KEY TO BPJ.IifT ASHING By Pro Ruth Alexander (Editor's Notes Following is the first article in a series on the theories of Russian physiologist Ivan Petrovich Pav- , -' v ' r as they are used by the Communists in the •*old n war and to "brainwash" capture ed American troops.) One of our greatest weaknesses is our addiction to slogans. Our slipshod "ed ucation, 11 with its emphasis on trumpet tooting and life adjustment, has rendered us incapable of pure thought and has crested in us a genuine hostility toward any word, symbol or concept that smacks of the intellectual process. Take the absurd slogan "brain-washing" for instance. It is a meaningless quick ie dreamed up by.some smart alec, yet it epitomizes the little we know about the Pavlovian stresses practiced ceaselessly upon us by the Communists. If our POWs in the Korean T ' T ar had been thoroughly familarized with Pavlovian techniques, they might have been able to resist their apparent unpredictability. Suspense, itself, is a form of shock and, being inexcusably unprepared for the pattern of Pavlovian degenerative psychology, our boys were sitting ducks for shock. Their wills were paralysed and Korea was the first war in our once" proud history where few, if any, sucess ful prison breaks were engineered by escapees, who had had it. We excused them by claiming they were "brainwashed," but not a man in a million had the foggiest idea of what he meant by this superficial euphemism for the complicated but scientifically reputable theory and practice of the conditioned reflex . It has been some ten years nov; since Korea. Our people are becoming slowl-’, painlessly and reluctantly aware of the minimal doctrines of communism and its grandiose determination to conquer the world. But fen have’ had the intellectual curios!by to dissect the Pavlovian base of "brainwashing" or to relate it to be haviorism, the basis of our welfare a Gate and all other degrees of socialism. Pavloyian techniques are net only the basis of so-'called h- , n:.i. , -v;,'esLi,ua, J are ?,j so the key 'em Soc'-et pi . We call the "coIOT -.var ‘ uho bridle for men’s minds J 1 let wo ware it as flip pantly as the Kodison /..venue boys wage the battle of status for the status seek ers fl The Russians, on the other hand, have built their strategy on the premises and conclusions of the great Russian physio logist , Ivan Petrovich Fsvlov, (lG'49 ~ 1936) - world famous for his research on digestive and cerebral activity and his theory of conditioned reliexes, Nobel prize winner, 1904, director of the Rus sian Academy of .Medicine,, the Institute sf Experimental Medicine, and honorary fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in London. Since 1!;T orId ' !7 ar I, which established the Communist system in October (old Sty le) 1917, all Ru ssian consultants on psychological warfare have been scienti fic experts highly versed in Pavlovian theory. Hence, nothing on our enemy's side "happens" accidentally. But we continue to play the "cold" war by ear and public ize it by slogans. *******#-jHr****-X- * #-#*#******#*#*#* ****** i $ The election isn't very far off when a candidate can recognize you across the street. ‘ v >a panda. KIN HUBBARD