8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, July 2, 1986 ZBTs plan mid-July move By Dana Spoor Staff writer While many University of Kansas students are settled in for the summer and not worrying about their fall housing, three students are loading boxes onto a moving van and storing them for future unpacking. The Zeta Beta Tau fraternity moved out of its former house at 1625 Edgehill Road yesterday and moved their belongings into storage. They will move into and own the former residence, which is now the house, 1942 Stewart Ave. on July 18. The sale of the ZBT house caused a controversy last year after it was bought by the Sigma DNA Tau sorority. SDT used an investment company to purchase the house and have a custom-built buyer was until the deal was over. "We don't have anything to do with them anymore." Ken Kraus, St. Louis senior and former president of ZBT. said Monday. ZBT will store their possessions until the 18th, said Kraus, one of the three movers. Originally, the ZBTs had a contract with the SDTs until spring 1987, but that contract has since been broken. "We are out of our contract with them," Kraus said. However, Lisa Zurovsky, Leawood senior and president of SDT, knew nothing about the arrangement. "I have no idea what is going on," she said. "We have nothing to do with it." The negotiations are being handled through the housing headquarters for SDT in Indianapolis, Zurosvyk said. Authorities for SDT could not be reached for comment. They are at attack headquarters, conference for the security in Florida. Kraus said the SDTs planned to completely renovate the Edgehill Road house before they moved in. Representatives for SDT came in town last Friday to look at the house and plan on starting work soon. "This one is full ownership." Fraternity members are excited about their move, because they have lived in many different houses since they were in campanula five years ago, Kraus said. The fraternity has 62 members, but the house can comfortably hold 65-70, with two men in each room. The SDTs will move into their house this semester, said Jodi Harris, Overland Park senior and member of the sorority. "All the girls have already signed leases for other places," Harris said. She did not know about the move either. Kraus said he was certain a full agreement had been made and the SDTs and ZBTs had finished their obligations to one another. Legacy of journalist rekindled By Evan Walter Staff writer 'Out of the history books and into Nunemaker Center stepped William Allen White, the owner, editor and publisher of the Emporia Gazette, delivering a speech on politics, politics, politics, and memoirs to 96 people Sunday night. "We always tend to think we get smarter as time progresses, but I think we just get thrown with the same old problems." "The main concept is to give people a grasp of history and help them with solving problems. As I studied the case, I see how many people opposed war." Actually, William Allen White has been dead since 1944, but Frederick Krebs, instructor of social science and humanities at Johnson County Community College, has given about 19 speeches in just more than a year, recreating the dress, style, and words of White. "After the speech, I sometimes feel as somebody else has been talking for 45 minutes," he said. Krebse wore a gray suit with matchmaking vest and a bow tie for the speech, which was to have taken place in 1925. In preparing the materials for the speech, Krebs said, he studied White's autobiography, his books, his letters, at least 1500 of his editorials and and other people's interpreta- tion. Wrote Krebs said he gained an understanding of the opinions and beliefs of White from his writings. He cured him from White's writings for the speech. The speech was presented by the Kansas Committee for the Humanities, which pays scholars to lecture around the country. Krebs said he had given Benjamin Franklin presentations twice. Krebs received a bachelor's degree in history from KU and a master's in American history from the University of Missouri-Kansas City. "People have called me inconsistent, Krebs said as White, "but in my writing and in my politics, there save been three consistent principles at work: reason, kindness and justice." Krebs said White had described himself as a progressive Republican for social reforms. At one time he vowed never to run for political office and would not defend war was never justified, but he thought it was necessary sometimes. Krebs said White made enemies with the Populists and the Ku Klux Klan. It was the Populists who inadvertently editorial, "What's the Matter With "What we need to do in Kansas," Krebs said as White, "is not fight and blame others for our problems (what the Populations encourage), but to get a more diversified economy in Kan- to attract businesses in the land." Kansas?" White was born in Emporia and raised in El Dorado. His mother was "what you might call an old-mad school teacher" who pushed for equal rights, and his father was a teacher for Kansas in those days, Krebs said. White attended the University of Kansas, but never graduated because he couldn't pass geometry. He became an editorial writer for the Journal and the Star in Kansas City, Mo. "I began to understand how a newspaper could make a difference," Krebs said as White. "William Rockhill Nelson (the editor of the Star) knew nothing about reporting, but knew everything about how a newspaper could make a difference. "I in Kansas City, I realized I wanted a paper of my paper. I wanted a paper in a college town. I wanted a paper in a town that wasn't too tall." White obtained the Emporia Gazette, a former Populist paper GET BACK INTO CIRCULATION. 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