Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 23, 1977 China restores ousted Teng to power TOKYO /P> - China's wizard broadcast showed Teng taking of political survival, Teng his place at the right side of Ilsiao-ping, was restored to the ( Cairman Hua Kuo-feng. nation's top leadership yester- Firecrackers, skyrockets, 'dty after twice being thrown drums and trumpets sounded on the political scrapheap. A as hundreds of thousands of There IS a difference!!! ., PREPARE FOR: MCAT* DAT* LSATO SAT GRE @ GMATO 9OCAT 0VAT r broad range of rograms provides an umbrel/a of test- gnq Aow-how that enables us to offer the best preparation d-0 !b/e no malsr which course is taken Over 38 years of experience andsuccess Small classes. Voluminous estudy tals Courses that are constasty up- i.,,d Permannt cetersuondays ssnigs &Awee-r ends alI year Complete tape facilties for review ofclass so "d"oru seosupple entary materials Make-ups ECFMG 0FLEX NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours Writo or call 1945 PAULINE BLVD. ANN ARBOR 48103 K4 N 662-314'9N N, at O0 .2-4 EDUCATIONAL CENTER CALLTOI Fr@ OUU- £1- 04U c itm ^Manor ItS tmesand tuaanq Switerned TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Chinese swarmed into the streets of Peking on yesterday night to celebrate the an- nouncement of the 73-year-old 'teng's reinstatement, t h e Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported from Peking. A PEKING television broad- cast showed Teng seated on the right of Chairman Hua and re- cniving applause from dele- ,ates to the third plenary ses- sion of the 10th Communist par- ty Central Committee meeting in Peking. Sitting on Hua's left was China's Defense Minister Yeh Chien-ying. The official news agency Hsinhua and Peking television confirmed what had long been, rumored. Teng was restored to his old posts of vice premier, party vice chairman and chief of the army general staff as well as vice chairman of the Communist party military com- mtssion. Teng's return comes at a time when President Carter is trying to hasten the normaliza- tion of relations with China and just before the scheduled Aug. 22-26 visit of U. S. Secre- tary of State Cyrus Vance. Teng's expertise on Western af- loirs and perhaps his skills as a negotiator are expected to be c-tlled on during the talks. "PEKING TONIGHT recalls Rio De Janeiro on 'crazy Car- nival night," the Yugoslavian trews agency Tanjug reported. A huge gathering took place in Ten An Men Square, where dis- turbance last April contributed t't his downfall and where huge rallies in January demanded his return. The Kyodo news , agency re- ported that in Shanghai, once the stronghold of the radical "Gang of Four", about 500,000 people turned out in the streets to welcome the announcement. TENG WAS first disgraced and purged as a revisionist dur- ing the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s. He was restor- el to power in 1973 by his men- By the time we're old enough to have children, we've been thoroughly sold on the idea. By our parents, our grandparents, our frends and neighbors, the media, everyone. It's hard to remember we ever had a choice in the first place. But there is a choice. Having a child is'a tremendous responsibility and an important decision. Probably the most important decision we'll ever make. And once it's made; it can never be undone. Just remember .. you do have a choice. So think about it, and do what's right for you. For more information write ------------------ -- National Organization for Non-Parents 806 Reisterstown Road Baltimore, Maryland 21208 for, the late Premier Chou En- lii, only to be denounced as a "capitalist roader" and forced from power again last year by radicals in the upheavals that followed the deaths of Chou and party Chairman Mao Tse- tung. Teng's latest return was seen as a development that could move China toward implement- ihg policies advocated by Chou, whose goal of making China an advanced industrial nation by the end of this century is again Ieing promoted in China. The radicals argued ideological pur- ity should be placed ahead of all other concerns. S. Korea prepared to fight troop withdrawal SEOUL, South Korea (AP)- South Korea is prepared for some hard bargaining with U.S. Secretary, of Defense Harold Brown early next week on phas- ed withdrawal of 33,000 Ameri- can ground troops. The U.S. defense chief arrives here tonight for talks Monday and Tuesday with Defense Min- ister Sob Jyonghul on how and when, and under what conditions the Americans are to leave. CONVINCED that the Carter administration will not budge from its withdrawal policy, President Park Chung-hee and his associates are determined to make sure that when the last of the troops are gone - pos- -sibly five years from now-South Korea will be strong enough to stand up to any threat from North Korea. The six-point agenda for the ministerial talks in the Defense Ministry building here reflects this anxiety. It calls for discussions on the timetable and method of the withdrawal, setting up a Korea- U.S. combined command, rein- forcing U.S. Air Force units here, transferring American weapons to the Koreans, U.S. logistical support in the event of war and beefing up through weapons modernization for the 600,000-man South Korean army. A Pentagon task force has come up with the figure of $8 billion in additional equipment over the five-year period. This would include.abot 250 jet fighters, including F6s, and hundreds of helicopters, obser- vation planes, missiles and guns. Brown arrives here with "a considerable mandate to consult and negotiate" on the weapons buildup, as well as work out how much will be sold and how much of it will be a gift. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No, 50-S Saturday,daluy 23, 197 is edited adisanged by stdet at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-052. Second lass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- 4oll f Id like to know more about N ON. 'lease send me your free Am I Parent. Material package. address city/statellip - r