2 Tuesday, September 23, 1975 University Dally Kansan DIGEST From the Associated Press Eloise hits Gulf Coast PENSACOLA, Fla.—Hurricane Eloise raked a five-state stretch of the Gulf Coast with lashing rains and pounding seas yesterday. The highest winds were expected to carve a crescent from the mouth of the Mississippi 100 miles east to Pensacola. Gates swept the shore long before the hurricane's center thundered northward through the coast of Guatemala in an hour. Elves had left 42 Caribbean islands dead in its wake. Forecasters said dide would be five to eight feet above normal near or just east of the point where the hurricane's eye crosses the coast. Heavy rains were predicted for Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida by the hurricane center, which said a possibility of tornadoes existed in southeastern Louisiana and Mississippi, southern Alabama and northwestern Florida. Nixon denies blame WASHINGTON-Richard Nixon's lawyer said yesterday the former president has denied under oath any "personal responsibility" for the 18%-minute gap in one of the White House tapes, one of the few remaining mysteries in the Watergate scandals. Attorney Herbert Miller Jr. said Nixon made the denial to Special Watergate Prosecutor Henry Ruth and two members of a grand jury who questioned him for Miller referred to the tape gap Monday during a three-hour hearing before a special three-judge court which is considering Nikon's attempts to regain ownership and control of the White House tapes and 42 million documents accumulated during his presidency. Suit to end life continues MORRISTOWN, N.J. — A hearing on a suit to discontinue life-eustensive medical treatment for a 21-year-old comatose woman will continue until Oct. 20 to allow attorneys for the parties to prepare answers to complex and controversial legal and medical questions. Superior Court Judge Paul Muir ordered the continuance yesterday after outlining the issues for the attorneys. Muir said the issues concern the legal and medical definition of death and the physical condition of the woman, Karen Quinlan. Captive faces execution N'DJAMENA, Chad-A French archeologist who was grabbed as a pawn in an African tribal rebellion in April 1974 faced possible execution this morning as the Chad government took steps to block any French effort to rescue her from the rebel camp. The antigovernment rebels of the Toubour tribe threatened to kill the aranea, and a group camp if they didn't receive $2.2 million worth of money and supplies from France. KU grad new judge TOPEKA-Robert Miller, who received his law degree from the University of Kansas, is the newest member of the Kansas Supreme Court. Miller, 56, was named by Gov. Robert Bennett yesterday to replace Associate Bruce John Ponteon of Murchison on the seven-member bench. Fonter, 71, retired earlier this month. Miller is a former state district court judge and a federal magistrate the past nine and one-balf years. Bennett said Miller, Overland Park, expects to assume his place on the bench within three weeks. His will will run until the patient is sworn in by Nov. 1. Nurse Ruth Gayle, in hospital after back surgery, He is a 1937 graduate of Ohio State University. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—President Gerald R. Ford had just delivered a pair of speeches when a 45-year-old woman tried to shoot him yesterday. Ford speaks on energy In a second speech, Ford spoke briefly to the World Affairs Council and then answered questions from the floor. He said he wouldn't be party to the destruction of the CIA and he called for a uniform way to combat terrorism. White House, in congressional committees, In a speech to the AFL-CIO construction trades and unions, Ford asked for a new $100 billion government corporation to work with the union on job training and dependence for the United States by 1985. "PEOPLE SAID ALL those projects were have done the impossible." But Americans have done the impossible. Ford, in his first speech, called for the creation of the Energy Independence Authority, which would, if approved by Congress, embark on a crash national emergency. He also landed the atomic bomb in World War II and landed Americans on the moon in 1989. "If any nation or group of nations in the world—including those favored by nature with great oil resources—the think America is finished, that we no longer control our destiny and our finances, then they have another think coming." He said the energy authority would be an independent federal agency reporting directly to the President and would seek technological improvements in deriving and transporting energy from nuclear, geothermal and other sources. The President said he would submit the proposal to Congress this week. "THE ENERGY Independence Authority will undertake only those projects that private business cannot undertake alone," said the enterprise system—it will supplement it. "My vision is of dramatic action to produce oil and gas from coal, safe and clean nuclear and coal-generated electric power, harness the energy of the sun and the natural heat within the earth and build numerous other energy facilities." The President said that by 1985 he envisioned America's energy being supplied by 200 nuclear power plants, 250 new coal mines, 150 coal-fired power plants, 30 new oil refineries and 20 new synthetic fuel plants. He said the program would result in the drilling of thousands of new oil wells, the insulation of 18 million homes and the manufacture and sale of millions of new K-JayHawK—FM91 Lawrence's Largest News Organization automobiles, trucks and buses that used much less fuel. Noting that the amount of money spent by the United States for foreign oil has risen from $3 billion a year to $25 billion in five years, Ford said the new program would make the nation self-sufficient in energy production. "The Energy Independence Authority would act to finance those projects vitally needed for America's energy independence and economic security. America's great capital, resources." He said. "There is now a possibility that the OPEC nations' foreign oil cartel will once again raise prices," he said. "We don't have to take this living down—and we won't." He said the nation would need 8000 billion energy investments over the next decade to meet its climate goals. A former University of Kansas assistant speech and drama instructor, accused of physically attacking a female sophomore student who served as the university serving a four-month sentence Friday. "As always, most of that investment will come from private sources," Ford said. "But I am convinced that we cannot wait for our emerging technologies to become conventional technologies. We must act now to speed their development." The man, Kenneth Baker, now lists his address in Abilleen, Tex. He pleaded guilty to one count of battery in connection with the assault of the KU student. Former instructor begins jail sentence Mike Eilwell, Douglas County Court judge, interceded Baker to four months in the court. was initiated. It did not elaborate on the background investigation. Moore, a divocess with a young son, was said by police to have possible ties to the Symbionsee Liberation Army and other radical groups. Attempt ... From page one The incident occurred last spring, when he asked to Baker's office to ask about an assignment. TV station KQED reported that Moore phoned two local radio stations last Thursday to tell them of the arrests of Hearst and SLA members William and Emily Harris before police had announced the captures. MOORE SAID AID her arrangement that she was unemployed since May, 1975. James Hewitt, of the federal public defender's office, was named her defense U. S. Magistrate Owen Woodruff scheduled a hearing for 2 p.m. today to determine whether Mrs. Moore should undergo a mental examination at a government institution as requested by the U.S. attorney. An affidavit signed by FBI Agent Parks H. Stearn Jr. submitted to the court said that after being advised of certain containment conditions, he "aggrandized the agent" that she did, in fact, fire the shot in question, that she had purchased the seized revolver this date, and she had observed Ford coming out of the St. Francis Hotel, was surprised that she had so much time." A police officer, the Tm Hetrich, then seized the cylinder of the 38-caliber revolver, preventing it from discharging a second time. "It was probably the most frightening thing that ever happened to me," Hetrich, 26, recalled later. Police said Oliver Sipple, a 39-year-old *ex-Marine* from San Francisco, was responsible for striking the gun just as it fired. The suspect shot another onlooker, inuring him slightly. THE WHITE HOUSE said the President was not wearing the bullet-proof vest he wore in New Hampshire in his first public outing after an attempt on his life by a follower of mass-murdered Charles Manson on Sept. 5 in Sacramento. "I was approximately five feet away—five or seven feet away—from a woman who brought her right arm up and extended it, and as she did so I observed a chrome- Dressed in a dark blue raincoat, her head bowed, Moore was taken from police headquarters about four hours after the incident and transferred to the federal building here for arraignment at 8 p.m. PDT. AFTER THE GUNSHOT rang out, police bulled their way into the crowd and grabbed the woman, carrying her bodily into the hotel. The Secret Service agent in charge in San Francisco, Kenneth D. Iacovoni, confirmed that Moore had been jointly interviewed Sunday by Secret Service representatives from the agency away from her. She was charged with bribery of a weapon and released, police said. platooned revolver in her right hand," he said. "He saw the victim, in the direction of the President." Police said Moore was born in Charleston, Francisco primarily residential Mission Dish. DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE Press Secretary Jack Hushen, who relayed Iacovoff's comments to newmen, said he believed the question on why the woman was released The wounded spectator was identified as John M. Ludawig, 41, a San Francisco cdriver driver. He was treated at a local hospital for a superficial grin injury and released. Earlier in the day, just seven minutes before Ford was to begin his first of two addresses at downtown hotels, a young man identified as Ronald Carlo, 24, of San Francisco was taken into custody and booked on suspicion of threatening the life of the President. Agents said Carlo had attempted to deliver a threatening note to an employee of the St. Francis Hotel, a short distance from the airport and stop on Ford's one-day visit to the city. CARLO FIRST approached a cashier at the ST. Francis with a vaguely wored, hand-printed note that contained a threat to him. The White House Press Secretary Bill Greener. Just 16 days ago in Sacramento, Secret Service agents wrestled Charles Manson follow Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme to the ground after agents said she pulled a gun on the President. She has since been charged with trying to assassinate Ford. Theatre spirit From page one technique." They also are more effectively done for small audiences in small spaces, be The plays usually are performed in the William Inge Memorial Theatre in Murphy because it has the most efficient setting, Willis said. However, one production was staged in the space between the two wings of Murhuy, now the formal garden. The name of the Experimental Theatre series was changed in the summer of 1974 to honor William Ingle, a KU graduate who wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning play "Come Back Little Sheba" are among Ingle's other works. Ige's talents as an original playwright in with the experimental goals of the theatre According to Gaffner, "Telemanich Cassini set the experimental nature of the suit." The play will be an experiment for all involved, he said, because it isn't being staged in the traditional manner. There are no costumes to indicate the nature of the characters and no sets to describe the scene, he said. Thirty persons are involved in the production of "Telemachus Clay," Gaffney said. Although the production staff is the size of a crew, the size is said, the sizes of the cast and crew vary. Gaffney said the other plays this season would be more conventional. Eleven actors will play 90 characters, including animals and billboards, Gaffney said. The actors won't look at each other on stage; they must play to the audience, he said, so the audience can see the characters as the other characters see them. Family Educational Rights and Privacies Act of 1974, says a student is entitled to see his own academic records. No one else may see the records, however, without written permission from the student, or from his parents if he is younger than 18. From page one Don Herbel, director of special services for the school district, said the statement was a formalization of policy already followed in the district. He said a student and his parents had always been allowed to see the student's records. Robert Taylor, assistant superintendent for instruction and personnel for the district, said the records had always been kept confidential. "There are only so many hours in a day, and I don't know of anybody in the school that has time." Buckley . . . Six weeks are allowed to stage each production, except the first one, which has been aired. THE POLICE statement approved by the board says, "Lawrence Unified School District 497 considers all student records, confidential information, to be confidential." CONDARA SAID HE thought implementing the policy would create paper work that would take the time of employees hired for other purposes. "This will insure that all administrators will be following similar procedures," he said. --breath, walk, and meditation to be conducted by Sufi Balthazar. "We have not as a school district made practice of divulge information," he said. The Lawrence Sufi Center will hold a seminar of Sufi poetry. Saturday and Sunday, September 27 and 28, in the country a few miles south of Lawrence. Send $15.00 for reservations to Ed Gauthier, 1301 Rhode Island. For details call 842-9272. Taylor said he thought no major problems would arise as the policy was being carried out. He said, however, that the policy would probably have to be revised within a year because of situations the board couldn't foresee. Donna Swall, chairman of the student records committee of the school district, said the board had been concerned about the new laws requiring local and federal officials to the records. She said the board had determined that the Comptroller General of the United States and the Secretary of HEW would have access to student records to evaluate and audit programs that were receiving federal funds. They wouldn't, however, be required to provide information without the written permission of the student or his parents, she said. Taylor said members of the local school board, who acted in their official capacity, would have access to the records of individual students. Welcome KU Students to JACK'S GOAL POST 1904 Mass. Open at 12 Noon Pitcher Night—Thursdays/KU Game Day Specials Foosball, Pool and Pinball READ 3X TO 10X FASTER! IMPROVE CONCENTRATION AND RECALL! READING DYNAMICS FALL SCHEDULE Mondays, 7-9 p. m., Oct. 6-Nov. 24 Tuesdays, 7-9:30 p. m., Oct. 7-Nov. 25 Four optional drill practice sessions will be offered on Wednesdays, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS Located in ADVENTURE E bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa 843-6424 Plants and Pots The Garden Center and Greenhouse 4 Blocks East of Mass on 15th THE LAWRENCE Buhai COMMUNITY Presents Step by Step (PASO A PASO) A film in Spanish and English on the growth of the Bahai faith among Indians, Latins in Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador and Panama 7:30 FREE FILM TONIGHT Council Room Kansas Union K.U. Class Rings Displays are now available in the bookstore. Representatives here Sept.24 Sept.25 Lifetime guarantee Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery These rings are designed by Josten's and brought to you by the tansas union BOOKSTORE --sandwiches for $1.29 (plus tax) with this coupon GREAT BIG MAC SALE 2 Big Mac $ ^{T.M.}$ Please present coupon when ordering. Offer expires: Sept. 27, 1975 McDonald's Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Go at all participating McDonald's* restaurants in Greater Kansas City, Lawrence, Manhattan, Warrensburg, and St. Joseph.