FROM ONE WHO FLED - A LOOK AT SCIENCE IN RED CHINA

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 27, 2010
Sequence Number: 
10
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 7, 1958
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8 U'. S. News & World Report From One Who Fled A LOOK AT. SCIENCE IN RED CHINA At TAIPEI, Formosa Q Dr. Wang, why did you decide to leave the United States and go to Communist China? A I had been planning it for a long time. All Chinese want to help their country. It's American-like-to e a ty to think? want to help your country. A As I said before, you forget Q What did the Communists do politics. You can be flexible in first, interrogate you about your edu- science and rigid in politics and other cation and abilities? fields. A They knew that already. They Q Then you could still be a good had complete lists of all students scientist under Communist control? studying in the United States. The A I don't know, really-I've never lists had been supplied by other stu- been a Communist. But my friends dents who returned earlier. who have lived in Peiping for many Q In what direction is Chinese years are still professionally intelligent Communist science directed, in gen- and professionally proficient. eral-toward military objectives, or Q What was your impression of what? the level of technical and scientific A Certainly the military. Every- knowledge in China? thing they are doing now is aimed at A The Communists have collected one thing-to beat the United States, the best Chinese brains there-most in the end to destroy it. of them from America and England. Q In what ways are they trying to Libraries are excellent-in some ways do this now? better than those at Cal Tech. Lab- A They have people, very smart oratories are very good, perhaps not men, working on projects to put a as good as in the States but they are satellite . into orbit. They have a building some new ones. Scientific project set up to fire a rocket to the equipment comes from Russia, and moon. they even have some smuggled in They have atomic scientists. Most from the United States and England. of these came from America. Three Q Is the primary stress on Soviet of them are from Cal Tech. science? Q Were Soviet scientists helping A Well, most of the scientists can the Chinese in these fields? read Russian, and it's better to know A Oh, yes. There was close co-op- it since so many books come from eration. My friends, nuclear scientists, Russia. I started studying Russian- said everything they wanted was pro- I wasn't ordered to-but I continued vided by Soviet Russia. Of course, for only two days. I've forgotten the they couldn't get equipment any- few words I learned. where else for this research. Q How high was the quality of U. S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Nov. 7, 1958 Copyright 1958, U. S. News Publishing Corp. Q Did your friends appear to be happy in their work? A Well, they were watched very closely. They couldn't go anywhere. But they were devoted workers. If a scientist is given something to do he will work on it-he forgets about everything else. Q Are the Chinese Communists much interested in pure science? A Yes, but they don't have enough scientists to do it in a big way. Prob- ably not more than one or two thou- sand scientists in various institutes are in pure science. Q What happens to a scientist's mind after several years of Commu- nist indoctrination? A They dare not think for them- selves, and sooner or later they forget how to think. Q How can a scientist function if he loses th bili Chinese technicians and scientists edu- cated in the Soviet Union? A Certainly the quality is not as good as those educated in the United States. Students who went to America before the Communists got power went on their own merits. Students sent by the Communists to the Soviet Union were selected on the basis of their reliability rather than ability. Q What made you decide to leave China? A Well, we had to conform to too many things. When I protested, my friends told me I was blind and couldn't see good things inside. Then, too, I had a feeling that something DR. WANG, pictured on a mountain- climbing trip in the United States. At the time, he was a student here. was going wrong with Chinese sci- ence, that you couldn't introduce Marxism into pure science. Q When did you actually make up your mind to leave? A Early in April, about a week after I arrived. It was obvious it was stupid to stay if I could leave. But it took time-50 days from the time I applied for an exit permit. I said I had to visit my father, who was dying in Hong Kong. The Communists be- lieved me. Q How did you feel when you got out? A I didn't have much feeling. I thought I was leaving my home-but it was absolutely impossible to remain. Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8 Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8 (This page presents the opinion of the Editor. The news pages are written by other staff members independently of these editorial views.) WHAT MANDATE? BY DAVID LAWRENCE W HAT IS THE MANDATE of the people in the con- gressional elections held this week? Can anyone be sure what the Democratic gains in the House or Senate really signify? Do we have two major parties, each with a recognized obligation to advocate certain policies of government in the field of national and international affairs? In Britain they still believe in party responsibility. Each party goes before the people with a specific plat- form, adhered to by all its candidates for parliament. When the incumbent party, moreover, loses the parlia- mentary election, a new prime minister takes office. But in the United States we have divided govern- ment. For four years now we have had the Democratic Party in control of both houses of Congress. Knowing that we shall continue to have a Republican Presi- dent in control of the executive branch of the govern- ment for another two years, millions of voters this week expressed their desire to continue control of Congress in the Democratic Party. Unfortunately, the peoples of the rest of the world who are familiar with the ways of parliamentary gov- ernment will be tempted to assume that the Demo- cratic Party's victories in various States in the elec- tion this week of Representatives and Senators to our national legislative body means a repudiation of the policies of the President and the Secretary of State. Having read dispatches quoting the campaign utter- ances of leading Democrats, the people in Europe, Asia and Africa will be told by Soviet-controlled radio broadcasts that a triumph of the Democrats means the President must stop supporting the Nationalist Chinese and must surrender our strategic position in the Far East. The American people, despite the claims of some Democrats, did not intend by the election to be put in the position of repudiating the foreign policy of the present Administration. It would be a mistake for Moscow to proceed on any such assumption. But, even while refuting such a possible misinter- pretation of the election results as bearing on foreign policy, it is evident that the ambiguities in domestic policy are not so readily dismissed. Do the gains of the Democrats mean that we are in for an era of public spending irrespective of deficits? Are we now to increase taxes on corporations and on individual incomes so as to balance the budget? Are we to ignore the fact that the inflationary move- ment may reduce the purchasing power of the dollar? The "pocketbook issue" has been useful in winning votes for the Democrats in areas where unemployment has occurred. But if all the unemployed do not get jobs in the next two years, will the Democratic Party in Congress be held responsible for this in the 1960 congressional and presidential elections? The answer is that the electorate will be urged again to hold only the President responsible for economic adversity even though a partisan-minded Congress may have blocked sound measures proposed by the Administration to insure economic stability. The truth is there is no clear mandate to be derived from the 1958 elections. There is today no party re- sponsibility on either side of the aisle in the Senate or in the House. Each side has been betting apparent- ly on the capacity of its orators to take advantage of the ignorance of an uninformed electorate. But, while we know there was no general mandate given by the people as a whole, we must face realistically the fact that the new Congress is to be controlled not by the Democratic Party as such but by a clique of union bosses. The labor unions through their political auxiliaries have spent in several in- stances more money to elect this week the candidates of their choice-almost all of them Democrats-than have the organizations of the nominees themselves. The mandate to be given by the labor unions to their henchmen in Congress will become clear enough next January. They must try to amend the labor-man- agement laws so as to give more advantages to the labor unions. They must try to repeal the law permit- ting the States to pass "right to work" laws. They must be ready to defeat any further legislation that might effectively deal with labor racketeering. To achieve a majority in the Congress, labor unions have spent time and money in electioneering. Business- men have not risen to the challenge. Now the question is whether the economic power of labor unions will be curbed. Higher and higher wages will be extorted from management under the penalty of costly strikes. Eventually, as prices must be raised to meet increased wage costs, the result could be a buyers' strike and finally a depression which certainly would bear the union label. The 1958 election, instead of bringing an era of prosperity, may in time prove to have been the turn- ing point in favor of those forces which really seek a breakdown in the private-enterprise system. Was this the intended mandate of the voters? U. S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT ? NOVEMBER 7, 1958= Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8 Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8 'niteb 'tatec 'enate MEMORANDUM November 4, 1958 FROM: Ben Mandel Approved For Release 2010/05/27: CIA-RDP91-00965R000200190010-8