Friday, November l9, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, November 19, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAO WIDOW ACCUSED OF TREASON: Chiang Ching charged TOKYO (A') - Once a head- succession and elevate Chiang they supposedly were prepared ttrong political queen who broke Ching instead to the chairman- to entrench themselves in Man- generals and cabinet ministers ship. churia and, with military back- seemingly at will, Mao Tse- Targets of the propaganda ing there, launch a civil war. tung's widow, Chiang Ching, barrage also include Chang U now faces myriad charges rang- Chun-chiao, 65; Wang Hung- OUT OF this welter of accu- ing from treason to importing wen, 39, and Yao Wen-yuan; 52, satitns nothing official has yet pornographic movies. all members of the Communist emerged. No formal indictments So far, no firm details have party's Politburo. But because have been published against been disclosed of an alleged plot of her name and the aura of the four radic ndewhou ar-er by Chiang ,Ching and her radi- prestige it gave her as Mao's rest o cal followers to kill Mao be- wife, the heaviest blows are be-: fore seizing power. But the pic- ing dealt to Chiang Ching, who H o w e v e r, the cam-' ture of her emerging in a was the arbiter of Chinese cul- paign against the four has all weeks-long " propaganda cam- ture. the earmarks of other purges pDaign is that of a cold, ruthless, in which the victims were first F i L F L 1 3k l 1 vain and ambitious woman, un- B E S I D E S PLOTTING seized, then rendered mute by moved by the impending death to assassinate Mao in some still denying them access to the us- of her famous husband. unspecified way, she is charged ual organs of propaganda. Af- with a 197f'ttempt to kill then ter this began the sometimes T H E I N T E N S E cam- Premier Chou En-lai, in concert long, repetitious process of de- paign against Chiang Ching and I with onetime Defense Minister stroying them officially and others of the so-called, "gang Lin Piao. They allegedly gave privately. of four," has been waged orders- to shoot down Chou's This was the way it worked through official media, speech- plane as he returned from a in the days of the 1966-69 Cul- es and leaked information in visit to Hanoi. tural Revolution, when Chiang Peking since the four were ar- The plan failed and Chou es- Ching led an army of fanaticE rested Oct. 7, barely a month saped, but the incident was Red Guards against her ene- after Chairman Mao died at 82. hthye up in w as latemie that year in a plane crash while me . Their arrest came amid the he was allegedly trying to flee i In the purges, it was suffic- swift rise to power of a virtual to the Soviet Union., ient to show that the victims unknown, 56-year-old Hua Kuo- Varioils accounts have emerg- all along had harbored a ha- feng, named to succeed Mao ed of the plans of the radical tred of Mao while secretly plan- with the help of the army and four to seize power. According ning to restore capitalism to other political moderates. The to one, they sought to win over } China - and that while waiting radicals were accused of at-!the army: according to''another, they lived a life of bourgeois temupting to deprive Hua of the the militia. In the last resort I decadence. i G I E Philadelphia hotel: The final victim PHILADELPHIA () - The Bellevue-Stratford Hotel, where kings and presidents have slept in luxury, closed at midnight last night, perhaps the final victim of the myster- ious Legionnaires' disease. , A sign in the rear of the lobby headlined, "Daily Events," lists a United Way dinner, the last event at the 19-story hotel that was built in 1904 as a rival to Europe's finest hostelries. Starting today, the sign will be blank. THE MAHOGANY grandfather clock that chimed for presidents from the time of Teddy Roosevelt was trucked from the lobby this week and placed in storage. Tony Delia, bell captain for 31 years, stood in the lobby Wednesday as a crowd of photographers snapped pictures of the hotel's next-to-last day. "It's like going to a wake and taking a picture of your mother in the coffin," he said. A PHILADELPHIA public relations firm, Spiro & As- sociates, was assigned the task of erasing the disease stig- ma. Ten thousand "I Love the Bellevue" buttons were, made up. How many were distribufed is not known, but the hotel's 350 full-time employes and 200 part-time em- ployes were given notice on Nov. 10 that the 19-story hotel would close. Two suits were filed seeking court orders to stop the owners from shutting the hotel and offering it for sale at $15 million. One was brought by unions to save the jobs of Delia and the other 350 employes. The second by two eld- erly women who didn't want to lose their $1,750-a-month hotel apartments. The Legionnaire's disease that killed 29 persons and hospitalized 151 last summer was linked by health officials to an American Legion convention headquartered at the hotel. Medical sleuths have searched in vain for the cause of the disease. BUT THE publicity was enough to reduce "the Grand Old Dame of Broad Street" to poverty. Thirty of 50 con- ventions scheduled this fall canceled. The room occupancy rate tumbled from 84 per cent to as low as 3 per cent. The owners set the losses at $10,000 a day. "The cancellations began coming in seven or eight days after the first story appeared," William, G. Cladwick, the hotel's executive vice president said. Since the announcement of the shutdown, souvenir hunters have been picking clean the marbled bones of the Bellevue. School superintendents plan educational priority strategies Money problems dominated Reed said reductions in city s"'toY £\tVP theopnig tlk o th Cunilspending called for by Mayor The counciln the opening talks of the Council Walter Washington forced him seeks federal ref of Great City Schools. The sup- to cut this year's school budget regation and g erintendents say they look to by $13 million to $202.8 million. grams and a Sec Carter and Congress to help "This means cutting out sum- cation. public education. mer school, not buying books "One of'our to or new buses and the release the creation of a THE MICHIGAN DAILY of 126 teachers," he said. "I vol. LXXXVII, No 62 think Carter and the new ad- department rel Friday November 19, 1976 ministration have to take a needs," said Lou Is editedth and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News long, hard look at where edu- cago school board phone 764-0562. Second class postage cation is going." council secretary paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a iil y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription FR I.-SAT. $2.50 rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. L n Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morn ng. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside AnnALKE Arbor. Arbor. _ -Regarded by authoriti cionodos of the subjec + .4: of the best performers * ORANGE songs and ballads, o THE NEW YORK T ** JULIUS master of the ra J* IU , . lisp ballad, .. of the Specializing n ~ . . . of the Irish song- Refreshing Drinks! fne singing; . g ORAN Efrnertoning;"on. * ORANGE >performer with an ext reoertoire."-John S. PINEAPPLE STRAWBERRY ' WED.-HOOT 75c JU L IUS " JL D ITHURS.: An Ann Arbor Ceilidh Gr * A LL MADE W ITH H * ACTUAL FRUIT! presenting music from the British Isles: Ballads, Jigs, Reels and Hornpipes played on traditional in * FEATURING ...$. * California Dog-55c $1.50 '(chili, cheese & onions) 1421 H I LL . 8:30 761 BRIARWOOD MALL. S. UNIVERSITY * UNIVERSITY TOWERS It Pays to Advertise in The nopen. meeting here orm in deseg- academic pro- retary of Edu- p priorities is a cabinet-level ated to ' our ise Malis, Chi- d member and y-treasurer. es and ofi- ect as one sof British ive today. IMES: "a onal Eng- he chanteyn -a master v kind of "a superb raordinary Wilson. oup Chanties, nstruments -1451 CHICAGO P) - Superinten-j+ dents of the nation's big-city schools yesterday began a three-day strategy session on educational priorities they hope President-elect Jimmy Carter, will adopt. "WE'RE AT a crucial'period when education is being labeled as ineffective and, at the same time, monies are being cut,"j said Vincent Reed, superin- tendent of Washington public schools. MONEY PROBLEMS are not limited to big city schools. In recent weeks several smaller school systems in Oregon and Ohio have had to close their doors because voters refused to approve higher tax levies neces- -Qnm7 t mn th orn.neo DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Exs~ssssi:ssm sas~sssss~s ss ss * 5ssss s lsssai* sss Friday, November 19, 1976 D, Angell, 4 pm. Believe Day Calendar Comparative Lit: Yen Yuan-shu PENED! WUOM: Live coverage of Eco- (Prof. Nat'l Taiwanese Univ) "Lit- Exam A nomic & Social Outlook Conf-Har- erary Criticism: The Chinese View- Deadline old Shapiro "The Michigan Econo- point," E Conf Rm, Rackham, 4:10 is Dec.< my in 1977," 9:30 am. pm. first exa WUOM: "Yanks and Limeys," 3rd Music School Oiera: "The Cru- Oak R in series of 8 special BBC programs; cible," Mendelssohn, 8 pm.. ( fers a su this program is "Doubtful Friends Residential College' Players: Pir- ing sen & Certain Enemies," 10:15 am, adnello's 'It Is So! ((If You Think open en Regents: Regents' Rm, Admin, 11 So)" Aud, E. Quad, 8 pm. M cal scien am. Ann Arbor Committee, Human Further Guild House: luncheon, Barbara Rights in Latin America (Benefit able. Murphy 'tAssertiveness Training," for Teach-In): Poetry reading, folk- - 802 Monroe, noon. music, theatre, Pendleton Rm, 3rd Ob Gyn / Bio Eng: Steve Enzer . fl, Union, 8 pm. "State of the Art of Gas-Sensing : UAC Major Events: Blues con- Electrodes," L2204 Women's ;Hosp., cert, Roosevelt Sykes, Otis Rush, noon. Jimmy Dawkins; Hill Aud, 8 pm. Educat Media: "Battered Child," Ark: Lou & Sally Killen, tradi- Schorling Aud, SEB, 12:10 pm. tional English songs, stories; 1421 C Biolog Chem: C P Lee (Wayne Hill, 9:30 pm. MU State Univ) "Respiratory Chain Career Planning & Program Linked Energy Transduction of Mi- Tri-State Career Conference, Ev- tochondrial Membranes," 6423 Med ansville - Indiana Area invites Sen- Set I, 4 pm. iors to attend. Date: Tues./Weds. Psycholog: W J McKeachie "Psy- Dec. 28/29. Further details and ap- chology In the American Bicenten- pis. available. nial Year," Aud A, Angell, 4 pm. Marriott's Great America. Inter- Biol Set: "Generation Upon Gen- ested in ad vance students major- eration," 2042 Nat Set, 4 pm. ing in Pub. nel., Market., Bus. Man- Philosophy: Donald Davidson agm. Job would begin on or near "Why Animals Can't Think," Aud Dec. 15. Further details available. e it or not IT HAS HAP- The Summer Fed. Serv. Announcem. 414 is here. e for taking the first exam 9. It is smart to take the :am. Ridge Nat. Labs., Tenn. Of- ummer program for graduat- lors/grads. students. Fields' ngr., math, environ., physi- mces. Excellent salary range. details and appls. avail- E C. GRADS TO ATTEND OMMENCEMENT YOU ST ORDER A CAP AND GOWN BY NOV. 19, 1976 FROM THE U. CELLAR 769-7940 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN--DEARBORN .PRESENTS a contemporarv American drama by MARK MEDOFF NOV. 18, 19, 20 at 8:00 NOV. 21 at 3:00 BRYANT JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 460 N. Vernon, Dearborn (1 blk. north of Cherry Hill Rd., west of Telegraph) ADMISSION: $2.50 AT THE DOOR Daily .n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n I FRIENDS OF THE COMMUNITY CENTER Present a BENEFIT DANCE for the: Community Center Ozone House 767-HELP Community Switchboard Community Center Project BENEFIT 1t i I t F " f 4.4 FEATURING: The Rockets The Madct- Muruga Band Dick Segal NOV. 20-8 p.m.-1 a.m. MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM $2.50 at the door Info. 663-1111 _. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DANCE COMPANY 1 Elizabeth Weil Bergmann's THE PLANETS by Gustav Holst Gay Delanghe's LA CREATION DU MCNDE by Darius Milhaud cndeue as Lrnt s e'eCh. em' Y nou . rhe tab ort, aecomrpte stitched oc stocfCwiei; Get a Pair1tet~. U 40i 1.Straight Leg' Cords -' '~ ' Trndatton, Irr r,< dness and ~ ~ - ccnid lcir~Xs TheSe msc .- .;rd' ( r ,;rr' n H rt1FP C '1;' :"' ± Q Zr/"" r Nri n\ 'k . $140d 2.Flare Leg Cords Fnsh'nrm bit'enomt 1!o teor e: e-; 'r he,'r. and so rmfortcble Luou 7if nt , 'Avo'hie in brown tcan ncvL'or ,ors' X14 :-~,~4 3. Denim Flares' e amusr u S 1 1 '' ' style and fit By 'f-r Jl +!+ + seller '- ", $350 4.Straight /°'t= Leg Denims Levi's have beers 4yeI making these jar y'ears aid cthey'~re stU!1 popJor 41350rK t 1 u . POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING. ARTS DECEMBER 10, I, 12 December 10, 11 at 800 December 12 at 300 - -- - - - - - - a.a"'Nw0 Please enter my order for Friday 10 Saturday It Sunday (matinee) 12 (Circle Date) $600 center orchestra $5 00 center balcony $4 00 side orchestra/ tickets @ $ For total of $ balcony NamePhone Address L City State Zip Mail self addressed stamped envelope and che mode payable to U M Dept of Dance to: Department of Dance, Barbour Gymnosium, U of M, Ann Arbor, Ml !4$109 Attn Ticket Office Information' 764- 6273 $2.50 Student Tickets available for the Opera production of Robert Ward's BASED ON Arthur Miller's play NOV. 18-21-8 P.M. AT THP I Singers, Dancers, Musicians, Actors! Ibrforming Artists, all! Opryland'77 WantsYou! ( Opryland '77, with 11 fully-staged productions featuring over 300 sin'gers, dan- cers, and other artists, offers tremendous opportunities to aspiring young talent. Some of our performers have won solo spots in network and regional TV produc- tions originating from Opryland. Opryland talent has traveled afar to entertain at special events (twice to Washington to perform for the President!). Several have received major-label recording contracts. For all, there's good money, exciting work, exposure to people who count! University of Michigan auditions will be held Thursday, December 2, 1976, from 12:00-5:00 p.m., at Michigan Union Assembly Hall. A piano accompanist, record player, guitar amplifier, and tape recorder will be available for performers. Conductors/leaders, stage managers, lighting technicians, sound engineers, stagehands, and follow spot operators should report with typed resume ready for interview. Non-Equity. II =