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L » .1 1 Opt" M :1j, S-itu'day P*\onr lib 4H’ EMU Continued bom Page 1 ly Cl percent o( the money allocated by the Iff In addition to the I;.Mil budget, tin' II ( allot'at i it l <102-0 I budgets to S|\ groups At Thursday's meeting, ASl'O [jegal Services whs unanimously allorutird $7l),Sdo for .1 r> 7 per cent decrease from this year's $74,807 However. IM Chairwoman l.vdia Lerma raised intent to re consider the budget jusi tiefore she stormed out of the hearing, which was tension filled from begin nmg to end Lerma said she wanted to see an even bigger cut in the group's budget, and was frustrated when !! ( members Harris. Ann 1'eig and Sara Dodge wouldn't go along with it Legal services asked the Ilf. for an .Incroast) in staff -salaries comparable to other local and state agencies offering similar services The li t asked Legal Servu es to make do with less, particularly during the1 summer months Thursday night was the second time Legal Ser vice-, had ils budge! reviewed by the Ilf. and it look- like H will he considered a third time At Wednesday s meeting, the lif allocated $20.:IH1 to (hree groups Disabled Student Services requested and re ceived $10,100 lor Its 1002 0.1 II I budget, repre senting nn i hange from this year's program subsi dy I he ASl'O wi-nl along with the /:un> percent me revise in its recommendation '!'))■■ Committee for Musical Arts also requested ,i /t-ri pert cnl increase from the li t Wednesday Mnvvco'r, ( MA members w ere very good-natured <11»>111 lie I percent dot lease they received C.MA re< eived SJ.to'i this yeiif .mil next year Will have .i budget of S-i ,5 IS (;MA represent,itivev told the lf;( th.it they un derstand the IH s position and tin need to keep fees from rising The Oregon Commentator magazine got its way with tie IFC Wednesday night The Commentator will rei ive Sf>.H4f> next year, lor a 1 percent in c reuse over this year s budget. In the course of disc ussion about the Commen tator. whic h prides itself on its conservative con tent, Harris reminded fellow IFC members "A lit tle deviance is good for the University The Commentator requested S5..H4 5'. and the AStJO recommended the IFC grant that request The IF( budget analyst recommended a (> >1 per cent dec rease for the Commentator, which is typi cal of his conserv ative rec ommendations The following figures from Tuesday's meeting were provided by the IFC The YWCA received S2.HB1 for a r> (> percent decrease from this year's StO'cl budget The Department of educational Policy and Management Graduate Students Or ganization was allocated a budget of SCO7 for a 2lt percent decrease from this year's SB24 budget The IFC allocated itself $11,034 for a 5 percent decrease from this year's SI 1.543 budget SPEAKER Continued from Page 1 unco it. the next time you will be reluctant lo do 1! Ilul Yuan does nul fxd love activism in China is over Ho |us! thinks it will come from a younger generation Many of ihe people who were involved In l'W*l have gone underground or escaped 1 he official govern nielli line on the massacre is that it didn't happen reflet t ed 111 the slate-designed text books Hut Yuan said that deni al ini)v work against the govern monl Those voting students, they haven't experienced d anti they will still do d. lie salt) "They won't he reluctant to get In solved The young people there lion i know the hardships of the pasl "Those si I. hi ■ kills, they don't tf.ili/e those killings hap pelied. Yuan salt! They only he I iey e u hat the teat her s and the bulks say They don't real i/e tie seven punishment to them until they ■ tuaiiv experi ellt e It " Nats a senior majoring In business at the University Yuan mi l a worn.in from Tu gene around that time and ini, y . d tie r e ! y\ u years ago yy lien they del ided to g‘ t mar ried After graduation, he wants i. y\ i ' s jo: an ()n gon * ofpora lion doing business in China Yuan said his friends in ( In n ! now tend lo focus on ecu nomu reforms more than poll tii al change China has regarded the l'nit ed Slates as an imperialist en emy suue communism m that outdry toe k I; >i : in l'H'l 4t;;l Within the past !l) years, ('lima has opened its dolls someyvll.il ASIA PACIFIC DAY Monday, Apr*, 20, 1992 IV-n Linder Room 9:30 -10:30 *£xperiencca of a Malay Women’ 11 >12:15 ’Aboriginal! of Awcraha, Yesterday and Today’ 11-1145 Thailand 12:30- 1:30 Origaam 12.30- L30 Taiwan 1-.30-2 Thailand Fruit Carving 1:30 - 2:30 Sri Lanka 2 • 3 India 2:30- 3:30 Nepal 3.30 - 4 30 ’'China's Role in the Next Century* Gnfffix by Jeff P*»l*v _ I Mtk Hat-Yang Yuan and has established a firm eco numii relationship with the U S In the Iasi three months, i! has changed so rapidly," he said l or example, the govern mi'iil opened 14 cities on the east i oast of China to the out side for trade TheS have ,1 huge plan for economic devel opment Yuan said ho holiovos Japan will play a morn important rolo for China than the U S Japan recently granted S7 billion in aid to China "For my opinion, China und Japan will ho dependent on oar h other more than over bo fori; since tho Second World War.' Yuan said "Japan doesn't have any natural re soun.es China has a huge vari ety of resources Japan needs that and China needs the tech nology and money of Japan " Another impetus is that Chi na and Japan are geographically i lose and culturally similar. Yuan saiil Politically, the S o v I e t Union's tall will have a signiii i ant impact on (Ihina The largest superpower of communism no longer exists, now the only powerful one is China." he said "For the US strategy. China will probably be the next target China realizes that and it's going to change it sell economically and political Is so it can survive better in the nf\t century Yuan know s the power of the Chinese people and believes the real, lasting changes will come not from Japan, the U S or the former Soviet Union, but from wilhin. No matter how powerful those emperors wen1 in the his tors of China, they were thrown away b\ the people," he said file communist pow er, no matter how powerful it is now will also be thrown away by the people ' The traditional communis! economy is dominated by state owne j enterprises, but -Hi per cent of the national profit ill China is now from the private set tor, Yuan said ■ RESUMES Give . ur resume a professional look, by having it typeset a: Let'er Perfect Graphics Suite 300 EMU 346-4381 9-5 Mon-Fri