Expert: U.S. scholars wary of going to China by Laura Cohn Daily Staff Writer A University political science Oksenberg feels so strongly professor and former U.S. govern- about this that in February 1979, he ment policy staffperson said the was involved in the initiation of Beijing massacre last summer has scholarly exchange between the U.S. caused many U.S. and Chinese and China. As a result, Oksenberg scholars to believe there should be said there now are more than 20,000 limited academic exchange between Chinese students studying in the} the two countries. United States. Michel Oksenberg, a former He also said that any responsible member of the National Security student should be able to understand Council staff under President Jimmy Chinese society in order to tolerate a Carter, said many U.S. academic part of the diversity present in our scholars have moral problems about own society. This diversity was in traveling to China. He told a 150- part created by an influx of Asians, member audience at Hutchins Hall last night that many fear the Chinese government will use them as fuel for 'J u n e 2-4 was a n propaganda, he said. enormous tragedy for "June 2-4 was an enormous the people of China. tragedy for the people of China. Now there are both Chinese and Now there a re both Americans who believe that our aca- Chinese and Americans, demic ties should be limited," who believe that our: Oksenberg said. academic ties should be His was the first of a series of limited' five talks on China during the next -Michel Oksenberg few days. Oksenberg said the University is 'one of the only schools in the coun- which Oksenberg calls a positive try that has made a commitment to "Asianization" of the U.S. during study China in depth. the latest decade. "It is important to study China Part of this includes the impor- for the intrinsic interest," Oksenberg tance of the Asian wisdom to our said. "China encompasses one-fourth society, said Oksenberg. As an ex- of the world's population, and study- ample, Oksenberg explained the ing such a country is like quick- Confucian theory that humans ac- sand... it keeps luring one in." quire their identity from their sur- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 22, 1989 - Page 3 Talks may spur weapons cuts WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush met with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze yesterday, opening three days of high-level talks likely to set a general time frame for a superpower summit and spur chemical and nuclear weapon cutbacks. After nearly two hours of discussion, Shevardnadze said the two sides had not set a date for a summit between Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev but "we have concluded that a summit is necessary. There is no doubt about that." The meetings began with a White House session attended by Bush, Shevardnadze and Secretary of State James Baker III. The discussions will continue between Baker and Shevardnadze today and tomorrow at a wilderness lodge near Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Baker said there was a "full discussion of a summit" and that "we hope to have a general time frame for a summit which we could announce while we're in Wyoming." The White House session marked Bush's first direct contact with a high-ranking Soviet official since taking office last January and came amid complaints by congressional Democrats, as well as from Moscow, about the pace of superpower relations. Schevardnadze, who arrived in the United States Wednesday night, said the letter from Gorbachev contained "some very important proposals on arms control and on reducing the military standoff between out two countries." Trying to capitalize on Gorbachev's campaign fors "glasnost," or openness, the administration planned to propose. liftifig virtually all restrictions on travel diplomats, trade, representatives, and journalists in the two countries, sources reported. About 90 percent of the Soviet Union is off limits to Americans. reflecting the suspicions that marked the rule of Josef Stalin. Over the' years, the United States responded by imposing similar travel restrictions' on a large part of the United States. Officials said the FBI ha$ approved the eased travel proposal despite concerns about keeping an eye on Soviet citizens' movements in the United States. To address security concerns, the plan would still require that the Soviets register their travel plans with the State Department's office of Foreign Missions. JULIE HOLLMAN/Daily Michael Oksenberg, University professor of political science and former member of National Security Council Staff, discusses "China and Western Scholarship" last night in Hutchins Hall. roundings and "where they fit in the overall scheme of things." If the current academic and eco- nomic exchange continues, Oksenberg said, China will likely develop advanced technology. If that' happens, he said, the Chinese could become the world's next major con- tributor of carbon dioxide to the at- mosphere. Rehnquist committee to reform death penalty WASHINGTON (AP) - A committee appointed by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist called yesterday for streamlining death penalty appeals to assure swifter ex- ecutions, but only after condemned murderers get more legal help. The proposal promptly was de- nounced by civil liberties lawyers who accused Rehnquist of stacking *the committee. "They want to be able to kill more people faster," said Mary Broderick of the National Legal Aid and Defender Association. Retired Supreme Court Justice and committee chairman, Lewis F. Powell, said the current system en- courages endless legal maneuvering, years of delay and frenzied, last- minute moves to stave off execu- tion. "The hard fact is that the (capital punishment) laws of 37 states are not being enforced by the courts," Powell said. "I respect those who ar- gue for outright abolition of death punishment. But it seems irrational to retain the penalty and frustrate its fair implementation." Ironically, Powell said he would vote to abolish capital punishment if he were a state legislature, contend- ing that "it has not deterred murder." The United States has the highest murder rate of any nation and is the only democracy that has the death penalty, he noted. The average delay between con- viction and execution is more than eight years and the longest has been 14 and one-half years, a delay Powell calls "hardly necessary for fairness or for thorough review." The committee report was sub- mitted to the U.S. Judicial Conference, the policy-making arm of the federal courts. The conference postponed any action on the report and any recommendations to Congress until its 28 judges recon- vene in March. The committee recommended that states enact laws to limit death row inmates to two, rather than succes- sive rounds of appeals in state and federal courts. One round would chal- lenge, a verdict directly; a second would be based on alleged violations of the condemned individual's right States that choose to adopt the new system, which also requires congressional approval,would be re- quired to assure legal help to death row inmates at taxpayer expense throughout the appeals process. 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