FIVE YEAR PLAN
AN OUTSTANDING QUESTION. (United Press Association- B.v Electric Telegraph.—Copyright.) (Received this dnv at 1.5 p.m.) LONDON, January 29. Air C. J. Ketcluun in the “Daily Express” states that the success ol the Ej ve Year Rian is an outstanding question in Russia. The whole destiny ol Bolshevism depends on the answer. M. Stalin aims at converting the populace, eighty-five per cent, of which are peasants, into a populace of eighty-five per cent successful industrialists. IT he fails, Russia will again he a bloody battlefield of a new sociological experiment. On tile surface the I lan ,s succeeding. Immense facto lies ait springing up and cities are being horn in a night, and magnificent modern plants are being completed in every corner of tlm land. M. Stalin has long realised he cannot achieve his ends by employing revolutionaries as organisers alone, so he unearthed a few remaining engineers of the old regime. If they fail to produce the programme in time, they will be accused of sabotage and suffer imprisonment, exile or death. Workmen are practically slaves and hence personally 1 believe the Five Year Plans must fail.
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Hokitika Guardian, 30 January 1931, Page 5
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190FIVE YEAR PLAN Hokitika Guardian, 30 January 1931, Page 5
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