4.0.9.0 Royal opening Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13. KANSAN The University Daily 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 3y MICHAEL TOT Staff Reporter TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal $7 seven Board of Regt Reqents and Regents and Gov. J. The House appo budget recommends Committee last we approved last mont The $645 million will be returned if expected to reject schools' proposed Committee. The Seconference committee of both chambers to the budget HOUSE MEMB reduced Regents b the conference con- some of the floor State Rep. Jessis adposed to opposition to Republican major right wing. budge cuts. "We have hopes restored in commit decided that it wi amended on the fit "This kind of partisan basis. If Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985 Hou to n By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter A new director to succeed J.J. W. year after 30 year Kenneth L. St residence halls Tennessee-Knoxv replace Wilson, announced yester A search com m representatives, and presidents i zations read app applicants for the in December. Stoner was one visited the Unive Students find moving a pain By BETH REITER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter He needed help. Some students overwhelmed with the burdensome chore of moving avoid the weighty problem by hiring professional movers. The student regarded the crates of albums, boxes of books and piles of clothes that littered his bedroom floor. He sank onto the bed as the realization of what had to be moved to his college room hit him. Marcy Burke, Leawood sophomore, said she rented a truck to move her belongings in her freshman year. During the summer, she stores possessions in a friend's apartment. "I really hate it," Burke said. "It's a pain." Sonja David, Oklahoma City junior, said her parents had hired a professional moving service to move her furniture. David said she needed to move chairs, a kitchen table, a night stand and a sofa for her bedroom. LAURIE HOWELL, Pittsburgh freshman, said she had needed three trips in a station wagon to move to Lawrence. She started moving last summer and left her belongings in a friend's garage "Every time you get things situated, you have to pack in and move again." Howell said. Some students rent trucks from U-Haul Centers, 549 Kasold Drive. Steve Geiss, the manager, said the length of the trucks ranged from 7 feet to 24 feet. Prices are determined by the number of miles for one-way rentals. For two-way trips, the price is determined by the number of days the truck is rented and the number of miles it is driven. Geiss said that students made up 35 percent of his business. ABC Unlimited, 2612 Redbud Lane, offers local "Years and 80-pound cat, Lawrence res banks of the f you have to f moving for students who need to move from one apartment in Lawrence to another. so much ruthless. The cost is $25 to $15 an hour. Percent of his business consists of students he salts. JEFF SEUELL, the owner, said his company served Lawrence and other towns within a city. "A lot of foreign students will call," Seuilul said. "Sixty percent of them do it themselves. They've got to learn." Students must do the packing themselves. Seuell said. But his staff loads the boxes and assembles whatever it may have unassembled to make moving easier. Residents of Village Square Apartments, #50 Avalon Road, may store belongings in their apartments during the summer if they agree to take the fall, said Vicki Kaulich, the rapper. ZOROB SAID HE thought most foreign students bought larger items, such as stereos, in Lawrence, and sold them before they moved back home. A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the n The storage is free for residents who sign a lease to live there the following fall and pay the August rent, she said. Students who can't store possessions in a friend's apartment or their own can rent storage space from one of the storage services in Lawrence. Imad Zorob, Beirut, Lebanon, first-year graduate student, said he had brought only clothes with him. He purchased other items in Lawrence. A-1 Mini Storage, 2900 Iomega St., offers eight sizes of space for rent, ranging from five feet by 8 feet to 10 feet by 24 feet, said Colleen Krizman, a security specialist at A$10 a month. A $10 security deposit is required. Krizman said about one-half of the service's business was composed of students. --please tear out and mail to: Save Gas While Apartment Shopping Fis on In an effort to help you with your housing needs please answer the questions below and return by mail. Once we know your needs, then we can get in touch with you saving your time and money. Name. By MICHELL Staff Reporter Present Address Rental Price Desired $ per/month Would like to move in on Total Number of Occupants Please check the appropriate boxes below that best describe your needs Studio Apt. Washer/Dryer Bus Route 1 Br. Duplex Hookup Walk to Campus 2 Br. House Fireplace 12 mo. lease 3 Br. | Garage 12 mo. lease Never a charge to you! KW Kaw Valley Management, Inc. P.O.Box 323 Lawrence,KS 66044 Office is at 901 Kentucky Suite 205 Phone:841-6080 In warm w the dam acres FURNITURE RENTAL Individual Items. Complete Groups GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices Monthly Leasing No Deposits Quick Delivery PROUDLY SERVING LAWRENCE FOR 15 YEARS MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAN CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL Brand Name Household Furnishings HON Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL 520 F.22nd TERrace LITTON Microwave Cooking RCA Electronics 841-5212 Monday thru Friday 10:00 to 6:00 Saturday & Sunday 10:00 to 4:00 Office Hours An apartment complex with a stylish design enhanced by its carefree living. Exceptionally located, these apartments are easily accessible to . . . • popular night clubs • well established restaurants • the convenience of the KU bus route This complex offers you a luxury 2 bedroom apartment that - is wired for cable T.V. • has a complete G.E. kitchen • contains hookups for your washer-dryer Enjoy your privacy while visiting your fenced in pool The Georgetown Apartments deserve your immediate attention Come by, then make yourself a home II/KANSAN weekend d Heidi night to of papers h to finish completed smart said return the after they the door. an key in began. to all the swappers. apers, but e saved to ve. they had and quit at at 5 p.m. there they only thing Duffy and not no one er drop at trunk with uffy said. the paper g them up all at tie' accused the 'of' a gross pursuing a sing Soviet call for a EEK ministration ion nor the 'y' sought in Tass news I their fifth Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame. Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, along east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park. Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof. LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be 60 inches long, 480 crunchy, lightly battered fishbites. LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner. WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut into the river and plunked into the deaths of the river. Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents and others to the river on Easter. and the dam blocks their path. that he had "People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said. But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said. "I didn't do," 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." "Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they never did." And when these fish bite, they really bite. "Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said. According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back. 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. 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 dam 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. "Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said. accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment 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 Sturgeon 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 European 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 seek to increase the use in other nuclear warheads. 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