie re- !first time since hir.Luce's deathP.duAry and other adverse, eco-? ones Roy E, Larw.ii, who - ,-ts r!----7-7-4?,??.?-e- .".... .--..suggersted that Mr. Heiteli inomic factors that have sharply ;elected -Ace chairman of thet,,?:3'ItIPa* niat ridves ripl-to tbe food rtsuidd howl fie company's man-ildepressed its stock.board of directors. - Vilma assistant inzhh. ef' to as,,,i to nirtae P r )agenseirt math while Mr- 1)0"i Announced in Manure:Want , i Hemy Luce 3c1,. a son of the'i5ncinte, ___Pnblisher IA Thma- ., 4 rr_.* .r1.?1efric-k, site:4 for_ editorial operations.ii The adnanistrative overhaudePsrPnratinn:s kiunder and rin-41-.--r ii '44 rg the "nrIOnnninal in--MS.?KO - van would retain full respove. .:A ,?,.,,_ biggest at nme we. since;i; her of fortune since Aprd.,.tital. rateroai Y. rune rac. ex-t 1 Go.dwym-Ma ' *71 -suppose you Might sav 1,--s3. _ a,,-? ate now a , dauravirato,4:1!he sweeping personnel shifts.' .:?1?19:38,shwas. Itan-'ed m s acceed !.eanthies- ? sought. to &Vet any ; was Cltirltar: . itwezen said in at inter.ifin 1960 that alow,4 yomivr......... epley. a.s publisher of illiOpmmion that tile w.. 'Medley acd I conninueimen inin' high gets*: soring a,dri.anistrative at I STIP! Magazine. ?The appoint-roirt. have Pr=P;ted bY-1. .? Profits restored the tucel:,7 . ;,-,?,, tin t,y intro tall i'l mnaenmte thtousthe direction of the;ii-ir- a7 calased-:anytmg!V prnflts' zt-'; ' Pattnmvemthree, andeaSaaimmiSvehetceyeimemaraPasts ?adivaa.as1 annsignoadunced_ ierits reporting to :him:Mr...I-16.0ER and Mr. Donoxan.jivieeklY that h" bt'en the Wr'",'11b124ny.,disdeoriusettI vrart its;.;Inal...Pritssisli-_,,,g-e-s. g a new level, Of snan-1 The memorandum said the:nerrtlre of the Publishing etn-,,' etbs-:/ast And) trat-:".41tedi,ic,"-:azUsr- Tir board had accepted Mr. Lirten'sPire S'nce 1926' '' s ,caramation reachesq resignation "with regret- for the ia..-Pat,-.4-atntkt /ass au- ? 'nwnt-41s-? ?-t. .......... . - 4.W, ......? I ?N'L.rF , Baisketi JtesA. Un hit PP 4.:;?v : )keL?-"''' ? 2614 MOODY'S INDUSTRIAL MANUAL il)rfAu-nsTaiesptyzed For Fillasp 2070A31.WPPAIN) TOW144.2400120008-8 Call Price [n100 Call Price LONG TERM DEBT Issue 1. 73e% notes, due 1988 2. Term loans, 73e%. due 1977-80 3. Notes. & mortgages notes, 1976-98 DAmount Charges Earned Interest Rating Outstanding 1975 1974 Dates {J&J15 ---- 67,976.000J36,000,400 ' 8.37 9.33 As D$50,000,000 CAPITAL STOCK Par Amount DEarned per Sh. Divs. per Sh. Issue Value Outstanding 1975 1974 1975 1974 1. Common $1. n79,975,000 she. $4.52 $5.01 $2.00 $2.00 WBased on avg abs., as reported by Co. DIssued in Jan. 1 HISTORY f Incorporated in New York Nov. 28, 1922. Time, Inc. formerly controlled Time-Fortune Corp., Rogers and Manson Corp.. March of Time, Inc., and March of Time Distributors Corp.* Leese subsidiaries have been dissolved and their operations taken over by the parent company. Acquired the Literary Digest mag- azine in May, 1938, and merged it with "Time." In 1945 acquired Bryant Paper Co., Maine Seaboard Paper Co., Bucksport Water and Hennepin Paper Co. (companies sold to St. Regis Paper Co. in Nov. 1946). In Dec. 1945 acquired 2639 Corp., sold to Webb & Knapp in July 1950. In Feb. 1945 acquired Michigan Square Building Corp., dissolved in Dec. 1953 and operations taken over by parent com- pany. In June 1952 acquired entire stock of Albu- querque Broadcasting Co., 'licensee of radio station NOB and television station NOB-TV; subsequently sold one-half interest to Wayne Coy; in May 1957 Time Inc. and Coy sold all interests for $1,500,000 cash to ICS'TP, Ince Minneapolis-St. Paul. In June, 1953, company acquired 80% Of common stock of Laterrnountain Broadcasting & Television Corp. of Salt Lake City licensee of stations leDYL, KDY.L-FM and KTVT. Sold Dec. 195e for $Z,100,000 and net quick assets to Columbia Pictures Corp. In jinn. 1954, company acquired entire out- standing stock of Aladdin Radio & Television, Inc., licensee of radio stations KUL and KLZ- FM and television station leLZ-TV in Denver. In 1956. company liquidated investment In Houston Oil Co. of Texas. As part of plan of liquidation, company acquired Houston 011's investment in affiliate East Texas Pulp & Paper Co. (50% common stock?Company' now owns 100%?and $3,311,300 of subordinated notes) and caused East Texas Pulp Be Paper Co. to acquire 100% of stock of Southwestern Settlement & Development Corp., which owned 660,000 acres of timberland (exclusive of mineral rights) in southeast Texas and which had been a principal supplier of pulp- wood to East Texas. Aggregate purchase price of approximately e35,000,000 was financed by $18,61a,000 net proceeds (after taxes) from liquidation of Houston Oil investment, $15,- 750,000 of additional bank borrowing by East Texas and approximately 5635,000 from the funds of East Texas. After purchases were completed on June 6, 1956, Southwestern was liquidated into East Texas and is operated as a division of East Texas. Liquidation of investment in Houston Oil Co. resulted in capital gain of $15,113,700 after taxes. In 1965, the name of the subsidiary was changed to Eastex Incorporated. On May 22, 1957, company acquired for $15,- 955,000 radio and television properties of Consolidated Television & Radio Broadcast- ern Inc., which operated WFBM and WF33M- TV, Indianapolis, WTCN and WTCN-TV. Min- neapolis, and WOOD and WOOD-TV, Grand Rapids. In Mar., 1962 company acquired KOGO Broadcasting Corp., San Diego for $6,125,000 and on Apr. 30, 1962 Silver Burdett Co. for 45.000 shares. In 1964, acquired IMRO-TV for $1,665,000, an ultra high frequency station in Bakersfield, Calif. In Oct. 1964, sold WTCN and WTCN-TV, Minneapolis, for $4,400,000. In Jan. 1966 Co. formed General Learning Corp. a joint venture' with General Electric Co. to create and market educational ma- terials systems and services. Co. contributed Silver Burdett Co. (acq. in 1962) and General Electric Co. contributed $18,750,000 in cash. . In Nov., 1966 acquired New York Graphic Society, Inc. for 45,009 common shares. Also in 1966 acquired minority interests In Editions Robert Laffont, a French book -publisher and -Organizacion. Editorial No- varo, Mexico. In- Jan. 1968 acquired Little, Drown & book publishers, for 170,000 common shares. In Man 1969, acquired Pioneer Publishing Co. and in Sept., Lloyd Hollister, Inc., pub- lishers of 26 weekly and semiweekly news- papers with combined circulation of 180,000 subscribers in Chicago suburbs. In 1969, also acquired Peter M. Robeck & Co. Distributor oftelevision..and pelnpeeional films for 13,501telnlerrentenheenen ne?nl.Ses Society dissolved' in 1975 and The Book Find Club dissolved in 1975 were acquired for cash, and a subsidiary, New York Graphic er.-1.4-7 'Ltd acouired Alva Museum Repli- PriceRange _ 1975 1974 (11 Price Range 1975 1974 63 - eine 41ne 24 976. OBegineing Jan. 15, 1983. DExcluding current portion. In Oct. 1971, acquired Haverhill's, Inc., San Francisco, and two affiliated cos. in ex- change for 17,988 corn. stn. (dissolved in 1975). On June 1, 1972 sold television stations KLZ, Denver; KOGO, San Diego; KERO, Bak- ersfield, Cal. and WFBM, Indianapolis to McGraw-Hill Inc. for $57,200,000 cash and notes. In 1971 sold AM radio broadcasting property in San Diego and in 1e72, sold radio properties in Denver, Grand Rapids and Indianapolis. In Dec. 1972, Co. suspended publication of Life Magazine. In Jan. 1973, combined Time-Life Films. Time-Life Video and Time-Life Education to form subsidiary, Time-Life Films, Inc. On Aug. 16, 1973 acquired Temple Indus- tries, Inc. for 3,082,000 common shares, now operated as Temple-Eastex Inc. In Feb. 1973 Co. and Sterling Communica- tions Inc. (50.8% owned by Co.) (see Moody's OTC Industrial Manual) formed Home Box Office, Inc. to provide live sports events and feature movies to cable TV subscribers. In Sept. 1973 Co. in a transaction that was essentially an acquisition of minority interests, acquired Sterling Communications Inc. which it now operates as Manhattan Cable Television Inc. and Home Box Office Inc. In Sept. 1974 sold its 50% interest in Gen- eral Learning Corp. to Scott, Foresman & Co. for cash and notes. In 1975 sold 60% of its investment in Metro- Goldwyn Mayer Inc. In Jan. 1976 sold the business and assets of Printing Developments, Inc., except for the color scanning services, for cash and secur- ities. In Jan. 1978, also sold Time Tele-Marketing. Inc. for cash and notes. Subsidiaries Time Canada Ltd. Time-Life International (Nederland) D.V. Time-Life International (Australia) Pty. Ltd. Time-Life International de Mexico, S.A. Time-Life Educational Systems Co. Ltd. - Time-Life Tosho Hambai Kabushiki Kaisha Time-Life International (New Zealand) Ltd. Time-Life Films, Inc. Time-Life Libraries, Inc. Fourth Berry Street Corp. Little, Brown and Co. (Inc.) New York Graphic Society Ltd. Pioneer Press Inc. Temple-Eastex Inc. ? Printing Developments, Inc. , Rayco Realty Co. Sering Areas-Marketing, Inc. 541 Fairbanks Corn. Manhattan Cable Television, Inc. Home Box Office, Inc. HBO Studio Productions, Inc. Time Distribution Services, Inc. BUSINESS & PRODUCTS .." Little, Brown & Co. publishes trade boo' Legal and medical books and college tax books. New York Graphic Society Ltd. publish Line art reproductions.. Forest Products Paper and Paperboard: Company produc coated and uncoated paper and paperboar bleached linerboard and market pulp us for folding cartons, bakery board, bleach bags, paper plates, disposable cups and oth packaging products; and through its su sidiaries. also makes, a limited amount packaging products. Building Miamian: Company manulactur building materials, including pine lumb fiberboard, parecieboard, plywood, gypsu wallboard and decorative wall paneling. Other Operations IS Company provides products and services the graphic arts industry; markets inform tion relating to the movement of groce products; publishes weekly newspape owns an NBC-TV affiliate (V7OTV?. Gra: Rapids, Michigan); engages in corrirnerci and industrial contracting; manufactur furniture, furniture parte and wooden her age cases; and engages in mortgage ban land development, the operatian and ren of real property and certain related ins ance activities thru Lurnbermans' Investm Corp., an unconsolidated subsidiary. - Developmental Act7vities Company operates a cable TV system New York City and owns Home Box Off (IMO), a pay TV network, which provi programming to cable television syste nation-wide. Revenues by Line of Business, years end Dec. 31 (in millions of dollars): 1 47 24 The Company's principal lines of business are: publishing magazines, books, recordings anti related products ("Publishing"); produc- tion of pulp and paperboard and building materials ("Forest Products"); sale of prod- ucts and services to the graphic arts in- dustry, marketing of information relating to the movement of grocery products, news- paper publishing. TV broadcasting, film pro- duction and distribution, manufacturing furniture and beverage cases and commercial and industrial contracting ("Other Oper- ations"); and operations of urban cable TV and pay TV ("Developmental Activities"). Publishing Magaxine: Publishes TIME, a weekly news magazine; SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, a weekly sports magazine; FORTUNE, a monthly mag- azine on economic and business develop- ments; MONEY, a monthly magazine on personal and family financial management; and PEOPLE, which begun publishing in Mar. 1974, a national weekly that focuses on individual personalities. There are five weekly international edi- tions of TIT.M. which are printed and dis- tributed overseas, in Canada, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and the South Pacific (Aus- tralia and Neve Zealand). Book Publishing: Publishes TI=-LIFE ich ex:Ups a series of vol- 40E1 interest an appeal, are pittiVIPri gigs and 26 foreign languages and are sold largely through direct mail solicitation. Time-Life Records produces and distributes Publishing Forest products Other operations - Devel. activities 1975 531.0 257.6 105.9 162 Total _______ 910.7 PROPERTIES Principal manufacturing facilities and flees of Company are located as follows: New York Michigan Texas (3) Louisiana Illinois California Georgia France Arkansas Netherlands Tennessee (3) England Mississippi Japan MANAGEMENT ? Officers Andrew Heiskell. Chairrrsan & Chief Officer R. E. Larsen, Vice-Chairman - ei I. R. Shepley, President & Chief Oper. Off. C. B. Bear, Group Vice-Pres. & Sec. - A. W. Keylor, Group Vice-President Arthur Temple, Group Vice-Pres. Joan D. Manley, Group Vice-Pres. 3. R. Munro. Group Vice-Pres. R. B. Incleeough, Vice-Presidenie Fin_ Vice-'2'reeldents D. M. Wilson F. Hammack P.. P. Davidson B. L. Paisner R. P. Fis er C. L. Gleason, jr. C. J. Grum S. Denman, Jr. P. S. Hopkins G. M. Levin Henry Luce, TEE 3. A. Meyers E. G. Perle H. D. Schutz I. R. SLagter R. M. Steed K. F. Sutton A. H. Thornhill, Sr Garry Valk 3. A. Watters N. J. Nicholas Barry Zorthean W. E. Bishop, Comptroller & Asst. Sec. E. P. Lenahan, Treas. J. W. Fowlkes, Asst. Treasurer Olga Curcio, Asst. Treas. K. L. Dolan, Asst. Comptroller P. P. Sheppe, Asst, Secretary E. F. Ferro, Asst. Comptroller Directors Andrew Heiskell A. W. leeylor Roy E. Larsen J. A. Linen Medley Donovan S. M. Linowitz IIIHenryn1 c3?'auccee., Matins Homer elavdeigheVarner. J. R. Shepley . Arthur Temple It. B. lelc.inecrugh -r:-Robert Keeler Approved Foillease 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00140240012000 16 March 1977 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence ? FROM ?Andrew T. Falkiewicz Assistant to the Director SUBJECT Your Dinner Meeting with Time Magazine Please note that the Time lunch has now become the Time dinner. Place: Washington bureau of Time, third floor, 888 16th St, (just north ofLafayette Park) Date and Time: Thursday, 17 March at 7:30 p.m. We will provide the guest list as ?soon as we receive it from Time Inc. The senior Time representative will be Editor-in-Chief, Hedley Donovan. Unfortunately, Hugh Sidey, the Washington bureau chief, will be out of town and unable to attend. Others will be drawn from both New York and Washington offices. Ground Rules: This will be strictly a background session, an opportunity to get acquainted, to discuss some topics perhaps in depth without the inhibitions of an on-the-record interview. There will be no recording and, I am told, not even notes will be taken. Donovan and his colleagues will undoubtedly get some ideas for the kind of stories they might want to develop in the future. The session should be lively and brief. I am sure you can plan on being out by 9:30 p.m. Since you are scheduled for a Congressional visit at the end of the day, I will plan to make my way to 888 16th St. independently and be there when you arrive. Andrew T. Falkiewicz AA_ I ST Approved For lose 2004/03/2 Central Intelligence Agen Washington, D.C. 20505 (703) 351-7676 ." Herbert E. Hetu Assistant for Public Affairs Approved For Release 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8 ON PAGE e? Approved For Relfe 200,40424gc)A-RDP8 2400120008-8 ? THE WASHINGTON pouitighim By Frances Moore Lappe and Joseph Collins EARNING often begins with unlearning. Several JL years' research on world food problems has helped . us see through four pervasive myths that keep most Americans paralyzed by guilt and fear. These myths prevented us from grasping how hunger is' generated and that basic food self-reliance is possible for every country in. the world. MYTH ONE: People are hungry because of scarcity.. ? both of food and of agricultural resources. They are hungry because populations exceed the limited amount of food-producing resouri?es. AN SCARCITY seriously be considered the cause of hunger when even in the "fOod crisis" of the early 1970s there was plenty to go around --:.enough in grains -alone to provide everyone with 3,060 calories a day and. ample protein? _ - ? Such global estimates mean little, we are told; what matters is the food available for each person in the "hungry countries." We found, however, that in count tries accounting for 86 per cent of the total population of the underdeveloped world, food production has kept pace with and often exceeded the growth in population during the last 20 years. The writers are co-directors of the Institute forFood. and Development Policy in San Francisco and co- authors of "Food First," to be published next month by: Houghton Mifflin. - . .... ? Approved For Release 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8 ? , - Approved For lase 2004/03/23: CIA-RDP80M001654,400120008-8 The very countries that most of us t - of as food-de- ficient and import-dependeneare themselves major agri- cultural exporters. Forty per cent of all agricultural im- ) ports into the United States, itself one of the world's top three agricultural importers, come from countries of supposed scarcity. In 1973,36 Of the 40 nations classified s :by. the United Nations as being most seriously affected :by enflated world food prices actually exported agricul- ;tural goods to the United States. ? Agricultural exports from the Sahelian countries dra- matically increased during the early 1970s, in the face of 'drought and widespread hunger. Still, a U.N. Food and .Agriculture Organization survey, squelched by dis. 'pleased aid-seeking governments, documented that 'every Sahelian country, with the possible exception of enineral-rich Mauritania; actually produced enough grain to feed its total population, even during the worst drought year. So, while many went hungry, it was not because of scarcity of agricultural production or even of food. _ ,And what of land scarcity? Several authoritative stud. _ie,s agree that only 44 per cent of the world's cultivable . lend is actually being cropped: Many landowners who - hold land as an investment, not as a source of their food, leave vast amounts implanted. In Colombia the largest landholders, in control of 70 per cent of the Agricultural land, planted only 6 per cent in 1960. But it was in assess- _ ? hag what is grown that we came to understand the true magnitude of the waste of land needed by hungry ,.people. In Central American and Caribbean countries, eihere as many as 70 per cent of the children are under- nourished, at least half of the agricultural land, often the best land, is made to produce crops for export, not food for the local people. . If "too many people" were the cause of hunger, we should expect to fikd more hungry people in countries with greater density of people per agricultural acre. We can find no such correlation: In China, for example, 80 . per cent more people live from each cultivated acre than in India. Yet today, in what was once called the "land of famine," no one starves. Country-by-country in- vestigations, even of the so-called basket easel like Bangladesh, led us to believe that in fact there may well be no country without adequate agricultural resources to feed its population. Neither the size of today's population nor population growth is now the cause of hunger. But it is self-evident that continuing to grow at current pies would seriously. , undercut the future well-being of all of us. This self-evi- dent truth should add even greater urgency to the search for the real causes of rapid population growth. And these causes ? the insecurity and poverty of the ? majority caused by the monopolization of food resources by the few ? are the same as the real causes of hunger. MYTH TWO: The solution to the hunger problem is to produce more food. . IAGNOSING the cause of hunger as scarcity in- evitably leads to thinking that greater production ? itself will solve the problem. Thus, for at least 30 years, governments, international agencies and multinational corporations have promoted greater production through -"modernization" --1147proubdifrigroRelletised2004/03/23, lizers, pesticides, machinery and the seeds that give - higher yields if they receive such inputs. ? But when a new agricultural technology enters a sys- tem shot through with inequalities, it'profits only those who already have some combination of. land, money, credit "worthiness" and political influence. This fact alone has excluded most rural people and all the world's - hungry. Once agriculture becomes a speculativeinvestrnent in - which sheer control of the basic inputs ensures financial success, a catastrophic chain of events is set into motion. Competition for land_ sends land values soaring. Higher rents drive tenants and sharecroppers into the ranks of - ' ? the landless who now make up the majority in many countries. With their increased profits, the powerful buy out small farmers. Large commercial operators, tak- ing advantage of government credits and subsidies, mecheniee to avoid labor "management problems.' Many made landless by the production fccus, finding ever fewer agricultural jobs, join the hopeless search for work in urban areas. . To be cut Out of production is to be cut out of con- sumption. The observation of a 36-cent-a-day agricul- tural laborer in Bihar, India, confirms this truth: "If you . don't own any land, you never get enough to eat, even if the land is producing well." Indeed, in many countries more food per-person is being produced, yet many are more hungry. This is not a theoretical point. Study after study around the world documents a consistent pattern: the retrogression of much of the rural population even as production ad- - vances. One extensive, just completed study of seven Asian countries containing 70 per cent of the rural popit lation of the non-socialist underdeveloped world conclu- des that -the increase in poverty [of 20 to 80 per cent of the rural population] has been associated not with a fall . but with a rise in cereal production per head." Ignoring the social roots of hunger and focusing in- stead- on production increases has taken us backward, - not forward. The real obstacle to people feeding them- - selves is that they do not have control over productive resources. People who know they control their resour- ces will, through their ingenuity and labor, make them ever more productive. The Chinese experience shows? that people are a country's most underutilized resource. Human energy, properly Motivated and organized, has transformed deserts into granaries. ? - _ - The reality is that democratic redistribution of control - - over agricultural resources has historically been shown to result in dramatic production advances in countries as different as Japan, Taiwan, China and Egypt; more- over, it is the only guarantee that the hungry will eat. - - ? MYTH THREE: An underdeveloped country's besp- hope for development is to export crops in which it htis . a natural advantage and use the earnings to import CJANFOR &MO Olt UAW 24 (X) 1 2 poos,a.: ? Approved For R se 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A1t 400120008-8 71 HERE IS nothing natural about concentrating on a 1 few, largely low-nutrition crops. The same land that grows cocoa, tea and sugar could grow an incredi- ble diversity of nutritious crops. Nor is there any advan- tage. Reliance on a limited number of crops generates economic as well as political vulnerability. - Among the many flaws in the natural advantage theory, the most serious is that the people who benefit from the foreign exchange earned by the 'agricultural exports are not the people who work to produce those exported crops and who need food. Even, when part of ei exchange earned is used to import food, it is enerally ot the needed staples but items to satisfy the testes of the better-off urban classes. In Senegal,, the choice land is used to grow peanuts and vegetables for. export to Europe. Much of the foreign. exchange earned is spent to import wheat for foreign-owned mills that turn out flour, for French-style bread for ,the urban dwellers. Indeed, the very success of export agriculture can fur- ther undermine the welfare of the poor. When world commodity prices go up, self-provisioning farmers may be pushed off the land by cash crop producers seeking to profit on the higher commodity prices. An increase in the world price of a commodity can actually mean less income for the plantation worker or the peasant pro- ducer. When the price of sugar on the world market in- creased several-fold a few years ago, the Teal wage of a cane cutter in the Dominican Republic actually fell to less than it was 19 years earlier. A nominal increase in the wage of the cane cutter did not compensate for the inflation set off by the sugar boom. - Governments fixated on agricultural exports suppress labor reforms they believe would make their exports un- competitive. Furthermore, in countries such as the Phi- lippines, governments exempt land producing for ex- port from land reform, and thereby not only maintain the poverty of the rural landless but further undercut food production as growers shift to export crops to avoid redistribution. ? . By contrast, food self-reliant policies would measure success in terms of the welfare of the people, not export income. Food self-reliance is not isolationist. But trade would become an organic outgrowth of development, not the fragile hinge on which survival hangs. Clearly, no country can hope to "win" in international trade as long as its people's very survival depends on selling one or two products. Once the basic needs are being met, however, trade will no longer be at the cost of the food well-being of the people, as evidenced by countries such as Cuba and China.. MYTH FOUR: Hunger is a contest between the Rich World and the Poor World. ri ERNIS kfLA PrrIeNgsaP2V021; I, make us th . n rmA y t ungry masses, w realit htin_er afflicts the lower rungs in both ; 23 e treme power inequ es ecomes a smokescreen for so- the usurpation of food resources by the few for the few. called developed a derdeveloped countries. Worse still, the "rich world" versus "poor world' scenario makes the hungry appear as a threat to the majority in countries like our own. In truth, however, the problems of the hungry will never be addressed until the majority in the United States can see that the hungry abroad are their allies, not their enemies. The poor majority in underdeveloped countries and ordinary Americans are linked through a common threat: the tightening of control over the most basic human need ? food ? both within countries and on a global scale. The very process of increasing concentra- tion of control over land and all other productive resour- ces that we have identified as a direct cause of hunger in underdeveloped countries is going on right here at home. Only 5.5 per cent of all farms in the United States have come to operate over one-half of all land in farms. The resulting landlessness and joblessness in rural America are at the root of much of the persistent hun- ger in the midst of agricultural bounty. In food manu- facturing, the top four firms in any given food line con- trol, on the average, over half of the market. In 1972, the Federal Trade Commission staff calculated that such olie gopolies in 13 food lines cost consumers $2.1 billion in overcharges. For the 1 out of 10 Americans who.must spend 69 per cent of all income on food, such- inflated prices mean undernutrition. Many of these Same oligopolistic corporations are now expanding their operations into underdeveloped coun- tries. Multinational agribusiness is busily creating a Global Farm to serve a Global Supermarket. Finding production sites in underdeveloped countries, where land and labor can cost as little as 10 per cent of state- side costs, large food corporations are shifting produc- tion of high-value items ? vegetables, fruits, flowers and meat ? out of the industrial countries. They find ready partners in foreign elites who, given the increas-. ing impoverishment of much of the local population, face a stagnated internal market for their production. In the Global Supermarket the poorest in the Philip- pines, Colombia and Senegal must reach for food On the same shelf as-hundreds of millions of consumers around ! the world. Every item has a price and that price is deter- ! mined by what the Global Supermarket's better-off cus- tomers are willing to pay. And the sad reality is that even Fido and Felix in. countries like the United States - can outbid the world's hungry. Consumers in the in- dustrial countries unwittingly become a suction force, diverting food resources in the underdeveloped coun- tries away from local needs. ? . And the significance for us? In our country, farmers I and workers are losing their jobs as agribusiness roants abroad. The United States imports annually between $9 - billion and $10 billion in agricultural products, two- 1 thirds of which compete directly with what farms grow I here. Moreover, a Global Farm gives the U.S. govern- ment further rationale for supporting political and eco- nomic structures abroad that block hungry people from growing food for themselves. Nor should we conclude that consumers here get cheaper food. Studies show that lower production costs for food oligopolies on foreign soil do not get passed on to consumers. - The Global Supermarket is the type of interdepend- I : Clgikedair Otltraclig ' ,4i-olibmedn a weed of ex- alidiptA-RtNuetiVivAhriealfltau u i 1 7.---3NCLASSIFIED 1-1?C1111:- ENTIAL 1 SECRET I OFFICIAL-ROUTING SLIP TO NAME AND ADDRESS DATE INITIALS DCI ACTION DIRECT REPLY PREPARE REPLY APPROVAL DISPATCH RECOMMENDATION COMMENT FILE RETURN CONCURRENCE INFORMATION SIGNATURE Remarks: - ? FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER FROM: NAME. ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. DATE * UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL SECRET prIRA/ft Par7Re*Mi02bdtl1trt/23 : CIA-REPP41~0165A002400 1 ko08- Approved Fo ease 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M001 024001i00 - Executive Regintry 7 A-U8 7747;7 Dear Zygmunt: I consider my visit "postponed" and look forward to the opportunity to be with the Council at some future date, so please try me early in 1978 as you suggest, Thank you for your kind words and best wishes. This is going to be a challenging job, but I am looking forward to it. Yours, STANSFIELD TURNER Admiral, U.S. Navy Mr. Zygmunt Nagorski Director The Thomas J. Watson Meetings Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. The Harold Pratt House 58 East 68th Street New York, New York 10021 F).?vt!r?vr,-erii g g ILLEGIB Approved For Release 2004/03/23 : CIA-RDP80M00165A002400120008-8