Wednesday, May 4. 1977 University Daily Kansan 5 this way: you raise ach aren't are sub- another it in the taxes and the smaller cars is continue to way we do or natural i but are language con- servation weave while we live in the US, home in- line and tax and laral energy would lead to i B. in short, or an ac- cident policy ongress es ments and don't cry out. of a coun- sas been ex- government to care. why all why Europe are our own air its emphasis its importance campus, so campus, or er violations isnormally? isnormally? million people treatment less rights? rightist? rightist? whatever the reason, is a sophomore geography and for the help of and, especially nanned the aid of more ex- ent and a Saturday stand by the beaten on repeating or Gatorade?" or 300 asleep without them with a wretched ticket. Robert Carroll Kansas City, Mo. August turing Holika- Kan. we $18 iss are y fee Editor arram Managers' seminar will honor founders Three founders of early city management organizations will be honored by the University of Kansas Institute of Public Affairs and Community Development this week during the 60th anniversary celebration of the manager plan in Kansas. Edwin Stone, Lawrence; John Stutz, Topeka; and Orin Noll, Overland Park; will be honored by the Institute, a part of the KU Division of Continuing Education, which annually City Managers' Seminar today through Friday in the Kansas Union. "To celebrate the 60th anniversary of professional city management, we decided to honor those men who helped start the organizations and programs in the early years," Tim Pryor, director of the Institute, said yesterday. "KU has one of the oldest established master of public administration (MPA) programs in the United States, and Lawrence was the location of the first meeting of the National League of Cities." Pryor said. STENE, KU professor emeritus of political science, founded the MPA program at KU in 1948 with a grant from the Carnegie Foundation. The Institute will honor Stone at a noon luncheon today in the Kansas Room of the Union. Stutz was executive director of the League of Kansas Municipalities in 1920 and helped organize the National League of Baseball Players. He was the permanent director of the International City Management Association (IMCA). Stutz attended the seminar's noon luncheon Friday. The Institute also will honor Notling, the present director and executive director of the IMCA, at a luncheon tomorrow in the Union's Kansas Room. The purpose of the three-day seminar, in addition to honoring the early founders of city management organizations, is two-fold, Pryor said. "THE INITIAL purpose of the seminar is to provide managers with an up-date in the field of city management," he said. "The seminar is also an annual homecoming for KU MPA graduates who get a chance to see each other and exchange information. David Morrison, Topek psychiatrist, and Chester Newland, professor in the School of Public Administration at the University of South Carolina to lead two of the 14 workshops. Morrison, a psychiatrist at the Meninger Foundation in Topeka and consultant to Events TODAY: There will be a meeting of CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS all day in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. FALL SEMESTER TIMETABLES will be available all day in the Office of Admissions AND THE HAWKER YEARBOOK will be distributed from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. in Strong Hall's lobby, ALETHA HUSTON, professor of human development, will speak on television violence at noon in the United Ministries Center. There will be an informational HOWLAND BIRD HOUR AND FULBRIGHT-HAYS SCHOLARSHIPS at 4 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. TOMORROW; There will be a symposium on ACCOUNTING AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY by Lawrence Gordon sponsored by the School of Business all day in the Union's Walnut Room. The UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the Union's Oread School to elect officers. A story in Monday's Kansan about fraternity members who ran race races last weekend to raise money for CARE projects in Africa incorrectly identified the president of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity in Chicago. Also this was Presley, North Chicago, III, junior. This also was the first run-a-thon, not the second, as was reported in the Kansan. government and industry, will speak at 1:30 p.m. today on "The Use, Misuse and Abuse MORRISON'S professional focus is to help executives, government officials and other professionals cope with the stresses of work, human pressures of the twentieth century and the loneliness of responsible positions. Correction newward, a KU graduate, has served as a consultant in labor-management relations, personnel, executive development and administration in federal, state and local organizations. 'Newland's workshop should attract many city managers as he is well known in the labor union field, and that is a major area of interest in Kansas and elsewhere right now,' Mike Wilden, assistant Lawrence city manager, said. LENDING AN international flavor to the seminar will be Jacques Perreault, president of the IMCA and city manager for Quebec City, Quebec. Perreault will speak at tomorrow's luncheon on "The Future of the Profession." Newland will speak at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Bia Eight Room of the Union. Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager, will help lead a workshop on the role of neighborhood groups in city government at 1:45 p.m. Thursday. Scott Brooks, research associate for the Institute, and selected KU interns will host a workshop on "Getting the Lost Back to School" in February. He is Educated," which will be today at 1:30. KU MPA students and interns also are helping with the seminar. Students will sponsor a social hour for the managers attending the conference tonight. "The KU seminar tries to give enough variety in discussion topics and workshops so that there will be some topic of interest to every manager in attendance." Wildgen About 150 city managers from Kansas and across the United States are expected to attend the seminar. Most of those who will attending are KU MPA alumni, Pryor or Molded or Steel Cleats Adidas • Puma • Pony Spoybilt • Brooks Baseball Shoes SUA FILMS CLASSIC FILMS OF THE 40's WEEK REBECCA (1940) Dir. Richard Thorpe with Robert Montgomery, Rosalind Russell, Classical Fiction 4.15, 6.4, 7.5c, 7c Elmir Elmir (1945-47) Dir. Alfred Hitchcock with Sir Laurence Oliver, Joan Fontaine The seminar also will feature workshops and discussions on such subjects as stress management, management as a public policy tool, time management, budgeting and what to do when a city council decides to fire a manager. NIGHT MUST Dir. Edward Dmyryk. The original dir. of Raymond Chandler's "Farewell My Lovely." Dick Powell as Detective Phillip Marlowe. MURDER MY SWEET (1945) Rukeyser . . . OUT OF THE PAST (1947) Dir. Jacques Tourneur with Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming, Film Society. of political realities. He said one-term politicians who would act for the public good rather than political expediency were also needed. PAST ADMINISTRATIONS have failed that Lack, Rukesver said. From page one THE BIG SLEEP Dir. Howard Hawks with Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall CASABLANCA (1943) Dir. Michael Curtiz with Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman. May 6, 5 & May 7, 5: 3:30, 8:00 P.M. "If Nixon had been captain of the Titanic," he said, "he would have told the passengers they were just stopping briefly to take on ice." THURS. May 5, 7:30 p.m., 15c THE BIG SLEEP (1946) CASABLANCA (1943) The Ford administration also failed to provide political and economic leadership for the war effort. "Ford turned out, at best, to be an uncertain beacon for a nation at sea," he said. "His economic policies could best be enabled as 'walk stickily and carry a big soft.'" Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union "OVER THE LAST two years we have been presented with so many Carters that anything he says would fit one of those images." Rukewer said. Rukeyes said Carter made the issue of credibility a major test for himself by promising to never tell a lie. He has practiced fine politics, Rukeyes said, by relying on the advice he believed, and therefore enhancing his chances of passing the credibility test. On the positive side, Rukeyser said that He said Carter was selling a new political commodity called political litmus paper—"it comes out looking like any color you want it to." Carter was profiting from one-the-job training, and had faced up to wage and price controls by forgetting his campaign keeps control as a "viable alternative." Carter has learned that wage and price controls are one of the few vices that are as painful to workers as any other. "ECOCONISTS OFFEN'm the boat because they overlook things like public confidence," Rukeyser said. "When connexion is poor, the economy can quickly spiral downhill." commit, he said, and keeping controls ready could precipitate a drop in public health. Despite the problems, Rukeyer said that the economy wasn't in the awful shape many people said it was, and that it was an economy of rapidly expanding markets. "The economy has been expanding for two straight years and it shows no signs of slowing." Rock Chalk Ranch 2 miles west on Hwy 40 Phone 843-4646 GRAND OPENING & OPEN HOUSE Sunday, May 8 10:00-1:30 - Free coffee & donuts in the morning - Free horseback rides for kids - Tours & demonstrations of riding & jumping Featuring in a special 3:00 concert. Admission only '2.00 per person THE ROCK CHALK RANCH Boards and trains horses—Offers English and Western riding Initiation With special guest FIREFALL "ZZ TOP may have started out as just 'that little oil' band from Texas,' but today the group is one of the biggest in the world, out-drawing even the Rolling Stones." The Miami News ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SATURDAY,MAY 7 Tickets at Kief's,SUA An Amusement Conspiracy Production An SUA Special Event