SUNDAY,' OCTOBER 18, 1964 TAE MICHIGAN UA iT.V --l ...__'i.. .....__U..U Z.F A . UA PAGE THREJ. Ill E ffects of Segregation Told -Associated Press SOVIET PRESIDENT ANASTAS MIKOYAN, left, and newly-named Premier Alexi Kosygin discuss the shift in Moscow politics at a Kremlin reception yesterday. Former ruler Nikita Khrushchev has been toppled from power and his present location is not known. His two successors are ruling in 'tandem.' Kremlin Shuffle Evaluated Single Leader Seen 'Painless' Power Play Remove Evolving There Khrushchev from Soviet Of fic (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) them forward at every ch diplomatic problems Khrushchev ernment in Moscow. Chief Charges has left behind, as well as with The now ousted premier must That was one of thi the swelling voice of the Russian have contributed to this situation charges made by the cent 0 people wanting to be heard. himself, and he must have known mittee against Khrushch Not until a good start on these that one of the unpleasant results ing his relatives too man tasks has been made is a serious would be denunciation in his old Khrushchev was a toug power struggle expected. mouthpiece Pravda. liant Communist leader wi ertheless made his biggest Both men reached the top via It is true that Nina Petrovna impact as the Kremlin cap 0 the new road-mastery of Soviet Khrushchev, whom he married in playboy of the presidium. technical problems-and are also 1924, has been urging him to re- Varied Strategy the first Kremlin chiefs to whom tire. Nina Petrovna, a Red sharp- While plotting his power w the 1917 Bolshevik revolution is shooter during the Bolshevik revo- Wis partyngpne only a childhood memory. lution who later, almost single- against party opponents Varied Background handed, drove Nikita to the top, n g against nf cPi i kett l f d By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - A school desegration fight in Prince Ed- ward County, Va., in 1959 has left some Negro students unable to read or even tell time. Professors Robert E. Green and Louis Hoffman of Michigan State University said yesterday, in a re- port issued to the United States Office of Education, that one group of more than 1000 young- sters had an average IQ of only 69.4-"borderline defective"-after the four years without classes. The 290-page report was a re- sult of a study among the county's 1700 school-age Negroes. Steps Now The closing of the schools in 1959 came after a federal gourt ruling reversed a lower court rul- ing in demanding that the county take "immediate steps" to inte- grate the public schools and to admit all qualified Negroes to its high schools. County officials had closed the public schools, rather than inte- grate them, and white children attended private schools. While other countries in Vir- ginia had desegregated, Prince Edward County did not have token integration in its school system. The board of supervisors aban- doned the public school system June 26, 1959, rather than obey the federal court order. The school supervisors voted at that time to levy no taxes for educational purposes. Immediately following this, the privately financed Prince Edward Educational Foundation opened six elementary schools and two high schools. But only 1,090 of the county's 1,450 children enrolled. A non-profit Southside Schools, Inc. was formed to provide schools for the county's Negroes. Negroes now are back in public schools, though, following an order When nationwide attention fo- cused on the county, he said, the children became more concerned than ever about getting an edu- cation. Ask Many Questions Green and Hoffman administer- ed questionnaires and interviewed Negro parents and children in the fall of 1963, just before privately supported free schools provided Depressed IQ Lack of schooling apparently de- pressed intelligence levels as age increased, the educators reported. They said 7-year-olds with no edication measured 17 points low- er in IQ than those with some schooling,'and, at age 9 the dif- ference was 32 points. Those 9-year-olds with some schooling, Green and Hoffman said, had a mean IQ of more than by the United States Supreme classes for the youngsters for the 100, well within the normal range Court reopening the schools. first-time since 1959. 1 of intelligence. Out of County Because of difficulty in securing Parents Not Adequate Green and Hoffman said during teachers and supplies, attendance While many parents attempted the four years when schools were in schools outside the county and to teach their children at home, closed, 575 Negroes attended class- declining motivation caused by the the educators said, most of this es outside the county, but only 35 long school closing, less than 40 instruction was confined to basics of them on a full-time basis, per cent of the children attended such as reading and writing. They Tsummer crash programs," thesaid the parents felt "too inade- The two men are now studying two MSU' men reported. qae ohnl h oefra whether the youngsters can re-U n quate" to handle the more formal cover; Green expresses hope that Only six per cent attended all aspects of the school's role. they can. three programs, they said. Students with at least some schooling set higher educational and occupational goals, Green and Hoffman reported. They said during the closed schools period, communication be- tween Negroes and whites decreas- ed sharply. Each race, they said, "tended to, become psychologically deaf and blind to the, actual feelings, opin- ions, needs and desires of the other' group." n::::::.v: ": :" :va"r:." ": .. rr:. " ::................ +r:".".":v:'r: i ::::::................: ,.... .... r.......::......... .5::......... .....:....,.... :: " :""."ov.v... .. vr.". "::v."vr v r. ........................'r}Y."A::v:"i3?Si": :... r:: ".": r......... ". .v..............:. ::.:.. .,a..........w...":."::iwo"":."Sv.. re.'ySS":?:L:{ ro.:....... ' s:Y.""" A....x.. .$ _ยข; """" "" 5...:.. :S:rk4:":SS43?b::s'tiai :"i}::: i: S:!{:"'r::":":54:"?}:.}RS{S4:StSif::":. rY:1'":v? :u"'is:SvX4:"bS3:fS:.:d :{"?F::S .i:::J Sfi3 "Y.Sc avvSJ.i;. :; es e $ > {>;, ance. he chief ral com- iev-giv- y jobs. gh, bril- 'ho nev- personal erer and er moves or con- tates, he i4h 4 Imported Italian MOHAIR SWEATERS Regularly 14.00 8.90, many luscious pastels to choose from S-M-L YOUNG COLONY-MAIN on1 main Ac&- Shop Monday Nite 'til 9:00 . f". h..h. ti+". f1 :1y : r f .its 50 {J, f i" iJ1 J:} M: :JV fJ"f rho h4 $:4 V{ Brezhnev, born in December, 1906, of Russian parents in the Ukrainian town of Kamenskoye, was successively a steelworker, metalurgist and agricultural spe- cialist. A member of the Communist Party since 1931, he hitched his wagon to Khrushchev's star in 1938 in the Ukraine and stuck with him. After World War II he was chief political commissar of the army- the big brother who kept an eye on the reliability of officers-and then boss of Khrushchev's virgin land development project in Kaz- akhstan. In 1956, Brezhnev was appointed a secretary of the Communist Party based on Moscow. This es- pecially pleased his chic wife and daughter, Galina, who is noted for her taste in high-styled western clothes.. In 1960 he became president of the Soviet Union. He relinquish- ed that figurehead post last July 15 for full-time work as a secre- tary of the Communist Party's Central Committee. The change was a definite indication that he had been picked to succeed Khru- shchev some day. Last Stalinite Kosygin was Stalin's last addi- tion to the old politburo and was' pretty much in the shade during the first years of Khrushchev's rule. The new leadership soon learned to value his talent as a businessman with a flair for or-E ganization, however, and he moved into the front ranks. Born Feb. 20, 1904, in St. Peters- burg (now Leningrad), he joined the Communist Party in 1927 and was a chief party official in Len- ingrad textile plants. In 1959 he presented a new plan for the tex- tile industry and was made com- missar of it almost immediately. His subsequent rise has been steady but not spectacular. never liked the Kremlin spot once she got it. She thought her hus- band worked too hard. Her aim changed from rifle tar- gets to top spots for her children and grandchildren. She pushed Pc uew al oi guara wt~ par- ties, picnics and pithy peasant sayings. If for nothing else, Khrushchev will go down in history as the man who stripped at least the surface mystery from the Kremlin. - - 1+ 1400 4.,- Y' Here it is! A young bra that gives you a naturally alluring outline! Very fresh and pretty! This bra is supplemented with Bali's exclusive Fiberj Fluff (TM), lightest form of padding that stays true to its original form. Never gives a lady away, either! 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MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM "Contemporary Man in Search of Identity" (Open Forum with students: James Helm, Marion Fin- ley, Barbara Nadal, and Suzanne Naiburg; N. Pat- rick Murray, Ph.D., modera- tor.) COMING WEDNESDAY E OCTOBER 21 PA.UL TILLICH Professor of Theology, formerly of Harvard University, now at The University of Chicago "PERHAPS THE GREATEST MIND OF THE 20TH CENTURY" Tillich on the meaning of "God" The name of this infinite and inexhaustible ground of history is God. That is what the word means, and it is that to which the words "Kingdom of God" and "Divine Providence" point. And if these words do not have much meaning for you, translate them, and speak of the depth of history, of the ground and aim of our social life and of what you take seriously without reservation in your moral and political activities. Per- haps you should call this depth "hope," simply hope, for if you find hope in the ground of history, you are united with the great prophets who were able to look into the depth of their times, who tried to escape it, because they could not stand the horror of their visions, and who yet had the strength to look to an even deeper level and there to discover hope.- -Shaking of the Foundations COMING OCT. 27-29: PAUL VAN BUREN Theologian, Temple University van Buren on the "Problen of 'God' " The theological "left" has urged us to think through Christian faith in the light of the critique of modern thought . . . we would take this demand seriously. It will not do simply to translate the different word "God" into some highly or subtly qualified phrase such as "our ultimate concern, or worse, "transcendent reality," or even, "the ground and end of all things." These expressions are masquerading as empirical name tags, and they are used as though they referred to something . . they put us in the worse situation of speakina a ! The Michigan Memorial- Phoenix Project announces The Fourth Annual Dewey F. Fagerburg Lecture -DR. HANS, BETHE --physicist -recipient of the AEC's Enrico Fermi Award -U.S. delegate to the Geneva negotiations on a nuclear test ban will speak on DISARMA- MENT and STRATEGIC. STABILITY Wednesday October 21 8 P.M. Rackham. Lecture Hal t r.J"V.. ..r w...... .... ............................................ ".... . ..... .,. . . .:.. r ' ..r r': .'"::4 "^:l ". ."..:Y ".::. r : .... ..........: h rrrr: frr.::::: rtrrr: rrrr.::: :Y:rr::r"r:"""""""""".":r.:".".".::: .".':l."Y:r".. .".': rrrrr.:::'.'::Jlr. r.: :r::r.":::.t r:"rr:....... 1r:::: r.... 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