中卫37299 Royal opening The University Daily Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13. KANSAN Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3. Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas. Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640) Tuesday, April 9, 1985 University budget approved in House By MICHAEL Staff Report TOPEKA approved a seven Board reduces the Regents and The House budget recorom Committee I proposed sn approved last The $645 m will be留 expected to schools' pro委村. Conference co of both chamt the budget. Page 20 HOUSE MR reduced Reger the conference restore some o floor. State Rep. said oppositor Republican m. difficult to figl budget cuts. "We have been restored in care decided that it amended on the "This kind partisan basis. April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement By MICHELLE Staff Reporter Shawn Riedel, Misson sophomore, gets milk from the Joseph R. Pearson Hall cafeteria at dinner Monday. The cafeteria kitchen will be having new equipment put in by the beginning of the fall semester. J.R.P will be closed all summer for the renovation of the barn and elevators. A new director to succeed J.J. "year after 30 years" Kenneth L. St residence halls Tennessee-Knoxi replace Wilson, announced yester How to r A search comr representatives, and presidents izations read appl applicants for the in December. Stoner was one o visited the Univer Fis on b A whale of $g$ across from $t$ For years stunt show linger in the marmor By MICHELLE Staff Reporter "Years and y 80-pound cat." s Lawrence resident banks of the Kaw you have to fight In warm weath the dam across fr Power Co. Sixth hopes of catching perhaps a few min Sounds kind of t Sounds kind of I isn't another tale gets away - there Residence halls get face lift from repairs, renovations By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter Hall residents are beginning to see the benefits of a hall improvement and renovation drive that has picked up steam this year. J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said recently that residence halls had been working to use their money from hall improvement and public areas funds to help finance changes. Hall improvement funds pay for large renovations and repairs. Public areas funds pay for improvements and purchases in hall rooms such as living rooms, which are used by all residents. roooms. Gee Kroon, Boxet, Holland, freshman and Hashinger Hall resident, said he already thought his hall was well-equipped to meet the needs of most residents. But he likes the changes he has seen recently. said. RENOVATED CHAIRS, new desks, painted murals, hanging plants and improved basketball courts are some of the changes halls will see in the next two years. "They've just gotten a computer room lately, and that looks really nice," Kroon said. years. Joseph R. Pearson Hall may be leading the deck. The hall will be closed this summer for kitchen renovations and elevator remodeling. Besides this summer's renovations, JRP president Alan Oakes said, the hall recently has received new cafeteria adding desks to each lobby. Hall committees also are considering the purchase of new room furniture and curtains, he said. chairs. Oakes said JRP also was reupholstering floor lobby furniture and adding desks to each lobby. Molly Martin. Lewis Hall assistant resident director, said her hall was going through several changes, among them converting the fireplace room into a games room and purchasing new furniture and carpet for the living room. LEWIS ALSO IS getting a new stereo, a new computer room and maybe a new piano, Martin said. She said a hall improvement fund would finance most of this. residents who were Carol von Tersch, interior designer for the office of housing, advises the halls on project improvements. She said much of the emphasis in renovation this year had focused on hall lobbies. Martin said attracting new residents and instilling hall pride in current residents were aims of hall improvement. on their topiops. Plaintiffs usually was the most imaginative project that each of the halls and the separate floors work on each year, von Tersch said. Art, von Terschlau and Von Terschlau said one corridor painted by residents to resemble street scenes and another that resembled Monopoly board pieces were two of the more interesting corridors she had seen. TEMPLIN HALL IS another that may soon get a face lift. Wilson said Templin had a $4,000 living room project in the works. This year, Templin received new furniture for its foyer. Mike Osterbühr, Templin resident director, said he and the Templin residents he had talked to were pleased with the changing look of the hall. Tom Foster, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said. "It really makes the downstairs look a lot better than it did." a lot better than it has in HALL GOVERNMENT committees have been established this year in an effort to improve the look of the halls. The committees meet to decide what improvements they want for their halls and submit a price estimate to the office of housing, Wilson said. The estimate then goes back to the hall committees for them to decide what they would like to do next, Wilson said. After the halls find out how much their requests will cost and how much they can afford to spend, the hall committees decide what they would like to purchase. Waddill/KANSAN is weekend and Heidi last night to UNIVERSITY TERRACE APARTMENTS We also have rates with all utilities paid—on request. Reserve your apartments now for fall! We offer summer rates for June and July and a 10-month lease in the fall. 1607 W. 9th (office 4-B) 842-3230 or 843-1433 From the pages of the Wichita Beacon: Excellent housing for KU students! - 1-Bedroom Unfurnished $200-$215/month plus utilities - 2-Bedroom Furnished $285/month plus utilities - 2-Bedroom Unfurnished $265/month plus utilities - 1-Bedroom Furnished $220-$235/month plus utilities Chinese Food Tasters Delight By M.F. West Wichita Beacon staff Spring is here and many of you may be heading north to Kansas City for a ball game or to go to Worlds of Fun. On your way you may want to stop in Lawrence to fill up your gas tank or put up your stomach if the drive has left you. with an appetite. "You're in Lawrence, you should try the cuisine of the Peking Chinese proprietor — we've been told the family can cook." The proprietor offers dinner families for two, for three, for four and for five or more. "The hotel will For $8 a person the chef will prepare "The President" in Peking to Richard尼奇 on his break-through journey to China. Individual dishes on the card table cost $15 to $15 for Peking Duck. Most are in the $3 to $4 range. On recent family occasions he treats three and for four. We hardly had finished soup and roll when the main dishes arrived: the fried rice, beetroot salad, potato and corn sauce, bite-sized pieces of chicken prepared with mushrooms and vegetables in including bamboo shawarma. Roast Peking pork is topped medium in with a rich orange sauce and a sweet and sour pork. and for four. The latter we began with the won ton soup, which was brought to table only moments after we'd ordered and our tea had been prepared. The pot of royal Peking provides two for the dollar with both a hot mustard sauce and a chili sauce. The roll covers are thin and crisply done. The pork bits in the filling are well done and then fried in the crisp and finally chopped vegetables in the roll only hint of being cooked. ed the door, own key in on began. ed to all the newspapers, papers, but are saved to rive. they had and quit at While tastes are difficult to describe to others, it may be enough to say that each of these dishes is a savory tasting experience in itself. Paid Advertsiement this is a very tasting experience in itself. On the latest visit to the restaurant (which is at all times open) we shop on 23rd street next (Auipuntours) we ordered the dinner for three, beginning with soups and egg and preceding with fried rice and three main dishes including three green pepper pepper which was precisely touched by heat of without it being cooked or raw) sweet and sour shrimp. These were much like dishes in the other dinner but with soup and egg, the result of both evenings was a dining experience with a variety of fasting experiences and a considerable gouratory satisfaction. seasonal fare. The Royal Peking decor is modest with wall hangings and lanting suggests a celebration of charac- teries, nothing to overpower the pleasure of dining. Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second and Elm streets, a block east from Lawrence Riverfront Park. 841-4599 ROYAL PEKING Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner. LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul For example, one 85-pound catfish would be 140 pounds, 800 crunchy, lightly buttered fishsticks. WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into the depths of the river. 711 W.23rd The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and his wife, Sherry, from the city. And when these fish bite, they really bite. Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes. "Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything." "Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said. "I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off." their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said. According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back. "Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said. Brice Waddill/KANSAN used the "a gross resuing a Soviet for a Europe-istration nor the ought in is news ar fifth he had for a tal-de Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back. Duffy said. the paper ing them up of papers, to finish completed mart said return the after they at 5 p.m where they only thing Duffy and ut no one drop at trunk with ll t e' payment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe. Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe. BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe. The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe. Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threats they had withdrawn. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count. 1 See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1 1.