Wednesday, September 12, 1973 3 Temporium Closure Urged University Daily Kansan BY JEFFREY STINSON Kansan Staff Reporter A recommendation that the Emporium Bookstore be closed immediately because it is making little profit will be presented to the Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee Sunday, according to Pete Tokapea senior and member of the committee. By Sept. 6, the Emporium's ledger showed a net profit of $34.98. Kathy Allen, Topeka senior and director of the bookstore reported the profit to be $109. The ledger also showed that the Emporium had a budget of $500 for the Kanazer said yesterday this would be almost enough money to allow the bookstore to make a profit. 'I will recommend to the Finance and Auditing Committee Sunday, to cut the budget by 30 per cent.' incurred forcing us to go into the contingency fund, which we cannot afford," he said. Of the $880 remaining in the Emporium's account, $44 is allocated to be paid in salaries to its two employees and $58 is allocated to supplies and operating expenses. "From the beginning it has been totally mismanaged by its director," Kanatzer When contacted yesterday, Allen said she would rather discuss the matter when she had a copy of the financial sheets in front of her. "I don't think I made a mistake about the profit figure." Kanatzer also charged that it was a stake in the empirement hired much later. $125 and could have made it through the travel section. It takes about $30a to pay their tax. "If the Emporium had started with only one employee, they would have save about "I also think it's a little improper for Kathy to have hired her housemate," he said. Marcia Overstake, Wichita senior, is roommate and an Emporium employee. Lisa Eitner, Manhattan senior and the Emporium's other employee, said that when she was hired in July, Overstake had already been hired as manager of the store. "I found out about the job from a poster outside the financial aid office," Eitner said. "Kathy told me there was a lot of other applicants but that they didn't get the manager's job because they didn't know the internship or had misconceptions about it." "She said Marcia had been the best qualifier for the job." Mental Health Bill Up in the Air By BILL WILLETS Kanson Staff Reporter Hearings in the state senate on a bill designed to bring more humane treatment to mental patients concluded yesterday after two days of testimony. No decision was reached on recommendations that be made to the 1974 legislative session. Jon Brauch, R-Overland Park, chairman of the Special Committee on Health, said a decision would be withheld until a research committee had evaluated Kansas statutes and proposals on the bill in light of Supreme Court decisions. "Basically what we have ended up with is the recommendation that we need a balance between patients' personal rights and responsibilities to adequately treat." Brauchi said. The bill defines civil, legal and treatment rights of patients committed to the state's Brauchi said most of the testimony from opponents of the bill dealt with the commitment process rather than care and treatment of mental patients. the heart of the bill, according to Louis Frydman, associate professor of social welfare at the University of Kansas and a backer on the bill, deals with the involuntary housing of minors. The present procedure, Frydman said, is almost like putting people in jail without due process to the laws then seeing that they are well taken care of. Clark Owens, Sedgwick County probate judge, opposed the bill. "If you pass this bill, you might as well do away with involuntary patients," he said. Brauchi said the bulk of the testimony yesterday came from opponents of the bill, including representatives of the Meningerian Association and the Kansas Psychiatric Association. Fryman said he was amazed at the open distortion of fact he heard in the hearings years ago. "I have never heard such brazen, total lies," he said. The committee at this point is confused, pypman said, because of the completely complex situation. Davis and Frydman said that the members of the committee were honestly Joan Upshaw, a graduate of the KU School of Social Welfare and chairman of the Mental Patients' Support Committee, which helped draft the bill, said Monday that she was pleased with the response of the Senate to her chance a chance that changes could be made. was receptive and its questions generally weren't hostile, he said. Michael Davis, associate professor of law at KU,TESTed yesterday in favor of the bill. He said he was well pleased with the attitudes of the committee. The committee Brauchi said the committee would announce its recommendations within a few weeks. NED VANE, from the University Field Staff Service, will speak at 2:30 in the third floor conference room in Moore Hall. He will discuss "The Middle East Crisis: Politics and Oil." THE CONSUMER PROTECTION Association will sponsor a training session for students interested in volunteering for the CPA office, 299 Kansas Union. MARCUS ELIASON, Associated Press Jerusalem correspondent, will discuss Israel and the Middle East at 3:30 p.m. today in the Reading Room in Flint Hall. THE SUA OFFICE will begin accepting reservations for the canoe trips at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow. Each trip will cost $12, which covers rental of canoe and equipment and hauling charges, and will be limited to 30 persons. THE SUA CANOE CLUB will have an orientation meet at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union for students interested in the club's activities. The team is having a canoe trips planned for this fall on the Corrente Missouri will be available at the meeting MIRE WOOKS, adviser for the Red Cross from Wichita, will speak at 7 tonight in Oliver Hall cafeteria on "How to Approach Donors." He will also show slides about the blood program and pass out sheets with guidelines on who can and can't give blood. SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA- SUA Film Society SUA Classical Films BIRTH OF A NATION dressed in W. Griffith wearin' Larry Hagman Wednesday, Sept. 12 7:30 & 9:15 75c Woodruff SPIDER'S STRATAGEM SUA Popular Films 7:30 & 9:30 Woodruff Auditorium directed by Bernardo Bertolucci (Last Tango in Paris) Thursday, Sept. 13 14th and Ohio SUA Humphrey Bogart Film Festival "STRAW DOGS" 7:00 & 9:30 Friday, Sept. 14 2:00, 4:30, 7:00 & 9:30 Saturday, Sept. 15 Maltese Falcon directed by John Huston starring Humphrey Bogart & Peter Lorre Monday, Sept. 17 THE 7:30 & 9:30 Woodruff Auditorium 75 $ ^{c} $ $ 75^{\circ} $ Woodruff Auditorium SUA Humphrey Bogart Film Festival "Casablanca" starring Humphrey Bogart Tuesday, Sept. 18 75°C 7:30 & 9:30 Union Ballroom AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS 817 Mass. Downtown Lawrence Sandwiches Soups Beverages Daily 11:30-2:30 Home Cooked Specials Now Serving GOOD EATS Real Tasty • Cheap Too! UNIVERSITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION ON SMOKING IN CLASSROOMS The University Council recommends that each instructor devise some procedure to alleviate the problems of smoking in classrooms and report this procedure to his or her class. The Council suggests that upon the request of any student in the class, the instructor shall prohibit smoking in the classroom during the class period. Resolution adopted by the University Council December 14, 1972 Introducing Kansas Cocktail Hours 90° Pitchers 10° Popcorn 3-5 Monday thru Friday The Ball Park Hillcrest Shopping Center—We're Cool Inside DISCOUNT RECORDS MALLS SHOPPING CENTER PIONEER TEAC JBL DUAL DISC PREENERS STEREO COMPONENTS - Pioneer SX-424 50 Watt AM-FM Stereo Receiver PIONEER SX-424 Retail Price: $199^95 AM-FM STEREO SYSTEM We Consistently Have the Cheapest Records in Lawrence Significant Savings on All Name Brand Stereo Equipment GATSBY USA...THE NEW ELEGANCE FROM ROBERT BRUCE 841 Massachusetts 843-2828 Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358