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October 19, 1976 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-10-19

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_
Page Two

-" THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, October 19,

T 9 6,

Page TWO ~- - THE MICHIGAN DAILY

EXPANDING AWARENESS

Chiang accused of
trying to kill Mao

Arab leaders vow to end
18-month Lebanese war

_i

HEALING
NOVEMBER 6-7,

1976

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(Continued from Page 1)
documents made available by
the university Communist Party
authorities.
The text of one, written Sun-
day by physics students, gives
a dramatic version of the vents
surrounding Mao's death on
September 9.
"When Chairman Mao was
gravely ill Chiang Ching did not
care. When Chairman Ma's
illness reached its crisis, Chiang
Ching disregarded opposition
and obstacles from the doctor'
and insisted on moving Chair-
man Mao in a vain attempt to
kill him," the students wrote.
THE BIG PINK poster de-
scribed Madame Mao and her
supporters - Vice Party Chair-
man Wang Hung-wen, Vice
Premier' Chang Chun-chiao and
top politburo ideolouge Yao
Wen-yuan - as "the gang of
four."
The group are understood to
have been placed under housel
arrest on October 7.
It added: "In the days fol-
lowing Mao's death, wherever

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you looked all were sunk in BEIRUT, Lebanon () - An parently to help purge it of and streets, and maintain law
grief. 800 million people sin- Arab mini-summit agreed yes- guerrillas. Correspondents have and order, according to the
cerely hoped to preserve Moa's terday in Saudi Arabia to bring not seen Israeli troops in action communique.
body so that generation upon Lebanon's 18-month civil war with the Christians. IT SAID the force also will
generation might look upon his to a "decisive end" with a In Beirut, an escalation of help the Lebanese government
face. cease-fire to take effect at mid- blind shelling terrorized both regain control of the country
"BUT THIS game of four night tomorrow. Meanwhile, the Moslem and Christian sec- and revive Lebanon's economy
strictly opposed the preserving troops riding in Israeli helicop- tors while six Arab leaders and military institutions,
of the Chairman's body." ters captured a Palestinian completed a three-day confer- There have been some 50
There was a mysterious month stronghold in southern Lebanon. ence in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, cease-fires declared in the war
of silence following Mao's death A Lebanese Moslem officer in search of a peace formula. and they all quickly collapsed,
'without an' announcement of claimed the attacking forces at THE SAUDI state radio re- but it appeared that the Syr-
what would be done with his the town of Marjayoun were ported the leaders of Egypt, Sy- ians and Palestinians had stop-
body. Not until October 9 was Lebanese Christians backed by ria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Leb- ped battling each other because
it announced Mao's remains Israeli transport and artillery. I anon and the Palestine Libera- of the summit meeting.
would be embalmed in a maued- He said Israeli forces also en- tion Organization (PLO) had Sadat met yesterday with Syr-
leum like those of other Com- tered the town after it was cap- agreed on the new cease-fire. ian President Hafez Assad and
munist giants. tured. Other Moslem leftists, al- It said a joint communique Palestinian chief Yasir Arafat
The poster, headed. "The lied with the Palestinians signed by the six also agreed to in an attempt by the three to
Towering Crimes of the Gang of against the right-wing Lebanese expand the small Arab League iron out their differences over
Fours," and the students were Christians and Syrians, claim- peace - keeping force in Leba- Syria's military intervention in
delighted when they heard news ed to have engaged Israelis in non to an army of 30,000 offic- Lebanon.
dthtPemient ard neghand-to-hand combat. ers and men to police the cease- A 'SYRIAN spokesman said
that Premier Hua Ko-feeg ISRAEL DENIED that its fire. Assad and Sadat agreed to stop
Mao's successor as party chair- forces were involved in the as- The Arab League units will their propaganda campaigns
man, and the central committee sault. "From the beginning they disengage the warring parties, against each other and to "re-
had adopted "decisive and re- have tried to involve Israel in implement the 1969 Cairo 'pact, sume normal ties."
ulate measures' against the the war," said a spokesman in governing the presence of Pal- T h e i r relations became
rebel leftists -presumably their Tel Aviv. "But this has not estinian guerrillas in Lebanon, strainedafter Syria bitterly
arrests. changed - Israel is not involv- supervise the withdrawal of mi- criticized Egypt for signing the
IT DESCRIBED the four as ed in the war." Ilitias, gunmen and heavy wea- Sinai disengagement pact with
"a dangerous cancer" which Correspondents have seen in- pons from Lebanon's war fronts Israel last year.
had long plotted to take over stances of Israel providing ar-
Chinese leadership. mored cars, weapons and ar- O
"When Chairman Mao was tillery support for Christian
alive they had already formed forces in the border area, ap- yh o ld W ilso
a clique and were intriguing,
plotting and stretching out their
reactionarytentacles E U at least one ont
"They antedto twst(th
"Te atdt tittenv arty and seize power . .. they1 at the{

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vainly thought they would be
the masters of China after Mao's
death," it said.

V-BELL

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HI, my name is Bernie

By JAY LEVIN held on $100,000 bond in a cor-
Ricky Wayne Wilson, prime rection" facility in Louisville.
suspect in the Arboretum slay- Meanwhile, Wilson reportedly
ing of University freshwoman told Kentucky officials that he
Jeannine Boukai earlier this was not in Michigan at the time
month, refused to sign extradi- of Boukai's death.
tion waivers in Kentucky yester- "He is saying he was never
day, and will remain in that up here (Michigan) and he's
state for at least a month. made a statement that he's
Wilson surrendered Saturday been, there (Kentucky) since
morning to a policeman he knew July," said Washtenaw County
in Louisville, Ky., his h o m e- Sheriff Frederick Postill, who
town. According to authorities, has been in touch with Ken-
Wilson was apparently told there tucky authorities.
was a warrant for his arrest in HOWEVER, according to Ser-
Michigan, and wanted to resolve geant Donald Wolfe of the Louis-
the matter. ville Police Department, "his
THE SUSPECT is now being (Wilson's) mother said he came
in on a Greyhound bus (at an
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Wolfe said that a search
of Wilson's parents' home by
detectives failed to uncover
Boukai's Yamaha motorcycle,
which the suspect was believed
to have stolen. Neither have au-
thorities located Leah Knox,
the woman thought to have fled
Michigan with Wilson.
"There's no indication that
she's here," said Wolfe.
BOUKAI'S handbag and wallet
were not recovered, either.
Kentucky authorities yesterday
asked sheriff's officials here to
begin extradition procedures on
Wilson.
Extradition is the legal pro-
ss by which a state attempts
tsend a prisoner to another
state to face criminal charges.
Had Wilson waived extradition,
he would have been returned
to Michigan some time this
week. According to Postill, the
extradition hearing will delay
the suspect's return between 30
and 60 days.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVII, No. 35
Tuesday October 19, 1976
is edited and managed by students
at the University of Michigan News
phone 764-0562. second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.
Published d a i1 y Tuesday through
Sunday morning during the U~nver-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street; Ann
arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription
rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes-
ters): $13 by mail outside Ann
Arbor,
Summer sessions published. Tues-
day through Saturday morning.
Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann
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