0.80.91 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 approc April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement Page 12 By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter TOPEKA - The Kans approved a fiscal year seven Board of Regents reduces the increases Regents and Gov. John 6 The House approved budget recommended by Committee last week. The Senate has approved last month by The $645 million app will be returned to the expected to reject the schools' proposed bad Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to reel the budget. HOUSE MEMBERS reduced Regents budget the conference commi- nity some of the los- floor. State Rep. Jessie Kid said opposition to the S Republican majority I support on budget cuts. "We have hopes that restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor. "This kind of vote partisan basis. If the Housto m By MICHELLE T. JC Staff Reporter a new director of h to succeed J. W. Jill year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls a Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, the announced yesterday A search committee representatives, ho and presidents ofizations read applic applicants for the po in December. Stoner was one of f visited the Universit Fisl on b By MICHELLE ' Staff Reporter a whale of a tra across from the For years, stories about ringer in the mu "Years and 80-pound cat," Lawrence reside banks of the Kar you have to figh Doug Ward/KANSAN Doug WREN/KAMAN Oliver Hall residents Janet Good, Topeka freshman; Denise Kansas City, Mo. Ms. and Janelle Mathews, McLouth sophomore; look at part pictures that were taken at a baird surgery. Living out is in for some greeks By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter They shared a house with 80 fraternity brothers. Now they share an apartment, the rent and the memories. Mark Newby, Wichita senior, Brad Coens, Leawood senior, and Scott Tidwell, Prairie Village senior, are members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, 1540 Louisiana St., but they live in an apartment. Newby moved out of the house in 1983, and Coens and Tidwell moved out last fall. "Everyone gets along so well in the house, it's hard to turn someone down when they say, 'Let's go party,' "' Coens said. "It's easier to set your priorities straight now." These three, and about 100 other fraternity and sorority members at the University of Kansas, are called "live outs." The number of members who live in apartments ranges from none in the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, 1425 Tennessee St., to 16 in the Chi Omega sorority, 1345 Campus Rd. Coens said almost half of his fraternity brothers in his class lived in apartments this year. NEWBY SAID HE moved out last year because the house was too full and he needed more privacy. He said he had adjusted to living in an apartment. "At first, you are wishing you never moved from Neway," said. Like during Country Club Week, you are wishing that your life will be complete. But William Hanna, treasurer of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, 1435 Tennessee St., said members who moved out of the house were the exception rather than the rule. He said he thought the benefits of all members living in the house outweighed the inconveniences. Living in a fraternity has advantages, and Newby and Coens agreed that the experience had made apartment life easier. "in fraternity you learn to live with every kind of person there is," Liveby said. "You grow from it." IN THE FRATERNITY, Coens said, he shared a sleeping room with three other men. He said that often someone would come home drunk, which made it difficult to stumble. "Living out you tend to go to bed earlier." Geems said. "You get your studying done about 11 o'clock." Coens said he didn't go out as much on the weekends now, and he studied more than he did when he lived in the house. "At the house you're up until not two doing it, and up a few hours of the night! Here I go," Moore said. Coens, a member of the swim team, has to get out of bed at 5:45 to make it to practice every morning. Some greeks found ways to improve their lifesyles once they moved into apartments "Here you rely on your alarm clock and your common sense," he said. ALLISON RIEGER, Overland Park senior, said one of the reasons she chose to move out of the Delta Delta delta this year was that she wanted to choose her own food. "I've lost 20 pounds since I've moved out," Rieger said. "Houses are big on gravies and starches β€” lots of starches and butter. I do not eat them." He is a real strict person on fruits and vegetables." Todd Bedwell, Omaha junior, said he moved out this year from the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. 1621 Edgehill Road, because he knew he needed more privacy to study. "I STUDY MORE now." Bedwell said. "I'm an engineering major and they were all business and liberal arts and sciences majors, and they were asking me to teach them how to open my door and ask them to shut up." Bedwell said he paid a $25 social fee that enabled him to continue attending fraternity party. Fraternity living cost Bedwell about $100 more in rent and food than living in an apartment. He said he also paid a lot of fines while living in the fraternity. "I was a 'kitchen creep.'" he said. "We would break into the kitchen when we came home from outage. It was $15 the first time and $25 every time after that. I used to get caught all the time." "A lot of them come over and eat lunch here." Blubaugh said. "They don't have to pay a certain meal plan. They're Chi-Os and they can come over when they're going to want as long as they don't abuse the privilege." Carol biblaugh, treasurer of the Chi Omega sorority, said this year was the first that any women other than those who were student teaching had been allowed to live out. Most of the sororites have policies concerning members who want to live in apartments. Jennifer Juhl, president of the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, 2005 Stewart Ave., said she thought her house had an effective policy. Juhl said members who lived in apartments paid a "parlor fee" of $30 each month. Come Live With Us Amenities: -1 Month Free Rent - Flexible Leasing - Cable - Year Round Swimming - Laundry Facilities - 24 Hour Maintenance Studios, 1 & 2 bedrooms available 524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center 842-0600 door- ey in igan. all the upers, s, but ved to y had quit at said. paper em up we they thing fy and so one trop at ik with papers, finish applied ert said turn the r they 5 p.m. ISAN end eiid it to in warm wea...the dam across from Bowery. used the *a gross training a *g Soviet ll for a *Europe not a *not the sought in ass news heir fifth Power Co. Stxlt and New Wet Surfaces, and perhaps a few minutes of fame, and perhaps a few minutes of fame, and Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away β€” there's proof. Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on up a wall of Huggies Bait Shop. Second floor, above the east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park. LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Giant. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunchy, lightly LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Hirgens, the shop's owner. WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully dropped into the depths of the river. The lure of landing a big one drew rivers to residents in East Danny, burglar in East Rustle. Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock and the dam blocks their path. "People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he 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." But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said. "Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were not sure." And when these fish bite, they really bite. According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back. "Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said. 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. "Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said. Brice Waddill/KANSAN 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. Gerbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to停 simultaneous deployment of stop 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. Gorleben announced that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and that he had joined the Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western 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 accused them of ignoring the threat. The Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count. 1 See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1