PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, ]DECEMBER 11* I!1# l U TVEI~DAY, flECEMBER ii, J)6i International Students T HE PROBLEM OF learning to know and understand the personalities and moti- vations of our neighbors in the world isn't one to be handled solely by Washington dip- lomats and delegates to the United Nations. It also has local aspects. There are 800 foreign students now on campus, representing most of the major countries of the world. These students are anxious to become integrated into the campus life and especially to express their opinions and their knowledge of affairs in their home countries to American stu- dents. The value of contact by Americans with these students is mutually beneficial, not merely in terms of friendship but in inter- national understanding. The numerous foreign student clubs have been organized to encourage this exchange of friendship and information. Integration of these many clubs into a functioning whole is the task of the International Students Association, which is also seeking American student participation. In addition, Lane Hall, through the In- tercultural Department of the Student Religious Association plans many formal and informal American-foreign student activities, with the Intercultural Outings providing an outstanding example of how successful a project of this type can be. The International Relations Committee of SL has recently taken it upon themselves to stimulate American students into reaping the benefits to be gained from contact with representatives of foreign countries. The first project to be undertaken by this committee in conjunction with the ISA, the International Banquet held Sunday, can be considered successful on most points. This combined committee from SL and ISA has proved to be the best way tried so far of arranging cooperation between foreign students and other campus groups. It could be applied to many future acti- vities planned individually by the ISA and SL. The success of the experimental Banquet this year has shown that cooperation be- tween American and foreign student groups can be achieved with careful planning and organization. However, it is only with the enthusiastic participation of American stu- dents that anything can be accomplished by these international activities. --Marge Shepherd _-_ _ I Ill ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON "1 WASHINGTON-It's a poor example of the good-neighbor policy, but Canada is deliberately withholding precious alumi- num from the United States. This has al- ready pinched the aluminum supply for home construction and other civilian uses. But far more serious the Air Force is not getting all the aluminum it needs to build jet fighters. Furthermore, part of the aluminum Canada is withholding from us was finan- ced by American RFC loans during World War I1. What Canada' has done is divert alumi- num from the American to the British mar- ket. It won't be admitted, but the real reason for this diversion is to force this country to swap steel for aluminum. For example, Canadian aluminum ship- ments to the United States dropped from 34,800,000 pounds per month last March and April to a meager 5,300,000 pounds per month today-a decrease of 85 per cent. In the same period, Canadian ship- ments to Britain have shot up from 21,- 100,000 pounds to 39,700,000 pounds per month-an increase of 88 per cent. As proof that this is a cold-blooded squeeze-play, Canada has doubled its alum- Religiouc (Continued from Page 1) and We clothed the bones with flesh: then brought forth man of yet another make. "This does not conflict with, scientific thinking," Miss Adibe pointed out. "Many Muslims believe that all life started from a single aquatic animal." * * * AND MAN directs himself. Sulaiman noted that man is born free of sin. "He is pure and innocent. Of course, he can sin by not following God's commandments-basically the Ten Com- mandments of the Old Testament. Then unless he repents he will be punished." The Pakistani termed the earth a testing ground where man can choose to do sinful or good deeds. * * * EVEN THE io-called fall of man is inter- preted as an a nen of his freedom. "Man's first act of disobedience was also his first act of free choice; and that is why, according to the Quaranic narration, Adam's first transgression was forgiven," Iqbal writes. "Now goodness is not a matter of compul- sion . . . A being whose movements are wholly determined like a machine cannot produce goodness . . . That God has taken this risk (giving man his freedom) shows His immense faith in man ..." Thus was man placed, according to Iqbal, in a painful physical environment not as a punishment, but because it was better suit- ed to the unfolding of his intellectual facul- ties. Here he could defeat Satan who, as man's enemy tried to keep him ignorant of the joy of perpetual growth and expansion. * '* * MAN'S SOUL or ego, to the Muslim, is a thing separate from his physical being. The Koran says the ego has a beginning in time, and cannot return to earth after death of the body. But it claims finitude of life is not a misfortune because there shall be a day of resurrection. Iqbal interprets the verses dealing with this resurrection to mean that whatever the fate of man may be, there will be no loss of individuality. inum shipments to Australia, Brazil, Uru- guay and even Argentina at the same time it strangled the aluminum flow to this coun- try. In fact, the United States is the only major market that received less Canadian metal this year than last. As a result, the United States is the only North Atlantic Pact country that has been forced to clamp civilian controls on aluminum. * * * -CANADA WINS- MEANWHILE, THE Canadian squeeze has accomplished its purpose and forced the United States to swap American steel for British aluminum. Hard up for steel but overflowing with aluminum, Britain has agreed to divert 22,000,000 pounds of alumi- num to American purchasers during the next five months. In return, Britain will be allocated 25,000 tons of fabricated American steel, 45,000 tons of steel ingots and another 28,500 tons of iron and steel scrap from the American zone of Germany. The joker in this deal is that the United States must return the aluminum after its own plants are expanded to make up the shortage, though Britain is allowed to keep the steel with no strings attached. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bel Syndicate, Inc.) Korean Truce DURING THE past week many persons on campus have signed petitions asking President Truman to call a cease fire in Korea. It is their opinion that with a cease fire order will come the termination of the loss of American lives. Many feel, too, that in doing this we are showing the Reds our willingness to carry out our half of a "truce peace." However, a cease fire proposal is as bad as asking Truman to evacuate our forces from Korea. Unless we set up a system of inspection to check the activities of both sides, to stop fighting would give the Reds time to rebuild their forces and repeat the performance of last year's disasterous offen- sive. To hope that a cease fire would convince the Reds that we can be trusted to fulfill our half of a truce, thus getting them to agree to one, is unrealistic. It is most important that the Allied forces keep persistently smashing at the Communists now, while we can, for as the Reds realize that we are getting stronger and they weaker, they will be willing to come to a settlement. With no pressure on them it would be foolish to think that they would give the Allies any concessions. Another argument, almost similar to the first one, is that we leave Korea altogether. This reasoning, too, is foolhardy. Technically, the United States forces in Korea represent a United Nations' police force. This is the very reason for the whole Korean issue. On July 26, 1945, the United States not only recognized the UN but, with other nations of the world, gave its pledge .... "To maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace and for suppression of acts of aggression ...." When North Korea committed acts of aggression, President Truman kept his promise to the UN and on June 27, 1950, sent naval and air forces in an attempt to halt the aggressors. When that wasn't enough, he also called the ground forces into South Korea. Then, as now, the refusal of the U.S. to supply troops for the United Nations forces would have been disasterous. It would have caused (and would still cause) the collapse of the UN and the loss of respect that other nations have toward us. Once again Com- munism would spread further in the East. Taking a third side of the argument are the people who believe we should bomb Manchuria, where most of the Reds' sup- plies are coming from, and use the atomic bomb in Korea. There are two main reasons why we cannot bomb Manchuria. First, the Chin- ese Communist government and Russia have a mutual defense pact, whereby if either nation is attacked the other will come to its aid. Bombing China is likely to cause Russia to enter the battle and the UN would be defeating the very purpose of its existence: to prevent world war. The second reason for not blasting Man- churia is that it is considered, as is Japan, a privileged sanctuary. If we bomb them, they will bomb our bases in Japan. And to use the Atom bomb would be most contradictory for the nation which is so strongly supporting international control of atomic weapons. Also experts have found that the atom bomb would have little effect in Korea. The bomb is used to destroy large con- centrations of soldiers or industries, both of which are lacking in Korea. Almost all North Korean cities are ruined now and both armies have learned how to spread out their forces in order to stay alive. Then too, the extremely mountainous ter- rain throughout the peninsula prevents the effects of the bomb from doing any harmful damage over a very large area. The goal of the UN now is to settle a sat- isfactory truce with the Communists, one in which there will be a detailed inspection of activities behind the lines of both forces. There are other major issues to be settled, for example the exchange of prisoners. All this will take time. Yet when the truce is finally settled another threat of world war will have been relieved. Then back to the arguing, the vetoes, the walkouts, back to the UN tables. -Robert Apple The State Teacher In our more highly organized world we face a new problem. Something called edu- cation is given to everybody, usually by the state, but sometimes by the churches. The teacher has thus become, in the vast ma- jority of cases, a civil servant obliged to carry out the behests of men who have no experience in dealing with the young, and whose only attitude towards education is that of the propagandist. --Bertrand Russell Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: CAL SAMRA The Daily welcomes communica- tions from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Criticism ,,, To the Editor: FOR THE past year the Daily critics have been systematically demolished by our student body. One of the most palpable differ- ences between science and litera- ture is that one lends itself readily to exact measurement while the other must be examined by per- sonal evaluation. Very often it is a case of the scientific instrument as opposed to the mind. Any two thermometers of good quality will agree with each other as to the temperature within one or two de- grees variation, but how many domestic quarrels have arisen be- cause of a difference of opinion as to whether or no it is necessary for the man of the. house to go downstairs and stir up the coal furnace? Because the floor is cold, the husband is comfortably in bed, and the furnace is three flights down, Mr. Jones will either deliberately or unconsciously in- sist to his loving mate that the room is perfectly comfortable and that any more heat would be un- bearable. The husband, because he is consulting his mind and not the thermometer, is, whether he knows it or not, obviously preju- diced, and so, any critic in a field such as music or literature, in which there is no "thermometer" or other instrument of exact mea- surement, must, when offering opinions, depend much upon his own prejudice. In this case the prejudice arises not from any re- luctance to leave a warm bed, but is dependent upon the critic's past experience. Mrs. Jones can dis- agree with Mr. Jones, and remedy her husband's recalcitrance by hanging five fine and accusing thermometers in her bedroom, but the reader can only rely upon his own biased background when dis- puting the critic's preudices, thus creating a nearly unending battle. All this assumes of course that both reader and critic have at least made use of the few existing literary and critical values. Quality or genius in the arts, though almost always recogniz- able, is thus seen to be seldom ex- actly measurable. Two men may well possess an equal admiration for Chaucer, but it would prove extremely difficult to find any other two men who will agree as to the relative merits of each of the twenty o dd "Canterbury Tales." This task of comparison, critical analysis, and evaluation, becomes greatly magnified when, not only does the critic possess a question- ing and intelligent background, but his audience itself is equally intelligent and questioning. Thus one sees the vehement letters to the Daily reflecting just one of the many manifestations of such a phenomenon. The ideal critic should possess a literary and aes- thetic background at least on a par with the best of his readers, but since this seldom can be the case in a large university, prob- lems arise. Bearing this in mind I feel a thinking reader should at first attempt the assumption that a critic has a wider intellectual background than he, but if he finds such an assumption unten- able he will not resort to jibes and insults directed towards the critic in question, but will maintain a tolerant attitude and will attempt to disprove him from a firm, in- tellectual, and respectful stand- point. -Kenneth L. Becker The Fumblers. To the Editor: "A POX ON both your houses." Neither side of the present Israel "battle" recognizes that this problem is primarily one of justice, not of efficacy; that it is to be decided on a much broader basis than local and temporary consid- erations. Fie on you Mr. Samra, not only do you miss the point, but you play tricks with demographic geo- graphy. You know as well as I do that one nation may be over- populated with 40 people per square mile and another not so with 450. The future of Israel's economic stability depends upon so many diverse factors that to make unequivocable statements as you do requires not only audacity but ignorance. And you Zionists with your pet- ty arguments concerning these 2,- 000,000 people astound me. Sure- ly you don't weigh the interests of these as greater than that of 50,000,000 Arabs! ! ! The fact that "Just A Little Christmas Sock, Chum" \v< & EN?' Q i ,k {iy 4 eft . 'r /////// al , ; . s«. - . h r. . ~ ~ . - . . . - . . . i . . - ' * , ~ . w t A ~M ta t * m the terrorists, and other Israeli political groups, but Zionists in America as well, demanding that Israel be given more and more Arab land-all of Palestine, Trans- jordan Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Iraq--the boundaries will be ever expanding and peace will be im- possible as long as such fears are encouraged by Zionists words and acts. The Arab States, under no circumstances, can ever trust the new state, and cannot feel any friendship for it. Zionists describe us as poor, ig- norant and weak. To a certain extent, we are. But the reasons for that should certainly be clear. For five centuries, the Arabs were suffering from foreign domination and severe political control. But after continued struggles, some of the Arab States obtained their in- dependence hardly five years ago. During this short period, the Arabs have progressed in leaps and bounds. It is sheer ignorance to compare us with the United States or even the Jews who, though they were being persecuted, were still benefitting from Western civil#- zation, culture and money. Looking at the government bud- gets of the Arab States, we notice that half of Egypt's budget goes for education. The fact that this year we have almost 1500 students in the U.S., and almost double that amount in Europe and elsewhere, gives us strong hopes for our prog- ress. Besides, we are planning the Arab's income from oil would amount to 700 million dollars per year, which will surely help uas technically, educationally, a n d more important-militarily. Also, the Arab armies would be well strengthened, for not only serving the cause of liberty and freedom in the World, but for restoring our Palstine. Al n J .t 8 to i/e 6kio . 0 0 '' 1 s Survey Just as belief in the amount of direction, God exercises over man's temporal life varies between Muslims, so does thinking about the after life. To the philosopher Heaven and Hell are states, not localities. "Hell as conceived by the Quaran, is not a pit of everlasting torture inflicted by a revengeful God," Iqbal declares. "It is a corrective experience which may make a hardened ego once more sensitive to the living breeze of Divine Grace. "Nor is Heaven a holiday. Life is one and continuous. Man marches always on- ward to receive ever fresh illuminations from an Infinite Reality which 'every moment appears in a new glory'. And the recipient of divine illumination is not merely a passive recipient. Every act of a free ego creates a new situation, and thus offers further op- portunities of creative unfolding. TODAY ISLAM is growing. Although Miss Adibe noted that the religion has few mis- sionaries, she maintained that it is growing within itself. Many of the old customs that attached themselves to Islam from the many cul- tures that it came into contact with, and that led to its stagnation if not decay, are being wiped away. In Turkey, where the state and religion were completely split because Islam had gathered so many foreign characters, re- ligion is again being taught in the schools. "The people saw that they we re living in a spiritual vacuum. They have returned to their faith, and the religion is being re- vitalized," Sulaiman said. The historically inferior woman is again regaining her status of equality as prescribed in the Koran. "This was the great teaching of God's prophet Mohammed, the mystic who brought the people God's word through the Koran. Equality is the great rule of living for the Muslim," Miss Adibe said. "That is why Islam is the most tolerant of religions. It can exist side by side with Jew or Hindu. Unless broken apart by tem- poral politics its people live with all others as brothers, the children of God." (Next: Judaism) throughout the diaspora a cultural unity. Fact-the Jews have been guilty of, and the victims of "Ghetto psychology." Opinion- the establishment of Israel re- moves the rational basis for such a situation. Israel is thus the set- tlement of the problem of Jewery as it exists in pogroms, discrim- i n a t i o n and differentiation throughout the world (including the U.S.). Fact-the Jewish pop- ulation of Israel is working with feverish intensity toward the es- tablishment of a "better way of life". Fact-outside populations can not help but be influenced by this. Opinion-this is a healthy tonic for the sickness from which liberality has been suffering since the Wilson defeat in 1919. I hang my head in shame that I can't be as positive as Mr. Samra or my Zionist friends.-but then the future escapes me. -Leo D. Vichules * * * Peace on Earth .. . To the Editor: MANY OF the lamp-posts along State Street are now decor- ated and proclaim the message "Peace on Earth", a phrase taken from the first Christmas carol ever sung, that of the angels, and re- corded for us in Luke 2:15. I would like to raise the question as to what this phrase really means. No doubt the popular view of "Peace on Earth" is that associat- ed with peace between the na- tions of the earth. However, I sub- mit that this is not the import of this particular message. According to the more accurate translation given in the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, the complete statement is "Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth peace among men with wnom he is pleased!" I believe that the correct interpretation is simply that God assumes an attitude of peace among (or towards the men with whom he is pleased. In other words the angels here were singing about a relationship be- tween God and man which was to be established by Jesus Christ. This relationship is clearly spoken of in Romans 5:1, "Therefore, since we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." The men with whom God is pleased are those men who accept Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savious. Friend, I hope you are among those woth whom God is pleased. -Donald DeJager * * * Ann Arbor Prices ... To the Editor: HURRAH for Bob Perry! His motion in the SL to establish a student book store is the best suggestion I have heard in a long time. I am sick and tired of pay- ing the double price of $6.00 for a book and then, when I try to re- sell the book at the end of the semester, being offered 50-75c by the bookstore to have it taken off my hands. Next year, this used book will be on the shelves for $4.50. This has actually hap- pened to me twice and all my friends have suffered similar ex- periences. I can see only one reason for the excessive prices charged for books in Ann Arbor, and that is' lack of competition. If there were competition, students could boy- cott the offending merchants and give their trade to the stores with I would like to remind these men that the Snack Bar and Club 600 were initiated by the students of Michigan as a protest against the high cost of restaurant foods ... Would free enterprise be en- dangered? Hah! There is very little of that in Ann Arbor .. . Ann Arbor has long been ham- strung by t h e s e "gentlemen's agreements" to fix prices. Doesn't' it seem strange that all barber- shops in campus town boosted the price of haircuts to $1.25 (out- rageous) at the same time? Most of the lumber companies in town have identical (even to the typing errors) price lists, and a single firm audits their accounts to make sure that none will try to under- sell the others. Look at the store windows and newspapers. In any other town, there would be adver- tisements for bargains; yet, in Ann Arbor there is a conspicuous ab- sence of bargain sales . . . They can make money enough by charg- ing higher prices, thus jacking up rents and fees for services-for all of which the students must pay through the nose. There is no wonder that Ann Arbor, small town though it is, has the second highest price level in the entire United States. -R. Booth Tarkington Stadium Contest .. . To the Editor: IT IS OBVIOUS that the hier- archy of the University is in a dilemma. The deemphasis argu- ment is getting out of hand. The opportunity has occurred to us, however, of how the student body can lend a hand in solving the problem. We are looking for suggestions on how the University can get its money's worth out of a 97,239 seating capacity football stadium after it discontinues its football team. Any suggestion will be ac- ceptable from using it for a huge outdoor circus areana (by attach- ing 3,000,000 war surplus para- chutes as a tent) to renting it out for the "game of the week" each Saturday. Please keep your contest entries brief and mail them to the "What To Do with the Stadium When We Deempha- size Contest," care of either of the undersigned at 426 Anderson House in the East Quadrangle. Prizes have not yet been defi- nitely decided upon but they may be: First prize-one set of goal posts; Second prize-Bennie Oos- terbaan; Third prize-One pla- toon of rugged football players; Fourth prize-the ten yard line. Decision of the judges will be fi- nal. Hurry! You may be one of the lucky ones. -Sanford D. Schwartz E. Sterling Sader * * * Arab Answer. . .. To the Editor: THE CHANCES for Israel's sur- vival depend on many major factors, which are far from favor- able to Israel. Walter Lowder- milk's contention that Israel could support a much larger population through development projects such as T.V.A., could be true only if that land could be at peace. Israel obviously can easily obtain the skill and capital necessary for such developments, but can she win the peace, without which they will be of no avail? She certainly cannot count on financial assist- ance from American Zionists in- 4 --Dounia Mrowa Atrocities .. . To the Editor: WOULD like to add my opinion to the comment on the atrocity story by a Captain Furman. I could laugh it off and say that that is the kind of rot we may ex- pect from an Army Officer. If he is so gullable as to believe that atrocities are committed only by the other side, he is at best an ex- tremely nieve person. I have no proof of any atrocities anywhere, as I have never seen any com- mitted. Captain Furnani would probably feel that therefore I have no right to an opinion. Following his logic I would also have to dis- believe the stories about the Nazis. Any nation which is capable of using the atomic bomb on a peo- ple after the war had been won, and after they had already sent out peace feelers is certainly cap- able, in my opinion, of killing pri- soners of war in cold blood. Any natiof-.which is capableof using its air force to destroy women and children is quite barbaric.Ma e latter according to such leftist pa- pers as the New York Times, and the Chicago Tribune, and others, is what our air force did in Ger- many in the last war, and what it is doing now in Korea, It may be some people's idea of Democracy to have tle, victors round up the vanquished after a war and execute them. It may be their idea of a democratic trial' when the prosecuters, the judges, and the juries are the same peo- ple; it is not mine. Militarists seem to be the same, regardless of their ethic back- ground. For the most part it seems that the only differences between the German, the Japanese, the ' (Continued on Page 5) (fit IjP A irl igttu 3 ttily .4 II .4 Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staf f Chuck Elliott .........Managing Editor Bob Keith ............. ....City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern Emerson ........ .Feature Editor Rich Thomas ..........Associate Editor Ron Watts ............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn .........Associate Editor Ted Papes .................. Sports Editor George Flint ...Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ... Associate Sports Editor Jan James ........... Women's Editor BAR NAB1 Thieiio, Gorg~on.I Ching brings his two-legged one to that place every few days, Professor, to get her JcRM A. ~IIFRENCH PASTERIE~ Fii, my dear, you get #1 prettier all the time- D CAKES Business Staff Bob Miner ..........Business Manager Gene Kuthy. Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ... Advertising Manager Sally Fish.............Finance Manager