2 Monday, March 24, 1975 University Dally Kansan Panel to investigate IRS WASHINGTON—A probe of alleged invasions of citizens' rights by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will be launched Wednesday by a congressional panel. contributions. We were shocked to hear the extent to which citizen's rights were invaded, apparently needlessly, by tax collectors and agents," said Rep. Charles A. Vanik, D-Ohio, whose investigations subcommittee will hold hearings. hearings, paid the first item to be investigated is what he termed the "telecommun project," in which the IRS is charged with spending public funds to conduct surveillance of private citizens and with allegedly hiring persons outside the IRS to report on taxpayers. Magazine tabs Richardson LONDON—The Sunday New York Times magazine said Ambassador Filid L. Richardson wanted to be President of the United States Richardson was quoted as seeing no immediate prospect of moving from an ambassadorship to the presidency, but he said: "I suppose it's like climbing M.Everest: if you are a mountaineer, it's the most demanding. I've had experience in various forms of public service for so long, I'm sure I would feel this would more than any other possible role demand over ounce of experience and ability energy and skill." the magazine said Richardson, 54, was "one of the most popular and respected politicians in America today" and added that he "wants to be Argentine law official shot BUENOS AIRES — Terrorists assassinated a police official who led raids against leaflets putting to subway Argentina's steel industry. Telemaco Ojeda, his deputy police chief in Villa Constitution, was shot to death outside his home 200 miles north of Buenos Aires, they said. more than 200 turtles were arrested in raids led by Ojeda late last week. The Communist party said the raids “were conducted in the best Fascist fashion, with doors and windows broken and many honest workers brutally beaten.” Jida was the 25th person assassinated in Argentina in four days and the 100nd since New Year's Day. On Saturday, hooded right-wing gunmen assassinated a leftist politician and seven of his friends in Temperley, a Buenos Aires suburb. Fuel rates up $6.5 billion WASHINGTON—Automatic price increases granted to electric and gas utility companies because of higher fuel bills cost consumers about $ 5 billion last year, more than all the rate increases granted in the previous 25 years, according to a congressional survey released Sunday. Fuel adjustment increases represented the bulk of nearly $10 billion in rate increases granted to utilities last year, the survey said. Sens. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., and Edmund S. Muskie, D-Main, chairmen of the Senate Government Operations subcommittee, said that in most states fuel cost increases could now be added to utility bills without prior review. WASHINGTON (AP) — President Ford, welcoming home Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger Sunday night, said the collapse of the world economy in the Middle East was only on a temporary basis. The President met a smiling Kissinger on the south lawn of the White House as the secretary ended a 16-day abortive effort to new settlement between Israel and Egypt. Earlier in Jerusalem, Kissinger had tears in his eyes because of the failure of his mission but said the United States would adopt methods and new forums for an agreement. "This is a sad day for America," said Kissinger, his voice breaking with emotion. We will now have to look to new methods of communication, move toward peace cared, be abandoned." Ford and Kissinger said the United States would continue its efforts to move the Arabs and Israelis toward peace. Their remarks were echoed by other efforts the efforts would be at a Geneva conference. "No people need peace more than the people of Israel, gathered here after 2,000 years of dispersion and a generation of strugle," he said. Kissinger planned to go directly to the White House upon returning. Washington During a brief stopover in London, it was learned that Kissinger was convinced that his step-by-step diplomacy was dead and that resumption of the Geneva peace talks were inevitable. U.S. officials also expect that the breakdown of his mission will serve to unify the Arabs in pressuring Israel to give up war-capture territory on all fronts. Kissinger told the Israelis as he flew off to London, "We have had no other goals except to enable the young people in this area to grow up without the fear of war." Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin said to Kissinger, "I know you have done more than any human being can do," adding that despite the breakdown of the mission, Israeli-American relations were still special and unique. Kissinger left less than 12 hours after his 16 day mission broke up because of “irreconcilable” differences between Egypt and Israel in a withdrawal in the Sinai desert. At that point his voice began to crack and falter. Haldeman wants tapes made public The collapse of the mission increased chances for renewed fighting in the area, but it was likely that there would be new attempts to reconvene the Geneva peace conference. Egypt and Israel胱ed each other for the suspension of the mission, but Wallace reminded Haidman that he once told him that Nikon "was the worst man I ever knew." Haldeman responded, "Weird in the sense of inexplicable, strange, hard to un- NEW YORK (AP)—The rest of former President Richard M. Nixon's White House tapes should be made public, said Nixon's former chief of staff, H. R. Halden. "We haven't heard one-tenth of one-thousandth of 1 per cent of the tapes and they're pretty bad," Haidman said during his interview by Mike Wallace. "I would like to have the other 99.99 per cent of the tapes available. But Haladan said in a paid-for interview telecast Sunday by CBS that the Watergate tapes should have been destroyed when they were stolen that Nixon couldn't keep them private. Haldeman said that while the Watergate scandal was unfolding he recommended that the tapes should be kept because he had been accused of knowing what had been said in his office. "There are areas in those tapes that would be enormously valuable to the American people to have . . . to know the great things that Richard Nixon did, the great, strong, incisive and decisive leader that he was 90 per cent of the time." Kissinger back; peace effort fails "Morally, I would say that given what we now know, and what's happened, it was a disastrous thing to have done." Haldeman said of the tauting system. "I should have realized that as a practical matter, the release of the tapes wasn't good. And when it got to the point of having to release them, or of having even to consider releasing them, they should have been, in my opinion now, destroyed," he said. "On a personal basis, on a nonbusiness basis, I was not close to Richard Nixon . . . I did not worship him and I do not, nor did I hear of any other definition of the word that I could apply." Is your automatic transmission alling? Starting to slip or grab? Let Gene, our automatic transmission expert, check it for you. At DON'S AUTO SERVICE we pride ourselves on being the best . . . Don's Auto Service 900 New Jersey 842-0753 Jayhawker Towers Apts. OPEN HOUSE OFFICE OPEN DAILY Monday-Thursday til 8:00 Friday, Saturday & Sunday til 5:00 1603 W. 15th Lawrence, Ks. both also indicated willingness to return to Geneva. Egypt called for recovering the conference. The Soviet Union, co-chairman with the United States of the talks, also favors their resumption. Presidential press secretary Ron Nessen, appearing on CBS's "Face the Nation" in Washington, said that Ford had been in touch with both sides in the dispute. Nessen wouldn't say whether similar messages had been sent to both sides and would only repeat that Ford was disappointed that the talks had been suspended. Other administration and diplomatic sources in Washington said Ford had sent a private note to Raxpain expressing his sharp criticism of Kissinger's peace effort. The sources said the note discussed the need for flexibility by all parties if the United States was to continue its current relationship with those governments in The diplomatic sources added that Ford also sent a note to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. They said they didn't know if the contents were similar to the Israeli communication, but they assumed that was the case. Rabin told a news conference after Kissinger's departure that Israel would be given the right to withdraw with Egypt and Syria, both negotiated by Kissinger, and would continue the ceasefires with Lebanon and Jordan as long as they were mutually honored by all the countries. Rabin said his government offered to sur- render the Milta and Gild desert passes and the Abu Rudei oilfield in exchange for a nobellerygency pact, and later offered a compromise version. He said a rejection of the offer by Egypt led to the suspension of the talks. He said Egypt was willing to give almost no political concessions. mail Falmy said that the state of belligerency would only be ended after Israel withdrew from all Arab territories and a Palestinian state was created. He said Israel must bear full responsibility for the breakdown of the negotiations. In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign Minister Is- "Know what you are and act from your full potential" TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION As taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI Introductory Lecture by Marcy Kipnis Students International Meditation Society Monday, March 24 7:30 p.m. Regionalist Room Kansas Union They call it a "Great World Newspaper." But it's something more than that. "It is representative of the finest in courage, and unbiased journalism." Walter Cronkite, CBS News. "The Monitor must be judged one of the leading newspapers of the English-speaking world . . . [it] towers over 99 percent of American papers in care and quiet competition." A Washington Post editor, now National Correspondent, Columbia Journalism Review. "In the five polls of American newspaper publishers we have conducted since 1992. The Christian press has been ranked the top ten, according to three standards: impartial presentation of the news, journalistic independence, and crusading for the public good." - John W. Campbell on public opinion and public affairs The Christian Science Monitor is unique – the only national, or international, daily newspaper published by a church. It's printed simultaneously five days a week in the Boston, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and London areas. From these cities it goes out to the world. Included in its readers are: Arabs and Jews, Catholics and Protestants, Russians (the Kremlin quotes it) and Chinese (Madame Mao says she reads it), conservatives and liberals, Moslems and Hindus. Why do people of such diversity read it, talk about it, quote it? 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