Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 71.djvu/858

 B38 August 5, 1957 [H, Con. R e s. 135] P r i n t i n g as House document.

August 5, 1957 [H. Con. R e s. 136] P r i n t i n g as House document.

August 6, 1957 [H. Con. R e s. 204]

U. S. a c t i o n in United N a t i o n s Genercd Asseirbly.

CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS-AUG. 5, 1957

[71 S T A T.

"GUIDE TO SUBVERSIVE ORGANIZATIONS AND PUBLICATIONS**

Resolved by the House of Representatives {the Senate concwrring), That the publication entitled "Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications" prepared by the Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, Eighty-fourth Congress, second session, be printed as a House document; and that there be printed sixty thousand additional copies of said document, of which forty thousand copies shall be for the use of said Committee and twenty thousand copies to be pro-rated to the Members of the House of Representatives for a period of ninety days after which time the unused balance shall revert to the Committee on Un-American Activities. Passed August 5, 1957.

"SOVIET TOTAL WAR**

Resolved ty the Mouse of Representatives {the Senate concurring), That volumes I and 11 of the publication entitled "Soviet Total War" prepared b;^ the Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, Eighty-fourth Congress, second session, be printed as a House document; and that there be printed five thousand additional copies each of volumes I and II for the use of said committee. Passed August 5, 1957.

HUNGARY

Whereas the Hungarian freedom revolution which broke out October 23, 1956, was catastrophic in nature, and subsequent events shocked the conscience of the free peoples of the world; and Whereas the barbaric action of the Soviet Union in Hungary demonstrates that the Soviet Union is determined to go to any and all lengths to maintain its empire of enslaved peoples by the most brutal forms of armed subjugation and repression; and Whereas the Special Committee on the Problem of Hungary, created by the General Assembly of the United Nations under its resolution 1132 ( X I) adopted at its six hundred and thirty-sixth plenary meeting on January 10, 1957, has established that what took place in Hungary in the latter part of 1956 was a spontaneous national uprising caused by long-standing grievances engendered by the oppressive way of life under Communist rule and by the state of captivity of Hungary under control of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; and Whereas the crisis and foment created by developments in the satellite nations require a continued reevaluation by the United States and the United Nations of strategic policy to meet changing conditions: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the House of Representatives {the Senate concurring), That it is the sense of the Congress that the President, through the United States representatives to the United Nations at the forthcoming special reconvening of the General Assembly of the United Nations, should take every appropriate action toward the immediate consideration and adoption of the report of the United Nations Special Committee on the Problem of Hungary and toward the immediate consideration of other available information on the brutal action of the

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