. Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thurs sday, April 8, 1976 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY POETRY READING with D. Clinton READING FROM HIS WORKS ThAurs., Apri 8--7:30 p.m. at Guild House-802 Monroe Refre-hments h e enb1 ca fCe ers- last e~ n . ( 7,- 1 A L M AT P . UATO i HUA NEW PREMIER: NOW OPEN Ha eadTeng ous ILeather whUrk , Ltd. (Continued fromPage 1 tation cre W ork sY, Ld . i with the followers of defeated; Hunan pi 539 E. Liberty Teng Hsiao-ping. power, a Teng, the most ardent rival moments Be/ween David's Books and John Leidy and critic of Chairman Mao The fir Tse-tung, was fired from his Premieri IHAND CRAFTED LEATHER GOODS powerful jobs as first vice pre- ary. Teng Mier, party vice chairman, and and prote jackets, bags, luggage, backpacks, hats, chief of the army general staff. to take ov wise. He vests, belts, buckles, sheepskin coats, H. IWA himself is not consider- of villifica wallets, briefcases. ed as extreme as most of the casing hin radicals, but as Mao's man he ist - roa Famous Walter Dyer Moccasins will be expected to do the 82- China to year-old chairman's bidding. ted in power shakeup eated largely in Mao's rovince. Hua rose to s people often do, in of crisis. er and visionary as contrasted to the hard-headed doer and realist. UM Gilbert & Sullivan Society proudly presents RUDDIGORE APRIL 14-11 MENDELSSOHN THEATRE BOX OFFICE OPEN APRIL 11, call 763-1085 I '- .~'.--. Virtually unknown outside China until this year, his repu- COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY Munson and Munson CALL 995-3929 Hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. ii "XMen told I had cancer of the larynx, my reaction was: what good is a lawyer without a voice?" Frank Purcell, Attorney HE AU voring ex al resourc think woi try's devf dence, an of univer: petitive e The se Monday v nese por Square in a rampag tempt to his politic him thel In som: which div tions in C human ra st was the death of ALL HIS life, Mao has been a Chou En-lai in Janu- dreamer and a teacher with g, 72, Chou's old crony visions of a China re-made ge, had been expected through the manipulation and er. Mao thought other- driving power of the masses mounted a campaign and of human nature remolded ation against Teng, ac- by education and experience. m of being a "capital- After years in the wilderness, der" trying to return Chinese communism came to capitalism. power in 1949 and Mao had his first great opportunities to put SO was accused of fa- his bold ideas into practice. He port of Chinese natur- worked on the Chinese millions ces, which the Maoists like clay, moving them out of uld hinder the coun- private farming and industry elopment and indepen- into communes and state-owned d of favoring selection enterprises, touching off vast sity students by corn- migrations from city to coun- xaminations.-; tryside, instituting purge after econd crisis erupted purge to - as he put it - keep when some 100,000 Chi- the waters of communism pure red into Tien An Men and untainted by capitalism. Peking and went on He wanted the old privileges e of violence in an at- abolished and the peasant, extricate Teng from worker and soldier given ac- tal dilemma and get cess to higher education; the premiership. old ills eliminated through hy- ne ways, the quarrel giene and barefoot doctors; the vides the opposing fac- gnawing wants of hunger satis- "hina is as old as the fied through planning and grain ce, that of the dream- storage. he had to step down as presi- dent while the realists ruled. The radicals saw their tor- mentors as "revisionists," fol- lowers of the Soviet line of pseu- do-capitalism. When Mao under- took his comeback in the Cul- tural Revolution, the lines were drawn. HUA himself is less than radi- cal, once was attacked by the leftists during the cultural purge. But as Mao's creature, he will follow the radical line, within limits. Anti - Sovietism will continue and so will the, rapprochement with the United States and the West, not because of affection for the old imperialism, but because they stand as possible buffers to Soviet expansion or attack. At home,Hua must earn his keep by making secure the gains in education, science and culture which Mao and his wife, Chiang Ching, 62, leader of the radicals, cherish. HE HAS the devil's own task of coaxing enthusiastic new ef- forts from a peasantry and a laboring class now thoroughly alarmed by the shadow of per- haps another cultural purge. They want stability but are now to be forced to swallow ideology and class struggle while they work. The army may well be deci- sive in the immediate future. It also values stability, being conservative by nature, and wants expertise, modern weap- ons, and a professional fighting corps. It may. well resent the [ way Teng, once one of China's most brilliant commanders, has ibeen treated. Then there are the old-timers, Mao's comrades on the Loog March of the 1930s-Yeh Chien- ying, Chu teh, Li Hsien-nien. Age has taken some of the revo- lutionary fire out of them. They prize security, are troubled by the turmoil whipped up in the new radical purge. They are among the moderates. AVAILABLE AT YOUR "PICTURE AMERICA" dealer where vou'll qet Good Prices, Good Service & a Full Line on the MAIN CAMPUS at 318 SOUTH STATE ST. 761-2011 ( x d ti t- i nF e t e. p m Z 's h x- p it n IS d+ CATCH, LI VE: On Epic Records and Tapes ai "EPIC," MARCA REG. 3,1976 CBSINC Pick up your portfolio an take a merciless look. If you're hi ting the mark creatively but not i execution, take a look at Canon. The good things youv heard about Canon SLR's are tru One of the best things about ther is our line of nearly forty lense from fisheye to super-telephotc including aspherics and our e clusive fluorites. They represer the optical state-of-the-art. 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"That was nine years ago. 111 less than two months after the opera- tion, I was back at work and talking. Today, I do everything I did before. Even try cases in court. "All of this is thanks to early detection. effective. treatment, and the ex- tremely beneficial voice training program offered by the American Cancer Society. Ive won my battle. But the battle against cancer goes on. So, please, have regular checkups. And give to the American Cancer Soci- ety. We want to wipe out cancer in your lifetime." SUN PHOTO MAO'S dreams reached their climax in the Great Leap For- ward of the late 1950s. Mao threw millions of Chi-} nese into a frantic battle to achieve overnight industrializ- ation. Elated, he believed China stood on the threshold of true communism, a time when each man and woman would be compensated according to need rather than labor. Disastrous harvests inducedt by natural calamities, technical mismanagement and the with- drawal of Soviet assistance ran the Great Leap onto thenrocks. THE REALISTS, headed by Liu Shao-chi and Chou, took over, brought the country back to stability by tossing the Marxist - Maoist handbook of ideology out the window. Mao never forgave or forgot. Opposed by the armed forces, d I- e a e' p 'w h si o el sc I W ."'' U U