6 Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan FUJI Sale June is FUJI month at RICK'S Save $25.00 to $200.00 during our annual month-long FUJI sale! Fat tire bikes from $229.95 Road bikes from $199.95 3. FREE Cycle Pro gloves Free Accessories Buyany bike which is not discounted and get: 1. FREE lock & cable 2. FREE water bottle & RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, Ks., (913)841-6642 Clip and $ave with Kansan Coupons!!! Robert Kleinberg, assistant professor of political science, agreed with Yu's prediction. - Continued from p. 1 Anger, grief felt by students "I can assure you that the entire population of Beijing is behind this protest against the government, and they will not rest until the government is replaced." Kleinberg said. He said he based his assessment on talks with a number of Chinese students who had been in phone contact with relatives and friends in Beijing. removal of the current government and the trial of Chinese premier Li Peng for ordering the troops' action. Kleinberg said that the protesters' initial demands for basic freedoms and government reforms had been augmented by demands for the "I *would urge everyone at KU who is upset about the massacre to contact Chinese students at KU and find we can contribute*, *Kleinberg said*. Wang Xiaoming, Beijing graduate student, was one of about 40 KU students who took part in a demonstration Sunday near the Country Club Plaza shopping area in Kansas City. It is a common description of the Chinese students' response to the killing of hundreds of protesters. "Essentially, it's extreme anger," Wang said. "A lot of confusion, a lot of anger, a lot of sadness." Wang said that very few Chinese people in the United States could do anything substantial to help. The protests that have taken place in U.S. cities are mainly expressions of frustration and outrage, he said. "At this point there is no turning back until the government gets Tiananmen Square cleared away," he said. "I'm worried that this kind of killing is going to silence people for a long time. "From the look of it now,it looks like we're heading into a dark period." Nonetheless, Wang intends to return to his homeland to work. "I'd very much like to work at home," he said. "I have every intention to go back. We've all been watching it very carefully." Lawrence residents with relatives in China are also watching carefully Marie Willis returned May 12 from Beijing, where she visited her eldest son, a commercial officer with the Department of Commerce, and his wife, a vice consul with the Department of State. KU professor analyzes turmoil in China by Dick Lipsey Kansan staff writer "Many people still look for por Like the Manchu dynasty of old, the Communist regime in China may be in danger of losing the Mandate of Heaven. A flood, earthquake or other major natural disaster would be taken as proof by many Chinese that the mission has lost favor with the gods. "Students and intellectuals use the Mandate of Heaven cynically, but it is still a stick to be beat by the authorities." Daniel Bays, professor of history. tents," he said. "If a natural disaster were to strike, many citizens would take it as a disavowal of the government. The concept behind it, that students should be realizing, is very real. Many Chinese students have expressed this recently." Bays said the Communist leadership may be losing control of the country. "By the end of the year we may see a pattern of extreme regionalism in China. 'Bays said,' "Protracted civil war is one of the worst clashes. More likely is a weakened and decentralized central government." "Initially, students from the People's University in Beijing led the protests," Bays said. "These are students who are scouted for future high party positions. People's University has a department that trains students in Marxism-Leninism and party management. These students are the ones who led the first marches in April. Another problem for the Chinese leadership is the nature of the student opposition. prestige. They feared for the credibility of the party, and their slogans brought in students from Beijing University and the rest of the country. They poured into Beijing railway station by the thousands." Bays sees little possibility that the leadership could soon regain its authority. "Their concern was that they are slated to be party leaders, and they saw the Communist Party losing HAIR, THE TREND IS MATRIX. 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