STABLE AND DURABLE PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST

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CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013-7
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June 28, 1967
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Approved For Release 2004/05/25,: CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013-7 June 28, 1967 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE the vessels which transport fish from the fishing grounds to the processing plants. The present regulations, particularly those covering load lines, freight for hire, dis- pensing fuel and manning schedules, present serious problems in the operation of these vessels which are unique in the type of serv- ice they perform. We have discussed these problems with members of your staff. They are well in- formed on the details of this situation. We request that you introduce legislation which will update the Coast Guard Regula- tions as they pertain to these tenders. This procedure seems to us to be the logical so- lution to these problems. Sincerely yours, W. V. YONKER, Executive Vice President. STABLE AND DURABLE PEACE IN THE MIDDLE BAST Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, on behalf of the senior Senator from New York [Mr. JAVITS] and myself, I send to the desk a resolution and ask that it be referred to the appropriate committee. There are at the present time 62 co- sponsors of the resolution. Its purpose is to express the sense of the Senate as to the desirability of a stable and durable peace in the Middle East. I ask unanimous consent that the resolution be read, along with the names of the cosponsors.. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The reso- lution will be received and appropriately referred; and, without objection, the resolution, together with the cosponsors, will be read. The assistant legislative clerk read as follows: S. RES. 143 Mr. SYMINGTON (for himself and Mr. JAvrrs, Mr. BAKER, Mr. BAYH, Mr. BENNETT, Mr. BIBLE, Mr. BREWSTER, Mr. BROOKE, Mr. BURDICK, Mr. CANNON, Mr. CASE, Mr. CHURCH, Mr. CLARK, Mr. COOPER, Mr. DOMINICK, Mr. ERVIN, Mr. FONG, Mr. GRIFFIN, Mr. HANSEN, Mr. HARRIS, Mr. HART, Mr. INOUYE, Mr. JACK- SON, Mr. LAUSCHE, Mr. LONG of Missouri, Mr. MCCARTHY, Mr. MCCLELLAN, Mr. MCGEE, Mr. MCGOVERN, Mr. MCINTYRE, Mr. MONDALE, Mr. MONRONEY, Mr. MORSE, Mr. MORTON, At.. Moss, Mr. MURPHY, Mr. MUSKIE, Mr. NELSON, Mr. PASTORE, Mr. PEARSON, Mr. PELL, Mr. PRox- MIRE, Mr. RANDOLPH, Mr. RIBICOFF, Mr. SCOTT, Mr. SMATHERS, Mrs. SMITH, Mr. STENNIS, Mr. TALMADGE, Mr. TYDINGS, Mr. YARBOROUGH, Mr. YOUNG Of Ohio, Mr. COTTON, Mr. FANNIN, Mr. SPONG, Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts, Mr. KENNEDY of New York, Mr. BYRD of West Virginia, Mr. KUCHEL, Mr. JORDAN of Idaho, and Mr. ALtOTT), submitted the following resolution: Whereas the United States has a vital and historic national interest in a stable and dur- able peace in the Middle East; and Whereas the President of the United States has stated the principles upon which our Nation is committed to peace in the area and that every nation in the area has a fundamental right to live and to have this right respected by its neighbors; and Whereas the peace and security of the nations of the Middle East have been en- dangered by a wasteful and destructive arms race, threatened by belligerency and have just been shattered by hostilities endanger- ing the peace of the entire world: Therefore, be it Resolved, That it is the sense of the Sen- ate that- 1. The security and national interests of the United States require that there be a stable and durable peace in the Middle East; and 2. Such a peace calls for discussions among the parties concerned, using such third party or United Nations assistance as they may wish, looking toward- (a) recognized boundaries and other ar- rangements that will give security against terror, destruction and war, and the conse- quent withdrawal and disengagement of armed personnel; (b) a just and equitable solution to the refugee problem; (c) free maritime passage through inter- national waterways, including the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba, and (d) limits on a wasteful and destructive arms race; and 3; In a climate of peace, the United States will do its full share to- (a) help with a solution for the refugees; (b) support regional cooperation; and (c) see that the peaceful promise of nu- clear energy is applied for the critical prob- lem of desalting water: And be it further Resolved, That the President is requested to pursue these objectives, as reflecting the sense of the Senate, within and outside the United Nations anai with all nations similarly minded, as being in the highest national in- terest of the United States. Mr. SYMINGTON, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the resolu- tion be held at the desk for possible addi- tional cosponsors until the close of the session tomorrow afternoon. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Mr. AIKEN. Mr. President, I have been asked to object to the holding of the resolution for the addition of cosponsors. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard. Mr. AIKEN. I do not know what the resolution is. This is no reflection on the Senator from Missouri in any way. It is a procedure which has been ob- jected to before, and I have been asked to object to it at this time. Will the resolution be referred to committee? Mr. SYMINGTON. It was requested that it be referred to the proper com- mittee, which I believe would be the Committee on Foreign Relations. Mr. AIKEN. I have no objection to the committee considering it. However, I have been asked to object to this pro- cedure. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The reso- lution will be referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. ADDITIONAL COSPONSORS OF BILLS Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, at the request of Mr. TYDINGS, I ask unanimous consent that, at the next printing of S. 1981 and S. 1982, bills to improve the judicial machinery for the courts of the District of Columbia, the name of the Senator from Nevada [Mr. BIBLE] be added as a cosponsor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that at the next printing, the following Senators be add- ed as cosponsors of legislation I have introduced: S. 824, Senator MCGEE; S. 1366, Senator YARBOROUGH; S. 1360 and S. 1361, Senator GRUENING; S. 1503, Sen- ator JAVITS; S. 1565, Senator KENNEDY of New York; S. 1765, Senator CLARK; S 9039 and S. 1941, Senator KENNEDY of New York. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. NOTICE OF HEARINGS ON DISTRICT REORGANIZATION PLAN Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, the Committee on Government Operations has scheduled public hearings on Reor- ganization Plan No. 3, to reorganize the government of the District of Columbia, for July 25, 26, and 27 in room 3302, New Senate Office Building. In view of the interest in this proposal, the hearings will be held before the full committee. I have designated the junior Senator from Connecticut [Mr. RIEI- coFF], chairman of the Subcommittee on Executive Reorganization, to serve as co- chairman of the committee for the pur- pose of processing this plan and con- ducting the proposed hearings. Inquiries should be directed to room 162, Old Senate Office Building, Wash- ington, D.C., telephone No. 225-2308. CORRECTIONS OF THE RECORD Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. President, on page S8918 of yesterday's RECORD, in the third column, line 6 of the poem which I quoted, the word "his" should be "our." I ask that the word be corrected in the permanent RECORD. In the June 26 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, on page 58831, column 1, in the lower one-third of the page, in the second line of my speech, the word "enlightened" should be "enlightening." I ask that the permanent RECORD be corrected to show that the word was "en- lightening." The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The corrections will be made. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, on page 59001 of yesterday's RECORD, in the second column, fourth line down from the top, it has Mr. DIRasEN saying: Would there be any chance of its being carried over until we return after the In- dependence Day recess? That statement was made by me and I ask that the correction be made in the permanent RECORD. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The correction will be made. Mr. RIBICOFF. Mr. President, on June 8, 1967, when I introduced S. 1929, the title of the bill was incorrectly stated at three places in the RECORD. On pages S7876, S7879 and S7880 the bill was in- correctly titled as a bill for an Office of Legislative Evaluation in the General Ac- counting Office. The bill should have been designated as a bill to establis' . a Com- mission on Legislative Evaluation. I ask unanimous consent that the permanent RECORD be corrected accordingly. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The correction will be made. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, one of the characteristics of the summit meeting between President Johnson and Prime Minister Kosygin was the warm Approved For Release 2004/05/25 : CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013-7 S 9040 Approved For Release 2004/05/25: CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013- CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 28, 1967 and sympathetic reception by the peo- ple-not only of Glassboro, N.J., but throughout the country. I believe this demonstrates popular ap- proval for President Johnson's summit peace efforts. The American people are not so gul- lible as to think that immediate agree- ments on explosive world issues would emerge from the summit meeting. Yet they were encouraged-and justi- fiably-to believe that such a meeting would make a solid contribution to greater understanding between two na- tions which have differed on many issues in the past. The meeting did produce a lessening of tensions. It did produce an atmosphere of understanding. It did make "acci- dents" less likely. It did bring the par- ticipants closer together on missile con- trol and nonproliferation of nuclear weapons. There is a definite history of. agree- ments for peace between the Soviet Union and the United States, agree- ments which preceded the summit meet- ing: the Outer Space Treaty, the open- ing of a new United States-Soviet direct air link, increased East-West trade. The summit is another large step in the work of building bridges between East and West. We shall not regret it. The President is to be applauded for his tireless efforts. The people know the value of those efforts. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD the following comments on the popular and positive reaction to President Johnson's peace initiatives: An editorial entitled "The Summit," published in Newsday for June 24, 1967; an article entitled "'Spirit of Glassboro' Really One of People," written by Isabelle Shelton, and published in the Washington Star of June 26, 1967; an editorial entitled "Glassboro," published in the Washington Post of June 27, 1967; an article entitled "Washington: A Steadier Administration," written by James Reston, and published in the New York Times of June 28, 1967; and an article entitled "Johnson-Kosygin Talks: Possibly A Step Forward," written by Joseph Kraft, and published in the Los Angeles Times of June 28, 1967. There being no objection, the edi- torials and articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From Newsday, June 24, 1967] THE SUMMIT "Oh, East is East, and West is West, and Never the twain shall meet, Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God's great Judgment Seat. But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth, When two strong men stand face to face, though they come from the ends of the earth!" -RUDYARD KIPLING, "The Ballad of East and West," Kipling's rhythmic view of the East-West split in the year 1889 still holds true today. Two strong men, President Johnson and So- viet Premier Kosygin, met yesterday at the Glassboro summit and perhaps their meet- ing could yet cause the twain to meet. President Johnson has made the better- ment of East-West relations a leading ele- ment of his foreign policy. He has sought to broaden trade with Russia and the satel- lite nations. He has asked Congress to ex- tend credits to allow the Russians to buy machine tools for their new Fiat automobile plant. He has tried to head off an anti- missile race and has sought agreement on a nonproliferation treaty. During the cur- rent crisis in the Middle East, he has called for a reasonable settlement of the long- standing Arab-Israeli grievances that could one day produce an East-West confronta- tion. Unfortunately, Russia has not followed a reasonable course. The war in Vietnam is a potential threat to the peace of the entire world, but the Russians have done nothing to move Hanoi to the peace table. Instead, they have poured supplies and arms into North Vietnam, encouraging Hanoi to con- tinue the war. In this hemisphere, Russian aid has en- abled Fidel Castro to survive despite whole- sale mismanagement. It was with Russian help that Castro first turned his Island into a base of subversion that still threatens all of Latin America. Yesterday's Johnson-Kosygin meeting probably would not have taken place if Rus- sian efforts to gain power in the Mideast had not backfired, Yet Russia has persisted in its folly of encouraging Arab belligerence. In his UN speech, Kosygin offered only propa- ganda, invective and a "peace proposal" that would guarantee continuing hostilities be- tween Israel and her Arab neighbors. There were several hopeful signs at yes- terday's summit meeting. There was a hint in President Johnson's remarks of Russian Interest in a nuclear nonproliferation treaty. The fact that the world leaders are to meet again tomorrow is, in itself, a good omen. But why must the quest for peace be so bit- terly slow? There could be peace today if the Russians wanted it and it could be a peace that would be fair to all. But there is no peace, and Russian policies in the Mideast, in Vietnam and in Latin America have shown little promise of peace. In the final analysis, the major concern of both the U.S. and Russia must be to prevent the outbreak of World War III. Both powers must make new efforts to head off a new mis- sile race and spread of nuclear weapons. In- deed, the possession of a hydrogen bomb by Red China presents new dangers to world peace and especially to Russia and to China's neighbors in Asia. The fact remains, in assessing yesterdays summit meeting, that peace depends more upon the Russians than it does upon the U.S. Hopefully, in his talks with the Presi- dent, Kosygin will indicate a willingness on the part of the Russians to modify their policies in the Mideast, Vietnam and Latin America. Until Kosygin does so, the U.S. must look to its allies to continue our world- wide holding actions against Russian ex- pansionism. Cooperation with Russia is pos- sible, but until it comes, the U.S. must stand fast. [From the Washington (D.C.) Star, June 26, 1967] THE CROWD OUTSIDE: "SPIRIT OF GLASS- BORO" REALLY ONE OF PEOPLE (By Isabelle Shelton) GLASSBORO. N.J.-A "Spirit of Glassboro" was reflected in the hearts and faces of the crowds that waited for the leaders of the world's two strongest powers to finish their discussion even if it was not reflected in the results of the summit meeting. There had been a carnival atmosphere yesterday-balloons, ice cream trucks, front yard hot dog stands. While families turned out with children, dogs and picnic lunches. When the bulk of the crown of several thousand stood its ground late in the day in a pelting rain, shouting "We Want Alec" and "We Want Johnson," a yearning for peace seemed tangible enough to touch. For one brief moment, it was possible to believe, as New Jersey Gov. Richard J. Hughes said, that "there must be lots of Glassboros in the world-in China and Europe and Vietnam and Russia-filled with people who are working and praying and trusting that their children and their chil- dren's children will be able to grow up in a peaceful world." Soviet Premier Kosygin apparently got the crowd's message as ;yesterday's session was ending, just as he and President Johnson were about to enter a limousine that was to take them to waiting helicopters and back into their separate worlds. Johnson, usually supersensitive to crowds, was ignoring them, no doubt out of courtesy to Kosygin. It was the Russian who wheeled, just as Johnson was about to enter the oar that would take them to their helicopters, and walked across the lawn of the meeting house to wave and speak fondly to the soaked, steaming crowd massed below. For a man, not used to American-style politics, Kosygin learned fast. He raised his arms above his head? clasped his hands and grinned broadly, in the best prize fighter style. You would have thought he'd been winning ward and county elections all his life. ANTI-RUSSIAN SIGNS GONE The few anti-Russian signs (carried by pro- testing Ukranians) that had been there ear- lier were gone. The only sign visible at the moment was in Russian, and it said, accord- ing to a Russian reporter, "something good about peace." The President followed Kosygin in brief waves and words to the crowd. And then they were gone. None of the dire things that state and local police had suddenly begun to worry Saturday afternoon and evening came to pass. The crowd, not much if at all bigger than the 5,000 or so Friday, continued its love af- fair with Kosygin to the end. Hostile pickets such as met President Johnson Friday night in Los Angeles didn't show up. Police and state officials knew after Friday's summit meeting that the people of Glassboro and vicinity didn't feel that way. But after reading the reports from Cali- fornia Saturday, they began to worry that organized groups of "peaceniks" or other dis- senters of the right of left might come mass- ing In from nearby large cities, if only for the television exposure. FENCING UNNEEDED The long lines of snow fencing, on which New Jersey state highway department crews worked all night Saturday, weren't needed. The more than doubled state and local po- lice force (from Friday's 700 to 2,000) prob- ably wasn't either--although it no doubt contributed order to the traffic situation. The giant cleanup effort was launched at dawn today to remove tons of paper cups, soda bottles and escorted trash left by the spectators. Seven state troopers were stationed in "Hollybush" during the night to guard against souvenir hunters, and workmen today began converting hollybush back into a home for college President and Mrs. Thomas E. Robinson. Glassboro-where the biggest event in the past was a two-state baseball tournament- probably will never be quite the same again. [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, June 27, 1967[ GLASSBORO Meetings of heads of state arouse great hopes and involve great risks. The meetings which President Johnson and Premier Ko- sygin held at Glassboro are no exception. They inspired the hope that some great, dramatic and spectacular resolution of Soviet-American tensions might emerge; and Approved For Release 2004/05/25 : CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013-7 S 9058 Approved For R #~f Lc vehicle propulsion, sulfur dioxide pollution and low-sulfur or sulfur-free substitutes. This program would raise authorized re- search funds from $12 million in fiscal 1967 to $18 million proposed for fiscal 1968. It proposes the program include direct activi- ties by the federal government and contracts or grants-in-aid to private industry, univer- sities and other groups. 7. The total financial resources proposed in the Muskie bill calls for an increase from the presently authorized $74 million in fiscal 1968 to $80 million for that year and such sums as may be determined by Congress for the following four fiscal years. The AFL-CIO Executive Council last Feb- ruary called for stronger enforcement of the Clean Air Act. The AFL-CIO agreed with the President's proposal to establish federal air-shed commissions and empower the Sec- retary of HEW "to set air quality criteria over all sources of industrial pollutants re- leased into the atmosphere, not merely those by automobile as provided by the present act." By these means, It is possible to move in with federal, state and local programs to control poisoned air emitted from stationary sources, factories, power stations, oil refin- eries and the like. The AFL-CIO policy statement had this to say on the problem of automobile com- bustion and air pollution: "Expanded use of electric-powered ve- hicles would sharply reduce the largest and most rapidly-growing source of air pollu- tion. Any federal program to develop an economically feasible electric-powered ve- hicle should provide public domain owner- ship of all federal patents and a searching assessment by a national commission, with labor representation, of the social and ec- onomic impact of a largescale changeover to the electric automobile." In a recent statement to a special Senate joint committee considering legislation to authorize a federal research and develop- ment program for electric-powered vehicles, AFL-CIO Legislative Director Andrew J. Die- miller said: " present control technology and that likely in the near future is not adequate to reduce the continually mounting load of contaminants emitted to the atmosphere from the automobile In its various forms. The sheer increase in numbers of cars, trucks and buses, even if equipped with all control devices required under the Clean Air Act, will inexorably add to the aggregate environ- mental burden of carbon monoxide, hydro- carbons and other harmful chemicals re- leased into the air." The electric car is not new. It. was used years ago and some probably are operating in the form of commercial vehicles in most large cities. The problem is to find an energy source, either a battery or fuel cell which operates on chemicals, which will enable faster pick- up and higher speeds and allow the driver to cover 100 miles or more before recharging the battery at a station or exchanging it. While Industry is grudgingly accepting the disagreeable inevitability that there will be some kind of control over air pollution, it wants a major voice in setting the terms. Industry wants federal activities restricted to research and development, and it seeks federal tax writeoffs as well as state and local financial incentives for air pollution con- trol equipment. Such tax breaks and Incen- tives are strongly - opposed by organized labor., Recently, the chairman of the board of Humble Oil Refining Company said to a meeting in Houston, Texas, that if industry did not voluntarily clean up its own mess .. in the near future our actions in this area will be spelled out by congressional leg- islation." $p9~RN P200300013-7June 28, 1967 Uniform federal standards, equitably ap- plied, would enable Industries to become so- cially responsible and also to maintain their respective positions In the marketplace. This is what Is provided for in the proposed Clean Air Act of 1967 now before Congress. With- out such standards, industries would be en- ticed to relocate in a more lenient regulatory climate where, among other incentives, a relaxed attitude toward air pollution could be maintained by the state or local enforce- ment agency. The battle lines are now being manned in the halls of Congress. But where the fight will be finally won or lost is in the cities, towns and villages of this nation, when the citizens have decided that they have had enough and, as President Johnson has said, . through their elected representatives, demand the right to air that they and their children can breathe without fear." PERSECUTION OF ISLAM IN THE SOVIET UNION Mr. DODD. Mr. President, in the after- math of the recent Mideast war, Nasser and the other Arab leaders have thrown themselves completely on the mercy of continued Soviet assistance. Their de- pendency on the Soviet Union, according- ly, is even greater today than it was be- fore the recent crisis broke. Yet only one result seems certain for the United Arab Republic and those who follow its lead. That result is domina- tion by the Soviet Union, and the de- struction of the Arab culture and the faith of Islam. Nor is the word "destruction" an exag- geration employed for literary effect. In 1920, there were an estimated 40 million Moslems in the Soviet Union. Several years ago the number was esti- mated to have fallen off to 8 million. At the present rate of decline, it will not be too long before the Muslim religion is only a memory in the Soviet Union. The persecution of the Muslim reli- gion in the Soviet Union was the subject of a study put out in mimeographed form a few years ago by the American Com- mittee for Liberation. This study is so pertinent to the Mideast crisis and Arab dependency on Soviet aid that I wish to comment on it briefly before placing it in- to the RECORD. All religion has suffered untold per- secution under communism, Islam has been no exception. Moslems have been persecuted for their faith in the same manner as Christians, Jews, Buddhists, and others. In some respects, indeed, the fate of Islam has been worse than that of other religions.. In Tashkent, for example, there were 341 mosques in 1911 and today there are 16. In Bukhara there were 360 mosques in 1906, today there are four. There is only one theological seminary for the whole of central Asia. In a study of the Soviet regime's treat- ment "f Islamic institutions and its poli- cies with respect to the Islamic peoples of the U.S.S.R., the American Committee for Liberation pointed out the following: All government media are employed in anti-religious propaganda-the press, the radio, the official "Society for the Diffusion of Scientific and Political Knowledge" with its lectures, movies, conferences, and dis- cussion groups ... As in all other parts of the Soviet Union, the daily press carries frequent anti-Islamic articles. Religious cus- toms such as prayer and fasting are derided and denounced as reactionary . . . Islamic clergy appears to be under more severe limi- tations than the Christian clergy. Its mem- bers may not solemnize marriages; they are constantly under the surveillance of the secret police. In the matter of religious education, the situation clearly points out the hard- ship suffered by the followers of Islam. Before the revolution of 1917, besides the thousands of primary schools, there were more than 1,000 Islamic secondary theological schools in the Russian Em- pire. These all disappeared in the early years of the revolution. A handful have been reopened in the 50 years since, but these have been for show purposes pri- marily. Unlike the Soviet Christians, who are permitted a very limited publication program, Moslems have no publications of their own. Only one printing of the Koran has taken place since 1917, and the review entitled "Moslem Religion," which was announced by Radio Moscow in 1957 has yet to appear. The Arab leaders must not forget, and we must not forget, that religion has been the traditional enemy of all modern tyrannies. Mussolini stated that "Re- ligion is a species of mental disease." Karl Marx called it the "Opium of the people" and Hitler denounced Christi- anity not only because Jesus was a Jew, but because it was cowardly to speak of giving love for hate. The Arab leaders who propose an al- liance with Communism are engaged in a betrayal of their faith and of the mil- lions of Moslems behind the Iron Curtain who have suffered for so long in an ef- fort to practice their religion. It is important that they weigh the dangers of the step they seem about to take. It is a step from which there is no turning back. I wish to share with Senators this im- portant report about the state of Islam in the Soviet Union. I therefore ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the report was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: RED STAR OVER ISLAM (A study of the Soviet regime's treatment of Islamic institutions and its policies with respect to adherence to their tradi- tional faith by the Islamic peoples of the U.S.S.R., by the American Committee for Liberation, New York, N.Y.) BACKGROUND Bearing in itself most of the stigmata of a religion, Communism is opposed to every other religion; it is a principle of the Marxist faith that every other religion must be elimi- nated. One might quote Marx and all the latter-day Communist prophets to prove this basic statement, but a few statements will suffice here. Lenin said, "Every socialist must be an atheist ., in the. face of the ignorance and darkness which religion is, the Party cannot remain indifferent. The fight against it (religion) is not a private matter. It is the business of the whole Party." - As recently as in 1950, Jakovenko, writing specially for readers in Central Asia, asserted: Approved For Release 2004/05/25 : CIA-RDP69B00369R000200300013-7 June -28) 1967 Approved E~e~~a~A/~05'~RDg69R000200300013-7 S 9057 wind, or rain comes to the rescue, the cool take necessary action to abate Interstate air that of Los Angeles County--$3.7 million. upper air stays put and prevents the dirty pollution situations. Control agencies in California made up 38 air at ground level from circulating up and The Clean Air Act also expanded research, percent of total 1965 local air pollution con- out. Los Angeles is the prime example of a technical assistance and training activities trol budgets in the nation. The seven largest metropolis with a chronic inversion situa- of the U.S. Public Health Service. It directed agencies made up 58 percent of the total tion. But they can take place anywhere. the Service to do research and development local air pollution control budget for the When they happen suddenly and remain for on motor vehicle and sulfur oxide pollution nation. several days where there is a great deal of from coal and oil burning in power genera- While the towns and cities are now doing emission of pollutants, people who are well tion and other industries, and to develop more about the problem than a decade ago, get sick, the sick get sicker and some of the criteria on air pollution effects on human much of the larger urban areas still lack sick and some of the older people die. health and property. programs. There are manpower problems, The burden of principal pollutants is ex- The 1965 amendments to the Clean Air both in funds available to hire personnel at pected to double by the year 2000. Over the Act authorized the Secretary of HEW to adequate salaries and trained manpower. The great metropolitan areas of the West Coast, establish standards to control emissions into U.S. Public Health Service estimates that at the Great Lakes and other regions, inversions the air from new motor vehicles and to in- least a fourfold expansion of programs is are expected to become more and more vestigate and develop methods of controlling required to do a reasonably good job in terms lethal, together with the kind of 'ordinary" new air pollution problem -of n3orreK end taff air humans breathe between inversions, In 1966, furthc mints enlarged the Moreover, i