Pi ursdaiy, August Q, 19,76 THEMJC+l+GAN DAILY Page Tree Final atgtack on Tal Zaa tar near, 0 1EIRUT, Lebanon W) - Christian rightist forces hit Tal Zaatar with artil- lery, rockets and other heavy weapons yesterday in what appeared to be the start of the final effort to eliminate the battered Palestinian stronghold. Radio broadcasts said more civilians were flee- ig the camp. Reliable sources said negotiations were under way early this morning for a total evacuation of Tal Zaatar. The sources said emergency talks were be- ing held between the International Red Cross and Christian officials to work out a cease-fire. THE SOURCES SAID the Palestin- ian command had already agreed to pull out everyone from the camp, which held 30,00 persons - mostly civilians -when the siege began. The Christian radio said Palestinian and Moslem artillery, located in West Beirut and mountain areas to the south- west, had shelled Christian positions from which Tal Zaatar was attacked. Fighting also continued on other fronts in the 17-month-old civil war. Casualty figures for the previous 24- hour period were placed at 91 killed and 129 wounded. The figures are compiled from hospitals and security sources who attempt to keep an account of the toll. NO FIRM COUNT was available on the number of persons, most of them ap- parently Lebanese Moslems and other non-tPalestiniansbraving the Christians' fire to come out of Tal Zaatar, which has been- under siege for more than seven weeks. But ' indications were that several thousands had emerged from the camp and from the Moslem slum of Nabaa, seized by the Christian fighters last weekend. They were being collected in Christian - controlled East Beirut and transported across no-man's land to the Moslem-held western sector in motor convoys organized by the Shiite Moslem sect. Some refugees had said on Tuesday that an unknown number of them had been killed and wounded by fanatic Christian soldiers, possibly in defiance of orders, as the Moslems escaped Na- baa and Tal Zaatar. THE CHRISTIAN RADIO said nothing about this but declared the Christian rightists were furnishing the refugees with food and medical aid. Security sources said as many as 4,000 Christian fighters of the Phalange and National Liberal parties were taking part in the attack on Tal Zaatar. The dwindling force of Palestinians inside the camp was reduced to small arms. In continuing efforts to establish a workable cease-fire, Arab League medi- ator Ilassan Sabri Kholi met with Pierre Gevel, leader of the Phalnmge party, the largest single faction on the right. KHOLI HAS IKEEN trying since last Thursdayto keep afloat the league's lat- est cease-fire, but the more than 50 be- fore it, the truce initiatise has dissolved in renewed fighting, Ford, Reagan, may face Buckley bid KANSAS CITY. Mo. (/a) President Ford's backers, working to head off po- tentially bitter floor fights over platform issues, were confronted yesterday with a new threat-the possibility of a third candidate in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. Sen. James Buckley of New York, a conservative Republican, told a news conference in New York City that lie had been approached by supporters of Ronald Reagan and asked if he would be willing to become a compromise candidate for president. "I HAVE MADE no decision," Buck- ley said. Don't count your chickens... The managing editor of the Scribner- Bantam English Dictionary has decided to "take a chance" and list Jimmy Car- ter as the 39th president of the United States in final page proofs for the dic- tionary's latest edition. In order' to meet a January publication date, the proofs must go tc press by September 15, more than a month and a half be- fore the nation's voters actually decide if Carter will become the next presi- dent. But the dictionary's managing edi- tor, Walter Glanze, says that even if Carter loses "it's no major flaw from a lexicological standpoint. Some people will laugh about it, and to others it will be a collector's item." The dictionary lists Gerald Ford's term in office as 1974- 1977. There is no listing for Ronald Rea- gan. U' - Ha penins,.. . . . There will be a meeting of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union today at 7:00 at room 44e of the Michigan Union . . . there will be a special GEO membership meeting at 7:30 at the Rackham Am- phitheater. Weathero nt It'll be anotier cloudy- day today, with a good chance of rain. The high will be in the upper 8's, while tonight's low will be near 70. The senator is running for re-election and Richard Rosenbaum, New York State Republican chairman, told report- ers in Kansas City that he had made it clear to Buckley that "I did not look ppon his involvement in this situation as particiltirly priducetive." Rosenhu', a strong supporter of Ford, said he talked with Buckley by teleohone and told him the situation wold be "counterproductive with ref- erence to his senatorial aspirations . I know that he is considering very seriously my advice." FOR BUCKLEY to have his name placed before the convention as a can- didate for the presidential nomination, he would he required to demonstrate that he has the support of a majority of delegates from at least three states. A proposal before the party rules commit- tee would increase that number to five. Unless Reagan were willing to turn over his support in some states to Buckley, there seemed little chance that the New York senator's name could be placed before the convention. However, delegates can vote for can- didates whether or not their names are officially before the convention. AT THE WHITE House, Press Secre- tary Ron Nessen told reporters that if Buckley enters the race, it "really NEW YORK SEN. James Buckley was all smiles yes clinches it for President Ford." nouncement that he had been approached by Reagan See FORD, Page 7 alternative to the two current front runners. SHOT AND APPREHENDED BY POLICE terday following the an- delegates as a possible Kansas sniper kills two, wounds seven WICHITA, Kan. (41, - A sniper armed with two rifles opened fire yesterday from the roof of a 26-story hotel in down- town Wichita, killing two persons and wounding seven others before he was shot and apprehended by police. Officers said 19-year-old Michael Soles of Sand Springs, Okla:, was captured after 20 minutes of what they described as indiscriminate sniper fire. No charges were immediately filed against him. POLICE LT. COL. Bobby Stout said the shooting began shortly before 3p.m. from a 26th floor balcony area at the Holiday Inn Plaza,. Among the dead were a free-lance news photographer who was shot as he sat in a car on the street near the hotel and. a workman who was hit on the roof of an adjoining building overlooked by the hotel. Identities of the victims were withheld. WITNESSES SAID the sniper's bullets hit streets and a shopping courtyard below the hotel. "It's hard to tell how many shots there were," said Dan Rachmann, an attorney with offices in a nearby building. "I must have heard 30 or 35 shots, then I saw him throw down what appeared to be two rifles. The next thing I saw up there were two or three police officers." An engineer who was on the hotel's 26th floor when the shooting began said he saw the sniper standing on a balcony with a weapon. "I SAW ONE guy wounded down there on the roof of an adjoining building. lIe crawled about five or six feet before he collapsed," the engineer said, Stout said an unidentified citizen tele- phoned police to report that a man carrying two rifles was walking around on the top floor of the hotel. As officers were dispatched to the scene, the sniper started firing into the courtyard area facing the city's civic center, Stout said. "FIVE OFFICERS who arrived at the hotel first went immediately to the 26th floor," he said. "They entered a room and could hear the bolt action of a rifle in an adjoining room." The five officers burst into the gun- man's room and wounded him, but there was no indication of an exchange of gao- fire with the arriving police. See KANSAS, Page