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CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5
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July 3, 1968
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July 3, 1968 Approved F ffC)$"tgSi / 1t/ 1LC *BQP~ PRHR000300070003-5 S 8169 Township 20 north, range 21 west, M.P.M., section 1 northeast quarter southwest quar- ter, containing 40.00 acres. Township 22 north, range 22 west, M.P.M., section 3 north half southeast quarter, con- taining 80.00 acres. Township 19 north, range 23 west, M.P.M., section 5 northeast quarter southwest quar- ter, containing 40.00 acres; section 35 south half northeast quarter, southeast quarter northwest quarter, northeast quarter south- east quarter, containing 160.00 acres. Township 20 north, range 23 west, M.P.M., section 15 northeast quarter, southeast quar- ter northwest quarter, containing 200.00 acres; section 17 west half southwest quar- ter, containing 80.00 acres; section 18 south- east quarter northeast quarter, east half southeast quarter, containing 120.00 acres; section 29 northwest quarter southwest quar- ter, containing 40.00 acres; section 30 north- east quarter southeast quarter, containing 40.00 acres; section 29 west half southwest quarter southwest quarter southwest quar- ter, containing 5.00 acres; section 32 north- west quarter northwest quarter northwest quarter northwest quarter, containing 2.50 acres. Township 22 north, range 23 west, M.P.M half southwest quarter, west half sout quarter, containing 240.00 acres. Township 23 north, range 23 west, M section 3 southwest quarter northeast ter, containing 40.00 acres; section 5 half southeast quarter northwest qu southwest quarter northwest quarter, acres; section 19 lots 2 and 4, southeast quar- ter northwest quarter, containing 103.21 acres. Township 24 north, range 23 west, M.P.M., section 19, southwest quarter, northeast quar- ter, northeast quarter southwest quarter, east half southeast quarter, containing 160.00 acres; section 20, southwest quarter south- west quarter, containing 40.00 acres; section 30, northeast quarter northeast quarter, con- taining 40.00 acres. Township 23 north, range 24 west, M.P.M., section 1, northeast quarter southwest quar- ter, containing 40.00 acres; section 3, north- west quarter southeast quarter, containing 40.00 acres; section 24, northeast quarter southeast quarter northeast quarter, south half southeast quarter' northeast quarter, southeast quarter southeast quarter south- east quarter, containf'ng 40.00 acres. The net proceeds fro or lands pursuant to The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem.- pore. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. EXECUTIVE SESSION Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate go into executive session to consider the nomination on the Executive Calendar. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro teni- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. CALIFORNIA , )ES tIS COMMISSION The stant legislative clerk read the no ation of Brig. Gen. William M. ber of the California Debris Commission under the provisions of section 1 of the act of Congress approved March 1, 1893 (27 Stat. 507; 33 U.S.C. 661). The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem.- pore. Without objection, the nomination is confirmed. U.S. AIR FORCE The assistant legislative clerk proceed- to read sundry nominations in the Mr. ANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanin1 consent that these nomina- tions be con ' ered en bloc. The ACTIN RESIDENT pro tem.- pore. Without obje 'on, the nominations will be considered en c; and, without objection, they are confil d. U.S. ARMY ceeded to read sundry nominations in the U.S. Army. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that these nomina- tions be considered en bloc. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, the nomina- tions will be considered en bloc; and, without objection, they are confirmed. additional lands within boundaries in accordance this Act. ysection 2 of The assistant legislative clerk pro- Salish and Kootenai Tribes, the Secretai'y..gf v- -zwy. the Interior is authorized to acquire Indian-;--_ Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask or non-Indian-owned lands within the reser- vation boundaries for such tribes, and such lands may be held for tribal use or for sale to tribal members. Title to lands acquired pur- suant to this authority shall be taken in the name of the United States in trust for the tribes or the tribal member to whom the land is sold. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I move that the Senate concur in the amendment of the House. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The question is on agreeing to the motion of the Senator from Montana. The motion was agreed to. Mr. 'MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The ACTING 'PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, the nomina- tions will be considered en bloc; and, without objection, they are confirmed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the President be immediately notified of the confirmation of these nominations. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem.- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. LEGISLATIVE SESSION Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate re- sume the consideration of legislative business. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. EXECUTIVE COMMUNICATIONS, ETC. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore laid before the Senate the following letters, which were referred as indicated: PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE BUDGET, 1969, FOR THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH, SENATE A communication from the President of the United States, transmitting an amend- the budget for the fiscal year 1969, in the a unt of $1,430,305, for the legisla- tive brans , Senate (with an accompanying paper); to the Committee on Appropriations, and ordered to be printed. UNITED STATES-MEXICO COMMISSION FOR BORDEP. DEVELOPMENT AND FRIENDSHIP A communication from the President of the United States, urging the enactment of a bill to establish the United States Section of the United States-Mexico Commission for Border Development and Friendship; to the ,Committee on Foreign Relations. REPORT ON SMOKING AND HEALTH A letter from the Secretary of Health, Edu- cation, and Welfare, transmitting, pursuant to law, his report on smoking and health, which includes the Surgeon General's Report to the Secretary on The Health Consequences of Smoking, 1968 Supplement (with an ac- companying report) ; to the Committee on Commerce. WAGERING TAX AMENDMENTS OF 1968 A letter from the Secretary of the Treas- ury, transmitting a draft of proposed legisla- tion to modify the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 relating to wagering taxes (with accompanying papers) ; to the Committee on Finance. REPORT OF COMPTROLLER GENERAL A letter from the Comptroller General of the United States, transmitting, pursuant to law, a report on the need for improve- ments in internal auditing, Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Transporta- in report) ; to the Committee on Govern- men Operations. INTER RE ON MODEL CODE To GOVERN THE A MINISTRATION OF JUSTICE BY COURTS OF IND N OFFENSES ON INDIAN RESERVA- TIONS A letter Xrom the Secretary of the In- terior, report g, pursuant to law, that it will not be possib to complete preparations for drafting the odel code to govern the ad- ministration o justice by courts of Indian offenses on In ian reservations in time to permit its su mission to Congress by the date specified in the act; to the Committee on Interior nd Insular Affairs. REPORT Lei:' SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES CONTROL United States, reporting, pursuant to law, on the proceedings he has instituted before the Subversive Activities Control Board since January 2, 1968 to the Committee on the Judiciary. RANDOLPH-SHEPPARD ACT AMENDMENTS OF 1968 A letter from the Secretary, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, transmitting a draft of proposed legislation to amend the Randolph-Sheppard vending stand for the blind law so as to make certain improve- ments therein (with an accompanying paper); to the Committee on Labor and Pub- lic Welfare. Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 8170 Approved For RtM&J /I'JN?AL %f.Pll70B0R&QR0300070003-5 July 3, 1968 REPORT OF A COMMITTEE The following report of a committee was submitted: By Mr. KUCHEL, from the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, with amend- ments: 5.2159. A bill to establish the Fort Point National Historic Site in San Francisco, Calif., and for other put s (Rept. No. 1382) . n !r.`1 BILL7U C'ED A bill was introduced, read the first time and, by unanimous consent, the second time, and referred as follows: lay Mr. BREWSUER: 5. 3733. A bill for the relief of Yuk Kwun Lam; to the Committee on the Judiciary. SENATE RESOLUTION 313-RESOLU- TION URGING SUSPENSION OF MOST-FAVORED-NATION TREAT- ]VIENT FOR POLAND Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I submit, for reference to committee, a resolution urg- ing the suspension of most-favored-na- tion treatment for the Polish Commu- nist Government "so long as the Polish Government continues its present cam- paign against Polish intellectuals and students and religious institutions and the Jewish minority in Poland, and so long as it continues to conduct itself as a total satellite of Moscow in the sphere of foreign policy." 1. am pleased to be joined in sponsor- ing this resolution by the junior Senator from Connecticut [Mr. RIBIcOFF] and the junior Senator from South Carolina [Mr. HOLLINGS 1. ' i'he resolution points out that most- favored-nation treatment was predi- cated on the belief "that there would be a progressive development in the direc- tion of greater religious, cultural and political freedom for the Polish people," and that "Poland was moving in the direction of increasing independence from Moscow in the conduct of its for- eiign affairs." Since the conditions on which most- favored-nation treatment were predi- cated no longer exist, since the Polish Government has indeed for several years now been moving backward instead of forward, I believe it makes sense to let the Polish people know that we strongly disapprove of the drift back to Stalinist rule on the part of the Polish Commu- nist Government, and that we also share their unhappiness over their Govern- ment's slavish obedience to Moscow in the field of foreign policy. The hopes we have entertained in re- cent years were not without foundation. The great Poznan revolt of 1956 pro- duced a condition in Poland that was aptly described by some writers as "the frozen revolution." The Communist regime still remained. But in the immediate aftermath of the Poznan revolt there was a truly remark- able liberalization in many spheres. The peasants abandoned the collective farms and began to farm their own plots of land. The church was granted a de- gree of freedom unequalled in any other Communist country. And while the re- gime essentially remained a one-party dictatorship, Poland's intellectuals and students were able to show a degree of independence which would have been un- thinkable under the old regime. Moreover, certain actions taken by the Polish Government during this period created reasonable ground. for hoping that in the field of foreign policy Mos- cow's control was no longer as absolute as it had previously been.. Over the last few years, however, the Polish Communist regime, apparently alarmed by the demands for even more freedom, has been clamping down pro- gressively on its restless intellectuals, As early as November 1964, the Polish security police arrested a group of lec- turers and students at Warsaw Univer- sity, on the charge that they had cir- culated a paper criticizing the Commu- nist system in Poland. Among the arrested lecturers was Karol Modzelew- ski, the son of a prominent father and a leader of the pro-Gomulka student movement in 1956. Instead of being intimidated by their arrest, Modzelewski and a friend by the name of Jacek Kuron circulated an open letter to party members, attacking the Communist system and calling for revo- lution. Not very surprisingly they were immediately rearrested. Tried behind closed doors, they were sentenced to long terms in prison. But this was only the beginning of the trouble for the Polish Communist regime. Prominent intellec- tuals, including long-time Communists, rallied to the defense of the imprisoned men. Among them was Leszek Kolakow- ski, Poland's leading Marxist philoso- pher. Kolakowski soon became the leader and the symbol of the intellectual revolt, a revolt that continued to spread like wildfire despite the repressive measures of the Communist regime. Called before the Communist Party Control Commis- sion of March 1966, he refused to give ground before the inquisition to which he was subjected. On October :21, 1966, the 1.0th anniversary of the Poznan revolt, Kolakowski, in a speech before the his- tory department of Warsaw University, made a scathing indictment of the Com- munist regime, charging that there was no democracy, no responsible govern- ment, no freedom of assembly, and that there was nothing to celebrate. Two resolutions were moved at this meeting, one demanding freedom of speech and the abolition of censorship and political repression and the other calling for the immediate release of Modzelewski and Kuron. The next day Professor Kolakowski was expelled from the party. On November 25, 15 writers, all of them party members, sent a letter to the Cen- tral Party Committee declaring their support for Professor Kolakowski and de- manding his reinstatement. As a result of their protests, six resigned from the party and seven were suspended. Again, these limited repressions failed to solve the problem for the Polish Com- munist regime. Throughout 1967, there were repeated outcroppings of intellec- tual ferment. On the other hand, the in- fluence of the Stalinist elements within the party leadership became progressive- ly stronger. The situation was aggravated by the blatantly anti-Semitic reaction of the Communist government after the Arab-Israeli war of June 1967. The government had sided openly with the Arab extremists against Israel. The sympathy of the Polish Jews, not very surprisingly, lay on the side of the State of Israel. The government responded, first, by attacking the Jews for being "Zionists," then by expelling them en masse from positions in the party and the government and in the universities. The early months of 1968 witnessed the most massive public revolt since 1956; and they also witnessed a merciless in- tensification of political repression and anti-Jewish measures. On January 30 of this year the Com- munist government ordered the closing of the poetical play "Forefathers Eve," by the renowned 19th century poet Adam Michkiewicz. This action triggered an epidemic of protests over the next sev- eral months. Let me quote only a few of the newspaper headlines for the purpose of telling this story as briefly as possible. On February 18, the New York Times carried a story headlined "Writers Dis- pute Party in Poland: Showdown Ap- pears at Hand. Over Rule of Regime." The article told the story of an extraor- dinary session of the Polish Writers Union which petitioned against the clos- ing of Michkiewicz' play. On February 20, the headline in the Baltimore Sun read: "Writer Jailed as Poland Steps Up Stalinist Purge." On March 8, 4,000 students assembled at Warsaw University to demand the re- opening of the closed play. When the militia was sent against the students, rioting spread to the streets of Warsaw and sympathy demonstrations took place in eight major universities. On March 10, the headline in the New York Times read: "Polish Students in Second Day of Riots; Tear Gas and Clubs Are Used by Police." According to the article the students shouted "More de- mocracy," "Down with censorship," "Down with the lying press." The New York Times of March 12 read: "Thousands in Poland Fight Police as Protest Mounts." On March 20, the New York Times reported on a protest sit-in by the stu- dents at Cracow University. On March 22, there came reports of a student sit-in at Warsaw University. The revolt, which began in February and continued, through the end of March, was brought under control dur- ing April and May by stern repressive measures. Any pretense at moderation was completely discarded by the Com- munist government; and within the Gov- ernment, according to all reports, the real power passed into the hands of the Stalinist Minister of the Interior, Gen- eral Moczar. In cracking clown on the intellectuals and the students, the Communist gov- ernment, following the example set by the Czarist government in the first part of the century, decided to make the harassed Jews of Poland the scapegoat once again. The Government-controlled press charged that the student demon- Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 July 3, 1968 Approved Fo~("eS?R8IVAL2hEE&-WP7g 3 IR000300070003-5 stration and the entire intellectual pro- test movement was instigated by the "Zionists," a term which they have con- sistently used in seeking to disguise their anti-Semitism. Hundreds of Jewish intellectuals who had survived the 1967 purge, now were dismissed from the universities and Gov- ernment offices. To their everlasting credit, it should be said that Poland's students and in- tellectuals understand only too well that the present anti-Semitic campaign is part of a wider reaction affecting the entire Polish nation. They have not merely refused to go along with the new Communist campaign against the Jews, but they have openly opposed it. Demon- strating students have carried placards which read: "We are against cultural repression and against anti-Semitism." At this moment, the Communist re- action is triumphant in Poland. But this triumph, I am certain, is a transient one. The Polish people, who have never com- promised with tyranny, will not for long remain quiescent under the intensified tyranny that has now been imposed on them. It is my belief that by approving the resolution which I have today submitted, we can demonstrate our support for the Polish people in their continuing strug- gle for freedom and for independence from Moscow's control. I want to make it clear that I am not proposing economic sanctions. Most-fa- vored-nation treatment is not a right; it is a privilege. And it is a privilege which we have granted to Poland at a heavy cost in terms of our own balance-of-pay- ments deficits. As the senior Senator from Virginia, Mr. HARRY F. BYRD, JR., has pointed out, in 1959, the year before most-favored- nation treatment was accorded to Poland, Polish exports to the United States to- taled $31 million, while her imports ran to $75 million. At that time, therefore, we had a favor- able trade balance of more than $43 mil- lion a year with Poland. The trade advantages Poland has gained as a result of most favored nation treatment has now reversed the situation so that in 1967 Poland's exports to the United States totaled $91 million, while her imports had declined to $61 million. This meant a deficit of another $30 mil- lion a year added to our already pressing balance-of-payments problem. If Poland had continued to evolve in the direction of greater independence from Moscow and greater internal free- dom for her people, a solid argument could be made for continuing to accord her the privilege of most favored nation treatment, even at some cost to our- selves. But as matters stand today I can think of no argument to justify con- tinuation. I ask unanimous consent to insert at this point in the RECORD the complete text of my resolution. I also ask unanimous consent to insert into the RECORD at this point an article by Tibor Szamuely which appeared in the Reporter magazine for June 1, 1967, and which tells the story of the intellectual revolt in Poland from 1960 until the first part of 1967. I also ask unanimous consent to insert into the RECORD a number of newspaper articles which deal with the events of last year and this year in Poland. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The resolution will be received and appropriately referred; and, without ob- jection, the resolution and articles will be printed in the RECORD. The resolution (S. Res. 313) was re- ferred to the Committee on Finance, as follows: S. RES. 313 Whereas the most favored nation treat- ment which the government of Poland today enjoys was predicated on the belief that this government had turned its back on the worst abuses of the past, and on the hope that there would be a progressive development in the direction of greater religious, cultural and political freedom for the Polish people; Whereas the Polish Communist govern- ment over the past year has completely re- versed the earlier trend toward liberaliza- tion, has embarked on an open campaign against intellectuals and students and free- dom of speech, has sought to reimpose new restrictions on religion, and has engaged in a virulently anti-Semitic propaganda remi- niscent of the worst of Hitler and Stalin; Whereas, as President Johnson made clear in his statement of March 24, 1964, announc- ing the extension of most favored nation treatment for Poland, this policy was also predicated on the assumption that Poland was moving in the direction of increasing in- dependence from Moscow in the conduct of its foreign affairs; Whereas, as President Johnson made clear in his statement of March 24, 1964, an- nouncing the extension of most favored na- tion treatment for Poland, this policy was also predicated on the assumption that Po- land was moving in the direction of increas- ing independence from Moscow in the con- duct of its foreign affairs; and Whprcas the Polish Communist govern- ment has instead over the past two years slavishly followed the Moscow line in for- eign policy, as is evident from its uncondi- tional support of the Arab extremists in the Mideast crisis from its militant opposition to the current expansion of freedom in Czecho- slovakia, and from the fact that it is, after Moscow, one of the principal sources of sup- ply for North Vietnam: Therefore be it Resolved, That it is the sense of the Sen- ate that the government of the United States should manifest its support for the aspira- tions of the Polish people for more freedom by suspending most favored nation treat- ment for Poland so long as the Polish gov- ernment continues its present campaign against Polish intellectuals and students and religious institutions and the Jewish minor- ity in Poland, and so long as it continues to conduct itself as a total satellite of Moscow in the sphere of foreign policy. The articles, presented by Mr. DODD, are as follows: [From the Reporter, June 11, 1967] THE INTELLECTUAL REVOLT IN POLAND (By Tibor Szamuely) On January 8, Peter Raina, a young Indian leftist scholar, was expelled from Poland, where he had lived and worked for more than four years. It was a harrowing experi- ence: Rains, was held at the East German border for almost twelve hours while Polish guards methodically went through his be- longings, reading every scrap of paper. Fi- nally they let him go after confiscating a three-hundred-page manuscript of a biogra- phy of Communist Party Secretary Wlady- slaw Gomulka on which he had been work- ing, with official encouragement and help, for about two years. Raina had come to Poland full of sym- pathy for the Gomulka regime. He learned S 8171 to love the country, its language and culture. Warsaw University gave him a doctorate. Wanting to see only the best, for a long time he resolutely dismissed all western criticisms as propaganda. He wrote letters to the for- eign press attacking western correspondents for their lack of understanding of Poland and accusing them, among other things, pf slandering the Ministry of Interior Affairs. Thus it came as a shock to be called an enemy of the state by that very ministry and to be ordered by it to leave the country within forty-eight hours. When he finally reached West Germany, Dr. Raina unburdened his disillusionment to the press, broadcast to Poland on Radio Free Europe, and made public a scathing letter he had written to the Polish Minister of Interior Affairs. His story is informative, for it shed light on some little-known aspects of what is probably the most important process at present taking place in Poland: the new ferment among the intellectuals. LAMENT FOR OCTOBER Since about 1960, Warsaw University, and particularly its departments of the humani- ties and social sciences, has become the cen- ter of disaffection, spreading among the younger generation of intellectuals. In No- vember, 1964, the security police arrested a group of the university's young lecturers and students. One of the lecturers was Karol Mod- zelewski, a stepson of the late Polish Com- munist Foreign Minister and a leader of the pro-Gomulka student movement of 1956. They were all accused of having circulated a paper criticizing the Communist system in Poland. Although soon released, five of them were expelled from the party. Administrative sanctions, usually an ef- fective warning, didn't work this time. Mod- zelewski and a friend, Jacek Kuron, com- posed an open letter to the party. When they distributed it in March, 1965, they were immediately rearrested. No one was surprised, for the document was a devastat- ing indictment-couched in impeccable Marxist terms-of Poland under Gomulka: "To whom does power belong in our state?" the authors asked. "To one monopolistic party-The Polish United Workers' Party . . . The decisions of the elite are inde- pendent, free of any control on the part of the working class and of the remaining classes and social strata." The Poland which Modzelewski and Kuron described and analyzed with a wealth of sta- tistical and other evidence is, in fact, the familiar Stalinist system-which Communist leaders and wishful thinkers in the West in- sist was swept away in the cleansing after- math of the 1956 Twentieth Congress of the Soviet Communist Party. But it was the authors' conclusion that was intolerable to the authorities: "In view of the impossibility of overcoming the economic and social crisis within the framework of the bureaucratic system, revolution is inevitable." Modzelewski and Kuron were tried in July, 1965, behind closed doors, with the courthouse surrounded by.~a tense crowd of students. They were sentenced to three and a half and three years respectively. This, however, was far from the end of the affair. Modzelewski and Kuron had been vol- untarily defended in court by some of the most esteemed figures of Polish intellectual life: Antoni Slonimski, the dean of Polish writers, and Professors Tadeusz Kotarbinski, Leopold Infeld, and Leszek Kolakowski. It was Kolakowski who occupied the center of the stage. His reputation and popularity as a champion of intellectual and political freedom-and as Poland's leading Marxist philosopher-was established in the "Polish October" of 1956. He was one who rallied the intellectuals and students behind Gomulka and the ideal of rebuilding Polish Commu- nism on an ethical, libertarian, and humanis- tic foundation. Today his fiery declarations of ten years ago may well seem naive-not least to Kola- Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 S8172 Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE July 3, 1968 kowski himself-but at the time they con- veyed hope. In his ideological credo, pub- lished in 1957, Kolakowski argued that the true Communist's place was on the side of the oppressed and the persecuted: "No one is exempt from the moral duty to fight a?rainst a system or rule, a doctrine or social conditions which he considers to be vile and inhuman, by resorting to the argument that lie considers them historically necessary." Through the sad years of Gomulka's gradual repudiation of all that he seemed to repre- sent in 1956, Professor Kolakowski had re- treated into semi-passivity. The case of lodzelewskl and Karon forced him again to face up to the dilemma of the idealistic Communist in a repressive Communist state. It is at this point that young Peter Raina caters the story. Dr. llama was a devoted ad- mirer of Kolakowski, and he unhesitatingly Toined his professor in protesting the sen- tences given the two teachers. Last year, the party leadership decided to stamp out student unrest and began a series of repressive measures directed against War- saw University; a number of students were expelled, new disciplinary rules were intro- duced, party control was tightened. The re- strictions brought a wave of even more vocif- erous indignation. Protest meetings were held, delegations dispatched, signatures col- lected. There were noisy scenes at the 1966 May Day demonstration. In the meantime, ever-increasing pressure was being applied to Leszek Kolakowski. In March, 1966, he was summoned before the party Control Commission and called upon to submit a declaration retracting his views. Despite a grueling interrogation, he remained obdurate. The climax came on October 21, the tenth anniversary of the uprising, that had swept Gomulka to power. A commemora- tive meeting was held in the history depart- ment of the university, at which Kolakowski spoke for about half an hour. His message, as reported in a Polish paper in London, was on the order of an obituary of freedom in his country: "Genuine democracy is lacking here. There is very little public choice of the leaders. Thus, the leadership, :which is not really clected, becomes conceited, self-assured. There is no apposition; hence there is no confrontation between those who are in power and those who are without. . `The Government does not feel responsible to the nation. The system of privileges is prevalent. These privileges exist for a few outside the law. . Public criticism is lack- ing. Free assembly is nonexistent. Censorship is extremely severe. . "All this has weakened society, for there is no perspective, no hope. The state, the party, the society are the victims of stagna- tion. There is therefore nothing to celebrate." pcaker after speaker rose to reiterate the main points of this comprehensive indict- cnert. Among them was Peter Raina. Two resolutions were moved: one demanding the introduction of freedom of speech and the abolition of censorship and political repres- J,,n, the other calling for the immediate .releaso of Modzelewski and Kuron. Although the motions were not allowed to be put to a vote, the thunderous acclaim with which l,hcyf were received spoke for itself. UNSI7i' IN PROTEST Naxt day Professor Kolakowski was sum- marily expelled from the party. In the fol- l.owing few days his assistant was also ex- pelled, six students were suspended, and even others were sent before the university's disciplinary commission. A systematic cam- aign of calumny was mounted with the nib ect of discrediting Kolakowski, who was accused of being "a tool in the hands of the imperialists." On November 15, the university organiza- tion of the Communist Party held a general meeting; it was addressed by Zenon Kliszko- the secretary of the Central Committee, the chief party theoretician, and Gomulka's second-in-command---and by Stanislaw Kociolek, first secretary of the Warsaw com- mittee of the party. Kllszko trotted out all the cliches about the perils of revisionism; Kociolek went straight to the point: "I am against discussions, dialogues, and seminars. The unity of the party is supreme. Discipline is the cardinal principle of the life of the party." Instead of giving the expected dutiful assent, the assembled university Commu- nists launched an attack on the party's lead- ership. Kliszko, driven into a corner, pro- tested: "I didn't come to this meeting to present any explanations. I came to listen to them." Similar stormy scenes were repeated at party meetings held in other leading cul- tural Institutions. The intelligentsia clearly was getting out of hand. The conflict spread fast. On November 25, fifteen writers, all active members of the party and regular contributors to official periodicals, sent a letter to the Central Committee expressing their solidarity with Professor Kolakowski and demanding his re- instatement. The response of the party bu- reaucracy remaind doctrinaire--and ineffec- tual. The writers were summoned to the Central Committee, where, one by one, they refused to withdraw their protest. Six of them, including prewar Communists, driven at length into rebellion against the beliefs of a lifetime, resigned from the party. Seven others were suspended. Nor was the party leadership any more successful in its deal- ings with the Writers' Union as a whole. At a special meeting of the party organization of the union's Warsaw sections (numbering about a hundred members) that was con- vened to condemn the actions of Kolakowski and his supporters, only one speaker sup- ported the official line. It would be wrong to assume that all these who joined this broad front of intellectual dissent necessarily subscribe to Modzelew- ski's or Kolakowski's views. The principle that unites them is opposition to the stifling system of Communist conformity, to the to- talitarian controls over thought and speech and writing, to the subjugation of the intel- lect and the prostitution of culture. Yet as the history of Communism-whether in Po- land, the Soviet Union, or any other "social- ist" state--has shown, the party cannot afford to compromise this control. The result it has achieved in Poland has been the suc- cessive alienation of the intellectual com- munity, and with every new purge the area of revolt grows wider. Peter Raina's letter to the Minister of In- terior Affairs summed up the sense of be- trayal. "A few days ago," he wrote, "when I went to the militia headquarters in order to have my visa extended, I was greatly surprised by the decision of the militia riot to extend my stay in Poland. I was aghast at the mo- tivation of this decision, namely that I have a hostile attitude toward Poland. . . . "For the first time in my life I came against a case when the control of university life was exercised by secret agents of the Min- istry of Interior Affairs. . . . "I never had any treacherous intentions towards Poland. I always defended Polish interests. I published abroad letters which criticized foreign correspondents for their lack of understanding of Poland. I endeavored within the limits of my possibilities to spread Polish culture through numerous transla- tions of Polish literature. I feel, therefore, greatly injured by the mendacious accu:aa- tions formulated against me by the Ministry of Interior Affairs. I am writing to you that thanks to the activity of agents of the Min- istry of Interior Affairs at the university, everybody is governed by fear and one can- not behave normally and calmly at seminars and meetings. I am ashamed for the univer- sity and its leadership that things have come to such a pass that low and dirty methods are applied to students, methods that recall the times of fascism and Its terror. Methods applied to me during the last few days at the militia headquarters (to wit, the denial of any possibility of explaining things) recall .to my mind the methods of Stalinism. . the events of the last days con- vinced me that all the ministries, the uni- versity, the whole cultural life, the political parties, the parliament, were subject to or- ders of the Ministry of the Interior Affairs from which them was no appeal and that nobody had the courage to dare even to make a rightful protest against unjust treatment." A fair description of a country which was only recently being advertised as a showplace of "liberal" Communism-and a melancholy epitaph to the illusions of an idealist who learned about Communism the hard way. [From the Baltimore Sun, May 22, 19681 POLISH ANTI-SEMrTISM CALLED COVERUP FOR STATE CRISIS (By Stuart S. Smith) PRAGUE, May 21.-Polish Communist party leaders are deliberately promoting anti-semi- tic agitation in the guise of a fight against Zionism to cover up a "serious crisis" that threatens to destroy the State according to a responsible Czechoslovak journal. The Gomulka regime seems to be incapa- ble of mastering the nation's deep divisions, it added, and there is a grave danger that police oppression used to silence the increas- ing dissatisfaction will cause an explosion. The comment was contained in the third and final part of a lengthy analysis of the current Warsaw malaise published in the latest issue of Literarni Listy, the Czecho- slovak Writers' Union weekly. The piece appeared despite an earlier for- mal Polish protest that Czechoslovak journ- alists have been slandering Poland by ac- cusing it of anti-Semitism. The Poles charged, too, that the Czechoslovak news- papers had been relying too heavily on West- ern media for their reports. The article's author, Jiri Lederer, visited Poland earlier this year and talked exten- sively with numerous journalists and other persons familiar with public life there. He said all those who are participating in the campaign against Zionism swear that it has nothing to do with anti-Semitism. In practice, however "it looks quite different," Lederer asserted. Whether the party leaders wanted it or not, a wave of anti-Semitism has appeared and made many Poles ashamed of their country. Among the Polish "citizens of Jewish ori- gin," the agitation prompted a wave of fear for their existence-in the very nation in which the Nazi extermination policy had been the most successful, he said. PROPAGANDA FOSTERED Lederer charged that anti-Zionist propa- ganda is being particularly vigorously fos- tered-by Pax, a Government-sponsored Cath- olic organization whose chairman, Boleslav Pisecki, was active in the National Radical Camp, a pre-World War II nationalist and anti-Semitic political organization. Fortunately, however, the Polish popula- tion has stayed aloof from the anti-Zionist campaign, Lederer reported. He attributed this to widespread hatred of the regime and its Police-state terrorist tactics. Two months ago five members of the Po- lish Parliament challenged the Government to put a stop to its degrading brutality. The five deputies, who are members of Znak, a twelve-year-old Catholic organization which has nothing to do with Pax, accused the Gomulka regime's security forces of abus- ing numerous persons arrested during the March student demonstrations and "tortur- ing" many people, including young girls. With a certain irony, Lederer recalled that a dozen years ago Wladislaw Gomulka, who had just taken over as the Polish party Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 July 3, 1968 Approved O!lp?g %- /1#,/ o?iiB[ M 338R000300070003-5 leader, was accused of being a traitor to so- cialism, much as Gomulka's followers now cite the new Czechoslovak leaders on the same charge. None the less, Lederer said, after they as- sumed power in 1956, Gomulka and his as- sociates took over the old political tradi- tions left over from the Stalinist days in- stead of reforming the system, and by now a "profound degeneration" has developed and the "ruling party is undergoing a crisis." LACK OF FREE9OMS "There is a great lack of democratic free- doms," and a "modern democratic concep- tion of a Socialist society" does not exist in Poland today, he charged. The Government's use of Zionism as the alleged inspirer of the dissatisfaction among the people is a substitute for a real anlaysis of the country's political and social prob- lems and "distracts attention," from the real issues at hand, Lederer commented. What is more, he asserted,. Gomulka "is losing his authority of the party apparatus" to Mieczyslaw Moczar, the Interior Minister, whom Lederer accused of trying to solve all the nation's difficulties by the use of terror. "Such a policy, however, cannot remove all the dissatisfaction," he stated. "It can only silence it temporarily. Then a serious danger could arise that this discontent could re- appear in a more explosive form." [From the New York Times, Feb. 18, 1968] WRITERS DISPUTE PARTY IN POLAND-SHOW- DOWN APPEARS AT HAND OVER RULE OF REGIME WARSAW, February 17.-Recent interference by the Communist party in Polish cultural life appears to be provoking a showdown between the normally complacent intellec- tual community and an increasingly nervous party leadership. Indicative of the intellectuals' new mood of militance was a decision this week by the Warsaw section of the Polish Writers Union to hold, before the end of this month, the first extraordinary meeting in its 48-year history. More than 230 Communist and non-Com- munist writers overcame their political dif- ferences to sign a petition requesting the meeting to protest the party's decision that ended performances of a classic anti-Russian play by the 19th-century romantic poet Adam Mickiewicz. Major importance is attached to the meet- ing because, if past performance is any guide, it should provide a rare semipublic forum for airing the intellectual communi- ty's accumulated complaints. AUDIENCE PROTESTED Both before and after "Dziady" ("The Forefathers") was closed amid angry audi- ence protests on Jan. 30, the party showed its nervousness in dealing with the Intellec- tuals. Last week, party censors abruptly can- celed performances of a prewar avant-garde play, "Gyubal Wahazar," the day before it was scheduled to open at the Nardowy Thea- ter, where "Dziady" had also been per- formed. The play, by the late Stanislas Ignacy Wit- kiewicz, was described in an official theater publication as a "protest against all tyran- nies." It ends with the secret police chief assassinating the dictator. Censors are reported to be insisting that the name of the Nardowy production now in rehearsal be changed before it can open. The original title of the play, a nonpoliti- cal turn-of-the-century comedy, is "Ciezkie Czasy," or "Oppressive Times." TRIAL IS CLOSED Observers also credit party nervousness with the current trial of the literary critic Janusz Szpotanski; who is accused of harm- ing state interests by writing and privately performing a satiric operetta, Cisi i Gegagze, ("The Silent and the Honkers.") Some Communist sources are worried that the writers union will stray from complaints about censorship to political polemics, which could further estrange the party and the in- tellectual community. A number of leading Polish intellectuals, many of them Jews, have resigned from the Communist party since the Middle Eastern conflict last June amid charges that the lead- ership used the war as a pretext to shut off discussion. Other signs of intellectual unrest are re- flected in reports that actors and Warsaw University students have signed petitions condemning the closing of "Dziady." But both Communist and non-Communist writers are chary about predicting that the Writers Union meeting will produce any significant liberalization of party attitudes. [From the Baltimore Sun, Feb. 20, 1968] WRITER JAILED AS POLAND STEPS UP STALINIST PURGE-OPERA- SPOOF WARSAW, February 19.-A 34-year-old lit- erary critic was sentenced today to three years in prison for writing a comic opera spoofing leading Polish personalities :ranging from politicians to Cardinals. Janusz Szpotanski was found guilty of "preparing and disseminating false or deroga- tory writings or other materials deemed detri- mental to the interests of the state." The verdict and sentencing were read in open court, but the motivation for the de- cision was given after the courtroom had been cleared of spectators. SECRET SESSIONS The trial began February 5 and was open to the public. In the six sessions that followed until the conclusion today, the trial was held behind closed doors. Szpotanski's opera tapes had. been making the rounds of private parties for a few years. [From the Baltimore Sun, Feb. 20, 1968] WRITER JAILED AS POLAND STEPS UP STALINIST PURGE-POLICE STATE (By Stuart S. Smith) BONN, February 19.-Poland has fallen back into the status of a reactionary police state, Western observers said today. The once liberal Gomulka regime has in recent months made use of threats, arrests and political trials to harass both the party rank and file and the population at large, they say. The principal instigator of this repression is said to he Mieczyslaw Moczar, the Polish Interior Minister and head of the secret police. Moczar is, at the same time, leader of a Stalinist party faction called the Partisans, which for years has been trying to undermine the position of the liberals who helped bring Wladislaw ? Gomulka, the Polish Communist party secretary to power in 1956. The fact that anti-Partisan elements have been the chief losers in the recent reshuffles and have been replaced by men close to Moczar indicates the Interior Minister is getting the upper hand. For sometime now the Polish press, radio and television have been conducting a propaganda campaign, warning the popula- tion against contacts with the "imperialist" West. Regular denunciations of not only the United States but also West Germany are standard fare. This contrasts with the attitudes of Yugo- slavia, Romania and Bulgaria, which now have good relations with West Germany. Also Hungary and Czechoslovakia are taking slow but positive steps toward improving com- munications with the Federal Republic and other Western Nations. ANTI-SEMITISM The Polish propaganda, which contains a considerable amount of anti-Semitism, is S 8173 being supported by a series of spy trials, which have been given wide publicity in an obvious effort to scare the citizenry. Western journalists encounter great diffi- culty in entering Poland, although they may travel freely throughout Hungary, Chechos- lovakia and Romania and do not even need visas to enter Yugoslavia and Bulgaria. Polish censors, who once tolerated much Government criticism, are now among the harshest in Communist Europe. Numerous theater pieces have been can- celed and books and magazine pieces banned in the past few months. Only the most obedient writers have been able to obtain good commissions. MIDEAST WAR Moczar's purges have been directed against all liberal groups, but last summer's Arab- Israel confrontation provided him with an excellent weapon to use against Communist party Jews, most of whom opposed Moczar's Partisan movement. Although Jews have for many decades played an important role in Polish party affairs today there are few if any left in re- sponsible positions. The Polish leadership's ever closer relation- ship to Soviet policy runs against the trend among other European Communist nations, with the exception of East Germany, which are seeking as independent a political status as their economic dependency upon Russia will allow. Why the Polish leadership feels so insecure that it must turn back the clock and reapply terrorist methods is difficult to say, but new acts of oppression or even the continuation of the present conditions can only further embarrass the country's more liberal Com- munist allies in Southeast Europe. TWO JAILED IN POLAND WARSAW, February 19.-A West German was sentenced to 61/2 years in prison and a Pole to 9 years in Szczecin, northwest Poland, to- day for alleged hostile political activity on orders from two West German religious or- ganizations. Eugan Schrabtke, a West German, and Al- fred Kipper, a Pole from Szczecin, carried out their activities in areas Poland took from Germany after the World War II, the provin- cial court said. In its judgment, the court stressed the men's full consciousness of their activities against the Polish state and in the interest of the West German "revisionist" church or- ganizations Kirchendianst Ost and Evenge- lishes Hilfswerk, according to the Polish news agency Pap. The court said the regret Schrabatke ex- pressed during the trial mitigated his offense. The indictment said that under the guise of helping German nationals still living in the former German areas the two organiza- tions aimed at encouraging the belief that the present Polish-German frontier was not permanent. The accused were alleged to have slandered Poland while pretending to help German na- tionalists of evangelical faith in northwest Poland. They were charged with collecting and sending information to West Berlin, and West Germany about life and people in the western Pomeranian region around Szczecia, including lists of persons supposed to be needing help. They were also charged with illegal cur- rency manipulations and other financial of- fenses. [From the New York Times, Mar. 10, 1968] POLISH STUDENTS IN 2D DAY OF RIOTS--TEAR GAS AND CLUBS ARE USED BY POLICE To COMBAT BRICKS-TWo ARRESTS REPORTED (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 9.-Polish students shout- ing "Long live Czechoslovakia!" fought steel- helmeted police here today for the second day. Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 S8174 Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE July 3, 1968 The fighting began when students threw bricks and bottles. The police replied by lob- bing tear gas shells. Some students were beaten with rubber truncheons. The students' shouts apparently alluded to the promises for greater democracy that have been made by the new Czechoslovak leadership since Alexander Dubcek replaced Antonin Novotny as First Secretary Jan. 5. Spokesmen for the police and the Polish Government said they had "no information" on the number of students that have been arrested during the two days of rioting at Warsaw University and the Polytechnic school. Informed sources said the police arrested Jcek Kuron and Karol Modzelewski last night. They are teaching assistants at War- saw University, who in 1965 were imprisoned for having distributed pamphlets that criti- cized the lack of democracy for the Commu- nist party here. Unlike the rioting yesterday, which was limited to the Warsaw University campus, the clashes spilled directly into the streets, which were littered with bricks, broken glass, stones and newspapers. POLICE ACTION PROTESTED The rioting, which saw policemen and civilian auxiliaries hunt down students in apartment houses, doorways and on church steps, began today when Polytechnic stu- dents marched out of school grounds after a, protest meeting. At the meeting the students condemned the violation of the university's traditional autonomy by policemen and civilian auxilia- ries yesterday and demanded the release of students arrested earlier. Tonight the state-controlled Warsaw tele- vision network broadcast a statement that denied persistent rumors that a girl student had died from injuries received in the clash with the police yesterday. The rioting started when Warsaw Univer- sity students met to demand the reinstate- ment of two students expelled after being arrested last Jan. 31 for demonstrating against the closing of a classic Polish play by Adam Mickiewicz, a 19th-century poet. The play, depicting Polish suffering, contains Ines that could be interpreted as criticism of the Soviet Union today. The students also expressed their solidarity With the Warsaw branch of the Writers' Union which last week condemned the clos- ing of the play, "Dziady" ("The Forefath- ers"), and called for a relaxation of censor- ship. MARCH ON NEWSPAPER Today, led by a student carrying a red and white Polish flag, some 3, 000 students marched in the direction of the offices of Zycie Warszawy, a Government-controlled newspaper that had criticized them as "scum." Near Workers Unity Square, the stir- dents were met by policemen who demanded that they disperse. Among the slogans the students shouted were "More democracy!" "Down with censor- ship!" "Gestapo!" "Down with the lying press!" and "Down with Moczar!" Gen. Mieczyslaw Moczar is the Interior Minister and chief of the secret police. Later, some two miles away, police auxil- iaries used truncheons to beat students who were standing on the steps of the Church of the Holy Cross, across the street from the main university entrance. Other students sought sanctuary inside the church, where composer Frederic Chopin's heart is buried. The police and auxiliaries were brought in by the truckload. Traffic patrolmen cor- doned off streets for several hours to contain the rioting near the Polytechnic School. The student rioting was the most serious clash with authority since October 1957, when the Polytechnic School and university students fought police for three days to pro- test against the closing of an outspoken student magazine, Po Prostu. [From the New York Times, Mar. 12, 1968] THOUSANDS IN POLAND FIGHT POLICE AS PROTEST MOUNTS (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 11.-Tens of thousands of Poles clashed with policemen in front of Communist party headquarters and at the statue of the national poet, Adam Mickiewicz, today. For the first time adults joined university students and. teen-agers in the wave of protests against stringent Communist party control of cultural affairs. The patricipation of adults altered the character of the demon- s trations, which began last Friday. The disturbances sought to protest, among other things, the closing of Mickiewicz's classis anti-czarist play, "'Dziady" ("The Forefathers"). [Demonstrators sacked a building of the Culture Ministry in the central section of the capital and fought policemen with debris and broken furniture, Reuters reported. Militiamen battling demonstrators outside Warsaw University were met with chants of "Gestapo! Gestapo!" as they waded forward with flailing clubs.] For almost eight hours, policemen, worker militiamen and civilian police auxiliaries fought with the demonstrators in the third day of violence unequaled since 1957. Then serious rioting followed the closing of the liberal student magazine Po Prostu. Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Roman Cath- olic Primate of Poland, canceled a schedule sermon "to avoid worsening the situation." The cancellation was announced to an over- flow crowd in St. Ann's Cathedral, which reeked of tear-gas grenades tossed by the police. Workers and militiamen used rubber truncheons to beat churchgoers on the cath- edral's steps, which, like many Warsaw streets, were littered with tear-gas canisters, broken glass, bricks and paving stones. Meanwhile, Slowo Powssechne, newspaper of Pax, the pro-Communist Roman Catholic lay movement, suggested that the demon- strations had been led by Zionists. It listed the names of some of the students arrested, almost all of whom are Jews. P.A.P., the Polish press agency, reported that one sign carried at a Communist party meeting at the Zeran automobile factory read, "Clean the Zionists out of the party." During most of the day and early evening, demonstrators seemingly ranged at will, shouting "Gestapo!" "Democracy!" "Con- stitution!" "Warsaw with us!" and "Moczar's valets!" at the police, Mieczyslaw's Moczar is the Interior Minister and chief of the secret police. The demonstrators threw paving stones and bricks at the helmeted policemen, who charged with truncheons and fired tear-gas grenades and, for the first time in the cur- rent outbreak, used a truck armed with a water gun to disperse them. Time and time again demonstrators slipped through side streets and emerged red-eyed and weeping to taunt the police. Most of the fighting took place along Novy Swiat and its continuation, Krakowskie Przedmescie, which for more than a mile forms one of Warsaw's main thoroughfares. Shortly before 4 P.M., when most Warsaw offices and factories had closed for the day, tens of thousands of people suddenly gath- ered in Novy Swiat. Virtually unopposed by small detachments of policemen and large numbers of worker's militiamen, they surged along the street. On their way they burned copies of the principal newspapers, which had continued their denunciations of the student demon- strators, characterizing them as hooligans and "Well-to-do youths with political ambi- tions." Only when. the crowd neared the gray, for- bidding building that, since its erection dur- ing the Stalin era, has housed the United Worker's party Central Committee did the police make serious attempts to stop It. There the fighting, which lasted for more than two hours, was watched by a dozen men and women standing on the party's sixth- floor terrace. The crowd finally dispersed-and the main streets were partly opened. [From the New York Times, Max. 12, 19681 PRAGUE PARTY CHIEF DENIES HE ISSUED STATEMENTS PRAGUE, March 11-The head of the Com- munist party in Prague, Martin Vaculik, ex- pressed his regrets that antiliberal statements by his organization had been "imprecise" and "misunderstood." He asserted on television that he was a progressive but acknowledged that in the party power struggle early this year he sup- ported President Antonin Novotny. A few hours earlier, the Ministry of Interior apologized. to students in Prague for the police violence employed against them last Oct. 31, during a demonstration against living conditions in dormitories. Placing full responsibility on the police for the incident and promising that seven policemen would be punished, the Ministry insisted that neither the Communist party nor state officials bore any responsibility for the mistreatment of the students. The Prague city Communist organization was criticized at weekend meetings of sev- eral of Prague's borough organizations. The attacks were aimed at the city leaders' state- ment last. Friday warning against overhasty changes in Communist party policy and against alleged "one-sidedness" of the com- munications media, which were accused of having disseminated radical ideas and even of mocking fundamental Communist con- cepts. At one meeting, the city leaders were accused of having tried to dictate the line to be taken by the local conferences, having waited until the local organizations ex- pressed their own opinions before issuing a citywide statement. At another borough, a resolution was adopted condemning the city organization's statement, while at a meeting of Communists of Prague universities, disagreement was voiced with the city groups' charge that the communications media were one-sided. Tonight, Mr. Vaculik pleaded that the pre- vailing opinion that his leadership was con- servative was mistaken, and that the wide- spread belief that his organization's state- ment was agaipst freedom of the press was wrong. He argued that he was opposed to radical and extreme statements. [From the Baltimore (Md.) Sun, Mar. 12, 1968 ] YOUTHS RIOT AT POLAND'S PARTY OFFICE- STUDENTS YELL "GESTAPO" DURING 7-HOUR FIGHT OVER CENSORSHIP WARSAW, March ll.-Students shouting "freedom" and "democracy" marched on Communist party headquarters in Warsaw today and battled police for more than seven hours in the worst rioting in Poland in eleven years. Student taunts of "Gestapo, Gestapo" rang out repeatedly as several thousand demon- strators clashed with truncheon-wielding police in running battles on downtown streets. The Gestapo was the secret police in Nazi Germany. The unrest, which flared into weekend riots, had smouldered since early in January when censors construed lines in a play as anti-Soviet. FROM WINDOWS Communist party members and workers watched from the windows of the headquar- ters building as the riot surged below. Tear gas cylinders soared through the air and often were tossed back at the police. Approved For Release 2005/11/21 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 July 3, 1968 Approve(5"ggfW/~V/~bitgA _RR40338R000300070003-5 S 8175 Rocks, sticks, bottles and bricks were sent flying toward the police ringing the building. Stefan Cardinal Wyszynsky, Poland's Cath- olic primate and long an Opponent of the Communist regime, canceled a sermon at St. Ann's Church near the university be- cause of the violence outside the church doors. The cardinal said he would not speak, to "avoid worsening the situation." WORST SINCE 1957 The disorders were the worst since 1957 when protests over the closing of a stu- dent magazine erupted into three days of disturbances. The press today blamed all the trouble on Zionists working for an "alliance between West Germany and Israel" by undermining "the authority of Poland's leadership." Packed streetcars and buses were brought to a halt by the action today. The acrid blue smoke from the tear gas filled the jammed intersection where the building is located. The scene resembled a battlefield. Women screamed insults at police clubbing youths with truncheons. Other passers-by rubbed eyes made red by the tear gas. Police finally managed to disperse the shouting crowd. It was the third outbreak of violence in Warsaw since student demonstrations began last Friday at the downtown campus of War- saw University. On Saturday, police and youths clashed again near the Polytechnic University. As on Saturday, the harsh police measures appeared to have been set off by rock- throwing youths. Friday's violence began after a protest against expulsion of two Warsaw University students on the ground they took part in a demonstration January 1 protesting forced closure of the popular play which had some lines construed as anti-Soviet. Saturday's demonstrations protested police measures used the day before. [From the Evening Star, March 14, 1968] PROTEST OF STUDENTS IN POLAND SPREADS (By Bernard Gwertzman) Poland's student-led demonstrations have spread to at least eight cities outside of Warsaw and have picked up moral sup- port from Czechoslovakia's newly liberalized student organizations. The demonstrations, many of which have led to clashes with police, began as a simple protest meeting in Warsaw last week but have escalated steadily, due in part to the way Polish authorities have handled the matter. Almost from the start, the Communist party press and radio blamed the demonstra- tions on Jews, international Zionism, liberals and anti-socialist elements. And the media have refused to acknowledge the students' major grievance-the expulsion of two students from Warsaw University for participating in a protest against the forced closing of a popular, if somewhat anti-Rus- sian play. WARSAW TENSE The situation in Warsaw, where steel- helmeted police are on the ready, has re- mained quiet but tense for the past two days, diplomatic sources report. This is in contrast to the open clashes on some of the Polish capital's downtown streets last Friday and Saturday. But student groups in other important Polish cities have been protesting in support of the Warsaw demonstrations. Many of these marches have been. aimed at the rather crude way the authorities have handled the situation. The protesters have carried posters saying such things as "The Press Lies," "Down With Censorship" and "Warsaw Is Not Alone." At last report, demonstrations have been held in Krakow, the ancient capital of Po- land and the nation's leading college town; Gliwice, Gdlansk (Danzig), Lublin, Wroclaw (Breslau), Lodz, Poznan and Szczeczin (Stettin). KRAKOW PROTEST Unconfirmed reports say that in Krakow, where Poland's oldest university Jagielionian, is located, force was used to disperse some 3,000 marchers. In Poznan, where riots in 1956 touched off Poland's liberalizing revolution, there were reports that police also used force to break up a smaller demonstration. According to UPI, a meeting of 8,000 stu- dents was hold yesterday in Warsaw to air grievances, and one of Warsaw University's officials, Prof. Dionizy Smolenskl, reportedly agreed that the police actions and press coverage were "two sad things" and be ad- mitted that "sometimes the militia exceeds the limits of their power." Among the complaints aired were that more than 200 students still are being detained by police-another 150 were released. At the meeting, the students also de- manded freedom of assembly and speech, punishment of the university official who summoned police to the university last Fri- day and guarantees against future police in- vasion of the grounds. WIDE PUBLICITY The student resolution also said that the students were in favor of socialism and de- clared that they were not allied with either Zionist or Semitic causes. In Prague, where a change in party leader- ship has brought rapid liberalization, the press is giving wide publicity to the Polish demonstrations, and indicating support for the Polish liberals. The student organization at Charles Uni- versity in Prague has sent a message of sup- port to Warsaw for the student demands. The immediate cause of the unrest was a well-known Polish play, "Dziady" ("The Forefathers' Eve"), written by the 19th.cen- tury romantic poet Adam Mickiewicz who is something of a national hero in Poland. PLAY STIRS UNREST On Nov. 25, Kazimierz Dejmek, one of War- saw's most talented directors, put on a new version of the play in the National Theater. Audiences began to pay special note to the political aspects of the play, which depicts, in part, oppression of Poles by Tsarist police and officials. There were laughs and applause at such lines as "The only things Moscow sends us are jackasses, idiots and spies." For reasons still unknown, the Polish au- thorities, who generally are fairly lenient in theatrical censorship, closed the play on Jan. 30. News about the suspension was widely known in Poland and top cultural figures as well as many students attended the last per- formance. After the final curtain, there was a demonstration against censorship. About 200 students marched to a Mickiewicz monu- ment and about 50 were arrested. Two Jewish students were expelled for their role in the march. Three weeks ago, the Warsaw chapter of the Polish Writers Union held a meeting, and despite efforts by hardliners to prevent it, the majority passed a resolution asking for restoration of Dejmek's production and an end to censorship. WARSAW UNIVERSITY Last Friday, a meeting was called on the campus of Warsaw University to protest the expulsion of the two students and this led to police efforts to disperse the crowds, fights and injuries. For the next three days, War- saw underwent a series of incidents, with many injuries. Prominent in the official response has been the emphasis put on "Zionist sympathizers." The attack on Zionists has been going on with little letup since the Arab-Israel war last June. In the aftermath, almost all of Warsaw's intellectuals have been at odds with the party leadership decision to break rela- tions with Israel. As a result of the disputes over the war, party hardliners, apparently led by Interior -Minister Mieczyslaw Moczar, have been purg- ing party liberals who show any sympathy with Israel or who are Jewish. There are only about 20,000 Jews in Poland, but many are in middle levels of the party. [From the New York Times, Mar. 20, 19681 CRACOW STUDENTS STAGE A SIT-IN; CZECH PRIVATE DEFIES A GENERAL-GOMULKA SPEECH IGNORED (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 20.-Students in Cracow pointedly ignored today an appeal by the Communist leader, Wladyslaw Gomulka, for an immediate return to classes: They staged a sit-in at Jagiellonian University. In a further indication that the students were not satisfied with Mr. Gomulka's prom- ise yesterday of eventual consideration of their grievances, 3,000 of them at the Warsaw Polytechnic School voted to begin a 48-hour sit-in tomorrow morning. Warsaw University students will join the sit-in, according to a student delegate at the strike meeting held this afternoon at the Polytechnic School. The Warsaw sit-in reflected warnings by the students that they would take other defiant measures unless the regime published their 15-point resolution and corrected "slanderous" press accounts of previous dem- onstrations by Tuesday midnight. The Polytechnic meeting demanded that students be allowed to discuss their problems on the radio and television, controlled by the regime. Symptomatic of the student's mood at the meeting was the tearing up of newspapers. The newspapers' main interest today was the text of Mr. Gomulka's speech to Warsaw party members. Some student sources suggested that a factor in the students' renewed defiance was Mr. Gomulka's criticism of "revisionist" liberal professors at Warsaw University as the "spiritual instigators" of the student unrest. Many professors named are Jews. Mr. Gomulka dropped similar charges against Zionists and former Stalinists, ap- parently in an effort to keep within bounds the anti-Zionist campaign that he obliquely conceded had anti-semitic overtones. The Polish party has applied the name "Zionists" to instigators of the student demonstrations. Although Mr. Gomulka stressed that no professors had lost tenure because of their "academic views," he indicated that changes might be under consideration. He said the regime "displayed considerable-and as ex- perience has shown, unfortunately, too great-restraint and caution in interfering for political reasons with the life of aca- demic circles." In Cracow, the sit-in involved students sitting in corridors and not attending lec- tures, informed sources said. It followed a five-day classroom boycott during which some parents had been warned that their children would be expelled unless they re- turned to school, the informants added. At the Polytechnic meeting, a message was read from workers at a rolling-stock factory in Wroclaw, the sources said. The message .expressed solidarity with student demands. In Wroclaw, newspapers disclosed that classroom boycotts or sit-fns took place at all eight institutions of higher learning there last Thursday and Friday. Only students of the School of Plastic Arts did not return to classes normally on Saturday, according to the newspapers, which added that "hooli- gans" had been responsible for violence there on Friday. Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 S 8176 Approved For Relets8 I 11/211- AL RECORD 03 SENATE 03 0070003-5 July 3, 1968 Meanwhile, the anti-Zionist campaign evaporated today in the wake of Mr. Gomulka's speech, which sought to moderate a 10-day campaign that apparently had the party's blessing. In its place, there were pledges of support for "Comrade Wieslaw," as Mr. Gomulka is affectionately called, as well as confusion among many Poles who were surprised at the moderate tone of his remarks. In some quarters the excited shouts that accompanied Mr. Gomulka's remarks on Polish Jews and the chanting of the name of Edward Gierek were interpreted as reflect- ing the popularity of the anti-Zionist campaign. Mr. Gierek, the party secretary in indus- trial Silesia, had made a strongly anti-Zionist day and is sometimes mentioned as a possible successor to Mr. Gomulka. [From the New York Times, Mar. 22, 1968] STUDENTS' SIT-IN OPENS IN WARSAW-MOVE- MENT SPREADS DESPITE EXPULSION WARNINGS (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 21.-Warsaw students to- day joined a sit-in movement underway at Cracow despite threats of expulsion unless they resumed normal studies. Students took up quarters at the Poly- technic School at 8 A.M. at the start of a 48-hour sit-in. Tonight as many as 5,000 were playing cards listening to Chopin on tape recorders and preparing to bed down with blankets brought to the school premises, stu- dent sources said. At Warsaw University all gates were locked, apparently by order of the university author- ities. Nonetheless, several hundred students were milling around the grounds and some scaled spiked fences to enter university prop- erty. Many hundred other students, some wearing white student caps and carrying bundles, were seen leaving the university area, apparently because of the lockout. The sit-in took place despite printed offi- cial posters on the doors of the university and the Polytechnic School doors warning of "serious consequences," including expulsion unless the students stopped disorganizing school work. SIGNED BY RECTORS The posters were signed by the institu- tions' respective rectors, Stanislaw Turski and Dionizy Smolenski. For the first time since the student unrest began two weeks ago, the state-controlled television network reported thhe new de- velopments promptly. "A small group of political troublemakers incited students not to attend classes at the Polytechnic School," a news bulletin said at 11 P.M. "Unhappily a certain number of stu- dents listened to them." Informed sources said the Government was considering closing the Polytechnic School for two weeks and drafting male students into the armed forces if the rector's appeal went unheeded. In Cracow, where students boycotted classes at Jagiellonian University last Thurs- day, the sit-in completed its second day. Students remained in the hallways of univer- sity buildings and did not attend lectures. The sit-ins are being held to protest against the regime's refusal to answer stu- dents' grievances quickly. These grievances focus on charges of police brutality, insist- ence on rectification of "slanderous" Polish press accounts and demands to free arrested students. Wladyslaw Gomulka, the Communist party leader, appealed to students two days ago to return to work immediately and promised eventual consideration of their grievances once calm had been restored. COLLECTION TAKEN UP Tonight adults passed food and cigarettes to Polytechnic students across an iron fence. Student leaders have organized a kitty of 5,000 zlotys ($200) to supply blankets, food and even candles should the school's lights be turned off. In the school, students gathered around a Dixieland pianist who was playing in the main auditorium. They also listened to West- ern news broadcasts. Although the warnings from the rector of the Polytechnic school had been stern, one of his assistants simply asked them not to cause trouble. Student leaders issued orders against bringing vodka or any other hard liquor to the Polytechnic sit-in, sources said. Some students were seen drinking beer. The state-controlled television network to- night announced the arrest of the son of Mieczyslaw Lesz, the former Internal Com- merce Mir. ister, who is now deputy chairman of the Committee for Science and Tech- nology. Officially charged with spreading false in- formation. his son, Aleksander, was attacked in a newspaper article last week for allegedly having anrashed an official car while drunk. The newspaper, Walka Mlodych, charged that his father had hushed up the accident. At the Polytechnic School, windows were thrown wale open on this first warm day, which coincided with the beginning of spring. Chalked on a classroom blackboard was a sign announcing "night resident." On the statute of a woman on the facade of the main building hung an enormous sign that read "strak okupacyiny," the closest equiva- lent to "sir; in" in Polish. [From the Baltimore Sun. March 25, 1968] STUDENT AIM IS FREEDOM, POLAND'S EPISCO- PATE SAYS WARSAW, March 24.-The Catholic episco- pate of Poland attributed student unrest in the county today to a "striving for truth and freedcm." In a message read in Sunday masses throughout the country, the church leader- ship suggested that the regime of Wladyslaw Gomulka acknowledge the desires of youth and adopt more progressive policies. DIALOGUE URGED "Pope Piu1 VI has written that the new name for peace is `progress.' That is why we pray for this peace and we ask all to pray for this," the message said.. It added that "penetrating dialogue" should be employed instead. of physical force to solve matters dividing people. The message, drafted at a March 21 meet- ing of the episcopate, is to be read in all academic towns and "in the soonest possible time thereafter in-all towns of Poland." The nation's population is about 85 per cent Catholic. Student,: have been demonstrating prac- tically non-stop since March 8. Their protests include charges of police brutality against demonstrators, false accounts in the state- controlled press, demands for release from jail of arrested student leaders and respect for the freedom to assemble and demonstrate as guaranteed in the Polish Constitution. The church message said Polish bishops felt "obliged to make their voice heard in this matte;.,." FORCE IS CONDEMNED It condemned the "brutal use of force" and said t:.ie church has "addressed in this matter ... the Government of our state." Three student sit-in demonstrations in defiance of school and Government author- ities ended yesterday in Warsaw. In the bi.ggest one at Polytechnic College, about 4,000 students were persuaded by school officials to leave campus buildings during the night instead of carrying on to a planned morning conclusion. [From the Christian Science Monitor, Mar. 13, 1968] WARSAW RIOTING SPREADS (By Paul Wohl) Broken bottles, stones, and bricks litter the streets of Warsaw. Three days of student riots have been put down with tear gas and rubber truncheons, One student was so badly hurt that the government felt the need to report that he was still alive. "Gestapo!" the students cried defiantly as the police charged. "Down with obscu- rantism," "Long live Czechosolvakia," "De- mocracy," "Freedom," and "Constitution" were other cries heard during the demonstra- tion. Writers, students, actors, the old genera- tion of intellectuals, and the new educated middle class of workers and peasant origin are tense. A mood of insurgency is rising in the capital. [Several thousand demonstrators fought running battles with police on downtown streets for Seven hours Monday, the Asso- ciated Press reported, and smashed the windows of it Culture Ministry building. The party headquarters was also a target of the demonstrations. [The Polish news agency PAP said the militia seized about 300 persons during Mon- day's disturbances, according to Reuters. It said an identity check revealed that Only about 30 of those held were students. RESOLUTION PASSED [Informed sources told the Associated Press that at a meeting at Warsaw Univer- sity, about 3,000 students and a number of professors passed a resolution demanding freedom for students arrested after Friday's demonstration. The resolution, informants said, also carried an appeal to other Polish universities to support the Warsaw cause. [The resolution was said to demand in ad- dition that the state-controlled press publish the students' accounts and explanation for their protest actions. The press said the trouble was caused by Zionists working for an "alliance between West Germany and Israel" by undermining "the authority of Po- land's leadership."] Wladyslaw Gomulka, the aging party chief whom Poland hailed 10 years ago as a sym- bol of renewal, never has been more un- popular. "He could have become Poland's Tito," this writer was told not so long ago; "he could have become Poland's de Gaulle; instead he has become Moscow's proconsul, a fear-ridden, heavyhanded bureaucrat." Even those who see Mr. Gomulka's good sides, his evenness, his quiet insistence on orderly progress, on economy, sobriety, and order-characteristics which In the past were seldom associated with the Polish national temperament-feel that it is time for a change. PUBLIC WELL INFORMED The issue is not merely a personal one. In his obstinate resistance to change and his defense of the most pro-Soviet policy in the bloc, Mr. Gomulka was forced to lean on the support of hard-liners and synical ca- reerists, regardless of public opinion. Polish public opinion today is better in- formed than it was in 1956 when the Stalin- ists were thrown out and Mr. Gomulka was swept into power. Sources of information have kept step with the progress of elec- tronics. Today everyone in Poland listens to foreign radio stations. Radio Free Europe in Munich, which formerly was shunned by many Poles as biased, now has its largest audience ever. Poles call it "Warsaw Four." (The capital has three broadcasting sta- tions.) "Warsaw Four's" sources of information are stupendous, showing that discontent and a spirit of insurgency (Fronda) has spread among the highest officials and their auxiliaries. Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70BO R000300070003-5 July 3, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SEN The Polish press has been almost com- .pletely silent about developments in Czecho- slovakia. Yet the public knows what is going on. Czech and Slovak broadcasts can be heard. (Slovak is so similiar to Polish that any Pole can understand it.) Then there is the popular BBC and the Voice of America. DANGER SIGNAL The Western press is accessible in some 60 press and book clubs in all major cities. Scores of Poles are constantly returning from missions abroad. What they have to tell spreads and is frequently embellished. The tense and desperate mood in the Polish capital is a danger signal for the ruling bureaucrats throughout the bloc. The rebellions of 1956 started in Poland. Polish intellectual and artistic life is the hope of reformers in all of Eastern Europe's Com- munist-ruled countries. Poland with its 32 million inhabitants is the second-largest country of the bloc. It has actively participated in European his- tory and in the continent's great cultural movements .(the Reform, the Renaissance). Its people are known for their fighting spirit. The mood of insurgency which has come to the fore in Warsaw these days has de- veloped slowly and from many causes which all have their counterparts in other bloc countries. OFFICIALS CLOSE PLAY In contrast to 1956-57, economic reasons have little to do with the protest movement. There are no starvation wages; even the apartment shortage has eased. Except for pensioners without a family and some of the very old without pension, there is no misery in Poland. As a whole the common people live better than they did in the past. There is less inequality than in any other bloc country. The immediate cause of the protest move- ment was the closing of the play "Dziady" by the Polish 19th-century classic writer Adam Mickiewicz. "Dziady," meaning the old men or the beggars, is a very long play which has to be shortened selectively in order to be performed. The new version, which was closed, highlighted certain anti-Russian passages which are out of line with the author's friendly approval of Russian revolu- tionists elsewhere. The anti-Russian lines caught on and were greeted with wild applause by part of the audience. One reason for this may have been the residue of the old anti-Russian bias, which actually is disappearing among the intellectuals. More likely, the public en- thusiasm reflected in indirect protest against the government's unfailing allegiance to Moscow. Rumors that last year's meat shortage, which led to a substantial rise in meat prices, was caused by excessive exports to the Soviet Union have fueled resentment on this score. Be this as jt may, the government closed the play, and the students protested. The Warsaw Writers Union joined in the protest. An extraordinary meeting of the Warsaw writers, called at the demand of 250 mem- bers (one-quarter of all the members of the Polish Writers Union), was held from Feb. 29 to March 1. A resolution adopted by a large majority requested the reopening of the play and condemned the government's interference in cultural affairs. The meeting, which closed on March 1 at 2 a.m., was dramatic. "ESCALATION OF CENSORSHIP" Jerzy Andrzejewski, one of the most fa- mous Polish writers, who had never spoken at any previous writers congress in the past 10 years, protested against "the escalation of censorship." The popular Roman Cath- olic writer, Steran Kiezelewski, complained that literature and history were being "fal- sified by the obscurantism" of the leaders. Prof. Leszek Kolakowski, who was ousted from the party in 1966, spoke of the smoth- ering of criticism and debate in every field." Professor Kolakowskl is the idol of the students. "Is this really socialism?" he asked, The extraordinary congress also adopted a resolution demanding that the results of the meeting be published In the press. Not a word was printed, but what had been said, made the rounds of Warsaw with light- ning speed and added to the tension. No one can say whether those in power will be able to restore the artificial calm which has reigned in Poland for the past few years, or whether the insurgency of the intellectuals will shake up the government and the country. But even if calm is re- Stored, the experiences and the bitter feel- ings of the past few weeks will not be for- gotten. [From the New York Times, Max. 28, 19681 WRITERS' PROTEST SCORED IN POLAND-OPPOSI- TION TERMED PLEASING TO NATION'S FOES ABROAD (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 27.-The Communist party newspaper, Trybuna Ludu, today printed a S 8177 [From the New York Times, Mar. 29, 19681 WARSAW STUDENTS MEET AGAIN, DEFYING RE- GIME-DEMAND THE REINSTATEMENT OF HUMANITIES PROFESSORS AND LEGAL REFORMS (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, March 28.--Warsaw University students today defied new warnings from the Polish Government and met to demand the reinstatement of six dismissed humanities professors, according to informed sources. The unauthorized meeting of 2,000 students constituted the first overt act of student defiance since three Warsaw sitins ended last Saturday. Held despite serious warnings in two news- papers today, the meeting was apparently prompted by the dismissal of professors Monday. Wladyslaw Gomulka, the party leader, had foreshadowed the dismissals in a speech 10 days ago in which he said the professors were the "spiritual instigators" of the now three- week-old student unrest against Communist cultural controls. Fragmentary reports about today's meet- ing said the students also denounced censor- ship and demanded the release of students arrested or drafted into the armed service because of their participation in demonstra- tions. long attack on the extraordinary meeting of LEGAL REFORM DEMANDED the Warsaw writers union held last month. Another student demand was said to have Wladyslaw Gomulka, the party leader, ac- been reform of the legal code, especially the cused the writers in a speech March 19 of so-called Small Penal Code. having played an active role in organizing Originally adopted in 1946 to deal with the student demonstrations against Commu- armed anti-Communist guerrillas who then nist cultural controls. disputed the government's authority, the The newspaper said the meeting of Feb. Small Penal Code has often been invoked to 29 "was probably the only forum in Poland punish dissident intellectuals. where it was possible to express such slanders The meeting today took place despi te a with impunity." The meeting adopted a resolution con- demning the regime's cultural policy, par- ticularly the closing of Adam Mickiewicz's 19th-century play "Dziady" ("The Fore- fathers") in the Narodowy Theater, The Po- lish Government considered the production to have anti-Russian overtones. Trybuna Ludu quoted various speeches, in- cluding one said to have been made by Leszek Kolakowski, a Marxist philosopher who was one of six Warsaw University pro- fessors dismissed Monday. He was quoted as having said that "the national culture is being dwarfed under innumerable blows.', OPPOSITION IS NOTED "The huge mass of unavoidable opposition has consolidated feelings of bitterness, frus- trated hopes, caused the hopelessness of the situation and proved the Incompetence and lack of ability In the cultural leadership," he added. He was said to have rejected a draft reso- lution condemning the tightening of cultural controls because it "did not reflect fully enough the protest and bitterness provoked by the present-day administration of Polish culture." The newspaper charged that the speeches at the meeting had served the political pur- poses of "antisoclalist forces" abroad. These forces "look for every opportunity to set the names of writers well known to mass- es of readers against the people's authority," the newspaper added, and "hostile propa- ganda centers have been going into ecstasies in commenting" on the writers' meeting. Meanwhile, the newspaper Gazeta Kra- kowska denied rumors that one of its articles last week had suggested that police dogs had been used against rioters in Cracow. The original article, dated one week ago, read: "Yesterday the surgical out-patient clinic of the ambulance service In Slemraid- zki Street gave first aid to 112 patients. Those hurt were mainly people who had suffered injuries at their place of work. Many had been bitten by dogs." series of warnings from the regime. Two days ago a message from Rector Stanislaw Turskl warned that any further student disobedi- ence would entail expulsions and the closing of the university. PARTY PAPER WARNS Today, Trybuna Ludu, the party news- paper, said student troublemakers "must be told with all seriousness, determ.inely and decisively, stop, put an end to trouble mon- gering, provocations and misleading your colleagues." "All of us have had enough of mass meet- ings," it warned. "There will be and there can be no tolerance of trouble-mongers and peo- ple of ill will," the statement said. Zycie Warszawy, another newspaper, warned "only firmness remains when all means of discussion and discreet persuasion become exhausted." Backing up the stern warnings, police and plainclothesmen patrolled Krakowskie Przed- miescie, a main street, which passes in front of the university in the center of Warsaw. The university gates were closed at 4:15 P.M. after the rector was reported to have exercised his privilege and canceled late after- noon classes. The gates were reopened more than three hours later and hundreds were seen leaving the university grounds. While the gates were closed, hundreds of students were seen milling around inside the university grounds and adjacent streets. Many wore white caps, which have become the symbol of student defiance since the demon- strations began. Meanwhile, observers noted a discrepancy in the party's handling of a principal student grievance-the use of security forces inside the university grounds despite traditional ex- traterritorially enjoyed by Polish institutions of higher learning. While Polish newspapers have printed ar- ticles stressing that no legislation or tradi- tion exists on this score, Czeslaw Domagala, the party secretary in Cracow, said just the opposite. Addressing a recent party rally, Mr. Doma- gala conceded that "an unfortunate incident Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 S8178 Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE July 3, 1968 occurred, namely the entry of a group of police and workers' militia, while chasing students, into the grounds of Jagiellonian University." He added: "Obviously, as a result of this unintentional incident by the police com- mand-a violation of the traditional right of extraterritoriality of an institution of higher learning which no one approves of-an ex- traordinary outcry ensued." [From the Christian Science Monitor, Apr. 11, 1.968[ POLES PRESS REFORM DRIVE (By Paul Wohl) Poland's political crisis is deepening. The country is in the middle of a political purge encompassing state, party, and the military. Veiled criticism has been addressed to the Politburo, the pinnacle of power. The partisans of Gen. Mieczyslaw Moczar, Minister of the Interior, are advancing all along the line. Writers and students no longer hold the center of the stage. First Secretary Wladyslaw Gomulka's call for moderation has been discarded. The anti-Zionist campaign continues un- abated. Other slogans used by the regime's critics stress, calls for a radical renewal of cadres, for rejuvenation of party and state, for an end to corruption, slothfulness, and incompetence, for "true collective leadership." The last slogan hits at the present-day domi- nation of the leadership by Mr. Gomulka, assisted by party Secretary Zenon Kliszko, at least until his resignation offer this week, and President Edward Ochab. All three, in- cidentally, have Jewish wives, which makes them vulnerable to the anti-Zionist cam- paign. No one knows exactly what General Moc- zar is seeking, except that it entails a radi- cal overhaul of party apparatus and admin- istration in which his supporters would oc- cupy strategic posts. Most of the several hun- dred thousand young workers recently ad- mitted to the party are supposed to be Moczar supporters. CAUSES TRACED "The era of mistakes, hypocrisy, double- dealing, messiness, egotism, and undiscipline is coming to an end," wrote a spokesman of the general, Kazimierz Kakol, editor of the weekly Prawo I Zycie (Law and Life) re- cently. Faulty planning 'and economic dispropor- tions are at he bottom of much of the pres- ent trouble. The eceswmic records of 1967 and of the first months of this year were uneven. Con- sumer interests are being neglected. On the other hand, several new industrial projects have been completed including the big alu- minium factory in Konin with a capacity of 100,000 trans and the nitrate fertilizer plant at Pulawi. Both projects have been in the works for several years. Critics of the regime say that once plan- ning is overhauled and management given the necessary leeway, Poland with its stead- ily increasing power capacity, its copper and sulphur processing facilities, its steel pro- duction of 10 million tons (half that c8 France), its booming shipyards, and its pet- rochemical industry may outstrip East Ger- many in industrial importance. As industry expands and agriculture con- tinues to do its share, shortages should begin to disappear and living standards increase. POLITICAL REPERCUSSIONS Last year's uneven economic record may be one of the reasons for the political advance of the partisans and for the popularity of Upper Silesian party Secretary Edward Gierek, who is identified with the demand for a thorough modernization of the Polish economy. Facts and figures are spelled out in the United Nations economic survey of Europe in 1967. This carefully documented survey shows that Poland lagged behind the other countries of the bloc, especially in the realm of consumer interest. The growth of labor productivity was much slower than elsewhere. Production in- creases in industry were achieved largely through an expansion of the labor force in excess of plans. The industrial growth rate was below the average of the 1960's. Production of con- sumer goods decelerated while heavy industry exceeded its targets. Agriculture is hamstrung by all kinds of contradictions. Although meat; consumption is still higher than in the past, meat deliv- eries last year increased by only 3.5 percent. In the second half of the year there was prac- tically no increase at all. Yet according to the plan meat deliveries, should have risen by at least 7 percent to keep step with pur- chasing power. FODDER SUPPLY CUT The reason for the shortage of meat, espe- cially pork, was insufficient fodder. The feed shortage, in turn, was a consequence of the decision to reduce imports of grain to save hard currency. Ultimately, officials hope, domestic food supply will suffice. Such hopes, even if well founded, have been dishedout to the Polish people for years instead of tangible accom- plishments. What happened on the "meat front" is typical of the abstract character In much of Polish planning. In November meat prices were raised by an average of 16.7 percent. Since the price rise varied according to kind and cut, better qualities of meat, according to the United Nations survey, were placed "virtually beyond the reach of lower income groups." The government's purpose in raising meat prices was to curtail purchasing power and to reduce the subsidy on meat. No attempt was made to pass on the price increase to the peasants. Because there was neither enough meat nor a sufficient quantity of attractive con- sumer goods, savings and cash holdings went up by nearly 46 percent, accounting for about one-sixth of the people's total income. Such disproportions have become increas- ingly characteristic of Polish planning. Ac- cording to the regime's critics, methods of robbing Peter to pay Paul, of opening one bottleneck and causing two new ones, may have been justified during the reconstruc- tion period when there were shortages all around. Today, partisan economists say, this is unnecessary and harmful. The economic dis- proportions of the past few years are attri- buted to incompentence and the exercise of unimaginative personal power. No one can say what the outcome will be, but there may be a change even before the next party congress in November. General Moczar's anti-Zonist followers are becoming more and more outspoken in press and tele- vision. Whatever changes do occur in the party, then, the Defense Minister is certain to have a hand in them. [From the New York Times, Apr. 28, 1968] TIGHT POLISH CURB ON WRrrERS URGED- UNION AIDE ASKS GREATER REGULATION BY PARTY (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, April 27.-The Communist party newspaper demanded today that measures in- suring tighter party control of the writers' union be distributed. The measures could prevent many of Poland's better known writ- ers from earning a living. The demands for greather control, pub- lished in the newspaper Trybuna'Ludu, were also addressed to party organizations dealing with artists, musicians and actors. Ireneusz G. Kaminski, chairman of the Szczecin branch of the writers' union, urged that party organizations be empowered to ex- pel members who are "enemies of our coun- try," choose new ones and decide on schol- arship policy and foreign travel. Expulsion from the union is tantamount to prevent a writer from publishing new works or benefiting from financial advantages accorded intellectuals. The article reflected the regime's growing annoyance with the intellectual community, which has been held responsible for foment- ing student unrest. SELECTIVITY IS URGED Mr. Kaminski complained that the writers' union and other similar associations "ad- mit new members only on the basis of the artistic value of their work without con- sidering the moral and political attitudes of candidates." He also noted that the writers' union had no provision for expelling members, a short- coming that so far has frustrated the regime's plan to oust Antoni Slonimski, Pawel Jasi- emca and Stefan Kisielewski. All three have been under attack from critics ranging from Wladyslav Gomulka, the party leader, down. Expulsions are mandatory, Mr. Kaminski contended, to "get rid of the whole ballast of two-faced persons and of those who, in practice, have long strayed into the revision- ist and Zionist wilderness." "Let us stop at long last being coquettish toward political opponents lest we persuade them that they are worthy partners of the rulers of this country," he said. He advocated new statutes to make ideolo- gical loyalty to Communism mandatory for membership and also setting up a party um- brella organization to oversee the activities in all the branches of the writers union. CRITICISM IS DEFENDED Such far-reaching criticism as Mr. Kamin- ski's was defended today in an editorial, titled "Criticism The Party's Most Efficient Weapon," in Tryduma Mazowiecka. The newspaper is closely associated with Maj. Gen. Mieczyslaw Moczar, the Interior Min- ister, who is believed to be a major force be- hind both the "anti-Zionist" campaign and the power struggle challenging Mr. Gomul- ka's authority. "No progress is possible without criticism," the editorial proclaimed. "No one has suc- ceeded or will succeed in snatching from the hand of the party its principal weapon- criticism." The editorial was regarded as a warning from General Moczar and other advocates of change that the current purge would con- tinue despite Mr. Gomulka's reiterated ef- forts to moderate its tone, especially toward Poland's 30,000 Jews. Many of the hundreds of Poles purged from job or party in the last seven weeks have been Jews. PENSIONED OFF EARLY The latest Jewish victim was Prof. Juliusz Katz-Suchy, a former representative at the United Nations and Ambassador to India. The 56-year-old professor of history and in- ternational relations at the Warsaw Univer- sity Law School was pensioned off today by order of the Education Ministry although the normal retirement age is 65. He was criticized last month by Trybuna Ludu for an alleged "politically ambiguous attitude" toward student demonstrations. In another development, the editor of the weekly newspaper Polityka indirectly criti- cized Czechoslovakia's peaceful revolution and Rumania's independent foreign policy as "too far-reaching and inconsistent with re- ality." The editor, Mieczyslaw F. Rakowski has often reflected Mr. Gomulka's thinking on problems of the international Communist movement in the past. Although events in eastern Europe re- flected "rejection of what is obsolete and de- structive," Mr. Rakowski said, some develop- ments "should be recognized as extreme, un- favorable for the consolidation of Socialism Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 July 3, 1968 Approved FoGrON6R SSIONAL/2 r~JJ $DP7ARRYPR000300070003-5 or too far-reaching and inconsistent with reality." He wrote that "any centrifugal tendencies dictated by narrowly understood national interests, losing the common interest by the wayside, are dangerous because they push back the nations of the Socialist world from the path along which they have been pro- gressing for more than 20 years." [From the New York Times, Apr. 29, 1968] POLISH WRITERS GIVEN A WARNING-UNION TOLD To BAR DISSIDENTS OR RISK NEW CON- TROLS WARSAW, April 26.-The leading Commu- nists in the Warsaw Writers' Union pleaded with his nonparty colleagues today to expel some writers as the price of avoiding tighter government control of the association. Jerzy Putrament, first secretary of the party organization in the union's Warsaw branch, said ''the union would be forced to undergo changes of one kind or another" unless critics of the regime were expelled. He did not specify how many critics were involved. Mr. Putrament's plea, in the newspaper Zycie Warszawy, followed by a day a much sterner call for purges and vastly increased party control of the writers' union. Most un- ion members do not belong to the party. Expulsion of "politicos who have chosen the union as a field of action transcending litera- ture and aimed against the people's author- ity," Mr. Putrament said, might "provide a chance of preserving the union's specific or- ganization." A WARNING ON "LOYALTY" The writer-a member of the Central Com- mittee and a former Ambassador to France- warned union members against being swayed by "political blindness, twisted interpreta- tions of the union's very imperfect statutory framework or falsely understood loyalty to colleagues." "The writers' union will no longer tolerate the activities of enemies of the system, par- ticularly within the union itself," he said. Mr. Putrament did not mention by names the union members he wanted expelled. But it is known that the Government, increas- ingly impatient with its intellectual critics, has asked the union to expel the writers January Grzedsinsky, Pawel Jasiericia and Stefan Kisielewski. So far nothing has been done, and union's statutes include no provisions for expelling members. DRIVE PRESSED ON TV Writers critical of the party line were also attacked tonight in a television com- mentary by Josef Ozga-Michalski, a poet and member of Parliament. In remarks that re- flected the Government's "anti-zionist" cam- paign, he said, "it should be stated that those who fraternized with and lived behind the table with Jehovah had a special inclina- tion toward forbidden fruit." "In many of these personalities forcing themselves forward," he added, "patriotism has drained into foreign seas and other rivers." At the same time, the official press agency, R.A.P., accused a number of New York poli- ticians of "more or less rabid anti-Polish at- tacks" in connection with the "anti-Zionist" campaign here. Senator Jacob K. Javits "deemed it neces- sary to express the 'profound anxiety' of the United States because, as he untruth- fully maintained, of the 'intensifying anti- Semistic incidents in Poland,'" the agency's Washington correspondence reported. Representatives Jacob H. Gilbert, Joseph P. Addabbo and Seymour Halpern "also put forward crude insinuations," the agency said. [From the New York Times, Apr. 29, 1968] PURGE BEWILDERS JEWS IN POLAND-"WHAT WENT WRONG?" ASKS VICTIM OF "ANTI- ZIONISM" (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, April 25.-"Recently it's better to be called Radziwill than Rabinowitz," re- marked a Pole in commenting on the official "anti-Zionist" campaign, which the regime has conceded is getting out of hand. The remark was not without a peculiar form of Polish compansion for, in an earlier period, the regime had also attacked former landowning families like the Razdiwills, some of whom remained in Poland under Commu- nist rule. Love of country had been as much a d.e- ciding factor in their staying as it was for the Jewish survivors of Hitler's "final solu- tion." That love, and often a long commitment to Communism have prompted questioning by some of the Jewish victims of the current purge that is strangely similar to that Ar- thur Hoestler described in "Darkness at Noon." That novel described the Stalinist purge trials of the nineteen thirties in the Soviet Union. ONCE A HAVEN "What went wrong?" one purged Jew asked. His dismay was genuine, for if Poland has an anti-Semitic tradition, so does most of Eastern Europe. Indeed, the Warsaw regime is on solid ground in pointing out that Jews from the rest of Europe fled to Poland as a haven of tolerance in past centuries. The current campaign has its roots as much in recent history as in ancient history. Many Polish Jews fled to the Soviet Union as the Germans advanced, and returned with the liberating Red Army to high positions in the new Communist regime here a quarter of a century ago. A substantial number of them held im- portant posts in the much-hated secret po- lice.in the Stalinist period and were regarded by Poles more as Soviet Stalinists than as fellow Polish citizens. Vladyslaw Gomulka, the Communist par- ty's First Secretary, has offered Poland's re- maining 30,000 Jews passports for Israel and has tried to moderate the "anti-Zionist" campaign, the popularity of which consti- tutes a threat to his leadership. But for many Polish Jews the harm has been done. They had a chance to emigrate earlier and remained. After telling themselves for years that Poland was their homeland, they are now being told that their loyalty is suspect. A recently purged Jew--one of hundreds dismissed from job or from the party in the last seven weeks-bewailed his fate: "Fifty years in the movement, kicked out of the party, lost my job and my son in jail." Even those who have been pensioned off, rather than dismissed, find little solace in the pensions. "They won't have to pay those pensions for long," said a man who knows many important Jewish party members. "A lot of them are going to die of broken hearts." CONVERSATION IN POINT Just how far the "anti-Zionist" campaign has taken root in the Polish people was il- lustrated recently in a conversation between a Westerner and a customs official. "You Westerners don't understand because your press lies about Poland," the customs official said. "Of the 30,000 .Jews in Poland, at least occupy important posts, especially in the ministries, and it's quite natural that we want to get rid of them because they don't work, they only work for themselves and have no national spirit" "What do you reproach the Jews with, with being ministers or Jews?" asked the West- erner. 58179 "You don't understand," the customs of- ficial said. "They didn't work and we will replace them with people who work for the nation and not for themselves. "In any case, they should be happy-we've not take away their apartments or their cars or imprisoned them." Nonetheless, persistent rumors suggest that some purge victims have been forced out of their apartments, and an atmosphere of uneasiness has been created that appears dif- ficult to dispel. A current Warsaw story sums up this at- mosphere as well as anything. "Is that you, Jaworski?" a tense voice on the telephone asks, "This is Kowalski." "But which Kowalski? I know dozens of them." "Israel Kowalski, the one you hid in the closet during the Occupation." "Oh, yes, how are you? Haven't heard from you in 20 years." "Let's cut things short. Do you still have that closet?" The number of Jews asking to emigrate to Israel has increased considerably since the "anti-Zionist" campaign began last month. [From the New York Times, May 5, 1968] PRAGUE'S REFORM SCORED BY POLES--WARSAW NEWSPAPERS OPENLY CRITICIZE "NEUTRALIST AND ANTI-SOVIET" TRENDS (By Jonathan Randal) WARSAW, May 4.-The controlled Polish press directly attacked today the growing liberalization movement in Czechoslovakia. Departing from past veiled criticism of Czechslovak developments, which have been reported here only in part, Warsaw news- papers published a dispatch today criticizing "neutralist and anti-Soviet tendencies" in Czechoslovakia. [Amid increasing criticism from the Soviet Union and its allies, four Czechoslovak lead- ers conferred Saturday in the Kremlin after a surprise nighttime flight to Moscow.] The article, signed by Wlodzimeriz Zralek, Prague correspondent of the Polish Workers Agency, a press service, also decried Czecho- slovakia's rapprochement with West Ger- many, the "dictatorship of the intelligentsia" and the growth of non-Communist parties. The overt Polish criticism of the Czechoslo- vak reforms was published in Zycie War- szawy, a mass-circulation newspaper; Zol- nierz Wolnosci, the army newspaper, and Sztandar Mlodych, the Communist youth paper. Political analysts suggested that it reflect- ed support for the Old Guard elements in Czechoslovakia associated with the ousted President Antonin Novotny, and was a clear warning that Poland would not tolerate any similar liberalization. Mr. Zralek said his dispatch was based not on "conversations in which antisocialist tendencies occasionally became apparent," but on statements at the Czechoslovak Cen- tral Committee meeting last month "express- ing anxiety about the further evolution of events." Those doubts were expressed generally by Mr. Novotny's supporters, who are in a dis- tinct minority, observers noted. Mr. Novotny was Ousted from the leadership on January. Mr. Zralek did not mention the relative strength of the liberal and Old Guard wings of the party. Rather he sought to convey the impression that the conservatives had the upper hand by quoting Alexander Dubcek, the Czechoslovak party leader. "We would have been shortsighted," Mr. Dubcek was quoted as having told the Cen- tral Committee meeting, if we did not notice one more phenomenon after January: The revival of certain antisocialist tendencies. The Polish dispatch said that at the Czechoslovak party meeting "critical com- Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 S 8180 Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE July 3, 1968 rnents were caused by the tendencies to introduce a `dictatorship of the intelligensia' and to minimize the role of the working class." The observers noted that many Polish intellectuals had been purged from job and party in the last two months as the Polish regime has stressed the primacy of the work- ing class in tones that sometime recall the Stalinist period. Mr. Zralek also said that some speakers at the Czechoslovak Central Committee session were apprehensive that developments might push Czechoslovak off the path of socialist development. FREE PLAY OF FORCES Causing this anxiety, Mr. Zralek noted, were "voices advocating the return to the free play of political forces as a means of forcing the Czechoslovak Communist party to give up its guiding role." "Attention was drawn to the massive growth of the Catholic People's party and the Socialist party, a growth which may be only partly explained by lifting the previ- ously binding administrative prohibition on admitting new members," he added. "If we decided to express our apprehension over the current events in Poland, it is only to repay our debt," they added. "We are doing so without any feeling of superiority, aware that we also have to overcome the past. The endeavor to spread (anti-Soviets feel- ings, "is still more perfidious since it Is gen- erally known what position was taken by Brezhnev during his visit to Prague in the critical days," the article said. It said Leonid 1. Brezhnev, the Soviet party leader, had stated "that the Soviet Union did not intend to interfere in Czechoslovakia's internal affairs." Turning to student unrest in Warsaw, the writers asked the Polish leaders "not to con- fuse the natural criticism of the young gen- eration with hostile subversion, and not to drive Polish citizens by harsh sanctions to positions that are inherently alien to them." [Prom the New York Times, May 5, 19681 CZECHS CITICIZE POLAND PRAGUE, May 4.-Three Czechoslovak writers appealed to Polish leaders today "to put an end to the shameful anti-Semitism threatening to stain the common fight of the Poles and the Jews against Hitler's fascism." JUVENILE DELINQUENCY PREVEN- TION AND CONTROL ACT OF 19138-AMENDMENTS AMENDMENT NO. 875 Mr. DODD submitted amendments, in- tended to be proposed by him, to the bill (H.R. 12120) to assist courts, cor- rectional systems, and community agen- cies to prevent, treat, and control juve- nile delinquency; to support research and training efforts in the prevention, treatment, and control of juvenile de- linquency; and for other purposes, which were ordered to lie on the table and to be printed. REQUIREMENT OF AIRCRAFT NOISE ABATEMENT REGULA- ^a'ION-AMENDMENTS AMENDMENT NO. 876 Mr. CASE. Mr. President, on behalf of the Senator from Wisconsin [Mr. PROXMIRE] and myself, I submit an amendment to H.R. 3400, an act pro- viding for control and abatement of air- craft noise and sonic boom, arid ask that it be printed. When H.R. 3400 is taken up on the floor after the 4th of July recess, I in- tend to call up my amendment which would add to H.R. 3400 the provisions of my own sonic boom control bill (S. 3399). Mr. President, I ask that the text of my amendment to H.R. 3400 be printed in the RECORD. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The amendments will be received, printed, and will lie on the table; and, without objection, the amendments will be printed in the RECORD. The amendment (No. 876) is as fol- lows: On the first page, line 10, strike out "and sonic boom." On page 2, line -strike out "and sonic boom". On page 2, line 5, strike out "and sonic boom". On page 2, line 12, strike out "and sonic boom". On page 3, lines 9 and 10, strike out "or sonic boom standards, rules, or regulations" and insert in lieu thereof "standards, rules, or regulations issued pursuant to subsection (a)". On page 3, line 15, strike out "or sonic boom". On page 3, line 18, strike cut the quota- tion marks and between such line and line 19 insert the following: "(d) The Administrator shall (1) pro- hibit nonmilitary aircraft, singly or in any combination thereof, from being operated over the United States (including territories and possessions thereof) in such a way as to produce sonic booms, but such prohibition shall not apply to aircraft used in the in- vestigation and study herein -authorized; (2) conduct a full and complete investiga- tion and study for the purpose of determin- ing what exposures to sonic booms (amount and frequency) are detrimental to the health and welfare of any persons, and such inves- tigation and study shall include (A) con- sultation with the Secretary of Health, Edu- cation, and Welfare, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Develop- ment, the Secretary of the Interior, the Sec- retary of Commerce, the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Admin- istration, and the President of the National Academy of Sciences, and (B) such research as may be necessary, which shall include, but not be limited to, the startle effect and physiological or psychological problems that result from sonic booms and the possible detrimental effects on preservation of nat- ural beauty and historic shrines; (3) within one year from the date of enactment of this subsection make a report to the Congress on his findings as of that time, together with the written comments of the above- mentioned officials; and (4) no later than two years from the date of enactment of this subsection, report to Congress on the final results of his findings, together with the final written comments of such Federal of- ficials." ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative, Clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. THE 192D ANNIVERSARY OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, we live in a time of revolution. In all the nations of the world, including ours, there are increasingly frequent scenes of disorder, disruption, violence, pitched battle in the streets, and-in many forms-at- tacks on the properly constituted au- thorities of government, from pclice officers to political leaders. In this vast scene of turmoil and turbulence, there are many who fear for the safety of the United States and for the preservation of our great institutions of freedom. On this occasion, the 192d anniversary of the Declaration of Inde- pendence, I think it is important to state why we must not be fearful in these revolutionary times. In fact, these revo- lutionary times offer us opportunities for accomplishment quite as grand as any that have heretofore existed. If it is true that these are revolution- ary times, it also is true that we are a revolutionary nation. The United States was born in revolu- tion and our founding principle-the principle that made us the special Na- tion we are-is a revolutionary principle. That principle is stated elegantly and for all times in our Declaration of Independence: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal and are en- dowed by their Creator with certain inalien- able rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, The American Revolution was the greatest political revolution in history because it established government, for the first time, on the principle of the equality of all men in their rights to live their own lives in freedom, with their own happiness as their goal. Those powerful words, and that prin- ciple, made Americans one people. And the Constitution they wrote a decade or so later, based on the principle of the equality of all men in their rights to life and liberty, made Americans into a spe- cial kind of nation-a stable and law- abiding nation based on a revolutionary principle. That paradox--of stability and revolu- tion-is what makes me confident, not fearful, that America is well-suited to survive and even thrive in a revolution- ary age. What makes our Nation strong is the principle of equality. What will make us stronger and stronger is progress in equality. The revolutionary demands that en- danger other nations should not en- danger our Nation if we keep in mind our revolutionary founding principle. Whoever among us demands his full share of equality in human rights is fully in accord with American principles, and in granting those rights we help him be- come more fully an American citizen. What might tend to tear down and threaten in other countries not founded on equality as we are, tends in the United States to build up, to strengthen, to ad- Approved For Release 2005/11/21: CIA-RDP70B00338R000300070003-5