Mexico and South (Continued from Preceding Page) must be searched . . . for what wasn't exactly clear .. . on enter- ing and leaving. Additional check points are lo- cated along the road outside the: actual customs.' With soldiers, (some whose writing and reading left some- thing to be desired) doingtmost of the paperwork, the process is long and dragged out. Entry into Hon- duras took us an hour and a half ... exit took the same amount of time. All the time, a machine gun is aimed in the direction you are going. - MANAGUA, NICARAGUA - (July 23, 7634 mi.) We knew the Inter-American Highway was go- ing to be bad ... but just how bad was a mystery. We have traveled on everything from asphalt high- ways in Mexico, to dirt ox paths in Guatemala and finally now to1 a gravel road in the mountains. In a jeep it isn't bad .. . the only things you have to worry about are fiat tires and hitting cows and, dogs. On a motorcycle it is differ- ent. With only two tires instead of four, a lagre rock in the road1 can be just as dangerous as a sleeping cow is to a jeep. But some progress is being made . . as much as the summer rains w ill p e r m i t. American-loaned9 graders, bull dozers and other roadl Poland Experiment in International Living Mexican .Landscape equipment are working steadily . . . but in most places human labor carries most of the burden. Mac's impression of Mexico is beginning to look brighter. PUNTEREANAS, COSTA RICA -(July 27, 7882 mi.) We stopped in this west coast port town three days, ago intending to get a banana boat bound for California. But as luck would have it none are expected for several weeks. Port towns hold nothing un- usual for seasoned sailors but to three college boys they are some- thing out of the ordinary. Today we met one of the strangest per- sons so far . . . his name is Ru- gilio Bishops. He got aboard a Swedish ship from his native home of El Salvador five years 0 ago at the age of 14 and hasn't re- turned since. He left his ship two months ago in this-port without seaman's pa- pers, money or extra clothes. So far he has gotten along fairly well on coconuts, supplemented by a few handouts from ships in the port . .. he sleeps on the beach. and washes in the ocean. He said his ship is supposed to return here in about a month . . and tale him home. We joined him on the beach as we're out of money. We are go- ing to see an American family about a mile down the beach who are trying to build a boat to sail to South America. . . A real Swiss Family Robinson. Seems about a year ago they made it as far as Costa Rica by truck . ,. but their money ran out. POST SCRIPT -- Huthwaite and Dick McElroy left Puntareanas two days later determined to reach Michigan the way they had come - by motorcycle. They suf- fered no mishaps until they reached Texas. After approxi- mately 10,000 miles of travel, the two lost one another and returned home separately. The student from Antioch Col- lege, Dick Wiley, decided he still wanted to see South America. He signed on a tuna boat at Punta- reanas and is now fishing some- where off the coast of Peru. Meanwhile Wil Porter, origin- ator of the trip, was determined to continue even after a second mishap in Tuxla, Mexico. He left there hoping to catch up with the three others but a third accident in El Salvador prevented him from continuing further. After a brief rest, he returned north to Texas and then a tour of the east- ern United States. Bob Mancell toured Mexico un- til August, suffering only one mishap on his motorcycle, and then returned to Michigan. (Coritinued from Page 4) medical aid to help them (the aid being stopped at the Czech bor- der by Czech authorities who were playing up to the Russians). A ND JUST before our group left Poland, the people" were lining the streets of Warsaw, cheering and crying and throwing flowers onto the way of Vice-President Nixon. Only a few days -before when Khrushchev visited War- saw, the only people on the streets were sent there, the cheering came from special broadcasting speakers and the flowers had been supplied by the government. And every Sunday in the churches, the people come to pray and sing; across the land the houses of worship are filled as men, women and children of Po- land sing to their God, sing the songs that are theirs - so much of them and their country. "Matko Boska, Krolowo Polska" Mother of God, Queen of Po- land. Y TRIP to Poland has prob- ably been a turning point inj my life. The things I have seen and the people I have met havej forced me to alter my feelings on many things -not the least ofI these are Russia and Commun- ism. I had heard, of course, of Hun- gary and I knew that Hungary and Poland an'd others were dom- inated by Russia. But I had heard too of pacifism, co-existence and friendly competition. Above all, I felt I wanted peace. k'can no longer feel this way. Ij have spent a summer in Poland, I've lived in a country that really knows Communism and Russian "friendship." Poles have tasted Russian treachery more than once: they were attacked from the East dur- ing the war, deceived during the Warsaw Insurrection and mur- dered at Katyn. And after the war they were occupied and robbed. This situation is not unique to Poland. In all of Eastern Europe people have felt the Russian paw. Of this the Hungarian revolt and i the Gomulka regime serve as the more striking evidence. SINCE OUR group has returned from Poland, Khrushchev has come to our country. Khrushchev, the man the Poles have learned to hate, Khrushchev the man our group has, in its own way, learned to hate. While here, he has tpken advantage of the vast American communications system to teach us and correct our false impres. sions about peace, coexistence, friendly competition and of course, about misunderstood Russia. .I hope we don't believe him, that we realize what a foe we are up against and prepare accordingly. I wish we could feel even a little of the hate for Russia the Poles and , the other captive peoples have and that everyone could go as we have gone to see a country such as Poland, for only there can one learn what Russia really is. But most of all I hope and pray that we as individuals and as a nation realize the limitations and dangers of pacifism and that we always believe there comes a time when a man has to stand up and fight for a life and a principle he believes in. O N ONE of my last evenings in Berlin we gave a party. We mixed cheap rum with tea and served it along with thin slices of neopolitan ice cream and little piles of cookies. As entertainment we offered a shoddy song-and- dance show: Ibrahim did an Arab dance, Anh played Chinese music on his home-made flute, Ernesto sang some Mexican songs, and we all joined in flat renditions" of "Swing Low" and "Study War No More." In broken and sometimes non-existent German we kept the conversation going as well as we could. Yet as the silences grew -'longer and longer our guests gave no signs of leaving, and when we finally sent them on their way with "Auld Lang Syne" they still ing with paint and whitewash, wall-paper and glue, in the poorer homes of the area. In efforts to make these apartments livable again we plastered cockroaches into the walls, burned flea-infest- ed couches, and scraped layers of dirt and grime from the ceilings. We spent days on scaffolding wielding heavy brushes full of whitewash; we wrestled with end- milk or some fruit for lunch as payment. Members of our group came from Egypt and India, Af- rica and America, Germany, France and England to live for one month in Berlin and try to make life a little more bearable for the sick, aged people for whom we gave the party. One need not go as far as Ger- many to find this kind of thing. Throughout the year the Ameri- can Friends Service Committee sponsors weekend work camps of this sort in most large cities. Sum- mer camps may be found in the States, on Indian reservations or in the poor sections of the Ozarks. Nor is Berlin the only site of a European camp: The AFSC works with the Service Civile Interna- tionale and the Nothelfergemein- schaft, as well as other organiza- tions, to place Americans in camps all over Europe. Several of my friends found themselves swinging pick-axes in Worms, Germany, digging founda- tions for refugee housing. One was awarded a medal by the Yugoslavian government for be- ing the hardest worker in a camp of 200. Another helped to, lay a pipeline in the French Alps where the temperature was freezing even in the middle of the summer. TwoM went to Turkey and worked in the mountains a day's journey from the nearest village. Several went to Italy, two to Scotland, one to Finland, and other, perhaps, even farther away. I went to Ber- lin. GOT something of an orienta- tion to work-camping both in America and in France, but in Berlin I found the real thing. There were 24 of us from 14 dif- f'erent countries: many from the Hilary Smith spent the sum- mer in France and Berlin as a -volunteer with the American Friends' Service Committee. She is a senior in the literary college. near and middle East, surprising- ly enough no one from Italy or the Scandinavian' countries. When we walked down the street people turned and stared at us: there was Parvathi in her sari, Anh in his black mandarin coat, Singh, with his beard and turban. We were a novelty wherever we went; after a while we became the special novelty of the Schoneberg sec- tion. People stopped us in the street to talk with us, and once a newspaper vendor tried to give us some English papers. When we asked him why he answered, "You help the Berliners; I want to help you." Twice we stopped after work for a beer and found the drinks.- appearing before we had ordered. When we looked up there was a cheerful German gentleman rais- ing his glass in a salute. (Concluded on Next Page) 214 SOUTH FOURTH Mel Youth From Several Cultures Help For Impoverished People in Berlin By fIiLARY SMITH IMNIML Volunteer groups of the American Friends' Service Committee help the aged and poor of Berlin make their small apartments liveagle again. showed their reluctance as they moved off slowly, shaking our hands again and again. Since 1956 work camps of at least a month's duration have been sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee every summer in the Berlin-Schoene- berg district. As a member of a volunteer -group, we lived togeth- er on the edge of the local Sportz- platz and spent the days work- less strips of wallpaper; we cov- ered ourselves with cobwebs and paint and carried cartloads of an- cestral trash home from work each day. MOST OF US paid for the privi- lege of doing this work: the people for whom we worked were getting as little as 120 Westmarks a month ($30.00) and could only occasionally offer usa glass of Poland's Economy Ii r _ _ _ _ - .1 You an ti elas gently never sli SIZES TO 14 WIDTHS AAA to B No other motor- bike in America has all these features! " No shift automatic transmission for jerk-free, safer, faster driving * Auto-type front and rear brakes * Plus power to handle steep moun- tain roads, traffic safely, surely " 150 miles per gal.; i 30 mph in 8 sec. ! 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