The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 14, 1979-Page 5 MODERNIZATION, TAIWAN ISSUES DEBATED U.S. -China relations show 'U's ideological split (Continued from Page 1) plaining their position regarding the issue of Taiwan. A telegram was sent to the Taiwanese government pledging 'llegiance and support. Two days after the announcement, the Free China Student Association organized a Diag rally to protest Car- tgr's decision. "Jimmy Carter decided the fate of the Taiwanese people and it should not be up to him. It should be up to the Taiwanese. He has no right to decide," said Hsi-Hsin Chien, a mem- ber of the group. 'HOWEVER, other Chinese groups, mostly Chinese-American students who recognize the Communist government in Peking, are not as sympathetic tdward Taiwan's plight. "I think that the so-called mutual defense treaty (between the U.S. and China) .was illegal in the first place. They signed the treaty with a very small minority of' the Chinese population. Taiwan has ,always been a part of China," said Lee in his office at the Chinese Study Club. ,Lee was one of three students invited tq dine with Teng at a reception in 'Washington when the Vice Premier visited the U.S. in February. He was in Washington at the same time as three other Ann Arborites who are members of anther organization with a stake in normalization, one, owever, on the op- posite side of the White House fence. Three members of the city chapter of the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade (RCYB) were among 500 demonstrators who gathered in Lafayette Park across from the White House chanting "Death to Teng Hsiao- Ping" in hearing distance of Carter and Teng who had just sat down to dinner. THE RCYB believes that Teng's mbdernization policies run counter to Mao Tse-Tung's cultural revolution of the proletariat. "Teng is repudiating everything revolutionary China represents. Already we can see that capitalism is being restored in China. They're actively dismantling all of the great things the Chinese people have achieved," explained Randy Schwartz, an RCYB member. Students charge 'U' biased in admissions (Continued from age 1) University for ten days in 1970, Harris said, "It did not really have any lasting effects on the University." He said the lack of activism to day "has led people to believe the University has solved its admissions problem. It has not." After hearing nearly six hours of testimony from the students, Edward Vaughn (D-Detroit) declared, "We are going to have a talk with the leader- ship." 'The six legislators will be holding similar hearings at Wayne State University, at Michigan State Univer- sity, and Eastern Michigan University. VAUGHN SAID after Caucus mem- bers had a chance to hear "both sides of the story" - from University ad- ministrators - then it would be possible they would meet with the University's Regents. In a closing statement to the legislators, the students presented a list of ways in which the legislators might help them. The students requested that: *A task force be formed to identify problems in minority support programs, such as the Coalition for the Utilization of Learning Skills program; " The legislators support college preparatory programs in high schools; They - take action to 'see that recruitment of minorities is more representative of the average minority community; * They help see work-study positions are available to black students; They help see that responsible positions in experiential programs be made available to minority members; " They help secure more funding for Trotter House; *They help open up the tenure process to student influence, and finally * They push for the divestment of University funds from companies doing business in South Africa. Join the A rts Members of the RCYB ' said they believed they belong to the only campus group which has upheld the tenets of Mao Tse-tung, since Mao's doctrine was being de-emphasized in China by the pragmatists (those who favor modernization) after the September 1976 coup and the rise of Teng. "The China Study Club for a while played a progressive role. But after the coup in 1976, they sided with the new regime and tried to apologize for what was going on," said Schwartz. LEE RESPONDS however, "We are not the so-called apologists for the government. It's not what the RCYB says about China, it's what the people say.'' The RCYB has repeatedly challenged the China Study Club to a debate-on the issue of modernization and the for- saking of Mao's little red book. So far, the China Study Club has refused. "I really don't think there's an in- dividual I know of who understands what's going on completely" in China, said Lee. "Maybe the revolutionary students brigade feels they have the correct analysis, but we don't. We don't have a unified view." SCHWARTZ maintained the China Study Club is "out for their own organization: They're out to derail the people's struggle." Their conflict has often been more than just a war of words. Lee said that the RCYB often shows up at the Study Club functions and plasters the walls with posters praising Mao and the purged "gng of four." Lee described This split of-ideologies represents a - -s one encounter at the Union when the Union manager had to lie called in to force the RCYB to remove its posters. Another campus organization the Revolutionary Communists takes issue dualism that has existed throughout China's history under Communism. The pragmatists advocated material incentives and imported foreign technology, to further China's 'Jimmy Carter decided thr> fate of the> Taiwanets, people and it should not be up to him. It should bh> up to the Taiwanese. He has no right to decide. -Hsi-Hsin Chien mem ber, Free China Student Association Haven Hall and transplanted him to the National Security Council in. Washington. OKSENBERG - along with three other high-ranking administration of- ficials - quietly led the behind-the- scenes negotiations for two years that eventually led to the normalization of relations. Now, with full diplomatic relations established, Oksenberg will be returning to the University in the fall to resume teaching. AnId now, partly because of Oksen- berg's work, the University can expect its first group of exchange stddents to arrive in the fall. The group will be researchers in the College of engineering taking graduate level courses. Sending students to the United States from China is just another facet of Teng's modernization drive. However, if there is one thing everyone at the University agrees on, despite differing ideologies, it's that China's moder- nization will be a very long and slow process. As Shiuh-Wuu Lee said, "A lot of things take time. Ten years from now, maybe we will see whether the Chinese government is doing the right thing for the people." with is the U.S.-China People's Frien- dship Association. The Friendship Association is concerned with nor- malizing relations and furthering cultural exchange. According to Deborah Peterson of the Friendship Association, "There is a misconception about our organization. We're not political, but people think we are." BUT SCHWARTZ said the Friendship Association only decided to renounpe .political stands after the September 1976 coup and the purging of China's radical faction. "~There was a strong tendency towar- ds liquidating political discussion. We can organize any sort of friendship association, but if it's purely on the basis of friendship, and not on the unity of workers around the world, then what good is the organization," explained Schwartz. economic development. But the radicals promoted self reliance and rejected the capitalist idea of in- creasing material resources in order to get people to work. MAO HAD ACTED as a moderator between these two forces until his death in September of 1976. At this time, the pragmatists usurped the leadership from the radicals. Under Teng, the pragmatists embarked on a policy im- porting foreign technology and working for closer relations with the U.S. About this time, Jimmy Carter was elected President, a candidate who had all along maintained he wanted to establish normalization of relations with China. In picking his staff, Carter plucked a young University political scientist and China expert named Michael Oksen- berg out of his sixth-floor office in - Book.s Bought Tou Prices Paid! (WellPick-'up) WESTSIDE BOOKSHOP 113 W. Liberty 995-1891 i i x "1 refuse to use the kind of protection that always has me wearing something internally. Or following some strict schedule. 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