IZOLDA TAKÁCS: THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY
 father [...] could not be put in jail in 1956, but he needed to move to a different city.
 (Subject no. 15, natural sciences)
 So the issue was again not that the fact I am of a different gender. It would have
 meant nothing at all [...] it was all political. (Subject no. 1, social sciences)
 There were heaps of quality folks with a degree among my forebears, and children
 of such had great difficulties getting into a university at the turn of the SOs. (Subject
 no. 10, doctor of technical sciences)
 I was not a member of KISZ [Magyar Kommunista Ifusdgi Szovetség, Hungarian
 Young Communist League]. Those intending to continue their studies were 120%
 KISZ-members in high school. Whoever wasn’t could not even be recommended
 for university by the high school. And I had not become a member due to the Imre
 Nagy trial and because my dad was thrown in the clink. When I explained I was
 not a member of the League due to reasons of conscience, they considered me a
 clericalist, because who else could have a conscience other than the religious. So
 they introduced me to other teachers as a reactionary clericalist someone. But I
 took part in all sorts of academic competitions so I could apply eventually. (Subject
 EQUAL RIGHTS IN STATISTICS, AND WHAT LAY BEHIND IT
 
The reformation of education practically meant making primary education
 mandatory, followed by changing secondary education. The most important
 result of the former was the disappearance of the gender-differentiated educa¬
 tion typical for the interwar period in Hungary. Decree 6660/1995 of 1945
 allowed for women to further their education in law school, whereas Act XII
 of 1946 allowed for equal conditions for female and male applicants to enrol
 to universities and colleges. As a consequence, the percentage of women rose
 from 19.5% to 41.4% in middle schools in the 1951-52 school year, rising fur¬
 ther to 52% by 1959.%1 There were significant changes in higher education as
 well: “the percentage of female doctors as well as lawyers and attorneys rose
 from 12.4% and 0% in 1949 to 21.5% and 9.2% in 1960, respectively”???
 
By the beginning of 1978, the educational level of working women under 35
 was higher than that of men in the same age group. The proportion of women
 with graduations was 22% in 1962, which grew to 40% by 1972, and up to 45%
 
 
34 See in Schadt: „A feltörekvö dolgozö nö”, 34-36.
 322 Data from the Hungarian Statistical Office called KSH (Központi Statisztikai Hivatal) Adat¬
 gyűjtemény, guoted by Schadt: , A feltörekvő dolgozó nő", 52.