THE MICHIGAN DAILY iIFID Soviets Study Harder Than Americans FOR RENT OOM large apartment to share with re person. One block from campus. 0 a month. Call after 5 P.M., NO 7393. 024 gMS FOR RENT for girls. % block ro.campus. 1218: Washtenaw. NO 7942 for arrangements. 012 MPUS, clean, 4 room furnished partment, $70. NO 3-4322. U EGE 3 bedroom house. Modern ranch vpe with attached .garage. Large eled living room with fireplace idview. Stove, refrigerator, washer, ryer, ironer and disposal. 1lj blocks om elementary school. Conveniently ear North Campus and hospitals. wuer will care for yard and pay ater. ar lease or longer, $175 per lofth. NO 3-8677. 020 EDROOM furnished apt. for 4 girls rt 4boys. Includes silver and dishes. astefully decorated by interior dec- ator. Convenient Liberty St. loa- ont. $160 per month, including heat id water. Phone NO 35098 evenings. C19 LRTMENTS FOR RENT. "Furnished unfurnished," on and off campus cation, two bedroom, abundant loset space, tiled bathroom and tlwer, large living room, air-con- tioned if desired, birch kitchen, oaets and counters, Westinghouse ectric range and refrigerator, wash- 'a and driers. Tel. NO 2-7787. On1 renings and 'Sundays after 6, NO -6714 or.NO 5-5515. 017 "MS FOR MEN: Quiet. Campus area. nens furnished. Low rent. NO 3-4747. 015 GE ROOM, private bath, linens, ear campus and hospital. NO 5-5605. 013 CAMPUS: A nice two room, fur- Ihed, all - utilities, private bath, Iditional services. $80; with garage, 350. NO 8-7234. C2 1011 gE. UNIVERSITY. student rooms. oryimen at summer rates. singles and uble. Phone after 5 P.M. NO 8-8681. 04 1 BLOCK fromcampus, modern apts. 40So.'FForest. NO 2-1443. Cl LNISHED: Campus apts., I or 2 irms. Boys, girls, families. Single Odd,, Summer rates and fall rates. 4 S Division' Also caretaker apt. Cli *L COMFORT-Evrything you want !an Ann Atbor apaartment. 'ULLY AIR-CONDITIONED ROOMS P: * * * HI FI * * * Modern Kitchen and .Bath * **a Washing Machine *** Backyard and carport. IURRY - Call NO 2-3036 after 5 This is the way to live. C' FOR SALE' RENT OR SALE: Zimmer house ailer,.over two hundred square. feet r floor ,space, Servel ref rig, gas ove, gas heater and bathroom fa- lities. Needs handy-man to put into -1 condition. Only $450. Will' ar- nge terms. Call GE 8-8391. B7 $s8 SETS: 2 hand-carved Austrian lgurines; One English ivory. One erman plastic (figurines)..Call after HUnter 24056.;'eS GE COLLECTION of classical mu- c: piano, opera scores and organ. 'ide selection,,of Bach and Mozart. so Conn flute, $50. Call after 7, unter 2-4056. B5 USED CARS '57 VOLVO $1.545 Mich. European Car Corp. berty at Ashley NO 5-5800 N14 . STUDEBAKER, 6 cylinder with erdrive. $200. See between 5-6 P.M. 510 Lawrence, apt. 6. N15 OLDS conv., all power, white walls, other seats, new top, sharp. $1,395. 0 2-1443. N5 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES ~IDAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .80 2.00 2.96 3 .96 2.40 3.55 4 1.12 2.80 4.14 Figure 5 overage words to a ine. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT Sept. 1st, 2 or 3, bedroom house with fenced yard, by Doctor while doing graduate work. Will sign 1 or 2 year lease. L MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Complete line of HiFi components including kits; complete service on radio, phonographs and HiFi equip- ments. H I F STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east at Campus Theatre Phone NO 8-7942- X2 LEARN TO PLAY Hammond Spinet or- gan: $15.per month, includes lesson in our studio. Rent a Spinet piano of your, own choice-$10 per month. GRINNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 'X PERSONAL WANT TO rent, swap or exchange 9 room house in Flint, three blocks from U: of M. campus for comparable accommodations in Ann Arbor. Call NO 8-8712. F13 LESSONS in singing and speaking, Carol F. Westerman, NO 8-6584. F9 BUSINESS SERVICES REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save' your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade. NO 2-4647. J5 PRECISIONl POJRTABLE BUSINESS PERSONAL MERRY ELLEN SCHOOL at 1706 Pauline Blvd., Ann Arbor, invites you to en- roll your emotionally disturbed, slow- learning, or retarded child. Visit school while still in session. Closing July 1st. Telephone NO 3-3879. FF1 CAMPUS: 23 apartments, 2 houses, modern, profitable. NO 2-1443. FF2 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM and/or Board, excellent meals at Tappan International House. Call Mrs. Griffee at NO 5-5703. El BOARDERS WANTED: Good food at reasonable prices. Short walk from campus. Call Hse. Mgr. at NO 2-8312. E2 CAR SERVICt, ACCESSORIES NEW ATLAS TIRES "Gripsafe" in sets of 4; 4--670x15, $58.75; 750x14, $74.95; (plus recap. able tires and tax). Other sizes comparably low. Tune-ups. Brake service. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Cor. Main & Catherine NO 8-7717 S3 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service-mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1220 8. University at Forest NO 8-9168 82 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 81 NEW CARS English . SLine * A Ford Product (Continued from Page 1) quite remember the exact per-£ centage. It's about 18 or 19 per1 cent." Without a moment's hesitation,t one of the Russians spoke up: "It's 21.3, Professor James," het said.I Despite all of this, however, it was startling to me to realiZe how X completely, even with an aston- ishing amount of statistical infor- mation, these students missed an understanding of what the sys- tems were all about and how they1 actually functioned. I had the1 same feeling sitting in the Ameri- can literature class and reflecting upon how completely one-sided was their view of American life,r but I will have more to say aboutt that in the final article of this series.c Asks Re-readingr An incident which occurred during one of my meetings with an English language class at Mos- cow University also may serve to1 demonstrate something of theC foreign language competency ofE Soviet students. A small group oft students was having a little diffi-t culty with the pronunciation of certain English phrases and It stopped to read a passage for them. After I had gone throughE the lesson for the first time, one of the girls said to me: "Sir, you read that a little more slowly than you should. Would you mind reading it just a little faster?" The question concerning how well prepared the Soviet student is upon entering college is a diffi- cult one to answer. Our experi- ence naturally was limited and unquestionably we met mostly the superior students at the universi- ties and institutes we visited. t Better PreparedC Even making. allowances forr these limitations, however, itE seems clear that the average So-r viet student entering a universityf is better prepared, at least in cer-I tain fields. Chief of these, of while at the university, a schedule to a minimum. With care, there- course, are the sciences and for- which I believe few American stu- fore, even the lowest stipend pro- eign languages, where the prepa- dents match. vides for most of the costs of col- ration has been much more in- Furthermore, my colleagues and tensive than in the United States. I were impressed with the serious- lege, including room and board. It also cannot be denied that ness and industry which we found In conclusion, it seems to me the intense corpetition to get into among Soviet students at the uni- that the Soviet government has universities and other institutions versity levels. In the USSR, higher introduced into its higher edu- of higher education plays an im- education is serious business and cation program one of the strong- portant part. In the Soviet Union, the system of awards and incen- est incentive systems I have found we were told, there are about ten tives is designed to encourage the anywhere in the world. The pres- applications for every place in a maximum effort possible. sures upon the young men and university with the result that Stipends Helpyoung women to excel and to ex- niv thy exce tional students ceed, the rewards that come if only te e p There is no doubt in my mind they do, and the penalties if they have an opportunity to be se- but that the system, of stipends do not, are far greater than any- lectedr plays an important role in en- thing in our own so-called com- Demand More couraging all-out educational ef- petitive system There also is considerable evi- fort from the Soviet college stu- At a moment when we have dence, based upon reports from a dent. More than 80 per cent of all tended to relax in our own coun- number of educational delegations students in universities receive tryto talk more and more about which have studied the Soviet stipends from the government;psy, fonkoe stuena secondary school system. in some and these are directly contingent pushing off onto the student a depth, to suggest that Soviet ele- upon satisfactory academic prog- greater and greater share of the mentary and ten-year schools de- ress, cost of education, our chief chal- mand more in the way of home- The stipends vary but, using lenger for world leadership it mar, nd itmr tityo ii o U moving strongly in the opposite work, insist more strictly on rigid oscow University as an example, direction. intellectual discipline (work must they run between 300 rubles per be done promptly, neatly, and month ($75 at official rate of ex- correctly), . and encourage more change) for the first three years, effective teaching by smaller to 450 rubles per month ($112) for ENDING classes and a lighter teaching load the fourth and fifth years. Even WEDNESDAY 4 than in this country . . ; Soviet more important, however, a 25 per, students also go to school six days cent bonus is added for the stu- a week instead of five, although dent with straight A grades and this does not seem to have length- spca ,nae stped ar aaJil- ened materially the total number able ranging up to 800 rubles of hours of instruction per week. ($200) per month. Turning to the university stu- No Tuition dent, I believe the question of Sovietunoveriti' whether he works harder than the fees ort universities charge no fs rtuition and room charges J American college student can be in dormitories or hostels are kept T H UNDERING answered with a quite definite______________ "yes." Again, however, it must be realized that we are dealing with generalizations to which there are exceptionsWorks Harder The normal course of study inGLEQUE a Soviet university requires som e- whe 0.-2 twee o da3 hru s o where between 30 and 34 hours of classroom work per week, spread over six days. In addition to this, Subscribe to most students spend about an equal number of hours in prepa- T ration and outside study. In oth-'A R er words, the Soviet student- hiAUDDREY works roughly 60 hours a week M ichigan Daily n "THE NU S*14 models to choose A Prices start $1474 from TYPEWRITERS j* Up to 35 miles per gallon DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Beautiful styling . , GERMAN OLYMPIA SWISS HERMES ITALIAN OLIVETTI SMITH-CORONA and the Smith-Corona Electric Portable ONE YEAR GUARANTEE MORRILLS * Easy Parking and Driving t Good Trade-in'Allowance F ITZGERALD, INC. LINCOLN-MERCURY EDSEL ENGLISH FORD 3345 Washtenaw Phone NO 3-4197 Vi BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S SKIP-dent short-sleeve sport shirts. $1.39, 2 for $2.50. Wash 'n Wear, sanforized, asso'ted colors. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W1 314 South State NO 3-2481 J10 HOME LATE? CUPBOARDS BARE? You can shop at Ralph's 'till 12' midnight for all grocery supplies. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-3175 "Just two doors from the Blue Front" J9 TYPING, all kinds done professionally, reasonable rates, will call for and deliver. NO 5-6713. J14 (Continued from Page 2) Mr. Wjociech Morawiecki,l Dean of the Consular Div. of the Higher School of Foreign Service, Warsaw, Poland, July 11-19. Placement Notices Personnel Requests: West Liberty state College, W. Lib- erty, Va., person with Master's degree to fill faculty vacancy in business ad- ministration. Handle such classes as Principles of Accounting, Intro. to Business, Business Law, B u s i n e s s Arith., Retailing. Sherwin-Williams Co., Cleveland, O., Immediate opening for a recent inex- perienced college graduate with an ac- counting or similar background In its General Insurance Dept. for an Auto-j mobile Insurance Supervisor. Formsprag Co., Warren, Mich., Proj- ect Engr. B.S. degree in Mech. Engrg., at least 4-5 yrs. exp. in engineering, approx. 25-35 yrs. of age, and interested in mechanical design and development. Thiokol. Chem. Corp., Denville, N. J. Openings for top level engineers ira the Engrg. Services Dept.: Structures Engr. (B.S. in Engrg., and advance degree in.engrg. or applied mechanics desirable, with 9 yrs. exp.) Sr. Engr. (B.S. and M.S. in Elec. Engrg. and a minimum of 5 yrs, exp.), Sr. Engr. (Minimum of 7 yrs, exp. in design of aircraft and/or missile hydraulic and pneumatic components). Further in- formation is on file at the Bureau. Children's Hospital of Michigan, De- troit, Mich.. Asst. Dietitian. T.W.A., Kansas City, Mo., Clinical Psychologist for its Medical Staff lo- cated in Kansas Ctiy. A Ph.D. in Psych. or Clinical Psych. is required. W. R. Grace & Co., Dewey and Almy Chemical Div. Current personnel needs are on file at the Bureau. Openings for: Engrs., Sales, Personnel Manager, Chemist and others. Company is.slo- cated in Cambridge, Mass. U. S. Civil Service Commission, Chi- cago, Ill. General Engrg., ,Office Serv- ices Supervisor, Supervisory Physical Therapist, Marine Engrg., Administra- tive Services Officer, General Supply Officer, General Supply Asst., and Op- erations Research Analyst, Clinical Psychologist, Management Analyst, Su- pervisory Procurement Agent, and Elec- tronics Engr. U. S. Civil Service Commission, U.S.A.F. Institute, Madison, Wis., an- nounces closing date for acceptance of applications for Educational Specialist as July 16, 1959. Michigan Civil Service Vacancy Re- port of current needs is now on file at the Bureau. Organization in P e t o s k e y, Mich. Salesmen in Mich. area. Man with B.A. in Engrg., Bus. Admin., or Liberal Arts. Ageff 23-30 considered, with younger men preferred. Veteran. Exp. is not necessary, if have sales aptitude. J. Walter Thompson Co., ; Detroit, Mich., Proofreader, by fall. Company is an advertising firm. Woman with B.A. in Liberal Arts, preferably with background on newspaper or yearbook in college. Firm in Ann Arbor, Mich., Technical Recruiter. About 50 per cent of time will be spent in travel. Man with B.A. Must have background in personnel work. For further information concerning any of the above positions, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin., Ext. 3371. On Tues., July 14, there will be a representative from the Detroit Public Schools at ' the Bureau of Appoint- ments. Candidates will be interviewed in all fields for the 1959-60 school year. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. '_ HELP WANTED HELP WANTED WANTED TWO MECHANICAL ENGINEERS for positions leading to shop management and sales management posts with Detroit company. This division of 500 employees needs M.E. graduates to strengthen existing organization and to support expanding market diversification program. Will start at $450.00 month as assistantto works manager as SHIRT SLEEVE LINE MEN This is not a training program. 'Plant produces rolled-formed, cold- formed, and stamped components for automotive, appliance and all other industries. Applicant must be in top 20 per cent of class, prefer- ably have 'a minor in humanities, engaged or married and have desire to work and ambition to grow with small metal forming industrial manu- facturer. Write to The Michigan Daily, Box 60. DIAL NO 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT ,: HENRY '""* SUSAN SFODA-"HSTRASE GREENOIODMARSHALL ...'i and imrodue CHRISTOPHERPU E Starting *cN R Wednesday "Land of Pharaohs" and "Helen of Troy" Read Daily Classifieds I THIS IS WHAT YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR! Our Annual SALE and all at prices so low that you'll e want several for now . a . and [iter. a. . and all at tremendous savings. ASS: ' ::.-,Fashionable sweater and dress combinations, :: .;l.: t".;gay party prints with sparkling rhinestones M scattered hforn neckline to hemi, casu~al dresss in new and distinctive rints . . laces . chiffons ... organzas .. drip'n' dry cottons ~ . and dacronus. Dresses for Tiny 7's to 15's For tall and average 104- 20 - Women's 38-44 . . . Shorter 121% to 261/ ..' < '" Original prices were $14.95 to $49.95 Now grouped from $7.00 to $25.00 We have TANDEMS FOR RENT Over the Weekend. I ,