Alexander Jordan Lutoslawski

Foreign service officer, broadcaster, author

Born Dec. 10, 1913, Chateau Barby, France; came to U.S., 1950; son of Wincenty and Wanda (Peszynska); married Helen (Johnson); child: Alexander.

Education: Master of Arts (M.A.), Ecole des Sciences Politiques, Paris (France), 1935; Master of Arts (M.A.), School of Political Sciences, Warsaw (Poland), 1938; diploma, College of Automotive and Aeronautical Engineering, London (United Kingdom), 1941.

Career: civil servant, Polish Foreign Office, Warsaw and London, 1937-45; radio commentator, Polish Radio, Warsaw, 1935-39; broadcaster, British Broadcasting Corporation, London, 1939-44, Radio Free Europe, New York City, 1950-62.

Author: Propaganda, 1937; chapter in Guidebook of Europe, 1937; Face to Face, 1943; First to Fight, 1943; Central Union of Europe, 1944; Poland's Frontiers, 1944; Poland's Aviation, 1944; Insider's Guide to Poland, 1990; Of Horses and Men (political satire); over 1200 articles in Poland, France and England i.a. in: Readers Digest, National Review; translator, 45 books from Polish to English.

Member of: active in R. Nixon presidential campaign and James Buckley campaign for senator from State of New York; executive director, American Institute of Polish Culture, Miami (FL); Mensa.

Honors: British medal for service in World War II.

Served with: Polish Armed Forces in the West, Jaziowiecki Regiment in United Kingdom.

Affiliation: Republican. Catholic.

Languages: Polish, French, English.

Hobby: swimming.

From: "Who's Who in Polish America" 1st Edition 1996-1997, Boleslaw Wierzbianski editor; Bicentennial Publishing Corporation,
New York, NY, 1996