Dear Dr. Burt;

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP60-00346R000100090003-9
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
4
Document Creation Date: 
November 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 23, 2000
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 28, 1957
Content Type: 
LETTER
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP60-00346R000100090003-9.pdf323.58 KB
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Approved For Release 2000/05/22 :CIA-RDP60-(468 ~`"~ TRB F`OREIE~N SBRVICB UNITED STATES OP AMERICA ~~~~~~q~ OFFICIAL BQTSII9ESS INFORMAL RDH-Poland-L-36 ~ . Dear Dr. Burt; 28 Larch 1957 Recd: April 3, 197 This is in a manner of a general lettar carrying items which should not be in the more serious letters which followp These other letters will no doubt have a wider distribution than normal and the remarks of this letter may eezm a little "out of places one might say. ~xcaAN~~s A~.run I have written that an exchange was made with the university and listed the things which they want. I-can not impress too much that the items from OLI/M to this exchange (and-the othex I will mention in a moment, must not under .arty circumstance be sent to the Embassy. Agencys in Warsaw are forbidden to have arty contact with foreign Embassies in Warsaw_ without dealing through the Foreign Office.. The FO will stop any arrangements and should any material be sent to the Embassy for transmittal to any agency in Poland it will probably aegate the exchange immediately, if not soonero Please don?t send material except directly from Washington to the agency involved. Don?t do it via the Polish embassy in Washington either. Official paper can be used and, if necessary the Department of State address as a return, If it can be avoided on the envelope, so much the betterm If sot, it doesn~t make too much difference. Put addresses inside of course. I Bm bowing out of t~tese exchanges except for an advisory basis. you can make them by asking for and supplying material since the egencys involved really want to make the whole thing work out well. gou,can, if you want to, make the~nore auto- matic than I did. Mare of this later. QR 1~5~ ~a Dr. Arthur L. Burt Special Assistant for Maps Department of State Washington, DoCa State'~~eptVeaec~ass ficatiori in5structlons on0~i~e 468000100090003-9 Approved For Release 2000/05/22 :CIA-RDP60- 0468000100090003-9 ~.r co~IDE~3TIAL EXCBANGE WITH THE PPWK For your benefit and for the Embassy in Warsawy I will put the exchanges in a forma]. despatch form for the record. However I got into the CUOiK and its affiliate research organization the Institute for Gieodesy and Cartography for several hours on Monday of this week. They arranged on Tuesday to have a car pick: me up at the hotel at 9AM oa Tuesday and take me to the PPWK. A gala atmosphere prevailed as a foreigner was made welcome to the unholy circle. I stayed there until. 31'M (without lunch - what I don?t have to do for my countryo) and took tha $5 grand tour of the organization. They were delighted about an exchange and the information will be iven in the formal F`6Despatch by Monday. The same limitation ~of not dealing through the Embassy) applys horsy except more so, if possible, I am also worY.ing on an organization report which ~wi11 take the batter part of a week to prepare. My notes are all over including the sleeve of my beet nylon shirt. I told my wife not to wash it until incorporated into the report. They would be delighted however and are collecting a mass of materiel for shipment to me here, This will take a t'ew days to compile and a week to get here and is necessary for the report. Depending oa how the FSD works.out- I may write another 0$I on the PI~FiKo Right at the moments the most vivid impression is of the last de4y. It was a hectic affair and some how symbolized the idea of Poland to me. All of its faults and certa~.y its strong points, The day began with the usual effort to straggle out of bed and to remember not to turn the room light aa. Whoa ever I did this by accidents it blew all of the fuses on the first floor of the hotel, For some reason or another this light fixture could never be repaired. I have never figured cut if the electrician was- really a "plumber" or if the tapg~ng device (said to be in every room on the first floor of the hotel) was there. $owever~ I had to live with the minor irritation of no main light in the room. I 8resaed and went to the breakfast room and was asked by the waitress if I Wanted ham and eggs. This seemed like a good idea since I would,~'b a flying at the noon hour and. hence would have a delayed lunch.- Two minutes later she came back (the breakfast room had been open for 10 minutes) to say that there was no more ham but they had a nice pork steak. This did not appeal far brekfast and so Y refusede settling for a couple of rolls and coffee. I advise all future CAS traveling in Poland to bring a pair. of asbestos glRR~~ves.since all coffee and tee ie served boiling hot in a glass without hasPles. I have killed the nerves in the fingers of my right hand until I overcame my American inhibition to "blow on my soup". After breakfast9 I went to the floor clerk and stated that I was leaving aryl would like my bill. She took out three huge ledgers and an abacasa pencil and Approved For Release 2000/05/22: CIA-RDP60-0034680001.00090003-9 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For R~erl~ease 2000/05/22 :CIA-RDP60-0068000100090003-9 c4rr~I~~~TI~, -3p paper. she took the figure 797.5p out of one ledger and then filled the S~c10 sheet with a thousand. and one figures from tine other ledger uttering stange inhuman sounds all of the time before arriving at my total bill which was 799.30 z~. 'Ibis entire process of consulting ledgers, abacas and paper took almost 20 minutes. Then she asked if i had. money. Being a little startled by this question since I had. dust asked to pay my bill, I asked what she meant. She wanted to know if I ha,d z~oties and I proudly replied "Oh, yes." She was sorry to beer this because, she mumbled, she could get me abetter rate. NOTE: The official z~ rate used to be four to a dollar. They gust made a new tourist rate of 24 to the dollar. This rate actually is very favorable to the tourist since a hotel room with a bath is about z~ 54 and a dinner in a good hotel is about 25. I figured on west German prices that 1$ to 1 would be coffiparable. However, to return to the story, one ie not five minutes in a conversation before one i~ The offered (cagily rates varying from 100 to 150 to the dollar. poor girl was evidentally a front man and was disappointed that I failed to realize the possibilities. This business plagued me over and over as all sorts of people worked to get the gankee dollar at completely A~nrealistic rates of exchange, On going downstairs to await the car from the Embassy, I decided to spend the last few 2~oties on some gifts for my children and wife. 4n entering the small gift shop in the lobby, I chanted to see a small painted box which looked like a chest of drawers. I asked how much it was and the girls replied that it was no flood and I did not want to bp~y it. "I+ooI~seeemed an8 pulled the darn thing apart in front of my eyes: everything I wanted was no good. There were some lively an8 lovely She 8eco~-eted "caster eggs" and T bought four Pon the the kids. remarked that they were real eggs but not to eat them since they were Polish: On this confusing note, I crawled out of the hotel. This some how was typical of all of the comedies, in which I flayed the straight man. I cou]..d. have made a million with a television cmunera-and e. pocket full of Parker 51 pens. Just think, I waa offered almost 3,040 z~ for ones The general attitude of everyone is anti-cormnuniatic. Time sad time again I was shocked to hear the degree of the feeling against it and against the people in the gcvernment. As I told you in an earlier letter, I saw a 1:100,040 tops sheet and asked if I could get tbem. I was told that the people in the government were very bad people and were under the very bad influence of the Rusd~ia,ns and their attitudes towards maps. In the end., they would be changed but this took time because the people were so bado As one man put it "We will make them change, but naw it is too early." In the PPWK, I was told that they were sure that the Army Map Service maps of Poland were probably better thaw the Polish ones. Approved For Release 2000/06tbIIDP60-003468000100090003-9 Approved For F~elease 20~~3,,~,IA-RDP60-068000100090003-9 It-was very heart-rendering to see the attitudes of the people toward the U,So. They hate the Russians, fear the tfermans and look only to the US for their ration. Their interest in our country and its ways. is overwhelming. At the PPWK, we talked over coffee for almost an hour on wages, costs, manner of living, political freedom etc. in the~UOo "We" included the chief engineer, the librarian (he runs the exchanges and speaks excellent English} and the "political director" appointed as the administrator by the ministryo He-was 'as anti-regime as the so-called technical people. I was shocked since I expected a "cool" reception from him, Se joined us only at the last minute. Se made up for~his late arrival, however. -I have agreed to send the "kit" to them on a loan basis and to make available some of the other cartograpbic reports-which I have here. I would like this exchange to function as-well as possible. Sou might write a general letter stating your demands, desires might be abetter word. I will send the new AMS catalog and the U~iAF one from here. It might surprise you to know that 1;1,000,000 is the largest scale they want. A remarlc was made to me in the PPWK which I found quite good. My-guide said that I should have noticed that most of the .people were very young. In fact moat of them were so new in the business that they could be considered as merely apprentices. He mused over this for a moment and then went on to add "This you know ie the whole problem in Poland. Everybody is an apprentice. Even the people in the government =;~~:. apprentices P" There was a story going around which is typical of their attitude to the government and to the currency. When Nehru was visiting Poland-and talking with the Premier, he was aske8 how much the average Indian factory worker earned in a month. He replied that it was about 300 rupees a month. The Premier then asked bow much it cost the man to live. Nehru answered about 150 to 200 a month. The premier appeared sur~rised and asked what the worker did with the remainder.. It was now Nehru?s turn to be surprised and he aHieered that they did not .ask since it was none of their business. curiosity was aroused and he asked the premier what the average factory worker earned in Poland and was told about 650z} a month. Then came the inevitable question "How much does it cost to live for a month3" The premier answered "About 1,2500" Now it was Nehru?s turn again to ask "Where do they get the rest of the money ftromt? The premier answered "Oh, we don?t ask, since it is none of our businesso" I guess with this note I wild.. drop my impressions of Poland. There are many others such as trying to sleep in a bed with one broken leg and slithering out onto the floor 8 couple of times a night etc. but the general tone has been established. The duller stuff must be done since it really is what counts. I?11 start the exchange FSD this afternoon (it is new Fridays so it can b~sent the firstr'?of the week. I also want to send some material to the P~+iK to show that I mesa business v J Approved For Release 2000/05/22 :CIA-RDA 00090003-9 CONFIDENTIAL ~j n `Y