2 Wednesday, March 26, 1975 University Daily Kansan Kansas clubs raided TOPEKA-Atty. Gen. Curt Sandler led state and local law officers on coordinated raids on 11 private clubs in five Kansas cities Tuesday night, hoping to find gambling equipment believed sold to the clubs by a Topeka wholesaler dealing in illegal cards and other devices. Schneider said the arrest earlier Tuesday of Glenn Eugene Van Vleck, 59. Toneka, pronounced the raids on the clubs. Schreider called Van Vleck "probably the No. supplier of gambling equipment in Kansas." The attorney general estimated the value of the punchcards confiscated at Van Vieck's home at $15,000. He said this was the largest amount of gambling equipment seized in the state since the raids on Great Bend private clubs in 1971 by then Atty. Gen. Vern Miller. Freight rates to rise WASHINGTON-The nation's railroads got permission Tuesday from the Interstate Commerce Commission to boost freight rates 7 per cent on commodities including most foodstuffs and coal and oil. A spokesman for the Association of American Railroads said the carriers probably would go ahead with plans to ask the ICC to grant still more time. In grazing the 7 per cent increase, the ICC said the railways were in need of additional revenue from interstate freight rate charges. These increases would offset recently incurred operating cost hikes and provide an improved level of earnings. Death penalty rejected TOPEKA- For the second time in less than two weeks, the Kansas Senate rejected a motion to restore the death penalty for the Kansas criminal statute. principals. The Senate voted 21-19 to strike the enacting clause of a bill that Edward F. Kelly said was intended to attempt to amend to require all for first degree nurses to be certified. Boule appeals verdict MEDIA, Pa. — W. A. "Tony" Boyle, the once-powerful president of the United Mine Workers now ailing in a federal prison, today will seek to set aside his conviction of murdering a union rival on grounds that excessive public denial him a fair trial. The 73-year-old Boyle was convicted last April 10 of first degree murder for arranging the assassination of Joseph "Jock" Vallonki, his wife and mother. Boyle presently is in custody at Springfield, Mo., where he is completing a three-year sentence for making illegal political contributions BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—The assassination of King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, shot to death in his palace by his "deranged nephew," shocked capital cities Tuesday and added new uncertainties to the Middle East situation. The first reaction, in the United States and elsewhere, was the hope that the conservative, pro-American monarch's successor would succeed the monarch's basic policies in the key oil, rich state. The official radio in Riyadh said Faalis's suspected assassin, Prince Faisal Ibn Mused Ibn Abdul Aziz, approached the king to offer salutations during an audience for princes and commoners, pulled out a gun and fired several times. The king was taken to a hospital where he died shortly afterward. Faisal murder sparks uncertainty Within hours after the assassination, Faisal Da Nang base struck Faisal was replaced by his allying brother, Abu Abdul Mousa, 62. Faisal was believed to be a Muslim. SAIGON (AP)—Viet Cong gunners blasted the Da Nang air base early this morning, hours before an emergency U.S. airlift was to start evacuating hundreds of thousands of refugees who had fled to Da Nang. According to the Saigon command, 14 sieve-built rockets smashed into the base, killing two fighters. Da Nang, South Vietnam's northernmost military bastion, is crammed with more than a million refugees from ad-hoc camps on the eastern coast off the city from the rest of the country. It was the first shelling of the DaNang air base since the Communist-led troops unleashed their offensive in the northern tier of South Vietnam three weeks ago. A U.S.-financed airlift and sea evacuation will seek to transfer some $30,000 refugees coast, Western diplomats said. However, rocket attacks could inflict massive casualties on refugees gathered at the base and also damage the aircrafts and runways. Today's airlift is the largest of the Indochina war, with commercial jets planning to ferry several thousand people daily to Cam Rai Bay, a deep-water port that was once one of the largest U.S. military complexes in the country. The United States also is financing an emergency airlift of food, fuel and ammunition to Phnom Penh, the besieged capital of neighboring Cambodia. In Washington, the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) announced that it had arranged for jelliners to make 25 flights during the next six days from Da Nang to Cam Ranh. The jets could transfer as many as 50,000 refugees. A World Airways Boeing 727 cargo plane capable of carrying 375 persons and of making the DaN-Cam Ranh flight in 30 minutes will open the airlift, a spokesman said. The Airbus Boeing 747 to be stripped to the deck, allow it to lift 1,200 to 1,600 refuctions a flight. U. S. assistance funds already allocated to South Sudan will finance the evacuations. The city is still awaiting a decision on the court judge. Judge James Patterson, from District Court Judge James Patterson, has joined a Fate of city garage waits on finding of district judge A spokesman for Paddock's office said Tuesday that there had been no decision and that there was no indication when a decision would be made. A restraining order to delay construction of the garage at Second and Indiana was issued by the court Jan. 31, at the request of Ed Collister, attorney for the Old West Lawrence and Pickney neighborhood associations. Paddock will rule on whether the city's actions were administrative or legislative. If he rules that the action was legislative, and therefore subject to a referendum, as opponents to the garage site argue, the present commission could call for a referendum or defer action to the new commission. Four of the six candidates for commission have said they strongly oppose the proposed location and preferred a 23rd and Learnard Ave. location. If the garage issue reaches the new commission, either a referendum could be passed or another resolution could be proposed. Marjorie H. Argersinger, Donald A. Binns, Carl Mibek and John Colyer, Jr., have said they strongly opposed the commission's decision to locate the garage at Second and Indiana. They said they favored the location at 23rd and Leanard Ave. location because it was away from residential areas and near main highways. Tax cut bill seeks rebates, aid to poor WASHINGTON (AP)—Senate and House conferees agreed Tuesday that a tax cut bill they are considering would include a 1974 law of $100 to $200 for most Americans. The cut must be held down, Fords said, less Congress make the bill “so bad” it’s easy to do. Robert P. Radcliffe and Dale Willey said they tended to favor the 23rd and Learnard location, but would have to study the issue before making a final commitment. as the conferences began to trim the bill to less than the $4.3 billion voted by the Senate, President Gerald R. Ford said he was delaying a final decision to fly to California for a nine-day vacation until he saw the size of the final tax cut. If Ford vetoes the bill, said press secretary Ronn Nessen, the President might call Congress into special session next week, forcing the lawmakers to give up their own recess, to approve a recession-fighting tax cut more to Ford's liking. Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore., chairman of the conference committee, said he wouldn't predict that the tax cut bill would be completed Wednesday so that Congress could pass a law that "both sides are taking tough positions." However, he said he was optimistic. *We're starch on oil and housing* *in a肩B instrument B and housing* *sidemaintain* new house to subtract 5 per cent of the cost of a house in a maximum of $2,000, from its 1976 cost. He was referring to the oil depletion that would allow a person who bought billet that would allow a person who bought billet. Ford has recommended a $16.2 billion tax cut to stimulate the U.S. economy. The final version of the congressional measure is expected to call for a cut of about $23 billion, but it does not mention the major oil companies, would cut the net revenue loss to about $21 billion. In attempts to complete work on the compromise tax cut, the conference also accepted a special $1.5 billion program of refunds up to $40 for poor working families. The confeerese approved a Senate provision that called for $200 million in emergency benefits for the hard-core unemployed. They also agreed to authorize increased tax benefits of about $900 million or working families who must hire babysitters. Commissioner Barkley Clark, KU professor of law and an incumbent, cast the only opposing vote in the commissions' Nov. 12 approval of the Second and Indiana site. Several major issues remained to be settled if the conferences were to complete work on the bill so the House and Senate would pass. The bill was later approved by Easter egress after Wednesday's session. Those issues included a Senate provision for a $100 bonus for every Social Security and railroad-retirement system beneficiary; a special credit for home buyers; reducing the tax rate on the first $4,000 of taxable income by 4 per cent; and deciding to either concentrate tax relief on families that take the standard deduction Vous interesse, Adresse vous au représentant du Corps de la Paix, sur votre campus. Ici on parle Francais . . . CORPS DE LA PAIX EN AFRIQUE Si cela vous interesse, 4/7/75-4/9/75 Could YOU qualify? Do you keep your apartment in good order? Do you pay your rent promptly before the 5th of each month? Can you sign a full 12-month lease? Then YOU can be a SUPER RESIDENT! The $100 check (no strings attached) is just our way of saying "thank you" to our residents who are dependable, loyal, trustworthy . . . and neat! And that's not all. Shortly before your 12-month lease is up, we'll inspect your apartment and, if it's in good order, we'll refund your deposit . . . on your moving day! No waiting. No mailing. You'll receive your deposit AND your $100 thank-you check when you turn over your keys. Simple. And sensible, too. We get a super-resident . . . you get $100 . . . and the satisfaction of knowing you're SUPER! *Applicable on any lease signed after February 1, 1975 Columbian Properties Corp. - West Hills 1012 Emery Road *Avalon 901 Avalon Rd. PHONE 841-3800 *Harvard Square 2105 Harvard Khaled named Prince Fahd, $3, as the new crown prince, and diplomats in Beirut said Fahd was likely to take the reigns of Turkey and moving in a ceremonial or interm role. Both Khaled and Fahd are expected to follow the path set out by Faish, leaving Saudi Arabia as a stanunch friend of the Arabs in their conflict with Israel. King Faisal had been regarded by officials in Washington and other Western capitals as a voice of moderation in the Arab world. But he remained a leader in the Arab cause against Israel and led the Arab oil boycott against the United States. In Washington, where officials described the assassination as a blow to U.S. policy in the Middle East, President Gerald R. Ford said it was "a close friend of the United States." Ford Monday had ordered a review of U. Mideast policy, which had been closely linked to Israel. Ford's order followed a collapse last weekend of efforts by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to bring peace through step-by-step moves in the Middle East. In Jerusalem, Gen. Haim Herzog, Israel's ambassador-designate to the United States, said that the new regime may be that the new regime could open the door to Sudan penetration in Saudi Arabia and that the assassination "does open up a major power confrontation in this area." The account gave no hint as to the fate of the assassin. In Riyadh the official Saudi radio quoted a palace spokesman as saying, "Investigation established the assassin acted alone, and no one else is behind the crime." Saudi Arabia is governed by the strict Islamic code coded abiaria, which require the following: ★★ Prince's drug conviction revealed BOULDER, Colo. (AP)—The man accused of assassinating King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was identified by university officials Tuesday as a University of Colorado graduate who once pleaded guilty to charge of conspiracy to sell LSD. Faisal Ibn Musaei Abd Abul Aziz, identified as a prince and the nephew of King Faisal, was arrested in October to testify that he would sell the baccalinecum drug-LSD, Police and court records show that he was arrested and pleaded no contest to the charge, but the case was dismissed because of problems with its wording. MARCH SIZZLER SPECIALS The prosecutor reaffirmed the charge and the bail in May 1970 and was placed on probation. Tues., Wed., Thurs. The University of Colorado confirmed that Prince Faisal was graduated in May 1971 with a degree in political science. He enrolled in the fall of 1967. 2 TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS $3.98 1 GR. SIRLOIN STEAK $1.19 1 SIZZLER STEAK $1.99 served with sizzler toast baked potato or French fries SIZZLER FAMILY STEAKHOUSE 1516 W.23rd St. 842-8078 Locally Owned & Managed Catering and Banquets A Creation of the Ultimate for Your Eating Pleasure ... Here's How We Make it Step By Step ... Bite By Bite . . . Enjoy a Experience in Good Eating ENJOY ONE TODAY MAR 28TH-10 TH 130th - PREMIUM FLAVORS REGULAR FLAVORS VANILLA + CHOCOLATE IMPORTANT MARKET DATE 95¢ *TEXAS PCAM* *BUTTERED PCAM* $ 105 CHOCOLATE CHIP BUTTERED BRICKS BLACK CHERRY CHERRY JUICE FRONT VANILLA CHERRY VANILLA - CHOCOLATE MARSH MALLOW SUPER SIZE Coca-Cola 24 oz. 33¢ REG.40c SUPER-BURGER Made From 1/4 lb. 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