THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER By presenting s unit rang*- f-qinioro and deas reprint ed from hur.ireds of cam pm newspapers wt hope to enhance the quality of campus life as we ,n(;rn. enter tain and engage the rate nal tent body d> arknemi ■■dge 'he ci ■: :r.:tnsenl of spiderjourr.a..sU arms the ,.il. ■ supported v the:; media advisers and. mutism professors, to report the nt.v t.es, issues and concerns of tiieir feibw students I’KKSIIIKNT SMI ft HI ISMKH S>u**nA Pairrvwv ik-rwicii AS.MM IATK IM BI.ISHER Mike Sinjjrr EDITORIAL DIRECTOR (>or£f K TsyW SjHTial Rmjf-cts, Van hamtek EDITORS ON FKU.OWSHIP (*harlrfcA Hahn , Nartheotter n ,\Vu * Nort)iea»t*m t' .'acki H 114 ' r 77; r Breme. M odium U K.ithif Kuf e.-n.h. ''V«ff . lir'tiui Western Michigan l.’ ilct'.-i P Varj;!!* Ir . The fUH and Black U of Or* rgia CAM Rl.'S RELATIONS DIRECTOR D.rk SublcUr EDITORIAL ADVISORY COUNCIL r<)M ROLNIt Kl. hh. st.vc. irre' ■ A>V*. p.Utl CoJleg.ntr Prt*» DR. DAVID KNOTI* mr i< -•> ■ n' ■ i. 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I -ovum Clarke THE AMERICAN COLLEGIATE NETWORK CHAIRMAN Albert T Ehnnger L' u published eight limn j vur by The American '.cn .Ve Network. 3110 Main Street Santa Monira v \A 90405 Til 2131440 2931 Copyright I *#9 All rights rr*erve»i Consumer AjC1 Ybpa Subscription* SIS rear COMMENT AND OPINION American media refuses to ask: What do Chinese students want? By Brian Smith ■ Western Heiaid Western Michigan U. The U.S. media indicated the magni tude of tiie news of the Beijing uprising; unfortunately, the complexity of the events and what the students do and do not want has been clouded by the media's neglect to ask the students one question: "What do you want?” Of course, the answer might refute the f S. media's implications that the stu dents want Western style liberal demur racy, complete with a complimentary serving of supply-side capitalism This became evident on a CBS report After showing student sit-ins, CBS fol lowed up with a report about what young Chinese want The report focused on a supposedly typical 12 vear old Chinese boy and his family And what did that young boy desire in life? He desired to manage a large factory in which he would control lots of workers and, of course, make lots of money. The question of whether the majority of those in Tiananmen Square were crushed by tanks in order to control each other and to make lots of money can be left up to the survey takers. But, it is questionable as to whether the students, the community members and military members who now support them, are dying fora better cheeseburger and the right to control several franchis es that make those cheeseburgers. But because the protesters put up a replica ofthe Statue of Liberty, this action was interpreted as an attempt to be just like us. After all, doesn't everyone want to be just like us'.’ Although we have some good charac teristics that other nations do not have, this does not mean that we are the perfect society for which others strive Now that Solidarity has gained power in Poland, LYNETTE TSAI. JAI; Y BRUIN. U OF CAUFORNA LOS ANGELES. A student weeps while listening to an account of the bloody suppression in Tiananmen Square. CHINA CRISIS THREE STUDENT PERSPECTIVES Americans are about to l>e sent a shock Solidarity is not the Republican Party, Polish style. It is still a socialist party, and will govern as a socialist party — the major difference being that it will govern democratically. And it would seem :i • the same would hold for the Chn protesters, if and when they gain po ■ Unfortunately, the U.S. med: . attempts to make the uprising appi pro-capitalist rally is only one mislead. aspect of their coverage. The other was the result of then neglect to reflect on how the U.S. gover ment has dealt with similar pro-dem racy movements at home. China could take a few tips by look: at U.S. history. For instance, perhaps China’s bigg mistake is the manner in which t:. have killed their protesters. China needs to learn to shoot its dents in groups of four, as we did at K. State, and not 400. China needs to It-.; to use dogs that look and act like Rm T Tin on acid, not tanks that look Czechoslovakia in 1968. China needs to learn to use a half-ci\ urn, half-military militia — a Nation Guard — to quell protests, and not to c out its main militia. Governme response can, thereby, be labeled pol action; and headlines mentioning n war are avoided. China needs to learn to make the s dent movement appear threatening infiltrating rallies with undercover ’ cers who, through their violent a> make a protest appear violent. The United States found this ' quite successful in making the ( Rights and anti-Vietnam War protest the 1960s appear violent China also needs to better control t foreign media; international pressu will then lessen. Rut China is a naive, communist, tote, itanan nation - we are a smart, deni cratic, capitalist nation (with goo cheeseburgers and good eheeseburg managers). That is why they want to : like us. Right? Peace activists’ silence indicates consent to Beijing totalitarianism By Mat Gleason ■ University Times California State U„ Los Angeles We have watched President Bush impose sanctions on the Chinese government that were followed by calls, from both nght and left, for stiffer penalties. Every group associated with inter national causes from Amnesty International to The John Birch Society, has spoken against these atrocities — except the peace activists. Tiananmen Square was the setting of the most deliberate and heinous systematic violence in the past 40 years, yet the lack of protests by non-Chinese Americans is not only appalling, it’s scary. This question, this unabashed indifference immediately reveals the wolf in sheep’s clothing who has successfully hidden from the press. The worldwide network of peace activists are politically motivated, and their politics preclude certain gov ernments. Which governments are spared the ‘hit-list" treat ment? Illogically, it is the most repressive and brutal govern ments that are spared the wrath of peace demonstrations. In addition, these lucky regimes are rarely democratically elected. How convenient. The peace activists’ silence is an act of support for Beijing’s totalitarian regime. Their motives, disguised as concern for the oppressed, are exposed The Peace Movement is an anti-demo* racy leftist faction that, while probably not an organized con spiracy, has stemmed t he tide of democratization Nicaragua has no free press. How can the Peace Movement uphold the myth that it holds free elections? Yet, when El Salvador democratically elects a president, the Peace Movement demands that we cut aid. They want us to cut off aid to one of the few democracies in the world because a majority of Salvadorians don’t agree w'ith their pseudomarxist views. Next time a non-socialist, democratically elected government supported bv the U.S.A. is involved in violence against sonii rebel faction or guerilla group, you can bet that we’ll hear their impassioned pleas.But they won’t protest the Chinese govern ment’s use of violence and suppression against pro-democracy supporters. An activist told me, in the days when we were normalizing our relationship wath The Peoples’s Republic of China, that China was the closest approximation to pure communism ever I’m afraid that they may be realizing how true that is. ( hina has a limitless capacity to fascinate. But it is not Disneyland.lt is, as it has been since 1949, a Communist dicta torship held together by brute force.No one who knows China should be surprised when its leaders turn to violence to pursue their political goals. They have done far worse before. Tiananmen Square - Former President Richard M. Nixon.