Page 3 Managers School Set for April 24-26 Twelve KU faculty and staff members will participate in the 16th City Managers School on April 24-26 at the University, which will discuss the ethical problems of leadership. The school, which is sponsored by the City Managers Associations of Kansas and Missouri, the KU Governmental Research Center, and the University Extension, is expected to include leading city administrators, philosophers, psychiatrists, and political scientists from eight states in the Midwest area. KU members in the program are Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations and psychology; Frederick Moreau, dean emeritus and professor of law; George B. Smith, vice chancellor of institutional planning; Edwin O. Stene, professor political science and director of the city management training program; James Titus, assistant professor of political science, and Charles Warriner, associate professor of sociology. The two main speakers in the school will be Wayne Thompson, Oakland, Cal., city manager and president of the International City Managers Association, and Stephen K. Bailey, dean of the Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Handled any filiberts lately? If so, be certain you "keep records of all filiberts received, held and disposed of as prescribed by the Filbert Control Board." Filbert Records Required By Law Ey Dick West United Press International I personally have not handled any filberts, but I have shelled a few peanuts. It behooves me therefore "to maintain detailed records and keep copies of reports pertaining to the shelling of each lot of peanuts (including record of peanuts retained by the sheller)." These are, of course, in addition to the records that the 10 executive departments and 18 independent agencies keep for themselves. "FILBERT HANDLERS" and "peanut shellers" are among the 848 groups that are currently required to keep records for the 10 executive departments and 18 independent agencies of the federal government. A handy, thought-provoking list of the records that private citizens and organizations are required to keep has just been published by the General Services Administration, which itself requires the keeping of 11 different types of records. AMONG THOSE who must keep records for the General Services Administration are parties who sell the government manganese, mica, beryl, asbestos, columbium-tantalum and mercury. Thursday, March 7, 1963 University Daily Kansan A beryl dealer apparently has to keep even more records than a filbert handler. The Maritime Administration requires the keeping of 29 types of records. These include "receipts for the quantities of slop chest items delivered aboard ship." I AM NOT CERTAIN just what sort of items go into a slop chest, but if anyone filled a slop chest with filberts he presumably would have to keep records for the Agriculture Department as well as the Maratime Administration. The Securities & Exchange Commission has a requirement pertaining to "records prepared or maintained by others than person required to maintain and preserve them." If you have a permit to frighten migratory birds, you should keep records for the Fish and Wildlife Service. The same is true for "persons authorized to kill depredating purple Gallinules in Louisiana." IMPORTERS OF India water buffalo bides should keep records for the Customs Bureau, as should importers of rapeseed oil. It is the Federal Aviation Agency, however, that requires airplane makers to keep records of flight flutter tests. I don't know what that means exactly, so my advice to you is: don't throw anything away. Principal Named For High School A former Arkansas City High School principal will assume the position of Lawrence High School principal when Neal Wherry retires June 30. Wherry, who has been at LHS for nearly 30 years, has reached the compulsory retirement age set by the Lawrence Board of Education and will relinquish his position June 30. Dan Kahler, 37, was unanimously elected Monday night by the Board of Education to succeed Wherry. He was chosen from a field of 25 candidates. Kahler received his bachelor's degree from Southwestern College in Winfield and his master's from Emporia State Teachers College. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 SOUTHSIDE TV & Appliance SERVICE Specialists on duty VI 3-5140 DRIVE IN FACILITIES 1422 W. 23rd JERRY'S "66" Free Lubrication With every oil change and this coupon. Good for one week 25th & IOWA South of the Chuck Wagon 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended mild...made to taste even milder through the longer length of Chesterfield King. CHESTERFIELD KING TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS FOR A GENTLER, SMOOTHER TASTE ENJOY THE LONGER LENGTH OF CHESTERFIELD KING CHESTERFIELD KING The smoke of a Chesterfield King mellows and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste. ---