12 Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Lisa Jones/KANSAN Happy birthday Jan Holliday, Great Bend senior and morning news anchor, will join other staff members of KANU-FM 91.5 to celebrate the station's 35th birthday today. The station, KU's public radio station, went on the air at 1:45 p.m. Sept. 15, 1952. Commission to discuss sales tax By a Kansan reporter The Lawrence City Commission tonight will discuss programs and projects to which the city could benefit. The department sent sales tax proposed by the county, The commission meeting begins at 7 p.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The Seem-to-be Players, a non- profit children's theater group, has voiced its support for the sales tax. A new bill would also marked for arts and humanities. City Manager Buford Watson said the commission would hear comments from area groups. group's board of directors, said, "The Seem-to-be Players feel it is an appropriate use and want to go on record supporting it." Support from the city government would help the players do more of what they are already doing, such as children's programs and workshops, Longhurst said. David Longhurst, a member of the Plan may help Stouffer Place A community center and an academic resource center might be constructed at Stooufer Place apartments but not before KU administrators spend five to 10 years deciding whether they are needed. By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said yesterday that a group of KU administrators would meet in the student housing building to discuss new student housing construction. "At this point, we are at the experimental stage," Stoner said. "At the meeting, we will likely kick around some ideas." Stouffer Place apartments is a University of Kansas housing complex open only to students who are married or have children. It is east of Daisy Hill between 16th and 19th streets. Stoner said Stouffer Place was one area under consideration for new construction because it might need the community center and academic resource center. "For some of their meetings, they have been using several churches on 19th Street," Stoner said. "They have also been using the basement at McColum Hall and a vacant apartment at Jayhawk Towers to do lab experiments." The administrators at the meeting and others who later become involved in the process will eventually decide who would do the planning necessary before any student housing construction could begin, Stoner said. "We have four likely possibilities," he said. "The housing office could do it, facilities planning could do it, the state could become involved or a private company could do it." Stoner said administrators not know whether Stouffer Place needed the new settings until he completed whole study and made recommendations. Stoner said the planner would take two years to examine all the student housing on campus before recommending what construction should be done. The recommendation would be based on what the planner thought was the greatest future need of students, he said. The final decision on the Stouffer Place buildings would then be made by administrators who would set up a timetable for construction, Stoner said. Construction might not begin for several years after administrators reach a decision on University construction priorities, he said. KU's neighbors plan to speak up By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer Members of Lawrence's newest neighborhood association expressed concern last night about the possible increase in planning plans at the University of Kansas. About 75 people attended the first general membership meeting in Lawrence High School of the University Place Neighborhood Association. the crowd looked around the high school music room. "We'll have the Christmas party at his house." Lynn Weis, president of the group, opened the meeting by asking whether Chancellor Gene A. Budig was present, because Budigi's house is within the group's neighborhood boundaries of Louisiana Street, Naismith Drive, 19th Street and the KU campus. Weis said that the University was the largest landowner in the area and that it would benefit both KU and the neighborhood association for the two groups to work together. Bob Soppelsa, vice president and head of the association's environmental impact committee, said the committee had questions about three upcoming University building projects. "We're concerned about water run-off from the University and traffic congestion resulting from new building plans." Weis said. 270,000-foot-square building which will be connected to the east side of Haworth Hall on Sunnyside Avenue. Another project is a multi-level parking lot with room for 600 to 800 cars that KU officials have proposed to build the field just north of Walkins Hospital or just north of Allen Field House. "Oh good," he said and laughed as Soppela said those projects would bring sewage and water run-off and traffic and noise problems with them. He said he'd already met with Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning. The group also is concerned about long-range plans for a theatre and arts center at the University. "I assured him we want to be friends with him," Soppelna said. 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