2 Wednesday, January 29, 1975 University Daily Kansan 150 state jobs cut TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett said Tuesday that 100 to 150 persons would lose their jobs as a result of his budget recommendations for fiscal Bennett proposed last week to eliminate 1 new positions requested by state agencies and 391 existing jobs. Only 100 to 150 of the new positions are filled. Bennett did the cutting last fall at budget hearings when agency directors couldn't justify the need for additional or existing jobs. Bennett calculated that his recommendations would save the state $13 million, which he hopes to use for pay raises for the remaining state employees. Bomb in Washington WASHINGTON — A bomb exploded in an elevator shaft in the State Department headquarters here early today. District of Columbia police There were no injuries reported, the D.C. fire department said. The explosion came about an hour after news media around the country were notified by a caller claiming to represent the "Weather Underground Organization" that some kind of damage would be done to the State Department and to a Defense Department Installation in Oakland. Kissinger has hope WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hary A. Kissinger said Tuesday that in thoughtful consideration, the Sinai area and the Sinai region are not appropriate for peace with its Arab neighbors could be more effective. However, he said he didn't expect to arrange a settlement or even engage in shuttle diplomacy when he visits the Mideast some time next year. Kissinger described his mission as exploratory and said he was faced with "an extremely complex and dangerous situation." Vietnam aid unlikely WASHINGTON-President Gerald Ford formally asked Congress Tuesday for an additional $300 million in military aid to South Vietnam. But Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., said the request would be turned down because "the majority of the Congress is prepared to let Vietnam go down." In voting only half of the President's $1.4-billion request for South Vietnam aid last year Congress already indicated its willingness to sacrifice South Vietnam, according to Tower, chairman of the Republican Policy Committee. Ford is also seeking some $220 million for Cambodia. MIA families still seek meeting with Kissinger WASHINGTON (AP) — Two Kansas mothers of men missing in Southeast Asia say they and other MIA families still need to find their Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. "Amost total silence" was the way the official responses were described Monday by one of their companies, a worker in the movement by families of soldiers and others shut down or captured on the ground in Southeast Asia. They are hoping for definite word on the fate of their relatives and their release if alive. Parents, brothers, sisters and friends of the MIAs were here over the weekend and Monday. They had expected to meet with the secretary and sent an assistant Unstead. Mrs. Cornie Pugh of Salina, here with her son Dale, said "Kissinger is the architect of the Paris agreement" and therefore "owes us a meeting" to explain what has been, is being and will be done to secure information on prisoners still missing or unaccounted Her son, Capt. Dennis Pugh, an Air Force lieutenant in the Air Force Trail, takes along the He Gi Chi Mt训 Trail, she said. Dennis has been seen alive and injured, she said. Terry Reynolds, a reporter for United Press International captured in Cambodia April 26, 1972, with an Australian and their Cambodian interpreter, also has been seen in Laos, said his mother, Mrs. Eileen Reynolds of Grainfield. She said her son had been seen by local residents being taken from village to village and being used as a photographer "to shoot images of people in the village, well, as far as his health goes, apparently." "These men are still alive . . . and rotting away over there," said Mrs. Pugh. "Even if they're going to leave them there to die, we want him to meet with us and tell us about it." NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market resourced with activity again Tuesday, but the sharp rise of the previous session was blunted by profit taking. Asked if the officials' responses have been noncommittal or even rebuffs, one worker said they have instead been "almost total silence." it was the fifth advance in a row for the Tuesday to 87 points its rise since last Stock rise continues The Dow Jones average of 30 industries, up about 6 points in wildly active trading at 1478.98. New York Stock Exchange volume totaled 31.76 million shares. The NYSE ticker tape ran as much as seven minutes later during the morning in a crush of orders that exceeded even the record. The ticker tape was Board on en route to a record 12.31 million share day. By noon, however, the tape had caught up with on trading on the floor. Trading in the first three hours amounted to more than 21 million shares on the ex- "This buying is coming in very heavily from the institutional side, reflecting heavy cash reserves and the nervousness money managers feel about declining interest rates" said William Sadler, a vice president in the portfolio management group at Irving Trust Company of New York. Another factor in the advance cited by brokers was the recent court decision in favor of international Business Machines and a blue-chip favorite of the market. Advances topped declines 1,021 to 542 among the 1,865 issues traded on the ox- Through the early part of the session, the market appeared to be moving largely on the strong psychological forces set off by Monday's impressive impact. A good many market-watchers talked of "missing buy" by investors fearful of missing what they evidently saw as a possible strong upward move in stocks. You could pay a lot more for a lot less camera. Minolta SR-T 100. Some people just don't know about the Minolta SR-100. You can try to have it get a camera its equal, or they pay the same and get less. Either way it's a costly mistake. But you don't have to make It. 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