/ University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, October 17, 1990 9 City approves new site plan for Jayhawk Bookstore work By Elicia Hill Kansan staff writer After more than two hours of debate, the Lawrence City Commission last night approved a revised site plan for the expansion of the building. The project was granted a month and-a-half extension for the completion of the project. The commission approved the new site plan for the store at 1420 Crescent Road and gave owner Billery a Dec. 1 deadline for completion. Muggy appeared in front of the commission in response to a letter from the city planning staff that stated there were 19 violations to Muggy's original plan, which was approved in June 1899. The letter stated that the expanded bookstore would not receive permanent utility hookups until full complementary original plan had been accomplished. Violations cited included unapproved outside lighting, a trash dumpster container that the city deemed too small and a handicapped parking space that might have been used as a loading zone. Each allegation was answered by Muggy's attorney, Jane Eldredge. who said the violations would be corrected in the revised site plan. Jim Williams, an architect hired by Muggy, presented a revised site plan in response to the letter, which showed the present construction. There were arguments about whether the city was being too picky in its complaints against the bookstore. City commissioner Bill Penny said the complaints were ridiculous. "My problem with this whole thing is that people are nitching," he said. "There are always problems with site plans when there are renovations, and most of these violations are honest mistakes." "I think we're being compromising and accommodating to the neighbors," he said. "We're dealing with a non-conformingzoning use, and it is a problem. But it's something where we need to consider all aspects of the neighborhood." But commissioner Mike Rundle said the commission was being reasonable in its questioning of the expansion. Several Lawrence residents voiced their concerns about the expansion. Jan Meyer of Lawrence said residents in the area did not approve of the lighting that the Jayhawk Book store had installed. "We don't want our neighborhood to look like the auto plaza," she said. Diane Hughes of Lawrence said she didn't notice because it lighted the sidewalk. Commissioner Bob Schumm presented a possible new violation, saying Muggy had broken an agreement with the store to the use of his store's second floor. "It is on record that Murgy is not to use that second floor to sell books except for seven weeks at the beginning of each semester, and when I visited the store today he was allowing public access in a four-by-five-foot area, which is a violation of what we agreed on." he said. The commission decided to defer decision on the alleged use violation until the commissioners had a chance to visit the bookstore to see whether Muggy was violating the original agreement. Muggy said he felt Schumm was picking on him for personal reasons "I feel like this is Bob Schumm's personal vendetta," he said after the meeting. Sehumm said in response, "That is totally ridiculous." Briefs Selection process for Grissom trial to continue for 320 potential jurors More than 300 prospective jurors will return to Johnson County District Court today for the second phase of jury selection. About 140 potential jurors were selected in the second day of the preliminary phase. They are among about 220 potential jurors who will return today for questioning from prosecution and defense lawyers about their ability to serve in Grissom's trial, which is expected to last about a month. Grissom, 29, is charged with killing three Johnson County women whose bodies never have been found and faces other charges in connection with their disappearance. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. He is charged with first-dgree murder in the disappearance of KU graduate John M. Butler, 24, of Overland Park, and roommates Theresa Brown and Christine Rush, both 22, of Lenexa. They all disappeared in June 1989. But authorities have gathered mostly circumstantial evidence linking Grissom to their murders. Grissom also faces one count of aggravated kidnapping, four counts of aggravated robbery, two counts of aggravated burglary, one count of burglary and one count of theft. Art Blakey, jazz musician mentor. dies of cancer at New York hospital Art Blakey, a drummer whose band nurtured generations of leading jazz players, died yesterday. He was 71. He died of lung cancer at St. Vincent's Hospital in New York hospital and emergence Barbera (Coa) said. York, hospital Spencerpeckin Barmon a Cotton St. For a great part of his career, Blakey did his drumming for the Jazz Messengers, the band that came together under his leadership in the early 1950s. In a television film about Blakey's career, a Jazz Messengers alumnus, pianist Walter Davis, said "I think no one in jazz has brought more great musicians to music than Art Buzz." Ditzy Gillespie, the giant of be-bop, once described Blakey as "the volcano" of be-bop drummers. He was considered in the top echelon that included such drummers as Max Roach and Buddy Rich. The 1981 Newport Jazz Festival dedicated an evening to "The Blakey Legacy," in which the drummer was joined by the players who had been with his band during the previous quarter century. Among the musicians who got a start with Blakey's band are horn players Wynton Marsalis, Freddie Hubbard, Clifford Brown and Chuck Mangione, saxophonists Johnny Griffin and Johnny Griffin, pianists Keith Jarrett and Davis. 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