______________THE MICHIGAN DAILY T T, rr. , , U - PROF. PREUSSNER ;I I A fn '1 American Students Learn More Than Europeans' _ By JOAN KAATZ "American students learn more than European students, probably because they are obliged to," Prof. Eberhard Preussner, administra- tive director of the Mozarteum, Salzburg, Austria, observed in an interview .'sterday. Prof. Preussner will speak on "Three Periods of 'New Music'- 1300, 1600, 1900" at 4:15 p.m. to- day in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Prof. Preussner visited the Uni- versity during the spring semester of 1952 as a Pullbright scholar and at that time made many compari- sons between American and Euro- pean students. Americans Study More He stated that he felt American students are obliged to learn more because they must attend kectures in order to obtain the necessary credits. In contrast, however, Eu- ropean students receive no credits and have much more free time for thought and musical inspiration. Commenting on the Mozarteum, Prof. Preussner compared the school to the University depart- ment of music and the Oberlin College conservatory of music "Musical training in Europe be- gins much earlier than in Amer- ica," Prof. Preussner said. At the Mozarteum students often begin at six years old. They enter the Con- servatory when they are 18 years old. During these two training stages, the students are subjected to a rather regimented education including practice in rhythm and choir singing. "However, once the ,students is Student Jobs Rise in'U' Of f campus job placements, de- clined this fall while student em- ployment within the University rose, the personnel office reported recently. In September part-time em- ployment for students working their way through school rose, with 557 job placements compared to 424 during' the same month last year. All of this increase came from within the University, however, with placements jumping from 363 last year to 458 this Septem- ber. Off-campus employment, which included everything from model- ing shoes to dispatching trucks, fell from 1.14 placements to 99. "Permanent" part-time employ- ment, the type students prefer, caused most of this drop. "It doesn't take much unem- ployment in industry Ito put pres- sure on students in such jobs as gasoline station attendants," Al- fred B. Ueker, of the personnel of- fice, explained. "Many students who want steady,,'part-time work have had to settle for take-on jobs, like raking leaves or washing windows." Off-campus job placements by the personnel office have fallen from 2,360 in 1954-55 to 969 dur- ing the last school year. DIAL NO 2-3136 James A. Michener's romantic story of what happened when the U. S. Marines came to New Zealand. 0 "A man's really got to study to make the grade in engineering, whether it's A.E., E.E., M.E., or C.E. But when I was at Michigan U., we found time to sit ,around and just talk, at some place like the Pretzel Bell. It wad a good time for thinking about our future. We were all pretty hot on being right, no mis- takes, and we knew what we wanted out of life. I'm sure it's the same way with you." N'a4e4'to oi0% th 44jot4. "We knew we wanted to get off on the right foot with an outfit where we'd have a chance, right off, to take responsibility on important projects. That's why we worked hard at finding out just what various companies had to offer us. We wanted to know about salary, sure. But we also wanted to know about the work we'd be'doing about our chances for getting ahead in engineering and manage-' ment, about the kind of people we'd'be working for .. and with. And we found that the best place to get the answers was at campus interviews sponsored by the companies looking for engineers." r Tf1'A 'l4U y fi ; N 3 DIAL NO 8 -6416 'As a result of my interviews, I decided to go with Emerson Electric. They' offered me a realistic salary, the knowledge that Emerson had important projects to work on, and I could see for myself that there'd be plenty of opportunity to move up fast in a company where engineers and management are young and aggressive, with young, hard-fisted plans for the future." Week Nights at 7 and 9 WINNER --VENICE FILM FESTIVAL! "Right now, we're working on some pretty hot projects here, stuff like the B-5$ Hustler bomber fire control system and F-101 Voodoo fighter structure. We're working on missiles, too. But behind this imhportant defense work, Emerson Electric is sound in commercial manufacturing, with a reputation in the electrical field that stretches back to 1890. And that literally means money in the bank." "I think Emerson is a darned good career outfit. But I know every man's got I ~~14 to work out his own future. That's why all I'm really urging you todo is give yourself every break by getting all the answers before you decide. Sign up to 11\./I-rr'1 1 s-,11 t1J1