> Eh Se ee ashy Sen he OR, sls meh rh Swear thao y mw: a Re cmc ata sesh PT eet ey : Ree ; BT Pie iat > i s i Laasel at Neg EN NN SIS Sek oni censhin ie are Lgl kre LE Macs, aia ee py Nov eu f% 1952 fublished oy tho, SOMMITTER Td College, Swarthmore, Pe, NOV oontinue t } po an ol ny Le Peace Pe 23 Aa Dery oS > Oa ee 0) Fei tg FOR STUDENT £3 EXCHANGE > od ae Seen > ebent. ete atte on Uni- ted Pee stucests: Gould make to uUnaerstanding, TrLendsaip, and peace would be tO Participate an Ube Mery act ing on betwe and Western ie ab ie. fom Students of Students ar ivities of exchenge go- en students in Hastern Countries, resens sime le leading the i ikigugu eval Oia oval, ent & ViSHtinges the Soviet Una omy February, au the in- Law LOM the Unton of Gtugen ts (BNUS),, @ dele. gation of Chinese students visited Britein ‘and “later went.to Norway and Finland, A Soviet student de- legation visited Norwey recently. Last year the leaders of the BNUS went to the USSR. At the 1951 Internetion- (81 Union of Students (is). Council? ‘meeting in Warsaw, the President of the Canadian Fedéretion of Stu- dents .invited Soviet studertts to Canada and the Soviet student lea- der reciprocated. Unfortunetely the Cenadien Federation Executive has withdrawn the Pave ta wLon. Dorine thie Pest ya year the. 1S helped orgenize internetionsl stu- Gent .eemos in Itely, Gzechoslova- kee? Hodelend.. Rump ni, Rast (Ger= meny (a swimming Gann) tacit ea, end Finland (during the Olympics). Students from the USSR, Rumania, Cue, Deretelpated in asthe LUD. BNUS inbernetionel student chess tournsment in Englend this.fell. So fer U.5, students heave missed out on these activities, we sould make a beginning by exchanging Lenters, By Sbry ine: LO serrense an exchenge of student art or photog- raphy exhibits with some Sovict u- niversity or by corresponding with studsnts at Mescow University oabcut the possibilities of recip-— BOCaw Visits of Studente ior py pr:O- posing, to Cnerles University ‘Prague)students reguler. exch-nges of newspaper columns between our >t%wo Suudent publications, The "C,ech” student representetive et the lest 1Us Council meeting votcd on Tavror OL such ame exch nee. of NEWSOADEr erlicies, tion; of. ell the « sugfering,. -mis.cry-.~ ond egony ecnsecuent upen, it,.can and’ sheuld be stepped, even failing an immoe diate. sgreement cn these points (i.e.,, the priscner exchange preb- ten) and. pending their more lei- surely ecnsideration." Aeccrding. to, pthes NeY. TMmes iNowv.. 15). ogy U sSen PRrepresecntea tive speaking cutside» the ecnmittee meeting srid..that he did not be» licve, the American pbecple weuld tclernte an immediate cease-fire while. .a4mericen scldiers ere still captives cf the Nerth Kereans. He added, thet the UsSa-weuld fight:con until the issue wes settled, 4& rescluticn presented. to the U.N. yesterday, Wed. Nov. 19, by India was alsc-rejected by the U:G The prepesel called for immediate rebatriation of el] priscners wen- ting tc return but reteining these wace@id netesco Gesire. s4thes sback Of. mepatristicn,.wevuld bet hendied by © .fcur naticoniccamissicn:ccn= sisting cf com= missilom cf «neutral nations’ re= eciveselli«prisonere Yon nevwtral ground end give them tc the side efi their icheice .2.. The) ULM, -command views the priscner issue 8s a moe rel question, Should they er should they not force men to return to a gcvernnent that mey harm then? Generel Merk Clerk said recent ly in an interview that he theught the prisoner of wer issue wes en excuse for ecnrrrying on the wer, He. predicted thet the Communists W1ill:sbe eble te fight the present wer of ettrition: for “many years without tiring. | 4 POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE REPORT The Political Action Committee presented to the Eest-West group a.oshort: ‘summery cf i the’ o Korean Peace’ talks and the priscnér re- petrieticn issue, ~ While lecking for more esta, the .ceomnittee: also ciscussed the ccnseoucnecs cf an immeciete’. cease fire with ciscuse Sion cf the’ truce terms ’fellowing, Sinee this would step the waste of lives anc probebly permit more in- telligent desisions, it seemedlas if the cemmittee should press for “nm immeciste ceese- fire, A reseed luticn; “listing the pessible eons sequences of A.cénse fire snd the ccmmittee's conclusiens, ° wes -cén= Sidcered “‘atocar générel “membéerskinp mecting, PROF, BODDE SPESKS ON CHINA Mp. Derk sBodde,. carthor of athe Peking Diery end Professor of: Chic nose + Hiestony’ ati the University, of Pennsylveniojocq-cddressed erin jokt mecting: of Ehe Hast-West Club & the Internstional, Rehetions; Club inst wednesday. on! "Trediticnnl: Chinese SocLety »eand- > Chinese Conmunismy” Mr. + Bodder-wese-dn Chine Llestuin 1948-49, nine months before it was taken by the, Communists end nine monthe: -ftere: The. ;stete-of; Chinese society, Mr. Bodde srid,wrs pre-industrirl. in. Lerge, percentrge of; the farmna (the everege size of which is three to four ecres)were worked by ten+ ent fermers whe commonly geve 50% oftheir cnnupd: prop; to theimrdend zords., Politicelly:> the Jand: was contrclled .by~e. ruling oligarchy ef. dends» Lords... ' Well+-bcrn: and ed- uceted: men went almost exclusive? dy inte .ecvernment’positicns:y in- steed cf into the business er ccom= mercied world, !? As, :2 result’ there wes preetierlly no middle: ciss) of eny/import:cither:politicrlly oT econemicelly.'» The: effect of: this leck of} @e:.sienificenti cinssion Chinese ecconcmic: development wns to. prevent: the rise cf enpitclism such..°s herd grown in-the West due te-w the: pooledjywerlthof private individurls. Politicrddyieud here wes ne grecup seeking tr. reduce the eutecrstic powers. cf gevernment in order tc pretect Ate ownimlehie ond, inkerestoyrs did the 17th end thy century middle! Melsas) Cri.Eu- rcpe. The sbroskdewnsc¢f thiss olde sce cicty crme’ about wsthe ecnsegquenccec of populetion.s grewthgy the infiux ef Western ptdcesswhich ewhkcned * new conscicusness nd new eeoncemic ferces which worsened demestic ccnditicns;: One suchs ferce Iwas the intredueticn of Western end Jr> penese. mrchine+m-de gccds*’ which heve..destreuca vthed~eidoawiliege heandicr-fts tindustri¢és;) reducing further..the;subsistenceslevel of perzsent ineccme. The r4Gommuniss sppealiw-sxbrsaa moinly.cn neticnelismiendttheir c+ Vere | LeweCCAGMmeG. fApPRoacks Meny Chimese,.,-net.convineediof the .ds= sir-bility cf the new regime's eccncmie presrem, heve been influ- enced by pride’ in CREPE GL trys: sbility te bring to * stend~ Silo tT the Setrrasest CO prU SG war, Och Obet wonlidyy + The # Ccnmis Hise.” tt be nes sues against Snete el MA Pati tion, which in IS? ropened” such’ #-ocint"in Boidie thet ori ces would srmetimes Bcubleos ineeene?. day, proved, duite effcetive, The Communist farm Orcercn! hes -etnsisted* «r* Mend ree ferm--in which the lsnd hes been divided inte. °smell holding given Beoitne Opeesents, vend widl not’ be directed tewerd cecilectivisetion until the Chinese rre mere willing to wpecept Thiet ldeece ant ct ieriets being. mede tegive to eech person av hecling’ ef blece: end funetien tna the oecmmunity, Students re made “eU Tel theyere needed in the re= construction cf sccicty. Educs= ticn hes deen speeded up. In 1949, cne third cf’the Peking University students’ went Scuth with the Ccm- munists te’ ect-es sxdministretcrs in the-newly crgenized ecmmunities, tim? cenclusien, "Mr." B-dde scid 1t isesn errer:t*" believes thet* the Comrunist gcvernment will crcllrpse iar %theone-r future. The me jority CE Beeble | oheithinks, re’ in Tever ef thei sréscnt> regime*end herve *n eePnest Beve: in the future,’ *1t is FOLMLSEN tes heaps Herio+return’ ce? the KUcmintens-*s *this’ perty hrd- died OT 1ES* cwn UweELigeht befcre the rise ef the Communists nd “hes: long Since. sessed’ tev bde“r scericus’ el} Hernstive -f£er*the “present regime im the? minds” cf mest-cf the Chi- nese 'pecple. CULTUR.D AND EDUC! TION bai ter..(ifivsceennes TOng Hol t2 re RI OE dS abate P eee Ones Se one eer neh RE PRE Pe HORE BOB A EE AE 8 one Weeks 54, recently rc- Fe Mawes trip around the will speek this Tuesday, cn student movements acd i11 sre welcome, it (EXCHANGE DIFFICULTIES ecnt'd frm P2} of the. Scviet Union friled to“an= sworlenttnvatetson tor tour "Sh e Scencinevian ccuntriecs together With es delegrtion from the Us5-. On, the other. hand, the IUS has continurlly ssked for "the sclec~ tion, by stucents ef U.S. Univers sities, oof, 2° dclesation cf’ student representetives,. The IUS is pre- pered te support with its member orgenizetions * visit of this ce- hegebionitonthe ceuntries er these member ercanigations,+) if in re- turn »thciNSA will support sna’ ar- rengcasyreciprecnlivisit~ oF hae TUS tdelegation’ (to -U