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INDEX, Vol. 3, Communist Affairs ‘(Nos. l-6, Jan.-Dee. 1965) Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda, University of Southern California, LA. 9007 KEY: Articles are indexed chiefly by area topics and sub-topics. Names of authors are indexed alphabetically as are names of persons about whom substantial material has appeared in Communist Affairs. Issue numbers are in arabic and are separated from page numbers by colons. “Dt” in brackets indicates a Developments and Trends item; “qq” indicates a Quotable Quote; other entries are principally of three types: Background Articles [ bkgrd], Biographies and Book Reviews. . ADEN --See Indonesia (2:8) ALBANIA ADVANCE YOUTH ORGANIZATION --See Front Conferences (5: 13) -See Communist Bloc (1:16) (2:18); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); Kosygin (3:27); Romania (2:21); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20) -See also Africa (6:4) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ; Front Conferences (3: 17) (5: 13) ; Indonesia (6: 13-14) ADZHUBEI, ALEXEI -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (6: 12) ALGERIA AFGHANISTAN --See Kosygin (3:25) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and International Relations (3: 13) Algerian Coup Disrupts Afro-Asian ‘Unity’ [dt] 3: I 1 Communists React to Algerian Coup [qq] 3: 17 -See Africa (4: 17); France (2:24); Front Organizations (4:13-14); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20) AFRICA A Red Chinese Camel in the African Tent [qq J 4: i 7 African Leader Questions China’s Friendship [qq] 4: I 7 African Socialism: A Challenge to Communism [bkgrd] 6:3-g Danger of Subversion in Africa [qq] 1: 25 East-West Aid to Africa: A Comparison [dt] 3: 15 Soviet Bloc ‘Educates Africans [dt] 6:26 -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:13); Communist Bloc (6:26) ; Rochet (4:20) ; Sino-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20) -See also Algeria (3: I I) ; C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (2: 28) ; Front Conferences (1:2g) (2:27) (3:17) (4:14) (6:g); In- donesia (2:6) ; Front Organizations (4: 13); Lin Piao (5:8) ; Nigeria (4:14); Rochet (4:22); Sihanouk (5:17-18); Strong (4:17); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 12); U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religious Life (5:4) --See also Africa (6:8); Front Conferences (1:ag) (2:27) (3: 17) (4: 14) ; Rochet (4:ro) ; Sihanouk (5: 18); Sino- Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; Vietnam (3: 12) ; Vietnam, D.R. (2322) ALLIANCE FOR PROGRESS -See Latin America (4: 10) AMENDOLA, GIORGIO -See Italy (4:6-g) AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 10-1 I) AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC ACTION -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: IO-II) AFRO-ASIAN AFFAIRS ANDREYEV, ANDREY ANDREEVICH See Kosygin (I: 28-30) Peking Opposes Afro-Asian Role for U.S.S.R. [qq] 4: 15 -See Indonesia (2:6) ; Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) -See also Africa (6:8); Chen Yi (5:15); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 15-16) ANDROPOV, YURII V. See Communist Bloc (I : 15) ARGENTINA AFRO-ASIAN CONFERENCE, SECOND (ALGIERS) Algerian Coup Disrupts Afro-Asian ‘Unity’ [dt] 3: I 1 -See Nigeria (4: 14) ; Sihanouk (5: 18) ; Sino-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) See Communist Bloc (2: 18); Kosygin (3:23-q,) -See also Communism (3: 13) ASIA --See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ; Front Con- ferences ( 1: 29) See Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:11-12) AFRO-ASIAN ECONOMIC SEMINAR, SECOND -See Front Conferences (1:zg); Korea (3:16) AFRO-ASIAN JOURNALISTS’ ASSOCIATION (AAJA) -See Front Conferences (1:2g) (3:17) (5:13) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:1a); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (a:28); Communist Bloc (x18); Front Conferences (2:07) (3:17) (4:14) (6:~); Indonesia (x6); Lin Piao (5:5,8); Rochet (4:za) ; Ralph (4:a3) ; Sine-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religions Life (5:4) AUSTRALIA AFRO-ASIAN PEOPLE’S SOLIDARITY ORGANIZATION (AAPSO) -See Front Conferences (6:g) -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) -See also Ceylon (3: 14); Indonesia (6: 13-14); Kosygin (3:aT) AFRO-ASIAN SCIENTISTS’ CONFERENCE -See Front Conferences (5: 13) (6:g) AUSTRIA AFRO-ASIAN WORKERS’ CONFERENCE, FfRST (AAWC] -See Front Conferences (I : 29) --see Kosygin ($24) -Sea also Italy (4:8); Front Conferences (a:a7) (4: I+) AZAHARI, A. M. AIDIT, DIPA NUSANTARA Indonesian Communism’s Drive to Power bkgrd] 2:3-g -See Indonesia (~17) (5:g) (6:13); Malaysia (3:7); Ralph (4:23) -See Indonesia (a&; Malaysia (3:6-7) BARNETT, FRANK R., et. al. Peuce and War in ths Modern Age [Book Review by Rodm,’ Swearingen] a:31 *I
Transcript
Page 1: Index, vol. 3

INDEX, Vol. 3, Communist Affairs ‘(Nos. l-6, Jan.-Dee. 1965) Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda, University of Southern California, LA. 9007

KEY: Articles are indexed chiefly by area topics and sub-topics. Names of authors are indexed alphabetically as are names of persons about whom substantial material has appeared in Communist Affairs. Issue numbers are in arabic and are separated from page numbers by colons. “Dt” in brackets indicates a Developments and Trends item; “qq” indicates a Quotable Quote; other entries are principally of three types: Background Articles [ bkgrd], Biographies and Book Reviews.

.

ADEN --See Indonesia (2:8)

ALBANIA

ADVANCE YOUTH ORGANIZATION --See Front Conferences (5: 13)

-See Communist Bloc (1:16) (2:18); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); Kosygin (3:27); Romania (2:21); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20)

-See also Africa (6:4) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ; Front Conferences (3: 17) (5: 13) ; Indonesia (6: 13-14)

ADZHUBEI, ALEXEI -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (6: 12) ALGERIA

AFGHANISTAN --See Kosygin (3:25) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and International Relations

(3: 13)

Algerian Coup Disrupts Afro-Asian ‘Unity’ [dt] 3: I 1 Communists React to Algerian Coup [qq] 3: 17 -See Africa (4: 17); France (2:24); Front Organizations

(4:13-14); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20)

AFRICA A Red Chinese Camel in the African Tent [qq J 4: i 7 African Leader Questions China’s Friendship [qq] 4: I 7 African Socialism: A Challenge to Communism [bkgrd] 6:3-g Danger of Subversion in Africa [qq] 1: 25 East-West Aid to Africa: A Comparison [dt] 3: 15 Soviet Bloc ‘Educates Africans [dt] 6:26 -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:13); Communist Bloc

(6:26) ; Rochet (4:20) ; Sino-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20)

-See also Algeria (3: I I) ; C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (2: 28) ; Front Conferences (1:2g) (2:27) (3:17) (4:14) (6:g); In- donesia (2:6) ; Front Organizations (4: 13); Lin Piao (5:8) ; Nigeria (4:14); Rochet (4:22); Sihanouk (5:17-18); Strong (4:17); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 12); U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religious Life (5:4)

--See also Africa (6:8); Front Conferences (1:ag) (2:27) (3: 17) (4: 14) ; Rochet (4:ro) ; Sihanouk (5: 18); Sino- Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; Vietnam (3: 12) ; Vietnam, D.R. (2322)

ALLIANCE FOR PROGRESS -See Latin America (4: 10)

AMENDOLA, GIORGIO -See Italy (4:6-g)

AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 10-1 I)

AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC ACTION -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: IO-II)

AFRO-ASIAN AFFAIRS ANDREYEV, ANDREY ANDREEVICH

See Kosygin (I: 28-30) Peking Opposes Afro-Asian Role for U.S.S.R. [qq] 4: 15 -See Indonesia (2:6) ; Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16)

-See also Africa (6:8); Chen Yi (5:15); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 15-16)

ANDROPOV, YURII V. See Communist Bloc (I : 15)

ARGENTINA

AFRO-ASIAN CONFERENCE, SECOND (ALGIERS) Algerian Coup Disrupts Afro-Asian ‘Unity’ [dt] 3: I 1

-See Nigeria (4: 14) ; Sihanouk (5: 18) ; Sino-Soviet Dispute (4: 15)

See Communist Bloc (2: 18); Kosygin (3:23-q,) -See also Communism (3: 13)

ASIA

--See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ; Front Con- ferences ( 1: 29)

See Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:11-12)

AFRO-ASIAN ECONOMIC SEMINAR, SECOND -See Front Conferences (1:zg); Korea (3:16)

AFRO-ASIAN JOURNALISTS’ ASSOCIATION (AAJA) -See Front Conferences (1:2g) (3:17) (5:13)

-See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:1a); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (a:28); Communist Bloc (x18); Front Conferences (2:07) (3:17) (4:14) (6:~); Indonesia (x6); Lin Piao (5:5,8); Rochet (4:za) ; Ralph (4:a3) ; Sine-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) ; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religions Life (5:4)

AUSTRALIA AFRO-ASIAN PEOPLE’S SOLIDARITY ORGANIZATION (AAPSO)

-See Front Conferences (6:g) -See Communist Bloc (2: 18)

-See also Ceylon (3: 14); Indonesia (6: 13-14); Kosygin (3:aT)

AFRO-ASIAN SCIENTISTS’ CONFERENCE -See Front Conferences (5: 13) (6:g)

AUSTRIA

AFRO-ASIAN WORKERS’ CONFERENCE, FfRST (AAWC] -See Front Conferences (I : 29)

--see Kosygin ($24)

-Sea also Italy (4:8); Front Conferences (a:a7) (4: I+)

AZAHARI, A. M.

AIDIT, DIPA NUSANTARA Indonesian Communism’s Drive to Power bkgrd] 2:3-g -See Indonesia (~17) (5:g) (6:13); Malaysia (3:7); Ralph

(4:23)

-See Indonesia (a&; Malaysia (3:6-7)

BARNETT, FRANK R., et. al. Peuce and War in ths Modern Age [Book Review by Rodm,’

Swearingen] a:31

*I

Page 2: Index, vol. 3

BELGIUM Communist Electoral Maneuvers in France and Belgium [dt]

i: 18-19 -See also Front Conferences (5: 13)

BEN BELA, AHMED See Algeria (3: 11) (3: 17-18); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R.

(mn) -See also Africa (4:17); Front Conferences (3: 17) ; Front Or-

ganizations (4: 13)

BERAN, JOSEF Archbishop Beran Leaves Prague, Becomes a Cardinal [ dt] 1: a I

BERIA, LAVRENTII See Gomulka (6:as); Kosygin (i:aB-31,33) ---See also U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (a:a7)

BERKELEY CAMPUS YOUTH ORGANIZING COMMITTEE -See Front Conference-s (5: 13)

BERLIN See Kosygin (3:2o-aa, a6)

BERMAN, JAKUB See Gomulka ((5:a8-ag) (6:aa)

BERNAL, 1. D. See Front Conference-s (3:17) (4:14); Front Organizations

(2: 19)

MSSARABIA See Gomulka (5:aa)

BHUlTO, ZULFIKAR All See Pakistan (a:ao>

SIENKOWSKI, WlADYSlAW See Gomulka (5:27, ag) (6:a3)

BIERUT, BOLESLAW See Gomulka (5:a8-ag) (6: 17, ig-ao)

MN HAJI MOHAMMAD, ISHAK See Indonesia (n:g) ; Malaysia (3: 7)

BOESTAMAhl, AHMAD See Indonesia (2:4); Malaysia (3:7, IO)

BOGROV, F. (DAVID IOSIFOVICH ZASLAVSKY) See Zaslavsb (a:go)

BOLMA See Latin America (4: 10)

BOOK REVlEWS Frank R Barnett, et. al, Peace and War in the Modern Age

a:31 Adam Bromke, ed., The Communist States at the Crossroads:

Between Moscow and Peking 5:31 David Floyd, Rum&a.* Russia’s Dissident Ally 5:31 Thomas T. Hammond, ed., Souiet Foreign Relations and World

communism i:35 Donald Hindly, The Communist Party of Indonesia, 1951-63

4:=3 Rollie Poppino, international Communism in Latin America

3:31 witold S. Sworakowski, The Communist International and Its

Front Organizutions 6: a7 Justus M. van der Kroef, The Communist Party’of Indonesia

4:93

BOR-KOMOROWSKl, TADEUSZ See Gomulka (6:17)

BORNRO See Indonesia (1:17) (0:5,8)

BORODIN, MIKHAIL SeeStrong (4:17)

BOUMEDIENNE, HOUARI Algerian Coup Disrupts Afro-Asian ‘Unity’ [dt] 3: I 1 See Algeria (3: 17); Front Organizations (3: 13)

BOURGUIBA, HABIB BEN All See Africa (4: 17)

BRANCO, HUMBERTO CASTE110 See Brazil (5: I i-la); Latin America (4.: IO)

BRAZIL Military Tightens Control in Brazil After Elections [dt] 5: 11-12 See Communist Bloc (a: 18) ; Latin America (4: 10)

BREZHNEV, LEONID ILICH See Communist Bloc (I: 15-16); Gomulka (6:24) ; Kosygin

(1:31) (3:aa, 26-30); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6:11)

BRITISH TRADE UNION CONGRESS See Front Conferences (5: 13)

BROMKE, ADAM, ed. “The Communist States and the West,” in The Communist

States at the Crossroads, Adam Bromke, ed. [Book review by William S. Caldwell] 5: 3 I

BROOKE, GEOFFREY U.S.S.R. Objects to British Objectivity [dt] a:a7

BROWN, ALAN A. Bkgrd article on “Communist Economics: Reform vs. Ortho-

doxy” I :3-Q [Co-author is Richard Yin]

BROWN, J. F. - Chapter in The Communist States at the Crossroad, Adam

Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

BRUNEI See Indonesia (a:4-5); Malaysia (3:6, 7, IO)

BUDDHISTS -See Vietnam (4:11); Vietnam, Republic of (i:ao-al)

BUFALINI REPORT -See Italy (4: 8-g)

BUKHARIN, NIKOLAI IVANOVICH -See Gomulka (5:a7)

BULGANIN, NlKOlAY ALEKSANDROVICH -See Kosygin (1:30-31,33)

BULGARIA Anti-Zhivkov Plot Revealed in Bulgaria [dt] 2:22 Bulgaria Convicts Plotters [dt] 3: 15 -See Communist Bloc (1:3-9) (a:lB); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16);

Kosygin (3: IQ-ao, 25) -See also Book Reviews [Bromke, ed.] (5:31) ; Front Confer-

ences (1:29) (a:a7) (3:17) (4:14) (5:13) (6:g); Gomulka (6:ai)

BULLITT, WILLIAM c. -See Kosygin (3: 28)

BUNDY, WILLIAM P. Assistant Secretary of State Comments on Vietnam [qq] 5: 15-17

BURMA -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13)

BURROWS, LARRY -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:a8-19)

BURUNDI Chinese Expelled from Burundi after Assassination [dt] 1: a i-22 -See also Africa (i:a5)

II

Page 3: Index, vol. 3

CALDWELL, WILLIAM S. Book Reviefir of Adam Bromke’s (ed.) The Cornmunisr S&&s at

the Crossroads: Between Moscow ana’ Peking 5: 3 I Book Review of David Floyd’s Rumania Russia’s Dissident Ally

5:31

CAMBODIA Cambodian Leader Loses Friends [qq] 5: 17-18 -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16); Vietnam (5: 12) -See also Chen Yi (5: 15) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (1: I I)

CANADA --See Gomulka (4: 12)

-See also Ceylon (3: 14) : Communism (3: 12)

CARTOONS Izues~iia Assails U.S. on Vietnam 2:23 Pravda on U.N. Crisis 1: 23 Washington’s Print . . . from the Vietnamese Negative 3: 17

CASTRO, FIDEL -See Kosygin (3: 26) -See also Algeria (3: 18); Book Reviews [Poppino] (3:31);

Cuba (2:27); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 10); U.S., Politics and Govermnent (2:20)

CATHOLIC CHURCH (See Roman Catholic Church)

CAT-MACKIEWICZ, STANISLAW (Ps. Gaston de Cerizay) -See Gomulka (6: 25)

CEAUSESCU, NICOLAE -See Romania (2:21)

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: I I)

CEYLON Ceylon’s New Premier Curbs Communists [dt] 3: 14 -See also Communism (3: 12); Kosygin (3: 19)

CHANG KUO-HUA See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15)

CHEN YI Chen Yi Castigates U.S., U.N. [qq] 5: 15 See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (1:23); C.P.R., Military

and Defense (3: 13); Indonesia (I: 16-17) (2:5, 8); Kosygin (3:24, 28); Pakistan (2:20); Vietnam (3:12)

CHENG PING -See Indonesia (2:5)

CHIANG KAI-SHEK -See Kosygin (3: 19) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15) ; Zaslavsky

(2:30)

CHILE --See Latin America (4: lo) -See also Front Conferences (3: 17) (4: 14) (5: 13)

CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF [MAINLAND]

Economy and Fomlgn Trade Communist Economics: Reforms vs. Orthodoxy [bkgrd] 1:3-g --See Ceylon (3: 14)

Foreign Aid A Sino-Indonesian &is? [dt] 1:16-17 Communist China Again Pledges Aid to Viet Cong [qq] 4: 16 -See Africa (3: 15) ; Vietnam (3: 14) (4: ii) ; Vietnam,

D.R. (I: 10-14) (5: 12)

Foreign Policy and International Relations A Red Chinese Camel in the African Tent [qq] 4: 17 A Sino-Indonesian Axis? [dt] 1: 1617 Chinese Expelled from Burundi after Assassination [dt]

1:21-22

Communist Powers Remain Rigid on Vietnam [dt] 2: 22-23 Indonesia Leaves U.N.; Red China Applauds [qq] 1: 23 Pakistan Signs Border Pact with Red China [dt] 2: 20

Peking Calls Tito and Shastri US. Tools re Vietnam [qq] 4:15-16

Peking Fishes in Troubled Indo-Pakistani Waters [dt] 5:12-14

Peking Opposes Afro-Asian Role for U.S.S.R. [qq] 4: 15 Peking Reacts to Exclusion from U.N. [dt] 6: 15 Peking Tightens Its Hold on Tibet and Sinkiang [dt] 6: 14-15 Peking’s New Order of the Day rdtl 3: 13

Red China Reacts to U.N. Action on Tibet [qq] 5: 18 Red Chinese Dominate 1965 Gensuikyo Meeting [dt] 4: 11-12 World Peace Front Now Peking’s Tool? [dt] 2: 19 -See Africa (1:25) (4:17); Algetia (3:11); Bulgaria (2:22);

Dalai Lama (5:18); Front Organizations (4:13); India (f:24) (2:15-17); Indonesia (2:3-8) (5:10-11) (6:13-14);

Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) ; Malaysia (3:4-g) ; Romania (2:21); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2:13-14) (3:10- 12); U.S., Politics and Government (2:20); Vietnam (3:11-12) (4:11) (6:10-11); Vietnam, D.R. (1:19-20)

-See also Ahreria (?:17): Front Conferences (1:2d (2:27) (3:17) (Gr4.) (;:I& ‘(6:9); Gomulka (4:12);&& (4:-i-

5) ; Korea, D.P.R. (5:18); Kosygin (3: 19, 22, 24-29); Nigeria (4:14); Rochet (4:22); Sihanouk (5:17-18)

Military Affairs and National Defense Peking’s New Order of the Day [dt] 3: 13 Red China Abolishes Military Ranks [dt] 3: 13-14. Soldiers Urged to Be ‘Mao’s Good Fighters [qq] 4: 16 The Lin Piao Document on Maoist Strategy [bkgrd] 5:5-9 -See Ceylon (3: 14)

Politics and Government, Personalities (See individual names)

Politics and Government, Policies Peking’s New Order of the Day [dt] 3: 1.3 The Lin Piao Document on Maoist Strategy [bkgrd] 5:5-9 -See Communist Bloc (1:15-16) (2:18-19)

Press and Propaganda Chen Yi Castigates U.S., U.N. [qq] 5: 15 Communist Historian Criticized as ‘Bourgeois’ [qq] 3: 18 Moscow-Peking Press re the Los Angeles Riots [bkgrd] 5:3-4 Peking Attacks Johnson Administration [qq] 3: 18 Peking Flays Moscow’s Treatment of Rioters [qq] a:28 Stop Trying to Be ‘Amicable Man,’ Chinese Urged [qq] 1:25 The Controversy over Half a Rice Dumpling [qq] I :a5 The Lin Piao Document on Maoist Strategy lbkgrd] 5:5-9 The Sino-Soviet War of Words [qq] 6: 16 What Is Communist Happiness? [qq] 2:29 --See Communist Bloc (2: 18) ; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S.S.R., Press

and Propaganda (2 : 20)

Social, Cultural, and Religious life Stop Trying to Be ‘Amicable Man,’ Chinese Urged [qq] I: 25 The Controversy over Half a Rice Dumpling [qq] 1 :a5 What Is Communist Happiness? [qq] a:29

CHINA, PRE-1949 -See Zaslavsky (2:30)

CHINA, REPUBLIC OF [TAIWAN]

-See Japan (6: 14) -see alSO Kosygin (3: 19, 25) ; %hanOuk (5: 17)

CHINESE, OVERSEAS -See Indonesia (~4-5) (6: 13-14); Malaysia (3:4-10)

CHOI YONG RUN -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16)

CHOU EN-IA1 --See Algeria (3:11) (3:18); C.P.R., Economy and Foreign

Trade (1:g) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 13); C.P.R., Military and Defense (3:13); Communist Bloc (1:i5); Indonesia (2:8); Rosygin (3:28); Romania (2:21); Sine-Soviet Dispute (6: 16) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Re- ligious Life ($3-4) ; Vietnam, D.R. (2:nn)

-See also Front Conferences (1: 29)

fTT

Page 4: Index, vol. 3

CHOU KU-CHENG Communist Historian Criticized as ‘Bourgeois’ [qq] 3: 18

CHRISTIANITY Young Communist Intellectual Upholds Christianity [qq] 2:2g -See Mihajlov (3: 13)

CHURCHILL, WINSTON See Gomulka (5: 29-30)

CORXISTENCE (See Paoceful Coexistence}

COLOMBIA -SeeCommunim (3: 13)

COMINFORM -See Gomulka (6: 19) -See also Italy (4:4)

COMINTERN dee &mmmist Bloc (I: 15); Gomulka (5:22-24, a6-27) (6:21) -See also Africa (6:5); Book Reviews [Sworakowski] (6:27);

Italy (4:4)

COMMITTEE FOR NON-VIOLENT ACTION --See Front Organizations (2: 19)

COMMON MARKET -See Italy (4:8)

COMMONWEALTH -See Vietnam (3:i I-12) -See also Front Conferences (4: 14)

COMMUNIST BLOC Air Mail Service Behind the Wall [qq] I: 24 Communist Economics: Reform vs. Orthodoxy [ bkgrd] 1: 3-g Communists React to Algerian Coup [qq] 3: 17 Moscow Meeting of 1g Parties Is Failure [dt] 2: 18-19 Nineteen Parties Finally Meet in Moscow [dt] I: 15-16

‘Soviet Bloc ‘Educates’ Africans [dt] 6:26 Survey of Films on Communim 5: 30 -See Africa (3:15); Bundy (5:16); Roman Catholic Church

(6:12) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:zo) ; Vietnam, DR. (I: 10-14)

-See also Book Reviews: [Bromke, ed.] 5:31, [Hammond, ed.] (1:35); Rochet (4:20-22); Romania (2:21); Sino-Soviet Dispute (6:16)

COMMUNIST COUNCIL FOR MUTUAL ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE (COMECON)

-See Romania (2:21)

CONFERENCE FOR SOLIDARITY WITH VIETNAM, 2nd [WFTU] -See Front Conferences (3: 17)

CONFRRENCE OF SOLIDARITY OF THE PEOPLES OF AFRICA, ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA

-See Front Conferences (6: g)

CoNRRENcE OF SOLIDARI~ WITH THE WORKERS AND PEOPLE OF VlEmAM [Wlw] -See Front Conferences (4: 14)

CONGO -See Indonesia (~~7-8) ; Kosygin (3: 23) [Brazzaville]

See Korea, D.P.R (3: 16) -See also Africa (6:s)

[Leopold~e] -See Burundi (1:22) -See also Chen Yi (5: 15) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Reli-

gious Life (5:4)

CONSTANTINE, KING OF GREECE -See Greece (4: 15)

COOK, JAMES A. Survey of Films on Communism 5:30

COSTA RICA --See Latin America (4: IO)

CROAN, MELVIN “East Germany, ” in The Communist States of fhe Crossroads,

Adam Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

CUBA High-Ranking Cuban Defects to West [dt] 2:26-27 -See Communist Bloc (1:16) (2:18); Front Organizations

(4: 13) ; Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) ; Kosygin (3:24-26) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (Z:ZO)

-See also Algeria (3: 17) ; Book Rcvicws [Poppino] (3:31) ; Front Conferences (3:17) (6:g); Latin America (4:io); Vietnam (2:22)

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS SeeKosygin (3:24-26)

CYPRUS -See Greece (4:15); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20)

CYRANKIEWICZ, JOSEPH -See Gomulka (4: 12) (6: 19-20, 25)

CZECHOSLOVAKIA Archbishop Beran Leaves Prague, Becomes a Cardinal [dt] 1: 2 I Czech Party Bosses Ignore Assembly Majority [dt] 4: 12-13 Czechoslovak Intellectuals at the Crossroads [dt] 3: 15-16 -See Communist Bloc (I :3-g) (2 : 18) ; Gomulka (6: 24,26) ;

Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) ; Vietnam (I : 12) -See also Front Conferences (2:27) (3: 17) (4:14.); Front Or-

ganizations (2:lg); Italy (48); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (6: 1 I)

DALAI LAMA Dalai Lama Says Tibet Struggle ‘Unabated’ [qq] 5: 18 See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15); India (2: 15)

DEFECTIONS High-Ranking Cuban Defects to West [dt] 2:26-27 -See Vietnam, D.R. (I:I~)

DE GAULLE, CHARLES -See France (1:18) (2:24); Gomulka (4~12); Kosygin (3:20,

22) ; Rochet (4:zo-21)

DELAIN, PIERRE Biographical article on Waldcck Rochet: Moscow’s New Man

in Paris 4: 18-22

DE LIMA, FRANCISCO NEGRAO -See Brazil (5:11)

DEMAITRE, EDMUND Bkgrd article on “Italian Communisnr: Debate and Dilemma”

4:3-g

DE MURVILLE, COUVE -See Kosygin (3:21)

DEL CASTILLO, JULIO CESAR High-Ranking Cuban Defects to West [dt] 2:2627

DESTALINIZATION The Restalinization of Stalin [dt] 2: 1g -See Communist Bloc (2:18-19); France (2:24) ; Gomulka

(6:1g, 21, 23); Khrushchgv (3:17); Kosygin (1:34) (3:1g, 29-30) ; Zaslavsky (2:30)

-See also Rochet (4: 18, 21-22) ; Strong (4: 17)

DHANI, OMAR -See Indonesia (5: IO)

DIALLO, DEMBA -See Africa (6:4-5)

DJIW, MILOVAN -See Popanl (6:12); Yugoslavia (1:21) (2:25)

DODD, THOMAS J. -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: IO)

Iv

Page 5: Index, vol. 3

DOMINICAN REj’UBLIC -See Latin America (4: 10)

-See also Book Reviews [Poppino] (3:31); Chen Yi (5: 15); Co-unist HOC (3:13); U.S., Social, Cultural, and me- ligious Life (5:3-4)

DORODNITSYN, ANATOLII A. -See U.S.S.R., Economy and I;ol,eign Trade ( 1 ‘.+j

DORTICOS, OSVALDO -See Cuba (2:26)

DOSTOEVSKY, FEDOR MIKHAILOVICH --See Zaslavsky (2:30)

DRACHKOVITCH, MILORAD M. “Yugoslavia” in The Cornrmrrlist Stutes ut the C~I~~~SI.I~~IIIS. AII;~ I I I

Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwc~ll] *j: 3 I

DU BOIS, w. E. 6. -See Africa (6:5)

DU BOIS, W. E. B., CLUBS OF AMERICA -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

DUCLOS, JACQUES --See Rochet (4: 18, 20)

DZIEWANOWSKI, M. K. “Poland,” in The Communist States nt the Crossroads, Adam

Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

ECONOMICS Communist Economics: Reform vs. Orthodoxy [bkgrd] 1:3-g Kommunist on capitalist, Socialist Planning [qq] 1:24-25 Kosygin Outlines New Economic Policies [dt] 5: I I

ECUADOR -See Mass Media (3: 13)

EHRENBURG, ILYA -See Front Conferences ( I : 29) ; Zaslavsky (2 : 30)

EICHhIANN, ADOLF Sea Israel (2:25); Kosygin (1:28)

EISENHOWER, DWIGHT D. -See Kosygin (3:20-22); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 13)

ENGELS, FRIEDRICH

-see IdY (4:7) ---See also Africa (6: 6)

ESPIONAGE -See Ceylon (3:14); Gomulka (6:22); Kosygin (3:21-22,27);

Vietnam, D.R. (I : I 2)

ESTONIA -See Kosygin (1:27) -See also Gomulka (5:27)

FASCISM -See Gomulka (5:22) -See also Front Conferences (3: 17); Israel (2:25); Lin Pie0

(5:5,8)

FILIPKOWSKI, COLONEL “JANKA” -See Gomulka (5: 29)

FINDER, PAWEL -See Gomulka (5: 2627)

FINLAND -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) -See also Front Conferences (1:2g) (2:27) (3:17) (4:~);

Front Organizations (2: 19) (4: 14); Gomulka (6:21)

FIRSTENBERG, JACOB (Furshnberg, alias Haneckl) --See Gomulka (5:20)

FISCHER, ERNST -See Italy (4:8)

FLOYD, DAVID Rumania: Russia’s Dissident Ally [Review by William S. Cald-

well] 5:31

. FORNER, ALAIN

-See France (2: 24) ; Rochet (4: 22)

FRANCE Communist Electoral Maneuvers in France and Belgium [dt]

1: 18-19 French Party Ousts Student Rebels [dt] 2:24 \\‘aldeck Rochet: Moscow’s New Man in Paris 4: 18-22 --See Communist Bloc (2: IS) ; Kosygin (3:20-21, 23); U.S.S.R.,

Press and Propaganda (2:20) - See also Algeria (3:17); Bundy (5:16); Chen Yi (5:15);

Mass Media (3: 12) ; Front Conferences (1:2g) (5: 13) ; L~‘runt Organizations (2: 19) (3:13); Gomulka (4~12) (5:22); Italy (4:3); Rolph (4:23); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I:IO-14.); Vietnam (2:13) (3:11); R.V.N. (I:zI).

FRONT CONFERENCES, INTERNATIONAL COMMUNIST Dissension in Youth Festival Ranks [dt] (4: 13-14) Schedules: 1:2g; 2:27;3:17;4:14; 5:13;6:g

FRONT ORGANIZATIONS Sino-Soviet Split Affects Japanese Front Groups [dt] I: 1g World Peace Council Now Peking’s Tool? [dt] 2: Ig -See Mihajlov (3: 13) --See also Book Reviews [Sworakowski] (627); Malaysia

(3:4-10)

GARCIA-GODOY, HECTOR -See Latin America (4:lo)

GARVEY, MARCUS See Ah-h (6:5)

GENEVA AGREEMENTS OF 1954 and 1962 -See Bundy (5:16); U.S. Foreign Policy and I.R. ( I:IO-II)

(2: 13) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 16); Gomulka

(4: 12)

GENOCIDE --See Kosygin (I : a6-28) -See also Yugoslavia (2:25-26)

GERMAN REUNIFICATION -See Kosygin (3:21, 26)

GERMANY, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF [EAST] East Germans Have a ‘Choice’ at the Polls rdtl r;: IO, East German s Start Film of ‘U.S. Crimes’ m Vi&&i [dt] 4: 14 -See Communist Bloc (1:3-g) (2:18) (6:26); Gomulka (6:20,

24,26) ; Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) See also Ceylon (3:14); Front Conferences (3: 17) (5:13)

(6:g); Front Organizations (3: 13); Kosygin (3:20-21, 29)

GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF [WEST] -See Communist Bloc (2:18); Gomulka (6:20, 24); Kosygin

(1:30); Roman Catholic Church (6:12) -See also Czechoslovakia (3: 15-16); Front Conferences (1:ag)

(3:17) (6:g); Gomulka (4:12); Israel (2:25); Latin Amer- ica (4: IO) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (I: 16)

GERMANY, WORLD WAR II See Bulgaria (3:15); Gomulka (5:20, 22, 24) (6:17-18, so) --See also Kosygin (1:26-28, 31); Lin Piao (5:5, 8) Yugoslavia

(2:25-16)

GHANA -See Africa (66,s); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16) ---See also Communist Bloc (6:26); Front Conferences (3:17)

(‘W

GHEORGHIU-DEJ, GHEORGHE The Guard Changes in Romania [dt] a:21 -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:13)

GIEREK, EDWARD -See Gomulka (6:26)

GOLDWATER, BARRY -See U.S., Politics and Govannnan t (w31)

Page 6: Index, vol. 3

GOMULKA, WLADYSLAW Gomulka Damns and Praises U.S. [dt] 4: 12 Gomulka: Head of ‘People’s Poland’ (1) [biography] 5:1g-30 Gomulka: Head of ‘People’s Poland’ (II) [biography] 6:17-26

GOERING, HERMAN See Kosygin (I:~I)

GOULART, JOAO -See Brazil (5: 11-12) ; Latin America (4: IO)

GRAMSCI, ANTONIO --See Italy (4: 7-8)

GREAT BRITAIN U.S.S.R. Objects to British Objectivity [dt] 2:27 -See Africa (6:5-6); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 12)

(5:13); Communist Bloc (1:16) (2:18); Indonesia (1:23) (2:4 7, 9); Kosygin (3:25-26, 28-29); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20); Vietnam (6:10)

-See also Chen Yi (5:15); Cuba (2:26-27); Gomulka (5:22, 30); India (2:15); Indonesia (1:17) (6:14); Malaysia (3: 4-5,8-g)

GREECE Greek Communists Fan Anti-Royalist Riots [qq] 4: 15 -See also U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I: 10)

GRIFFITH, WILLIAM E. “The Sine-Soviet Split: A Reconstructed History, 1956-64,” in

The Communist States at ,the Crossroads, Adam Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5: 3 1

GROMYKO, ANDRRI ANDRERVICH -See Kosygin (3:21-22); Vietnam (6:10)

GRONCHI, GIOVANNI -see Kosygin (3:23)

QRONOUSKI, JOHN A. -See Gomulka (4:12) (6:26)

GRUPPI, LUCIANO -See Italy (4:6-7)

GUATEMALA -See Latin America (4: 10)

GUEVARA, ERNESTE ‘CHE’ -See India (2: 17)

GUINEA -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) -See also Africa (6:s)

GURRVICH, M. I. -See Kosygin (3:2g)

HADLRY, PAUL E. Book review of Rollie Poppino’s International Communism in

Lutin America 2:31

HAMMARSKJOLD, DAG -See Zaslavsky (2:31)

HAMMOND, THOMAS T., ccl. Soviet Foreign Relations and World Communism A Biblio-

graphy [Review by Rodger Swearingen] t :35

HARRIMAN, WILLIAM AVERRLL -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 16); Kosygin (3:~s) -See also Gomulka (5:30)

HIMMLER, HElNRlCH -Seed Gomulka (5:30)

HINDLRY, DONALD The Communist Party of Indonesia, 1951-63 [Review by Ham-

mond M. Rolph] 4:03

HITLRR, ADOLF -!See Bulgaria (3:15) ; Gomulka (5:23-14,. 30) ; Rochet (4:no) -See also Kosygin (1:26,28,31); Yugoslavia (1:21)

HO CHI MINH -See Kosygin (3:28) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I: 11-14)

(2:13); Vietnam (4:11) (6:10) -See also Front Conferences (4: 14)

HO LUNG ---See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (G: 14-15)

HOCHHUTH, ROLF -See Czechoslovakia (3: 15-16)

HOLLAND (See The Netherlands)

HOMUNCULUS, (David losifovich Zaslavsky) -See Zaslavsky (2:30)

HOUPHOUET-BOIGNY, FELIX -See Africa (1:25)

HSIEH, FU-CHIH -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5:13) (6:15); Romania

(2:21)

HUNGARIAN COMMUNIST YOUTH LEAGUE (KISZ) -See Front Conferences (6: g)

HUNGARY -See Communist Bloc (1:3-g) (2:18); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16) -See also Caldwell (5:31); France (2:24); Front Conferences

(2:27) (3:17) (4:14) (5:13) (6:g); Gomulka (6:20-21); Italy (4:~ 8)

INDIA Indian Government Exposes Communist Subversion [qq] I : 23-24 Indian White Paper on India’s Communists [bkgrd] z:15-17 Peking Fishes in Troubled Indo-Pakistani Waters [dt] 5: 12-14 Pro-Chinese Communists Win Kerala Election [dt] 2:24 -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) ; Indonesia (2:5) ; Kosygin (3: ig,

na-ag); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20) See also Ceylon (3: 14) ; Chen Yi (5: 15) ; C.P.R., Foreign Poli-

cy and I.R. (4:15-16) (5:18) (6: 14-15); Dalai Lama (5:18); Front Conferences (i:zg) (2:27) (5:13) (6:g); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: I I)

INDONESIA A Sine-Indonesian Axis? [dt] i:16-17 Anti-Communist Trend Continues in Indonesia [dt] 6: 13-14 Indonesia: A Turn from the Left [dt] 5:g-11 Indonesia Leaves UN; Red China Applauds [qq] 1:23 Indonesian Communism’s Drive to Power [bkgrd] 2:3-g Sukarno Is Host to North Korea Premier [qq] 2:28 -See Communist Bloc (1: 16) ; Korea, D.P.R. ‘(3: 16) ; Malaysia

(3:4-10); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20) See also Book Reviews [Hindley] (4:23), [van der Kroef]

(4:23); Ceylon (3:14); Chen Yi (5:15); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:13); Front Conferences (1:ng); (2:27); (3:17) (4:14) (6:g); Kosygin (3:tg, 23); Sir&Soviet Dis- pute (4: 15) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religious Life (5:4)

INDONESIAN WEST BORNEO -See Malaysia (3:g)

INGRAO, PIETRO -See Italy (4:6,8-g)

INTERNATIONAL CONFEDERATION OF FREE TRADE UNIONS (ICFTU) -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF FOOD, TOBACCO, AND CATERING WORKERS’ TUI

-See Front Conferences (2:27) (3:17) (4:14)

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF TRANSPORT, PORT AND FISHERY WORKERS, 4th

--See Front Conferences (3: 17)

INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF ORIENTALISTS -See Rosygin (3: 21)

VI

Page 7: Index, vol. 3

INTERNATIONAL CONTROL COMMISSION -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.H. ( 1 : 10, 11)

INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF JOURNALISTS -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF RESISTANCE FIGHTERS (FIR) SeeFront Conferences (2:27) (3:17) (.1,:1.1,,l (5:13) (G:~J

INTERNATIONAL FRONTS (See Front Organizations)

INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION (ILO) --See Front Conferences (2:27) (5:13)

INTERNATIONAL LENIN SCHOOL -See Gomulka (5:21-22)

INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF JOURNALISTS (IOJ) -See Front Conferences (1:zg) (3:17) (5: 13) (6:g)

INTERNATIONAL PREPARATORY COMMITTEE FOR THE WORLD YOUTH FESTIVAL IN ALGIERS

See Front Conferences (2: 27)

INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS -see Gomulka (5:25)

INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY FUND -See Front Conferences (2: 27)

INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON PROBLEMS OF SCIENCE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

-See Front Conferences (2:27) (3: 17) (4: I+)

INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNIONS COMMITTEE FOR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS AND PEOPLE OF VIETNAM AGAINST U.S. IMPERIALIST AGGRESSORS

-See Strong (4: 17)

INTERNATIONAL UNION OF STUbENTS (IUS) SeeFrontConferences (1:2g) (2:27) (3:17) (5:13)

Ima -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16)

ISKENDEROV, A. -See Africa (6: 8)

ISRAEL Soviet-Israeli Relations: Hot and Cold [dt] 2:24-25

ITALY Italian Communism: Debate and Dilemma [bkgrd] 4:3-g --See Communist Bloc (2: 18) ; Vietnam (&IO) -See also Algeria (3:17-18); Caldwell (5:31); France (1:18);

Front Conferences (4:14) (5:13); Gomulka (5:27) (6:21); Kosygin (3:23-24); Lin Piao (5:5,8); Rochet (4:22); Rolplr (4:23)

IVORY COAST

-See Africa (1:25)

JAPAN Communist vs. Communist in Japanese Elections [dt] 3: 12 Japanese Communists Fight ROK-Japan Treaty [dt] 6: 14 &m-Soviet Split Affects Japanese Front Groups [dt] 1: 1g --See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 11-12) ; Communist

Bloc (1:16); ROK (2:23) -See also Ceylon (3:14); Chen Yi (5: 15); Front Conferences

(1:ag) (4: 14); Indonesia (2:4) ; Lin Piao (5:5-8); Malaysia (3:4); Romania (2:21)

JAVA

-See Indonesia (6: I 3)

JEDRYCHOWSKI, STEFAN -See Gomulka (6: 20)

’ JOHNSON, LYNDON Peking Attacks Johnson Administration [qq] 3: 18 --See Book Reviews [Poppino] (3:31); C.P.R., Foreign Policy

and I.R. (4: 15-16); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (a:io- 12); U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religious Life (5:3-4);

Vietnam (2:22)

-See also Chen Yi (5:15); Farley (2:zg); Front Conferences (.I.: 14) ; Gomuka (4: 12); Strong (4: 17) ; U.S., Politics and Government (2:21)

JOHNSON, U. ALEXIS -See Bundy (5: 16)

KAGANOVICH, LAZAR MOISEYEVICH -See Gomulka (6:20); Kosygin (1:28-31,34) (3:1g-20)

KAMENEV, LEV BORISOVICH -See Kosygin (1:3a)

KWEYAMA, KOZO --See Japan (3:ia)

KAMIYAMA, SHIGEO -See Japan (3:1a)

KARAMANLIS, CONSTANTINOS 0. ---See Greece (4:15)

KARELIA -See Kosygin ( 1: 27)

KASHMIR -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5:12,14)

KATYN FOREST MASSACRE See Gomulka (5:25, 29) (6:20) -See also Czechoslovakia (3: 16)

KENNEDY, JOHN F. -See Kosygin (3:a+a7); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (a:13) -See also Gomdka (4: 12)

KENT, FRANCIS B. -See Brazil (5: 1a); Latin America (4: IO)

KENYA ---See Africa (6:3-4,6,8) -See also Communist Bloc (6: 26)

KENYATTA, JOMO -See Afrioa (6: 3-4,6)

KERENSKY, ALEXANDER FEODOROVICH --See Italy (4~6)

KHRUSHCHEV, NIKITA S. Khrushchlvism Without Khrushch& [qq] 3: 17 -See France (a:a4); Communist Bloc (1:15-16) (a:18-19);

Gomulka (6: 1g-ao, a3-24) ; Kosygin (1:a7-a8,30-3a, 34) (3: 19-30); Lin Piao (5:8-g); Stalin (a: 19); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6: 11) ; U.S.S.R, Economy and Foreign Trade (1:45); Zaslavsky (a:3o)

--See also Caldwell (5:31); C.P.R., Foreign Policy aud 1.R (6: 15); Indonesia (a:6); Rochet (4: 18-19); Sine-Soviet Dispute (6:16); Strong (4: 17) ; U.S.S.R., Fore&n Policy and I.R. (1:1g) (a:24); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (1:16) (6:la)

KHRUSHCHEVISM Khn&ch6vism without Khrushchev [qq] 3:17 -See Communist Bloc (1:16) (a:lS); Stalin (a:lg) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Poliqy and I.R. (6: 15) ; Front Gm-

ferences (3: 17) ; Sine-Soviet Dispute (6: 16) -

KIM IL SUNG Nor& Korean Premier Criticizes ‘Revisionism’ [qd 5: 18 --See Korea, D.P.R. (n:a8) (3:16); R.O.K. (~13) ; gosygin

(3:a5)

VII

Page 8: Index, vol. 3

KIRICHENKO, A. I. -See Kosygin (3:nz)

KIROV, SERGEI MIRONOVICH -See Zaslavdg (a:30)

KISELEV, TIKHON YAKOVLEVICH --See Kosygin (3:30)

KLISZKO, ZENON -See Gomulka (5:a7, ag) (G:aa, 26)

KQGAN, LEONID -See U.S.S.R., Foreign Policy and 1.R (a:25)

KONRV, IVAN STEPANOVICH -See Communist Bloc (a: 18) ; Stalin (2: 19)

KOREA, DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF [NORTH] North Korea Takes Diplomatic Offensive [dt] 3: 16 North Koran Premier Criticizes ‘Revisionism’ [qq] 5: 18 Sukarno is Host to North Korea Premier [qq] a: a8 -See Cambodia ‘(5:17); Communist Bloc (1: 15-16); R.O.K.

(a:ag); Rosygin (3:a5,28); Vietnam (4:11) -See also Ceylon (3:14); Chen Yi (5:15); C.P.R., Foreign

Policy and 1.R (6: 15) ; U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6:ii)

KOREA, .REPUBLIC OF [SOUTH] Communist Infiltration into South Korea [dt] a:23 Japanese Communists Fight ROKJapan Treaty [dt] 6: 14 -See Kosygin (3:ag); U.S.S.R.,‘Press and Propaganda (a:ao) -See also Chen Yi (5: 15)

KOSIG, KAREL -See Italy (4:8)

KOSYGIN, ALBKEI N. Kosygin Outlines New Economic Policies [dt] 5: I I Kosygin: The Resilient Bureaucrat (II) [biography] I : 26-34 Kosy8im The Resilient Bureaucrat (III) [biography] 3: 19-30 -See communist Bloc (1:15-16) (a:18); Gomulka (6:a4);

U.S.S.R-, Foreign Policy and I.R. (1:1g-20); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6: 11); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (1:14); Vietnam (3:11-1a) (4:11) (6:10)

KOZLOV, FRO1 -See Kosygin (3:ig, 21-22,25-26)

KRZYZANOWSKI, COLONEL “WILK” -See Gdmulka (5:2g)

KUBITSCHEK, JUSCELINO -See Brazil (5:11)

KUOMINTANG -See LinPiao (5:6)

KUSY, MIROSLAV --See Cmchodovakia (3: 16)

KUZMIN, IOSIF IOSIFOVICH -See Kosy8in (3:20)

lABRIO& ARTURO -see Italy (4: 8)

LAcERDA# ‘XAluoS -&Brazil (~:II)

IADAKH 4b C.P.R., Foreign Policy ana I.R. (5: 14) iIndia (a: 16)

U%.S.R. ‘Objects to British Objectivity [dt] a:a7

IAIWER, PAUL F. “@$r ~olia, North Korea, North Vietnam,” in The Com-

~:m Statar; at the C’n~sroatis, Adam Bromke, ed. [Review bg wiuim s. caldwell] 5:31

LAO DONG -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I: IO, 11-13) (2: 13) ; Viet-

nam (4:11); D.R.V. (l:ao)

LAOS --See Kusygin (3:23, 25-26); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R.

(1:10-12) -See also Chen Yi (5: 15); Indonesia (1:17); U.S.S.R., For-

eign Policy and I.R. (I: 19)

LATIN AMERICA Communists Exploit Latin American Instability [dt] 4: IO Ace U.S.S.R, Press and Propaganda (2:20)

-See also C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (2:28); Communism (3:13); Front Conferences (4:14) (6:g) ; Indonesia (2:6) ; Kosygin (3:23); Lin Piao (5:8); Rochet (4:22); Sihanouk (5: 17) ; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: la) ; U.S., Social, Cultural and Religious Life (5:4)

LATVIA See Kosygin (1:27) --See also Gomulka (5:a7)

l.E DUAN --See Vietnam (4:11); D.R.V. (n:aa-a3)

LE THANH NGI -See Viefnam (6: 10)

LEE KUAN YEW -See Malaysia (3:5-6, IO)

LEE SIEW CHOH -See Malaysia (3:6-7)

LENART, JOZEF -See Czechoslovakia (4: 13)

LENIN, VLADIMIR ILICH -See Italy (4:3-g) ; Kosygin (1:a6-27) (3:23, a5,30) ; U.S.S.R.,

Press and Propaganda (4:17) (6: 11); U.S., Politics and Government (2:20); Zaslavsky (a:3o-31)

-See also Gomulka (5:1g, 21); Indonesia (2:g);Rosygin (1:31- 32) (3:20); Malaysia (3:4); Rochet (4:20); Sino-Soviet Dispute (6: 16); U.S.S.R., Economy and Foreign Trade 1:5, 7); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (I: 16); Yugo- slavia (2:ag)

LENINISM -See Gomulka (5:2g); Indonesia (2:3,6); Kosygin (3:21) -See also Indonesia (2: 26)

LIBERMAN, YEVSEI 0. -See U.S.S.R., Economy and Foreign Trade (I :5, ‘7, g)

UN PIAO The Lin Piao Document on Maoist Strategy [bkgrd] 5:5-g -See C.P.R., Military and Defense (3: 13)

LITHUANIA --See Kosygin (1:27) See also Gomulka (5: 27)

LIU SHAO-CHI -See C.P.R., Military and Defense (3: 13)

LIU MAO -&e Rosygin ($24)

LOEBL, EUGEN -See Czechoslovakia (3: 16)

LOGA-SOWINSKI, IGNACY See Gomulka (5:2g) (6:20)

LONGO, UJIGI -See Italy (4:3,8-g)

UJKACS, GEORGE -See Italy (4:8)

Page 9: Index, vol. 3

LUKMAN, M. H. -See Indonesia (2:4.1 g)

LUNSDEN, C. IAN “Cuba,” in The Communist States ai the Crossroads, Adam

Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

LUPORINI, CESARE -See Italy (4:6, g)

LUXEMBURG, ROSA -See Gomulka (5: 19-21)

LYUTOV, A. [David losifovich Zoslavsky) -See Zaslavsky (2:30)

MALAMUTH, CHARLES Biographical article on Alexei Kosygin (II) I : 26-34 Biographical article on Alexei Kosygin (III) 3: 19-30 Biographical article on David Iosifovich Zaslavsky 2:30-31 Charles Malamuth-In Memo&m 3

MALAWI -See Africa (4: 17)

MALAYA -See Indonesia (2:4-5); Malaysia (3:4-5, 7-g) -See also Indonesia (6: 14) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I: 10)

MALAYSIA (See Malaysian Federation)

MALAYSIAN FEDERATION The Dynamics of Communism in Malaysia [bkgrd] 3:4-10 -See Indonesia (1:16-17) (2:4-6, 8-g) (5:10-11) (6:13-14,);

Rolph (4: 23) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (1: 23)

MALENKOV, GEORGIY MAKSIMILIANOVICH -See Kosygin (1:28-34) (3: 19-20, 30)

MALI -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) -See also Africa (6:8)

MALYSHEV, VYACHHESLAV ALEKSANDROVICH -See Kosygin (1:33-34)

MAO TSE-TUNG Soldiers Urged to Be ‘Mao’s Good Fighters’ [qq] 4: 16 The Lin Piao Document on Maoist Strategy [bkgrd] 5:5-g -See Communist Bloc (I: 15-16) (2: 18-19) ; Kosygin (3: 19, 22-

29) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 14,) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15) ; India (2: 17);

Indonesia (2:5); Italy (4:4); Kosygin (1:32); Malaysia (3: IO); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: IO)

MARCHLEWSKI, JULIAN (allas Jan Karski) -See Gomulka (5:ao)

MARTINIQUE -See Africa (6:6)

MARX, KARL -See U.S.S.R., Economy and Foreign Trade (1:43 -See also Africa (6:4) ; Vietnam, D.R. (I: 13)

MARXISM A new Marxist Party in the United States [dt] x20-21 -See Africa (6:3-7); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (3: 18) -See also Czechoslovakia (3:16) ; Gomulka (5:lg); Rochet

(4: 20)

MARXISM-LENINISM -See C.P.R., Military and Defense (4: 16); Gomulka (5:22, 27-

28) (6:22) ; Italy (4:3-5) ; Kosygin (3: 27) ; Lin Piao (5:5-7, 9); Rochet (4:20-22); U.S., Politics and Government (2:20- 21)

-See also Africa (6:7-8) ; Communist Bloc (a: 18-19) ; Korea, D.P.R. (5: 18) ; Kosygin (1:28) ; Poland (6: 12) ; Sino-Soviet Dispute (6:16); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (4:17)

MASARYK, JAN -See Czechoslovakia (3: 16)

MASS MEDIA (AND COMMUNISM) New Communist Publications Spring Up [dt] 3:12-13 Survey of Films on Communism 5:30

MAURER, ION GHEORGHE --See Romania (2:21)

MAURETANIA -See Korea, D.P.R. (3:16)

MAY SECOND COMMITTEE -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

MAZUR, FRANCISZEK -See Gomulka (6:23)

MBOYA, TOM -See Africa (6:3-4)

MEANY, GEORGE -See U.S., Politics and Government (2:ao)

MECHINE, RODOLFO -See Front Conferences (6: g)

MEETING FOR THE LIQUIDATION OF COLONIALISM -See Front Conferences (3: 17)

MEHTA, J. 5. -See C.P.R., Fore&m Policy and I.R. (5: 13)

METAL WORKERS’ TUI, 5th CONFERENCE OF -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

MEXICO -See Latin America (4: 10)

MIDDLE EAST -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: 12)

MIHAJLOV, MIHAJLO Mihajlov Freed But Not Forgiven [dt] 3: 13 Tito Imprisons Mihajlov for Anti-Communist Article [dt]

2:25-26 Young Communist Intellectual Upholds Christianity [qq-j a:29 Yugoslavs Ban Anti-Soviet Article [dt]) 1:21

MIKOIAJCZYK, STANISLAW -See Gomulka (5:30) (6:17-18)

MIKOYAN. ANASTAS IVANOVICH -See Algeria (3:17); GomuIka (6:20); Indonesia (2:s); Kosy-

gin (1:28-31, 33-34) (3: 19, 22, 2426, ag-30); Romania (2:21); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6:11)

MINC, HILARY -See GomuIka (5:28) (6:17, 19)

MINORITIES -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6:14-15); Malaysia (3:

4-5,7-10); D.R.V. (5:in); R.V.N. (i:ai)

MIRKOVIC, MIROSLAV -See Yugoslavia (2:26)

MNACKO, LADISLAV --See Czechoslovakia (3: 15-16)

MOLOTOV, VYACHESLAV MIKHAILOVICH -Se;gFo.ulka (5:22) (6:ao); Kosygin (1:26-27, 3o-31,34,) (3:

MONGOLIA -See Comm~st Bloc (2:18); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); K&gin

(3: 199 25) -See also U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6:11)

‘Ix

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MORAWSKI, JERZY See Gomulka (6:2a-33)

MORSE, WAYNE See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (D:IO-II)

MOSELY, PHILIP E. “Power and Ideology in the Communist States,” in The Com-

munist State at the Crosmm!s,” Adam Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

MOSLEMS -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 14) ; Indonesia

(5:9-11) ; Malaysia (3:7)

MULTILATERAL FORCE (MLF) See U.S.S.R, Press and Propaganda ( I : 16)

MUST& A. J. See Front Organizations (a: IQ)

NAGY, IMRE See Gomulka (6:ao) -See Mihajlov (z-29)

NAMBOODIRIPAD, E. M. 5. --See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 14); India (2:24)

NANDA, GUKARJLAL 1. SeeIndia (i:a4) (a:&

NASSER, GAMAL ABDEl --See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ; Kosygin (3: IQ)

NASUTION, ABDUL HARIS -See Indonesia (5:10) (6:13)

NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES +See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: IO)

NATIONAL FRONT FOR THE LIBERATION OF SOUTH VIETNAM -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4:16); U.S. Foreign

Policy and I.R. (i:io, in-13); Vietnam (a:aa-23) (4:11) (6: IO)

--See also Chen Yi (5:15); Front Conferences (4:14); Mass Media (3:x+13); Sk-Soviet Dispute (6:16)

NAZIS -See GomulJm (5:aa, aea5, a7-a8); Kosygin (1:27); U.S.S.R.,

Ress and Propaganda (I : 16) -See &so Israel (a:a5); Front Conferences (a:n7) ; Yugoslavia

(1:21)

NEGRlTUDE -See Mrica (6:6)

NBHRU, JAWAHARlAl -See Kosygin (3:aa-13) -See also India (I: 16)

NENNl, PIETRO 4ee Italy (4:5)

NM-COLONIALISM --See Gomulka (6:a6); Indonesia (a:6-7) (6:13)

NEO-NAZISM -See Yugoslavia (2,: 29)

NEPAL -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13)

NETHERLANDS, THE -See Malaysia (3: 7) -See also Indonesia (~3-4); Rolph (423)

NEW ZEALAND -See Indonesia (6: 13-14) ; Kosygin (3: a8)

NGRNDANDUMWE, PIERRE Chinese Expelled from Burundi after Assassination [dt] I:~I-12

NGO DINH DIEM -See Bundy (5: 16) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (a: 13-14)

NGUYEN CA0 KY -SeeVietnam (4:11); D.R.V. (5:1a); R.V.N. (I:ZO) (3:11-x2)

NGUYEN CHANH THI -See Vietnam (4: I I) ; R.V.N. (I : 20)

NGUYEN KHANH -See RV.N. (1:no)

NGUYEN VAN THIEU SeeVietnam (4:11); R.V.N. (3:11-12)

NGUYEN XUAN OANH -See R.V.N. (1:ao)

NICARAGUA -See Dalai Lama (5: 18)

NIGER -See Korea, D.P.A. (3: 16)

NIGERIA Nigerians Resent ‘Red Nets Around Africa’ [dt] 4: 14 -See Africa (6:6) See also Co&&mist Bloc (6: 26) ; Front Organizations (4: 13)

NKRUMAH, KWAME -See Africa (6:6-7)

NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION (NATO) -See Kosygin (3: a4) -See also Gomulka (6:24) ; Greece (4: 15) ; U.S.S.R., Press and

Propaganda (I : I 6)

NORTHEAST ASIA TREATY ORGANIZATION (NEATO) -See Japan (6: 14)

NORWAY -See Front Conferences (3: I 7)

NORWEGIAN TRADES UNION FEDERATION -See Front Conferences (3: 17)

NOSAKA, SANZO -See Japan (3: 12) (6: 14)

NOVOTNY, ANTONIN -See Czechoslovakia (4: 13)

NOWOTKO, MARCEL1 -See Gomulka (5:a3-a4,a6-27)

NYAMOYA, AlBlN -See Burundi (1:aa)

NYERERE, JULIUS K. -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13)

OCHAB, EDWARD -See Gomulka (6:ao)

OLDEROGGE, D. A. -See Africa (6:8)

ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES (OAS) -See Latin America (4: 10)

ORTIZ, MIGUEL ANGEL ZAVAIA -See Latin America (4: i 0)

OSIPOV, D. (David loslfovlch Zaslavrky) -See Zaslavsky (a: 30)

OSUBKA-MORAWSKI, EDWARD --See Gumulka (5:28-ag) (6:17, 21)

X

Page 11: Index, vol. 3

PADMORE, GEORGE -See A&ca (6:5-6)

PAJETTA, GIANCARLO -See Italy (4:6)

PAKISTAN Pakistan Signs Border Pact with Red China [dt] z:zo Peking Fishes in Troubled Indo-Pakistani Waters [dt] 5:12-14 -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13)

PAN-AFRICANISM -See Africa (6:3,5-6) -See also Front Conferences (3: 17)

PANAMA -See Latin America (4: 10)

PANCHEN IAMA -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15)

PANTJASILA --See Indonesia (2:g) ; Kosygin (3: 19) -See also Communist Bloc (2: 18)

PAPANDREOU, GEORGE -See Greece (4:15)

PASOLINI, P. P. -See Italy (4:3)

PASTERNAK, BORIS -See Zaslavsky 2 : 30-3 I

PATOLICHEV, NIKOLAI SEMYONOVICH See Kosygin (3: 24)

PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE -See Communist Bloc (2: 18); Front Organizations (2:lg);

Italy (4:4-5); Kosygin (3:20, 23, 29); Yugoslavia (2:26) -See also Gomulka (5:22) (6:26)

PENG TEH-HUAI --See C.P.R., Military and Defense (3: 13-14)

PERU -See Latin America (4: lo)

PERVUKHIN, MIKHAIL GEORGIEVICH -See Kosygin (1:33-34) (3:no)

PHAM VAN DONG -See Vietnam (4:11); D.R.V. (1:20) (2:22-23)

PHAN HUY QUAT -See R.V.N. (1:20) (3:11-12)

PHAN KHAC SUU -See R.V.N. (1:20)

PHILIPPINES -See Indonesia (2 : 5) -See also Dalai Lama (5: 18) ; Indonesia (I: 17) ; Malaysia

i;::o;o); Strong (4,: 17); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R.

PILSUDSKI, JOZEF SeeGomnlka (5:lg) (6:21)

PODGORNY, NIKOLAI v. Podgomy and Shelepin Move Up in U.S.S.R. [dt] 6: I I -See Kosygin (3:30)

POLAND Bishops’ Letters Strain Polish Church-State Relations [dt] 6: 12 Gomulka Damns and Praises U.S. [dt] 4: 12 Gomulka: Head of ‘People’s Poland’ (I) [biography] 5: 19-30 Gomulka: Head of ‘People’s Poland’ (II) [biography] 6: 17-26 -See Communist Bloc (1:3-g) (2:18); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16);

Kosygin (3:21) -See also Caldwell (5:31); France (2:24); Front Conferences

(~27) (3:17) (4:14) (5:13); Front Organizations (a:1g); Itals (4:4,6)

POLYCENTRISM -See Italy (4:3-4) -See also Rochet (4: 1g,22)

POPE PAUL VI -See Roman Catholic Church (I:~I) (6:12) -See also Vietnam (6: IO)

POPE PIUS XII --See Czechoslovakia (3: 15)

POPPINO, ROLLIE International Communism in Latin America [Review by Paul

E. Hadley] 3:31

POTEKHIN, I. I. -See Africa (6:5-g)

PROFINTERN -See Africa (6:5)

PUERTO RICO -See U.S., Politics and Government (2:30)

RADEK, KARL See Gomulka (5:20)

RADKE, EDWARD See Gomulka (5:23)

RADKIEWICZ, STANlSlAW -See Gomulka (5:2g) (6:17,22)

RAHMAN, TUNKU ABDUL -See Indonesia (1:16) (1x4) (5:11); Malaysia (3:4-5,7-8)

RAKOWSKI, MlECZYSlAW -See Gomulka (6:26)

RAO, RAJISWAR -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 14)

RESTON, JAMES -See Vietnam (6: 10)

REUTHER, WALTER See U.S., Politics and Government (2: SO)

REVANCHISM -See Gomulka (6:10)

REWSIONISM North Korean Premier Criticizes ‘Revisionism [qq] 5: 18 -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6: 15) ; Communist Bloc

(1:15-16) (x18); Gomulka (6:lg,za-~4); India (2:15-16); Italy (4:3, 7); SineSoviet Dispute (6:16)

-See also Algeria (3: 11); Chen Yi (5:15); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (3: 18) ; Czechoslovakia (3: 16) ; Front Confer- ences (3:17) (5:13); Indonesia (2:6); Japan (3:~)

RIBEIRO, CARLOS OTAVIO FLEXA -See Brazil (5: 11)

ROCA, BIAS See Book Reviews Cpoppino] (3:31)

ROCHET, WALDECK EMIL RAYMOND French Partv Ousts Student Rebels rdtl 2:u Waldeck R&heti Moscow’s New -MI& in’ Paris biography]

4:18-m -See France (1:18)

ROKOSSOVSKY, KONSTANTIN -See Gomulka (5:nggo) (6:23)

ROLA-ZYMIERSKI, MICHAL -See Gomulka (6:17)

XI

Page 12: Index, vol. 3

ROLPH, HAMMOND Bkgrd article, “The Problem in Vietnam,” on U.S. policy in

Vietnam 2:ia-14 Book review of Donald Hindley’s The Communist Party of In-

done&, 1952-63 4: 23 Book review of Justus M. van der Kroef s The Communist Party

of Indo& 4:23

ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Archbishop Beran Leaves Prague, Becomes a Cardinal [dt] I:~I Bishops’ Letters Strain Polish Church-State Relations [dt] 6: 12 -SeeBundy (5:16); Vietnam (4-11) -See also Gomulka (6:21, 25); Italy (4:8-g); Vietnam (3:12)

(6: 10)

ROMANIA The Guard Changes in Romania [dt] 2: 2 1 -See Communist Bloc (1:3-g) (1:16); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16) -See also Book Reviews [Floyd] (5:31); Front Conferences

(4: 14)

ROOSMLT, FRANKLIN DELANO --See Gomulka (5: 29-30)

RUMJANTSEV, ALEXEI M. -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (6: I I)

SABAH (British North Borneo) -See Malaysia (3:4-6,8-10)

SABUROV, MAKSIM ZAKHAROVICH -See Kosygin (1:33-34) (3:20)

SARAWAK -See Malaysia (3:4,8-10)

SARTRR, IRAN-PAUL *ee Rochet (4:no)

SCHAFF, ADAM SeeItaly (4:8); Poland (6:12)

SEGNI, ANTONIO Gee Kosygin (3: 24)

SENAYAKE, DUDLEY Ceylon’s New Premier Curbs Communists [dt] 3: 14

SENEGAL -See A.&a (6:3,6)

SENGHOR, LEOPOLD -See Africa (6: 3, 6)

SERRNI, EMIL10 -See Italy (4: 8)

SERVIN, MARCEL -See Bochet (4~2~22)

SHALKHAROV, A -See Ceylon (3: 14)

SHASTRI, LA1 BAHADUR -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4:15-16) (5:14); India

(2: 24)

SHELEPIN, ALEKSANDR N. Podgorny and Shelepin Move Up in U.S.S.R. [dt] 6: 1 I --See Romania (~21); Vietnam (6: IO)

SHEPILOV, DYITRIY TROFIMOVICH --See Kosygin (1:34) (3:ao)

SIERRA LEONE --See communist Bloc (6:ai)

JIHANOUK, NORODOM Cambodian Leader Loses Friends [qq] 5: 17-18

SIKKIM See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 13-14)

SINGAPORE -See Indonesia (I: 17) ; Malyasia (3:4-10)

SINGH, 5. S. See Kosygin (3:22-23)

SINKIANG UIGHUR AUTONOMOUS REGION Peking Tightens Its Hold on Tibet and Sinkiang [dt] 6:14-15

SINO-INDIAN BORDER DISPUTE -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5:12-14) (6:15); India

(2:15-17) -See also Kosygin (3:22)

SINO-SOVIET DISPUTE Khrushch&ism Without Khrushchev [qq] 3: 17 Nineteen Parties Finally Meet in Moscow [dt] I: 15-16 North Korean Premier Criticizes ‘Revisionism’ [qq] 5: 18 Peking Flays Moscow’s Treatment of Rioters [qq] 2: 28 Peking Opposes &o-Asian Role for U.S.S.R. [qq] 4: 15 Red Chinese Dominate 1965 Gensuikyo Meeting [dt] 4: I I-I:! &o-Soviet Split &fects Japanese Front Groups [dt] I : 19 The Sine-Soviet War of Words [qq] 6: 16 U.S.S.R Again Active in Vietnam [dt] I: x9-20 -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (6:14); Communist Bloc

(2:18-ig); India (z:15-17); Indonesia (1:17) (2:6-7); Italy (4:3-4); Kosygin (3:1g, 22, 24-29); Romania (z:zI); Viet nam (~:II-12) (6:10-11) (2:22-23)

--See also Algeria (3:11); Book Reviews [Poppino] (3:31); Caldwell (5:31); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3:13) (6:15); France (2:24); Front Conferences (i:zg) (3:17) (6:g); Front Organizations (4-13-14); Japan (3:'~); Si-

hanouk (5:18); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6: II)

SINO-SOVIET TREAti AND AGREEMENTS -See Kosygin (1:32)

SKILLING, H. GORDON “Czechoslovakia,” in The Communist Siates at the Crossroads,

Adam Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

StANSKY, RUDOLF -See Czechoslovakia (3: 16) ; Gomulka (6: 19)

SOLODOVNIKOV, V. V. -See Africa (6: 8-g)

SOMALIA -See Communist Bloc (6: 26)

SOUTH AFRICA, REPUBLIC OF -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (I : 16)

SOUTHEAST ASIA -SeeIndonesia (2:3-g); Malaysia (3:10); Strong (4:17); U.S.,

Foreign Policy and I.R. (2:10-12) (2:13); Vietnam (2:22) -See also Indonesia (5:10-II) (6:13-14); Kosygin (3:1g, 26,

29)

SOUPHANOUVONG, PRINCE -See Kosygin (3: 26)

SOUVANNA PHOUMA -h! Kosygin (3:25)

SPYCHALSKI, MARIAN See Gomulka (5:27,2g) (6:22)

STAAR, RICHARD F. Biographical article on Wladyslaw Gomulka (Part II) 6: 17-26

STALIN, JOSEF The Restalinization of Stalin [dt] 2: 19 -See Bulgaria (3:15); Communist Bloc (1:15) (2:18-ig); Go-

mu&a (5:1g, 25, 27-28, 30) (6:17, 19, 21-23, 25-26); Kosy- gin (i&-34) (3:27, 19-30); U.S.S.R., Economy and For- eign Trade (1:3, 7); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (2:27); !Zaslavsb (2:30)

-See also Caldwell (5:31); Czechoslovakia (3: 16); Italy (4:3)

XII

Page 13: Index, vol. 3

STALINISM -See Bulgaria (2:22); France (2:24); Gomulka (6:zo); Italy

(4:3-5); U.S.S.R., Economy and Foreign Trade (1:8); Yugoslavia (1:21) (2:25-26) (2:zg)

-See also Africa (6:6); Czechoslovakia (4:13); Front Confer- ences (2:27); Rochet (4:18, 20, 22)

STEPAKOV, VLADIMIR I. -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (6: 12)

STEWART, MICHAEL -See Vietnam (6: IO)

STOICA, CHIVU -See Romania (2 : 2 i )

STRONG, ANNA LOUISE Peking’s Foremost American Resident Vilifies U.S. [qq] 4: 17 -See also Front Conferences (4: 14)

STRONG, JOHN W. “Sino-Sotiet Relations in Historical Perspective,” in The Corn-

munist States at the Crossroads, Adam Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

STRZELECKI, RYSZARD -See Gomulka (6: 23-24, 26)

STUDENTS FOR A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY -See Front Conferences (5:13); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R.

(2:ii)

STUDENTS’ NON-VIOLENT COORDINATING COMMITTEE

-See Front Conferences (5: 13)

STUDENTS’ PEACE UNION

-See Front Conferences (5: 13)

SUBANDRIO, FOREIGN MINISTER --See Indonesia (1:16-17) (1:23) (2:5-6,8) (5:g-10) (6:13-14)

SUHARTO, GENERAL

-See Indonesia (5: 10)

SUKARNO, ACHMED Indonesian Communism’s Drive to Power lbkgrd] 2 :3-g Sukarno Is Host to North Korea Premier [qq] a:28 See Indonesia (I: 16-17) (5:g-11) (6: 13) ; Korea, D.P.R.

(3:16); Ralph (4:23) -See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13)

SUSLOV, MIKHAIL ANDREYEVICH ---See Kosygin (1:28, 31-3a) (3:24, 26); Rochet (4:18)

SWEARINGEN, RODGER Background article, “The ‘Ought’ vs. the ‘Is’,” on U.S. Policy in

Vietnam 2: 10~12

Book review of Frank Barnett’s (et al.) Peace and War in the Modern Age 2:31

Book review of Thomas T. Hammond’s (ed.) Soviet Foreign Relatiolts and World Communism A Bibliography I :35

Book review of Witold S. Sworakowski’s The Communist Inter- national and Its Front Organizations 6:27

SWEDEN

-See Front Organizations (1: 19) --See also Front Conferences (6:g)

SWIATLO, JOZEF -see Gomulka (5:23, 27) (6: 19)

SWITZERLAND -See Front Conferences (3: 17)

SWORAKOWSKI, WITOLD 5. The Communist International and Its Front Organizutions, A

Research Guide and Checklist of Holdings in American and European Libraries [Review by Rodger Swearingen] 6:a7

SYLVESTER-WILLIAhtS, HENRY --See Africa (6:5)

SYRIA -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) See also Algeria (3: 18)

TAIWAN (See Chlna, Republic of)

TANGANYIKA (See Unlhd Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar)

TANZANIA (See United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar)

TAYLOR, MAXWELL D. Kommunist Pictures Gen. Taylor as ‘Monster’ [qq] 1:24 -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:23)

THAILAND See Ceylon (3:14); Indonesia (2:5) (5: IO); Malaysia (3~4,

7-8, 10)

THAYER, CHARLES W. -See Kosygin (3:27-28)

THOMAS, NORMAN -See U.S., Politics and Government (2:~)

THOREZ, MAURICE -See France (a: 24) -See also Rochet (4: 18-20)

TIBET Dalai Lama Says Tibet Struggle ‘Unabated’ [qq] 5: 18 Peking Tightens Its Hold on Tibet and Sinkiang [dt] 6: 14-15 -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 18) ; India (a: 16,17) --See also C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 13-14) ; U.S., For-

eign Policy and I.R. (2:ll)

TIT0 Peking Calls Tito and Shastri U.S. Tools re Vietnam [qql

4: 15-16 Tito Imprisons Mihajlov for Anti-Communist Article [dt]

2:25-26 -See Kosygin (1:28); Yugoslavia (1:21) -See also Communist Bloc (x18); Gomulka (6:16); Italy

(4:49 8)

TITOISM -See Gomulka (6: 19) -See also India (~16); Italy (4:5,8)

TODOROV-GORUNYA, IVAN -See Bulgaria (x22) (3:15)

TOGLIATTI, PALMIRO --See Communist Bloc (I: 15-16) ; France (2:a4) ; Itab t&:.+6. a) -See also Rochet (4:21)

TOLKUNOV, LEV N. New Editors for Pravda and Zzvestiitz [dt] 6: 11-12

TOMASEK, BISHOP FRANTISEK -See Roman Catholic Church (i:ai)

TRAN VAN HUONG -SW R.V.N. ( I:~o)

TRAN VAN MINH See R.V.N. (i:20)

Page 14: Index, vol. 3

“TRIAL OF VERWOERD” -See Front Conferences (3: I 7)

TROTSKY, LEON

-see *gin (3: 19) -See also Gomulka (5:27); Kosygin (1:31)

TROTSKYISM -See U.S., Politics and Government (2: 20-2 I) -See also Communist Bloc (2: 18) ; Indonesia (2:8) ; Rochet

(4:22)

TSEDENBAL, YUMZHAGGIIN See Kosygin ($25)

TUKHACHEVSKY, MIKHAIL NlKOlAEVlCH -See Gomulka (5:ao); Mihajlov (2:zg) -See also Bulgaria (3: 15)

TUNISIA -See A.ti-ica (4: 17)

U THANT -See Vietnam (2:a2)

U-2 INCIDENT -See Kosygin (3:n1-21, 27)

UGANDA -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) -See also Communist Bloc (6: 26)

ULBRICHT, WALTER -See Communist Bloc (I : 8) -See also Rosygin (3:2g)

UNION INTRRNATIONALE DE LA RESISTANCE RT LA DEPORTATION (UIRD)

-See Front Conferences (2:27) (6:g)

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS

Economy and Foreign Trade communist Economics: Reforms vs. Orthodoxy bkgrd]

1:3-g Kommunist on Capitalist, Socialist Planning [qq] I: 24-25 Kosygin Outlines New Economic Policies [dt] 5: I I -See Gomulka (6:14-25); Kosygin (3:24) ; U.S.S.R., Press

and Propaganda (I : a4-25)

Foreign Aid See Africa (3: 15); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 13) ;

Indonesia (1:17) (26-7, 9); Kosygin (3:22-23, 25); U.S.- S.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (I: 19) (2:25) ; Vietnam (2:14) (4:11) (6:10); D.R.V. (2:22)

Foreign Policy and International Relations Anti-U.S. Campaign in U.S.S.R Intensified [dt] I: 16 Commnnist Powers Remain Rigid on Vietnam [dt] 2: 22-23 1965 May Day Slogan Emphasizes Vietnam [dt] 2:20 Peking Flays Moscow’s Treatment of Rioters [dt] 2: 28 Peking Opposes Afro-Asian Role for U.S.S.R. [qq] 4: 15 Soviet-Israeli Relations: Hot and Cold [dt] 2: 24-25 U.S.S.R. Again Active in Vietnam [dt] I: 19-20 Yugoslavs Ban Anti-Soviet Article [dt] I: 2 I -See Algeria (3:11) (3:17); Chen Yi (5:15) ; C.P.R., For-

eign Policy end I.R. (4:11-12) (5:13-14) (6:14-15); Communist Bloc (a:18); France (2:24); Front Organ- izations (~17); Gomulka (6:17-26); India (a:15); Indo nesla (2:6-7) (5:10-11); Italy (4:3-4, 8); Japan (1:1g); Khrushchgv (3:17); Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) ; Lin Piao (5:5, 8-g); Mihajlov (3:13); Romania (a:21); U.S. For- eign Policy and I.R. (a:1o-12) (2:13-14); Vietnam (4:11) (6:10); D.R.V. (1:1g-ao); Yugoslavia (2:25-26) (f-9)

-See also Africa (6:5-g); Book Reviews [Hammond, ed.] (1:35)* [Poppino] (3:31); Caldwell (5:31); C.P.R., For-

eign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) (4: 16) (6: 15) ; Front Con- ferences (1:2g) (2:27) (3:17) (4:14) (5:13) (6:g);Front

Organizations (4: 13-14) ; Indonesia (I: 17) ; Korea, D.P.R. (3:16) (5:18); Latin America (4:10); Nigeria (4:14);

Rochet (4:18-22); Sihanouk (5:18); Strong (4:17)

Intelligence and Espionage -See Ceylon (3: 14) ; Gomulka (6:22-23)

Military Affairs and National Defense -See U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (z:20) -See also C.P.R., Military and Defense (3: 13-14)

Politics and Government Kosygin: The Resilient Bureaucrat (II) [biography] I : 26-34 Kosygin: The Resilient Bureaucrat (III) [biography] 3: 19-30 Moscow Meeting of 1g Parties Is Failure [dt] 2: 18-19 Nineteen Parties Finally Meet in Moscow [dt] 1: 15-16 Podgorny and Shelepin Move Up in U.S.S.R. [dt] 6: I 1 The Late Zaslavsky: Soviet ‘Hatchet Man’ [biography]

2:30-31 The Restahnization of Stalin [dt] 2: 19 U.S.S.R. Objects to British Objectivity [dt] 2:27 Writers Urged to Educate ‘Soviet Man’ [qq] 3: 18 -See Gomulka (5:26); Khrushchev (3: 17) ; Vietnam

(3: 11-12) See also Africa (6:7) ; Chen Yi (5: 15) ; Italy (4:5,8) ; Japan

(3:12); Rochet (4:18, 21); Strong (4:17); U.S.S.R.,Press and Propaganda (4: 17)

Press and Propaganda Anti-U.S. Campaign in U.S.S.R. Intensified [dt] I: 16 Izuestiia Assails U.S. on Vietnam [cartoon] 2:33 Kommunist Criticizes Time Lag of Soviet Press [qq] 4: 17 Kommunist on Capitalist, Socialist Planning [qq] i: 24-25 Kommunist Pictures Gen. Tavlor as ‘Monster’ foal I : 24 Moscow-Peking Press re the Los Angeles Riots [b&rd] 5: 3-4 1965 May Day Slogan Emphasizes Vietnam [dt] 2: 20 New Editors for Pruuuiz and Zzuestiia [dt] 6: 11-12 Pravda on U.N. Crisis [cartoon] I : 23 Soviet Veterans Address U.S. Veterans on Vietnam [dt] 2: 2 I The Late Zaslavsky: Soviet ‘Hatchet Man’ [biography]

2:30-31 The Sine-Soviet War of Words [qq] 6: 16 Washington’s Print . . . from the Vietnamese Negative

[cartoon] 3: 17 Writers Urged to Educate ‘Soviet Man’ [qq] 3: 18 Young Marine Is Soviet Villain [qq] 2:28-2g -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) (6:26); India (1:23-24) ;

Kosygin (3: 19-20) See also Gomulka (5:27); Strong (4+:17)

Social, Cultural, and Religious life Writers Urged to Educate ‘Soviet Man’ [qq] 3: I 3

UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC -See Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda

(2:20) --See also Africa (6:8) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (3: 13) ;

Rosygin (3: 19)

UNITED NATIONS Indonesia Leaves U.N.; Red China Applauds [qq] 1:23 Pruuda on U.N. Crisis [cartoon] I :23 -See Chen Yi (5: 15) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (5: 12-

13) (5:18) (6:15); Dalai Lama (5:18);Indonesia (1:16-17) -See also Africa (6:8) ; C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 15-

16); Front Conferences (1:zg) (2:27); Indonesia (2:6, 8-g) ; Sine-Soviet Dispute (4: 15) (6: 16) ; U.S., Foreign Pol- icy and I.R. (1:14) (2:11); Vietnam (2:22)

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION (UNESCO)

-See Front Conferences (5: 13)

UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANGANYIKA AND ZANZIBAR (TANZANIA) -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16) -See also Communist Bloc (6:26) ; Front Conferences (6:g) ;

U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:ao)

XIV-

Page 15: Index, vol. 3

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Economy and Foreign Trade --See Gomulka (4: 12) --See also Kosggin (3: 19-20, 27)

Foreign Aid --See Gomulka (6:26); Vietnam (2:13) (3:11-12); D.R.V.

(5: 12) -See also Brazil (5:11); Bundy (5:17); C.P.R., Foreign

Policy and I.R. (4: 16) ; Indonesia (2:4)

Foreign Policy and International Relations Asst. Secretary of State Comments on Vietnam [qq] 5: 15-17 East Germans Start Film of ‘U.S. Crimes’ in Vietnam [dt]

a:14 Gomulka Damns and Praises U.S. [dt] 4: 12 Zzves&z Assails U.S. on Vietnam [cartoon] 2:23 Moscow-Peking Press re the Los Angeles Riots [bkgrd] 5:3-4 State Deoartment White Paoer on Vietnam rbkardl I: 10-14 The ‘Ought’ vs the ‘Is’ [bk&d] 2:10-12 - - - The Problem in Vietnam [bkgrd] 2:12-14 Washington’s Print . . . from the Vietnamese Negative

[cartoon] 3: 17 -See Chen Yi (5: 15); C.P.R., Foreign Aid (4:16); C.P.R.,

Foreign Policy and I.R. (5:12-13); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (3:18); Communist Bloc (2:18); Gomulka (4:12); Indonesia (1:23) (2:3, 5, 7-8); Japan (6: 14);

Khrushchev (3:17); R.O.K. (2:23); Kosygin (3:1g-22, 24-28) ; Latin America (4: IO) ; Lin Piao (5:5, 8-g; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:21) ; Vietnam (2:22) (6:10-11); D.R.V. (1:12)

-See also Algeria (3: II); Cambodia (5: 17-18) ; C.P.R., For- eign Policy and I.R. (4:11-12) (4:15-16) (5:18) (6:15); C.P.R.. Press and Pronaaanda (2:28) : Front Conferences (2:27) (3:17) (4:14)-(5:13) (6:g);Gomulka (6:1g, 26); Greece (4: 15) ; Indonesia (I: 16-17) (6: 14); Korea, D.P.R. (3:l6) (5:18); Kosygin (1:32); Malaysia (3:10); Mi-

hailov (z:2g); Sino-Soviet Dispute (6: 16) ; U.S.R., For- eign Policy and I.R. (1: 19-20); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2:20)

Intelligence and Espionage -See Kosygin (3:21-22,27)

Military Affairs and National Defense -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: I+) ; Vietnam (4: 11)

Politics and Government A New Marxist Party in the United States [dt] z: 20-2 I -See Communist Bloc (1:15) (2: 18)

Social, Cultural, and Religious Life Moscow-Peking Press re the Los Angeles Riots [bkgrd] 5:3-4 -See also Gomulka (5: 19)

UNIVERSITIES COMMITTEE ON PROBLEMS OF WAR AND PEACE -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

UNTUNG, LT. COL. -See Indonesia (5: g)

UREN, PHILIP E. “Economic Relations Among the Communist States,” in The

Communist States at the Crossroads, Adam Bromke, ed. [Re- view by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

URUGUAY -See Latin America (4: 10)

VALI, FERENC A. “Hungary,” in The Communist Stntes at the Crossroads, Adam

Bromke, ed. [Review by William S. Caldwell] 5:31

VAN DER KROEF, JUSTUS M. Bkgrd article on ‘Indonesian Communism’s Drive to Power’ 2:3-g Bkgrd article on ‘The Dynamics of Communism in Malaysia’

3:4-10 The Communist Party of Indonesia [Review by Hammond M.

Rolph] 4: 23

, VARGA, EUGENE -See Italy (4:8)

VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL -See Roman Catholic Church (6: 12)

VENEZUELA -See Mass Media (3: 13); Latin America (4: IO)

VERES, SASHA -See Mihajlov (2:2g)

VIET CONG Communist China Again Pledges Aid to Viet Cong [qq] 4: 16 North Vietnam Increases Aid to Viet Cong [dt] 5: 12 State Department White Paper on Vietnam [bkgrd] I: 10-14

-See Bundy (5:15-17); Lin Piao (5:5); U.S., Foreign Policy and1.R. (2:13-q); Vietnam (3:11-12) (4:10-II) (6:10-11); R.V.N. (1:20-21); D.R.V. (2:22-23)

-See also U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (I: 24)

VIET MINH --See Bundy (5: 16) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (1: 14)

VIETNAM Asst. Secretary of State Comments on Vietnam [qq] 5: 15-17 Communist China Again Pledges Aid to Viet Cong [qq] 4: 16 East Germans Start Film of ‘U.S. Crimes’ in Vietnam rdtl 4: 14 1965 May Day Slogan Emphasizes Vietnam [dt] 2:20- - Peking Calls Tito and Shastri U.S. Tools re Vietnam [qq]

4~15-16 Situation in Vietnam Improves [dt] 4: IO-I I Soviet Veterans Address U.S. Veterans on Vietnam [dt] ~21 The ‘Oueht’ vs. ‘Is’ fbkardl 2: lo-la The Problem in Vietnam [bkgrd] 2: 12-14 Vietnam War Enters Crucial Period [dt] 3: 11-12

-See Chen Yi (5: 15); C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (3: 18)

-See also C.P.R., Press and Propaganda (2:28); Front Confer- ences (3:17) (4:14) (5:13) (6:g); Gomulka (4:12); Indo- nesia (5: IO) ; Sihanouk (5: 17); &m-Soviet Dispute (6: 16) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, and Religious Life (5:3-4)

Vietnam, Democratic Republic of (D.R.V.) [North] Communist Powen Remain Rigid on Vietnam [dt] a:a2-23 North Vietnam Increases Aid to Viet Gong [dt] 5: 12 Political Maneuvers on Vietnam [dt] 6: IO-I I

State Denartment White Paner on Vietnam fbkardl 1: IO-IA U.S.S.R.-Again Active in Vi&ram [dt] 1: 1p;o - - ’ --See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4: 16); Communkt

Bloc (1:15-16); G.D.R. (4:14); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16); Lin Piao (5:5, 8) ; Strong (4: 17) ; U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2:11-~a) (x13-14); Vietnam (3:11-12) (4:10-

11) --See also Bundy (5: 15-17); Ceylon (3:14); Communist

Bloc (2:18); Front Conferences (3:17) (4:14); Gomnlka (4:12); Indonesia (~7-8); Kosygin (3:18); U.S.S.R., Politics and Government (6: 11) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (1:16) (2:ao) (6:11); R.V.N. (1:ao-21); World Peace Council (2: 19)

Vietnam, Republtc of (R.V.N.) [South] Internal Power Struggle Continues in South Vietnam [dt]

1:20-Pi Political Maneuvers on Vietnam [dt] 6:10-11 Situation in Vietnam Imnroves rdtl 4: 10-i 1 State Department White-Paper &r ?iemam bkgrd] I: 10-14

-See Bundy (5:15-17); C.P.R., Foreign Policy and 1.R. (4:16); R.O.K. (~23); U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (aso); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (a:lo-12) (n:is- 14); Vietnam (2:22-23) (3:11); D.R.V. (5:~)

-See also Gomulka (4:1a); Indonesia (1:17) (~3); Lin Piao (5:5, 8); U.S.S.R., Press end Propagenda (1:14) (a:a8-ag) ; U.S., Politics end Government (x10) ; U.S., Social, Cultural, end Religious Life (5:3-4); D.R.V. (iso); World Peace council (~19)

Page 16: Index, vol. 3

VO NGUYEN GIAP

-See Vietnam (I:IZ-13); D.R.V. (1:20)

VON DRM BACH-ZELEWSKI, ERICH -See Gomulka (5:30)

VON SHULENBURG, FRIEDRICH WERNER

-See Gomulka (5:2a)

VOROSHILOV, KLIMENT YEFREMOVICH -See Kosygin (1:28-30) (3:22)

VOZNESENSKY, NIKOLAI -See Kosygin (I: 28)

VYSHINSKY, ANDREI Y. -See Rochet (4: 21)

WANKOWICZ, MELCHIOR -See Gomulka (6: 25)

WARSAW PACT See KOSye (3: 24)

WARSAW TREATY ORGANIZATION -See Gmdka (6:24)

WASHEWSKA, WANDA

-see Gomulka (5:a3, ZQ)

WEST ‘INDIES -See Africa (6:5-6)

WEST NEW GUINEA -See Indonesia (2:3-b) ; Rolph (4: 23)

WITE, GILBERT -See U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R. (2: I I)

WIESLAW (Wladyslaw Gomulka) -see Gomulka (5: IQ, 21-26)

WILHELM, BERNHARD

Bkgrd article on ‘African Socialism: A Challenge to Commun- ism’ 6:3-Q

WlTASZEWSKI, KAZIMIERZ -See Gomulka (6: 23)

WlTOS, WINCENTY -See Gomulka (5: 29)

WOMEN STRIKE FOR PEACE -See Front Conferences (5:13); U.S., Foreign Policy and I.R.

(2: ii)

WOMEN’S INTERNATIONAL DEMOCRATIC FEDERATION (WIDF) -See Front Conferences (4: 14)

WORLD BANK -see Africa (3:15)

WORLD CONFERENCE OF TRANSPORT WORKERS’ TUI, FOURTH see Front Gmferences (1:29) (2:27)

WORLD COUNCIL OF #ACE -See Front Conferences ( 1: 29) World Peace Council Now Peking’s Tool? [dt] 2: 19

WORLD FEDERATION OF DEMOCRATIC YOUTH (WFDY) -SeeFront Conferences (1:29) (2:27) (3:17) (6:~)

WORLD FBDERATION OF SCIENTIFIC WORKERS (WFSW) -See Front conferences (x27) (3:17) (4:14) (5:13) (6:~)

WORLD FEDERATION OF TEACHERS’ UNIONS (FISE) -See Front Conferences (I : 29) (4.14)

WORLD FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS (WFTU) -See Africa (6:6); Front Conferences (i:ZQ) (2:27) (3:17)

(4:14) (5:13)

WORLD PEACE CONGRESS -See Front Conferences (I:ZQ) (2:27) (3:17) (4:14) (6:~)

WORLD YOUTH FESTIVAL, NINTH Dissension in Youth Festival Ranks [dt] 4: 13-14 -See Front Conferences (1:29) (2:27) (3:17) (4:14)

WYSZYNSKI, STEFAN CARDINAL -See Gomulka (6:21); Roman Catholic Church (6: 12)

X, MALCOLM -See U.S., Politics and Government (2:21)

YEH CHI-CHUANG See KOSygin ($24)

YEMEN -See Korea, D.P.R. (3: 16)

YIN, RICHARD Bkgrd article on “Communist Economics: Reforms vs. Ortho-

dory” 1:3-Q [Co-author is Alan A. Brown]

YOUNG PEOPLE’S SOCIALIST LEAGUE -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

YOUTH AGAINST WAR AND FASCISM -See Front Conferences (5: 13)

YUGOSLAVIA Mihajlov Freed But Not Forgiven [dt] 3: 13 Tito Imprisons Mihajlov for Anti-Communist Article [dt]

2:25-26 Young Communist Intellectual Upholds Christianity [qq] 2:29 Yugoslavs Ban Anti-Soviet Article [ dt] I : 2 I -See C.P.R., Foreign Policy and I.R. (4:15-16) (5:13); Com-

munist Bloc (1:3-9); Korea, D.P.R. (3:16) ; U.S.S.R., Press and Propaganda (2 : 20)

-See also Algeria (3:17); Bulgaria (3:15); Caldwell (5:31); Communist Bloc (I : 15) ; Gomulka (6: 2 I) ; Indonesia (2-6) ; Kosygin (1:28) ; Poland (6: 12)

ZAMBROWSKI, ROMAN -See Gomulka (5: 28) (6: 23)

ZANZIBAR (See United Republic of Tanganylka and Zanzibar)

ZASlAVSKY, DAVID IOSIFOVICH The Late Zaslavsky: Soviet ‘Hatchet Man’ [biography] 2:30-31

ZAWADZKI, ALEKSANDER -See Gomulka (5:28) (6:20)

ZHDANOV, ANDREI ALEKSANDROVICH -See Kosygin (1:28)

ZHIVKOV, TODOR Anti-Zhivhov Plot Revealed in Bulgaria [dt] 2:22 -See Bulgaria (3: 15)

ZHUKOV, GEORGIY KONSTANTINOVICH -See Communist Bloc (2: 18) ; Stalin (2: 19)

ZIMJANIN, MIKHAIL V. New Editors for Pravda and Zzvestiia [dt] 6: 11-12

ZINOVIEV, GRIGORI E. -See Zaslavskg (a:go) See ah.0 Gomulka ($27)


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