Page 8-Friday, April 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily 'U' faculty secretly recruit official channels at the univer- sity-through the placement office or whatever appropriate official aspect of the university that is involved in that particular thing." When Ford, who is now a consultant to the Senate Select Committee on In- telligence Activities, was asked recen- tly for comment on secret recruitment operations here, he referred all questions about his activities to the Select Committee's press agent. After about three years as coor- dinator forAcademic Relations, Ford left the CIA to enter academic life in Washington, D.C. In a congratulatory letter to Ford, one unidentified Univer- sity professor wrote, "I trust that we will remain in touch, now as academic colleagues!" BUT SECRET CIA recruiting on college campuses did not begin or end with Ford. In 1966, the CIA began a Summer Intern Program in foreign studies. The program, which was open to anyone interested, gave students an opportunity to do "substantive scholarly research in their fields of academic research." The program, which is still in operation, is geared toward graduate students, and allows individuals to work with "professional analysts." An explicit goal of the program was CIA recruitment - about half of the sum- mer interns beome permanent CIA em- ployees, according to the Agency. While Summer Intern Program literature was made available to more than a hundred colleges and univer- sities, including Michigan, a letter from the CIA to one University professro - shows that the actual recruiting did not occur in the "official" manner, that is, through the Career Planning and Placement office.t THE LETTER, dated February 10, 1967, states: "Because it (the Summer Intern Program) isto be a very small and somewhat experimental effort on our part, we hope to develop a list of candidates through personal contacts. "Our regular Recruiting Officers, of course," the letter continues, "know of the program and are prepared to discuss it with any student who may be interested in this kind of summer ac- tivity. I would, of course, appreciate your calling this program to the atten- tion of any serious and mature student whom you think would be a likely can- didate." When several department heads were asked if they knew anything about professors covertly recruiting for the CIA, all responded negatively. "Nobody I know is (recruiting) - and I certainly know nothing about that," said Albert Feuewerker, director of the Center for Chinese Studies. Samuel Barnes, chairman of the Political Science Department, said, "I have no familiarity with it (covert recruiting) and certainly no knowledge of any cases." IN IT'S INITIAL report, the Senate Select Committee noted that, in most secret recruitment operations, "no one other than the individual academic concerned is aware of the CIA link." On December 20, 1974, Gary Foster, at that time coordinator for Academic Relations for the CIA, mailed 28 letters, including one to an unidentified contact at this University, asking for "help in spotting candidates for an intensified minority hirihg program we are currently conducting." In the letter, Foster said the CIA was "primarily looking for analysts and researchers in international politics, in- ternational economic systems and related disciplines. We also need linguists, particularly in the rarer European and Asian languages, especially Russian and Chinese." In closing, Foster pledged anonymity. "Your contact with us on this subject will be treated informally and confidentially. We will appreciate any help you can give us and I look for- ward to hearing from you." ' UNIVERSITY President Robben Fleming yesterday said he found nothing wrong with the content of any of the three letters. "There isn't anything surprising about this," he said. This type of recruiting is "done by all employers." FLeming said that in order for an in- telligence organization to function. "they have to have competent people." And just like other agencies or cor- porations who are looking for the highest quality employees, he said, the CIA comes to universities which yield likely candidates. When asked why the CIA keeps this kind of search for talent a secret, Fleming said, "the only reason that I can see is that they may have told those people (professors) that their recom- mendations would be held confiden- tial." FLEMING SAID not all professors are secretive about this kind of contact with the CIA. "Some are very open about it and wouldn't hesitate to tell you that it is their patriotic duty to make these recommendations," he said. But in The Daily's investigation there were no professors who would admit to the kind of recruiting referred to in the CIA documents. "I would bet you that 60 per cent of the recruiting (government and cor- porate) doesn't go on in the placement office," said Fleming. The problem, he said, is whether the Agency, "departs from what many of us consider normal ethical standards." Fleming said he save no such departure in the latest documents., The Campaign to Stop Government Spying, headed by Morton Halperin, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense and one-time Senior Staff member of the National Security Coun- cil, is now urging the University to adopt guidelines which would force , professors to make public any contact with the CIA. "Your Local Photofinisher" * 4 HOUR EKTACHROME SLIDE PROCESSING * SAME DAY KODACOLOR PRINTS SEE OUR YELLOW PAGES AD UNDER PHOTO FINISHING FOR A LIST OF OUR OTHER SERVICES. Daily obtains 200 Gins reports on 'U CIA agents. Continued from Page 1) UNDER THE FOIA, government agencies such as the CIA, have the right to delete material in certain circumstances when responding to requests for information. The CIA made extensive use of three legal exem- ptions in censoring material responsive to the Daily's request, such as names, dates, and places. According to the CIA, the deletions were justified because the infor- mation requested was "properly classified" and therefore exempt under Executive Order 11652. The Agency also claimed exemptions "to protect from disclosure in- telligence sources and methods, as well as the organiztion, functions, official titles, salaries or numbers of personnel employed by the Agency in accor- dance with the National Security Act of 1947 and the CIA Act of 1949." THE FINAL EXEMPTION the Agency used applied to "information, release of which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of the personal privacy of other individuals." In a letter attached to the documents received by the Daily, the CIA said: "Any additional records, if they exist, which would be responsive to your request . . . would be duly classified under criteria set forth in Executive Order 11652." The CIA then stated: "By this answer, we are neither denying nor con- firming that any such additional records exist." The Daily has appealed the CIA's decision to delete and possibly withhold information which would be responsive to the Daily's request under the FOIA. The Daily has also appealed the Agency's refusal to confirm or deny the existence of any additional records. INFACT protests Nestle )polic By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Despite bleak skies and gusting win- ds, about 30 demonstrators rallied on the Diag to protest advertising claims . made about infant formulas by American corporations in Third World countries. The demonstration was sponsored by local members of the Infant Formula Action Coalition (INFACT) in connec- tion with national INFACT Day. IN- FACT is protesting the promotion of in- fant formulas in the Third World which the group says ,leads to infant malnutrition and death. YESTERDAY'S protest was directed at Nestle Corporation, whose Swiss- based parent company is the world's largest distributor of infant formula. INFACT claims that Nestle's mass media promotion of infant formula in- duces mothers to use the formula in- stead of breast feeding. Because mothers cannot afford to feed their children the proper amounts of the formula, and because of unsafe sanitary conditions, INFACT says in- fant malnutrition results. Nestle states that all cans of its for- mula bear warnings that breast feeding is best for'infants. Similar protest took place simultaneously in Minneapolis, Minn., home of the national INFACT organization and White Plains, N.Y. where Nestle U.S.A. is based. A Bosto group planned to dump cases of Nestea into Boston Harbor. LOCAL PROTESTORS heard folk songs and speeches on the Diag and then marched down Liberty St. to mail postcards protesting Nestly policy. "We have to bring pressure to bear on Nestle and think about the corporate system that makes it possible," said INFACT member Fred Small. Steven Korsen, Nestle manager of Consumer Affairs read a prepared statement in reaction to INFACT day. In itststatement, Nestle called the protest "sensationalized, false and misleading." Korsen added, that INFACT's boycott of Nestle products "discriminated against Nestle" because no other infant formula producer is subject to such "public campaigns" in the United States. INFACT spokesperson Solonge Muller said she expects congressional action on infant formula marketing policy soon. According to Muller, Senator Edward Kennedy's (D-Mass.) subcommittee' on Antitrust and Monopoly and Senator Frank Church's (D-Idaho) subcommittee on Foreign Economic Policy will both hold hearings on the issue in May. DEDICATED JONES BALTIMORE (AP) - Pro football player's are not famed for their dedication to practice but quarterback Bert Jones of the Baltimore Colts is an exception. His coach, Ted Mar- chibroda, insists Bert works as hard in practice sessions as he does in a game. f "Jones is always thinking, always working, during a practice drill," Mar- chibroda said. "He has a reason for everything he does, a specific purpose for everything he works on. The results of his work in practice show up in the games." TONIGHT Gargoyle Films presents PETER SELLERS IN }"The Mouse That Roared" plus cartoon "RABDITHOOD" 7:00 and 9:00 Room 100 Hutthins Hall (Low Quad) ADMISSION: $1.00 3180 PACKARD 973-0770 r U ____U C OVn ~j I i ' V-" -0 5 d Crwy g W444 4 1 41, vAnA 10 IR STUDENT ONE-STOP TRAVEL SERVICE lr_ I .0 k4mol *INTE 'YOUTI 'RAIL E - 'TOUR INTERNATIONAL 603 E MADISON TER FLIGHTS )ENT DISCOUNTS ON [NS, SHIPS, CARS, HOTELS RNATIONAL STUDENT ID CARD rH HOSTEL CARD PASSES RS AND TREKS CENTER 764.9310 '4/ I -W , T ke TaK T Ke, .10ayl c.0 I V GZI vi. m 1Bo/E CASH Your Discontinued Textbooks :i 1%. (There oh ?ae. are worth real money! If sold to Ulrich's WITH your currently good ones YOUR BEST DEAL-FIGURE IT OUT 1 t&t~tTML~DKF'J * ar~ ,ar~.. ~ A '~-i g,.'A L .I F ) E A