CUBA TODAY - THIRD OF A SERIES

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CIA-RDP66B00403R000200170047-9
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
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December 16, 2016
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January 3, 2005
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47
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Publication Date: 
June 26, 1964
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OPEN
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1964 Approved For Jjejeease 2005/01127 CIA-RDP66B00403 0200170047-9 CtNGRESSIONAL RECORD-- APPENDIX era who fox mast children are perfect sym- bols of &}ltoyy So the pressure upon the student ;tp clr ixl and , participate beoa r_ies more ;than, ,a young person should have to -bear. ~e State has no right to impose this burder3'upon. him. I believe it is especially offensive yplle t is elong,,.in the name the Christian, religion It has been maintained by proponents of school prayers and meditative Bible reading that these are not devotional programs at all but merely opening exercises. But to the ex- tent this:is true or to the extent that the .public school'gives the impression that it is true then the state , and the, church have joined to.debase both prayer and'Holy Scrip- ture. Neither fs a gimmick for'cranking up the academic machinery, and we shall dam- age the religious traditions we seek to pre- serve if we use them as such, It remains 'true, however, that religious believers on both sides Of this, Issue want young people-indeed, want all people-to know and to appreciate the religious tradi- tions which have helped to make this_ Na- tion. what it is. No man is well educated who does not have a mature and adequate understanding of vital religion. But this can be accomplished by an ob- jective study of religion, including a thorough reading of the Holy Bible as well as other Feligious literature, which can be done in public schools as an academic, pur- suit, The-Supreme Court has not ruled this out, In fact, it seems to suggest that it be done, In,good conscience, therefore, we can encourage and develop such teaching for our children; but what we may not do in good conscience is to require them to participate in any form of corporate worship. Admittedly, neither the churches nor the public schools have done much, to set up appropriate plans of objective study like this. The problems that face us as soon as we think of it are so numerous that. it has been easier to settle for "opening devotions." But these problems, although thorny, . are not forbidding. It will take a lot of doing, but I believe good religious education can be de- veloped by Protestants, Orthodox, Jews, Roman Catholics, and others working to- gether; and if we are genuinely concerned about wanting our young people to have an understanding of their religious and cultural heritage, we will make honest attempts to do so. The questions raised by such a proposal are the ones for us to answer, it seems to me. It is no answer to our problem to say to Jews, to Roman Catholics, to 57 varieties of Prot- estants, to Orthodox, to atheists, and to all the varied and sundry types of believers, non- believers, and half-believers in our com- munities, "Please bow your heads and pray- or leave the room." Foreign Aid Victory for President Johnson,. EXTENSIONOF, REMARKS db' ,}ION, DONALD M.. ERASER .. _ 4F 11711~TNFiq,SPTA IN THE HOUSE OF 13,EP#ESF,NTATIVES Thursday June 25, 1964 Mr. FR415i' Fv,, Mr, Speaker, the recent passage of the foreign aid authorization bill was a 4istorio occasion of which President Johnson be justly proud. Nepex,intile ex3tire.histoxy of American. foreign aid hasa,Pres;dent been suc- cessul in Obtaining the totalamou>;t of ,money requested for foreign assistance. S think ShM, is a significant milestone in the history of foreign policy and indi- cates the true support for this vital program: The following editorial which appeared recently in the Washington Star com- mends President Johnson on his judi- cious leadership in the field of foreign aid. I join with the Washington Star in commending President Johnson for his skillful leadership and want to bring the editorial to the attention of my col- leagues in the House. The editorial follows: [From the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star, June 15, 1964] A GIFT President Johnson has good reason to feel a glow of gratification over the way the House has dealt with his request for foreign aid. By a rollcall vote of 230 to 175, it has author- ized-almost exactly down to the last penny-the $3.5 billion he has asked for. This has never before happened in the 17-year history of foreign aid. Always in the past, the House has slashed away at the annual Presidential recommendations. But now, setting a precedent of sorts, it has ac- cepted at face value Mr. Johnson's argument that $3.5 billion must be regarded as a pre- shrunk, barebones, rockbottom sum vi- tally needed to serve the Nation's best inter- ests abroad. We hope the Senate follows suit. Still to come, of course, is the vote needed to appropriate the authorized funds. But what the House has already done is a promis- ing augury. It is a measure of Mr. John- son's unique skill and persuasiveness in deal- ing with the Congress. It suggests that hon- esty may be a better policy than the tradi- tional practice of padding appropriations re- quests in anticipation of their being cut. Given such a gift, any occupant of the White House must cherish it as something good not only for himself, but for all the Nation. Cuba Today-Third of a Series EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. PAUL G. ROGERS OF FLORIDA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, June 25, 1964 Mr. ROGERS of Florida. Mr. Speak- er, as I stated an June 24, the articles on,conditions in Cuba written by Bruce Taylor and published by the Washington 6tar should be given the widest circula- tion, and accordingly I am inserting the third installment in the RECORD today: CUBA TODAY: CASTRO Has TALENT-FOR RUINING THE ECONOMY (By Bruce Taylor) It is not despite Fidel Castro's best efforts that Cuba is grievously ill. It is because of them. There is no realism in his programs to make the country self-sufficient. He establishes himself as the ultimate au- thority in a project, becomes entirely en- grossed in it, sets unattainable goals for it, makes mistakes, loses interest, leaves all of it to be puzzled out by subordinates who know less about it than he does, and moves on to something else. The results are disastrous. Cuba's economic welfare is determined almost wholly by its ability to produce sugar. It Is Cuba's only real currency. Last year's production was 3.8 million tons, the lowest in the nation's recent history. -A352J Premier Castro is talking about 10 million tons by 1970, but this year's production will be even lower than last year's. FORCED TO BUY SUGAR He is committed for 3.84 million tons, and has admitted in speeches he has been forced to buy sugar on the open market to meet that commitment. Mr. Castro is unable to plan ahead. Last year's low production was caused by the shortage of experienced cane cutters he created by bringing them into the cities after the previous season to work in industry He was unable to free them to return to the 'fields at harvest time. Wielding a machete is backbreaking work, and it is definitely an art. Amateurs not only can ruin the current crop, but the suc- ceeding one. IMPORTS CANE CUTTERS This year, Mr. Castro thought he had the problem beaten by importing new, specially designed Russian mechanical cane cutters. They did not prove effective. So he ordered practically all of his army into the fields. This improved the situation to some extent- although we saw thousands upon thousands of acres of cane that could never be cut in time-but this year there was a new prob- lem: transportation. Where it was relatively good last year, it broke down this year. The old American trucks he has been using were another year older. There are not nearly enough Soviet vehicles in Cuba to replace them. He used oxen. Next year, he doubtlessly will be plagued by the increasing malfunction of the ma- chinery in the American-built sugar mills. All of it is at least 5 years old, and no re- placement parts for it are available to him. PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECT This second successive sugar crop failure has had a tremendous psychological effect on the Cubans. It has heightened anti-Castro emotion everywhere on the island, but most -particularly in the agricultural areas where his main strength originally lay. It is not generally known that Mr. Castro ,last year carried out a second agrarian re- form. It nationalized the farms of the very people who had given him his most solid support. His first agrarian reform law was enacted in 1960, a year after he became dictator, and was the one which he had promised. It took over for the state all farms of more than 30 "cavallerias." There are 33 acres to a cavel- _,leria. Most of these farms and plantations be- longed to absentee United States and Cuban landlords, and there was little general sym- pathy for them. The land was not turned over to individuals, however; the individuals were turned onto it, to work it for the state. REPORTS START TO FLY Last year, reports began to fly that Mr. Castro was contemplating further agrarian measures. ANAP, an association of owners of small private farms, was worried. It called a con- vention last summer to ask Mr. Castro what, if any, plans he had. Mr. Castro assured the association he was satisfied to take no more than 70 percent of all land under cultivation and to leave the balance to the ANAP. Less than 2 months later he quietly en- acted his second agrarian reform law. it nationalized all farms of more than five cav- allerias. ANAP was destroyed, but if that wasn't bad enough, Mr. Castro had more bad news. TOOK ALL OF LAND The state took every last acre of every farm of more than five cavallerias. It also took all buildings on the farms, and turned out their owners with nothing more than clothes on their backs. Approved For Release 2005/01/27 CIA-RDP66B00403R000200170047-9 A3522 Approved For Release 2005/01/27 : CIA-RDP66BOR000200170047-9 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -APPENDIX I June 26 Compensation varied, from a minimum of 100 pesos a month to a maximum of 250 pesos a month for 10 years, according to the size of the farm. A farmer with even one or two children could not survive. To maintain a stable diet he would have to buy food on the black mar- ket, and he would now have to pay rent- If he was lucky enough to find a place to live. Premier Castro's typical lack of foresight compounded their troubles even further. He had neglected the mechanics of a system by which the compensation payments could be made. A great number of the evicted farm- ers received no money at all for several months. CONSCRIPTION RESENTED The reasons for their mounting antago- nism toward Mr. Castro do not end even there. He has begun compulsory military service for all able-bodied men between 17 and 45. His method of conscription is to go into small towns, seemingly at random, and strip them of all men who lit the bill. Mr. Castro began his reign with a great rash of construction. He had reasonable success putting up homes for laborers and farmers in the interior, but his project in East Havana-across the bay from the city proper-was a flop. i5ANT AS SHOWPLACE It was to have been a showplace. He put up beautiful seven- and eight-story apart- ment buildings. They are impressive, and Government officials delight in pointing them out to you. But when you get away from the officials The community OEDP's also empha- sized the need for more public works and facilities A good many of the "needed" public works projects had little relation- ship to the future economic development of the community. Few promoters paid any attention to the potential cost of the proposed projects even when they had relevance to economic development. Few bothered to compute a cost-benefit ratio to justify the proposed public works. The planning process was not taken seri- ously; it was Just looked upon as a pre- liminary hurdle to obtaining Federal largess. Local communities of State economic development agencies often ignored the congressional and ARA desire for "grass- roots" preparation. For one example, most, if not all, of the OEDP's for Ken- tucky were prepared by the State area program office in Frankfort. They were In such general terms that without basic changes they could have described almost any area. Incredibly, the ARA went along with this cavalier attitude. It faced the choice of either approving inadequate plans or disqualifying areas for receiving ARA cash until better plans were Pro- duced. The ARA was no less anxious to help than the communities were to re- ceive help. So It accepted the plans. The ARA had developed neither the ex- find the buildings are anything but practical. Cuba ay if you can getthings done by 1 pease nor the staff to appraise the valid- You learn that Mr. Castro couldn't get I na sera proxlma'-next week. Ity of the local programs and to offer elevators for them, so no one on the upper sound suggestions for the development of floors is happy. And transportation to the more comprehensive plans. city is so unpredictable the people can't ARA and its staff are inexperienced In of them comfortably theably get would to and move-if from there their jobs. was some- Most ARA's OEDP Program Was a Farce the crucial business of economic develop- where else to go. ment and planning. Their main objec- sva.ns POWERPLANTS EXTENSION OF REMARKS tive Is to stimulate and process applica- Cuba is in the process of constructing two of tions for Federal cash. ARA does not thermoelectric powerplants. one at each and let essentials interfere with spending. of the island. These, however, are being HON. BURT L. TALCOTT ARA also dissipated funds on foolish built by Russians, and are progressing well. of CALIFORNIA engineering studies. For example, ARA To the very bare credit side of Mr. Castro's IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES financed one study of the feasibility and construction ledger must be inscribed his designof a multipurpose reservoir In the fishermen's cooperative at Manzanillo. on Wednesday, June 17, 1964 Willapa River Basin, Wash., the kind of the Caribbean coast of Oriente Province. Al- Mr. TALCOTT. Mr. Speaker, commu- job that Congress has the Corps of Engi- most 600 fishermen and their families live scrambling for ARA benefits lost veers to do. It did the same thing in co small but very pc prefabricated no time in filing their overall economic southern Illinois, where the Corps of concrrate ete homes. They y pay attractive no rent. pay The development has a barbershop. a hoe- development plans. By May 1, 1963, 81 Engineers has for several years been con- pital, a pharmacy, and other such services. Percent of the designated areas-850 sidering the building of a multimillion- All are free. areas--had filed OEDP's. Most of them dollar reservoir to supply Industrial water LUSH GIVES our involved only limited thoughtful analysis and create a tourist attraction. The fishermen earn up to 400 pesos a of community resources and contained month, three to four times the national little that would provide a blueprint for average. future community economic develop- Mr. Castro's early gush of construction has ment. Many were poorly conceived and petered out now. There is a sign in Havana failed to contain essential economic data. .that tells people who can't get past the city Most were choked with information hav- to see for themselves that 70 percent of the Ing no bearing upon the purpose of the population lived in "bohios"-huts made of palm leaves thatched over wood frames- OEDP. Since many of the filing orga- and implies this nizations were direct successors of the when Castro came to power , condition no longer exists, established local economic development It is an outrageous lie. The bohios still groups-by 1961 there were more than are there. So are the mud-floor hovels that 3,000 In existence according to SBA esti- line every roadway through the interior. mates-it was not surprising to find that Castro is attempting to inject some reality the OEDP's followed the long-established Into his planning now, but without notable tradition of such groups by basing the achievement. "plans" for future development on en- LECroaES ON LIVESTOCK ticing new manufacturing plants from Currently, he is an expert on livestock, some far-off place. In short, Most of and lectures at great length on the subject the OEDP's were "pie In the sky" docu- Ih speeches and in private conversation. He meats. Actually, manufacturing em- wants to export beef, and says he is experi- menting ployment Is declining. ARA could raise a cattle natural feeds without that having will to imenable- scarcely base sound economic planning him to with him the fertilizers of which he is so desper- for its customers upon expanding manu- ately short. facturing plants. Critical View of Student Grouping EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. ROLAND V. LIBONATI OF ILLINOIS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, May 26, 1964 Mr. LIBONATI. Mr. Speaker, my good friend, Dr. George S. Reuter, Jr., secre- tary of the Chicago chapter, Industrial Relations Research Association, has pre- pared a "Critical Review of Student Groupings," with a review of its early his- tory and a compendium of the various plans that have been experimented with in the United States and abroad, for the purpose of giving deliberate and scholarly thought to the evaluation and recon- Approved For Release 2005/01/27 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200170047-9 At the moment there Is not enough good beef in Cuba for his own people. Cuba's climate is such that it should be a prolific producer of food. Properly tended, its soil can be induced to give three crops of corn a year, for instance. But the island's agriculture is in a mesa. The Russian and Red Chinese technicians brought there to straighten it out do not appear to be mak- ing much headway. CANADIANS' FARM SUCCESS They are being shown to great disadvan- tage by several Ontario tobacco farmers work- ing on contract In Cuba. Their success has been spectacular. They have introduced Canadian seed and methods to Cuban tobacco farming in Pinar del Rio Province, and have increased production there in the past year by 300 percent. Mr. Castro's own Inadequacies are largely responsible for the failure of his programs and, accordingly, the condition in which Cuba finds itself today. But he also is handicapped by the fact that the only people he can trust are the people who fought with him in his revolution. and they are the ones he has had to Install in positions of wide authority. Most are totally unfit to hold them. AVOID DZC?ISIONH It is seldom that the head of one depart- ment or ministry knows what his counterpart in another is doing; it is even more seldom that one of them will make a decision. Cubans have always been famous for get- ting things done "manana"-tomorrow.