)age Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 12, 191b Lenient graduation un ied (Continued from Page 1) were approved by the Board of Regents last year. Those changes allowed stu- dents greater options for satis- fying their distribution require- ments - categorizing classes by "disciplinary content" and by "approaches to knowledge," for example. The traditional dis- tribution requirement plan was also retained. JACKSON SAID there has not yet been much use of the new plans by students. Concentration requirements were also revamped, and re- quired academic counseling was abolished. Counselor approval of course elections is necessary only in "key decision-making points," instead of at the begin- ning of each term. MAO'S WIDOW IMPLICAT ED: Chinese co (Continued from Page 1) Thhe Peple's Daily newspap- struggle. er, official organ of the Com- munist Party, declared on its ANALYSTS HERE said China front-page Sunday: "Unite, appeared to be passing through Don't Split . . . Don't intrigue its biggest upheaval since the or conspirt." Lin Piao affair five years ago SUNDAY HUA appeared for when Defense Minister Lin was the first time since the crisis alleged to have died after at- broke to the surface on Sat- tempting a coup. urday. He turned up at Peking The streets of Peking were Airport to welcome Michael relaxed early yesterday. Tra- Somare, the Prime Minister of vellers arriving from Shanghai, Papua-New Guinea. Nanking and the southern city Smiling, chatting amiably with of Canton said there were no officials, he put on an impres- signs of unrest. sive display of confidence. With! Observers said if Hua suc- him was Vice-Premier Li Hsien- cessfully consolidated his posi- nien, 71, a leading moderate and tion, it would put China under close associate of ,the late Chou the rule of pragmatic and less En-lai. extreme leadership.: Li is China's top financial ex- pert and a man respected by! S I N C E S A T U R D A Y all sides for his administrative' there have been numerous signs tplent and party loyalty. of 'dissension in the leadership. up plotters seized Offer rejected for binding arbitration had been informed that Chinese and film works were devoloped It has since been acknowledg- cadres (officials) down to a along ever stricter, more puri- ed that the Cultural Revolution (Continued from Page 1) fairly low level had now been tanical and political lines. to some extent got out of hand the issue through binding arbi- briefed about the arrests. News The bespectacled First Lady when young Red Guards ram- mtratiohn" Moran explained. "It was spreading among the peo- appeared in a place of honor paged across China, denouncing seems theyre trying to tell us ple by word of mouth, they at the mass rallies of millions often highly respected figures, that they have already made' added. of Red Guards held in China indulging in mob violence and their final offer and we will Correspondents here noticed during the second half of 1966. smashing treasures of Chinese have to accept it" an unmistakeable relief among When she addressed them, she culture and art, though Chiang N E G 0 T I A T I O N S Chinese Sunday as news of Hua's waved the little Red Book of her Ching did not encourage such broke down nearly two weeks appointment went up on more husband's thoughts. excesses.l ,t." GEG is still wallposters. ' It soon became clear that Mao THE LAST TIME she and the ing for a 6.5 per cent pay hike CHIANG CUING, who has had entrusted to his wife respon- other three leaders appeared plus a 50 per cent cut in tui- been the main rallying point sibility for a nationwide cam- was on September 30 at a na- tion, while the University is of- forn radicals ding the past paign designed to wean Chinese tional day rally in the ancient fering a 5 per cent raise with yer took no pa s away from cultural influences Forbidden City. no cut in tuition s year, took no part tnChina's. he considered bourgeois, feudal Television coverage showed They are even farther apart. political life until the cultural or foreign-inspired. Madame Mao in ebullient form, on non-economic issues, with SHE BECAME cultural advi- -Jumping to her feet to enthu- the union still demanding a Together with Yad, she helped ser to the armed forces. From siastically applaud a speech by: strong affirmative action plan, spark the tumultuous revolution. the task of remodelling litera- Hua. University funded child care, Chang and Wang also rose toj ture, art, theatre, opera, ballet Observers pointed out although smaller classes, and a Teaching prominence as a result of the and music along proletarian the four radicals are allegedly Assistant training program, all cultural revolution. lines, she extended he influence accused of plotting a coup, they of which the Administration A former movie actress, she i to the whole scope of political may not have been planning a claims "simply doesn't belong married Mao in 1939 and was I decision-making. military take-over. in a labor contract." his fourth wife. In recent years 3 In April, 1969, se was elected IT SEEMED unlikely they With arbitration out as a pos- she has been the guardian ofi a full member of the policy- could drum up significant army sible solution, the only way to C" making Politburo of the Chinese support, except perhaps in Man- avert a strike is to resume bar- UNDER HER AEGIS, stage j Communist Party. churia. gaining. 'WE ARE going to ask them 'to go back to collective bar- eaining to try to reach a set- fails, GEO would not walkout for at least another two weeks. The union extended the con- tract deadline to a week from today, Oct. 19, and will try to bargain until then. 2 If a settlement has not been reached by the 19th, the union members could vote to circu- late a strike referendum. This would take about one, week, at which time the membership would gather again and take a strike vote. If a majority of those present voted for a walk- oit, the picket lines would be up by the first of November. rouns Dept. sweeps The official media have car- ried tough warnings that any at- tempt by right or leftwing "op- portunists" to split the party would fail. LI IS NOW being tipped as a possible premier after Hua's appointment as chairman is for- mally announced. Sources here told Reuters they 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY II I II i44 A I L[Icvi tlement," saidbMoran. "But theyL('.UG11 cwill have to be willing to bar-: gain seriously.'' (Continued from Page 1) But University President Robben Fleming was not con- THE DEPARTMENT also re- fident that a return to bargain- moves snow from Central and- ing would prevent a walkout. North Campus and from the "Their present positions are Medical Center. Of all the snow considerably out of our reach," plowing jobs, keeping emergen- Fleming said. "And if they cy routes open arid the Univer- stick to their present demands sity Hospital clear are the top well it would probably priorities in snow removal. mean a strike," For the future, the depart- Even if collective bargaining ment plans to preserve the nat- ural character of the North cam- pus. With the hope of attracting SeCiaI rates small animals, the Forestry De- partment has planted greens for Couples and seedlings which will im- prove the cover and food sourc- on- Tuesdays es - for small animals. The. grounds department has also in- BILLIARDS at troduced a policy of reduced the UNION mowing of North campus, "done to put it back into its own per- spective." r f PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 16, 1976. MEIJER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES ACCORDING TO SPECIFIED LIMITS. NO SALES TO DEALERS, INSTITUTIONS OR DISTRIBUTORS . .... . 1 ' APC MIRROR GRAPHICS 4 Ii I --- / + homecoming '76 Major Events and UAC are proud to present 0 ~udy Collins I ELENA ALL-PURPOSE MAKE-UP REMOVER PADS 0 100 count MEN' FLANNEL SHIRTS " Choose from a large selection of soft, worm plaids in 100% cotton s Sizes S-M -XL by In tercrof t Subjects are silk screened on high-quality mirrors of float plate glass. Your choice of plants or skyscapes in full color. Overall size is 20"x 26" 4 QUARTZ HAND SPOTLIGHT .12 foot cord 0 Fits all 12 volt systems " 200,000 candle power OUR REG. $24.97 14" OUR REG. $1 $1 0. $ 3" $15 '4 Cosmetic Dept. U Men's Dept. Gifts A Lamps Dept. C Auto Supplies Dept. PORK LOIN BLADE ROAST AACA A alA /!_ACIUI1 ii A MA 4 1A IL Lft. r ~ re* KREiT FrK PIRINU - PEnuUInE U.-. In. 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