here is quite a bit of interest again in the question of the relationship between the Baltic and Slavic branches of the Indo-European languages. This can be a-scribed to several reasons:
1. This problem has never been solved to everyone's satisfaction.
2. The V-th International Congress of Slavicists, which was held in Sofia in 1963, created a special Committee of sixteen members whose task it is to sponsor the more thorough investigation of this problem and to suggest definite conclusions or recommendations by about 1968, the year when the Vlth International Congress of Slavicists is to be held.1
3. Several books and some dozens of articles dealing with this problem have appeared since 1945 in many countries, their views being at great variance with each other.
4. The solution of this problem if a solution is really possible, would help reduce the great confusion in introductory texts and bibliographical arrangements, especially in the English-speaking countries.
5. A solution would contribute, generally, to linguistic knowledge, particularly on the geneological relationships between languages.
There are as many attitudes on this question as there are linguists dealing with some phase of Indo-European linguistics, particularly Baltic, Slavic and Germanic. To a certain degree, linguists dealing with questions of Finno - Ugric linguistics are also concerned with this problem, especially in discussing the ancient Baltic (i. e., Proto-Baltic, Proto-Lithuanian, Proto-Lat-vian, etc.) loanwords in the Baltic Finnic languages such as Livian, Estonian and Finnish.
Let us now examine some samples of these attitudes and views: