Published on CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) (https://www.cia.gov/readingroom)


TEACHERS' UNION HEAD CHALLENGERS NEA ON ISSUE OF CIA ASSISTANCE

Document Type: 
CREST [1]
Collection: 
General CIA Records [2]
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000100860007-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 18, 1999
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 7, 1957
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000100860007-3.pdf [3]100.32 KB
Body: 
FOIAb3b CPYR ~itized - Approved 'or' ease : CIA-R a,iiJ,lvu~lrty~ EA ~/.~ ffse avz m' By Eric Wentworth tivities within the aCadcmIcI terrst ~fosin Soviet tourists. He came ac to cov last summer as a tourist. Washington Post Staff Writer 1community, said yCStCri.ay aI ylad:mir Tourmnnotf, Russian-born. preliminary review Sl]Ows fotrier Second Sccretnr7 of the U.S.: T'moassy 1n Moscow a?ho. Izvestta said. President Charles Coggin irkpatrick's wore with O PR sent to Alaska in 1965 "to cub- e American Federation f a shipwrecked Soviet sailor. I "violated no policy of the As- ' Ebel." from tho Soviet Union cachers, AFIrCIO, 'invit sociation with respect to out- :j, who tried to attach himself for presumably nefnrious purposes to 1 he arch-rival National Educ . side activities of its staff." a deict;auon of Soviet oil experts last panel added: "We are Year. Lbcl'was not further Identified. on Association yesterday lo , The. p James Winkleman. an Interpreter at oin his group in joint disci ? informed, moreover, that all can Industrialiexhibition of 1960 n" who of the work of O"r'R was open, brilliantly proved to visitors his tenor- urc of any Central Int - factual, and intended for pub- aneo of color television." igcnce Agency in i Aninekt se Ele, an Corp.. who &I- Y lication, and that the organ. Westinghouse Electr:o Corp.. who ' al- ways seeds the company of Soviet dele- herorganization. ization performed no Intel?-cater to international technological " The AFT, said Coggin, "h s ligence functions." confeEdwardrences.I{eonlohn of the General ever engaged in any cove t In a third development yes Electrin s:iaend hia ae u d oseofob terday, the Areal York-based citizens defect., ;y . ctivitie union Nor. he added, h s Collegiate Council for the - - hc union recepted funs . d I`1ations called for es overtly from the CI &- Cog (n ited press reports that in i- .ate the NEA and the Word Confederation of Organip. ions of the Teaching Prof s ion have received such fun s William G. Carr, execute secretary of NEA and sec e ary-general of. the WC61 replied that the Associate 'has been paid no money the Central Intelligence A9 4n cy. Carr added: "I have no r a son to question the indepe d encc of the foundations wh' 1 have made grants to the 1 a tional Education Associatio He said NEA's accounts w (r Unl e tablishment of an independent agency chartered by Congress, through which both public and private funds could be chan- neled for the time being to finance such things as the in- ternational . activities. Of student groups. Soviets Accuse More as C111? Spies MOSCOW, March 6 (UPI) Th? Soviet Government news- paper Izvestia, accused seven more Americans today of spy- ing for the "Trojan Horse" Central Intelligence Agency. One of those branded as a "super-lackey" for the CIA is Gleb Struve of Berkeley,, Calif., an authority on Russian, literature and the son of a pre- revolutionary cabinet member. Struve is a professor at . the University of California at, Berkeley. audited yearly,' and the ' a tor's report was "widely av i able" to its members. Two professors of Gove rnent at American Univers Daniel M. Berrnan and C. D 1 story, circulated a let c protesting "a serious conf ?c of interest" because two o f cials of the American Polite o Science Association were s whom it described as a litera l officials of an Independent r(- l]ry aide of Struve. search group that has recce C I ` n, 'nnrlrnlnv .truvn denied money from foundations u c by the CIA. The newspaper also listed r i s Fillipov - Filistinsky B any link with the CIA. lie saia Fillipov, who . now lives in Washington, D.C., had collabo- rated with him in publishing several volumes of poetry. by 20th. century Russian writers whose works had been burned, and had been criticized by Soviet officials. Izvestia's list of "Trojan Horse" agents, supplcmcrl'i,i,- an earlier one in Pravda, also included: . Toni Ireland, former press officer of the DA. Embassy in Moscow. Isves- t1a salt Ireland resicncdt from the State Department several Years ago and worked as . guide for the Amerl- cao Express Co., showing special in- The pair involved, APSA ecutive Director Evron M. Kirkpatrick and Treasu r( r Max M. Kampelman, are p e - ident and vice president, r - spectively, of Operations Ill I:'alicy Research, Inc., a W s - lington concern that has r Iceived grants from the Un States Information Agenc s well as from foundat s linked to CIA activities. A panel of four for r APSA- presidents, named Gently to investigate CIA FOIAb3b .CPYRGHT Sanoto7ed-4proved For Releaser:- CIA-RDP75-00149R+100860007-3

Source URL: https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/document/cia-rdp75-00149r000100860007-3

Links
[1] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/document-type/crest
[2] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/collection/general-cia-records
[3] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP75-00149R000100860007-3.pdf