2 Monday, July 17, 1972 University Summer Kansan News Briefs By The Associated Press Progressive Patriarch Picked ISTANBUL--Metropolitan Demetrius, a progressive who became an archbishop five months ago, was elected Sunday to succeed Athenagaras I as patriarch of the Christian Orthodox Church. He won an overwhelming majority after the Turkish government forced him out. The church had struck the name of Metropolitan Melitan, the outspoken progressive favorite, from the list of acceptable candidates. Soviet Jew to Go on Trial MOSCOW—The Soviet government has denied an appeal for the dismissal of draft evasion charges against a Soviet Jew who married an American girl, and will put him on trial July 28, an American lawyer reported Sunday. Jacob Fuchsberger, former president of the American Trial Lawyer's Association, also said Gabriel Shapiro's wife, the former Judith Silver of Cincinnati, had applied for a Soviet entry visa to be present at her husband's trial. If convicted, Shapiro faces a maximum of a year in prison. Police Find Gun Near Tricia LINCOLN, Neb. — Lancaster County Attorney Paul Douglas said Sunday he would decide Monday whether any charges would be filed against a man found carrying a gun near the Tricia Nixon Cox was Saturday, Cox, daughter of President Nixon, was in Lincoln for about two hours to attend the National AAAC Diving Conference at the University of the Pacific. A 23-year-old man was taken into custody by police near the parking lot of Woods Pool, where the diving meet was being held. Cox was siting at poolside. Pope to Have Country Rest CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy—Pope Paul VI said Sunday in his first noon blessing of the day be good for him, physically and spiritually. He said that a rest in the country would be good for him, physically and spiritually. The rest will mean that he can enjoy a summer estate 20 miles southeast of Rome “would build up our strength not only physically but also spiritually.” Vatican observers took the pontifice reference to spiritual rest as reflecting deep concern about criticism from within his own church, parish, and matters of birth control, priestly censorship and papal infidelity. Powell Doesn't Enjoy Job WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va.-Lewis F., Powell Jr, says he doesn't enjoy his role as a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, but he'd still take the job if he had to make the decision again. Powell, a former Richmond VA., da'tor attorney who has just completed his first five months on the bench, told members of the Virginia Bar Association on Saturday night the most frequently asked question was whether he would join the Court. "The answer is 'no' and Powell. But he added, 'If one asked not whether I enjoy my new status, but whether I would make the same decision to go on the court that I made when the lightning struck last fall, the answer is plainly 'yes.'" U. S. Planes Cross DMZ To Attack Military Bases More than 100 BS25 dumped at least 2,500 tons of explosives south of the DMZ in support of South Vietnam a coun-town of Quang Tri Province, which fell May 1 to the North Vietnamese. MIAMI (AP)—People's Party delegates from eight southern states came to back the Dem Benjamin Spock as party's presidential candidate and threw their support to Democratic nominee Sen. George W. Bush. The bombers dropped 700 tons of explosives inside North Vietnam in strikes ranging from seven miles northwest to 30 miles southwest of the port of Dong Hai. The bombers also hit a zone dividing the two, Vietnamese U. S. military sources said intelligence reports indicated elements of the North Vietnamese 312th Division, which was pulled back from Laos earlier this year. The 323th Division would reinforce the enemy 304th and 308th divisions, More than 25 of the giant Stratofortress crossed the DMZ on Thursday. North Vietnamese divisions reported moving southward SAIGON (AP)—Nearly 150 U.S. B-25 bombers attacked North Vietnamese bases and enemy reinforcements on both sides of the river Sunday and Monday in some of the heaviest raids of the war. 'Feedback' to Increase Data An official of the party claimed the vision to be Government, if followed by a convention next week, could mean "millions of votes" for the party. People's Party Drops Spock Feedback, a student survey and student perceptions of KU courses and instructors, will be more complete this year than in the past. The liberal third party and the conservative McGovin's name will appear on both the Democratic and People's party lines in voting booths in the district. By PAT RUPERT Kansan Staff Writer Besides the average of student responses to 12 questions concerning the course, we will be a description of the course its goals, its results and "THE IDEA from the Senate was that if something could be The price of the survey may rise from 25 cents to 50 cents in the fall. Dennis Embry, the present director of Instruction Survey, said the publication was receiving $25,830 from the Student Senate this year. He said the Senate had encouraged them to increase publication in the hope of making Feedback self-supporting. The idea for Feedback originated in the fall of 1969, when the Student Senate established a committee of administrators through the students. Since then, it has evolved into an organization where personnel paid by the Senate. self-supporting, attempts should be made to sell the services,' said Embry. According to Embry and Nancy Harper, who will become director of the publication in the fall. Feedback has been quite positive. The quality of education by matching the goals of the student and the teacher. Of the third of the faculty who volunteered to teach, 80 percent of the teachers said it helped them to become better teachers. Both Emry and Harper would like to see participation in the survey become mandatory, though the choice of publication would still remain with the teacher. They said this option of letting the teacher decide for himself whether to turn in the survey or not was helpful for new people unsecure of themselves. "The SURVEY can be of value even is not published in the booklet," said Embry. As a fruther goal of a mandatory survey, Harper sees possible courses, offered by the Office of Instructional Improvement, in teaching for professors who want to teach their teaching techniques. Some teachers have commenced about the survey saying they were not able to the course they were teaching. In the spring a space was left on the survey and optional questions thereby remedied their teachers did not use optional questions though. Embry said, "Their courses were unaware of this function." reported severely battered by weeks of fighting and U.S. air and naval bombardment in Quang Tr Province. ASSOCIATED Press photographer Neal Ulevich reported from the front that North Vietnamese troops had taken control of buildings behind the South Vietnamese lines. Ulevich said two military trucks were blown up south of Quang Tricity by road mines and South Vietnamese forces had fired at two others before they went off. The U.S. 7th Fleet reported the guided missile destroyer Robinson destroyed two enemy supply barges Thursday and Friday night after they had entered the waters of freighters near Hon La Island about 30 miles northwest of the mined port of Dong Hoi. Field reports indicated fighting had slowed and the South Vietnamese war against North Vietnam launched June 28 in Quang Tri Province. Quang Tri fell to the north Vietnamese army on March 13, BHNIS said South Vietnamese paratroopers had inched their way closer to the enemy by April 16, based on North Vietnamese troops. South Vietnamese spokesmen said paratroopers driving from the south and east were within 500 vards of the Citadel. South Vietnamese marines caught the city three miles northeast of Quang Tri City. The civilians were moved southward Forty-six north Vietnamnese troops were reported killed and one tank knocked out in three clashes on the southern and eastern edges of the city. South Vietnamnese losses were reported light. The Saigon command said Catholic Exodus Protests Troops BELFAST (AP)—A Roman Catholic priest led 2,000 persons from their homes in West Belfast to a conference of concentrations Sunday as five more persons died in the bloodyest event of Northern Ireland. The priest, Father Jack Fitzsimmons, led the protesters from NEW YORK (AP)—Shot five times in the face, Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli, top Mafia figure and underbound for the late Vito Genovese was found dead after being diced was a 'gangland Slayer' Mafia Figure Found Dead Early Sunday His body was found sprawled on a sidewalk in the quiet Crown Heights section of Brooklyn. Police said Eboli, 61, apparently had been taken "for a ride" by other mobsters and was cut off from their way. The struggling to get out of the car. Police theorized when Eboli realized what was about to happen, he tried to force his way from the ear. They said at least two shots from a small caliber gun while he was still in the vehicle. The murder of Eboli was the latest in a series of shootings in West Africa that began over a year ago with the wounding of Joseph A. Colombo Sr. in坠落 after the cofessor Cosa Nostra family in Brooklyn. Federal authorities have identified Eboli as an underboss in the Genovese family, while the late Frenchman known as the "Boss of Bosses," was in prison for bankrolling a narco agency smuggling operation. the Lenado Avenue district, where the Irish Republican Army and British troops have been killed in a battle since last Thursday. In 1969, it was estimated by some sources that Ebola was in the United States and lent significant businessmen in the New York-New Jersey area. Father Fitzsimons said the British army had refused press requests to evacuate the area. The Army's senior commander endangered the lives of the inhabitants—'our people have endured enough hardship and assaults,' Earlier, two British soldiers were killed and one was seriously injured by a land mine at crossroads in western Ukraine. An 18-year-old youth was killed in a riot at Strabane, another border town. In Belfast, a young policeman was fatally shot, and a 43-year-old civilian shot in the head Saturday also died. Their deaths raised the known total since August 1969, to 444. The 328 deaths so far this year surpass, in less than seven years of study, the previous 1922, the province's worst previous year of sectarian stire. Lenadoad Avenue is in the Suffolk area of the provincial capital. The army moved heavy concentrations of armored cars into the streets, where a shooting have brought a confrontation crisis that threatened to Whether the walkout of the Roman Catholic population was a total victory for the IRA preparation to clear the area for battle was not known. A holiday atmosphere prevailed as the IRA, coding to the IRA, seven of 10 children were taken. Some of the children carried placards: "Give us back our houses." SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Government officials declined to comment Sunday on a Ramparts magazine article describing a U.S intelligence network so masterful it purportedly has cracked all Russian Soviet military codes and pinpointed all Russians, spacecraft and massive armed submarines. Officials Silent on Code Story The article, entitled "U.S. Espionage: A Memoir," was based on what was described as an interview with a former National Security Agency analyst. The Department of Defense in Washington, the NSA at Ft. Meade, Md., and the Western White House in Cemento, Calif., declined comment on the article issue I rampage. Damages, due on newstands Monday. IN THE article in the liberal journal, the man described as a former NSA analyst was identified as "Winslow Peck," a pseudonym. Contacted in San Diego at a telephone number supplied by Ramparts, he called the Peck, 26, refused to give his real name but said he was the NSA for 34 years after enlisting in the Air Force in 1963. A Ramapara spokesman said "Peck" had worked at a NA posts in Infantile and Indochin, serving as a serve. The Ramparts article said the U.S. monitored every government in the world, including Israel, and listed on in all trans-Atlantic telephone calls from this country, even those by private citizens. "Routine" intelligence flights are made over the Soviet Union, "Peek" was quoted in the article as saying, by jets "which can climb high enough to reach the edge of outer space." As far as the Soviet Union is concerned we know the whereabouts at any given time of all its aircraft, exclusive of small planes, and its naval forces, the missile-firing submarines, 'the former analyst said. "THE FACT is that we are able to break every code they've got, understand every type of communications equipment and enciphering device they've got." he added. When asked whether the United States makes surveillance flights over Russia, "Peck" replied: "Routinely, as a matter of fact, over the Black Sea, down to the Baltic. Our strategic Air Force flies the planes, and we support them. By that I mean that we watch them penetrate the Soviet air space, then analyze the Soviet reaction—how everything from the air defense and tactical air force to the KGB reacts." He said he also had indications U.S. reconnaissance planes had flown over China. "We know where their submarines are, what every one of their VIPs is doing and generally their capabilities and the disposition of all their forces," he said. "This information is constantly computer correlated, updated and the operations go on 24 hours a day." WHILE THE Defense Department refused comment, as is customary in intelligence matters, other knowledgeable sources denied U.S. planes flew over Russia gathering intelligence data The sources said the United States had not relied on intelligence flights over Soviet and Communist Chinese territory since the early 1960s, because it has sent aalto reconnaissance satellites, which transmit pictures and monitor radio and other communications forms. "peek" that so 80 per cent of all "viable U.S. intelligence" comes from NSA-monitored computers. "Information gathered by NSA is complete," he said. "It covers what foreign governments are doing, planning to do, have done in the past; what armies are moving and against whom; what air forces are moving and what their capabilities are." "There really aren't any limits on NSA. Its mission goes all the way from calling in the BS2s in Vietnam to monitoring every aspect of the Soviet space program," he said. AS FOR Soviet intelligence against the U.S., "peek" said, "Actually, they don't get that much." The sentient ask to break our advanced computer generation generates accounts for most of the information we transmit. "The key to it is that we have a ring of bases around them," he explained. "They try to make up for the lack of bases by using trawlers for gathering it." Not it's not the same. They're on the defensive." "Peck" he听他讲话 to a conversation betwea- Ship Premier Pierre Nicolet, Koygain and a com- municaion. "Kosygin was crying," the former analyst recalled. "He told him he was a hero and that he had made the greatest achievement in Russian history, that they were proud and he'd be remembered." The cosmonaut and his craft disintegrated a few minutes later, the article reported. KU's Orientation Center Helps Foreigners Adapt By PAM VINDUSKA Kansan Staff Writer About 76 students from 26 countries are participating in the Center's program of intensive English and American life. The Foreign Student Orientation program allows students from other countries for advanced education in the United States began its six-week course Most of the students hold masters degrees from foreign universities; nearly all are professional people. All students, after graduation, attend advanced education at a university or American graduate school or a J. A. Burke, director and lecturer, both students were U.S. government scholars and were selected to teach their native countries. Excellence in both English and their respective fields was required, he. THE CENTER is financed by the U.S. State Department through the Institute of International Education. research institute, he said. The program was founded on four principles according to Baldwin: students to American civilization, the need for an education patterns, to improve their English proficiency and teach them the American people. Students are introduced to American civilization through firsthand experience in Truman Library, Library, Nelson Art Museum and Kansas City's City Hall. semians, films and six hours of class each weekday. Guest lecturers include businessmen, clergymen, politicians, scholars THEY LEARN to know american families through online classes, and their student stays with a different family. One trip will expose them to the culture of the United States and the other will show them small community life in Paola. English proficiency is acquired through classes in speed reading, vocabulary building, advanced conversation and composition. Burke said. Other topics are English grammar, and professional seminar reports. in their free time, students attend SUA-sponsored activities. University offers a faculty and graduate student dinners, special films and square THE FOREIGN Student Orientation Center has existed for 22 years, Burlese said, and he indicated that many more students were interested in attending than were selected each year. Museum Hostess Studies 1863 Raid By MARY PITMAN Korean Staff Writer Kansan Staff Writer William Quantrill and his bushwhackers abruptly broke the slow, sweet rhythm of August 21, 1883, when they gilped into houses and looting and killing more than 150 men. The survivors of that notorious raid have dwindled and gone and one more was killed in a French Peterson, the hostess of the Douglas County Historical Museum, cannot actually remember the raid, she has so absorbed the hair-raising, eye-amazing that she should not torem. "I don't pretend to keep in my head all these facts," she said, but she is nevertheless full of questions. "I don't know about the early history of Peterson, at 81, although she herself was born near Concordia, speaks as if she were a collective memory of Lawrence. The small Douglas County Museum, which she hosts, is located at 745 Vermont in the basement of the Lawrence Police Department. She's on weekends: Fridays; 1 o'5 p.m.; Saturday; 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday; 1 o'5 p.m. In several months, the museum collection will expand to the much larger Elizabeth Watkins Community Museum. Museum Hostess Talks About 1863 Raid Gail France Peterson researched Quantrill Raid on Lawrence Lawrence. Kansan Photo by LINDA SCHILD The move is necessary for The pro-slavery Quantrill raided Lawrence, Peterson said, State Hutchings it wrote "Free the militarist spot to strike." Peterson related the route of the raiders from South Park down the river and first people killed by the raiders was a soldier who Peterson discovers, in the course of some weeks, that he had to have been his distant cousin. financial reasons, but Peterson said she felt some of the intimacy and personality of the present as in the stuff to larger quarters. Artifacts of Quantrill's Raid, including Quantrill's flag and alleged locks of his hair, are among the wide assortment of theatre treasures. Other treasures include a primitive camera from the old Bowsocker Theatre, an old snuff jar, top hat, beautiful quilts, a rocking chair brought to life by Dana Gillard and colorful three-dollar bills issued by Lawrence banks. Peterson talked about William Peterson talked about William Clarke Quantrill, who lived and worked in the Lawrence school teacher in Lawrence before leading the raid from Missouri in 1857. "He was a handsome man," the ladies said. "He wasn't very much enamored with you, then he became like all these fellows who get excited about someone." Frank James, brother to the outlaw Jesse James, was said to have been one of Quantrill's raiders; and, Peterson said, Jesse, too, was sometimes among the murderous crew. On Massachusetts Street, the rebels split up in different directions, killing and pillaging and setting fire to more than 75 businesses and 100 residences throughout the streets of Lawrence. Lawrence's mayor in 1983, General Collomare, hid in a wide to escape the guns of the raiders. But Peterson described how the men were killed and saufcoated the mayor, assuring him to the list of 143 men known to have been murdered in the raid. Other dead included those whose bodies were not recovered by the fire set by Quantrill's crew. The eye-witness accounts of the raid in the magazine documented how the team sometimes succumbed to a woman pleading for the return of her stolen keepsake. One woman told her story: "My homeite found a box of her memoirs cared for by the burning house by the raiders. Thus the raiders manifested unthinkable guilt with both a sense of southern manners. But the pleading of Lawrence male residents was to no avail. Eye-witness accounts, a magazine, document that some Lawrence men were rounded up in a bunch in the street to be seized and the survivor raided so because they made themselves scarcity—hid in cellars, or as the case of one in a potato patch, hird in a potato patch. Lawrence ladies—sometimes sweet-taking the raiders into their hands and instrumental in saving their husbands and homes. In the museum's collection of data about the American Revolution, a 1913 semiconient memorial of the raid, suggested "There was a sea war, and still clinging to the guerrillas." One youth borrowed sun bonnet and a dress to fool the raiders and escape their guns. Women liked artfully to save their husbands and kill them, but the fires the raiders started. The problem of burials in Lawrence was huge. Some of the dead were burned in coffins. One survivor of the raid, Mrs. J. B. Sulliv, vivally recalled the aftermain of the raid in the magazine eye-witness accounts. Nevertheless, in its wake, Quantrill's Raid left 80 wounds, 250 orphans, a disheartened and empowered citizenry, and the main street of the town burnt out except the descent of only two businesses. can hear the pounding of a drum as Ira Brown and Hanna Towne make coffins for two nights in their shop just across the alley "I'm just an average person," she insisted. Peterson is eager to talk about Lawrence history but reluctant to talk about herself. Quantrill escaped to Missouri to die a few years later in another vigilante raid. Her work as a journalist, a researcher for the state of Kansas and Texas, has given her an historian's passion for truth and accuracy. The tendency to the part of most people to embellish the facts has been one of the greatest problems as an historian. History is important to her because it reveals to a man his relatively small position in the vast perspective of time. She Quantrill's Raid and other aspects of Lawrence history—now dim and far-removed from their original homes in Gail French Peterson. European Countries Seek Money System The ministers are meeting for two days at Lancaster House, near Buckingham Palace. LONDON (AP)—The danger of a worsening crisis takes center stage today at a meeting with the governments of four countries of the new Common Market, to help frame a long term international money Anthony Barber, the chancellor of the Exchequer, has been pushing a plan to lessen the importance of the dollar as a world currency and replace it gradually with "paper gold," the Special Drawing Rights on the International Monetary Fund. Presents By MERCHANT OF VENICE WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE July 18, 19,20,21,22 UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL All Performances at 8:00 p.m. Refreshments & Entertainment at 7:30 in Main Lobby Ticket Prices: $2.00 KU Students $1.00 with ID Telephone UN4-3982