0 3 0 2 W The University Daily Royal opening 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 appr By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter TOPEKA - The Ka- oproved a fiscal yea seven months of Regen Regents and Gov. Job The House approves budget recommended Committee last week approved last month 1 The $645 million api will be returned to expected to reject tschools' proposed by Committee. The Senat conference committee of both chambers to r the budget. HOUSE MEMBER reduced Regents bud the conference comm restore some of the lo State Rep Jessie said opposition to the Republican majority difficult to fight on 11. "We have hopes the restored in committee decided that it would amended on the floor April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement "This kind of vol partisan basis. If the By MICHELLE T. JO Staff Reporter a new director of h to succeed J. H. Wil- year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls at Tennessee-Knoxville, replace Wilson, the o announced yesterday A search committee representatives, host and presidents of sizations read apply applicants for the pos in December. Stoner was one of foc visited the University By MICHELLE W Staff Reporter Fisl on b A whale of a tal across from the o For years, fi stories about monginger in the mur 'Years and y 80-pound cat banks of the Kaw you have to fight "LET'S DO THAT LUNCH THING!" Herbert does lunch: Herbert here may not know a plaid from a pinstripe or a Plymouth from a Porsche but he does know how to attract the right kind of crowd when he wants to do lunch. He just offers to treat at The Grinder Man. Herbert knows that at The Grinder Man he can treat all his friends with a choice of over 18 different sandwiches, in two sizes, on white or wheat bread, served hot or cold and all delicious. Herbert can also get side orders or take a trip through our salad bar to make a meal. Herbert then tops it all off with an ice cold drink. Herbert cashes in on a great coupon: With all this to choose from, Herbert knows he can please his or any of his friends appetites when he wants to do that lunch thing! And so can you! So if you're with a group or by yourself, take advantage of this great deal . . . 50C OFF Any Sandwich Dine In or Carry Out door. in gan. all the apers, s, but ved to y had quit at said. paper em up e they thing y and one top at k with apers, finish pl eted rt said m the they 5 p.m. ed the rigross uing a Soviet for a europeration night in a news irifif thirf Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock in warm weather. the dam across the Bowersock Mills and Peninsula in New York and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame. Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor. North east cast from Lawrence Riverfront Park. Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this unn't another tale about the big one that can be found. LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged and dug into the pounds, said daddy Jagger, the shop owner. LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be more than 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks. WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps through the dead and plunked into the deaths of the river. The lure of landing a big one drew awareness residents and law enforcement rivers on Easter. cause it is its nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path. "People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said. 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. "I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off." Brice Waddill/KANSAN "Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgins said, 'But they were under the dam.'" 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, crabdads and snakes. Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bait 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. Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had 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 Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Ukraine. 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 accused them of ignorance in their actions. Other unreliable arms Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count. See SOVIET. p. 5, col. 1 1 1