University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985 CAMPUS AND AREA City approves theater expansion Page 7 By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter Plans to expand a Lawrence theater were approved last night by the Lawrence City Commission after about an hour of debate on whether the expansion would complicate parking problems near the theater. The commission voted 4-1 to approve a proposed site plan that would add two more auditoriums to Hillebrand Theatres, Ninth and Iowa streets, Commissioner Ernest Angino was the dissenter. Debate began when the past owner and the husband of the present owner of Royal Crest Bowling Lanes, Ninth Street, rose to protest the expansion. Jack Harris, who owned Royal Crest Lanes from 1966 to 1980, said the addition would aggravate already serious parking problems at the Hillcrest Shopping Center. The retail center is part of the shopping center. HARRIS, 845 MISSOURI St., said theater patrons frequently parked in the bowling alley lots. But Brian Kubota, an architect representing Commonwealth Theatres, said efforts would be made to divert parking to the south and north of the theater. Commonwealth Theatres owns Hillcrest Theatres. Earlier, the commission expressed concern about traffic problems throughout the tillerest Shopping Center. The commission issued a traffic pattern in the area a disaster. Conrad Miller, the husband of the present owner of Royal Crest Lanes, said the bowling alley couldn't survive without adequate parking. Miller, from Kansas City, Kan., is one of four owners who owns the bowl; alley Kubota said that by moving the entrance to the theater to the south end of the building, the parking to the south could be better used. This had been achieved in representations of the staff of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. Angino said he doubted that attempts to divert traffic from the area around the bowling alley would work. No animals or people were hurt in the incident. The Med Center police said they had no suspects in the shooting. Two shots from a high-powered rifle on Sunday night struck an empty office that formerly belonged to the chairman of the animal care committee at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., a Med Center official said yesterday. Shots hit Med Center office once related to animal care "We can't direct them this way and that way." Angino said. "We don't behave by design." The two bullets apparently were fired from a moving car passing by the office in Wahl Hall, said Roger Lambson, vice charger for research and planning at the Med Center. The bullets were smashed Lambson said the office recently had been vacated by Jacob Frenkel, chairman of the animal care committee. The committee acts as a guardian of the administration of the Med Center and the animal care unit's administration beyond the recognition of police ballistics tests. Lambson said the committee recently had been criticized by animal care activists in the Kansas City area, who are disturbed because the police department has been cited recently by a federal agency for problems such as rusty cages, cracked floors and improper storage of food and drugs. ON CAMPUS NAMESTY INTERNATIONAL will conduct a letter-writing session from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Alcove E of the Kansas Union Dell. TODAY THE UNIVERSITY FORUM at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., will feature Eugen Borowitz speaking on the "Current State of Christian and Irish Conversation" at 11:45 a.m. THE DUNGEONS AND Dragons Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. THE CENTER OF Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag lunch, "Mierienda," from noon to 1:30 p.m. in 189 Lippincott Hall. Casandra by Bare Trap These bold gladiator sandals are enough to knock Ben Hur out of his chariot! 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