'V.. #,}N. ire: r -w -. -w C 1-. w .. -- r -r 'r -~ - - __ - ; .r , , Learning, Studying, Relaxing- A Russian Student's Week By PETER DAWSON A STUDENT at Moscow Univer- sity is quite likely to take it easy on Sunday, talking or perhaps studying in his two-person dormi- tory suite, according to Roger An- derson, '61, who just got back from three months in Russia and three satellite countries. Or a student may go to a soccer game, walk in the park or see an opera. If he studies in his suite he will have though but no extra room.7 A typical suite at Moscow has a small lavatory, a hall with closet space,' and two single rooms for sleeping ana studying. Each of these rooms is almost filled by a bed on one side and a desk at the end. Over the bed are shelves and over the desk are windows. Down the hal is a small cooking and ironing room. In each corridor the cooking part contains a hot- plate, a small refrigerator and a sink. Students use them for snacks, or, if they're in a hurry, for light meals:.. QUIET IS KEPT in the rooms not by an advisor graduate- student R.A. but by an older non- student man called a corridor monitor. Students didn't seem to feel very close to him, but they didn't seem much afraid of him ei- ther, said Anderson, who visited the university. The dorms are coed: boys' rooms and girls' rooms are scattered atI random. This seems normal to them. "Why aren't your dorms coed?" one student asked Ander- son. Then the student grinned, and, needed no answer, Tuition is free, and a dorm room costs a dollar a month. Eighty per, cent of the approximately 24,000 students in Moscow University get, a stipend from the government. Stipends run from $23 to $50, de- pending roughly on one's grades. Three meals a day cost about a dollar in the student cafeteria. A student's life is inexpensive;, he also receives many benefits aft- er graduation. It is rare for a stu- dent to be drafted. Instead, he works where the government as- signs him for three= years. After that he can usually work where he wants, unless the government re- assigns him to a specific place. He starts out with a good job-pos- sibly head of a department or a' factory-with a salary far above the average worker's that increases as he moves up. PHYSICS IS the best-paying field of concentration. Students rush to get into it because the number of physics majors each year is set by the government. The same thing happens in other majors, but to a lesser extent. Competition to enter the universities is stiff, Anderson says, and grades are the main cri- terion for entrance. Russia has no notion of a gen- eral education like ours, he adds. Student specialize heavily in their subjects two years before going to the university, and they continue to be heavily specialized while there. Students are encouraged to go to concerts, ballets and plays, Anderson says, but almost the only thing they study outside their specialty is history, economics and similar subjects from the Commu- nist point of vie- Educationis expensive, and the, government doesn't want to waste its money. Through Komsomol - the Communist youth league it exerts' pressure on students to get physical exercise and, more im- portant, good grades. Komsomol has a colnmittee in each univer- sity to remind poor students that they need good marks. STUDENTS SEEM to be under great pressure to join Komso- mol, Anderson says. One girl he met, -for example, said she was under pressure to join it so as to get her stipend. She' said she joined, even though she had to falsely swear she was a confirmed atheist. There is "real evidence," he. says, that stipends are much hard- er for non-members to get, and one is practically an outcast if he doesn't join. Ninety or 95 per cent of the students at Moscow belong. Students work hard at the uni- versity, Anderson says,' but most of them don't extremely overwork themselves. They are in class six hours a day for six days a week, and they study three or three and a half hours a night during the week. They study a little on Saturday, but Saturday nights are generally nights off. Students see movies, ballets, or a Russian version of Cinerama, or go for a walk. Every Saturday night, in the larger uni- versities, one of the faculties-for example French, chemistry or medicine--puts on a party for its students. Typically there is a stu- dent band. The most popular dance songs are American ones, especially those of Benny Good- man, Glenn Miller and jazz art- ists of the 44's. The administration, limits them to every third song, though, and frowns on rock 'n roll. If the dance ends at midnight, students often take their dates to their apartments for a while. They may listen to music on records or a tape recorder, which they use mostly for recreation if they can afford to have one. At one o'clock the monitor comes around and they take their dates home. Then to bed, to sleep late the next day. On Siary Sketch of a Motorcycle Trip Down the Inter-American Highway By BARTON HUTHWAITE the Road South UEVOLAREDO MEXICO - (June 23, 1062 mi.) We crossed the border here today and had our first glimpse of Mexico. Border towns have a°reputation for bawdiness,. . . Nuevo Laredo is no exception. On the northern bank of the Rio Grande we found Laredo, U.S.A. resting place of the dying young cowboy. On the southern bank lies its.sister city Nuevo La- redo ... the reason why the dying young cowboy went south. Mac described the squalor hidden be- hind Nuevo Laredo's main street of tourist attractions as "the pig- sty of the world." Bob disagreed suite now ir town. Alberto, proud of the fact he can speak English, is showing us'his cameras, radios, expensive uniforms and Swedish rifle .. . he also had an American sports car but he was asked to sell itas his commanding officer only had a convertible. He ad- mitted ie likes nice things . . . buys all his clothes in Texas. He gave up a career in engineering for a motorcycle, boots and a dress uniform . . . it doesn't look like he regrets it. ACAPULCO, MEXICO - (June 27, 2630 mi.) The rainy season is in full swing here now. Tourist door), twenty or more assorted people had joined in . .. you would never find that in Miami. MEXICO CITY, MEXICO -- (July 3, 2910 mi.) We never thought it was possible ; . . but Wil did it. After being injured in Hope, Arkansas, he rode the long hot stretch to Mexico City by himself . . . despite his still-mend- ing injuries. Bob Mancell decided to tour Mexico instead of going on to Central America. But Dick Wiley, a student from Antioch College, took Bob's place . . . Wiley can- celled his plans- for a tour of the Yucatan peninsula and added his motorcycle-to our group. T]TJXLA,.MEXICO -= (July 10, 3689 mi.) We were invited by a farmer to dinner last night. The language barrier was quite a problem , . . a mixture of Spanish and Indian dialect . . . but we managed to get along. He showed us into his adobe thatched roof home of three rooms. A dim oil lamp provided the only light in the main room . the glow from a charcoal fire the only light in the kitchen. The* meal was simple . . . rice, beans, tortillas and an added delicacy of steak. Ingenuity isn't lacking among Mexicans. A used truck tire can be converted into twenty pairs of sandals by simply cutting it into foot-long strips and adding leath- er thongs . .. a six-foot square of plastic can easily be transformed into one of the best ponchos for the summer rains. About the onlysthing the Mexi- can farmer is forced to buy is his trusty machete . . . it costs him approximately 25 pesos or two American dollars and will last a lifetime. It cuts the thatch for his roof, kills his chickens, and slaps his cow when he plows. Poverty is predominant outside the cities ... but friendliness isn't lacking. We thanked the farmer for the meal but he rejected any payment. I think he was a bit proud to have three Americans for Church N mountains here Michigan. It'll minutes then isn't like tha pour for tw suddenly be at ve co The Komsomol (Communit Youth League) pressures the students to get both good grades and physi- cal exercise. It often forms physical culture clubs which compete with each other in sports like gymnastics, boxing, volleyball and basketball. presented by The University Musical Society CHORAL UNION SERIES GLENN GOULD, Pianist ....x... . ... ........ ...Monday, October12 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . .... . ... ...Saturday, October 24 Charles Munch, Conductor IRMGARD SEEFRIED, Soprano..................Thursday, October 29 RICHARD TUCKER, Tenor .:.;............. . .....Friday, November 6 ' PAMPLONA CHOIR FROM SPAIN .........(2:30) Sunday, November 15 Luis Morondo, Conductor JAN SMETERLIN, Pianist ...................Tuesday, November 24 MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA .........Monday, February 8 Antal Dorati, Conductor BACH ARIA GROUP . .................. .... ..Tuesday, February 16 William H. Scheide, Director GIULIETTA SIMIONATO, Mezzo-soprano ...... (2:30) Sunday, March 13 CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA .......... ....Monday, April 4 Fritz Reiner, Conductor SEASON TICKETS: $18.00'$15:00-$12.00--i0.00 SINGLE CONCERTS: $3.50 -$3.00 - $2.50=-$2.00-$1.50 EXTRACCONCERT SERIES BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ......... (2:30) Sunday, October 25 Charles Munch, Conductor DAVID OISTRAKH, Violinift .................. Tuesday, December 8 WITOLD MALCUZYNSKI, Pianist........ ... . .Friday, January 15 PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ........... .Monday, February 29 William Steinberg, Conductorl LAMOUREUX ORCHESTRA (from Paris) .. ....... : .Thursday, March 24 Igor Markevitch, Conductor SEASON TICKETS: $9.00 - $7.50 - $6.00- $5.00 SINGLE CONCERTS: $3.50 -$3.00-$2.50 -$2.00 -$1.50 at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, Burton Tower Transportation in the Small Villages clear. We saw only two cars on road today. One was a truck c rying construction workers-to border in the north, the other v a heavily loaded Plymouth gC south. The driver, was a dens just graduated from a school the United States on his way see his family in Peru. He said has had enough of the Int American Highway and was he ing west toward the Guatema' port of San Jose ...plans to s his car the rest'of the way. We followed him up to 17 feet in the mountains and t lost him on the way down. Hi wayshin Central America ar like those of the United States white-washed rocks signal edge of a curve and a line of ro in the middle of the dirt r warns of no passing. Road si are few and far between if th are any. GUATEMALA CITY, GUA' MALA- (July 14, 7040 We renewed an acquaintance w a guitar player we had met Acapulco. Jose lives with Id Peter Dawson is contribut- ing editor on The Daily and a senior in the literary college. 1 I Berlin Work Camp (Continued from Preceding Page) This was the romantic side of life iri Berlin, but there were oth- er aspects. As we worked, or ate, or wrote letters in the eveningsa we would drift into conversation and so learn something. of the people we.represented. ONCE IBRAHIM spoke on the Arab-Israeli problem with quiet intensity: "I lost my house and my lands," he said, "The place my fathers had lived for cen- turies: they were given to the Jews and I had to leave. But I'll get back." "But, Ibrahim," some- one answered, "What about the people who live there now? It's their land now." "They can go. back where they came from," Ibe said. "They don't want to stay, anyway; they're leaving by the thousands now. It's my land, not theirs, and they can go back where they came from." Once Parvathi caused an up- roar by defending the system of arranged marriages in India. "In the West love ends in marriage," she said, "In. India, love begins with marriage." Later Devendra, another Indian, told us that that was old-fashioned, that arranged marriages were going out now. That started a heated, argument. Several times we went over to the East sector, twice to speak to the young Communists at Hum- bolt University. "We want peace, we want peace," they reiterated again and again, "but democracy must eventually succumb to Com- munism." Compared to the West sector East Berlin was a shambles: Tor stood the Hansa Quarter with its newly built apartments, on the other Unter' den Linden lay in ruins, the scattered bricks still ap- parently untouched. "YOU JUST haven't seen the right parts of East- Berlin," -the young Communists said. "And besides," they added, "the West had so much aid from the cap- italist countries. We had none of that aid and we had to build up our resources and our industry first." But on only one point did the East come out better than the West; the question of German re- unification. "We want to :talk to the West German government," they told us, "but those people will not come." In the West we were told that to talk to the East German government would be to recognize it as a separate govern- "ment which West Germany was not willing to do. This may be a fine ideal, but it certainly seems to me to be an impractical one. Most of what we did was spon- taneous. On a sudden impulse one rainy night we walked through the Brandenburger.Tor to the si- lent streets of East Berlin. The gate loomed high in the darkness and the ruins on the other side seemed a ghost town, mysterious and sinister. To Germans- that gate has a special meaning; it stands for "Union Now." We also think of it as a symbol. To us it means not only that night of quiet rain, or the divided island of- proud and friendly citizens. It means the work and the warmth of many cultures, many people. and more besides which I can only Poverty Predominant Outside the City guests .. by the time we had finished dinner a crowd of about fifty had gathered around our motorcycles and weresilently staring. H UEHUETENAGO, GUATE- MALA -- (July 12, 6840 mi.) We just crossed the gap in the Inter-American highway between the Mexican border and here which the American Automobile Club has labeled as "impassable." We were lucky ... only two days before, a mountain slide had closed the road to all traffic. But we managed to bypass it with our motorcycles and we only had to contend with about five washed out bridges. Rainy season is in full swing now . . . we have to stop every afternoon about three to wait out the worst of it. A rain in the grandfather in the center of city, drives a Corvette and gone to school in the Un' States. HissEnglish is almosti feet and he likes hamburgers French fries. He's proud of be "Americanized." He even asket to send him a Michigan lice plate for his car so he could ceive the police who are usu lenient with tourists. But at the same time he is pi of his country and will take pi to see that we have tasted all native drinks and seen the market place. His grandfather emplifies the higher class Guatemala's two-class soci Several farms in the south as as interests in various ban plantations assure his grand the same position. SAN SALVADOR, EL SAL DOR - (July 19, 7270 mi.) -. . I remained neutral. It's too' bad many tourists never see much more of Mexico. SALTILLO, MEXICO - (June 25, 1985 mi.) We came out of the mountains tonight only to be stopped by the Mexican equivalent of our national guard represented by Alberto. It seems he only want- ed to talk about motorcycles be- cause he rode one himself. But the conversation was interrupted every now and then. Alberto would go out to inspect the passing trucks piled high with everything. from used' tires to beer, shake right hands with the driver, transfer something to his left hand 'pants pocket and with a smile wave the trucks on. It seems he was supposed to check trucks for overloading. We're sitting here in his hotel Barton Huthwaite, Daily feature editor, went by mo- torcycle through Mexico and Central America this past summer, accompanied by Wil- bert Porter, Robert Mancell and Richard McElroy. Their goal was to reach South Amer- ica by motorcycle. traps have never appealed to me but Acapulco can't be com- pared to its American counterpart of Miami. The commercialism is still predominant here .. . but it's not the large-scale business prop- osition of the United States. If. you want to go deep-sea fishing, you nab a beach boy (if he doesn't nab *you first) and let him make the arrangements . . . he's sure "to know just the right boat at the right price. We had a real taste of Mexican music this -evening . . . quite dif- ferent from the night club va- riety. Mac began strumming on his guitar as we sat in an empty beach restaurant waiting for the rains to let up. Pretty soon a wait- er joined in . . . then another waiter with his guitar. A student from Guatemala already had my bongos .. only to be joined a few minutes later by an opera star from Chile . . . then a beach boy dropped by and began singing. In a matter of only a few minutes, two American guys struggling with a guitar and bongos had be- gun an impromptu Mexican folk sing. By the time it ended three hours later (we were taking busi- .... , .. f" _r