TlE MICHIGAN DAILY Grade School Tots Celebrate Christmas milies Throughout World Revive Christmas Spirit 0~ Grad. The day is filled with public meetings, discussing ways toward progress and prosperity. The influence of western cul- ture has made the celebration of the new year popular. The whole family gathers for a meal and presents gifts of new clothes. Then everyone attends student prepared variety performances. The most memorable Christmas Uddin has spent was with a Ful- bright Professor in Pakistan. He will never forget the "sincerity and cordiality" of the American family at Christmas. American Memory An American remembers Christ- mas in Iraq as "a very happy holi- day." William Greenip, of the American Friends of the Middle East counselor in Iraq, recalls the warm respect that the Moslems give to the Christian holiday. Moslems will call on their Chris- tian friends to pay their respects to the holiday and servants expect Christmas presents. Premiere Kas- sim sends greetings to the Chris- tians as Jesus is considered a great prophet in the Moslem world. The delightful stealth with which Prof. Fujio Shimomura of the Far Eastern studies dept. from Tokyo, crept in to leave presents by the side of his sleeping children marks his memories of the last New Year's celebration in Japan. Japanese Festival Christmas as a religious cele- bration is not widespread in Japan but the decorations and festivities are very popular. The fireworks and myriads of lights that mark the coming of the new year out- shine it however. The acting out of the journey of Joseph and Mary in the Pasades initiates the Christmas season in Mexico. Starting December 16, each of nine families go from house to house caroling and beg- ging shelter for the Christ child. At the last house they are In- vited to enter and all pray before the Kretch on the nacimincto. When this ends it signals a party where the children bat blindfolded at the gay treasure ladedl piantas. Froylan Caldana, '61, plans to drive home to Mexico for the fes- tivities, taking three American boys with him. His favorite in- gredients of the season are the parties, piantas and carol singing. By CAROLINE DOW Christmas in grade school - memories of freshrcut pine and stale chalk, "Christmas is a' Com- ing and . . ," the halls echo the ever piling snow, windows are dot- ted with snowball remains. One teacher puts on Christmas carols at full blast to give the kids something to change classes with. Her neighboring educator feels that the dear ones cannot calm down after such stimulation. Carols die amid cackles. Glee club finally gets a switch from "June Is Busting Out All Over" to "Silent Night." The Pa- geant is two days away. Artistic eighth graders and kindergarten- ers collaborate on painting a stere- otype angel on the windows. Some- one mixes black paint with the white. Kids Tote Kids tote cans of soup and pea- nuts for the charity basket. Each tries to bring more than his neigh- bor. Time to draw out of the hat for "present pals." Someone al- ways buys a two dollar present when the limit is seventy-five cents. Who is the lucky one? Everyone makes Christmas cards for the family. It is a good thing that Halloween and Christmas feature different colors because there is not enough left of the red. and green crayons anyway. But the cards are muddy whenthey arrive home so it doesn't matter. Carry Presents All the kids lug in their pres- ents. Perfume, coloring or scrap books or do-it-yourself plane models. The Christmas party be- gins with half the glee club gone to put on their paper collars. The cutest or smartest girl in the class passes the cookies and the ice cream starts to melt. From the hall comes the sound of Christmas carols and even the teacher smiles. Everyone is back in the room and the Santa Claus gives out the presents with hollow Ho! Ho's. The rustle of ripping wrapping paper mutes the gulps of $disappointment and squeals of delight. Everyone piles into line and the class marches out into the dark- ened cavernous school hall, lighted only by the blue, green, red of the Christmas tree. And the. spe- cial chorus raggedly breaks out in a beautiful, flat, "Come All Ye Faithful." "Silent Night" puts everyone in tears again. There is a moment of silence and then the ever-present murmur of a children's congrega- tion rises to a crescendo. School is out, vacation has begun and the real Christmas is about to begin. 1 AND HERE'S SANTA-An artistic elementary school student shows what Christmas means to him-toys, Santa, reindeer. He spends his last few days before vacation building snowmen in the school yard, singing carols off-key, coloring, Goya-bright cards for his family, and drawing names in order to exchange gifts. 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