IN ANY LANGUAGE IT SPELLS CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
37
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 5, 2004
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
February 16, 1967
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9.pdf | 6.19 MB |
Body:
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to
P Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Holy Cross...
(Continued from Page 16)
almost succeeded, combining for 52
of the team's 60 points in the sec-
ond half. But the clock ran out on
NYU
FGF
HOLY CROSS
T FG FT
0-4
Kaplan 4
0-0
8
Sludut
10
6-10
32
Witrock 2
1-3
5
Hch'tein
8
6-14
22
Miller 11
3-5
25
Texeira
3
6-7
12
Graham 20
6-8
46
Murray
1
4,4
6
Fiske 0
1-1
1
Sta'nski
6
1-2
13
PT.1
Basile 0
0-0
0
Willard
1
0-0
2
Ren'kamp 0
0-0
0
Moore
0
2-2
2
Daven'pt 0
0-0
0
O'Brien
0
2-2
2
Mullane
0
0-0
0
Christof
0
0-0
0
Foley
0
1-2
1
Totals 37 11-17 85 Totals 32
28-44
92
S.E.
E-1
Half-time Score: Holy Cross 48,
NYU 27
NYU, and Holy Cross was able to
e remove the starting lineup, leading
= 85-70 with 3:05 to play.
i?D Miller scored a career high of 25
gu points on 11 of 16 from the field,
rt but was lost in the light of Gra-
? ham's dazzling performance which
ri) drew oohs-and-aahs from the 4,323
O Holy Cross partisans
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The Guadalajara Summer School, a
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career opportunity.
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?
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Whiteman First Layman
Head of Divinity School
Dr. Harold B. Whiteman, special I been named as the first layman to
assistant for student affairs, has I hold the position of chairman of
?the board of trustees of the Berke-
ley Divinity School in New Haven,
Conn., founded in 1854.
Dr. Whiteman, 46, has long been
an active Episcopal layman. He is
also a professor of government
and international relations.
A member of Phi Beta Kappa at
Yale University where he also re-
ceived his Ph.D. in 1958. Dr. White-
man is married with three teen-
aged children, one of whom now
attends Yale.
Harold B. W hiteman
First Layman To Head Boarci
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For Details
Hester Forum
Commerce Council is accepting
questions to be proposed to NYU
President James M. Hester Wed-
nesday, at the group's meeting
Monday.
Dr. Hester has asked for spe-
cific questions on general topics
in advance so that he can prepare
an agenda and invite appropriate
Administration members.
The Council meeting will be
held in room 488 Loeb Student
Center, at 3 p.m. Monday. The
forum will be from 3 to 4:30
p.m. in Loeb's Eisner and Lubin
Auditorium Wednesday.
The Council will forward the
questions to Dr. Hester.
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QUESTION: WILL YOU MEET GEORGE ON THE
N.Y.U. SKI CLUB'S NEXT DAY TRIP?
ANSWER: YES, COME ALONG AND SEE WHAT
WE MEAN!!!
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY DAY TRIP FEB. 22
to BELLEAYRE OR HUNTER Mt.
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BETTER HURRY, GEORGE IS GETTING IMPATIENT ! !!
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Spend
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Just call your TWA Campus Rep AI Davis
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or the nearest TWA office.
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. Paul Friedman
May Operate From Street
Bob Helsel
Won't Knock Heads
Student Steadfast in Plan
To Protest with Red Lit
In spite of "being ignored" by
University officials, an NYU "Com-
munist" still plans to go ahead
with his protest Friday against the
on-campus recruitment of the Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency.
Paul Friedman, the School of
Ed sophomore who announced he
was bringing Communist Party lit-
erature to a display table to be set
up near the CIA, said he has asked
the NYU Placement Services for
permission to set up his display
table on NYU property, but Uni-
versity officials, he said, have not
? as yet replied to the rigistered
letter he sent them.
If he is denied premission to re-
cruit for the party on NYU prop-
erty, Friedman said he would "con-
sider" operating from non-Univer-
sity property, possibly the sidewalk.
Bob Heisler, the Party's New York
youth director, said he is "not out
to knock heads with the Univer-
sity." Heisler, a former City Col-
lege student, will also be present
Friday at the Party display.
"NYU will be our first open con-
frontation with the CIA," Heisler
said. He said that he and Friedman
plan to distribute two leaflets on
Friday. One will explain "why the
C.P. issue here" while the other will
be on "what the CIA has been do-
ing," he said.
"We will try to answer the lies
about Communism on which the
CIA is founded," Friedman added.
Heisel explained that the Com-
munist Party is gaining support
among college students. Recently
"Communist Forums" or educa-
tional and discussion groups have
been established at City College of
New York and the University o
California at Berkeley.
Medical Prof Testifies atHearing
On IllegalAbortions in Hospitals!
By GAIL DOIG
A professor at the NYU Medical
School told a joint State legislative
committee Friday that "more than
200 illegal abortions were per-
formed in New York City hospitals
in 1964" and that similar numbers
were probably performed in the
last two years.
Dr. Lewis Z. Cooper, a professor
of pediatrics, said that his testi-
mony was based on data from the
Downtown Medical Center and in-
volved "a representative cross-sec-
tion of private and municipal hos-
pitals, with the exception of Catho-
lic hospitals." He said he did not
have statistical information after
1964 but believed that as many
abortions were still being per-
formed. He said a committee of
physicians at each hospital decided
if an abortion was necessary.
Dr. Cooper testified before As-
semblymen Dominick Di Carlo (R-
Brooklyn) during the last of three
days of hearings on an abortion re-
form bill.
After the hearing Mr. Di Carlo
said on Dr. Cooper's testimony
that it was "amazing the way some
people feel they are not bound by
a law unless their conscience
agrees."
Dr. Cooper, however, said he had
never performed an abortion or
served on a committee to allow one.
Dr. Cooper, who heads the ru-
bella (German measles) evaluation
at the University's Medical Center
strongly favors liberalization of tlu
84-year old statute which permits
abortions only to save a mother's
life.
"If a young lady contracts Ger-
man measles in the few months of
pregnancy," he explained, "many
doctors are willing to present this
problem to the therapeutic abortion
committees of their hospitals even
though they realize that under the
existing statute it isn't kosher."
The abortion bill, which is spon-
sored by Assemblyman Albert H.
Blumenthal (D-Man.) would allow
abortions when there is substantial
risk that the mother's physical or
mental health would be impaired by
continued pregnancy or that the in-
fant would be born with a mental
or physical defect when the preg- ci)
nancy results from rape or incest,1
and when an unwed pregnant Ds
woman is under 15.
ea
Mr. Di Carlo, who is Catholic,
opposes the Blumenthal bill because 2
he feels that women would be able
to get an abortion "on demand."
The bill is opposed by the Roman 4--
Catholic Church, whose policy is o-.3
that it is a mortal sin to destroy a r
fetus. Catholics make up about 7
one-third of New York's population.
The bill is supported by Protes-
tant churches, several Jewish or-
ganizations, the American law in- 11
stitute, the New York City Bar (a.
Association and the New York it
Cilvil Liberties Union.
EUROPEAN STUDENT HOSTELS & RESTAURANTS ?
1967 edition ? a handbook on budget student travel con-
taining most complete information about
? student & youth hostels, budget type acommodation
? student restaurants
? local student unions & travel agencies
? discounts on flights & trains
? useful international organizations
Mail to: International Educational Exchange Club,
545 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017
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? ORDER FORM ?
Please send . . . . copies of the 1967 student hostel list to the
address below. I herewith enclose $1.00 per copy (check or money
order).
Name: First Name:
Address:
Master for Brittany
Carse Offered Post
By GERI GOLDBERG
, The resident master system at
NYU will be extended to the Brit-
tany Hotel if religion professor
James P. Carse accepts an offer to
fill the position.
The Brittany is the only Wash-
ington Square campus undergrad-
uate dormitory without a master.
The master program is an attempt
to bring an academic orientation to
the residenc halls, according to
Prof. Philip Mayerson, who was on
the three-man committee that chose
Dr. Carse.
Dr. Carse said he would decide
whether to accept the position by
the spring. He said that certain
conditions would have to be met
but declined to described them. His
appointment would take effect in
Septmber.
Dr. Mayerson said that he under-
stood on hearsay that "Prof. Carse
would very much like to be involved
in the masters program."
He noted that "not every faculty
member is qualified to be a master,
but Prof. Carse has had enough ex-
perience to qualify for the posi-
tion."
He said that Dr. Carse and his
family would live in the Brittany
if he accepts.
Presently, Al Medoff, the Brit-
tany's head resident fellow, as-
sumes some of the responsibilities
of a master.
However, Medoff haid that a
master in Brittany would act on
another level of appeal to residents
because of his broader experiences
as a senior faculty member." He
also said that "with the cooperation
of a master, plans for a library, a
music listening room and a study
could be more rapidly advanced."
The Brittany is a men's dormi-
tory at 55 East 10 St. Prof.
Alister McCrome this fall was ap-
pointed master of Rubin Hall, a
woman's dormitory at 35 Fifth
Ave. Prof. Victor Yellin has been
master of Weinstein Hall, a t4ed
dormitory, for a year and a Init.
The term "master" is deep rooted
in tradition, according to Dr.
McCrone. It has implications of
scholarship and intellectual inter-
est, he said, a master imposes a
formal or informal leadership to a
community of scholars, he added.
For Grads Only
The Student Commission on
Graduate Life is holding its first
"Pre-Holiday Relaxer" tomorrow
at Harout's Restaurant, 14 Wav-
erly Place, from 8 p.m. to mid-
night. The meeting is for gradu-
ate students only. Beer will be
free and food may be purchased.
ficipsilen litAraterttitti
Yu- giatatz. jitaL oteasts-'
*
Invites You To Join Them In
Three Days Of Activity
eactait
Thursday afternoon ? 4:00 p.m.
Phi Ep au Go-Go
FRIDAY NIGHT ? 8:30 p.m. till ???
Twins Party
SAT. NIGHT ? 9:00 p.m. ? Bring your date & dress as twins!
246 MERCER ST.
(corner West 3rd St.)
?You must have 14 credits or more to participate
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?CS
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Ed Changes S'uggested,
Faculty Might Consider
Some 40 graduate and undergraduate School of Ed stu-
t- dents Monday proposed a number of changes to be eventually
g
considered by the School's faculty.
I* ^ The forum was conducted by a
CD six-man student commission sug- ones used by WSC, Commerce, and
^ gesting changes in the School's the School of Engineering.
y.; curriculum.
The areas discussed included the
nature and number of course re-
quirements for the B.A. degree,
and the status of communication
between Ed Administration, fac-
ulty and students. Some recom-
mendations were:
71.
1.4
10
0
? "More freedom in choosing
courses" and "more liberal arts
included in the Ed curriculum,"
recommended by an undergrad-
uate in industrial arts.
? "More three credit courses"
to replace the now numerous
two-credit courses, urged by a
graduate student. She explained
that the present setup hurts
students wishing to teach in
states such as New jersey
that require three credit cours-
es in, for example, the philoso-
phy of education, to be eligible
for a teaching certificate. NYU
will not allow, she added, a stu-
dent to make-up the point dif-
ference if that course has al-
ready been completed and passed.
At the center of discussion, how-
ever, were various suggestions that
the School of Ed revise its degree
program to a five year 150-credit
Master of Arts plan, similar to the
The five-year program should,
in the words of an undergraduate
student, "provide more learning in
more various fields." This would
involve, another student added, the
integration of undergraduate and
graduate departments. Also in-
volved in the five-year program
was the expressed desire of many
students to adopt the pass-fail
system of grading to be initiated
next year at WSC.
LaVerne Thornton, a graduate
member of the Commission, out-
lined the new outlook she hoped
the Corrimision will bring to the
School of Ed:
"We must look at the curriculum
realistically," she said, "in terms
not only of today but in terms of
tomorrow." She said she hoped any
changes made in Ed courses should
be made "to have the? student
as well rounded as possible." Miss
Thornton said the Commission will
consider all proposals made at the
forum, rework them into a list of
suggestions and present them
Monday to Associate Dean Milton
D. Schwebel. Some of the sugges-
tions will eventually go to the Ed
Faculty Council and the entire Ed
faculty.
t .
.Don't Take Second best,
? be Particular
111
J
Go
....*********??????????4???????????????????????
Phi Sigma Delta
Fraternity
INVITES YOU TO AN
OPEN HOUSE
AND
SMOKER
IN ROOM 513 - 515 LOEB
9:00 - 1:00 A.M. FRIDAY
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
FRESHMEN & TRANSFERS WELCOME
STAG OR DRAG
*14 credits to participate
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2 NYU E
0 t
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Vol. 12 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967
389
No. 28
'Sit - In' Students
Denied Counsel
At Their Hearings
By TERENCE BERTELE
Students involved in last week's
bookstore sit-ins will not be allowed
representation by an attorney in
hearings before their schools' res-
pective disciplinary committees,
Journal learned late yesterday.
The Ad Hoc Committee for a
Democratic University, 35 of whose
members sat-in at the bookstore
Thursday and Friday, will meet to-
night to decide whether or not to
picket the hearings, which start
tomorrow.
At a meeting last night, the
Committee made clear its demands
for open, collective hearings with
legal counsel available to the stu-
dents.
Dr. Max Sorkin, chairman of the
WSC discipline committee and Dr.
W. Gabriel Carras, School of Ed
Progress and Discipline Commit-
tee chairman, both said that stu-
dents appearing before the disci-
plinary committees would not be
allowed legal counsel and that
hearings would not be open to the
Dr. Sorkin explained that there
was "no provision" in committee
,....tatkidterier., RUC
On Senate Group
Penny Becker will represent the
School of Ed and Van Rose will
represent the School of' Commerce
on the Senate Commission on Stu-
dent Participation.
Elections for the student rep-
resentative from WSC will be held
Monday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in
the South Study Hall of Main
Building. Petitions are available
and must be signed and returned
by tomorrow at 4 p.m. to 822 Main.
Thus far only one student, Lau-
rance Maisel, has turned in a peti-
tion.
The Commission was formed by
NYU President James M. Hester
to study ways of creating better
communications between students
and the Administration and is com-
prised of student and faculty rep-
resentatives, and a chairman, As-
sociate Dean Robert B. McKay of
the .Law School.
Virginia Brinson was appointed
by the Graduate Student Organiza-
tion to represent the graduate divi-
sion of the School of Ed.
The Committee on Graduate Stu-
dent Life of the Graduate School
of Arts and Science has appointed
three alternates to represent the
Graduate School. They are Leon
Fuerth of the history department,
Peggy-Ann Naumann of the En-
glish department, and Lurton Blass-
ingame of the American civiliza-
tion department.
Maisel, a junior in WSC, said he
wants to see a greater student
voice, and one that is listened to.
He added that he feels the Com-
mission will be "listened to" by the
Administration.
Miss Becker said that the Com-
mission "offers the potential for
providing students with a per-
maiien'. role in policy-making" and
"in evaluating student governments
and c hi'ng-up with something
(Continued on Page 10)
Henry Noss
Skeptical of Student Salt
rules for student legal representa-
tion.
Seven School of Ed students and
24 WSC students will be tried be-
fore the committees tomorrow.
The students, members of the
Ad Hoc Committee for a Demo-
cratic University, had retained two
civil rights attorneys, Karl Rachlin
and Steven Negeler to represent
the sit-ins in tomorrow's hearings.
In a related matter, members of
the Committee presented a petition
demanding. a tri-partite comission
to decide University policy to Geor-
-ge A. Murphy, chairman of the_.
NYU Board of Trustees earlier yes-
terday.
The petition signed by 1,300 stu-
dents, called petition,
a reform of the
University structure to allow the
three-part commission, composed
equally of students, faculty and Ad-
ministration, to, make University de
cisions.
Mr. Murphy said the petition
(Continued on Page 9)
Commerce, Ed Will Liberalize
'A' Course Requirements in Fall
The Schools of Commerce
ning in September. According
jects required to meet the A-
of the subjects students may
choose from a number of al-
ternative courses offered.
In the School of Ed, according
to Associate Dean Milton Schwebel,
each department chairman is pre-
sently studying the A-course pro-
gram and will determine which op-
tions will be allowed in A-course
requirements for students in their
department.
Dr. Schwebel said that the fac-
ulty has endorsed the principle of
making all of the new courses
available to all students.
Reports from the department
chairmen will be submitted by
Mar. 1.
Dr. Schwebel explained that the
departments are handling the re-
quirements because students must
take certain required courses, de-
pending on their major, in order to
obtain teaching certificates.
Unlike WSC, the Commerce plan
does not allow the student to choose
from among broad areas, but only
courses in the same department.
_Details on the Commerceskawres
are:
English Co nposition I, two sem-
esters of Literary Heritage, and the
current introductory psychology
course will remain the only courses
offered in each of these respective
areas.
Students will be able to fulfill
their classics requirement by tak-
ing the current A-course offered,
"Legacy of Greece and Rome," or
by choosing among the alterna-
tive classic's courses offered: "Lit-
Lone Teacher in Sit In
Says Felt No Reprisals
An English teacher who recited sonnets during Friday's
bookstore sit-in claimed no recriminations for the action
fuesday.
Miss Deirdre Levinson, English
instructor at WSC, maintains that
she has not been approached by the
Administration. She said she could
not conjecture whether any disci-
plinary action will be taken against
her for her participation in the
boycotts.
It was at the last sit-in, during
a lull between ominous warnings
by police chiefs and Dr. Harold B.
Whiteman, special assistant for
student affairs, and jeers at sun-
dry administration officials and
protest songs by the boycotters,
that Miss Levinson read from her
book of poetry.
Miss Levinson also joined the
students during the December sit-
ins in Main building in protesting
of the announcement of the tuition
increase.
"Yes," she said in reference to
the Main sit-in, "I got tired of
standing up."
- Behind her facetious repartee,
Miss Levinson reveals a strong;
committed stand on politics at the
University.
The present channels of student
and faculty participation in admin-
istrative decisions-making are in-
adequate, she said. "The channels
should be democratized."
"The Board of Trustees is super-
fluous," she added. Miss Levinson
noted that she doesn't know if the
Ad Hoc Committee for a Demo-
cratic University represents a ma-
jority of NYU students. "I would
have to -know all the students in
order to answer that," she said.
She commented that "it was a
joy to see" the spirit and ideas of
the Ad Hoc committee on campus.
Miss Levinson's career includes
other political involvements. Born
in England, Miss Levinson studied
at the University of Oxford.
She spent five years in the Union
of South Africa and wrote an ap-
propriately titled book, "Five
Years," about her political exper-
iences there. She described her ac-
tivities in South Africa as "radi-
cal" but didn't elaborate.
By BEVERLY KOSTER
and Ed are liberalizing their A-course requirements begin
to Commerce Associate Dean Raymond D. Buteux, the sub-
course require ments will remain the same. However, in many
erature of the Greek World," "Lit-
erature of the Roman Age," o
"Classical Mythology."
Students who take fine arts as
part of their liberal studies elec-
tives requirement may choose from
"History of Art" I and II, "Paint-
ing in the Western World," and
'History of Architecture" I and II.
To meet the six-credit history
requirement, students may take
"History of Western Civilization"
I and II, "History of the United
States," "Europe in the Twentieth
Century," "Ibero-America from Its
Beginnings to Independence" and
"Ibero-America from Independence
to the Present," and "The Great
Age of Greece."
"The Survey of Music" and "The
Elements and Literature of Music"
are the alternative music courses
offered to students who wish to
take music as part of their liberal
studies electives.
To meet the philosophy require-
ment, students can choose from
Problems in Philosophy, Introduc-
tion to
Two math courses are required,
which will be determined by the
director of advisement on the basis
of the student's previous work in
math. The courses which may be
assigned are algebra and trigono-
metry, probability, trigonometry,
college algebra, analytic geometry
and "Calculus for the Social Sci-
ences," and .linear algebra.
To fulfill the science require-
ment, students may choose from
the "A" biology course, the "A"
chemistry course, geology, "The
Nature of Matter," and "The Deve-
lopment of Physics."
Courses offered to meet the gov-
ernment requirement are the "A"
course, "Political Thought from
Plato to Rousseau," "Democracy
and Dictatorship," "The American
System of Government," and
"Comparative Politics." Only one
course is required.
The sociology requirement may
be met by either "Man and Soci-
ety" or "Great Books in Sociology."
Dr. Buteux explained that the
Milton Schwebel
Up To Departments
number of courses have been ex-
panded in some of the areas be..
se "these alternate "Cp344,94_,Ase
every bit as good for the students:7'
'Announcement' Has
Course Analysis
The WSC Announcement of
Courses to be given for 1967-'68
includes a detailed description of
every course to be given in the
School.
These descriptions, averaging
100-200 words in length, were writ-
ten by the professors giving the
courses. The days and hours at
which courses are to be given will
be printed on a master list and
sent to students before the advise-
ment periods of each semester.
The Announcement also includes
an explanation of the liberaliza-
tion of the A-course program to
go into effect in September. Under
this program students in WSC will
have the option of choosing from
among the courses offered in the
(Continued on Page 12)
Some 40 School of Ed students Monday suggested curriculum changes
to this panel. Story on page four.
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
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Professor Miglivi
Over Recent Visit to North Vietnam
roc
CIO
cd
"0
Ce
a.
Ce
ri)
E"4
!Dr. Pekary Dies
Taught German
Newsweek Photo by Robert R. McElroy
John Gerasi
May Lose Passport
Prof. Charlotte Pekary, profes-
sor emeritus of NYU, died Monday.
She was 72 years old and lived at
14-63 Burton St., Beechhurst, N.Y.
Dr. Pekary taught German here
for 42 years from 1923-1959, and
taught summer courses as recently
as 1965.
She was member of Phi Betta
Kappa, and received two Fulbright
Fellowships. The first, in 1952, took
her to Bonn, while the second in
1956 was to Cologne. The German
professor received her Ph.D. from
Cornell University in 1926.
Outside of the classroom, Dr.
Pekary was the adviser to the
German Club, German honorary
Delta Phi Alpha and to foreign
students. Her teaching abilities
l'qrVIluchp Ogalig.; slle stayed
two years at Aachen in German
Graduate Institute and served
as visiting professor at Western
College for Women.
Rudolf Hagelstange, a noted
German writer, paid .her a rare
tribute by devoting an entire
chapter to her in his book, "How
Do You Like America?"
Memorial services will held at
the Church of Ascension 5th Ave-
nue and 11th Street.
Munn, Dead at 76
Prof. James Buell Munn, former
dean of WSC and professor emeri-
tus at Harvard University, died
Tuesday. He was 76 years old and
lived at 58 Garden St., Cambridge
Mass.
Dr. Munn served as dean of
WSC from 1928-1932. He aided
many needy students without their
knowledge. He had an arrangement
with the University bursar's office
under which these students would
be told that their fees had been
paid through a fund called "Sched-
ule A." "Schedule A" was Dr.
Munn's pocket.
A group of grateful alumni set
up the J. B. Munn Scholarship Fund
in 1963, and presently four stu-
dents are attending NYU under
this scholarship.
He often allowed students to
his private library and to his
farm near Rochester. He also had
boxes at the opera for students to
use and even offered them a tuxedo
so that they could be properly at-
tired.
In recent years he taught at
Harvard and co-edited a book titled
"Ideas and Forms in English and
American Literature."
Funeral services will be private.
Dr. Munn is survived by his wife
the former Ruth Hanford.
(This is the last of a two-part
series on Mr. Gerassi's recent trip
to North Vietnam.)
Theoretically, the State Depart-
ment could cancel the passport of
John Gerassi, an NYU journalism
professor who recently visited
North Vietnam.
The department automatically
eancels the passports of all per-
sons "whose unauthorized trips to
Communist countries come to its
attention," a State Department
spokeman said recently.
Technically, however, Mr. Geras-
si pointed out, his passport might
not be revoked because he did not
use it to gain entrance to North
Vietnam.
Travel to Cuba, Albania, China,
North Korea and North Vietnam
without State Department clear-
ance is now banned by the depart-
ment.
Mr. Gerassi explained that he
used his passport to? get as far
as Cambodia. From there he was
issued a special visa for North
Vietnam by the North Vietnamese
government.
"My passport doesn't have any
stamps on it or anything," he said.
"According to what is printed in
my passport ?that I may not use
it to travel to certain listed coun-
tries? I have not violated the
law."
If his passport is revoked, Mr.
Gerassi said, he might choose to
fight the case through the Ameri-
can Civil Liberties Union. Mr. Ge-
rassi is a member of the AGLU.
Although a Jan. 10 Supreme
Court ruling said that the travel
of persons with up-to-date pass-
ports to banned counrties was not
a crime, the passports of such per-
sons may still be cancelled. If an
American's passport is revoked, he
can still travel in the Western
Hemisphere, but he would violate
a law of 1959 if he attempted to
go elsewhere.
Mr. Gerassi is an expert on La-
tin American affairs and has writ-
ten a book called "The Great Fear
in Latin America."
More than 600 American are
known to have violated U. S. travel
restrictions since 1952, according
to Supreme Court Justice Abe
Fortas. But the government has
indicted only 11 persons. Ten of
these cases were affected by the
Jan. 10 ruling. The eleventh case,
that of William Worthy, a news-
man who made an unauthorized
trip to Cuba, was thrown out by a
lower court, according to the Jan.
11 New York Times.
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g
Violets At
Army Saturday
ol. 12
5
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Potts
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967
Cagers Crush Catholic;
Subdued By Crusaders
Many years ago, an unknown sports personality said,
"you win some and you lose some but when you lose more
than you win, something is wrong." The Violets have certain-
ly been losing their share this
season. Last Saturday night
NYU was defeated by a high-
ly regarded Holy Cross five,
. 92-85. Undaunted by failure,
the cagers came back Monday
night at home to beat Catho-
lic, 64-59.
The Saturday night tilt against
tit.: Crusaders was not a total fail-
ure as Mal Graham broke lose for
46 points. Graham shattered two
NO-
N V U (61) CATHOLIC U. (59)
G. F. P. G. F. P.
Kaplan 9 6-6 24 Cioffari 7 5-5 19
Fiske 2 0-2 4 Kras'ki 5 0-0 10
Witrock 2 1-2 5 Graban 2 0-0 4
Miller 0 2-3 2 Speicher 2 5-5 9
Graham 6 8-8 20 Wilson 6 5-7 17
Slattery 3 3-4 9 McClure 0 0-0 0
Basile 0 0-0 0 Cosentino 0 0-0 0
Dave/1'14 0 0-0 0 Smith 0 0-0 0
-
Totals 22 2U-564 Totals 22 15-17 59
Half-time Score: NYU 31, Catholic 30.
more NYU records in that contest.
scoreHe 21
finished
finished the evening with 594 goals,
13 better than Kramer's standard.
Last Monday it was a different
story. Catholic was not the same
old patsy that NYU has been used
to. This year so far, the Cardinals
have whipped St. Joseph's at the
Palestra and Evansville College at
home.
A sticky zone defense bothered
the Violets in the early going.
Guard Bill Wilson was especially
hot in the opening minutes of play.
The Cardinals jumped out in front
by as many as six. The combina-
tion of Graham's driving layups
and short jumpers along with
Bruce Kaplan's deadly outside
shooting kept NYU within one
point of Catholic's lead with six
minutes remaining. Graham sank
two free throws to put the Hall
of Famer's up by one. The one
point margin remained 31-30, as
the buzzer sounded to end the first
half.
_
An overall team effort in the
second stanza saved the game for
NYU. The lead kept changing
hands until Kaplan put his team
great Ca Ramsey's
old record. Graham also surpassed
Barry Kramer's mark for total
field goals in one season. Graham
Villanova Simply Too Much
For Coach Variello's Squad
By SUSAN MARKEL
After being subdued by Villano-
va last Saturday, 71-21, the NYU
swimming team is sinking deeper
into despair.
The crushing defeat was the
worst ever sustained against Vi-
llanova, and was indicative of the
injury, illness and academic losses
that have plagued the mermen
since the exam recess. Co-captain
Gary Jandorf,. recovering from a
recent injury, was unable to com-
pete. The stitches in his foot should
be removed within another week,
but the time is all too short for
him to get back into shape.
Villanova, referred to by NYU
Coach Sal Variello as "one of the
outstanding teams - in the East,"
was led by the performance- of
swimmer .Mike Fitzmaurice. His
time Of 47.8 in the 50-yard crawl
relay with a flying start showed
that he has the speed to make him
a national intercollegiate therat.
The Violets will be splashing
again this evening against Adelphi,
and Variello is hopeful, if not con-
fident of doing well. But the next
? Write Sports?
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at 915 Loeb Student Center after
3 P. M. On Tuesday or Thurs-
day.
two meets are different stories.
West. Chester State and Rutgers
are the kind of competition that
prompt Variello to say, "We're
praying to survive."
Jim Miller
Hits Career High
in front at 15:16 of the second
stanza. Gene Slattery finally gave
th,, Violets a cushion by scoring
o:- two successive steals. Catholic
didn't give up and was only behind
by four as Bob Cioffari scored on
a clutch basket with 46 seconds re-
maining. NYU then cashed in on
three one-and-one situations in a
row to ice the game.
Holy Cross
In Saturday night's contest at
Worcester, the team was never in
serious contention except for the
.opcning minutes of the contest.
After the score was tied at 18 with
10:38 to go in the half, Holy Cross
began to pull away from the weak-
er Violets. Forwards Ed Siudut,
with 32 points, and Keith Hoch-
stein with 17 rebounds, began to
dominate the game and helped the
Crusaders to a 48-27 lead at half-
time.
Head Coach Lou Rossini, realiz-
ing that his team was being beaten
in the forecourt, told his guards,
Graham and Miller to try and close
the gap from the outside. The two
(Continued on Page 11)
Kill
? Serving
Downtown
NYU
No. 28
Manhattan Looks Green
As Violets Win, 76-63
By BARRY ALTMAN
The Manhattan Jaspers saw their NIT bid fade into the
night as the Violets surprised 6,267 fans at the garden by
trouncing their intra-borough rivals, 76 to 63.
It was a particularly hap-
py event for Coach Lou Rossini's
charges for Manhattan is second
in the Metropolitan Basketball
Conference race and the Violets
are already out of contention. In
addition, Mal Graham continued
his assault on the Hall of Fame
record books by netting 45 points.
He is currently the leading scorer
in the nation via his fine perform-
ance.
The first half began with a flur-
ry of fouls as both teams felt their
opposition out. Graham hit the ini-
tial goal for the Violets at 15:10
and put NYU ahead by one point.
Up to that point, a total of seven
fouls in a row were called on both
teams.
At 11:37 of the first stanza, Ka-
plan made good on a one-and-one
situation to put his team tempo-
rarily in the lead by one. Graham
added two more to the Violet bulge
t the freebee line before Chlupsa
evened the score on a layup.
In the last five minutes of that
period, Graham showed the crowd
what all-America stuff is made of.
He hit seven field goals in that
short stretch to put the Violets in
front by ten at the buzzer, 38-28.
The second half was a Violet
explosion. Graham, with the help
of some timely picks by Steve Ren-
nekamp, continued to score at will.
Jasper, Bill Goodfellow locked lost
on the court trying to contain the
flashy guard. Goodfellow finally
fouled out with 4:30 remaining.
Kaplan and Miller were deadly
from the outside and added to the
Violet Scout: Army
Army Mule Stubborn
By ANDY KIMERLING
In facing a typically tough Army team that has been giving up only 57.7 points per
game, the cagers will have to formulate an at tack that can successfully penetrate the Cad-
ets' defense. The Violets travel up to the 'Point' this Saturday for the game in a series that
started in 1907. Army has a
scorer with a 21.2
21-13 lead in the series and solther' frontcourt
the Violets have not won since
1963. NYU has lost four
games to the cadets in the
meantime, two of them by one
point.
Army, with a 10-8 record, uses a
tight man-to-man defense which is
the fourth stingiest in the country.
Like NYU, the Black Knights lack
height and thus are a ball control
team. Among the Cadets' victims
have been Manhattan, Fordham
(twice), Seton Hall, Holy Cross,
and Dartmouth. They have lost
close contest to St. John's, Prince-
ton, Cornell, and Purdue.
Forward Bill Schutsky, 6-2, from
Hillside, N. J., is the leading Army
average. At the
spot is Captain
Bill Shutsky
Dan Schrage, 6-1, who also plays
guard. Schrage is the team's top
defensive player. Last Saturday,
he and Mike Noonan, 6-6, teamed
up to hold St. John's all-American
Sonny Dove to ten points.
The center is Steve Hunt, a 6-6
sophomore from Westwood, Mass.
Hunt is the team's leading re-
bounder and is shooting at a 14.2
point per game clip. Hunt has a
fine hook shot and is especially
tough under the boards.
In the backcokrt, Ed Jordan, a
6-3 guard from Montgomery, Ala-
bama, is currently shooting at a
9.8 clip and is also tough on de-
fense. When Schrage plays up
front, either John Mikula, 6-0, or
Neil Hughes, also 6-0, team up
with Jordan.
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
NYU spread which grew and grew.
Play was sloppy in the last four
minutes. Manhattan, in utter des-
peration, tried to break up the
Hot
NYU freeze, only to foul in the
process. The buzzer sounded with
NYU on top, 76-63. Graham netted
a total of 45 points, his personal'
high in the Garden, Miller fol-
lowed with 14 markers and Kaplan
had nine.
Bruce Kaplan
Hand in. Second Half
Bud Cagers Take
Holy Cross Five
The NYU freshmen basketball
squad took their first road ' ip
with the varsity to Holy Cross last
Saturday and saved the show for
the group of five students and
cheerleaders who made the trip.
This year's band of rookies
thoroughly out-classed their Crus-
ader opponents, although the fans
who witnessed the contest at the
Worcester, Mass. Auditorium were
not exactly pleased by the 79-69
Violet win.
The freshmen, who shot a poor
percentage in the loosely played
first half, were led by 6-7 forward
Jim Signorelle and 6-1 playmaker
Dolph Porrata. Signorelle scored
23 points and dominated the boards
with 12 rebounds while Porrata
snapped the nets for. 22 points.
Other Violets who hit for double
figures were little John Kazanjian
with 12 points and guard Paul Do-
bleman with 13 points and ten re-
bounds.
The Holy Cross freshmen looked
lost on the court and were repeat-
edly . forced into fouling their op-
ponents by the steady ball-hand-
ling and play-making of their op-
ponents. Three Crusaders left the
contest with five fouls during the
second half.
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STAMP OUT YOUNG LOVE
It happens every day. A young man goes off to college,
leaving his home town sweetheart with vows of eternal
love, and then he finds that he has outgrown her. What, in
such cases, is the honorable thing to do?
Well sir, you can do what Crunch Sigafoos did.
When Crunch left his home in Cut and Shoot, Pa., to go
off to a prominent midwestern university (Florida State)
he said to his sweetheart, a wholesome country lass named
Mildred Bovine, "My dear, though I am far away in col-
lege, I will love you always. I take a mighty oath I will
never look at another girl. If I do, may my eyeballs parch
and wither, may my viscera writhe like adders, may my
ever-press slacks go baggy!"
Then he clutched Mildred to his bosom, flicked some
hayseed from her hair, planted a final kiss upon her fra-
grant young skull, and went away, meaning with all his
heart to be faithful.
But on the very first day of college he met a coed named
Irmgard Champerty who was studded with culture like a
ham with cloves. She knew verbatim the complete works
of Franz Kafka, she sang solos in stereo, she wore a black
leather jacket with an original Goya on the back.
Well sir, Crunch took one look and his jaw dropped and
his nostrils pulsed like a bellows and his kneecaps turned
to sorghum. Never had he beheld such sophistication, such
intellect, such savoir faire. Not, mind you, that Crunch
was a dolt. He was, to be sure, a country boy, but he had a
head on his shoulders, believe you me! Take, for instance,
bis choice of razor blades. Crunch always shaved with
Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, and if that doesn't
show good sense, I am Rex the Wonder Horse. No other
blade shaves you so comfortably so often. No other blade
brings you such facial felicity, such epidermal elan.
Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades take the travail out
of shaving, scrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull,
oust the ouch. Furthermore, Personnas are available both
in double-edge style and in injector style. If you're smart
?and I'm sure you are, or how'd you get out of high school
?you'll get a pack of Personnas before another sun has set.
But I digress. Crunch, as we have seen, was instantly
smitten with Irmgard Champerty. All day he followed her
around campus and listened to her talk about Franz Kafka
and like that, and then be went back to his dormitory and
found this letter from his home town sweetheart Mildred:
Dear Crunch:
Us kids had a keen time yesterday. We went down to
the pond and caught some frogs. I caught the most of
anybody. Then we hitched rides on trucks and did lots
of nutsy stuff like that. Well, I must close now because I
got to whitewash the fence.
Your friend,
Mildred
BS.... I know how to ride backwards on my skateboard.
Well sir, Crunch thought about Mildred and then he
thought about Irmgard and then a great sadness fell upon
him. Suddenly he knew he had outgrown young, innocent
Mildred; his heart now belonged to smart, sophisticated
Irmgard.
Being above all things honorable, he returned forth-
with to Cut and Shoot, Pa., and looked Mildred straight in
the eye and said manlily, "I do not love you any more. I
love another. You can hit me in the stomach all your might
if you want to:'
"That's okay, hey:' said Mildred amiably. "I don't love
you neither. I found a new boy:'
"What is his name?" asked Crunch.
"Franz Kafka:' said Mildred.
"I hope you will be very happy7 said Crunch and shook
Mildred's hand and they have remained good friends to
this day. In fact, Crunch and Irmgard often double-date
with Franz and Mildred and have barrels of fun. Franz
knows how to ride backwards on his skateboard one-legged.
* * * 431967.Max Shulman
So you see, all's well that ends well?including a shave
with Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades and
Personna's partner in luxury shaving?Burma-Shave. It
comes in menthol or regular; it soaks rings around any
other lather.
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
411111?."
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
? Unrecognized Group
? !May Get Loeb Rooms
By JUAN V. ORTIZ
Rooms in Loeb Student Center may soon become avail-
=
k able to unrecognized student organizations as an official
40 ? policy. Dr. Harold B. Whiteman, special assistant for stu-
dent affairs, said he favors
the plan.
The policy last spring was that
-4 Commerce and Ed
I 'A' Course Change
,.4
? (Continued from Page 1)
ci) humanities, social sciences, and
natural sciences.
0
ci Also, in certain subjects students
M can choose from among designated
W-courses in place of the A-course
-Na offered for that subject.
biD
? Students having at least 32
.0 credits may elect one pass-fail op-
tion per semester, in which he will
receive a P or F as his grade, in
place of a letter grade. The maxi-
mum number of pass--fail courses
per student is four one-semester
courses during his. college career.
In addition to this announcement
the regular bulletin listing courses,
faculty, fees, housing, etc., will
be sent to students in the spring.
i11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111/1111111111/11111111111111111111111111111111111111111t111111111111111111411111'
111/111111111111111111111I111111111111111111111111.11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111,11111111M2
iS
spelled
backwards
if
11111/1111111111,111/111111111111111//1111111111111111111111111111/1111/1111111111111/111141,1ido111111111/11III.-
i1111-1111.111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111117'
????????111111110600000001
ONLY ON SUNDAYS ?
5fo9P.M.
ANTHENTIC
NEW ORLEANS
JAZZ BY THE
SOUTHAMPTON
DIXIE,
RACING &
CLAMBAKE
SOCIETY
JAll BAND
YOUR FATHER'S
MUSTACHE
7th Ave. & 10th St.
FREE ADMISSION
WITH THIS AD
Siii*******???????601110
WANTED:
Photographers
Experienced or
inexperienced
Apply:
Washington Square
Journal, 915 Loeb
only those groups recognized by
All-Square Student Congress could
use rooms in Loeb. This rule has
not been enforced since the fall
term.
When the Committee to End the
War in Vietnam tried to reserve
a room in Loeb for a meeting re-
cently, they were denied the pri-
vilege "because they were not in
the list of recognized organiza-
tions," according to Leslie Cagan,
head of the Committee.
C. D. Spiegel, Loeb director, said
that this denial had been a mis-
t.ike. Any legitimate student or-
ganization, whether recognized by
Congress or not, may reserve a
room in Loeb, he said. But this is
not an official policy.
Dr. Whiteman said that he would
like to see the present practice be-
come the official policy. "IV3 can-
not deny our own students the
right to assemble," he said. How-
ever, he had earlier confirmed plans
to limit rooms to recognized
groups.
Dr. Whiteman will present his
views to the Commission on Stu-
dent Life at a meeting tomorrow.
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111P1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E1111111111111111 )11111!111111111111111111111:111111111111111111111111111111411111111111111111111111111J11111+1111i1111i1111111WRIIMI
TEP
IS REBUILDING
We will like to talk to you to about an exceptional opportunities Thursday
after 1:30 P.M. and Friday night after 8:00 P.M.
Note, one of the largest and strongest National or International Fraternities, with Chapters
in over 70 campuses throughout the United States and Canada and with 19 Chapters in the
metropolitan New York area, is reorganizing its Gamma Chapter at N.Y.U. Washington
Square.
The founders of this reorganized Chapter will be participating in perhaps the most memo-
rable and rewarding experience of their college careers. They will have the rare opportu-
nity to recreate a Fraternity based on the merit of new ideas ? NOT THE IGNORANCE OF
UNTHINKING TRADITION!
As you examine other Fraternities, think of the rare opportunity that TEP has to offer. We
extend to every member of this group the chance to assume leadership and responsibility
immediately, without the usual drudgery of a pledge period.
If you have 14 credits or more and fresh ideas of your own about what a fraternity ought
to be, accept our challenge. Discuss your ideas with us. Stop in and see us, and let us an-
swer any questions you may have concerning Tau Epsilon Phi or Fraternities in general.
Sincerely yours,
ERIC JONAS and AL VERSACCI
National Representatives
Chapter Headquarters - 8 Waverly Place
THURSDAY after 1:30 P.M.
FRIDAY after 8:00 P.M.
Ilfillii11111111111111N1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111M1111111111111M1111111111111111111111111111!11111111111111111111111111'11111ffill'1111,111111111111111110111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111imiiiiili
SS 396 Sport Coupe
SS396
And a new Turbo Hydra-Matic transmission for the driving man.
If you get tired of shifting, put it in "D".
Even a driving man's man can get tired
of clutching and shifting in a traffic
jam. But there are times when you want
to stir your gears by hand. A dilemma!
Until now, that is. Now you can order
Turbo Hydra-Matic in the SS 396. It's
GM
MANX Of EXCELLENCE
an automatic transmission you can shift
?really shift?for yourself. Feeling lazy?
Slip the selector into Drive and relax.
Want to play expert? So make beautiful
music on the gearbox. In the Chevelle
for the driving man, it's up to you.
THE QUICK-SIZE '67 CHEVELLE?Now at your Chevrolet dealer's
Approved-Frrr-Release-2-904/401-1-a-i-GIA-RDP-88-04.345R00.0200240.001 9
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Frat Adviser Calls for Trial Period
For Whitman House Plan Entry
By SAM DALIA
Robert A. Hogg, adviser to the
Violet Fraternity Council and co-
ordinator for student affairs, sug-
gested a "trial period" for the new
Walt Whitman House Plan to VFC
members at the group's meeting
Tuesday.
According to Mr. Hogg, the trial
period would allow time for the
Whitman House organization "to
prove themselves different" from
the fraternities. During this time,
the House would be subject to VFC
basic rules and standards.
Mr. Hogg had also proposed that
the House serve as non-voting rep-
resentative to the Council.
Upon completion of the trial
period, a general agreement by All-
Square Congress, VFC, Whitman
House, and Mr. Hogg would deter-
mine the status of the House Plan.
If classified as a fraternity, the
House would join VFC. If, how-
ever, it is designated a club, it
would seek acknowledgement by
All-Square Student Congress. The
possibility yet remains that the
House may not be required to join
either body, according to Mr. Hogg,
adviser to both organizations.
Stephen Sokolovsky, president of
Whitman House, said the House
"does not want to be affiliated
with the Violet Fraternity Council,"
but had no comment about joining
Congress.
VFC members oppose the House
on the grounds that its goals and
aims are similar in nature to those
of the fraternities and therefore
it should come under VFC auspices.
Bob Kaye, VFC president, said the
Whitman House has "as much right
to this campus as we do, but not
more than we do."
Richard M. Kraver, vice-president
of Congress, later added that twen-
ty clubs have been recognized by
Congress this year, "some of which
bear relationship to the fraterni-
ties." "Since the Whitman House
does not want to become a mem-
ber of VFC," he added, "and it
cannot stay in limbo, therefore, it
deserves the recognition of Con-
gress."
14111.1.1=1.0.1MPOOMMO?=?0401110.1.1.00.1?041.01
Join Journal
Loeb Student Center
Program Board
presents
Warren M. Smith
"am 4 antithical
pu2nwAt. Pluiduka:
Lecture and demonstrations of extra
sensory perception and telepathy.
Friday, Feb. 17, 8 to 10 P.M.
Top of the Park
Coffee will be served Admission Free
WHEN I WAS STILL IN
COLLEGE I HEARD Ti-IAT
WI-EN YOU WENT TO WORK
IN A LARGE CORPORATION...
AND THOUGHT ABOUT
WHAT YOU WOULD DO
IF ONLY THEY ASKED YOU
TO DO SOMETHING.
THEY PUT YOU IN -A
TRAINING PROGRAM
AND ALL YOU DID
WAS PAPER WORK
THAT WAe
LAGT JUNE
GENERALTELEPHONE& ELECTRONICS IS DIFFERENT. /
AND WENT TO
SOME ammo AND
WATCHED OTHER
PEOPLE WORK.
BEFORE I
WENT To WORK
AT GT&E
GTE
GOTANY IDEAS WE CAN USE?/ GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS
730 THIRD AVENUE, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10017
Approved For Release 2004/10/),3?: CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
.1
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Federal Grant Expected
n ?
For Project on Education
NYU will probably receive $130,000 from the Federal
government to participate in research with other universities
t's on ways to improve the education of the young.
E The Institute of Developmental t
Studies, which engages in psycho-
,*
p,, logical and social research, will ob-
. tam n the funds, Dr. Cynthia Dent-
d sch, resident scientist at the ins-
titute, said.
NYU's specific contribution, Dr.
g ? Deutsch said, would be in studying
NYU Prof Shares
7) Science Award
- .51,1 Prof. Albert S. Gordon, of the
?" Graduate School of Arts and
gSciences, and Dr. Donald Orlic, a
'4 former student of his, recently won
O the A. Cressy Morrisan Prize in
..4 Natural Sciences for research on
a the mechanism of action of eryth-
ropoietin, substance which stimu-
lates red blood cell production.
The award was given by the
New York Academy of Sciences.
The Laboratory of Experimental
Hematology at NYU, as well as
other laboratories around the world,
have partially purified this factor.
By FAYE BARTH
Erythropoietin causes primitive
blood stem cells to become red blood
cells rather than white. This factor
also stimulates 13`A and RNA syn-
thesis.
Once erythropoietin is highly
purified, Dr. Gordon speculated, it
might be used to treat incurable
anemias. 4
The Laboratory for Experimen-
tal Hematology is currently ex-
4
V
V
the "effects
velopment."
forts would
of environment on de-
She said that their ef-
concentrate on the ef-
fects of poor environment on the
young."
The participant schools will join
in a program to be known as the
National Laboratory in Early
Childhood Education. In the past,
research in early learning has
often uncoordinated. The labora-
tory will seek to develop coordin-
ated collaborative efforts.
The Federal support will enable
the various institutions named to
carry on existing research activi-
ties and launch new undertakings
as well.
tracting leukopoietin from blood
plasma. This material, believed to
stimulate white cell production,
may be used to combat blood dise-
ases associated with a deficiency
of white blood cells. Such diseases
occur in people exposed to
atomic radiation.
Ski Club
The Ski Club will have a day
trip on Washington's Birthday
to Belleayre or Hunter Mt. The
cost is $9.50 for members and
$10.50 for non-members, which
includes transportation, equip-
ment, instruction and refresh-
ments. Contact Born Friedman
at TR 6-3143 or OR 3-6388 or
at the Loeb control desk.
Russian Books
In New Library
The new Russian Library, a gift
of the Library for International
Studies, now makes available to
NYU students nearly 100,000 books
and periodicals concerning the
Soviet Union.
Its collection, accumulated
through private gifts, inheritance
and direct purchases includes such
rare periodicals as "Struggling
Russia," a publication released in
1919 by the Soviet information
bureau.
It subscribes to the "Kommunist,"
an ideological journal of the Soviet
Communist Party and to "Novy
Mir," the Soviet literary journal.
A variety of audio-visual mate-
rial, an index of the Soviet press
encompassing the years from 1936-
1948 and various Soviet legal docu-
ments are among the other special
materials offered by the library.
The Russian library is open from
10 to 6 p.m. Monday through Fri-
day. It is presently located at 21
West Fourt St., but will be trans-
fered, said Dr. Charles F. Gosnell,
director of the NYU libraries,
pending construction of the Elmer
Bobst Library and Study Center.
Miss Becker, Rose
On Senate Group
(Continued from Page 1)
more unique on student advisement
on the Board of Trustees."
Rose's view is that the Commis-
sion will be successful only if it is
able to coordinate the views of all
its members.
Miss Becker and Rose were un-
opposed. ?KOSTER
Teaching
Opportunities
with the
New York city
Board of Education
Beginners as well as experienced teachers are
invited to learn about the rewards of a teaching
career in the New York City schools.
Starting salaries for regular teachers range from
$5400 to $10,900 depending on education and
experience.
Substitute teachers may NOW receive salary credit
for prior experience.
Learn about the many opportunities for professional
advancement and our generous benefit programs
for teachers.
Immediate examination and placement for qualified
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHERS and secondary
teachers of English, home economics, industrial arts,
health education (women), mathematics, and science.
1
Spring schedule for regular teacher and supervisory
license examinations is now in effect.
For brochure (Corridors of Challenge) and complete details
visit, write or phone.
Bureau of Recruitment, Dept. C-10
New York City Board of Education
110 Livingston St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201
(212) 596-6464 or 65
?
N
V
\4
A Weekend Of Excitement
BROUGHT TO YOU BY
Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity
TODAY
BEER BLAST WITH NYWS FINEST, 3-6 P.M.
DINNER FOLLOWED BY ???
(BE THERE AND FIND OUT)
FRIDAY
MONTE CARLO NIGHT
BE A WINNER WITH ZBT ? 9 P.M. ? PRIZEST REFRESHMENTS
SATURDAY
LIMBO
LET ZBT TAKE YOU TO LIMBO . . . AND BACK
SEE THE INFERNO!
IT'S A HAIRY BUFFALO HAPPENING!
ZBT
ZETA BETA TAU
31 W. 4th St.
(Above Campus Coffeshop)
*STUDENTS MUST HAVE AT LEAST 14
CREDITS
11
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Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Ad Hoc Formulates Plans
As Hearings Begin Tomorrow
(Continued from Page 1)
would be forwarded to NYU Presi-
dent James M. Hester.
In another matter, at a Monday
meeting with students from the
Committee WSC Acting Dean Hen-
ry Noss said that a commission to
investigate the bookstore had not
yet been formed but he expected
it to contain five faculty members
and five students.
The dean, who will head the
group, said that h. will resign from
the committee if students are not
permitted a seat.
Dr. Noss said the committee
would consider four solutions for
the bookstore problem:
? An outright closing of the
store;
? Changing the store into a co-
operative;
? Turning the store over .to a
private concern;
? Altering "the character of the
store to make it fitting for a
great University."
Lester I. Brookner, director of
the University budget will also be
a member of the commission.
Also at the meeting Dr. Noss
said he was "skeptical" of student
participation in University policy
as proposed in the Committee's tri-
partite plan. The plan proposed by
the Committee followed December
tuition increase protests.
Dr. Noss said he thought crea-
SHANGHAI GARDEN
CHINESE RESTAURANT
Specializing in all Oriental
Cuisine
10% DISCOUNT TO
N.Y.U. STUDENTS
140 W 4 St. (Near 6th Ave.)
Tel. 982-7670 Orders to take out
11:30 a.m. ? 1-30 p.m.
BARNES & NOBLE
-COLLEGE OUTLINE
SERIES
tion of such a commission would
violate City and State by-laws re-
garding the structure of a Univer-
sity.
Dr. Noss was critical of the
Committee's sit-ins at the book-
store Thursday and Friday. He
said that the sit-ins "abused the
privileges of freedom of speech...
and alienated more student sup-
port."
Peter Ferrara, a member of the
Committee, however, said that ac=
tual protesting was "meaningless."
"The only meaningful thing is
change," he said.
LOW-COST
ADVENTURE TRAVEL
In the United States, Canada, Mexico,
Europe, Israel. Small coed hosteling
groups of all ages. Cycling, sailing,
pony-trekking, summer skiing, gliding
and other unusual outdoor trips, Includ-
ing non-activity tours, station-wagon
trips and overseas work program. Non-
profit organization. Write for free book-
let "Hosteling Holidays."
METROPOLITAN
NEW YORK COUNCIL
14 West 8 Street
New York,
New York 10011
(212) ORegon 4-1510
ROOMMATES, INC.
An exclusive apartment shar-
ing service for women only.
889-3238
280 Madison Ave. (40 St.)
Room 907
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ADVERTISEMENT
MORE GIRLS *
WANTED *
Why don't you telephone
879-8505 to find out how
you can earn $25 an hour
in your spare time?
SAVE 20% TO 40%
ONE OF THE 'LARGEST
SELECTIONS OF TRADITIONAL
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3 for $13.00 (Regular 5.50 to 6.95 ea.ch) ?
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FIELDCLUR
0752 BROADWAY(6th Floor Showroom)?1 WEST 8th St. (Annex Store)
? WESTFIELD, N.J..- 307 South Ave.
DEAR
14. Itlz II 4*.
A ? **
Composer wants to know the score on '67 compacts
DEAR REB:
I'm a well-known composer, and I need a new car.
The trouble is, I'm just too Bizet to pick one out. And
what's more, many of the new cars I see are Offen-
bach in the garage for repairs. But I do have a good
friend who is pleased with his new '67 Dodge Dart.
He was given an excellent deal and Berlioz any
money on it. My Bach is to the wall. Can you help me?
LUDWIG
DEAR LUDWIG:
My advice is that you let yourself Ravel in the enjoy-
ment of driving the sporty, all-new Dart for '67.
You'll find its Liszt price is a lot lower than you'd
expect. And even though it's longer outside and
bigger inside this year, Dart's still an easy car to
Handel.
,
Z.q
*Here's the swinging, man-sized compact for '67 that's got three B's of
its own: Bold, Brassy and Beautiful. Dart has been completely restyled
this year, inside and out. It's longer, roomier, more powerful. But still at
that snug compact price. Drop in at your nearest Dodge Dealer's and
try it out for yourself.
Dodge
CHRYSLER
MOTORS CORPORATION
THE DODGE REBELLIO ITANTS YOU
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
4
Library Shadow Revisited
Protest
By RAYMOND GNIEWEK
Greenwich Village residents op-
posing the NYU library design
yesterday brought the "shadow ar-
gument" back into the controver-
sy in a lively two-and-three-quar-
ter hour zoning hearing.
The hearing at the Board of
Standards and Appeals was finally
continued until May 2 to await the
decision of a court appeal lodged
by four Village residents. Stanley
Saplin, NYU director of public re-
lations, said he expected a decision
from the Board then if the court
case is settled.
An NYU lawyer also revealed a
letter sent by Parks Commissioner
Thomas P. F. Hoving to the Board
which opposed arguments that the
library would cast too large a
shadow on Washington Square
Park. Mr, Hoving, however, said
h- was concerned with the build-
ings width.
Village residents claim that the
proposed 150-foot building would
cast an oppresive shadow on the
park. The "shadow argument" do-
minated the Villagers' objections
when the library 'design was of-
ficially presented a year-and-a-half
ago.
Since then the Villagers have
shifted the controversy to the
University's use of 40 public feet
of West Broadway. They say the
40 feet should instead be used as
part of a "grass gateway" from
Houston Street to Washington
Square South.
However, one of the four Villa-
gers involved in the lawsuit recent-
ly privately derided the "shadow
argument."
The zoning hearing stems from
the proposed building's violation
of ordinances limiting its height
and bulk (the amount of space a
building takes on a plot of land.)
The library design's opponents
also testified on the University's
alleged bad faith with the com-
munity despite admonitions from
Edward W. Kleinert, the board's
acting chairman, to talk only on
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
Height
the issue's zoning aspects.
The Villagers claim that the
University promised it would not
construct a building higher than
60 feet.
The lawyer representing the
University reminded the Board
of Mr. Hoving's letter which said,
"I have stated in public several
times that I do not believe that
tin. "shadow" controversy has any
validity. My sole concern has been
whether or not the width of the
proposed structure will encroach
upon the southern approach to
Washington Square Park."
The court appeal stems from the
State Supreme Court's refusal to
overturn the City's approval of the
library. The Board of Estimate on
Aug. 25 had allowed NYU to use
the 40 feet of land and build a
150-foot library without setbacks.
MEXICAN HOLIDAY
CHARTER
FOR JULY 1967 (17 NIGHTS - 18 DAYS)
? INCLUDES: Jet Airfare Round Trip.
lst Class hotels. Mexico City (8 nights)
Tosco F.A.P. (1 night) Acapulco (8
nights)
? ALSO INCLUDED: All transfers -
Transportation Tours - Mexico City -
Xochimilco - Lunch - Bullfight - Ma.
puke - Yacht cruise.
PRICE ONLY $387
For Information: Call Professional-Alumni
Assoc. Inc. 597-1777 or 824-0644
* GIRLS WANTED
We plan to handout between
$75,000 and $100,000 to part-
time womens during the next
twelve months.
Don't miss this opportunity to
earn from $5 to $25 an hour
in your spare time.
Telephone 879-8505
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LEADERSHIP
Alpha Kappa PSI
invites you to hear
JACK WUNDER
of
DALE CARNEGIE
APARTMATES
One of Manhattan's Finest
and most Economical
Roommate
Service
Exclusively for Women -
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Hairstylist
?o Mea ?
Coiffeur Pour Messieurs
European Razor Technique
Hair. Coloring
Theatrical Styling
Hair Straightening
flair Pieces Re-styled
GR 5-9555
231 Thompson St. llist off Mini St.))
46414111111.0.111100.1.0041411111M.110100=M0.11111.41111.141111110.1.111?0. 112
Dc you have a skin problem?
Mme. lby Farkas is a European
pore cleaning and shrinkage.
beauty to any complexion. Also
Come in for free consultation.
Tel.: PLaza 5-2090
By appointment only:
no
skin expert specializing in
She guarantees new skin
individual makeup lessons. 0-3
`-1
Nan Orcel Salon de Beaute
14 East 56th Street
New York, N.Y. 10022 ql
(s)
-4
speak on
Leadership in Business
8: 1 5 P.M.
Thursday
February 16, 1967
255 GREENE ST.
behind Weinstein dorms
* YOU MUST HAVE 14 CREDITS TO PARTICIPATE
IIMI.M11:1?1:1?11Z ..111.1M11`011,1=0?.1.1.110,11.? OM le .1.,11111..111115 OMZ 1?11,1=b1=k41110?11`11111kiWkIM
MEET THE MEN WHO ARE THE
ALPHA EPSILON P1 FRATERNITY
18 EAST 10th STREET
(Between 5th Avenue and University Place)
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17th at 9:00 P.M. ?
ALPHA AU GO-GO PARTY
Live Band, Free Beer, and Loads of Girls
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18th at 9:00 P.M. ?
OLDIES BUT GOODIES PARTY
Stag or Drag, Entertainment, and Frefreshments
*14 or more credits to participate
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When you
can't afford
to be dull
sharpen your wits
with NoDoz
NoDoz keep alert tablets or new
chewable mints, safe as coffee,
help bring you back to your
mental best.. help you become
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Non-habit forming.
Tablets or new Chewable Mints
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FORGET bought for the mid-year exams. Just mail us the front panel or
label from any size package of NoDoe with this coupon. And
YOUR well mail you a quarter (258) in return. But hurry. Offer ends
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1 5t000200240001-9
1.1 IMO WO MMMMMMMMMMM 11
Washington Square Journal, Thursday, February 16, 1967
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Can
you
make it
as .a
modem
banker
A banker today is a lot more than a money
specialist who waits for the community to come
to him. He's a well-rounded, imaginative indi-
vidual who knows how to present a package of
financial services to fill his client's needs. He's
professionally involved with every kind of busi-
ness, from government to space exploration to
problems of emerging nations. And he can't be
pigeonholed because versatility is one of the
keys to his success.
He has job status and pride of profession.
And his compensation and employee benefits
are the envy of many.
His training is thorough and guided by expe-
rienced seniors who cushion the rough spots
and put him on the high road when he's ready
in his own mind and deed.
Before you make your big career decision,
take a long look at banking. Ambition is the
key, and the best way to check yourself out is
to set up a give-and-take session with a Chase
Manhattan Banker.
One more thing.
Modern banking is in. It asks for versatile,
creative, imaginative men who want to range
the community, the nation and the whole wide
world.
?
Discuss the possibilities of a career in modern
banking. A Chase Manhattan banker will be on
campus soon. Your Placement Office will tell you
when and where.
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK
National Association/1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York,
New York 10015 ? Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
An Equal Opportunity Employer
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The. Mail
Wild-Running Cancers and Pre-Fitted Pegs
To the Editor:
"He who witnesses a crime in silence, commits it."
(Jose Marti)
0 nJan. 12, Journal ran an editorial, "Come CIA,
Come All," saying, "Any organization that wants to reach
students, whether it be the CIA, the Armed Forces, CORE
or SNCC, should be allowed to work through the NYU
Placement Service." This is the "tolerant" liberal swill
which would allow the KKK to come on campus "to lynch
some niggers, in order to give the students an idea of
what the organization is like?an extremely apt com-
parison when one considers what the CIA's role has been.
After the military coup in Indonesia culminated in the
slaughter of one million citizens, the New York Times
(Apr. 27, 19(16) printed, "In Southeast Asia over the last
decade, the CIA has been so active that the agency in some
countries has been the principal arm of American policy.
It is said, for instance, to have so infiltrated the top of the
Indonesian government and Army that the U.S. was re-
luctant to disrupt CIA covering operations by withdraw-
ing aid and information programs in 1964 and 1965 [when
Sukarno told the USA where to get-off]." (Brakets mine.)
Students are encouraged to never make a judgment,
but to allow al the cancers to run wild. The University,
aimed at producing a pre-fitted peg for a slot in the putre-
fying system, is definitely not going to allow the student
to consider himself a worthy judge of anything.
Hasn't enough been exposed about this cancer to ban
it fro mthe University? It is time to make a value judg-
ment. Even the most naive student can see what "toler-
ance" the U.S. government practices, when it refuses to
allow the Vietnamese to decide on their own government.
Why foster this myth on the campus today? The game is
through, contrary to whatever is said by the University;
now comes the responsibility of seeing the crime and root-
ing it out once and for all.
Allan A. Shapiro
Courant Institute of
Mathematical Sciences
Books ,Rocks and Demostrations
To the Editor:
Not only is the NYU bookstore inefficient, disorgan-
ized, ill-stocked, uncooperative and profiteering, it is down-
right bloody dishonest.
This semester I enrolled for Geology I (required);
rocks also required, unprovided for by the $50 "services"
fee these have to be bouth. So I took my little yellow box
to the checkout.
Me: Seven dollars for a pile of rocks? Are they sold by
the ounce?
Check-out clerk: (shrug)
Me: Do I get a refund when I turn them in at the end
of the term?
C-OC: Sure.
Me: How much?
C-OC: (shrug)
Last week I went back.
Me: How much do I get back on these?
Stout man with scowl: (after long pause) Nuttin'.
Me: Look, I was told I could return these for a refund.
SMWS: Nope.
Me: You mean I don't get anything back at all?
SMWS: (silence)
Exit me, after reconsidering plan to scatter rocks on
floor and tromple into dust.
Anybody who wants to abolish the present bookstore
for any honest or student-oriented substitute has my vote.
Meanwhile, can anyone think of some non-violent de-
monstration using rocks?
Richard Perry
WSC '68
WASHINGTON 3ournai SQUARE.
The editorial office Is located in 915 and the business office is located
In 913 Loth Student Center, Washington Square, New York, N.Y. 10003.
Both offices can be reached by calling SPring 7-6320 or SPring 7-7003,
WASHINGTON SQUARE JOURNAL Is published twice a week by and
for the students at the Washington Square campus, New York University.
extensions 55, 56 and 57.
Managing Board
Nancy McKeon . Editor
Ira Pollack Business Manager
Andrew Cagen Managing Editor
Barry Altman Sports Editor
Thomas S. Meltzer Advertising Manager
Associate Board
Richard Prince . Copy
Sergio Lalli . ? Copy
Robert Oppedisano News
Terence Bertele . Features
Walter Feigenson Photography
Jerry Bergman . Sports
Andy Kimerling Sports
Lou Capozzi . Advertising
Maxene Sigberman Circulation
The next issue of Journal will appear Monday, Feb. 20, 1967.
Editorials
A Fair Hearing
It can be argued that the students who sat
in the bookstore last week would be better off had
they been arrested instead of being brought be-
fore an NYU disciplinary committee.
In a court at least the students would be en-
sured of due process and their right to counsel
would never be questioned.
The University, however, is under no legal
obligation to protect the students' right and if
past performance is any guide, it does not seem
willing to do so.
The early developments of the sit-in hear-
ings are similar to the University's actions in last
year's marijuana incident. At that time, NYU
evicted seven students from Weinstein Residence
Halls for allegedly smoking marijuana there. The
University conducted an investigation and subse-
quently told four of the students they could re-
apply to the dormitory. (The students never did
move back in.)
The Administration pointed out that the ma-
rijuana investigations were conducted in a per-
sonal, not judicail, atmosphere.
This personal atmosphere also happened to
deny students protections they would have in the
judicial system.
Now the students who sat in will be "tried"
in closed bearings and without counsel. While the
Guest Cohiniti
hearings may be completely legal, under this set- 4
up they cannot be called fair.
We feel the University is conducting closed E:
hearings without counsel to minimize publicity
and, thus, protect its own image. Since citywide 3
publicity on the results of the hearings seems
inevitable anyway, the University would seem to .ct
have little more to lose by conducting them in an si
honorable fashion.
Rocking the Boat
The recent news that the United States Nat-
ional Student Association has been receiving al-
most half its budget since 1952 from the Central
Intelligence Agency has caused many raised eye-
brows in university circles around the country.
The irony of the situation is, of course, that people
have long accused NSA of being a leftist organiza-
tion, while it has all along actually been subsidized
by a Federal government agency.
An Ramparts magazine advertisement ap-
pearing in the New York Times Tuesday, which
told of the publication's expos?suggested that
the CIA owes an apology to the youth of the
country for underwriting and, evidently subvert-
ing the purposes of NSA.
In view of the fact, however, that it was ac-
tually NSA which approached the CIA for funds,
we would suggest, rather, that NSA apologize for
permitting itself to be "bought."
Asesino, Asesino
By JOYCE MESCHMARImirdimethinsinnugailuimilliiiiiimilliiimiltriviuniiiiiiirdimiiilliliiima
(The author is a 21-year old Spanish major at TIFSC par-
ticipating in the University's junior year in Madrid prog-
ram. Following arc her observations on the current anti-
government protests at the Sapinsh University.)
My literature class was interrupted by the roar of
"Asesino, asesino!" and we knew the annual Rites of
Spring had commenced at the University of Madrid. The
professor's face took on a pained expression as he told us
"It's just another anti-Franco demonstration." Curiosity
and fright broke up the class as we ran outside to gawk.
There in the broad expanse of yard between the Schools
of Law and Philosophy, we witnessed a most ridiculous and
childish outburst of supossedly political basis. Lines of
police facing lines of male students were throwing rocks
at each other and laughing. The onlookers were cracking
up with laughter as they yelled insults at the police, tell-
ing then to get off their campus.
A group of us Americans bravely made our way out
the door and, since our blond hair and ski jackets, we
left no doubts as to our nationality, we rated a police es-
cort to the trolley.
Naturally we couldn't wait to get back to the action
after lunch. Much had passed in an hour. The buildings
were locked, the street covered with stones and broken
glass, and the grounds crawling with policemen.
It was definitely worth the 2-peseta ride to witness
the display the students were now putting on, One group
about five-deep was spread acrosS the street blocking all
traffic to and from the campus. Another sizeable lot was
atop the Physics building beating out their war cry on
an amplified drum. And a third group was placing logs
across the trolley tracks and disconnecting the electic wir-
ing. What was the purpose of all this play? We asked
several cowardly bystanders and they responded by laugh-
ing and saying "just demonstrations."
I returned to my dorm thoroughly disgusted but an-
xious to talk to someone who had helped organize the de-
monstration or who at least could speak about it ration-
ally. My wish was fulfilled as I went to my room and found
four Spanish girls having a typically Spanish heated ver-
bal battle.
Immediately it was obvious to me that their feelings
about the demonstration stemmed from their political
backgrounds. Basically those who were pro-Franco were
anti-demonstration and viceversa. This is not because the
demonstration represented a direct attack on the regime,
but due to a more profound feeling of either passively
accepting situations or trying to change them. And this
is, of course, a consequence of their civil war. The stu-
dents are still strongly influenced by parents who exper-
ienced the war and are either grateful to Franco for
twenty years of peace after three years of horrors, or who
are still resentful of the outcome and restless. It seems
that student and worker strikes ignited the reactions that
led to the civil war; this explains the large forces of police
on the campus who, by the second day of the demonstra-
tions, were also stationed at strategic corners and plazas
throughout the city.
Despite all the talk it was still difficult to get a
straight answer as to why the students were rioting. It
seems that various groups were reacting against the half-
peseta (one U. S. cent) raise in public transportation, an
increase which, although not as radical as the New York
transit increase, still affects the students' expenses the
university is a commuter school and Spanish students do
not have an abundance of money.
Others were reacting to the National Referendum
voted on before Christmas, a document which did nothing
but deceive the public by way of propaganda before the
voting, and which promises nothing in the line of more
liberties in the long run.
Both of these factors gave rise to a third component
of the riots ?sympathy demonstrations for and with
workers. On the third day of demonstrations, after the
university had been closed for two days, students and
workers demonstrated together in one of the large pla-
zas downtown.
This is where the big dispute arose among the stu-
dents with whom I spoke. The non-demonstrators felt that
students and workers should remain separate. They form
different sectors of society and by banning together with
workers, students would receive only worse publicity and
less support. Lack of mutual support by students was also
attributed to the poor organization on their part which
spurred distrust and, consequent sideline heckling. Another
factor contributing to the lack of unity is the fact that
411 percent of the student body of the University of Ma.
drid have fathers who are employed by the State in re-
latively high positiOns. Hence, these students could not
participate because of either strong parental influence
with respect to opinions toward the regime or fear of
being recognized in the riots and having their fathers'
positions endangered. The regimental influence is so
strong here in the capital that students seem to depend
on revolts in the universities of Barcelona, Zaragoza, or
Valencia for sympathy demonstrations of more force and
consequent results. They did demonstrate sympathy; they
did demonstrate strength; they did not reap any results.
How did that week of riotous student martydom ter-
minate? The University of Madrid was ordered to close
for two weeks, and the Economics School ordered not to
re-open until April as punishment for having produced the
instigators. Students in Barcelona must repay their ma-
triculation fee in order to re-enter. These ultimatums af-
fect all Spanish students. Many in Economics will be set
back a year if they cannot pass their exams in June after
having studied independently between February and April.
The state has employed surprisingly poor psychology
in its means of ending the rebellions. Many claim that in
past years if the students went back to classes directly
after the riots, there was only more unrest and disturbance
within the classrooms. But this year Big Brother has
really taken his belligerent childrens' toys away ?but
left them with only more hatred and deeper reasons to
give an encore next year.
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A publisher's survey
of what's new in the way
- ? of unrequired reading
alaretwA0?,
The building of a new hydroelectric power station in
Siberia may not seem like the most promising subject
matter for a 150-page epic poem. And it wild be
difficult to imagine one of our own poets ? perhaps
Allen Ginsberg? ? singing an unsatirical paean of
praise to the Hoover Dam.
But the poet in this case is very serious. He is also
one of the most exciting in the world, one who uses
the power station as a framework on which to hang his
unique view of existence. Yevgeny Yevtushenko is the
poet; the poem is Bratsk Station, and it is, in the words
of Vogue Magazine, the 33-year-old Russian's "newest
and perhaps his greatest."
Some of you may already be familiar with a bit of
Bratsk Station, for on his recent tour of American
colleges, Yevtushenko read parts of it to enthusiastic
audiences. Now the whole epic cycle of 35 poems, along
with 26 other new poems (on such diverse subjects as
seals, jukeboxes, and the death of Edith Piaf) are col-
lected in a new Doubleday Anchor Original paperback.
In the introduction to Bratsk Station and Other New
Poems, translated by Tina Tupikina-Glaessner, Geof-
frey Dutton, and Igor Mezhakoff-Korialin ($1.25),
Rosh Ireland calls Bratsk "a second autobiography.
Besides Yevtushenko's view of history, it contains . . .
the coalescing of a coherent view of his errors in the
past and determination for the future . . . and a vast
amount of evidence on his view of himself and his own
generation."
Mr. Ireland sees Yevtushenko "as a poet whose value,
like his inquiry, extends beyond the boundaries of the
Soviet Union, and whose work is properly the concern
of all to whom poetry is important." Yevtushenko him-
self, in setting himself the monumental task of this
distinctly Russian, yet universal poem, writes in a
prologue,
the poet is his century's image,
and the visionary symbol of the future.
Without shyness, the poet summing up
the total, all that has happened before him...
Can I do this?
On the evidence, the answer is yes.
Another author who set himself a monumental task
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The two books reviewed above are published by the sponsors
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BARNES & NOBLE
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CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
PRIDE AND PREIUDICE
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MOBY DICK
THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
IVANHOE
HUCKLEBERkY FINN
THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN
GABLES
SILAS MARNER
THE SCARLET LETTER
A TALE OF TWO CITIES
PARADISE LOST
RED BADGE OF COURAGE
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
THE ILIAD
EMMA
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ACTION
IMECT,IFAT
DISPATCH
PREPARE REPLY
RECOMMENDATION
APPROVAL
COMMENT
FILE
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks:
Enclosed are the only copies available to
local FBI of:
1. Leaflet of New York State Communist Party
headed, "Care for Murder, Sabotage, Sub-
version? Then the CIA Wants You!"
2. Article on Page 3 of "Washington Squ,g-re
Journardated 16 February 67 under the headini
"Student Steadfast in Plan to Protest with
Red Lit". As already mentioned. student
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME. ADDRESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
Chief, New York OfficeL7 Feb.6
UNCLASSIFIED 1 1 CO N1DEN11AL I I SECRET
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THE(
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41111111111?1???
HE\
AWA\ TS Y !!
Although living in mortal fear of publicity, agents of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have received notoriety as
freewheeling, international cloak and dagger operators. Scattered
news reports of CIA inspired coups and counter-coups, sabotage,
election rigging and training of "counter-insurgency" commando
forces make James Bond's antics look like child's play.
Acting on behalf of various huge American business concerns
(Gulf oil in Iran, United Fruit Co. in Cuba, etc.) and in brutal
disregard for the popular will of the countries in which it
operates, the CIA works to insure a high rate of return on US
corporate investment abroad.
CIA vs N
'Its latest conquest is a little closer to home. On Tuesday
and Wedsnesday of this week the New York Times carried an expose
of C/A financing of the international activities of the
Rational Student Association. What interest could the CIA have
in American student affairs? The truth is the CIA has been
manipulating NSA's international work for years now, misusing
NSA to undermine the activity of the world student and youth
movements.
On Friday, February 17th the CIA will utilize University
facilities to attempt to recruit new agents from among the
student body.
Mom..
XDOS
LI
S11
The basis for the CIA's existence and unlimited novernment
funding is the conspiracy theory of history- the "Big Lie"
which states that the world is under seige by an "international
Communist conspiracy". To counter "the red menace" the CIA
wheels and deals willy nilly, extending the Cold War and creating
hot ones. It is in the name of anti-Communism that Hitler launched
his horrible crusade. It is in the name of anti-Communism that
the CIA subverts democracy around the globe.
Student representatives of the Communist Party of New York
will set up a table near the site of the CIA recruitment booth:
to counter the distortions about Communism and the Communist
Party; to protest the presence of this undercover agency at NYU
and to give students a chance to find out for themselves what
Communists really stand for.
LOOK FOR US BETWEEN 43 & 51 West 4th STREET OPPOSITE THE ANTA
WASHINGTON SQUARE THEATRE FROM 10 A.M. till 5.
Sponsored by New York State Communist Party.
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A COMBAT
Special Report
Vin t=
LIBERATION LEA
the CP's New Baby
219172
5.-; tot c Pct S A
For more than a year now the Communist Party,
U.S.A., has agonized over a tough decision?what to do
about the foundering W. E. B. DuBois Clubs of America.
Branded by FBI Director I. Edgar Hoover as a Com-
munist front group, and deserted by young revolution-
aries who couldn't tolerate the strict discipline and obe-
dience to the Party line, the DuBois Clubs collapsed. At
the end its membership was less than 100.
Undaunted, Party leaders decided to bury the DuBois
Clubs corpse, and come up with a new youth group.
Almost a year of planning went into assembling the or-
ganization that succeeds the DuBois Clubs. Carefully-
screened delegates gathered Feb. 7-9 at the Sherman
House in Chicago, and launched a new youth group.
This exclusive COMBAT Special Report is based upon
information collected inside the convention hall.
Publicly the Communist Party's new youth group is call-
ing itself the Young Workers Liberation League, but that's
only half of the story. Like Janus it has two heads. It is also
called the Young Communist Liberation League, and in the
final hours of the convention the delegates endorsed a
policy of permitting the clubs in the various states to op-
erate under either name?whichever name would recruit
the most members, whichever name would least generate
hostile action against it.
The young liberators are going to walk softly for a time,
and they don't want to precipitate any "counter-revolution-
ary" action until they are fully organized. An observer
noted that from his vantage point there appeared to be
more Communists than workers present. Y(C)WLL claims
it now has 800 members nationally, and that 100 of them
are shop and industrial workers. Hardly a major inroad
into the proletariat.
The convention, twice postponed, was openly dominated
by the Communist Party, U.S.A. The CP picked the loca-
tion, the date, the delegates, fixed the agepda, wr6te the
resolutions and selected the executive staff and central com-
mittee.
The 395 persons who attended the convention were just
there to perform, in lock-step fashion, the old ritual of en-
dorsing what the leaders have decided is best. This is
known as "democratic centralism."
Of the nearly 400 persons who attended the meeting,
only 275 were certified as delegates. Another 91 persons
came, officially listed as "observers," meaning that they
were already members of the fledgling group, but did not
vote with their state delegations. About 50 persons were
permitted through the tight security screen as guests. This
last group included 14 foreign guests, and the principal
speaker, the man without whose O.K. the league could
never have been founded: Gus Hall, general secretary of
the Communist Party.
Little attempt was made to conceal the fact that the
Young (Communist) Workers Liberation League is just the
successor organization to the W.E.B. DuBois Clubs. Jarvis
RKERS
placed in nomination (and elected, of course) to the cen-
tral committee, and the central committee then named him
to the interim executive staff. He has been designated chair-
man of the Y(C)WLL. Tyner, from Philadelphia, was
listed on one biographical paper distributed to the press
as "a member of the Executive Committee of the National
Organizing Committee for a Marxist-Leninist Youth Or-
ganization [the shadow group which "officially" issued the
call for this Chicago meetingi, and a member of. the Na-
tional Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A." A sub-
sequent biographical sketch given newsmen dropped the
reference to Tyner's membership on the CP's national com-
mittee.
Tyner gave the convention keynote speech. Among his
revelations was that Y(C)WLL would support a Black
Panther defense conference to be held March -7-8 in
Chicago. This was not the only demonstration that the CP's
new youth group was going to implement the parent party's
campaign to move closer to the Panthers. Several known
members of the Black Panther Party were seen on the floor,
with delegate credentials.
Few blacks had major influence at the convention, ex-
cept those who were known as CP members. A heavy hand
kept some of the more militant blacks from realizing their
demands. For instance, one major project of some of the
non-CP blacks was to get convention approval of a resolu-
tion that blacks, as oppressed people, had a right to pick u?
guns and shoot "the madmen in blue" (the resolution'a
phrase), but the manipulators disapproved of this provoca-
tive gesture and headed it off. They used the old "safety-
valve" technique. Negro delegates were permitted to speak
to the point from the floor, but the leaders carefully
avoided calling for the question. Speaker followed speaker,
but the managers pushed the whole issue aside and in 15
minutes it was forgotten.
One Southern California Negro openly complained, from
the floor, that when the black people say "It's time to pick
up the gun" the white comrades yell, "Right on!" but they
don't bother picking up the gun to help. This complaint
that too many whites view Negroes as cannon fodder was
greeted by a chorus of "Right on!" from many of the
white delegates, proving the point. The matter was dropped.
A young Negro observer from Schenectady, N.Y., was
first ignored, finally applauded, when he tried to explain the
difficulties in getting Negroes to join. an organization that
calls itself Communist. In Schenectady, of course, the group
is going to surface publicly as the Young Workers Libera-
tion League. The Daily World carefully avoided identifying
this speaker. He is Willie Adams.
The convention also made a special pitch to Puerto
Ricans and other Spanish-speaking youths and the manipu-
lators drew up a resolution?naturally approved?support-
ing the Young Lords. The convention sent a telegram to
the Young Lords: "We recognize and support the initia-
tives taken by the Young Lords across the nation to ease
Puerto Ricans in the barrios . . ."
Tyner, 27, the natigq5130310trelaFaiJIJ O5t1 : C1-geNtiZsgM862oo24000i -9 Vol. 2, No, 5
Combat, March I, 1970
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
(1)
JAM BOND (Blk. Wrk. M.)
N. California'
(2)
MIKE LIMA (W. Wrk. M.)
N. California
(3)
KENDRA ALEXANDER (Elk. S. F.)
S. California
(4)
ROBERTA WOODS (4.1Nrk.F.)
S. California
(5)
CAROLYN BLACK F.T. F.)
Illinois
(6)
SAM DAVIS ('4. Wrk. M.)
Illinois
(7)
JAY SCHAFFNER (W. F.T. M.)
Illinois
(8)
JAN T BAYER (W. Wrk. F.)
Indiana
PROPOSALS
(9)
(10)
BARRY COHEN (W. F.T. M.)
JOHN LINE (Blk. Wrk. M.)
Michigan
Michigan
FROM' PRES IDING
(11)
(12)
APRIL SMITH F.T. F.)
PETER HALFKENNY (Blk, Wrk. M.)
Michigan
Mass.
COMMITTEE FOR
(13)
SUZANNE SIMON (W. S. F.)
Boston
(14)
JUDY EDELMAN W. Wkr. F.)
New York
CENTRAL
(15)
VICKI MISSICK (Blk.
New York
(16)
DENNIS MORA (P.R. Wrk. K.)
New York
COMMITTEE
(17)
ROQUE RISTORUCCI (P.R. F.T. M.)
New York
(18)
DONNA RISTORUCCI (W. F.T. F.)
New York
(19)
JOSE STEVENS (Blk. F.T.. M.)
New York
(20)
JAMES JOHNSON Wrk. M.)
New York
LAUREN LOCKSKIN W. F.T. F.)
Ohio
i21)
22)
ID1k.
JARVIS TYNER Blk, F.T. N.
W. Penn.
23)
NEROLDEEN STORY Blk. Wrk. M.)
E. Penn.
(24)
JULIE BORTZ W. Wrk. F.)
W. Penn.
(25)
JIM FERLO (W. 'Irk. M.)
W. Penn.
(26)
MIKE AZGARELL (W.F.T. M.)
New York
SHABAZZ (Blk. S. M.)
Tennessee
i27)
28)
RANDY SHANNON (W. Wrk. M.)
Tennessee
29)
VALERIE STUDANIRE (Blk. S. F.)
Washington (state)
(30)
HARRY SHAW (W. S. M.)
West Virgida
(31)
SUSAN SHIPPEE (W. Wrk. F.)
Wisconsin
(32)
Chicano youth
YOUNG (COMMUNIST) WORKERS LIBERATION LEAGUE Central Committee: This is the list of "approved" central com-
mittee members submitted for the delegates ratification at Chicago. Members are identified by race, sex and occupation. Bik. =
Black; W. = White; P.R. = Puerto Rican; Chicano = Mexican-American; M. and F. = Mak and Female; Wrk. = Worker; S.
= Student; and F.T. = Full Time organizer. *I is correctly James Bonds. #7 Jay Schaffner was replaced by Harold Rogers,
a Chicago Negro student. *32 is Juan Lopez, a Latin from San Francisco. #33 is Anita Satisfleld, Chicago Negro. #34 is a
high school student and #35 is vacant, so far as COMBAT can learn1 *27 is Eddie Shabazz, #26 is correctly Mike Zagarell.
,
The Young Lords' only initiative at that time consisted
solely of seizing one church in Spanish Harlem.
The delegates were presented with a mimeographed slate
of Party-approved people to elect to a 35-member central
committee. The list, "Proposals From Presiding Committee
for Central Committee," contained only 32 names.
Final approval to the central committee list came after
delegations from the 21 states represented there had
caucused. The caucuses produced the only drama?and re-
sistance to the well-oiled convention machinery?of the
three days. One of the proposed central committee mem-
bers was deposed, for strictly ethnic reasons. Jay Schaffner,
an energetic 18-year old white youth from Chicago, who
had done much to build student participation in the con-
vention, was summarily removed from his promised seat
(#7) on the central committee. This caused some Conster-
nation among white delegates.
"We had a problem," one of the manipulators privately
conceded. "Carolyn Black demanded Jay's seat on the
central committee for a black. She had been screaming at
us for weeks that we were racist MF's. If we refused her
The Middle-aged commentator was just one of a number
who roathed the convention floor, keeping the meeting run-
ning smoothly, buttonholing and congratulating delegates,
and generally functioning like floor managers at a national
political convention.
Daniel Rubin, national organizational secretary of the
CP, played a major behind-the-scenes role. Each delegate
received a letter from Rubin, on CP stationery, with his
best wishes, and enclosing a packet of CP literature. Rubin
also issued instructions to his errand box, rotund Michael
Zagarell, another memher of the, cP's national committee,
who officiously waddled around, relaying the word to Tyner
or Carolyn Black or the other prime movers.
Zagarell is once again wearing two hats. He's educational
secretary of the Y(C)WLL and national youth director of
the CPUSA.
The approved list of temporary officers of the Y(C)WLL
includes Tyner as Chairman, Carolyn Black as Black
Liberation Secretary, Zagarell as Education Secretary, Barry
Cohen of Michigan [former SDS activist] as Organizational
we would only have proven her point." A middle-aged Secretary; Judith Walborn Edelman of New York City as
supervisor butted in: "Don't worry about Jay. If he works Trade Union Secretary [she works for District 65 Distribu-
hard and keepsliiilkitgounitMilyt '
s
elT604110W3k: ClgAMW;b1/81kdtg94280/A515I5C09as Publications Di-
into the central colfiEutte-e:"- rector.
t
Approved For For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240901-9
rt-tt
LONGVIEW, ' WASH.
NEWS
E ? 21,292
JUN 2 0'19
W-7-7
The Communist conferences:
uch ado about very little
11E THOUGHT COMES 'to mind, after
t ?-? reading about the World Communist
Conference that ended recently in Moscow,
? that the Iron Curtain brass have something
t, in common with our own politicians.
Namely, a great deal of talk, and very,
f little in the way of action or results. For
unless something emerges later?possibly
k years later?the conference that Moscow
has tried for five years to get under way.
produced not much more than the usual
? florid assertions of "unity of purpose."
, But the evidence, glaringly obvious from
the very vehemence of the denials,
mdi-
cates that there is more disagreement than
? otherwise among leaders of Communist
, parties in the various nations. The Russian
? invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the looming
? threat of Red China to Soviet supremacy in
the world Communist movement, occupied
? rmuch of the talks.
At the end, a compromise agreement was
worked out that apparently allows the vari-
ous parties to state diVergent opinions, if
P. they do not agree with the Kremlin's view
on various matters.
??, would like our help.
IVERGENT OPINIONS among the Corn- There is no particularly new lesson for 1
munist nations? How times have ,
? Americans that has come out of the Corn-
changed. The monolithic machine that was munist conference, as yet. The best thin
touted as ready to roll relentlessy forward is to 'remember the old lesson?they
over the world is, stuttering and gasping destroy us if they can, anytime they think
like some old jalopy, and tne problems they can, and in any way, The enemy is in
faced .by the western :nations , become a trouble, but it is still an, enemy. ,
W,VAMea-4,....0
shade less formidable for the knowledge "
' that the enemy Is no less plagued.
' Even the attacks on the United States
lacked punch, and appeared as worn carbon
copies of the same old diatribes. Gus Hall,
general secretary of the American Com-
? munist party, condemned President Nixon,1.1
the,..GJd the Vietnam war, and it all
sounded rather dreary.
East German Party Chief Walter
Ulbricht attacked Red China, and pro-
claimed that this was a time to rally around
the Soviet flag. But the delegates weren't ?,
in a mood for rallying, and the Romanians
, even dared to criticize the "anti-Chinese" ;
atmosphere of the conference.
ERE IS THE big bugaboo for SovietliLt
Russia?the Chinese. The anti-Soviet
Chinese, and the very real threat they pose
? to the Russians. To the rest of the world as
well, but first and foremost to Russia.
And if attacks on the U.S. were less
frequent and vitriolic, the reason may be
that the worried Soviets anticipate a con-
frontation with one billion Chinese, and
1
ApprOved For ReleaSe2Q .
04/10/13 :*CiA-RDP88-013? 15R000200240,001-8
?
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Approved For Release4banfati ?SairA-RDP8801315R00020p2499919
2 2 JUN1969.,
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By DENIS BROGAN/
?
41.4,
:?;???;;;. ?
THE election of Georges Pompidou as , And have accepted, without resentment, .. their traditional, undogmatic form is,the .r
president of France can mean many. the direct election of the president and ,. need to unite to elect a president., ?
things. For one thing it proves that ?the maintenance of the Gaullist ideal of a,. So we have pieces of nonsense likePthe.:1
ism has not died or even withered with really strong executive. ?
? role as leading "Democrats" of chairmen
the abdication of Gen. Charles de Gualle ?-? ? The general guessed right, and the fact.. Senator'?Jamcs O. Eastland, of Missis-I.
any more than the Democratic party dis..,. that the French voted against him but for ' sippi, and Representative L. Mendel.
appeared with the abdication of President ? his system condemns all those intelligent.: Rivers of South Carolina, in the party
Johnson. And that is important, for. it ,,,but misguided defenders of the old parlia. of Hubert H. Humphrey, Senator Edward
mentary order of government to a future M. Kennedy, Senator' Eugene J. McCar- ,
means that France is politically mora,, 'of shallows and misserie? ' thy and ,Senator.,Joseph D. Tydings?to
stable than it seemed in May of last year,..f ? .
!,The
ate may be unjust, but the choose not quite' at random. , ,
and that the institutions of Gaullism have attractive of. the . honest and intelligent' ??? Is the Gaullist party, whatever it noWl
more future than many commentators enemies of Gaullism,, Pierre 'Mendes-. chooses to call itself, a party of the
thought.
The mass of French voters have not got; admired but impotent figure like Adlai, Alain Poher lead anything that can be
France, :will .be; in French ' history, an!.? ' American type?. Did interim . President' )
pver their contempt', for, the, Volatile poll..,?;.. Stevenson.: '. ' 7 ? ' : .. . - ` ' ? : ,..- ' ' ; ; 1 . called a party? Is the French Communist ii
ftle.s...of. plp,y4itt,aticl,:roVpilliAp9liesi,,....:.;r'r :If Mr.. Pompidou serves out his 7 years'4,I party capable of becoming one of, the 1
16-":.;j.1:4"!...''''' '''''' ''.4*I' ''''''..? ''' '6'. 4.r1"1.?.: following on the 11 years of ? the general,1.poles of a new two-party system?
., ,, ? 1
.. VI French political practice will have. been:: .. It is eaSier to answer the last question ?I
profoundly changed. The National Assem- ...., than the others. The French Communist.
bly will be less impotent than it .v'f6s,".? party has again chosen to say to the mass I
rt under? Mr. de Gaulle,,The'.'premier will .. of the French voters, "Include me out." 4
i: be more important. under' Mr. Pompidou .... 'The decision to abstain can, in certain' .d ,
than Mr. Pompidou was as Preside.4'de,..:. terms, make sense. Perhaps the French; ? Gaulle's premier. !..? :
'.. ? .:
.-... . ' ?:;:. `:'".1., ) . ' . . Communist party is simply obeying or- '
.
t'xT f
'clot. tile White. .11Ous.e ' . ?.'', 1 . ' i . '' clers from Moscow. The Kremlin may
v, . . , , , . ; . ?' .?,? vant to keep out of the Elysee Palace any
..i - But a decisive move toward the Amen partisan .of an 'Atlantic free world.' ; 1
can system will have .been made. And, a,f,s.Sucti an argument is.not nonsensical. .;? '..'t? ':,...s,.'
. .
i point to emphasize, France is becoming a,:??,,?, ? . . .
;.,,:z: ,? . .. .
;? young country. By 1076, most of the vet? , Waited for failure,
ers will have no lively memory, good 'or ,.r,I.,. ,
i ? ?/
,,,:., , i:;,i., :More serious, was the ,risk, the near .i., ?
?bad, of the "republic of Pals." .' . .f certainty, ..that Mr. Pompidou would ebb- I
ll. ? They will be like ' Bob Hope in '`?The .. ''.
i i' b e r Mr. Poher. (the Agnew of French
;na Purchase," who thought presi....q.`
Louisiana ;politics till a few weeks ago), and that the
dents ef the United States were alw.ayswill' ? ...,.
..,.Communists would share in his humilia-
? ;.?
'? 'called Roosevelt. French presidents .'? tion. And if abstention were on a great 1,
not. be called de Gaulle, but, with suitable.,
the victor would be discredited. t ,
:modifications,' they. will be General de'???,f scale'
t
. .., '(After all, in 1948, calculations of this *, .
rGaulle's 'dauphins. . ' '
' ? ' ' kind lay behind the formally hopeless
That. the 1
Thae :general' had .the American' candidacies of Strom purmond and Hen- 4
i.presidency in mind when he created the .?-ry Wallace (but not George Wallace, who 4,
Fifth Republic cannot 'be doubted. But '
2. had more serious hopes in 1968.)
i'. although he has successfully imported or , . ,
? imposed that institution on France, nei- ???, , And the Communists may have calm-
'Iated on profiting by an "inevitable" fall-1 ?
! ther he nor, it seems likely, his heir has7
ure of Gaullism, as they calculated on the' i
iall the resources that an American presk t.'
edent, even a feeble one, has, ..., ? . .? . ;??,..' early collapse of Hitler in 1933: '''' . , J :
i??? There is, as yet, no adequate historical :.? ., As long as millions of Frenchmen vote I
.magje, The Elysec Palace is more mag-1: in the spirit of the old solid South or. I., ,. - ?
a. nificent than the White House, but itisi';.'? Vermont and Maine in 1936, there Will be? . -....' .
not the White House. ? ... ' '. ? ?? . - . . , '' :no two party system, no consensus. un- ?,ii ? ...,- : -, ? !,
t., , More serious than the ? rawness or the-?".' less' there are open rifts among the Gaull-,:. ' -
,l,new presidential institution, is the ah- '.; ists, . .. : . ? ' . ? ...I .
. ,(.sence of an institution which is either the. ;,., Mr. Pompidou is abeve.all a manager, 1.,
. . . ., ..,., ..? ,. ? r,chief support of the American presidency'and he will t.
. allie that; as in a M ?', 1,
1
y .%8 i
,AppeOltcl.?;O:cie..-ke,teli6 i2evi 9f0,1,,,,t_ift?n44,.iiiiti
..,. tteFrsaunpcpeoisz:poi; i
.. , ? .,?. ,..,., . , , . ,,,America dielistAncIfre''''1. .t 21IffVti
Tro . . tri i
that the main; almost the 'onlY justifica-:, establishment. The CIA should be busy i \
tion for the 'American nationapartics in.. ', organizing an American equivalezt.
,
, .
NEW YORK TIMES Q
Approved For Release 2004/10/4:AR-A188-01315R000200240001-
-5
xcerpts FrofdDocumerit.Adopted byi
World Conference.
Following, as distributed in The successes of the
English here by Tass, the of- heroic Vietnamese people are
. ficial Soviet press agency, are convincing proof that in our
excerpts from the principal day it is becoming increasing- .
document adopted in Moscow ly possible for peoples reso-
on Tuesday by the world con- lutely using all means to de-
ference of Communist parties: fend their independence, soy-
Mankind has entered the last enjoying broad international 1
third of our century in a situ- : support, to defeat imperialist ,
ation marked by a sharpen- . aggression. ?
? ing of the historic struggle Crisis in Middle East
?
between the forces of prog-
In the Middle East a grave
ress and reaction, better international crisis has been
socialism and imperialism. ; precipitated by Israeli aggres-
Thihs clash is worldwide and sion against the United Arab
embraces all the basic; Republic, Syria and Jordan.,
spheres of social life: econ-
Through this, imperialism,
that of the United States
omy, politics, ideology and Above all, tried to crush the
culture. Arab countries, undermine
At present there are real the Arab liberation move-
possibilities for resolving key ment, and preserve or regain
problems of our time in the its position in the Middle
interests of peace, democracy, East. This it has failed to do.
and socialism, to deal imperi- United States imperialism
alism new blows. has not abandoned its plans '
However, while the world to strangle revolutionary .
system of imperialism has not , Cuba. It continues to threat- 1
grown stronger, it remains a en the independence of the
serious and dangerous foe. Republic of Cuba and in
The United States of America, flagrant contravention of in- economic, political and ideo-'
the chief imperialist power, ternational law tries to logical infiltration and sub- 1
'
has grown more aggressive, blockade it economically and jugation.
The war in Vietnam is the carries on provocative and The armed intervention in '
most convincing proof of the subversive activity against it. the Congo (Kinshasha), the
? contradiction between imperi- In Europe, the North At-, reactionary coups in Ghana 1
alism's aggressive plans and lantic bloc, ?the chief instru- and some other countries, ;
its ability to put these plans ment of imperialist aggres- , imperialist moves designed to
into effect. sion and adventurism, con-, dismember Nigeria, the po- .
? In Vietnam, United States tinues to be active. ? litical and military support '
imperialism, the most power- The axis of this bloc is the , given to reactionary and anti. !
ful of the imperialist partners, alliance between Washington ' national cliques, to the fascist 1
is suffering defeat, and this _ and Bonn. Contrary to the . and racialist regimes in the ,
is of historic significance, will of the peoples of Europe, , Republic of South Africa and
Socialism Termed Target , the ruling circles of the ; Southern Rhodesia, the fo-
United States, the Federal meriting of . inter-state con-
? The armed intervention in Republic of Germany and flicts and inter-tribal strife,
Vietnam holds a special place Britain are doing their ut- ' economic pressure and mo-
in the military and political most to prolong the existence . nopoly expansion?all serve
designs of United States im- of this bloc, strengthen its ' to further imperialist plans.
perialism. organization and maintain , The Portuguese colonialists,
The aggressor planned to the military presence of ?the backed by NATO, try to keep
destroy an outpost 'of social- United States in Europe. their possessions by force of
ism in Asia, block the way
f West German militarism ' arms.
or the peoples of Southeast .
the main source of the war ,,. Policy on Latin America
Asia to freedom and progress, ,
strike a blow at the national danger in eo
? ' the heart f Eu '
a ,, ,
' a ? United States imperialism
liberation movement, and test rope, was revivedNATOa8 and grew ,?
continues to step up its eco
the strength of the proletar- strong mainly with.,-?,
,,, ,
ian solidarity of the socialist, sistance. nomic penetration, as well as
,
its political, ideological and
countries and the working. The imperialist ruling cir- . cultural intervention in the 1
people of the whole world. ,, cies of the Federal Republic'- Latin-American countries. I
The criminal intervention of Germany, where rico-Naz a . In alliance with the local :
in Vietnam has resulted in ism and militarism are gain-
' reactionary forces it has been
considerable moral and pout- ing strength, persist in their pursuing a policy designed to
ical isolation of the United revanchist program of revis- prevent the peoples from '
States. ing the results of the World following the example of I
It has turned ever broader' War II and of changing the.,
Cuba. It suppresses any step
masses of people, new social' frontiers of airUnbeTiof ,E11--',1 leading to economic and
.
strata and political forces ropean countries. ' ,' ? '. genuine political independ-
against imperialism and This policy, aimed primari- ; ence. ,
speeded up the involvement ? ly against the German Demo- .,
of millions of young people cratic Republic, the first SO-I
in many countries in the anti- cialist workers' and peasants' I
imperialist struggle. state in German history, ,
It has aggravated existing threatens the security of all
of?Communist Parties
The Mediterranean ?coun- the "inter - American peace -
tries Occupy an important forces." The Alliance for
place in the plans of impe-
rialism. United States im
- Progress program has failed.
Other imperialist powers,
perialism, which has inipor- particularly West Germany
tent military bases in Spain,, and Japan likewise seek to ,
continues to support the , ,
entrench themselves that
Franco regime, thereby help-
? continent.
ing it to survive in opposi-
tion to the struggle of thel West German imperialism
war machine reaching out
fighting Spanish people. I ,
for nuclear weapons and
Coup in Greece Assessed intensifying its drive for
The repeated exacerbation' "domination over Western
of the situation in Cyprus Europe.
and the fascist coup in Greece, It opposes all steps lead-
arc likewise the handiwork of ing to disarmament and the
the imperialists, who support easing of international ten-
the colonels' junta. sion, and pursues a policy
Imperialism has become, of neocolonialism and ex-
more active in a number of:, pansion in relation to the
African countries. It tries to countries' of Asia, Africa
halt ?the growth of the libera- and Latin America.
tion struggle and preserve Despite the weakening of
and strengthen its poSitions' British imperialism, Britain
in that continent. , remains one of the major
The British and French im-' imperialistic powers and
.perialists, and the imperial-1 strives to maintain its posi-
ists of the United States, tions in Africa, Asia, the
West Germany and Japari are Caribbean and the Middle
making extensive uses of East by neocolonialist meth-
neo-colonialist methods of: ods and sometimes by di-
rect military intervention.
On the principal issues of
world politics Britain acts'
as one of the most active
partners of the United
States. It is a leading ag-
gressive force in NATO and
seeks a closer alliance with
West Germany.
Japanese imperialism is
gaining in strength, inten-
sifying its expansion, first .?
of all in Asia. Militarism is
again rearing its head in
Japan. Linked by many ties
with United States imperi- ,
alism, the ruling circles of
Japan have virtually turned
the country into a United
States arsenal in the war
against the Vietnamese peo-
ple, and take part in con-
spiracies against the Korean
people.
? French imperialism tries to
maintain and consolidate its
positions in world economy
and politics. It persistently
continues to build up a nu-
clear strike force and re-
fuses to join in measures :
-that would promote dis-
armament.
It retains its colonial
domination over the peoples
of Guadeloupe, Martinique,.
Reunion and some countries
of Africa and Oceania, and
refuses to recognize their
right to self-determination
However, the policy' of . and to govern their own
United States imperialism is affairs.
enconntering great difficul- It uses the influence it
ties. It fails to stabilize reac- still has in its former col-
finery regimes or secure the onies and, employing new
contradictions betyieriRrAtig_pwr2pea.,n peoples and the
imperialist powers 5116IrtIWEFMAI'Vf bletheaser21004/10/13 'Igaticapc:M; a
f all the govern-
_ methods of colonialist poli-
ealral5R06020024000itudjirly active in'
ect new ones, ' Africa.
continued
Approved.For Release 2004/10/13 ? CIA-RDPSIEL-0121.
Italian monopoly capitalEAU/11811111MT intei- Ttruse- prrnciple ',AARE LIEM00.200240,004a9set, which,
is likewise stepping; up its national relations of a new forms give the Communist betray these interests.
and workers' parties every The winning of power b. y.
possibility, to unite their ef- the working class and its
forts in the struggle for their allies is the greatest contia-
common aims, under condi- bution that a Communist
tions of the growing diver- . party fighting under capital-
sity of the world revolution- , ist conditions can make to
ary process. the cause of socialism . and
All parties have equal
rights. At this. time when .
proletarian internationalism.
The Communist and work-
there is no leading center .of
the international Communist
ers' parties, regardless of
some difference or opinion,.
movement, voluntary. co-or- reaffirm their determination_
dination of the actions of , to present a united front in
expansion. type and the development of
The defense of socialism is the fraternal alliance of the
an internationalist duty of socialist counties is a coin-
Communists. , plex historical. process. Fol-
The development and ' lowing the victory of the so-
cialist revolution in many
strengthening of each social- ;
ist country is a vital condi- countries, the building of so-
cialism on the 'basis of gen-
world socialist system as a tion of the progress of the '
eral laws is proceeding in
whole. Successful develop-
various forms, which take
meat of the national econ-
into account concrete histori-
orny, improvement of social cal conditions and national
relations and the all-round . distinctions.
progress of each socialist Key Principles Listed
country conform both to the !
;
interests of each people sep- Successful development or
this process implies strict ad-
of
and the common cause herence to the principles of
of socialism.
One of the most important proletarian internationalism,
tasks before the Communist
mutual assistance and sup-
port, equality, sovereignty
and workers' parties of the
socialist countries is to devel-
and noninterference in each
, . op all-embracing co-operation other's internal affairs.
between their countries and Socialism is not afflicted
with the contradictions inher-
ensure fresh successes in the e
decisive areas of the econom-
nt in capitalism. When diver-
ic competition between the gencies between socialist
c
two systems, in the advance? ountries do arise owing to
d
of science and technology. ifferences in the level of
As the struggle between
economic development, in so-
the two world systems grows ?
cial structure or international
,
sharper, this competition de- position or because of na-
mands that on the basis of; tional distinctions, they can
the socialist countries' funds-. and must be successfully
mental interests and aims and: settled on the basis of prole-
of the Marxist-Leninist princ-
iples underlying their? policy,
the socialist system should
place greater reliance on the,
international socialist division
of labour and voluntary co-
operation between them, .
which rules out any infringe-
ment of national interests,
and insures the advance of
each country and consolidates
'' the might of the world social-
ist system as a whole.
? Growing Potential Seen
? Relying on its steadily
growing economic and de-
fence potential, the world '
socialist system fetters im-
? perialism, reduces its possi-
bilities of exporting counter-
revolution, and in fulfilment '
of its internationalist duty, '
furnishes increasing aid to ,
the peoples fighting for free-? ,
dom and independence, and
promotes peace and interna-
tional security.
So long as the aggressive
NATO bloc exists, the War-
saw Treaty organisation has
? an important role to play in
safeguarding the security of
the socialist countries against ;
armed attack by the imperial- ,
? ist powers and in insuring
peace.
' The successes of socialism,
its impact on the course of
world events and the effec-
tiveness of its struggle against
imperialist aggression largely
; depend on the cohesion of the
, socialist countries. Unity of
action of the socialist coun-
tries is an important factor in
bringing together all anti.
imperialist forces . operation and are conducted
Approved r?g oksivitiuggas,
c
movement. ,
parties in order effectively
un-
to carry out the tasks be- . the l struggle against p a r ism.
fore them acquires increased .
importance. Some of the divergences
, that have arisen are elimi-
United Action Urged nated through an exchange.
United action by Commu- ? of opinion or disappear as,
fist and workers' parties will? the development of events
promote cohesion of the clarifies the essence of the
Communist movement on outstanding Issues. Other di-
Marxist - Leninist principles. vergences may last long.
Joint action aimed at solving The meeting is confident
vital practical problems of the that the outstanding issues ,
revolutionary and general can and must be resolved
democratic movements af . correctly by strengthening ail
our time promote a neces- forms of cooperation among ,
sary exchange of experience the Communist parties, by
between the various contin- extending interparty ties,
gents of the Communist ' mutual exchange of experi-
movement. ? ence, comradely discussion
They help to enrich and , and consultation and unity of ,
creatively develop Marxist- action on the international -;
tanan fraternal co-operation,arena.
Leninist ,to-strengthen
they need not disrupt the It is an internationalistor urgent ..
united front of socialist coun- ' internationalist.t.
revolutionary,
i? ? 1, duty of each party to do ;
tries against imperialism. problems.
The participants in the
. meeting proclaim their par-
ties' firm resolve to do their
utmost for the working peo-
ple anel for social progress,
with the view to advancing
toward complete victory over
International capital.
They regard joint action
against imperialism and for
general democratic demands
as a component and a stage
of the struggle for socialist
revolution and abolition of
the system of exploitation of
man by man.
Communists are aware of
the difficulties in the devel-
opment of the world socialist
system, but this system is
based on the identity of the
socio-economic structure of
its member countries and on
the identity of their funda-
mental interests and objec-
tives. This identity is an ear-
nest that the existing diffi-
culties will be overcome and
that the unity of the so-
cialist system will be further
strengthened on the basis of
the principles of Marxism-
Leninism and proletarian in-
ternationalism.
Cohesion Is Stressed ?
.The cohesion of the Com-
munist and workers parties is
the most important factor in
rallying together all the anti-
imperialist forces.
The participants in the
meeting reaffirms their com-
mon views that relations be-
tween the fraternal parties
are based on the principles
of proletarian international-
ism, solidarity, and mutual
support, respect for inde-
pendence and equality, and
non - interference in each
other's internal affairs.
Strict adherence to these
principles and strengthening
the unity of the Communist
movement. Bilateral consul- r
tations, regional meetings t
and international conferences n
are natural forms of such co- s
everything it can to help im-
prove relations and promote
trust between all parties and '
? to undertake further efforts '
`. to strengthen the unity of the
international Communist
1 movement.
Sucess Seen as Measure
The participants in the
meeting are convinced that '
the effectiveness of each
Communist party's policy de- ,
pends on its successes in its ;
own country, on the suc-
cesses of other fraternal par-
ties and on the extent of
their cooperation.
Each Communist party is
responsible for its activity to
its own working class and
people and, at the same time,
to the international working
class...., Each Communist
party's national and interna- '
tional responsibilities are in-
divisible.
Marxists-Leninists are both
patriots and internationalists;
they reject both national nar-
pwmindedness and the nega-
ion or underestimation of
ational interests, and the
triving for hegemony.
At the same time, the '
Communist parties, the par-
OiO-FID128.80M?glgd#400240001-9
ad working e ,
standard-bearers of genuine
national interests unlike the
?
BALTIMOD SUN.
Approved For Release 2004/0371iPalifirliDP88-01315R000200f40001-?`' 6"1
L
Aging
NI , k.. \ ,.. ? 1 I , ,E .
1' - _i_
? ,,,-4
????''''''. l't '; A c' ' I- -1
. e s court radical
,.
0 A "special convention" 4.'0
The party's upcoming convention, its : 7 011111..a.G-
By NATHAN MILLER , "-a
19th, was to have been held last year,
but rumblings of discontent were so ' munist party of Maryland, Is reportedly.: "'"'"- -
vvashington.1 strong, particularly on the West Coast, 1 in charge of the labor program.
I(VIIILE the eyes of the nation are that the leaders were afraid to call a I The party line on the Negro, which has
;
fixed on the antics of the New Left, the regular convention. been altered several times in the past, is
aging dowager of American radicalism The leaders feared a possible upheaval; also showing signs of revision once again.
;
will begin to celebrate its jubilee year and drastic change in leadership because , Originally, the party favored the idea of
this week, with its first national conven- of rank-and-file disaffection with the par., a separate black state in the South. When
bon since 1966. ? ty's decision to support Soviet interven.! the , integration movement gained
About 200 of the top leaders of the; tion in Czechoslovakia and the alibis for i.strength, the idea was dropped.
Moscow-line Communist Party, U.S.A. i?
Russian support of the Arabs against ? Now that some black power militants
will gather behind closed doors. in a New , Israel. have taken up the concept of a "black
York hotel from Wednesday to Sunday to 1 So they resorted to a "special conven- , republic," same party leaders are urging
put a rubber stamp on the leadership's ; tion," with about 100 members attending, another switch, back to the original line
choice of new officers and to discuss ;that did everything a regular convention 'of "black self-determination." By this,
strategy. I could do except elect officials. The deci- l? they hope to link the party with the most
l' On the surface, the party, formed Sep_ :sion to go ahead with this week's meeting j. militant Negroes.
, tember 1, 1919 in Chicago, is approaching is a clear sign that the old rulers are The question of Communist influence
I middle age in comfort. But deep inside confident that they have everything in among the nation's youth is probably the
t there is a gnawing uneasiness. , line, according to observers, most debated issue within the party.
i Publicly, from Gus Hall, the general ! Most prominent among .the dissidents -Some leaders have advised the dissolu-
, secretary since 1957 and the party's real ; are Dorothy Healey, the party leader in tion of the party's own youth front, the
I.; boss, on down, the party's officials are southern California, and Gil Green, the W.E.B. DuBois Clubs of America. In-
all smiles. Membership is up to 13,000 . New York party chief, who was head of ' ;stead, they advocate sending members
. and rising. The party has been revived i the Young Communist League in the off to join the small group of Communists
i since the days when Russian obstreper- . 1930's. ,who have already infiltrated the Students.
? ousness and federal prosecutions reduced , Miss Hcaley's basic theme Is that the for Democratic Society.
' the faithful to a hard core of about 10,000 ,, party makes a serious mistake by being ' It is argued that the Maoist-line Pro-
members. ' , so openly subservient to Moscow. She is gressive Labor party has gained influ-
ttracting the young people
seeking a public condemnation of such ence within SDS since it dissolved its.
, A
' things as Soviet anti-Semitism and the 'youth front. In fact, there: have ? beeni
0 that members of the Pro-;
It is the beneficiary of an incessant '
, lack of democracy in Eastern Europe. , recent reports
?war conducted at home and abroad by i ? ' ... gressive Labor party are. making a..,
anti-Communists against American par- ; Outstanding contributions . strong bid to take over the radical stu-i
'ticipation in the Vietnam war and the1
The West Coast leader took her ern dent group..
I expansive aspects of the nation's foreign I
, cism to the meeting held last year in , f SDS
policy. Paradox o
.INew York and was joined by six other,,
, Party officials say that most of the new
?, ': national committee members in voting ? Paradoxically, it Is the students' "un-
members are young people, radicalized
by weepin coun
against a resolution supporting the inva- structured" organization and ideals so:
l the student revolt sg the - 1 :-
,sion of Czechoslovakia. ? vehemently. condemned by their elders ,
The party desperately wants to attract The Kremlin has made it clear that it that make up the best defense the young
i ' 1
I?young people. When a bright, energetic ,wants Mr. Hall kept in power, officially .radicals have had against Communist :
, acclaiming him "for outstanding contri- .' infiltration.
1 youngster enters the party, he is quickly' lbutions to proletarian internationalism . Although they are committed to de-
1 given responsibility and an impressive ti- ! and devotion to Marxism-Leninism." . struction of the "corrupt Capitalist sys-
;tie, then he is pushed out in front, in
; hopes of attracting more young people, ., While the powerful French and Italian .. tern," as are the Communists, and al- ,
I For the first time in years, the , Communist parties bitterly denounced ;though they have adopted a Marxist view i
!American Communist party fielded a !'t,,,he Czech invasion, Mr. Hall was saying: ,: of the world, the students are suspicious '
ipresidential candidate in the 1968 elec- . We are for freedom. But we are not for ' And contemptuous of the Communists be- .
!tion. While Mrs. Charlene Williams, a !:tchiaelisfrinee,lom of those who endanger so-' 'cause of their reliance on a tight organi- !
.
lNegro, was on the ballot in only four ,I :sation and comparative moderation.
'states where she got 1,075 votes, her
iappearance brightened the party's image possible ;? In. preparation for dealing with any .' "Some pople say the Communists:,
!, ible dissension at the convention, the ; have infiltrated the SDS," says one stu-
as a ma dissent :
legitimate aim of dit general secretary is seeking to amend ' dent, "but have you ever considered that i
. : the party constitution by tightening up the kids may,1?1,Infiyx!41.14.tl!!,c0,,ram, um.,,,,i
Mr. Miller is a member of The
'the section dealing with "democratic cen- 44. p.b.M.,,,,;?1.2;a1,7,'..''..-.-?.!!....-..........,:.!..1
Sun's '
Washin ton Bure u,..._ . .tralism." While the stated purpose of the
?
revision is to "bring about more unity,
?,' And ast Ju y, aka by some rich
equests, the party again launched a the real aim is to make it more difficult
daily newspaper, called the Daily World. .for members to question policy. ? - ? .
Efforts will also be made to step ule
Since the demise of the Daily Worker 10'.. activities in the fields of youth, Negroes '.
: years ago, the party had lacked a daily. ...and labor. George A. Myers, whili once ,:
the .:4
0 organ.
With only 13,000 members,' e party l?
.1 Oesoribed..1.10604k* les4q,00.4.4F.fra4-t
: would seem to be hardly worth consider-
ing as a serious th.reat. 11y. Hall, how-.1
ever, has said that no, C,mmunkt, 1
there are 10 "s .6.vdmiN um.,fiikop, (ease 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
. , ,
. .
c;:nr"4"+- Win Presidency, Close F13i
? C??? --44 r- .4) 14...S
ri?aat C2:1.
Paco Paco Paz*
BOSTON, MASS.
HERALD TnAV7T 17 to
APO 0 iscs8
M-296,825
S-300,252
By EARL MARCHAND
The Communist Party of the United
States ?vill enter candidates for Presi-
_
dent and Vice President in this year's
national elections, the party's top offi-
cial announced in Boston yesterday.
This Will be the first time in 24 years
that America's notorious party-non-grata
has entered the national presidential
sweepstakes, said Gus Hall, general sec-
retary of the Communist Party, U.S.A.
THERE'LL BE CHANGES...
And if the Communists' "impossible
dream" comes throtigh, there'll be .1
changes made, Hall promised. That's
putting it conservatively.
"Within hours after the inauguration,
the Communist President would issue a
number of executive orders, plus rec-
cmrnendations to Congress for imrnediate
action," said Hall, a distinguished-look-
ing 57-year-old.
"If Congress didn't react to the roc--
ornmenclations," said Hall, "the Presi-
dent would call for the election of a new
Congress."
He would order, according to Hall:
?An immediate end ? to the whole
nilitary establishment.
,?The immediate withdrawal of all
U.S. troops from around the world.
?The closing of the FBI.
---The closing of the Central Intelike, T
gene e Agency.
?The closing of the Pentagon.
(These three agencies would be in-
vestigated, Hall said. Following the
investigation they would .be "continued
or abolished," depending how they made
out on the investigation.)
?An end to all practices of racism.
RETIREMENT AT 55
When these orders are tended to, Mr.
Communist President then would recom-
mend to Congress:
?A law to cut all work hours to six
a day with no pay cut, and two months
vacation a year with retirement at 55.
?Nationalization of all banks and the
major industries."
Hall explained that these measures
would be initiated on the first day.
He didn't go into what might happen
? GUS HALL '
-
dates will be officially nominated at the
Communist National Convention the
weekend of July 4 in New York City.
In the running for presidential nom--
inee are Hall himself, a Minnesotan;
Henry Winston, national chairman of
the U.S. Communist Party, 'a native
New Yorker; Arnold Johnson, party
public -relations man, also a New
Yorker, and Mrs. Charlene Mitchel, a
member of the national party staff and
.a California housewife.
ONLY 14,000 MEMBERS
Hall admitted there arc only 14,000
dues-paying Communists in the United
States, compared to their peak strength
of 100,000 in the late 1930s and early 40s.
He claimed, however, "The party is
growing- both in membership and in in-
fluence." Hall added, that about 100,000
Americans would like, to join the party
if it weren't for the limitations placed
on communists.
The candidates, Hall said, would
campaign across the nation and run
their names on ballots in states Where
allowed or by write-in (also in states
where allowed).
He said ? the party probably would
seek to get names on ballots in Massa- .
chusetts through court action. If the
court rules against this, he said, a
write-in campaign will be waged in this
state. Massachusetts, he explained, is
one of 37 states that bars Communists
from the ballot.
6
?
NO Ic2ERNATION1L TIES
The issues to be stressed in the Com-
munist campaign will be "the causes of
racism, (he causes of poverty and the
causes of war."
Approved (oPtreefondease 004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-94j0kgrt"
citeX a claimed
MMaull9
Communist
Hall said an announcement on the
I Communist candidates will be made in ' ties."
were "absolutely no international
,,?cFunle weeks," but that the candi-
r
SUN
(5),
_
iipproial(Kt4. Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9
S. 67,703
5.?
Dentorzstratious
i cr,
:J.. C..
By RAY MelIUGH
Copley News %erviee
WASHINGTON ?.April 8 is the next
big date on the "campus calendar.' of
Ilie Communist party in the United
Slates.
It will open a week of anti-Vietnam
protests at colleges across the country.
'Pile demonstrations also are expected to
feature .attacks on the Central Intelli-
gence Agency.
Althougli plans are being made by a
"Student Mobilization Committee" based
in New York, the Communist party has
openly participated in its organization
and has encouraged the participatiee of
such splinter and front groups as the
W.E.B. DuBois clubs; Youth against War
and Fascism, Socialist Workers party,
Young Socialist Alliance and the Pro-
gressive Labor .party.?
The "New Left" students for a Demo-
cratic Society and the Students Non-Yb-
lent Coordinating Committee are also in-
volved.
, All these organizations have been in-
volved in previous protests against U.S.
involvement in Vietnam.
Government sources have disel4ised
that a Dec. 211-30 student meeting at the
'University of Chicago drafted plans for
the April 8-15 protests. One of the par-
ticipants was Bettina Aptheker, a stu-
dent protest leader at the Universit,r of
California and member of the(Commu----.7-1-------
Dist party's national committee.
Major student and faculty rallies arc/
scheduled April 15 in New York and'e
San Francisco. Tn the preceding week, ,
students are being urged to stage anti-
war sit-ins at colleges, draft boards and
government agencies. They .also are be-
ing urged to hold mock war tribunals
at which U.S. officials would be "tried"
for alleged war, crimes.
. Antidraft petitions and pledges to re-
fuse to pay federal takes also are ex-
pected.
A 1967 Communist offensive on U.S..:
campuses was predicted last month .by,
!J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal ,
? Bureau of Investigation.
"The Communist conspiracy is reap-,
; big large dividends from its persistent
! efforts to gain a toehold on college and
university campuses and from its dogged
determination to disrupt, through mass
iiiiiii4SkItetiltP8i48\iegig/013411trl 3 : CIA-RDP88-01 315R000200240001-9
TT) ?
11"
Jo.
eduralinnal systems," said Hoover, writ-
ing in the FBI law enforcement. bulletin.
.. The idealism of many American
students is being cynically exploited for
Commileisle purposes; youthful exuber-
ence is being chalmeled into unlawful,
notions conduct; mocking disdain for
democratic processes and moral values
is being fed to inquisitive young minds
?all under the guise of seeking equal
justice or some other noble cause."
Hoover specifically branded the flu-
Bois clubs, the Students for a Democrat-
ic Society, the Progressive Labor party
and the Socialist Workers party as re-
sponsible for much of the disorder on
American campuses.
The. Central Intelligence Age,ney rx?
pected to share the "villain's role."
the war in the April 8-15 protests since
the receat disclosures that .CIA binds
have been used to support v
American student organizations.
A charge in Pravda that the CIA sent
spies to variour, warld student. gatherings
is expected to set' the tone for the Corn...*
munist party line in the United States.
A Senate judiciary Committee report .
this week points out that U.S. Reds in-
variably base their ,activities and propa-
ganda on directions from Moscow.
Gus Hall, secretary general of the:
Communist Party in the United States,
has consistently echoed Moscow'scriti-
cism of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
SEP t$ 1966
Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : CIA-RDP88-01315R000200240001-9 ? /
-sr-J.4416 64----/n-7te-vt1:42-04
'aLz,Y11:6 r
!?,' West Gentians entente Red
sow.' to Th c Nev.. ?oat 'rims .
I' BONN, Sept. Bcchtic,:.
157-year-old Communist leader,
was sentenced in Narlsruhe
to-
day to a year in prison. He had
. been found guilty of a violation: -
:of the West Gerthan law 'ban-
ning the Conununist party, of
leadership In a ?seoet.subitersiye:
organization, and Of falsification,:
of documents... ? ,..:41.,?? ? . s;?%.
?
"
Approved For Reiease 2004/10/13 C1A-RDP88-01315R000200240001,
c 5. 7? (-/ d(44-6.c-de
Otti 011 3.
, 01 5R00&;2162 0 agii
? Swint to The New York Times..
NEW DELHI, Sept. 1?About
100,000 people demonstrated in.
:front of Parliament today in. a
? Communist-sponsored march to
? .demand the resignation of
'Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's
'Government..
? e A. huge column organized by
ahe pro-Soviet wing ? of the
'LCommunist party marched
',eight miles from the Red Fort
In Old Delhi through the eapi-
','? ital's busy streets. The demon-
strators carried placards and.
;shouted slogans denouncing the
.,. ? riGovernment for devaluing the
[rupee last June and for grant-
..4,..11Ing economic concessions to
' .Vrivate enterprise.
? The marchers came from the
;Communist party's state units
all over India..
e Observers said the march was
.a demonstration of strength. by
the pro-Soviet wing of thc.
Communist party. The pro.
Peking Communists have been
'deriding the pro-Moscow wing
as a "zero power" with no
'following.
.' The pro-Peking Communists
1.split off '.'from he pro-Soviet
qndla'''Communist ; Party aftet
? ,he Chinese invasion of India x'
?a962.:.
. .
o
jouRN-A"r ' tagratogilre-,7
Approved For ReleSEP 2004195613 : CIA-RD4A34iRg0200240001-9
Our Ineptness Aids Rise of Communism
? ?
? * * .
'.'
By HARLEY L. LUTZ r
Within a few decades communism hast
been transformed from an academic doc:t
trine supported only by a few left-wing
economists and a? small band of cellar 'and!
garret conspirators into Great. Pewer stal
ttis. This transformatiOn was made possible,
In part, by our lack of acumen and our ?
.assistance. A correct appraisal of the con-! ,
sequences of the Russian revolution would,'
have been too much to ask of world leaders1
in 1917, but subsequent l3olshevik policies!
, should have brought prompt enlightenment!
In World War It the Hitler menace was so,
,
. much the greater danger as to justify al- .
liance with Russia. This military necessity
. was no excuse, however, for our naive atti-
tude in the conferences during end after,
: that war, nor for our misjudgment of ?the,.
Chinese "land reformers." There was ample'
; evidence of Castro's real intention well be-'
fore his revolution succeeded. i
As the Age of Innocence gave way before!.
the demonstrated intransigence of Commu-,.
I nist dictators, concern mounted regarding
1, the future of free world relations with Cont-!
i munist countries. Communism is an estab-
1 lished fact and its abolition is obviously im- !
1
rpossible. We have turned, therefore, to the !
I. concept of containment. Among the termsj'
; used to describe this policy have been 1
!.,"perimetet.' of national interest," "brink- I
1 manship," "massive retaliation," and "ad- :
1 yisers" sent on request to allegedly' free '
' governments engaged in resistance against 1
aggression. Ironically, these aggressors In- ,
gist that they are merely seeking to "liberel
ii ate" oppressed peoples from capitalist en- 1
q'slavement. !
Force and Persuasion
In the context of communism, contain-
ment means to keep the Communist system
within its present boundaries and to prevent
t its spread beyond them. This objective can
be sought in two ways, force and persuasion.
The first is mainly physical and material,
1 the second is mainly moral and intellectual.
' CONTAINMENT BY FORCE. Various me-
,-hods and degrees of force can be exerted in !
an effort to contain Communism, distinguish-
able as economic and military. Among the
economic weapons employed have been re-
striction of travel, embargoes on trade,
boycott of Communist products, and nonrec-
ognition of Communist regimes. The purpose
? of such measures has been to compel Corn-
munist countries to rely on their dofnestic
? resources to demonstrate the alleged Ripe?,
? riority of communism as an economic and
'political system. Fully effective economic
s Isola lion Is not possible without a united
front' and events since World War .7i/ have
shown that united opposition could not be
achieved. Travel, trade, cultural and dip- I
IoMalic intercourse are steadily expanding'
between West and East. Our navy could el..'
?have
?feeitvely blockade Cuba or Vietnam but we
not dared go that far against our own
I. allies. 1.. ?? r
r '4.41 64,a, AMILigkt
..
. ... . . _,
? The 'United States continues to give eco-
nomic aid to countries definitely committed ?
against us and our system. In some cases
foreign aid has been handled so naively and
Ineptly as to enable the Russians to claim ;
-credit for food and other supplies we have .
.provided. We were not able, by any sort '
Of embargo, to prevent dissemination of the
secrets of atomic fission. No country has a -
monopoly of physics, mathematics, and
chemistry, and these Secrete would have
been uncovered eventually elsewhere, 'even'
if there had not been, 'as has been alleged,
transmission of our own knowledge. p co- ,
nomic containment, as practiced, has not.
'been noticeably successful. -
The ultimate form of force is 'military '
power: A favorite .maxim of Theodore
Roosevelt's was, "Speak softly- but carry a'
big stick." He probably had in mind the.
conibination of skillful diplomacy and ade-.
quate military preparedness. Successful diplo-
macy depends on bargaining skill supported.
, by accurate and honest intelligence services,.
and on the.clear understanding of all parties
that the big stick will be used if necessary.
The record contains instances of faulty ? or
.inadequate intelligence, the latest of ? which
Is. the situation in Vietnam. ? -
A False Assumption ?
This enterprise began with thee dispatch
of "advisers." The commitment to give this
degree of assistance must have been based
on the assumption that the South Vietnamese
had, and would co Untie to ,have, a stable
government enjoyi popular g general pular sup-
'port. and loyalty. ,i
his asgumption was not
:well founded, for since we first became in-
:volved there has;been a succession of coups
d'etat, made .worse by assassination and
widespread ' corruption. The self-immola-
tion . of Buddhist monks. in the spring was
only one indication of the deep split within
? that land. Can anyone believe that this ven-
ture would have been launched if that split
, had been so overt at the time our first
soldiers were sent? Yet the evidence of this
possibility
possibility wa.s there, needing only to be nor-
- rectly evaluated. ' ---s
In the old days of the Monroe ? Doctine
and
In,
.Diplomacy," the United States
assumed an unofficial protectorate over the
'Western Hemisphere. Among the dozens of
revolutions' that occurred there were.. 'oc-
casional disturbances serious enough to war-
rant sending the Marines to restore order.
,
'It became' a byword to say that the Marines*
have landed and have the situation well In
. hand. When order was restored the troops
came home, leaving behind no serious local'
resentment at our police action. The Lebanon:
incident was a departure from our tradi-
tional hemispheric obligation but it appears
to have left no bad 'Scars. '? ,
- The attitude toward- our police efforts has
changed. Partly because of our sheer size
and power, . and .partly. because Ad the In-
(fluence of Woodrow'. Wilson's assertion of the
Lrigh.t:;..o.t.:selkletermination, our . intentions
.. ,. : .,. : ...
.. , ... . .. ..
0
. ;
have become suspect, our benevolence haS
been questioned, our impartiality doubted.
;Instead of "The Marine's have landed," it is
"Yankee. go home." Opposition is increas-
ing, not. only in Latin America but elsewhere
in outside interference in domestic affairs.
The recent reactions in Panama and Santo (,
Domingo is very different from that of sixty- I
odd years ago when we rescued Cuba, Santo ??1
Domingo, and Puerto Rico from Spinish rule '
and secured the independence of Panama. ;
Among the members of the United Nations ?
this opposition is suggested by the difference ?
the support for our military effort that
.:was supplied in the Korean war and that ,
:forthcoming in the Vietnamese war. The UN ,
,officially endorsed and supported the former,
'.11, has officially stood aloof from the latter. .
'Whether the present reluctance jo commit ?
.men and resources in a larger military ef-
'1fort to resist and contain communism, indi-
?cates doubt as to ?the successful outcome of
'this particular venture or a decline in the 1
. . . .
rating df military force as an cffrretive de-
terrent s not.'elen-r. In any ease, it appears
that in the present temper of the non-Corn- ?
munist world, a reappraisal of containment
by military action is under way. We could
squander?our resources and imperil our free-
dom trying to stomp out bruzh fire wars lit '
by the Communists around the globe without':
making headway toward discrediting corn-
munism as an economic system or a way of I
life. This brings up persuasion as an alterna-
tive way of containment.
CONTAINMENT BY PEIZSUASION.
aualsion is an appeal either' to reason or the .
emotions. The latter is often more effective -
for emotion is like a weathervane, yielding ?
as readily to the hot wind of hatred, :-freed, or '?
envy as to the cold wind of logic and justice.
Persuasion is used by both sides and each
. calls the other's persuasive effort "subver-
sive." Communist propaganda is often more
. effective than ours, for it is easier to stir up
hate and envy among -the "have-nots" and
to buy the services of the disaffected and
unscrupulous than it is to get attention and/
support by an appeal to logic and reason.
However, time is on our side. The hard facta
of economic life have begun to affect Russia,
: where recognition of the profit Motive, of ,
' reward based on, and as an incentive to \
' achievement, and of the incompetence of.
central planning ie pushing into the back-
ground. the. earlier credo of the omniscient
state.
The .persuasive struggle against corn-
munism has been called a "battle for men's
minds." This implies an appeal to reason
rather than emotion. We cannot profitably
conduct this battle against those born and
.brought up as Coi,,,nunists although we can
/encourage the un6erground opposition. The
main battleground Is the minds of those peo- -
pies not yet finagled into the Communise '.
camp. The major theme would be fecedom
.and the argument would be an exposition of
the superiority of our system in securing
and protecting freedom. We are, however, -
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wider serious handicaps in getting this argu-, preaching abroad. It' is not merely profcseing ness firms and' their officers are indicted s
ment across to others, from the enlightened 1 abhorrence of commonism while extending' for conspiracy to restrain trade. The num-
nations of Europe to the primitive citizens
of backward countries. Several reasons are
pertinent:
1. We lack proselyting fervor. We have
never had a sense of urgent mission to
spread the American story abroad. We have
no dreams of world conquest, no lust for
.world dominion. We have even ,proclaimed
the right of every nation to determine its
own form. of government, its religion, and its
economic and social institutions.
"?einee World War. IT we have, however,
developed a meseianie urge to assume com-
plete responsibility for the burdens and mis-
fortunes of the whole world. We have spent
: well over. $100 billion on foreign aid, and in
the State of the TInion message of January.
1966, the President proposed new programs
for feeding and. educating everybody, every-
where. Granted a correlation between pov-
i.erty and dieconrnt, there is a limit to what
.'we can do. Our benevolence has not in-
s creased the number of admirers and sup.
limiters. Very rich individuals have long
,since learned that lasting friendship and re-
eepect cannot be bought by the most lavish
hilanthropy and this is even more likely
t to be true .of a very rich nation.
* 2. We 'have never been noted for ability
to understand what makes foreigners "tick,"
to ,get inside .their minds as it were. Hence
we have never been conspicuously success-
:'-ful in international finesse. A smug sense., tatingly identify it with his slogan?"From
of superiority, based largely on fantastic each according to his ability, to each ac-
;, 'material ,achievement; has bred indifference cording to' his need."
Oto, even dislike of, foreigners and lack of
real concern, about learning how and why The Personal Dossier
they think and feel as they do. With this
e insensitivity, to alien thinking and viewpoint
almost as a national trait, it would be dif-
ficult for an American to convince an alien, ?
S" especially in a primitive backward ,country,
ie of the superiority of our system. The Peace soon have, such a file for the millions who
Corps is ? our closest and best approach to 'make a, tax return: No one knows how ex-
. "grass roots" indoctrination but its scope tensive or detailed the FBI files are. It would
'?:-bas been far from adequate to the task. easily be possible to blend these and other
3. We have assumed that 'any tribal or data. concerning the individual into a com-
l.- 'national group, however backward, could ? prehensive dossier that would permit a con-
overnight become' a democracy by holding '?, tinuous secret surveillance of the actions and
i?. an election. The policy line on ? South Viet- conduct of millions of persons. With such an
? nam is that our mission there will have ?;? approach to the police state freedom would
been' accomplished when a constituent as- no longer be a natural right but .a kind Of
arele subject to revocation at the will of an
sembly is elected to draft a constitution ';':P
and en election is held under its provisions. omnipotent 'state. ?
The record of both peaceful and violent ? c) A cardinal principle of our economic
ie revolutions in Latin America and, of -late, ; system is the free market in which prices
..?
in otKer parts ,ot the world has demon- .rellect the relation between supply and de- state. Persuasion can change men's Minds
strated? that more than en election is re- mand and thus guide production into the ? but it is ineffective unless the arguments are
beamed into these minds at a level cent-
:mensurate with ability to comprehend and
from a background of convincing sincerity
and wholeness of 'purpose.
? ?
?Dr. Lutz is professor emeritus of pub-
Uo at Princeton University.
,
?to Communists the same conetitutional pro-
tection that others enjoy. Nor is it a ques-
tion of tolerating the antics of extreme
right or left-wing organizations. and individ.- . it of production, is another essential fea-
,
uals.
This contradiction between theory and
/practice is incomprehensible to.those . whom
we would help, and it arouses suspicion of
our motives rather than inspires confidence
In our purposes. The 'case will be illustrated.. tion with its taxpaying citizens. Demands are
briefly. . ? continually arising for extension of Govern.
? a) The inconsistency involves, fundamen-
ment ownership, a recent instance being
tally,' the antithesis between the free mar- .1 bankrupt railroads serving the commuter '
! ket, private enterprise, capitalist society to population of metropolitan areas. Little Etc-
which we pledge allegiance and the wel-
count is taken of the contribution of obso-
i fare state to which so large a proportion of lete, rigid Government regulation to the
; the voting population has given enthusiastic plight of the railroads.
support over the past thirty-odd years. A Government's Interference
.myopic time preference is moving us inex-
orably toward some form of totalitarian state. Moreover, the Government has interfered
The benefits, here and now, of ever-increas-
With management decisions, recent illustra-
tions being the restrictions on foreign invest-
ing Federal support of individuals, bust- I
ment and the pressure to curtail domestic
nesses, and state' and local government out-
weigh the seemingly remote danger of ex-
capital investment. The former action was
treme -Federal centralleation and control, designed to ward off the consequences of mis-
'
lust as Russia is moving toward the sub-
managing the balance of payments problem,
stance' though not the form of a private en-
the latter is pert of the campaign against in-
fiation. . both cases long-run advantage is
terprise society, so we are moving toward
the substance, though not yet the form, of sacrificed to current expediency.
e a , Communist society. A Communist from e) A final illustration of the gap between
.Mars, looking at the present Federal wel. teaching and practice is the reliance for sus-
fare, Great Society program, would unhesi- tamed i prosperity on budget deficits and in-
flation. In many parts of the world inflation
is rampant. The obvious correction is strict
.observance of fiscal and monetary disci-
pline. Any counsel to this end that we might
offer would be counteracted by our well-pub.
b) The 'development of electronic "mem- ? licized actions to the contrary and by the in-
s.
ory" inaChines makes possible the accumula- flationary effects of these actions,
tion of an array of information concerning For these and other reasons we have net-
the private and public affairs of the ditizen. ther clarity of image abroad nor the capacity
The Internal Revenue Service has, or will to project our aspirations effectively into the
her who plead nolo contendere is amazir.;-;.
d) Private enterprise, which means pri-
vate Ownership and management of the facil-
tune of our economic system. The Govern-
'meet has not observed the division of-labor
between governing and producing but has en-
gaged in many business activities, notably
in housing, power, and finance, in competi-
-
minds of those not yet committed to com-
munism. Untutored the alien may be, but he
can grasp the difference between our
lip service to personal freedon1 and our com-
placent surrender of that freedom to a pow-
erful Central Government in order to get still
More benefits from it. In his view there is
little difference between one totalitarian re-
gime and another, for both involve loss of
freedom through coercion.
Military force is the ultimate coercion. Tt
cannot change men's thinking and hence is
futile as a barrier to communism' unlces the
? territory won is made a' permanent garrison
e? gifted to assure a stable government. most profitable, hence the most socially use-
' There !mixt be respect for law, regard for ftil, lines. Interest is the price of money and
ts property rights, protection of minorities, and I. credit and its variations perform a similar,
.- even-handed justice for all as minimum .re-l'Ounction in that area. For years the Govern.'
rquirements. True democracy, as distin- ? 'e ment has interfered; in different ways and,
'gins e ' h d from the false 'peoples' democ- ' ,'...
in varying degree, With the free market price
i ra.cy" of dictatorship, depends on attain- X."; system. The details, from agriculture and
I ment of economic end political maturity and ee Treasury bonds through to the recent moves .
sufficient degree of Felt-discipline to se- 'e.''to fight inflation by attacking high prides,
p rept settlement of ideological or other dif- ..i are familiar to all.
1 ferences by ballots rather than bullets. We ? It must be said that the business corn-
have failed to convey this hard lesson to' munity is not ?100% in favor of the free,
i backward peoples but instead we have en. competitive market price system. Protection ', .
!!..couraged the mistaken notion that an easy has been sought against its rigors, not only
way to democratic rule is to hold an election, through tariffs, import quotas, and other re.
e - 4. Our most serious handicap in the bat- strictioqs against foreign producers but also
'
tie ? for men's minds is that we do not act through laws . providing for price, main-
Ss 'if we fully belie in_our joystenk We tenange, ,p9t-pp.Ded2:faiLArede,"' marketing .
,dO- riot tyacilee."at tRIIIV99.47%ineHialSgrigihmirldibilitai 44,&*..816d1113y1,0 200240001-9
? .
SEP 2 1966
/61e-tt4A44-y),(1-ilti.
?
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/
'industrial workers," he wrlles
lb over Finds New i 'T ?
gor lioover finds the.,Communiste,
r! !have been I "acutely embarras-:'
? ?-i ? ? ? ? Ind," by their failure to recruit:
Negro& .
in onunz cust
?
'Washington, July 31 tai ? J. and "independent" candidates In,
tiklgar Iloovcr, FBI director, says
the Communist party has sur-
faced as a "unified, bard-hitting
Iwell-or:,?mized, , conspiracy" to
promote a class revolution in the
'United States.
iIn i rzport to the Senate inter-
nal security subcommittee on the
party's June convention in New
work,. Hoover ?Predicts. the Coin-
illills&c.1 Nion artisan"
the November elections.
He forecasts an extensive cam-
paign to infiltrate labor unions,
college campuses, anti-Vietnam
war demonstrations and civil
rights organizations. He ,says the
"new left" also will be a target.
"Uninhibited Glee"
"The party has been watching
with uninhibited glee the rise
of so-called 'new left' organiza-
tions and groups, which have
culminated in 'peace' marches,
protest demonstrations against
American policy in Vietnam, and
Curm,oil on college and university
cambuses;" Hoover .says in the
report released tonight.
' The FBI director sees this as
part of a youth drive the party
has been able to put on since it
has gained new freedom of ac-
tion under recent Supreme Court
decisions invalidating portions of
the 1950 Internal Security Act.
Spots Cities For Labor Work .
In the field of labor organiza-
tions, Hoover says he is con-
vinced major efforts will be made
Jh Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland;
St. Louis and Pittsburgh. ,
, "We can anticipate ,that the
party, Using the slogan labor is
a key 'force,' will make every,eP,
art to increase its recruitment in;
"To their everlasting credit,":
he says, "the vast majority ofi
Negroes have recognized thei
falsity of Communism and have
i turned It down. They know that
Communism does not mean a bet-,
ter life 'for them, economically,.
politically or socially."
Nevertheless, he feels the Corm
munists will continue to try to in-
filtrate civil rights organizations'
to turn that area "into a
hatchery for Communism."
"The Communists are 'hoping to
exploit situations on unrest In the
United States; such as the current
policy in Vietnam," Hoover, saysi
He adds: ,
"We can expect the party to
keep hammering at 'peace'
(meaning of course the betrayal
of American interests to the cause
of thelSoviet Union), all the time
trying to enlarge the party's itn.
m6diate and long-range Inflti-
ence." ?
Steady Use Of "Peace"
By allegedly standing lot
"peace" the Communists hope to
make contact with other groups,
such as pacifists, church organi-
zations and students.
"We can expect strong Commu-
nist participation in electoral cam-
paigns this fall and attempts tit
field party candidates, 'especially
under 'nonpartisan' or laridepcn
dent' labels. Such campailms pro-
vide publicity, for the party and,
help galvanize the metribershipin
day-to-day Communist work,"
'
Hoover comes up with the over:;
all conclusion, "the Communiit,
'party . . . 'In a much stronger
position antlicompletely loyal to a
foreign, power,' the Soviet Union
.'.!remains? a serlout,threatia
..1.4?414,114.1
r
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rl*L7:4'
ii
Viethurn,
es_ cdcion
't . ?,,),;II. AMERICAN PEOPLE, "cannot rest" until they put an end to the yietnam -war, .
(Gus Halli)leading Communis.rty. spokesman rsaid?Wednesday...night.. in ...hjs.. address ,
Prepri re7Lf.pi.: .tlip_oncrung, .of,.the-18th ?national ? -convention...a..th e?C,ommunist,;,,,gartY. : '
., ? .
:"United, aroused, determined, ,
we can put an end to this crime, ,J ?, Henry Winston, national party ' 'Bulk of the convention's work'
? he declared. (A report on Hall's spokesman, was scheduled to call : will be the discussion of Hall's
-address appears on page 2.) _ the convention to order as The reports and the reports from the
i Hail's address ? was ? a major ,-Worker went to press: Wednes- ; panels and committees. A new
' statement . of party volley to be , day evening's program was . to national committee and national
deba led by the more than 300 include - the introduction by officers are to be elected. :
delegates and alternates from Dorothy Heale' y, Southern Cali- ::' Amendments to the party's .
he entire nation attending the/ , fornia party leader, of repre-::. proposed new program will be
i five-day gathering at Webster ? 'sentative Communists. from I presented at the convention. The
throughout the nation. They were ,party's national board is reeom- 1
'Pm.17,1,7,p,Kw-
Archic . Brown, _longshoreman, mending the public discussion of 1
' ..and victor in a years' long strug-" the : draft program, Which has:
?gle against the Taft-Hartley ?ban been under way for five months, ,
on Communists holding. union .. ' be continued and that final adop- i
office; Bettina Aptheker, a leader'
'of the ' Berkeley. Free,. Speech
Movement; William Taylor, Who :' , time. :`'... , ??? ?
. ing to be held within a year's"
tion be set for a special meet-
'of the
35,000 votes fast yeai' in - ---- - -"-- .. ? '?*-- -....r?
a race for Los Angeles county :
suporvisor; Frank :Pellig-cini, of .
Chicago, and Mrs. Hortense Alli-'. 1
son, of Washington State, charter .:
members of the party; Mike Za-',
garell, national party youth ,
leader, _ ' and Rasheed Storey, .:
HarleM party youth leader. ,
' The convention is scheduled to :
set up trade union, civil rights,;
_
youth, and political action panels,-,
as Well as committees dealing ,
with the main political resolu-
tion,' party organization and l.
press,- amended party_ constitu-
. -. -?,. ,
tion and , other resolutions. ' -
WLNSTON i
Hall. Opening Wednesday night,
:it was scheduled to close- Sun-,
day afternoon.
? . Participating in the convention
were. more than 300 observers,-. 4
iincluding non-Communists, from
:the -U.S. and abroad.
The- convention opened after
,a lapse of seven years since the
17th -national convention, years
-in which the party's organiza-
tion, officers, and membership' .
had been harassed by. punitive
action under the McCarran Act.',,
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,
S. 53,694 . . OC,1 i',/?-? &.ilatd . r-02- ,..-11,P.i-1.5 ihkZ,,
. Jul. 3 1965 0 (7-1, i \i. 0--li 14-1 &,(7-ialAsX )?,/i.A4Itie4
-- 5.cieti)1/i7 i(ieReb
' ,e,p,J. i fed 7,5,t y.51r- - . ,
Rallying:1i or Rebellion . .
lon.:i0f2L, ,
? 414,..96 , at-cofrow i..r f'g, ? A_
' ?M"
Cs !
? . r .?j ,.?(.3?P,Q4 -?-: 4.0!g ,
r:,-.., ...,- --? ? ...-- . - ? , . ? , 1?. The aPproximately50 deIegateSi'pe.ople. '
?
The Students for a Democratic, to the national convention Of the'll.:
r..' . . Bunge praised the groundwork.1
r forefront of e x t r e m i s t orgaiii- ty,met in ? what could be described
i. ? ' delegates slept in unheated and !
to make the "establishment" ? jit-i,.;,i
kery.' He 'declared, however, that a,:li
'' zations in the Upited States. r.rlie , as a Bohemian atmosphere. Many -
. haci 1. "peace movement"' is more dan- .'',
tr. Studentsjor a Democratic Society ' ,
:,,fi.lthy cabins,' each of which ? ?
C.;tendencies toward: radicalism 'and. :,five . to eight bunks: Sleeping. ac-!;gerous? and more powerful than ail
lt.." showed that it is a-group . with
modations and rest . room fa- I
;civil. rights movement, and sug-'.'
' / f, - rebellion during a five-day nation, ;$ cilities were assigned without r-1 center
that Detroit be, made the'
''...
al convention held . during .Tune
at Camp Maplehurst in Michigan:,
?Asserting that the United' States is
0
controlled by a military-industrial
-, ? complex,' referred to as 1.he ."es-
f.: -tablishment," the Students for a,
Democratic Society appears - de-:
termined to change .the: structure il.' Students prespni. al, the national .
. , ?
'of society in the United- States no i.convention represented colleges ;
, ?, ? - . ? . ; 1:and universities 'throughout t h e '
0 ,...., matter what the cost. ...,...... ? , t. .
' ? k '' ? ' ' :: ? ?? ? c ouptry. 'These included Amherst
.- Self-described as a g r 0 u. p . of ;College, 'Boston College, Columbia
...,:',,, .
liberals 'and. radicals, ? , aCtivists.'. :University, liarvai-d University,
.:,,,and scholars, students. and facul- ;Northwestern University, Uiiiver-
...
r Society is rapidlyi moving tot, he zStudents for a Democratic Socie- laid by the civil rights movement
g ? " ? ce, sex, or c. fee' . This
? . i.center for a massive "peace MOV6- .:..?
arrangement was clescril'ied , as merit", with universities providing.;:i
. the work of the anarehist 'element ithe power base. In Bunge's,"peace,.i,,'
.,?in the 'Students for 'a, Democratic movement,". some. demonstratorsl
Society. The majority of the dee- would ride up and down in eleva-q
gates wept barefoot and . ? w e r e tors and talk about peace. Others.7?1
...needed hairctits,? ? :-A
irty. The men were unshaven and ?w .ould engage n sit-ins and chain-...til
, l. ? ? in
...
. ". ?I ins at ilia* thoroughfares in orderl
tO".scare "the' living Jesus" 'out'
people.. During his remarks, Bunga:
"passed Out copies,. of ?"Labor To-1
.d,ay,".a trade-union magazine pub-6.'1
lished,in Detroit by ths Commun1st.1
Party, USA '''' ? f ' .' ' ? ' '. ''ii
. ..i
National .Secketary .Clark Kis-,;.;,,
' singer 'introduced, the ?"Kissinger ;;';11
,plari"., for. ending .the war in Viet- 1
.nam.,-tiuring the 'national 'converi-,,
Aion of the Students for a Demo-..,0
, cratic, ' Society. 'By way of , 'in- ..1 '
.
Aroduction; Kissinger stated . that'.:',7
'act$' of 'civil, disobedience are. no, I.
longer . effeqive, because the po-?
lice have ire'come experienced in.'f)
dealing with them and jailing the
. ? .
,
? ,.i.
. ..
participants. Consequently, these.,.5
ads are receiving little publicity. ?'?1
..ii,
What is needed, 'Kissinger stet-
.. .'t
politccal trial in ? which ?,1
, ?
. . ?
...,?.:..ty, united fo work toward .a .Socie-? ,sity- of .California: at Be rkeley,. Uni-
. ? 'Versity of California ..at Los 'Ange-
? ;'..ty in which the people -'have.:'icni/-: !
' ;les, University of Chicago, .Univer-
.ntrol of the decisions that, a.f f e CI iSity of , Michigan; -r University of
them. and the reseurees,. on. Which.' 411exas, and 'University ?rif., Wisconr.
....:.
.,' they are dependent;" the Students ,- ',sin..
'a Democratic Society claims, ,1 One of the? national 'Cnnventinn :
'.'.that it ? has 2,000 members in' 70... ;1.vorks.liops- was directed 'by' , Wil-.,::
..4 .'chapters. It is the Youth affiliate.. 1,liarri Wheeler , T3unge,' Jr., 'profes-
of the League for . Industrial. De;. ilsor from Wayne State University,...,
:3;rno,cracy, successor to the, Inter- '..Detroil..:Ile mintaiii?,Ici that the:
? f.. collegiate Socialist' Society,
...which
, : , ..
''Negroes in the South are the power.:
. . .
.;.?..'was organized in 1905.- . ' ? . ?,' ' .:base for. a .revolution ?Of- s '0 c i a 1
The Students for a Democratic'..;.:cliange ,which is sweeping ? the:.
',Society was the sponsor of. the ...:tountry. ,After. claiming that. he,
April 17, 1965, March on Washing.., ,!Was working 'night and day to. in-.?
'tton, which was referred to by' 'the, sure the.? continuance' of this social .:
'.:Communist Party, USA as .t 11 e ..Change;...Blinge-.Stated that the civ:'
.,,"bigges1, single action calling 'for .i] rights movement Was redeeming
1.'?ian end to the war, in Viet Narn.".;'.!the churches. .and the clergy. ,..1-le.
.,4.A young Communist Party leader.:4hen accused the "establishment" ?
I -i:has said that It is ton bad that .):of being guilty of fascism and said'-
,
;the Students 'for A Deinocratic' So- .1', the United. States;., with 'its:siiper-: i
the United Staies would be forced 1
to 'defend its immoral acts in.? '',1
Vietnam; Irle proposed that the .!
Students for a Democratic Socie-...1
..ty? engage .in massive and orgari.."4
.,.ciety 'considers the communist- weapons, is beginning' to sound '?
. i7ed violation of the Espionage. Act ..i,
.`controlled W. S. B. DuBois . Clubs :like Inner. Bunge contended that.. of 1917, which makes it a violation ?,1
;
;
of America a threat to its &mill.: ',.,the United Safes . is. not a democ*, .to urge ioldie,rs ? to: desert or. to..:!,
!...nance or, college ,compuscS,? .,he..:4racy, because thecon-', .niilitary .
. Ipopardize, theN.:50r effort,An,',.ani.;::1-
, :?4 :
orgeOzations, are ? sMar......%'...,.',.fr101341.siAlfillflaWDAP15, RO 0 0 20084efel eit
. e.., k.pow.er,;1_,I.e.,viith,':?,the..,.4
!..cause the politicalkilemQ?lie#
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I
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,
[EAST EUROPE FERMENT
Hungarian Reds Apathetic
BY GEORGE SHERMAN
' European Correspondent of Ita Star
, BUDAPEST ? A current
political joke in Budapest lists
Incentives in a recruitment
drive for the Communist party.
If a member enlists one new
candidate, his own party dues
are cut in half for the year.
? If he enlists two new candi-
dates, he does not have to pay
any dues that year.
If he gets three candidates, he
Is allowed to leave the party.
And if he hits the jackpot with
four new members, he can
obtain a certificate stating he
has never been a member of the
Communist party!
The joke is told by Commu-
nists themselves. It simply
reflects a fact of Hungarian life.
The country, particularly the
youth, is almost aggressively
uninterested in official politics.
For instance, during the last
five years the percentage of
party members 30 years old and
r-N under has fallen from 25 to 13
percent of total membership.
"From one point of view,
Janos Kadar has done an im-
possible job well," remarked
one foreign observer about the
Communist leader of Hungary,
"He accepted the responsibility
for crushing_ the_ 1.95,83Tv_elutien_.
he has carried the burden
Soviet scapegoat At the 'same
time he has put the place bac
together and got the economy
back on its feet with Soviet aid."
Then he turned to the other
side of the picture.
"But Kadar has only neutral-
ized resentment. He has given in
wherever necessary to popular.
opinion. Bet he still has not
obtained free and active co;
operation of the people in mak-
ing the system work." ,
The result is indifference. And,
in this atmosphere the visitor
finds himself wondering exactly,
who won most from the October
Revolution of 1956. The Rus-
sians? The Hungarian Commu-
nist party? Or, the Hungarian,
nation? Today, more than eight
years later, you hear pros and
cons On each side.
The Russians certainly profit-
ed in terms of power politics.
Their intervention succeeded in
holding Hungary within Oom-1
munist Europe. Today .,Soyiet
George Sherman; revisiting East
Europe after five years, found
great ;Imps in the Communist
satellite nations. Here is the seventh
of a nine-port series on what he
sow.'
what has the Communist party
gained in the aftermath of 1956.
Despite greater autonomy from
Moscow, it certainly remains on
the defensive at home. Theone-
party state has been resurrec-
ted, all orgateanized opposition
ts
For instance, Kadar has
appointed a committee of top
economic experts to work out a
new economic model that will
give more power and initiative
to local factory managers. The
new experiment in decentralize-,
tion and "socialist profit-mak-1
ing" in Czechoslovakia is being
carefully studied. The commit-;
tee will report in September, the
Central Committee will debate
the formula, and the result in
scheduled to be incorporated ire
the new economic plan which"
influence on the mainstream of squelched, s ownerhip of begins next January.
Hungarian life counts for about the ecenomy preserved and even, "In retreating from direct
as much as the 80,000 Russian extended and, the network of control over everything we
troops who live alone, unseen olice spies Maintained, if less realize we are walking an
and unknown, in cloistered Obviously. untrodden path,"
problem is exath," said one
',
barracks in the Hungarian But the party has given up its Communist.
countryside. Claim to control every facet of figure how much democracy and
Soviet cultural influence is ilife. The leadership does not how flitch state power V are
i
almost nil. The Russian langu- publicly flaunt its power. Pic-
necessary to run the country."
age is still compulsory during tures of "the leader" andslo- 1500 Killed
eight years of schooling, but gans about "building of sod-
Hunpgarians refuse to learn it. alism" that were the insignia of The solution to that roblem
Modern Soviet literature runs a Stalinism have gone from the will show how much the Hun-
poor second to that available streets of Budapest. garian nation won from the
aborted 1956 revolution. Most
from the West. Modern theater
is either decidedly national Branded as Pessimibt Hungarians still shudder about
?
such as cabarets and satires ? "The party no longer pretends the horror that claimed at least
or Western, that it can control us through 15,000 lives during those October
Even in etonomics and foreign the Union of Writers," said one and November weeks. Most do.
writer about the state of rimo,t want. a .repeat erformance.
Polk"' this drive for limited young
independence Is just visible. the arts. He himself has been
convince them it w not be
The regime wor in4,hard to,
branded bregime y e as a
Hungarian officials make no "pessimist" in his recent wri- necessary. N
secret of their anger with the tings. , The result is a kind' of sick
inability or the Soviet-sponsoredadjustment to the reality of
Council for Economic Mutual through "We are tired of seeing life power. People live for the
Aid (CEMA) to work out inte- their eyes, of writing for
political reasons. We want done present. They spend their ener-
gy figuring out ways "to beat
grated production for Eastern with politics. We want to write the system." They fall over one
Europe. Today 70 percent of about love and idea
their trade Is tied to the Soviet
idealism. We another in the head-long rush
want to sort out our, own view of into materialism. They worry
bloc, but they are working life." about when and where to find a
actively on means to shift more
of it to the West,? particularly Pessimist or not, he pointed new apartment (five years is a
out that other writers had normal waiting period), about
Austria and West Europe. They protected him against the how to earn more (all jobs have
are cutting back on that heavy Communist attack. He still has a standard wages and standard
industry built up under Stalin-
ism without raw materials to job,he still writes, he is still raises), about where to find the
published. so it goes. Last little luxuries that give some
support It, and pushing more n.,,,?th f.hp party Central Com-' color to life.
profitable exports such as mmiTtee? published new theses on "M a r r y? Why should I
medical equipment, pharma-
ceuticalgoods, and radio and art demanding More ."socialist marry?" asked a youngish
telephonic gear. ? realism" in literature. Intellec- lbachelor. "It costs too much.
tuals were worried about a new 'Besides, love is cheap. Abortions
Political Flirtations ? tightening up, but most Consid- are legal?and they cost almost
ered it one More useless tattle nothing."
in the regime's never-ending This widespread use of abor-
war with the intelligentsia. tion and birth control is clearly
beginning to worry the govern-
ment. No distinction is made
between married and unmarried
women. All an abortion takes is
40 florints ($1.75) and a visit to
the maternity clinic. As a result,
the population has grown by
only 125,000 over the last five
years?the lowest birth rate in
Europe?and is stabilized at 10,-
11,000. Officials admit that they
are afraid to reverse their birth
control policy for fear that the
Furthermore Hungary corn
petes with Rumania today '
political flirtations with Wes
Europe. During a visit to Par'
last January, Hungarian For itself, there is also the first
eign Minister Janos Pete glimmer. - of experimentation.
expressed careful interest in Expert consensus Is that Hadar
President Charles De Gaulle's - ?
call for a "European Europe.,, carefully balances between the
And he went further last month "o I d guard" and younger
when he travelled to Vienna for "pragmatists"- who Vent to
agreements on reducing border work out new formS Within the
formalities .between' Hungary
and Austria.' ? on,e Party State>, The result is
gradualism as.p way of political
The nett ettestion;', then, is life. .1 .
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sudden population growth would
put a heavy new strain on living
standards and lead to many
Illegal abortions.
Concessions Granted
This popular attitude toward
life has wrung more and more
concessions out of the regime.
With initial injections of Soviet
aid, the government has worked
overtime to supply the better
life which is the people's price
for stability. Peasants are
actively encouraged to cultivate
their private plots on collective
farms and paid well for food
essential to city supplies. Today
the women of Budapest once
[again exercise their native.
.,talent for elegance, and the city
Is alive with coffee houses and
ispring flowers.
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