Page 2-Saturday, November 12, 1977-The Michigan Daily e Church Woershj Services - --'- ---I- e~- - Chinese intellectualism surfaces with shift to more moderate policies FIRST UNITED METHODIST State at Huron and Washington " .Dr. Donald B. Strobe the Rev. Fred B. Maitland :"The Rev. E. Jack Lemon Worship Services at 9:00 and 11:00. ( ChurchSchoolat9:00and 11:00. Adult Enrichment at'10:00. WESLEY FOUNDATION UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY W. Thomas Shomaker, Chaplain/Director' Extensive programming for under- grads and grad students. tUNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division .Steve Bringardner, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-11:00a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. * * * ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. ( one block west of U of M Stadium) Bible Study-Sunday 9:30 a.m.; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.mq. Need transportation? Call 662-9928 CAMPUS CHAPEL-A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church 1236 Washtenaw Ct.--668-7421 Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 10:00 a.m.-Service of Holy Baptism. 6 p.m.-"Creation and Providence." AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER AND r FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 E. Huron-663-9376 0. Carroll Arnold, Minister Ronald E. Cary, Minister Worship-10 a.m.; Bible Study-11 a.m. Fellowship Meeting-Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. * * * CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Student Foundation) 218 N. Division 665-0606 Chaplain: Rev. Andrew Foster Sunday Eucharist at noon. * + * UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 10 a.m.-Morning Service. 5 p.m.-Informal Worship. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (the campus ministry of the ALC-LCA) Gordon Ward, Pastor 801S5. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship at 11:00 a.m. Sunday Bible Study-"Revelation"- 9:30 a.m. Sunday Fellowship Supper - 6:00. p.m. Program-7:00 p.m.-(Topic: Ethics of Homosexuality). Monday Bible Study-"The First Prophets"-7:30 p.m. Thursday Evening Bible Study on North Campus. * * * ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thomson-663-0557' Weekend Masses': Saturday- p.m. Sunday-7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m,, noon, and 5 p.m. * * * FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister 608 E. William, corner of State Worship Service-10:30 a.m: Sunday Morning Worship-10 a.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Services and Sunday Schoo -10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meeting-8:0( P.m. Child Care Sunday-under 2 years. Reading Room-306 E. Liberty, 10-5 Monday-Saturday; closed Sundays. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at the Ann Arbor Y, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister Students Welcome. For information or transportation 663-3233 or 426-3808. 10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 662-4466 Sunday: 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship. 12;00-Coffee Hour. 4:00 p.m.-Undergraduate Fellow- ship and Supper. Tuesday-3:30 p.m.-Bonhoffer Sem- inar. * * * -a 4.. 4.t v4 V. , 4 "' 4 p'. w 0' 4.' f4 a. " ". " Co*nthoro ANNOUNCES ITS i t Riennial Pre -Christmas 1Sale Sunday, Nov. 13 Only-noon to 8 p.m. SAVE 25% and more on Selected Hardcovers including: How to Save Your Own Life by E. Jong Life Goes to War Chagall's Daphnis and Chloe The Kitchen Book Kenneth Clark's Animals and Men Origins by Leakey the Public Burning all Bibles Beggarman Thief by Irwin Shaw Dynasty. Edmund Wilson Letters r Abrams Rube Exotic Plant Manual Essays of E. B. White SAVE at least 10% on ALL hardcovers SAVE up to 2b% on Rand McNally globes' See our selection of over 120 Calendars ONE DAY ONLY Conticore Bookshops 336 MAYNARD OPPOSITE Nickels Arcade TOKYO (AP) - After years in the dog house, China's intellectuals have been brought back into the front parlor. They have been encouraged to conduct scientific research, read Shakespeare and Balzac and now have been given pay raises. Teachers, scientific and technical workers, medical workers and liter-; ary and art workers make up the majority of categories benefitting from salary increases effective Oct. 1. THE OTHER, perhaps more nu- merous categories, include industrial workers, those in commercial and service trades and government civil servants. The chief beneficiaries, according to an official Hsinhua news agency report yesterday, are workers with many years of experience receiving less than $45 a month. Forty-six per cent of the entire work force of about 120 million is affected. The fatter salary checks are part of the incentive package worked out by the new moderate leadership in Peking to get the country moving in high gear toward industrialization. The deadline is the year 2000. LESS INTANGIBLE, but possibly more important in the long run, is the incentive to knuckle down to the job in a somewhat freer society. For years, Chinese of all classes have lived and worked within a straitjacket of rigid controls. Their everyday actions even t h e i r thoughts, have been relentlessly monitored by the Communist Party. They have been told what to do, how to do it and when. The process has been uneven. It was eased for a while in the mid-1950s, at the start of the first big industrialization effort, but has re- mained generally consistent in the long run. AUTHORITARIAN rule reached a climax in the 1966-69 Cultural Revolu- tion when the party's radicals, led by the late Chairman Mao Tse-tung's wife, Chiang Ching, gained ascen- dancy in the"fields of culture and propaganda. Then, and in the years that followed, they decided what should be read and done and what not to read and do. Wedded to the radical idea of revolution, they went to the extreme of exhorting workers and intellec- tuals to rebel, to refuse even the most reasonable kind of authority. The re- sult was chaos in the economy''and a stifling of the arts and education. In recent weeks, the moderates - inspired by the late Premier Chou En-lai and his disciple, the twice- resurrected vice premier, Teng Hsiao-ping - have widened the op- portunities for education, revived pure research in the natural sci- ences, and struck off the shackles that imprisoned Chinese culture. THE CHINESE soon will have the long-denied opportunity to enjoy once more the poems, essays, novels and masterpieces of writers w h o emergedcafter the 1919 literary renaissance. Most have been banned for political reasons in recent years. In addition, state publishing auth- orities have announced new editions of classical literature, poetry, paint- ing and music, from the sixth century onward, are to be issued this year. The state publishing house also is raising the window to let in foreign literature, music and art, including the works of Shakespeare, Heine, Gogol, Balzac and Hugo, stories of Chiang Ching Greek mythology, the piano composi- tions of Beethoven, Chopin and Bach, and drawings of Rembrandt. Only four years ago, Western composers were derided as bearers of rotten bourgeois culture. Until now no Western works-of fiction have ap- peared on library or bookstore shelves with the possible exception of those of Jack London and Mark Twain, both regarded as suitably progressive Hsinhua said the new trend is not liberalism in the Western sense but "a diversity of themes and forms.! Chou En-Lai en UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (L MS ), : .1511 Wasltenaw Ave.--63-5$0 ;Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Services at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15 a.m. Midweek Worship Wednesday, 10:00 p.m. SHEEPSKIN COATS oad VEST For Men, Women and Children NOW 50% OFF 2PesE.n Hbuse of Imparis 320 E. Liberty i Bankerhints end .to S. Arica investment, JOHANNESBURG, South Africa investors, bue t ir wingfeelin (AP) - A Swiss banker,. warned that the country is a bad risk. South Africa yesterday that foreign Studer said investors believed it investments might dry up because of was unlikely the West would agree to fear that the government's 'policies an economic embargo against Pre- could lead to "revolution, civil or toria. underground warfare." "On the other hand, serious con, He spoke as South Africa's white- cern continues to exist that South minority government assumed war- Africa's policy of apaitheid racial time powers to force any company separation could produce revolution, operating in South Africa to produce civil or underground warfare and strategic and military goods on even open war between East and demand. The move was seen as a West," he said. response to the internationals arms GET MOVING, AMERICA! embargo against South Africa or- dered by the U.N. Security Council. ADDRESSING t h e Financial Mail's annual investment confer- ence, Robert Studer of the Union Bank of Switzerland said it wasn't South Africa's policy of racial segre- gation that would deter foreign - There.is --something STUDER ADDED, "The very exis- tence of these incalculable risks may bring it about that the flow of foreign capital to South Africa . . . will de- cline in the future or dry up com- pletely.," An American banker who asked not to be identified said many Western bankers ,have ordered a review of their loans to South Africa in the wake of protests, arrests and crackdowns that followed the Sept. 12 prison death of black national leader Steve Biko. The banker said that long-term capital available to South Africa has been decreasing steadily since 1974 and the trend was accelerated after rioting in Soweto last year. "MOST BANKS will not lend money for more than a year and if they do the premiums will be high," he said. South Africa currently needs for- eign funds for several big projects, including a uranium enrichment plant, expansioln of a plant that drives oil from coal and additional railroad, electric and harbor facili- ties. In the past, South Africa was a favorite among international invest- ors because of the high rate of return. According to the U.S. Commerce De- partment, the average rate on U.S. investments in South Africa in 1974 was 19.1 per cent, compared with a world average of 11 per cent. CRITICS OF apartheid maintain the high return is possible only because of the low wages paid to blacks. South Africa's official Gazette published a proclamation that the government was assuming on Friday powers that enable it to draw on foreign or domestic companies in South Africa for any strategic or 4 in Transpoi 1t 1 di. w A " "Il - - II Emmin.6 Aii i6ikAtIm