2 Thursday. March 6, 1975 University Daily Kansan Israelis storm hotel TEL AVI-Israeli troops early today stormed a Tel Aviv hotel and killed six Arab terrorists who were held at least 30 captives, the Israeli military command announced. It said some of the hostages, including British, French and West German tourists, were killed in an explosion set "The army is in control of the hotel," Radio Israeli报导. It said there was a short fire-fight as the troops clashed with the After heavy gunfire, a spokesman for the command said, "It's all over." over: "The army is in control of the hotel," Radio Israel reported. Soldiers were carrying dead bodies and wounded persons to waiting ambulances. The army attacked at 5:15 a.m., following a long lull and about six hours after the attack, and ashore from two rubber rafts blazed and captured on the coast. POLICE sources said three persons were killed in the assault and about seven were wounded. see section 10-3 in *Beirut*, the Al Fatah Palestinian organization issued a statement claiming its guerrillas made the assault, but it gave no details. Rail line averts crisis WASHINGTON- The financially ailing Rock Island has temporarily averted a cash shortage that threatened to shut it down and has enough money to operate throughout next week, the railroad president said Wednesday. John Ingram, president of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway, made the announcement that his board of directors met with representatives from the future for a meeting. Railroad officials had told the Interstate Commerce Commission Monday that the Rock Island could run out of money if it paid its bills by Wednesday. But Ingram said that possibility was avoided when a Canadian railroad and a railroad-connected corporation agreed to early bankruptcy. He said the payments, which totaled over $1 million, were received Tuesday. Ford seeks job funding WASHINGTON—President Gerald R. Ford announced Wednesday that he would ask Congress for an extra $2 billion to extend for six months the public service jobs program and provide more summer work for young people. The supplemental appropriations would be for the current fiscal year which ends June 30. Ford also directed aides to study the increasingly worsome problem of jobless workers who are exhausting their unemploymentcompetition. At the Capitol, Treasury Secretary William E. Simon testified against a $21.3 billion house-passed tax cut on grounds that too much of the reduction would go to the poor and too little would go to higher-income families. The bill wouldn't put money in the hands of those middle- and upper-income households that make the purchases needed to turn the economy around. Final arguments on the referendum for the proposed city garage at Second and Indiana were heard Wednesday by Douglas City District Court Judge James Padlock. Paddock said the attorneys for both sides had until Monday to file supplemental briefs on their cases. After that filing date, he would be able to get a case as soon as he can determine an answer. In his final argument, Ed Collister, attorney for the neighborhood associations, told Paddock that the matter of public improvement, such as the garage at Second and Indiana, was legislative and therefore required a referendum. EPA suspends 1977 standards for pollution WASHINGTON (AP)—Antipollution standards for automobiles due to take effect with 1977 models will be suspended for one year, Environmental Protection Agency chief Russell E. Train announced Wednesday. At the same time, Train changed current standards to interim ones which will remain in effect through the 1977 model year. The standards should be a tightening of nitrogen guide controls. The nation's automakers, who have campaigned actively for a five-year delay of more stringent standards, endorses the decision to Wednesday as a step in the right direction. Train also proposed a new emission standard for controlling sulphuric acid emissions beginning with 1979 models and immediate emission controls for 1980 and 1981. The controls would lead to imposition in 1982 of standards first scheduled for 1977. Such additional delay would require congressional approval. Train said research indicated that catalytic converter devices intended to reduce auto emissions also produced a kind of pollution—sulfuric acid mist—in conditions that could be serious enough to justify playing the overall antipollution program. The EPA chief called his decision "a difficult but inscapable conclusion that the nation needs to make." Abzug, chairman of the House individual rights subcommittee, disclosed the file at a bearing at which CIA Director William E. Kleinfeld the detailed kit of files his agency keeps. CIA admits opening Abzug's mail WASHINGTON (AP) -- Displaying the CIA file on herself, Rep. Bella S. Abzug, D.N.Y., disclosed Wednesday that the intelligence agency had opened some of her hacked computer accounts on her anti-Vietnam war activities, a meeting with Viet Cong delegates. Cohy acknowledged that some material in the files "may not be appropriate." Abzug said the files dated back to 1933 when she was a lawyer representing clients before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. She said the CIA opened letters she had received from the Soviet Union in 1953, 1958 and 1960 from Russian citizens and from a foreign agent. She said information for estate cases she handled. Albott nominated for KBI There also is a CIA report on the publicized meetings she and Rep. Patsy T. Mink, D-Hawaii, had with Viet Cong representatives in Paris in April 1972, she said. TOPEKA (AP)—Admitting that a prime consideration was to pick someone who had a good chance of winning Senate confirmation, Atty. Gurt. Schneider pleaded for William L. Abbott Wednesday to the director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Albott, 53, resigned Jan. 18 as superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol. He won Senate confirmation for that post in 1970 and is a Republican, two points Schneider emphasized at a hastily summoned news conference in his office. Schneider's first selection for the post, Richard D. Dewey of Wichita, withdrew as a candidate Monday when his confirmation hearing disclosed his hearings disclosures about his personal life. Final garage arguments heard "Even though there are those who want their own appointment, they are going to be hard pressed to stop the confirmation of the colonel," said Schneider, referring to Abbott a rank when he headed the patrol for the department and appointed by Gov. Robert Docking in 1989. Abbot said he didn't drink, and he had worked for the state 23 years before his release. The file includes a report on an antiwar speech she made at a Women's Strike for Peace demonstration in New York City in 1971 and her attendance at a Women's Strike for Peace conference in 1967, she said. The minutes of a secret meeting of the Mobilation Committee to End the War are in the file, she told newsmen later, but she didn't. They'd mediate seriously what they had to do with her. Colby told her she was one of four Congress members in CIA files. She released on Wednesday a one-page report from the files of her speech at the Women's Strike for Peace antiwar demonstration in New York in 1971. He said the House and Senate select intelligence committees had instructed him not to destroy any files that might be relevant to their investigations. Albott conceded he had some brushing up to do on investigative work but claimed that his experience in traffic investigation was not the factor that needed in criminal investigation. A few senators said privately Wednesday that they weren't enamored with Abbott's record as an administrator with the Highway Patrol but that they conceded that his confirmation would probably sail through the Senate. Abzug said she would release most of the files after she reviewed them to see whether they were valid. "The colonel left the patrol with probably the greatest respect and admiration that anyone in law enforcement could have hoped for," Schneider said. "To find myself in your files is most outrageous," she told Colby. "It is more than I thought." Late in the day, Colby told Abrug he had given他 photocopies of her file, not the file Colby said that report was prepared by another agency and distributed to a number of users. Hillcrest Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:00 Eve. 7:20, 9:45 3 Academy Award Nominations! including Ellen Burstyn, Best Actress Evenings 7:30 & 9:30 Sat. Sun Mat, at 2:30 Granada "ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE" PG Nominated Best Actress! Diahann Carroll as Eve, at 7:10, 9:35 Sat. Sun, Maf. 2:10 Hillcrest Colliser said that if the issue before the City Commission was permanent and had a lasting effect on the city, then it was a legislative decision and subject to referendum. If the issue before the City Commission is not in the nature, nature, nature, and as in the hiring of city employees or salary raises, then it is administrative. The proposed city maintenance facility, Collister said, is something that will have a lasting effect on the community and therefore should be subject to a referen- "CLAUDINE" with James Earl Jones Eve. at 7:15, 9:20 Sat. Sun. Mat. 1:15 Hillcrest Nominated for 6 Academy Awards "The way government is run today, everything is done by experts," Collister said. "The only way people can petition their government is by referendum." "LENNY" R "This is merely a negative pronouncement to say we don't want the garage here," Allen said. "This is not consistent with other cases in Kansas." Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 order to make the final decision on the garage location. Allen said that all the decisions the city had made on the garage location accordance with normal procedures. Allen said that the proposed referendum didn't mention another site for the garage, it didn't question the validity of building a garage and that it only said the garage shouldn't be built where the city wanted to build it. Milton Allen, city attorney, gave the court permission to ask the City Commission to work on the City Commission went about in court. Allen cited cases in other cities that corresponded to the way the city of Lawrence had handled its decision on the garage. He said that when there were referendums in other cities, the general obligation to pay the money for a garage in Lawrence, Allen said, is all revenue sharing funds, and no referendum is required. Allen said that most referendum dealing with public improvements were on whether there should be certain public improvement. He said that the referendum the garage opponents wanted was to stop construction of the garage at Second and Indiana. In an interview in February, Mayor Jack Rose said he wanted to make the decision on the garage at Second and Indiana irreversible for the next City Commission. The next City Commission will assume its office April 14. Paddock rules in favor of the city by the end of next week, then the City Council will approve the garage decision irreversible. If the garage opponents with the case, there will be a referendum on the issue in the near future. Varsity Title RC - Logo Design P.O. Box 120