Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 173, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1976 Page: 2 of 76
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from pace one
Mao
*
• *
11
Heavenly Peace) Square, where al-
moit 27 years ago Mao announced
the founding of the People's Repub-
All factories and neighborhoods
wtt) arrange for the population to lis-
ten to or watch live radio and televi-
sion broadcasts of the rally, Hslnhua
said, and at exactly 3 p.m. all Chin-
ese "wherever they are" should
stand at attention for three minutes
in silent tribute, "with the exception
of those whose work cannot be Inter-
rupted." Trains, ships and factories
are to sound their sirens at the same
time.
Hsinhua did not mention burial ar-
rangements.
It said no "foreign governments,
fraternal parties or friendly person-
ages" would be Invited to send rep-
resentatives.
A peasant's son who became one
of the 20th century's greatest revolu-
tionaries, Mao not only deeply influ-
(Continued)
People Chen Hsi-lien, commander of Peking
units of the 3> z-million-man Libera-
tion Army. Wang also Is a vice
chairman of the party.
The party constitution provides
that a plenary session of the 195-
member Central Committee elects
the new chairman.
Peking be^an receiving messages
of condolences from around the
world within hours of the announce-
ment. British Prime Minister James
Callaghan issued a statement ex-
pressing "great regret." Callaghan
said Mao was "one of the outstand-
ing leaders of this century ... he
will be remembered as a man of
great vision and a thinker with a
profound sense of history."
There was no immediate official
reaction in Taipei or Moscow. The
Soviet news agency Tass carried a
report from Tokyo quoting Peking
radio, rather than from its corre-
spondent in China. A Moscow radio
announcer read only a brief bulletin
toward the end of his newcast.
Hsinhua said Mao's body would lie
in state in the Great Hall of the Peo-
ple for one week beginning Saturday
for Chinese leaders and the masses
to pay their last respects.
All recreational activities will be
'Jgion. One resident said, "P
7‘Were walking around normally but
• some were weeping and many others
^reflected shock and sorrow on their
£ faces."
< Tiensnmen, the huge public
Square near Mao's Peking residence,
"was reported normal, except that a
'*larger than usual number of official
^limousines could be seen.
• The residents said news of Mao’s
ideath was repeated continuously
’’©ver the radio and funeral music re-
", placed regularly scheduled pro-
grams.
Mao is the third of his generation
■JGf Chinese leaders to die this year.
-•Chou died in January. Then in June,
• The program is an outgrowth of the
TRed army, died little more than a
jxnonth after he had taken over Mao’s
former job of greeting visiting digni-
• taries.
JI Presumably Premier Hua Kuo-
feng is next in line to succeed Mao,
;• since he was also named first vice
-chairman of the party when he was
‘raised to the premiership five
'months ago. But his elevation is not
' assured. He is in his mid to late 50s.
Others who appear to be in the
‘ running are Mao's widow, Chiang
’ Ching, a leader of the radical faction
■of the party; her proteges, Vice Pre-
rfnier Chang Chun-chlao, 64, Wang ,_______
Hung-wen (the youngest possible suspended until Sept. 18, when a sol-
’ successor at 42) and Yao Wen-yuan, emn memorial redly will be held in
*■63; party vice chairman and defense Peking's Tien An Men (Gate of
minister Yeh Chlen-ying, 78, and ” ‘ ""
•* THe DAILY OKLAHOMAN
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20 EXPOSURE
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finishing for 110. 126.
and 135 twelveexposure
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2.99
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Vivid quality controlled
color tor 110,126. and
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PRICES GOOD IN ALL T.G.aY. H TO 81.00 STORES AND FAMILY
CENTERS IN THE GREATER OKLAHOMA CITY AREA. THUR8-
0AV SEPTEMBER 9 THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
r W. Will Sa % --------—*
Naser Ta
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FREE DICTIONARY!
1 V
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Guyana wants
German firm
Premier Hua Kuo-feng
Mao's eaccesaor?
fi
Id
Mulhall
Rauls Valley
MS™
Wakita
Waller,
Waamorfart
(Continued)
and overnight were spotty, but wide-
guilty to a misdemeanor charge on
possession of heroin, just prior to the
trial starting. She also had been
scheduled to go on trial with the oth-
er defendants.
She testified that she accompanied said.
This differs from the state's pres-
ent five community treatment cen-
* (Continued)
lating to a comment made by Miss
Hulsey Wednesday when she testi-
fied she had delivered a package of
cocaine to the office of one of the de-
fense attorneys, Carroll Gregg.
Gregg represents Earl Jones, who
has been identified as one of the
leaders of the alleged heroin distri-
bution operation.
Miss Hulsey said she did not know
any of the other attorneys and had
not been in any of their offices.
Following her testimony, the pros- tablished in Tulsa are a big step to-
ward ending the present problem of
young people convicted on minor of-
fenses turning into hardened criml-
one community treatment center in
the city, near Northwest Highway
and Broadway Extension, housing
up to 130 inmates at a time.
Inbody said "the good record" of
the existing facility — "no violence
or other bad situations in its history"
— should make the new facility ac-
ceptable to the community.
He pointed out that while up to 40
per cent of the state's ex-convicts
someday return to prison, the return
rate has been only about 12 per cent
for those going through the work-re-
lease program.
He said Mayor Patience batting
has cooperated with the department
in establishing the site selection
committee.
He said the panel will help the de-
partment evaluate each possible
site, then make a single recommen-
dation to the Board of Corrections,
which will make the final selection.
Named to the panel were Martha
ters, where inmates are assigned Haswell, director of Special Services
near the conclusion of their prison
terms.
The department already operates
(Continued)
fences of no more than two years,
meaning they would be people in-
volved in less-serious, non-violent
crimes."
"And because we are talking about
first offenders, most of these will be
younger people," he added.
"Most of them will be in our custo-
dy only three to six months, none
over a year."
He said the new first offender cen-
ter here and a similar one to be es-
GEORGETOWN
(AP) — Guyana has
opened negotiations for
the complete acquisi-
tion of the Berger
Paints Ltd., owned by a
West German firm.
ecution called a former roommate of
Miss Hulsey, Jackie Hoffman, Ed-
mond.
Miss Hoffman on Tuesday pleaded nals because of experiences in pris-
. on
Those qualifying for the new cen-
ters will not go to prison at all, but
will be assigned directly to the cen-
ters following their convictions, he
Oklahoma rainfall reports for the
24 hours ending at 7 a.m. today in-
clude the following:
its: *” 4 w-
Amber 1 13 jefferemi
Miss Hulsey on an airplane flight
Sept. 24, 1975, from Oklahoma City
to Tucson, Ariz. and went with her to
the Mexican border at Nogales
where she said Miss Hulsey crossed.
Miss Hulsey has testified that she
transported the heroin across the
Mexican border at Nogales, and
Miss Hoffman's testimony was an
apparent effort to back up Miss Hul-
sey's previous testimony.
After she testified, a Tucson taxi
driver J. Calvin Daugherty, testi-
fied ne transported Miss Hulsey
from Tucson to Nogales on several
occasions.
He said he remembered specifical-
ly taking Miss Hulsey because on
one occasion she paid him a $40 tip
in addition to the $54 it cost to drive
her the 60 miles from Tucson to
Mexico.
A U.S. Customs Inspector, Leonar-
do B. Manriquez, testified he saw
Miss Hulsey cross the border "at
least six or seven times" in the sum-
mer and fall of 1975.
The reason he said he remem-
bered seeing the woman was be-
cause of her large size and the fact
that, "I remember seeing her come
back spaced out" one time.
Miller said he plans to call Barry
Bruce Bolding as a witness this aft-
ernoon. and he expects Bolding, an
unindicted co-conspirator in the
case, to take the rest of the day tes-
tifying.
sites are located, but that there are
no plans for public hearings on the
filled streets gutter-full at Ardmore, potential sites.
The Oklahoma City area was
paced by 1.54 at the north treatment
plant and .80 at Lake Draper. The
official .59 at Will Rogers World Air-
port, however, did little toward
catching up to normal.
Mythical women
on 13 U.S. stamps
WASHINGTON - Thirty-nine
women have been depicted on
stamps in America in the last 128
years, but 13 of them have been
mythical figures like Liberty. The
first of the 26 real women to appear
on a U.S. stamp was Queen Isabella
of Spain. More than 160 males have
appeared on U.S. stamps.
Buy Volumes 2 & 3 of
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•niim
Canwfto
artfv*
I w
Frederick
Ovyrnffi
enced the lives of his countrymen
but also became a model for revolu-
tionaries in many of the backward
regions of the earth.
A classical poet, calligrapher,
hard-headed p o 1 i t i c a n, guerrilla
strategist and audacious thinker, he
led the long struggle which ended
with the triumph of communism in
China and then broke with the Soviet
Communist party in a schism that
split the Communist world.
His passing raises the compelling
question of how long his own brand
of communism — called Maoism —
will survive in China. Much will de-
pend on how those who follow him
Interpret and apply his ideals and
teaching.
A believer in the masses and per-
manent revolution, Mao spearhead-
ed many revolutions during his long
and turbulent lifetime. In one, he
trampled upon and sought to destroy
the rule of the centuries-old elite —
the landlords, rich merchants, intel-
lectuals, officials and warlords —
whose privileges were defended by
25 centuries of Confucian thinking.
He aimed to turn over this power
to the poor peasants, city workers
and soldiers.
for Municipal Court; Pat Whitsett of
the League of Women Voters penal
reform committee; Dr. Lloyd Owens
Of the Oklahoma City Chamber of
Commerce Crime Prevention Coun-
cil; Dr. Frank Cox, former president
of the Urban League, and Cherry
Clifford, a member of the Junior
League.
Inbody said the committee will
visit with "community leaders" in
spread. Heaviest amounts included the neighborhoods where possible
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Bennett, Charles L. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 173, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1976, newspaper, September 9, 1976; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1797431/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.