0 Page 8-Tuesday, November 3, 1981-The Michigan Daily 1. THE FOLKS EXPECT YOU TO WRITE HOME ONCE IN A WHILE. 0 41 IP t -1 a -d HERE'S AN EASIER WAY TO WRITE HOME - SIX DAYS A WEEK! wm - -ul - -m -- m - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Dear Mom and Dad: * I thought you might like to know what school is like for me every day. The Michigan I * Daily is the University's daily newspaper. It brings the most complete coverage of I Dea M. .n Da: 4 Campus news six days a week . . . not to mention community, state and national I 1 coverage, a Sunday magazine; sports, features and editorials, and more! Just fill out this form and mail, with your check to: j 1 1 The Michigan Daily/420 Maynard/Ann Arbor, MI 48109 1 1 That way we'll have lots to discuss about living in Ann Arbor, and my days at 1 j 1 Michigan, the next time I come home. 1 1 LEAVE BLANK Yes, I would like to s u b sc r i b e to THE LEAVE BLANK 1 1 MICHIGAN DAILY. I agree to be billed later - (pre-payment necessary for subs. outside of 1 Ann Arbor, Mich.) 1 ONE SEMESTER --- TWO SEMESTERS PERMANENT I (automatically renewed1 each term) 1 1 - - --- SCHEDULE OF PRICES: For Circulation Dept. Use Only 1 $12 SEPT. thru APRIL (2 Semesters) I $13 by Mail outside Ann Arbor I p Stencil Typed ; $6.50 per Semester INumber of papers 1 $7.00 by Mail outside Ann Arbor Am oprs - $ 1 1 1 l Dote Started (Please Print) Last Name First Middle Initial I 1.D. No._Phone No.__circle one) University establishes exchange program with China (Continued from Page 17 China is emerging onto the world scene faster than many people realize, Oksenberg said. China has become the world's third largest energy consumer and fourth largest producer. It has the third largest defense budget and the fourth largest metallurgy industry. In addition, the United States has become China's third largest trading partner after Japan and Hong Kong. "ANYONE WHO wants to under- stand our era must take into account the' Chinese experience," Oksenberg said, explaining that China has been closed to the West for approximately 30 years. "In many scientific and humanistic areas, China is virtually unmapped," he said. The University has a long relation- ship with China. Before the communist takeover in 1949 the University was second among U.S. universities in the number of Ph.D.s bestowed on Chinese scholars, Oksenberg noted. Consequently many of the Univer- sity's alumni hold prestigious positions in the People's Republic. The head of the Chinese Academy of Medical Scien- ces and top officials in various engineering fields are University graduates, Oksenberg said. THE UNIVERSITY'S current ex- change program with China is distin- ctive from other schools such as Min- nesota, John Hopkins, Stanford, and Berkeley, because the University's ap- proach focuses on opening up quality research projects, and does not extend to undergraduates at this time, Oksen- berg said. University faculty and graduate students desiring more details on the exchange program should contact Associate Dean Donald Deskins at Rackham, Oksenberg said. 6 6 Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS POLITICAL SCIENCE PROF. Michel Oksenberg discusses an upcoming exchange program between scholars from the University and the People's Republic of China. A special China task force, of which Oksenberg is chair- man, will soon release details of the exchange through the Rackham Graduate School. Many Chinese scholars ,here at 'U'already 6 0 STAY ON TOP OF THE NEWS ... -. a nt". SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY! ABORTION CARE * No AgeLimit " Completely Confidential * Local Anesthesia " Tranquilizers " Birth Control-VD 0 Board Certified M.D.'s * Blue Cross/Medicaid - Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland), (Continued from Page 1) research associate at the Center for Chinese Studies. But Oksenberg said, that high Chinese government officials, including Minister of Education Jiang Nanxiang, have indicated they would like td in- crease social science research in the United States. China already has scholars enrolled in law, business, and economics at the University. "THEY'RE very interested in lear- ning business management courses," Oksenberg said. The current drive in Cina, according to Luo, is "To learn new technology from the western world to improve our modernization." "But our modernization cannot be a copy of western modernization," the Chinese professor said, explaining that China is a large country with a unique culture and socialist system. ABOUT THE recent exchange program established between the University and China, Luo said U.S. scholars must realize China is only a developing country and they should not "j ook at China from only the American point of view." Some U.S. scholars complain about the research conditions in China and state the exchange is not based on reciprocity, he said. Luo contends this view is shortsighted because it is dif- ficult to equate the two countries item per item. THE GREATEST difficulty for Chinese scholars, doing research here is the langufage, noting rarely are inter- preters provided in the United States, he said. This problem may 'be alleviated in the future, because English has replaced Russian as the primary second language taught in China, Luo said. Luo, who has been doing research here for more than a year, said he wishes to visit farms and factories - not only museums and universities - so he can write his book about American scoiety. But he said he has not been able to visit many of them. Luo will be returning to China this January. He said "My task is not com- pleted very well; to understand such a huge country is a difficult task." D Sweden questions 0 Soviet skipper STOCKHOLM, Sweden AP - The Soviet Union allowed the commander of a submarine stranded deep inside Swedish waters to be questioned yesterday and Swedish tugboats refloated the sub to prevent bad weather from battering the vessel. Sweden at first insisted that a satisfactory explanation for the sub's presence in restricted Swedish waters would be required before it could be taken off the rocks close to the Karlskrona naval base where it ran aground last Tuesday. The Swedes said the sub was equipped as a spy ship. SOVIET AMBASSADOR Mikhail Yakovlev earlier in the day told the Foreign Ministry that his government had approved interrogation of the skip- per, paving the way for a solution to the nearly week-long impasse. But while the sub's skipper was being questioned aboard a Swedish naval vessel, its assistant commander sent distress signals to naval headquarters at Karlskrona. 'up; rm i T 1- !! LSAT - MCAT - 'GRE GRE PSYCH - GRE BIO - MAT GMAT - DAT -OCAT - PCAT VAT* SAT* A CT4CPA.TOEFI. . k. AW