,igloo rre" ,ed open- lays, the iorhoods (ork has .ation. in governor's ,ern, Shore npny~ from s evidence s own ap- destroyed ftndel, had, ie~ting be-' to pass egislation. ,der was a I's, Weiner numerous andel over at Snyder, r force be- ierride of-a x of a bill k Zace Trac annuall~'to NDEk. A-6 PLAINS, Ga. - Though President Lottery. NumbeT enJ,341.~' Ca' tlo,gr1PWe4booMZfd.~trig-lkb?i~b---oO-MROOO'20 60 funL** t his -battle wi 4 ess over the Waterways may not be over yet. I "I woulcf be surprised if we've seen the las't'of the water projects Turner Dei,, ice - even this yeari" a senior White House off i- cial. said yesterday. At this oint,.it is up to"the Presi- dent to Me the next step in'the con- troversy over the expensive water Erojects, ones that Congress wants to ave built andr that Carter feels are cost ineffective. There seem to be two options for the. President if he decides to take .any action at. all. He could seek to 'defer funding for the 10 projects, and his deferral would take effect auto- maticalfy unless Congress voted to oveiride it. Or he could attempt to rescind the funding- altof ether. Should he choose that option, e would need an affirm- ative vote in Congress for them such a vote is projects 'to -die -;- and an unlikely prospect. oil note that this bill contains fund- 'Ing for 10 projects for which I recom. mended deletion of funds." he. said. "I remain very concerned about these projects." WHEN -HE- INITIALLY raised the Issue of the waterways several months ago, the President soug'A to kill 31 of the projects,, and he 1.-ater trimmed the list to'19. He succeeded in halting funds for nine projectr and reducing funding for four more. According to.Carteri the elinl-ina- tion of some waterways, was "a precedent-setting first step In t.-Am- ming spending on unnecessary, expensive and environmentally damaging. construction projects . . . this is unprecedented progress, "Much remains. to be don,.- to accomplish lasting reform in water resources policy,!' he~ said. "My ad- ministration is . developing v, a ter policy reform proposals and will con- -carefully all ongo- tinue to scrutinize ing and proposed water projects." Whatever broad action he -tright take to curb the construction of vyater grojects, it is.certain to be met with owls in -Congress. Many senv,tors and House members appear tc re- gard the waterways as a necessary ork barrel, and thus Carter's first folray, against the projects cooled, his relations with Congress. In his statement yesterday, issued as he vacationed in his hometown, Carter =ted that -the. re r'a~'ons a bill provides $500 ffiillion re. search and development on breeder d other advanced nuclear reactors an er technologies." 1~0~w See CARTER, A-7 Approved For R61ease 2000/08/10: C1 A B U MA, nl'u be Ko ~,15' Teo By Jeremiah 0% 1 ry Washinrton Star stall CIA Director ' Stansf; .4 7 ~c ! todd~-denled that U.S. inte e agents bugged th~e South T"'orea nz7- ernment's "Blue'House" o, ',si hn~ recor-dingg of the- conv~~vsatio!~o of President Park Chung n w It'was the first time t~he,new . e _, ts t6r of central intelligen 'e s" on the record about persist genre orts that the 'CIA t ne ti ti Eugged the Korean pare dent e n t dence' and found ev scheme to influence U.S. I "There wer :io tape e0 ape 0 -Turner said., "!'rn spea g g entire intelligence corrmun] just CIA." But he declined to to on his 'answer when, re pressed him as to whether the 7_7;nted States had interceptek-." bein ul sent over the a Seo and Washing _ten TURNER SAID th~,~, '_'~IA agreement with thle X Or _a n C- r Intelligence Agency cr other governments about how flicy cq-, e in the United Slates. -,;ere 0 deals about whatit the'i'-'eo what U.S. age-its do in foreign 'COU71- tries, he said, adding t~nt,anl activities of Sayak (Lhe irarian t, Crv se- cret police), DINA (the "hile cret agency) nnd others are the rJrr.,v- ince of the FBI. said that Turnab- turned-over to Sezi. Adkn' E. Steven- son,, D-111. ands chairman o` the Senate E&cs Committee, all ments in the CIA's -ossession re- garding the committees prospecdVe investigation of Korear. influel"ce- Eeddling. But Turner rc4'used to go wle~:p eyond the -nere acknc.,, nent that these sensiti've which might implicate sena'wr~ m Che scandal, had been bancled to the committee. The implication of 'u:ner's ment to'da- is that none of documents s the re~u,`- o? surveillance Of the ON OTIRE11 matters, 'iurner dx- c4ared: He has taken the a'dvic,~ of Sen. viard M. Kennedy, D-N`z:ss, and i notifying all involved universifles 0i their unwitting association with fli I e e e T UR. N E R, A% -6 CIA-RDP96-00791 R N U11 4 r J 4 6", Z Y~ _46 ' W ~A t ~ [4 10 q qi, Z", ~4 P, A'. qwc ~ , ,, %. ". 'a" ; ,I , AW'. X", 1110 P, 4 'M c"- C;. 4 V. t~~ -rice""LIVII UYU TV in respuFls-e-OULain varx s testintuny 4 He LU in the crani- k . W corhmitte6's blanket nal investigation of the 3 request to Justice Dc- 0 racing -0 r' ,~'all fede 07S1 1 0 P96 1A Ar ie Iff &0 2"~Vjt% 9 Marl that m' 6 nite ates after Q~ FP t 2e1 "de, senators. early press accounts of his activities of frqnte ss and Among, the do uments apparentlyinvolving members of.Congres -o " docu-made availabl-e,was a1istis believed to be living ":-N., containing in England. , the names of i-'numbei. ted of federal As part' of the effort that to obtair, Jan Y- Park's testimony 7 officials who allegbdly Bell said received pa high a(;- . ments from Tongsup Parki , , the ugi- , General ministration 'officials tive'Korean businessman have sought whose ac- ,,,ene help from the Korean government B. ' Justice in tivities promptdd the ' . Seou million-, I. Department's He confirmed that President investigatiom !nt , Carter "has had some'role" and o.was in these TFtE LISTiiMich- als made c' ,~ i h S t -available to the House ecr Ethics (Stand- . communica ons, as as State Cyrus Vance. letterards'of Official Conduct) Committee - l' Al h h t 1e reportedly was obtained s 'maiilast week the attorney. genera oug , statements seemed to underscoreX.,". iftedbg federal age'hts from- by Jay Shin Rye, , ' ri a former associate of Park t Park s importance to both the crimi. a . es nal and congressional investigations, a )f nson ' Tide-At~ his news conference, Stev I e tol Inc. declined to iay whether d reporters that some prosecu- a the list con- i il i l h t 'odg tained the names of 'any t rs. current or out ons st l cou d be brought w ' the Korean past mem6ers of the Senate.s testimony. In fact, the let- plete and "sanitized" versions of al! documents r - RNER elated to the drugs-test- n con and ing project. Turner said at the Ford ' t does administration's Rockefeller Com- ,.gest to ss m ion, which investigated zflega- o Cory Continued From A-1 i t ns of CIA abuses had all this ma- poor secret -ULTRA -~drug-testing, ' terial, too, well before I the rece.-t dis- does- blic atten closures of experiments project now.comin !o on mind con S ~ in'lifetidm -But hd aine that trot. Turner said A20 a' , some th-e 149 r ,omp )n,justuniversities have been projectswere' the kind "unaca. "You wo 'demic" in their treatmentmind having your', children of individ- ir. Volved ' uals who had even a smallin.".The CIA is associa- trying so fa~ xfth- Gdne tion with the CIA. in out success - to find the 4i-, the past. unwilltin.7, .ted,'.it* He has ordered new movesvictims of the tests. to vand reduce the CIA Ope~ationsAll documents on 1AK-ULTRA Division sayingby about 800 employes, have gone to the Justice largely from Department, . an overstaffing that grewwhich must determine whether during the . any- . lie also-has ordered one connected with the i war in Vietnam tests sliould If argu-., n6w screening and exercisebe prosecuted. 4, Rob- pro- grams so that the agency Turner said the CIA also ys will get had ark "lean and mean." ctions undertaken tests on parapsychology He is not cled-ring all several years ago. The. secret intelli- intellig ence try-on g gence operations in a6ancedirector said the agency with the had aman Senate Intelligence' Co'mmittee,gifted with what he called al- "visi attor.though the legislative ception" of.places he had branch is being never seen, s notified. but added with a smile had that the rn a 1i com. The Senate co mittees died two years ago "and working on we haven't ' M Z; -ULTRA were given both.com-heard from him since." Al MK Q d 4 A a a -v- f zi-t? e,- Aq C/ S-(~~ CA CZ s I % a country. morlanin(cl'. SG1 I ~ve -CIA-RDP96-007 AT ~JdF r ~fflved F r Release 2000108/10 A0 1.0 7 .. ........ --j , I I 41.1 Y~ (7., Approved For Release 2000/08/10 : CIA-RDP96-00791 R000200140002-0 SG1 I ORM 1395A UNCLASSEFEED Cover? Request Date Library Use Only Yes 7 June 1995 Due Date No adqe Number USERID Needed By Call Nq,,o SG1A rn I August 1995 V r/Off/Div Room/Bldg. Phon as ORD/LY 809 AMES Black SG1A Secure 30134 fle Of Publication (For A Journal: Include Vol., Issue, Page(s)) "Turner Denies CIA Bugging of South Korea's Park" The Washington Star, 9 August 1977 iblication Date ithor iblisher )marks (ISSN, IqBN, Source of Citation, Etc.) (Questions? - Call Natalie at the above numbers) SG1 I Approved For Release 2000/08/10 CIA-RDP96-00791 R000200140002-0