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October 04, 1959 (vol. 6, iss. 2) • Page Image 11

…'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…

… 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…

…. 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…

October 04, 1959 (vol. 6, iss. 2) • Page Image 13

…... accounts for this extraordinary comfort. Vou'll want to see our new FLOATERS in a new selection of colors. They're greatI SAT I. $ Slipper-Free Where Your Foot Bend I Student Life in Munich Berlin that…

… the point of view of their alle- giance to the state of Israel. All the British (save for one or two "traitors" to their country) are priggish, interested only in oil,i double-dealing; all the Arabs pre…

…- sented (save for one who is killed by other Arabs early in the novel) are ignorant or fanatical or cruel. Despite the large cast of charac- ters and the relevant historical issues treated, Mr. Uris…

… Palestinian Arabs or the origin of the first kibbutz settlements or the story of the Nazi occupation of Den- mark during World War II. All of these accounts are admittedly shaped to focus on Jewish issues. but…

… lodging at the hostels and met students from Australia, England, France, Ger- many, Italy, Switzerland, America, South Africa, South America and France. IN EUROPE the student is be- loved by all and…

October 04, 1959 (vol. 70, iss. 12) • Page Image 4

…v f Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO…

students are receiving approaches is a reorientation by expedience. re. Some of the public-affairs programs of recent The first of these areas is of course reform of years have not been very well…

…-attended. This ucational technique. The quarter - system, cannot however be interpreted merely as a sign ided honors programs, changed major-minor that students are not interested in the subjects quirements and a…

… not care to see. AWO CURRENT projects, both supposedly de- signed to provide intellectual stimulation STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council's Reading tside the classroom, vary widely in approach and Discussion…

… segments of the nomy measure but because it makes clear to ,keruspparticipating students the quality of tht faculty, The "Attractions" *ere once known as the and thus the possibility of getting greater cture…

October 04, 1959 (vol. 6, iss. 2) • Page Image 12

…,000 miles of travel, the two lost one another and returned home separately. The student from Antioch Col- lege, Dick Wiley, decided he still wanted to see South America. He signed on a tuna boat at Punta…

… served it along with thin slices of neopolitan ice cream and little piles of cookies. As entertainment we offered a shoddy song-and- dance show: Ibrahim did an Arab dance, Anh played Chinese music on his…

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