Page 6 University Daily Kansan, October 7, 1982 Walesa won't sanction party unions, wife says By United Press International WARSAW, Poland — Interned Solidarity lead Lech Walesa will never sanction the "liquidation" of his suspended trade union — expected to be outlawed by Parliament this week, Walesa's wife said Wednesday. Danuta Walesa, in a telephone interview from her apartment in the northern coastal city of Gdansk, said her husband did not see a place for her in new Polish trade unions to be formed after Solidarity was officially banned. "he will never approve the liquor sale of Solidarity," said Mrs. Walasa, whose husband has been under detention since the imposition of marital law last Dec. 13. MRS. WALESA also said she did not believe rank-and-file Solidarity members would join the new unions, which a government proposal said would be independent from state administration and could be holding role of the (Communist) Party. Mrs. Wales, whose husband is being held at a government rest center in southeastern Poland about eight miles from the Soviet border, said her family "We would like to live like other ordinary people but we do not know if they (pollish authorities) will let us say, "the she said." But we shall not emulate her. Government press sources said Polish authorities still "nursed hopes" for winning Wales's support for the new labor structure in the country. THE PARLIAMENT was scheduled to meet Friday and Saturday to pass a new bill providing the rules for the new unions. The draft bill holds that existing unions will be outlawed once the new bill is enacted. Walesa was instrumental in the forming of Solidarity on the Baltic coast in August 1980 during mass protests. She was an influential regime's economic and social policies. The Communist Party's 15-man Politburo, led by Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski, recommended Tuesday that party deputies vote in favor of the draft which the Politburo said was in agreement with international labor conventions. The union law was virtually assured of passage since the Politburo had 270 In another development, a local paper in the southwestern textile center of Lodz published an interview with Lt. Col. Stanislaw Banasiak, who charged the U.S. Embassy in Warsaw and western journalists with espionage and "penetration" of anti-government circles. Head of redevelopment firm to discuss improvement plan The president of the development firm that will work on the downtown redevelopment project will be in Lawrence next week to meet with city officials, a city-county planner said yesterday. Dean Palos, a planner in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Department, said that Tom Davidson, president of Sizer Realty Co. Inc., will meet with city officials Oct. 14 to discuss a memorandum of agreement. PALOS SAID that besides he and Davidson, the meeting was expected to include City Manager Buford Watson, Planning Director Price Banks, and Gerald Cooley, a member of the law firm representing the city. "We're really anxious to get going," Palos said. The agreement is expected to include provisions for a preliminary project design, an initial financing plan, required public improvements, some equipment that would be acquired and a general timetable for the project. Palas said. The agreement probably will be reached within three to four weeks, he said. ONCE THE agreement is reached, developing a project design will be one of the most important steps to be undertaken, Palos said. "What's most important — what we hope for — is that within 90 days the developer will put together a design that is satisfactory to the city and also gets concurrence from the department stores," Palos said. Warmer weather causes air conditioners to flow On again, off again. The air conditioning in three campus buildings has come back on again because of recent warm weather, a KU official said yesterday. Officials at the University shut off the air conditioning earlier this year but this week they re-activated the cooling units in Green, Haworth and Wescoe halls, said William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor. Hogan said yesterday that several people had called his office and complained that the three buildings were too warm. EARLY LAST MONTH officials turned off the cooling units in many campus buildings a month earlier than usual to cut utility costs. Turning some of the cooling units on again will cancel some of the savings earned by shutting the air conditioning off early. Hogan said. Hogan estimated that the University had saved $50,000 by turning the air conditioning off early. "Anytime you activate one of those major systems you expend a large amount of your time." How long the air conditioning will stay running in the three buildings depends on the weather, he said. "We're trying to play it day by day," he said. "We're hoping for cool wear." Also, few of Green Hall's windows will open to let in outside air, he said, and Wesco is not structured to allow in outside air. HOGAN SAID that during warm weather Haworth lacked adequate ventilation without air conditioning for research being conducted in the building. BESIDES SHUTTING off the air conditioning a month early, the University will try to hold back the heat later than usual, officials said. The heat is normally turned on Oct. 13, but official want to delay that move until the end of October. Mayor Marci Francisco spoke to a group of about 40 people yesterday morning during the weekly luncheon forum held at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries. City growth is a process of change, mayor says Change and adaptation are the only constants in Lawrence development plans, Mayor Marci Francisco said yesterday. By MATTHEW SCHOFIELD Staff Reporter Francisco, speaking to a lunch-hour crowd of about 50 people at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, said the development of a city was not a progression toward a finished project but a continual process of renovation. "We all like to think that when we put up a painting it's going to stay, but things change — and buildings age," she said. Francisco said planners could learn through experience, but there was no way to know whether lessons learned five years ago still held true. PEOPLE'S NEEDS change faster than buildings decay, however, and adapting to new needs is the essence of successful city planning, she said. "About the time you put in a football field with goal posts and everything, you find out that kids want to play soccer," she said. CITY GOVERNMENT has a difficult role to play in the development of a city, she said. A government should look out for the economic interests of, or force growth to take place in some places and not in others, she said. "I hope my role is more in handing out hammers than channeling growth." Community growth could take different forms, she said — either all in one place or all in separate locations. She said good examples of the two types of growth were the construction of the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center and the Kansas Union. The Alumni Center will be coordinated, everything in its place, while the Union looks as if half of its parts do not belong, she said. "As a model of construction I would point to the Union. It has a nice sense of being added onto. Not everything that has been done to the building has been removed, but I like the Union, much in the same way I like Lawrence," she said. SHE SAID LAWRENCE had adapted well to its people's needs, and a large reason for that is the people's involvement in structuring their community. "There is a lot of interest in making home improvements," she said. "We've been able to make things work in a pattern with the city." Francisco said Lawrence had problems, partly because the city was too large for personal contact between all of its organizations, and partly because some people did not have much community feeling. By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter "I don't mind conflicts," she said. She creates a more balance community. Drop in enrollment foreseen for fall Officials at the University of Kansas are a projecting in KU's enrollment next fall, according to figures from the University business affairs office. The prediction is based, at least partially, on the shrinking number of students graduating from Kansas high schools, officials say. The projections are for the proposed fiscal 1984 budget, said Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs. Officials must make the prediction to The predictions set next fall's headcount at 23,750, a drop of 650 from this year's. THE DROP of 650 would mean $13,400 in residential fees paid by the $36,900 paid for fb. This semester's enrollment was up 10 from last fall, according to figures in the department's job search database. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the latest enrollment figures were music to administration and might not escape a decrease next year. "We're all pleased when it goes up" he said, "but it can't go on forever." The number of students coming out of Kansas high schools peaked in the late 1970s and the number of graduates has been declining since, he said. The decline, he said, "is surely going to affect our enrollment." Jones said the latest projected figures were revised after the actual headcount for this semester was revealed. The University originally had predicted last spring that next fall's enrollment would be 23,369. THE REVISED projections will be presented to the Kansas Board of Regents this month, he said, adding that the board must approve the figures before they become a part of the fiscal 1984 budget proposal. He said the University's enrollment would drop off in the spring also, but more because such a decrease traditionally occurs at that time. "With one or two exceptions our spring enrollment has been 800 to 1,000 students." Although the headcount at KU shot up in the fall, the University suffered a dead-end. AMBLER SAID the University based projections for undergraduate enroll- ment in the university. The trends in the past have pointed to declining enrollments because of the drop in high school graduates, he said, and the declines may be less than expected. "I don't think the decline is going to be as severe as many us was thought," he said. Besides, he said, "we probably have an expanding proportion of the population." This is especially true as the number of college educated parents continues to grow, he said. Jobless carpenter throws pie in unemployment clerk's eye By United Press International LAKELAND, Fla. — A 53-year-old jobless carpenter who "couldn't take it anymore" threw a lemon meringue pie in the face of a harried unemployment office clerk and then surrendered to police. "They'll probably throw the book at a man who is quick. But, he added, "It was sort of truth." Quick, who has been out of work for most of this year, had been waiting for more than two hours Monday at one of Polk County's busiest unemployment offices when he left the line to confront the clerk, Gloria Lehr. He said Lehr was rude to him and spoke in a "snotty-like" tone. "And that's when_something snapped," Quick said. pie for $1.79, returned to the office and threw the pie in Lehr's face. HE DASHED OUT of the office, bought a freshly baked lemon meringue Lehr, who has worked for the Florida State Employment Service for 2 1+2 years, was surprised. "I didn't even see it coming," she said. "I just got so I couldn't take it anymore," Quick said. "And I figured the only way I could get recognition was to do what I did." Immediately after hurling the pie in Lehr's face, Quick drove to the police station about a mile away and turned himself in. HE WAS CHARGED with simple battery and released. "I figured they'd come looking for me anyway," he said. "I could have gone back in here and been like water off a duck's back." nta Goodies! Jerseys Polk County has an unemployment rate of 18.5 percent. COURON Shorts Gloves and Shoes RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642 DUNKIN' DONUTS It's worth the trip. 521 W. 23rd Street COLIFORD Cannot be combined with any other offer. Good at participating Dunkin' Donuts shop. One coupon per customer per person. Offer Good; October 4, Thr October 18. BAKER'S DOZEN 13 DONUTS for $2.00 Famous Sandwiches Hero Ham Hero Turkey Hero Cheese Hero Roast Beef Hero New Yorker No other coupons Accepted with this offer. Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tuesday-Sun First Jump Course $55.00. Group of 5 or more - only$45.00 per per person, included training and education for first jump. Students required to show proof of age. Located 4 miles from Waltville. For further information 883-4210 or 883-2535 SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Here's your chance to be counted, VOTE ATTENTION FRESHMAN in your Freshmen Class elections. Held on: OCTOBER 6,7 From 9am to 4pm at booths in front of Fraser, Wescoe, Robinson and the Union. ~ and ~ From 6pm to 10pm at GSP, Oliver, and Lewis (on October 6 only). Remember-bring your KUSD!