PLIGHT OF RUSSIAN JEWRY

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CIA-RDP67B00446R000400170028-0
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K
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2
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December 16, 2016
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June 28, 2005
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28
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Publication Date: 
March 2, 1965
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OPEN
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A912 Approve~6gf& lfj1OAL/ 7ia R13 RRY%" i R000400170028-0 March 2 that the Soviet Government is not insensi- tive to world opinion, and particularly to the American opinion. The mere fact that this year, the Soviet Government permitted the baking, as well as the importation of matzoth-the ritual bread that is used by Jews during the 8 days of Passover-is a sigh that the Soviets are sensitive to world opinion. Again, we thank you for your time and patience and cooperation, and we do hope that your intercession will determine the new Russian Government to revise its past policies of discrimination and to give Jews full and unrestricted religious liberty which is guaranteed under the Russian Constitu- tion. Pollution in Lake Erie EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. RICHARD D. McCARTHY OF NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, February 15, 1965 Mr. McCARPHY. Mr. Speaker, it is widely recognized that one of the most serious water pollution problems in the Nation is that which besets Lake Erie, a portion of which borders the district I represent. Recently, an outstanding presenta- tion of the Lake Erie problem was made in a program that was broadcasted by WGR-TV in Buffalo. I call to the at- tention of my colleagues a major por- tion of the script for this program: DANGER IN EVERY DROP The beauty of Buffalo's surrounding waters today obscures a modern-day menace * * * the massive hazard of pollution. Unfortu- nately, much of this bright sparkling water would * * * if bottled * * * have to be la- beled: ` "Danger in Every Drop." Without adequate safeguards, it could mean death * * * not only to portions of the human pop- ulation * * * but to shipping, industrial production and recreational facilities as well. Good evening, this is Pat Fagan. For two centuries Lake Erie has supplied the lifeblood for the stream of commerce that has built Buffalo into the second largest city in the second most populous State in the Nation. Ever since a French explorer christened this site on the Niagara Frontier with the felic- itous phrase "belle fleuve"-or "beautiful flow"-its shining waters have been the crown jewel in the proud diadem of the Queen City of the Lakes. But much has occurred historically since the discovery of the Great Lakes early in the 16th century. Huge harbors have mush- rcomed from its wild river mouths-primitive Indian canoe routes have become swarming channels of commerce-and once-isolated trading posts have quickened into the busy pulse beat of cities like Buffalo. As State Health Commissioner Hollis S. Ingraham has warned, "polluted water can menace health * * * deter real estate de- velopment * * * interfere with recreation * * * and repel tourists." For in this un- bottled poison, as he points out, "lurks a virus that stunts community progress." And this is the danger in every drop. So much danger, in fact, that two worried Gov- ernments-the United States and Canada- have just asked the International Joint Com- nalssion to investigate the water pollution problem in Lakes Erie and Ontario. The re- quest for the pollution study said the United States and Canadian Governments have been informed that the lake waters "are being polluted by sewage and industrial waste- causing or likely to cause serious health hazards on both sides of the border. Not only Buffalo is threatened-but many neigh- boring communities as well. Cities on all of the Great Lakes stretching their more than 2,000 miles more than halfway across the Northern American Continent-are all affected to some degree by water pollution. But the Niagara frontier is particularly vulnerable to this deadly virus because of its location on both Lakes Erie and Ontario-with its 43 million population in a 295,000-square-mile area directly de- pendent upon these two lakes for its water. Locally, Buffalo's waterfront provides a vivid picture of pollution in "living color." This pollution extends along the waterfront from the river entrance to below Lackawanna. This so-called "black belt" is a blend of many contaminating factors. Stanley P. Spisiak, chairman of the Water Resources Committee of the New York Conservation Council, has estimated that a total of 350 tons of cyanide, phenol, ammonium, compounds, acids and suspended solids-plus approximately 2,710 gallons of oil-are dumped daily into the waters of Lake Erie and the Niagara River. Of all the communities along the Niagara frontier, the city of Buffalo alone uses about 123 million gallons of water a day. Some of this, of course, is used industrially for cooling and processing purposes. For in- stance, it takes 65,000 gallons of water, weighing 270 tons, to process a single ton of steel. The average Buffalo family of four uses 300 gallons of water a day. Every time you step into a shower, 25 gallons is consumed washing off the soap with the spray-every time you splash in the bathtub, whether you're big or little, another 36 gallons even- tually run down the drain-and anywhere from 20 to 30 gallons are used for such ordi- nary household chores as washing the dishes or taking care of the family laundry. Of this, the water you drink is literally only a drop in the bucket-about half a gallon a day. Yet this has always been the prime concern of local health authorities. Buffalo's drinking water is under constant 24-hour analysis in the Erie County Health Department's testing laboratory on the top floor of city hall. Here, health department inspectors bring daily samples of water from the city's filtration plant at the foot of Porter Avenue. Bottled in sterile flasks, the water samples are first examined by a bac- teriologist to determine its fitness to drink. The laboratory tests not only city water- but samples from wells, swimming pools, and public beaches in all parts of the county. Toxicity is sometimes tested by placing guppies in samples of suspicious water. If the fish expire, It's a sure sign the water is suffering from either lack of oxygen or some form of pollution. A high bacteria count is the chief menace in drinking water. When this is suspected, special millipore filtration tests speed up the routine diagnosis of the samples. The 10 members of the laboratory staff immedi- ately swing into action, working around the clock to analyze the water in less than 18 hours and submit their findings to the Erie County health commissioner, Dr. Wil- liam E. Mosher, and the health department engineer. Such an emergency occurred on January 13, 1964, when Lake Erie dropped to its low- est level in 24 years, causing slush ice to block the intake to the Colonel Ward pump- ing station. After receiving a laboratory re- port that contaminated water was pouring through the rusty pipes of the auxiliary Massachusetts Avenue pumping station. Dr. Mosher issued this warning: "This is an emergency. All citizens of Buffalo are warned not to drink water with- out boiling it at least 5 minutes. This boil order is being issued by the health depart- ment because of an emergency at the water intake. I repeat, Buffalo water is unsafe to drink. It must be boiled before drinking until further notice." All Buffalo schools were ordered closed as low water pressure continued to plague the city, which normally uses 120 million gallons of water on a winter day. The old Niagara River intake-pressed into service for the first time in 30 years- supplied about 70 million gallons, or three- fourths of the city's requirements. It was sediment from this old intake * * * plus the lack of filtration facilities at the Massachu- setts pumping station * * * that resulted in the "boil water" order. The water en- tering the well at the Massachusetts sta- tion was at first very muddy. Massive doses of chlorine made the water safe * * * but quite unpalatable. As the crisis continued, Dr. Mosher was forced to issue another order: "I've been advised that we are losing about 30 million gallons of water a day in our systems and, therefore, it has become neces- sary for me to ask all residents of Buffalo to use water only for essential purposes such as cooking. Water should not be used for laundry and so on. I'm also directing industry to reduce its water to the barest minimum and to use it only for emergency purposes." In 24 hours, Buffalo's water emergency was over. The boil water order was re- scinded * * * schools reopened * * * and af- fected factories resumed normal operations. However, the health department-in its role of "watchdog" over the city's water supply-still cautioned citizens to run their tap water for at least 3 minutes before using it for drinking purposes. The job of clearing the portholes to the clogged water intake was carried out by an Army surplus vehicle whose path was cleared through the ice fields by the Buf- falo fireboat. The military vessel used a scoop to re- move some of the ice * * * then lowered small dynamite charges to blast open each of the 12 ice-clogged portholes. No similar threat to Buffalo's water sup- ply is expected to be posed this winter as the result of a city project now underway at the Lake Erie Intake. First * * * dredges scooped away debris from the bottom of the lake around the intake and loaded it onto scows for dumping in deep water off Lacka- wanna. An estimated 25,000 cubic yards of debris was removed to permit a freer flow into the underwater ports of the in- take. Later * * * specially fabricated metal "elbows" were attached to the intake. The 11-ton elbows are designed to lower the level at which water enters the intake. Aside from such freak quirks of nature, along with the unavoidable runoff of filth after floods or heavy rainstorms when more than the normal amount of pollution pours into drains, the chief source of contaminated water is untreated sewage. Conditions in Lake Erie were described recently by Frank P. Briggs, Assistant Sec- retary of the U.S. Department of the In- terior, as "dangerous, deplorable and dev- astating." He charged that one of the chief reasons was "the indiscriminate dumping of domestice sewage by lakefront cities." But Buffalo has a better record than most. Briggs admitted that the city still supplies good drinking water and has corrected a pol- lution problem that once was one of the worst on the lake. Prior to 1930, municipalities paid little at- tention to the problem of providing treat- ment for sewage. State law at the time called for pollution abatement only in the case of a direct health menace. But after an outbreak of disease affecting 40,000 residents of Niagara Falls * * * where the drinking water was polluted by untreated Approved For Release 2005/07/13 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400170028-0 f965 Approved For Release 2005/07/13 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400170028-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --APPENDIX AM . rest .,RI , the brigade, The professor's study noted: ., A 'fairly comprehensive study of the mod- ern era (classes of 1953 through 1962) shows that the student athlete is hardly distin- guishable from his counterpart in the brigade in every facet of his full Navy career. As a group, entering student athletes win their share of prizes and awards, consistently stand higher in first class aptitude, and con- sistently stand slightly lower in relative standing for the completed course. ''The group of student athletes has a good reten- tion rate for service careers, Other studies at the Air Force Acad- emy and the U.S. Military Academy have produced similar statistics with regards to the relative standing of the varsity athletes. The Military Academy, utilizing the members of the classes of 1064-67 who were on the varsity football and basket- ball teams as a sample of athletes, found their mean score on the college entrance examination exceed, significantly the na- tional mean for high school seniors who enter college. Additionally a review of the high school standin s of this sample indicates that 70 per were in the top 20 per- cent of their class acid 90 percent in the top 'half. Considering that the high school standing is generally accepted as the one best predictor of academic suc- cess, this group of athletes demonstrates outstanding potential. A review of the Military Academy classes of 1955-60 indicates no significant differences between retention rates of athletes and t.liat of their class. In addi- tion the officer performance of athletes is not significantly different from their contemporaries. As an example, the se- Iectionrate to captain for those first con- sidered was 97.9 percent for athletes as compared to 97 percent for their con- temporaries. It is further interesting to note that a survey made of Military Academy graduates in korea established that physical ability measures were more related to the criterion of combat officer success than any of the academic course grades or final class standing. The.Air Force Academy n}aae a, sur- vey of the high schoolI records of mem- bers of Its football and basketb$ll squads. This survey, for the classes of 1964-61, showed that 80 percent of the football players were in the top quarter of their high school graduating class. A total of 77.3 percent of the basketball players, in the Air Force Academy classes of 1964-67, were in the top quarter of their high school graduating class. In a breakdown, of the academic grades for the spring semester of 1964, the Air Force Academy found that. the average grade of all cadets was 2.81 on a 4.0 system. The average for the foot- ball ,sauad was 2.67, and the average for the basketball squad was 2.56. A similar correlation was found in the percentage study of cadets below the 2.0-or C .grade-average. The per- centage below 2.0 for all cadets at the Air Force Academy was 6.8. The per-' centage for the football squad was 7.0, and the basketball squad, 4.5. These studies show that the high school records and Academy records of varsity athletes are almost identical with the overall cadet averages. The ath- lete is clearly no drag on the academic excellence of any of the three academies. In fact, a, substantially greater propor- tion of the basketball and football squads than of their classmates were on the Commandant's merit list at the Air Force Academy. Athletics and intercollegiate competi- tion are healthy and essential to all three academies. It is all too easy to hunt for it "whip- ping boy" in the case of the Air Force cheating, but the facts and figures clearly proclaim the folly of trying to make athletics the ete noir of this situation. __-i'? /' Plight of Russian Jewry EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. CHARLES McC. MATHIAS, JR. IN 'I'lfE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesda::l, March 2, 1965 Mr. MATHIAS. Mr. Speaker, many Americans are becoming increasingly concerned about the tragic plight of the Jewish people in Russia. Last Septem- ber I wrote to the President of the United States asking him to protest the discrimi- nation against the Jewish people in Rus- sia. I believe my colleagues in the Con- gress will be interested in reading a statement on this subject made today be- fore a Joint meeting of the Rabbinical Assembly of America of the Greater Washington area and the Maryland dele- gation. STATEMENT BY RABBI JOSEPH M. BRANDRISS, "PRESIDENT OF THE RABBINICAL ASSEMBLY OF AmERTCA OF THE GREATER WASHINGTON AREA, MARCH 2, 1965 Distinguished Senators and Congressmen of our beloved State of Maryland, permit me at first to express to you the gratitude of the members of my organization, the Rabbinical Assembly of America of the Greater Wash- ington area, as well as our own gratitude for your having taken time off from your busy schedules to meet with us this morning. Be assured that we greatly appreciate it. With me are Rabbi Tzvi Porath, the sptr- itual leader of the Montgomery County Jew- ish Community Center, and former president of the Rabbinical Assembly of America of the Greater Washington Area, Rabbi Lewis Wein- traub, spiritual leader of 'temple Israel, and former president of the Washington Board of Rabbis, Rabbi Sanford Jarashaw, the spiritual leader of Temple Shalom, representing the Conference of American Rabbis, and Mr. Isaac Franck, the executive director of the Jewish Community Council of Greater Wash- ington, representing 130 Jewish organiza- tions. '"We are thus representing all the constit- uent agencies of the Synagogue Council of America. We have come here to plead with you distinguished representatives of our great State of Maryland, to bring the plight of Russian Jewry to the attention of our Presi- dent, Lyndon Baines Johnson, and to urge our Ambassador, Adlai Stevenson, to bring the violations of the rights of Russian Jewry before the United Nations. We plead with you to communicate with the State Department and to urge it to inter- c$de with the Russian ?Government . that. it put an end to its present anti-Semitic course. We would also like to request that you urge the House Foreign Affairs chairman, and the members of the committee, to hold hearings and to support a resolution condemning Soviet anti-Semitism. . For quite a number of years the Soviet Government has been pursuing anti-Semitic activities of an alarming nature. Synagogues are being closed. Their num- ber has been reduced to less than 100 for 3 million Jews. No Hebrew Bible has been published for Jews since 1917. Hebrew schools are nonexistent. There is no public Jewish religious in- struction at all. . Jewish children are not permitted to be taught the language of the Bible-the language that binds Jews to- gether, and to their ancestral faith. Despite the fact that Jews are officially recognized as a religious group, they are not permitted to set up any central coordinating body, similar to those of various Christian denominations, the Moslems, and the Buddhist, nor do the Jews have any religious publications, like the other religious groups have. Of all the religious groups, only the Jews are prevented from establishing contact with their coreligionists in other countries. The Russian Orthodox Church Is now a member of the World Council of Churches. Soviet seminarians attend Protestant and Moslem institutions of learning abroad. No such permission is given to Jewish theological students. The training of religious functionaries is limited to a single Yeshivah, to a single school, which leads a precarious existence. Only five students are presently in attendance. Jewish cultural life too has been banned since the Stalin persecution of the Jews. A decade after Stalin's death, there is still no permanent Yiddish theater. Such kind of a policy on the part of the Russian Government toward Jews, violates the Soviet Constitution's guarantee of na- tional self-determination, and the legal rec- ognition of the right of all nationalities with- in the Soviet borders to cultural freedom. The Soviet policy amounts to spiritual and cultural strangulation of Judaism in Russia. The Soviet press and radio have been conducting an extremely bitter anti-Semitic campaign, not only against Judaism, not only against the Jewish religion and culture, but also against Jews as. human beings, branding them as criminals. They are accused of disloyalty toward the state; they are accused of economic crimes. the Soviet press features trials that result In death sentences. To date, 36 such trials have been reported In 26 different cities. In these trials, death sentences have been meted out to 70 individuals, of whom 45 are Jews. In a number of cases, the Jewish religious affiliation of some of the "culprits" is made explicit. The synagogues are portrayed as the place of illegal transactions. Religious Jews are mockingly described as "money worshippers"; the rabbi is shown as their ac- complice; their family connections in Israel and the United States are pointed up. In general, the Jews are presented as people whose only "G-d is gold." We could go on and on. In sum, Soviet policy places the Jews in the most difficult situation. They are allowed neither to assimilate, nor to live a full Jewish life, nor to emigrate to Israel or any other place where they might live freely as Jews. We therefore have come here to ask your understanding for the plight of Russian Jewry. We' know that many of you have already approached the President, to protest the outrages perpetrated on the Jewish people in Russia, and we are greatly in- debted to you for it. American Jewry is most encouraged: by your sympathy and helpfulness. We know Approved For Release 2005/07/13 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000400170028-0