. WAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDnAY. 12TANTTT&RV 1og1 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY a att.t lltiz, 14 Jt7. UAIii Z Iub7 ALMOST UNSOLVABLE': Boulding Cites China Across Campus PTP '65 PRODUCTION: D -"~I/kA IL I1 -k7&W By MARK KILLINGSWORTH Marxism, riationalism and Tai- wan make United States-Chinese relations a problem that is "al- most unsolvable" and that re- quires "extraordinary patience," Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the economics department told a ca-. pacity crowd in the Multipurpose Rm. of the UGLI Sunday. The lecture was the first in a Challenge series on "The Chal- lenge of Communist China." Calling the Eastern tradition of China and India and the Western tradition of Sumer, Greece and Rome the "two great strains of history which, until about 100 years ago, never really mixed," Boulding noted that their impacts on each other have differed. "We owe more to China than we realize," he said, maintaining that China's impact on the West in terms of the mandarin-scholar- civil servant ideal has been very influential. Impact of West "But the impact of the West on China has been almost totally destructive," he declaied. "In about 200 years China fell to per- haps the lowest level in the world." Then "the West hit China through Marxism-that's a little like getting it through Jehovah's Witnesses. The Peking Review is a little like the "Watchtower," with the same narrow frame of reference." Boulding explained that Marx- ism, with its stern, puritanical outlook, its prophet, Marx, its view of private property as sin, its vision of heaven as the Commun- ist state and even a transubstan- tiation in its Labor Theory of Value, is "the Judeo-Christian tradition at its worst, for Marx- ism is a loveless Christianity." And as a result of its contact with Marxism, Boulding declared, "the closest thing China reminds i rqnjwm I Two University faculty mem- nationalistic, particularly during bers contributed chapters to a the later 19th century. new book, "Contemporary Amer- China is especially nati cmalis'.ic! can Novelists," edited by Harry in an ideological sense, he said. T. Moore in the Crosscurrents However, answering a ds uestin Series published by the Southern about the Chinese takeover in Illinois University Press. Tibet, Boulding added that China's, John W. Aldridge, visiting pro- nationalism "isn't very expan- fessor of English, contributed "The sionist-it seeks primarily to ex- War Writers Ten Years Later,"I A ' for Mollusks" supported by a two year NSF grant of $15,000., 11 nd.ll s r By JUDY STONEHILL "An Evening's Frost," a new; The current exhibit in the cor- dramatic treatment of Robert ridor of the General Library dis- Frost the man by Prof. Donald plays engravings on copper by Hall of the English dept., will be Peter Lipman-Wulf illustrating produced by the Professional eleven of Shakespeare's sonnets. Theatre Program's New Play The artist not only created the Project for 1965, the PTP an- designs, but did the printing as nounced yesterday. well. The exhibit will remain on Prof. Robert Schnitzer, execu- display until the end of January. ror ofe PTP excud * * *ive director of the PTP descriued "An Evening's Frost" as a "dram- PROF. KENNETH BOULDING me of is Cromwell's Englanl- virtuous,sbut extremely disagree- able." Hatred for U.S. This puritanical fervor of the Communist Chinese, he concluded, has resulted in a hatred for the less-puritanical United States that is "understandable, but strictly pathological," and which has im- peded United States - Chinese communications severely. The second element, which has often mingled with Marxism, is Chinese nationalism, Boulding maintained. "Now is perhaps the first time that the concept of government has replaced the con- cept of the family, and the Chinese are going through it with a vengeance. It is an assertion of national identity after one hundred years of disaster," he said. The United States, he pointed' out, "has been a howling suc- cess," and even so, was intensely pand to its historical border." } He noted that China also is seeking friendly border states, as' has the Soviet Union. "We'd be alarmed if Mexico were in two, parts and a Communist armyl were fighting in one part," Bould-E ing added in a reference to Vietl Nam. "When imperialism is the worst word in your vocabulary, you dol not tend to be an imperialist," hel said. He referred to China'sI Chinese name "chung-quo" mean- ing "middle kingdom" or "center, of the earth" as indicating hera traditional mentality and lending, support to a view of an isolation-l China.- Crucial Element Touching on what he calledI "the inevitable question" of Tai- wan, Boulding called it the "cru- cial element" in U.S.-Chinese re- lations. The Chinese regard Tai- wan as a national problem; the U.S., since it has had an impor- tant part in its development and a stake in its future, feels it is an international problem, he said. "I favor a 'two-China' policy- in fact, I favor a twenty-China policy. The country is much too hard to run properly as a socialist state. Of course, it's hard to tell the Chinese this." "We used to think of Canada as 'our country,' and made several attempts to take it from the British," Boulding continued. "Now we're rather accustomed to a 'two-America' policy." Boulding admitted that he did not have "all the answers," but said that United States recogni- tion and a United Nations seat for China, along with "extra- ordinary patience," were imnpor- tant. Economic Future "Red China's economic future, unlike Taiwan's, is still veiy largely a question-mark. Red. China may be around for a long time, and we ought to recognize it and think in long-range terms," he said. However, Boulding noted that,, "it's very hard to communicate, because all our classical refer- ences are different. Marxism is a form of Westernization. But it's out-of-date and heretical-and it's harder to talk with heretic than an infidel." He added that, in his view, Japan would not play an impor- tant role in promoting communi- cation between China and the rest of the world. a wide-ranging essay on a num- ber of post-World War II Ameri- can novelists. Prof. Marvin Felheim composed "Eudora Welty and Carson Mc- Cullers," a treatment of two wom- en writers whose first works ap- peared in the 1940's. Two University psychologists have received National Science Foundation research grants total- ling $81,900. Prof. Daniel J. Weintraub will conduct research entitled "Deter- minants of Discriminability among Visual Patterns," and Prof. Char- les M. Butter will study "Neural Mechanisms of Perception." A University anthropologist and a zoologist are directing research projects with grants announced by the National Science Founda- tion. Prof. Volney H. Jones, curator of ethnology in the Museum of Anthropology, is in charge of an investigation titled "Regional Pat- terns in Pueblo Ethno-botany." The $19,700 NSF grant covers a two-year period. Prof. John B. Burch, curator of mollusks in the Museum of Zool- ogy, is directing research titled "Cell and Tissue Culture Methods 'U' Gets Grant For Education The Woodrow Wilson Founda- tion has given the University a $66,000 grant for support of'grad- education. In an announcement yesterday, the foundation said that three- fourths of the grant is for aid to graduate students in their second or subsequent years of study, but not necessarily for former Wood- row Wilson Fellows. The remain- der of the grant is unrestricted. Last year, 20 University stu- dents received Woodrow Wilson Fellowships. This ranks the Uni- versity second in the nation among state universities. The Uni- versity of California's four cam- puses ranked first with 46 fellows. A total of 159 University stu- dents have won the award since the fellowship program began in 1945. I. d TODAY, JAN.12 Eight Student Groups Planj Course Description Boolet ia rortrays rrost what she calls "a distinguisned quent contributor to the New Broadway cast." It includes Yorker, Paris Review and other -Jacqueline Brooks, star of the publications. r 1964 American Shakespeare Fes- "A Reef of Tiger Lilies," Hall's tival, newest book of poetry published -Staats Cotsworth, currently by Viking Press, was begun when ' narrating Sean O'Casey's" IKnock I Hall was in England lalt year at the Door" and "Pictures in the on a Guggenheim Fellowship. Hallway" While in England he served as a literary critic for the British -Donald Davis, who created the Broadcasting Company and began., lead in "Krapp's Last Tape" and another book, a biography of the starred in the New York com- sculptor Henry Moore. pany's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Robert Frost was the Unlver- Woolf and sity's first poet-in-residence in -Will Geer, now starring in the twenties. Hall now shares the the national tour of "110 In the same position. He has created the Shade." play as a tribute on the second "An Evening's Frost" the second anniversary of Frost's death. play in the PTP's New Play Series, Last season's New Play Project, is a theatre "first" for Hall. The "The Child Buyer" is currently author is currently poetry cditor being presented in New York by of Harper's magazine. He is a a.vavv..... . . .W.t t~4 ..t*.a~a.. .-,, a aa.~-a. .*,~.aThisaaaaaspaceaa.a r (Continued from Page 1) C jeet is not something new to the sorority system. "Most sororities keep a course evaluation file but not on as extensive a basis as this new undertaking represents," she said. There have been at least two previous attempts to prepare such a booklet, one by the Literary College Steering Committee and the other last year under the aus- pices of the Union, League and Student Government Council. Neither project got off the "Mr. Raleigh's lectures are 'dull, pedantic and largely ii- relevant,' and often cast in the form of a 'long list of dull facts'{ unrelieved by imaginative an- alysis. Although apparently a tech- nician and scholar, 'he is like a used car salesman selling Tolstoy to a customer who he is sure won't buy' No papers. Helpful hint: develop a theory of interrelationship among the books read." -SLATE, A Supplement to the General Catalogue (Berkeley). ground because of lack of co- operation and funds. "This is not the first time that the Union has dealt with the idea of course evaluations, and we are always in favor of supporting any project that helps any student get the best education he pos- sibly can," Union President Kent Cartwright, '65, said. Booklets of this nature have been published at Harvard Uni- versity, Cornell University and Berkeley. The United States Na- tional Student Association has re- ported receiving requests from about 20 schools this year ex- pressing interest in publishing course description booklets. The project was announced at AHC yesterday afternoon and met with a favorable reaction accord- ing to AHC President Maxine Loomis, '65. "The groups involved in the pro- ject are making a serious effort to provide some meaningful public comment on the nature of educa- tion at the University," Berkson said. "Its success or failure de- pends on the quantity and quality of student response." '} Y Dial 2-6264 Shows at 1-2:55-5-7 & 9:10 NOW DIAL 5-6290 OVICHIGAil Mats. $1.00 Eves. & Sunday $1.25 I "A fiercely funny film . . nothing should deter you from going to see 'EMILY'?!"-N.Y. Times I She plays roe gir lwho became the leader of the sex revolution In America... Yo--- ave never seen i before! J-seph E Levine S. presents a. ° @ 7& APM. 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