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Salient. An Organ of Student Opinion at Victoria University, Wellington N.Z. Vol. 22, No. 10. September 14, 1959

Counter Attraction

Counter Attraction

When the original plan to prevent the festival's being carried out in Vienna proved to be impossible, the view that the festival was excellently suited for the meeting with great numbers of young people from the East Bloc and under-developed countries, to enlighten them about the true character of the festival, and to give them a picture of the ideas and way of life of youth in western countries gained favour.

Thus the so-called "Guest Programme" came about.

Austria's Federal Youth Ring and the Austrian National Union of Students invited youth organisations from the Western World, above all from West Germany, to work together with them towards this goal. The result was at the end a many-sided and successful "Guest Programme."

For example, rides in special buses to the Hungarian border were arranged, to give a picture of the reality of the Iron Curtain by letting the participants see the barbed-wire fences.

In big Jazz concerts in Vienna's Music Hall, Ella Fitzgerald, "The First Lady of Jazz," did a counterpoint to the folklore fostered predominantly by the festival, and in various Viennese cinemas "uncensored films" were running, among them Orwell's ing in East Germany in 1953 and the Hungarian revolution of 1956.

In 11 so-called Information booths, little modern wooden barracks, as well as in a co-operative exhibition, "Austria's Youth Introduces Itself," the festival participants could supply themselves with information material and various printed matter.

Meanwhile, the sponsors of the festival limited themselves in their programme pretty exactly to the set-up of the Sixth World Festival in Moscow. Here, as there, there was no end to daily culture programmes, gala evenings, friendship meetings, and seminars in the International Student Club. Whereas in previous festivals the capitals of the East-Bloc countries always offered a lively and harmonious side-scene, this resonance was sorely lacking in non-communist and neutral Vienna.

To be sure good numbers of curious Viennese stood on the kerbstones of Ring Street as the great parade went by. But the incessant shouts of "peace and friendship" received only an occasional echo, especially wherever groups of the communist Free Austrian Youth had gathered.