a special feature the sunday daily by mark dillen 4 Number 48 Night Editor: Sara Fitzgerald Sunday, October 3, 1971 In search of Soviet student'sF ; , : THERE WAS no reason to believe this day would be unlike any oth- er. Rising early, the young American began her regular routine: first a quick breakfast, then four hours of classes at the university, another ,meal, and an excursion perhaps. In the evening she would meet her friend Vanya, study, and go to bed. For five weeks she had been staying in Lenin- grad, and with only one week remain- ing of her stay, she could already hear her teachers reminding her class about upcoming tests. Already dressed, she paused to view the panorama visible from her third story window. Before her flowed the Neva in customary stillness, reflect- ing the light of the advanced mid- summer's sun. A few hundred yards away, across the river, she could make out the pastel, statue-laden outline of the Hermitage. Now a fam- "bus museum, it had once housed tsar Nicholas II, whose fall in October, 1917, marked the. start of a new era. On either side, however, the scene along the horizon gave little indi- cation of time's passage. The pre- revolutionary buildings still stood, made old only by the cars, trucks, b u s e s and streetcars that moved within their shadows. On the sidewalk below stood ano- ther pre-Revolutionary remna'nt in dark, baggy clothing, hunched over a broom made of twigs. Together, there are millions of these old wo- men, and their lives preserve a legacy of a war whose results here had been covered very i'ttle by time. Seeing them reminded the girl that twenty million Russians died in that holocaust from which the nation still had not fully recovered. But somehow she knew she could never fully un- derstand the war and the effects it had had on this culture. For there was everywhere in this cultre a mys- tery she had not been able to pierce. INDEED, THIS AMERICAN and most ofthe 150 Americans in her group, had been surprised by much of what they saw here, even though they were as well prepared as any American could be for their trip. They were students of the Russian language and Soviet culture, and so no great shock had accompanied their arrival in the Soviet Union. Rather, they found their impressions somewhere between the two poles of propaganda they had regularly been exposed to, They were neither in a land of equality and harmony, nor in one filled with fear. The standard of liv- ing here was lower than in the West, but considerably higher than just a few years ago. Yet it was not for these general impressions that these people had come in the first place. Instead, the aim of the 150 was to live the life of Soviet students, and to understand on a day to day basis all that had been misunderstood by their Western contemporaries for so long. But somehow this was not to happen. For the students had never really been allowed to live the life of nor- mal Soviet students, and thus, it was only in brief and often startling flashes that they received their in- sights into Soviet culture.. SOON THE GIRL joined the stream of her co-students walking across the bridge toward the stolovaya-the dining hall, where all had their meals. This morning's menu was one of her favorites: kasha (a porridge made from rice), tea, potatoes and a jelly- filled turnover. At breakfast the stu- dents discussed rumors that "sec- onds" were no longer being served due to thievery on the part of the stolovaya's director. "I was talking to this guy the oth- er day who waas telling me the three biggest problems in the Soviet Union are alcoholism, thievery, and laziness on the job," offered one student. "Who was the guy?" she countered. "Oh, just a black marketeer who wanted to buy my jeans." But the incongruity of the ex- change did not strike the trio as it conversed over breakfast. The stu- dents had simply been approached too often by Leningradites interested shbi-house of friendship. Unfortu- nately, Sputnik had forgotten that most of Leningrad's students were out of town for the summer, working on stroiki, or youth work projects, so when we arrived at the well-preserv- ed former palace, the "get acquaint- ed dance" turned into nothing more than lengthy addresses from local no- tables. "They were followed by student musicians, whisked on and off with- out a word of contact with the audi- ence. There were, howover, a few "real" students present and among them we found Shenye and Sergei. We then became acquainted as our hosts played old Aretha Franklin re- cords. "Shenye and Sergei live with two other students (all are involved in the physical sciences) in one of the The young men would try to demonstrate their worldliness with a show of elan, hopefully gaining access to western pop music records in the process. Their older counterparts realized American visitors provided their only chance to get something nice from America, and became almost beggars. Both groups, she thought, have opinions of America as far from the truth as those of their government. in "doing some bizness" over the Am- ericans' western clothing. Such is not to say that these con- cerns were the only topics discussed at breakfast that morning. There were homework assignments and gos- sip of a more mundane sort. And soon everyone's attention was immersed in a story about a birthday party, given an American by some Russian s t u- dents the night before. rgJHE AMERICAN, who had been the guest of honor, told his story: "We became acquainted with She- nye and Sergei almost in spite of ourselves. Sputnik, the Soviet youth travel agency, had arranged a meet- ing between us, and a group of So- viet students at the local Dom Dru- older dormitories at Leningrad State University. It's quite hard to deter- mine the oldest, since all date from before the Revolution and have var- ious histbries. They appear no differ- ent from the dozens of old, massive, thick-walled apartments scattered in that area of the city. "When we arrived there, we walked into a small dark vestibule at the end of which sat an old woman by a rack of keys and a rack for holding the inhabitant's passports. Every Soviet citizen must have a passport con- taining all the pertinent informa- tion about him. In this case, the rack served to hold students' passports while they were in their rooms. Only when a student left the building did his passport leave its place. "This surprised me. The closest I had come to such controls before was with the library cards issued to us for which our pictures were taken. Though I never had occasion to use the libraries for which the card was intended, I knew of one curious stu- dent who was refused when he at- tempted to use his card. "AFTER SOME HURRIED negotia- tions,,Shenye, leader of his local komsomol group, led the group of Russians and Americans upstairs, our arms full of breads, wines and vodka. "Slogans and pictures of Lenin de- corated the dank stairwells. The wooden bannisters were in need of re- pairing and, at the top, a lone light bulb guided our way down the corri- dor past what our noses told us must be the jon. Their room seemed aw- fully crowded. Two bunk beds side by-side in a corner, table, chairs, bookcases and a ceiling that seemed like it was twenty feet over our heads. "While we had been quick to criti- cize our dormitory for being, scarce in hot water and not having proper- ly equipped toilets, we suddenly real- ized it was considerably better than average at the second most prestig- ious university in the Soviet Union. "Securing glasses and the ever-pre- sent corkscrew, we warmed to the op- portunities of our repast. Each bot- tle became the vehicle for a suc- cession of toasts: to international friendship, to my health, and to peace. I wanted to know more about how Sergei, who was respected as a bril- liant student of mathematics, thought. In return I was trying to explain why I thought Soviets could never get an accurate view of Amer- ica with a controlled press - that things weren't quite as bad as the Soviet press depicted. Sergei was re- ceptive to the argument, and said he heard that Ramparts was run by Maoists, whom he severely criticized. "'Just one question,'" said Sergei, half in earnest. 'When will the re- volution be?' "'Next year,'" I said as seriously as I could. We all laughed. THE MONOLOGUE ended, and with breakfast complete, the group set out for class. The afternoon passed uneventfully for the American, adding to the ted- ium of the day's strict Soviet-style classes. She was bored, and it made her think of that morning's conversa- tion. It seemed to her there were really two types of 'Soviet youth. The first group, including people like Shenye and Sergei, was cultured and self-as- sured. The second, however, was not tourists from western nations for bubble gum, jeans, and button-down shirts. Five years behind the times, but desperately wanting to be cur- rent, they became slavish, is some- what apologetic, copiers of western fashion. In a way she found it quite un- pleasant to meet these refugees from Soviet culture. The young men would try to demonstrate their worldliness with a show of elan, hopefully gain- ing access to western pop music re- cords in the process. Their older counterparts realized American visit- ors provided their only chance to get something nice from America, and became almost beggars. Both groups, she thought, have opinions of Amer- ica as far from the truth as those of their government. SHE WAS NOW BACK in her room. Her train of thought was sud- denly interrupted by a call from out- side her door. It was another Ameri- can from her group, asking if she-had remembered her promise to go to the Alexander Nevsky graveyard today, accompanying the caller on the 20 minute bus ride to the graves of some of the most famous people in Russian literature and music. It was too late to refuse. Within the estimated time t h e y were outside the entrance of t h e graveyard and waiting with a large group of Ukranian tourists. When the group learned of the nationality of the two new arrivals, it crowded around them and stared while a dis- cussion ensued between the self-ap- pointed representatives of the groups and the Americans. One man, as it turned out, was a World War II veteran who emotion- ally voiced his hope for world peace. Explaining that much of his family was killed or injured during the war, he expresed the fervent hope that the United States might help the world avoid such catastrophies. How odd, she thought, that people being governed by the U.S.'s chief political opponent should express such an un- usually strong pro-American senti- ment. Perhaps it could be explained sim- ply as an adverse reaction to the Soviet Union's unremitting propa- ganda campaign against the U. S. government. This would be particu- larly true in cities frequently by tour- ists -- like Leningrad and Moscow - where the contradiction between de- grading Soviet propaganda and the wealthy appearance of Western tour- ists lends little credence to the gov- ernment's view. But for these rural people, living in areas with few contacts with the West, the explanation was probably much simpler. For their ideas h a v e simply failed to keep up with t h e times, and in their anachron- istic view, America is still the mythi- cal land of riches that spurred Euro- pean immigration at the turn of the century. BY THIS TIME, dusk was approach- ing, and 'the girl remembered that soon she would meet Vanya and they would go shopping. Several stores near the outskirts of town would be their destination, but it would be one they would never reach. Getting off the tramway at the ap- pointed stop, there would be a car ready to take Vanya into custody for questioning. Two days later, Vanya would come to see her at the dorm, saying he couldn't see her any more and refusing to say what happened. I A - .1 0 .1 1*