Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 7-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 16, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Hostage children die in Arab-Israeli clash Troops attack guerrilla-held school MAALOT, Israel (M-Israeli sol- diers charged with g u n s blazing into a school in this half-Jewish, half-Arab village yesterday in what officials described as a desperate last-minute e f f o r t to stop three Palestinian guerrillas from blowingr' up hostages who included about 85 Israeli teen-agers. M The carnage left virtually all the "'. hostages - vacationing pupils andAk s e v e r a l chaperones - dead or wounded. T h e Palestinians a 1 s o were killed. THE ISRAELI military command said 16 hostages were killed in the school and one Israeli soldier was killed by terrorist sniper fire before the building was stormed. Seventy h o s t a g e s were wounded. An explosion went off inside the school and smoke poured from its windows as the Israeli attack began with bursts o gunfire that lasted for about 10 minutes. Some of the children were injured when they jumped from second-story windows * of the building where they had been held at gunpoint for about 13 hours. Before they seized the school, the same guerrillas had killed five other Maalot residents. A FAMILY of four-a seven-months' pregnant woman, her husband and two children-were massacred in their beds i« in an apartment near the school. An . Arab woman was killed when the guer- rillas ambushed a truck.mAP Pho The attack came less than 24 hours A BLOOD-SPATTERED teenage girl is helped from a school building in Maalot, Israel as an Israeli soldier, at right, after p o li c e issued a public warning weeps after seeing the carnage that resulted when Israelis stormed the building. Three Arab guerrillas had held 85 stu- dents hostage in an attempt to free other Palestinians from prison. Sixteen of the hostages and all three guerrillas were See CLASH, Page 10 killed in the resulting shootout. Judiciary probe mandates new t WASHINGTON (P) - The House Judi- ciary Committee voted 27 to 1 yesterday to subpoena 11 more Watergate tapes President Nixon has refused to turn over to its impeachment inquiry. By top-heavy votes it also subpoenaed scheduling diaries of Nixon's meetings and conversations during four periods of time, and there were indications it would decide soon whether to subpoena up to 66 more apes dealing with non-Water- gate matters. THE COMMITTEE members, mean- while, got their first chance yesterday to compare a tape already on hand with the White House transcripts, and some found the recording "more damaging" than the edited version, One of two tapes heard by the panel was a-Sept. 15, 1972, meeting involving ipe the President, H. R. Hal Dean. A transcript of th was released last week b Rep. Robert Drinan ( the tape "much more da White House transcripts. "WHEN YOU hear how planning and plotting,y picions are aroused," h voiced similar appraisals The vote on the Water ported by all committee cept Rep. Edward Hutc igan, was a direct chal who notified the commit would give it no moreV rial. The subpoena calls the tapes next Wednesda The White House is shock effects of Nixon's a committee subpoena, subpoenas, deman and John over transcripts instead of tapes. Segretti hot conversation THE 55 CONVERSATIONS covered by as the d y the President. the new subpoena deal with plans for trict Jud D-Mass.) called bugging Democratic headquarters, con- "your r maging than the versations a few days after the Water- cannotb gate break-in, and efforts to get the CIA have re they have been to limit .he FBI investigation of the remaine your worst sus- break-in. -In a he said. Others That's as far as Chief Counsel John Waterga s. Doar has gotten in his presentation of dent's c 'gate tapes, sup- evidence to the committee, which he re- secondc Republicans ex- surned after the vote on the subpoenas. his knom hinson of Mich- In other Watergate developments yes- given t lenge to Nixon, terday: Rebozo tee last week he -Dwight Chapin, the President's for- Haig re Watergate mate- mer appointments secretary, was sen- May 2,s for delivery of tenced to 10 to 30 months in prison for him toi ay. his April S conviction on two counts of -Earl still feeling the lying to the FBI about political trickster unanimt last response to Donald Segretti. Chapin, 33, had pleaded tend the when he turned for clemency, saying that both he and 37 -1 already were "marked for life irty tricks team." But U.S. Dis- dge Gerhard Gesell declared that esort to . . . swearing falsely be condoned." Chapin, who could ceived up to five years in prison, d free on bond for an appeal. n afternoon session, the Senate te Committee gave the Presi- hief of staff, Alexander Haig, a chance to answer questions about wledge of a $100,000 contribution o Nixon's friend, C. G. "Bebe" by billionaire Howard Hughes. fused to testify on the matter saying the President had ordered invoke executive privilege. Mier, the Senate committee voted ously to ask the full Senate to ex- e committee's life to June 30, See PANEL, Page 10