FOUR 0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1952 . .........--- A NIGHT IN SCHEVENINGEN: Hague Resort Area Seen after Dark By BARNES CONNABLE Special To The Daily SCHEVENINGEN, Netherlands -We spent an evening at the Hague's resort area on the North Sea, a town so hard to pronounce that the Dutch underground used it as a password during the occu- - pation.f Dinner was at an Indonesian4 restaurant where the dark, broad- nosed waiters heaped gigantic " portions of unknown quantitiesu on the table, It was seasoned and strange, but after a few weeks in Europe nothing from a kitchen is surprising anymore.{ * * * AMERICAN FOOD must taste pretty flat to a European. When you're 'used to having your let- tuce wringing wet with olive oil, it would no doubt be a shock the first time you entered a New York restaurant. The Dutch we talked with who had visited America were quite fascinated with such things as the hamburger and the milk shake. But as a steady diet, they're sure it would cor- rupt their refined appetites. They look with scorn over here on a glass of milk with your meal. We tried to get some in most of the places we went and they either said they didn't have it or displayed surprised, and even con- temptuous, frowns. * * * WINE IS the assumed beverage. In every good restaurant you go, the man with the grapes embroid- ered on his coat will advise you on just what vintage goes with how well done your meat is. Some things you can enjoy with a degree of familiarity. Cheese, for instance, you know something about. And Dutch cheese doesn't send you for a gastronomic loop-It's just bet- ter. One experience you're not likely to forget is your first jigger of Dutch Gin. You either like it or you don't. You can't mix it with anything. It defies description. * * * s WE WANDERED into a couple of night clubs where Dutch jazz musicians do their best to imitate American 'cats. The result is often amusing. Amercan songs are the rage over here. They become hits generally between six months and a year after they've started sliding toward the cellar in the States. Right now, "Cold, Cold Heart," "A Kiss to Build A Dream On" and "Go'in Fishin'" are among the favorites. And the Dutch sing the English lyrics, although at the Amsterdam Student Festival we were told many of the boys didn't know what the words actually meant. We talked with a promising pi- anist who was up on all the latest 88 trends of his contemporaries across the sea. The musicians we Annual Meteor Shower Will Arrive Soon With many parts of the nation already seeing strange objects in the skies perhaps it's wise to re- port now that August will bring with it the annual shower of me- teors. Prof. Hazel M. Idosh of the as- tronomy department reports that the Perseid shower of meteors will reach its peak around the evenings of August 10 or 11. "The flashes of light from these shooting stars may be seen in any direction of the sky during the peak period," Prof. Losh pointed out. "But when you trace back their paths, the meteors seem to follow trails that intersect in the north-eastern part of the sky where the constellation Perseus rises about 10 pm. This fact has acounted for the name of this an- nual display," she said. The shower of meteors takes place each year when the earth encounters the swarm of shooting stars as each is making its year- long swing around the sun. Enter- ing the earth's atmosphere at a high rate of speed, the bits of iron and stone that make up a meteor are slowed up and the resulting friction sets them burning at such a high temperature that a brill- iant flash is produced in the sky. Most of these meteors burn themselves out when they enter the earth's atmosphere, although a few frequently fall to the ground. Stevenson Group GROCERIES-Dutch farmers carry their cheese to the market. 4 * * * heard here were pretty good and the influence of changing Ameri- can styles is evident in every note they play. S, * * * THE MOST fascinating guy to watch in the dining rooms and the niteries, however, is the wait- er. He carries out his profession with all the dignity and pomp of of a grenadier guard. The servant class concept was one of our chief concerns as we began traveling through Europe, but good sources tell us the waiter is solidly emplanted in the middle class. He is a social superior to the laborer and the pride of his life is when his son grows up to hold down the same honored position. * * * WE MADE several other ven- tures into Dutch darkness. One was just a walk, the most signi- ficant development being the dis- covery that Holland is a nation of starers: Another was the Student Fes- tival at Amsterdam which made American magazines when they lined up 17 of the noisy "Piere- menten," the big barrel organs that haunt the streets of. the city, and had a contest. On the more esthetic side, there was the Holland festival at the Hague and Scheveningen run by the Ministry of Education which doesn't seem to celebrate anything in particular except the arrival of the American dollar. Amsterdam's w o r 1 d-famed Concertgebouw Orchestra was there. So was the Rotterdam Philharmonic, the Royal Dutch Military Band, the Netherlands Opera, the Belgian National Orchestra and the New York City Ballet. We were lucky enough to grab seats for the large national dance group of Yugoslavia which gave a moonlight performance at the edge of a forest across a stream infested with swans. BUT AS the tourist is lost in the color provided for him, there is the danger of losing sight of Dutch life as it really is. We'll have to admit we can remember Survey Finds Studies, Jobs Don't Mix Well Earning one's way through col- lege is not a "bed of roses"; in- stead, a student's scholastic per- formance is usually penalized. This is the observation of Wil- liam J. Brownrigg, director of test ing at Michigan State Normal Col- lege, who yesterday announced the results of his case study involving 110 MSNC students with full-time jobs. The students were engaged in a full-time occupation and also persuing a standard semes- ter's course at the college. Forty-one of these students failed to attain a "C" average. An- other 30 students had an average of slightly better than "C," while the remaining 39 students earned grades averaging midway between "C" and a "B." Brownrigg concluded that only one out of every 10 students with full-time jobs may expect to earn an average of "B" or slightly high- er. Two out of every 10 such stu- dents will probably attain grades between "C" and "B," while three in 10 may expect to earn barely a "C" average, he said. I * * * entering only one Dutch home during our stay in Holland. There are 2,500,000 families in Holland and they're buying their cigarettes at 75 cents a pack, or twice as much -for to- bacco from the states, while the American is carting around his twenty cent packs in a suit- case. And *while you're eating fantas- tically heavy meals in commercial dining rooms, the Dutchman' isn't exactly gouging. FOR BREAKFAST, for instance, he usually has only tea and bread. For lunch ("coffee-drinking, lit- erally translated) there is some more bread, maybe a little meat like sausage anti the coffee. There isn't too much meat at dinner either and there's no bread. But, as this is the big meal of the day, there are big portions of po- tatoes and vegetables. Raw herring, another contro- versial item to the foreign stom- ach, is on every menu you pick up. But despite all the fishing off the Netherlands, Holland could not be called a fish-eating nation. So you have to stack the home- made clothes, the five meatless days and the one hot meal with your memories of the Spanish step-gables and the Tenth cen- tury town hall in Leiden. After you've done that, you can leave Holland with a clear conscience, but to really know the land you realize someday you'll have to re- turn. Job Outlook For August Grads Good August graduates in the fields of etementary education, library science, business administration, commercial and engineering won't have to worry about getting a job, according to T. Luther Purdom, head of the Bureau of Appoint- ments. In fact, demands in these fields are higher than at the end of the spring semester when job oppor- tunities reached a peak at the Bu- reau, he said. ELEMENTARY teachers a r e needed so badly that Purdom re- ceived a call for 60 teachers from one school system. The only graduates who will have any trouble at all in se- curing a position, Purdom said, are those looking for a particu- lar location or salary, or who are seeking specialized jobs that just aren't available now. The call for engineers by com- panies throughout the country has been so great that many colleges are no longer advising interview- ers to visit their campuses, he continued. A large number of calls have also been received for accounting, physics and chemistry majors, it was reported. Concert Set For Tonight "Variations for Carillon on a Chime Tune" by Jan Sibelius, the first carillon composition to be given international recognition alongside works for other instru- ments, will be played by Prof. Per- cival Price as part of his concert, to be presented at 7:15 p.m. to- day. The chime tune was composed to be played on seven bells in a church in Berghall, a modern sub- urb of Helsinki. The variations, for large carillon, were selected by the Canadian Arts Council for dis- play this year at the Olympics Music Exhibition. This is the first time a carillon composition has re- ceived such recognition. Prof. Price will also play Bach's tocatta "Glockenspiel" and seven sacred melodies: W. B. Bradbury's "He Leadeth Me"; a Polish chant, "Nie opuszczaj mas (Lord, Have Mercy Upon Us)"; the spiritual "All God's Chillun Got Wings"; an American folk hymn, "Land of Rest"; and H. Smart's "Lead On, 0 King Eternal (Lancashire.)" PIer JULR NEWS I N 0 R D E R A C A I N--west German border guards wear steel helmets for first time since end of World War II, at Bonn after the Republic was given virtual sovereignty by Allies, K E E P I N C I N F 0 R M-Sheila Lerwill, who has cleared Eive feet, seven and one-half inches in competition, has one foot tucked behind her as she high jumps in a London meet. x E Y E AlI D--Awnings of light stainless steel, devised by a Miami, Fla., aircraft engineer to keep rain off eyeglasses, are worn by Don L. Davis, in a Los Angeles oddity content. vacation time t -A U J y 1Hi P .-r p'0 5 -, p,- REMOVAL C H U R C H ( I N A D A Y -- Clock shows completion time, just over five hours after 180 workers, donating ther labor. began to build this church in a suburb of Santa Rosa. Calif. I SAVE '/2 and more on your vocation clothes and dozens of wearobles for seasons to come. T R U M A N S E R V I C E- Margaret Truman serves fruit juice to Cpl. Irving Rosenberg, left, of New York, and Sgt. Harold Henly, of Cleveland, Tenn., at White House lawn party given by the President for disabled veterans from Walter Reed Hospital. U N D E R 'M O T H E R' S E Y E-Babyhippotakes swim- ming lesson under watchful eye of mama at Frankfurt Zoo in Germany. Youngster, 120 pounds, is mouthful to guide in water. Beautiful 100% wool suits and coats, originally were 49.95 to 69.95 now 25.00 to 39.95. Dresses of every kind, ma- terial, color and size from 9-24 12 from 5.00 to 14.98. Originally were to 35.00. Skirts-cottons, rayons and wools ... 2.98, 3.98, 5.98. Handbags-straws at 98c and 1.98, leathers and plas- tics 2.98 to 5.00, originally to 10.95. I Marvelous ly 4.00 to blouses original- 10.95, now 1.98 to 5.00. Slips - beautiful nylons, lace trimmed 3.98 & 5.00, originally to 8.95. Ravons ... 1.98 & 2.98. II Costume jewelry kinds 49c, 98c to of all 5.00. V 0 E MINE= ,v.: