t~ EA I - PUBLIC AUCTION of Persian and other Oriental rugs. All to be sold for imoortina invoice number 085-32117772 through Habib Bank. AUCTION AT BRIARWOOD HILTON State St. and I 94 Ann Arbor Mich. 48104 Phone 313/761-7800 SAT. NOV. 10, view time 1 p.m., Auction at 2 p.m. Big, small, scatter and large room size rugs-includes Silk Qum, Esphan, Nain, Tabriz, Kerman, Keshan, Princess Bok- hara, Deep Pile Bokhara, Tabatabai Tabriz, Chinese, Romanian and Indo Aubusson rugs. AMA Liquidators Consultants, Appraisers, Auctioneers of Massachusetts TERMS-cash or check Oriental rus are a great investment and increase in value with age. Page 10-Saturday, November 10, 1979-The Michigan Daily Hopefuls eature like qualities I IW Invites you to join him for NEW HAPPY HOURS Mon.-Fri. 4 pe.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sun. 9 p.m.-12 a.m. p 1140South University - 668-8411 Mon.-Sat.I_a.m.-a.m. Sun._p.m.-12a.m. eof (Continued from Page 1) COOP SAID THE firm considered input from council and the citizens committee but the six finalists were chosen based on the job profile for- mulated bycouncil, personal inter- views, and background checks on all of the qualified applicants. "We think they (the six finalists) are the best . . . we have a good enough track record and they do track well (with local recommendations)," Coop said. Korn-Ferry has participated in the selection process for city managers in 50 cities, including the placement of Sylvester Murray in Cincinnati. "We hoped they (council) would in- terview them (the candidates) . . . they aren't obligated to take any of them," Coop explained. "WE WERE seriously interested in 50 candidates," Coop said. About 65 ap- plications were receied, primarily from midwestern city managers, including a few from Michigan. None of the ap- plicants currently work in Ann Arbor. SINCE MONDAY'S council meeting, Democratic members have accused the mayor of mishandling the selection process and questioned whether their recommendations would be considered. But Coop said the selection process -is "so much more open than in other places." He said few cities have a, citizens committee to review resumes. Because of the state's Open Meetings act,' Coop said, several candidates- decided to withdraw their names from consideration rather than have it be known they were seeking the Ann Arbor job. Belcher said at the press conference. that council knew Korn-Ferry would compile the list of finalists for them to interview. The firm was hired because of their reputation for extensive in- vestigation of candidate qualifications. "That's why we hired them, they're professionals," Belcher said. He said the firm knows more about the in- dividuals and their communities than council or the citizens could know from a resume. "I FEEL VERY comfortable" about Korn-Ferry's slate, because it corresponded so closely with the recommendations made locally, Belcher said. He said he would have been "very upset" if the recommen- dations made locally had not matched Korn-Ferry's. Korn-Ferry did not rank its six choices, Coop said, since the final choice rests with the eleven-member council. "We're helping them with that decision," by pioviding "our best judgment." He said since the firm could not predict which candidate would suit the council best, the firm could not predict which candidate would suit the council best, the firm could not rank the finalists. The "chemistry" or per- sonality between the candidates and council could not be predicted, he said. "We'll be happy if they take one of the candidates we recommended." William Kirehoff According to a councilman from Wheaton, Illinois, William Kirchhoff's zero-based budget program is used as a national model. Kirchhoff, 46, has been city manager of the town of 40,000 since 1973. "He's been able to avoid those programs that you sometime have to avoid to have a balanced budget," said Dan Fapp. Comparing Wheaton to Ann Arbor, another council membr said, "there are a lot of similarities on a smaller scale." The home of Wheaton College, the town's population is a predominantly white, conservative community. Wheaton's major employers-the college, BeH Labs, Standard oil resear- ch, and Fermi labs-cater to the highly- educated Wheaton citizens. Lawrence Gish Lawrence Gish is one of two ad- ministrator aspirants that runs a southwestern city. He has been managing Stillwater, Oklahoma, the home of Oklahoma State University, since 1966. Abouts40,000 people reside in Stillwater, which is about half the size of Ann Arbor. The city is known for its generally conservative politics, although it possesses a non-partisan, council-manager form of government. He is one of three candidates that has confronted city water shortages. Gish was instrumental in implementing plans for a multi-million dollar water pipeline linking Stillwater with a reser- voir some 40 miles away, according to a local media source. Stillwater's manager supervises electric service delivery, in addition to the water sup- ply. The source named Gish a "fine ad- ministrator," who is "a good operator and very sound." Although Gish was in Ann Arbor last night, he could not be reached for comment. The 49-year-old past president of the International City Management Association is the oldest of,the six con- testants. Gish earned his Masters of Public Administreation from the University of Kansas. John Elwell John Elwell, 46, has managed St. Louis Park, Minnesota for the last two years; and has faced several problems similar to Ann Arbor's. Elwell gained a reputation as a steady mediator, having resolved several of that city's labor disputes. And working with the pollution control agency and the health department, Elwell developed a par- ticular expertise at investigating and enforcing plant safety regulations. Elwell also has been at the helm of St. Louis Park's affirmative action drives. He reportedly has continued the strong affirmative action programs set into place by his predecessor and has per- sonally selected the personnel director that many observers in that city credit for vigorously enforcing those programs. Elwell graduated from the University of Colorado, and is the former city manager of Albert Lee, Minnesota. At his current post in St. Louis Park, Elwell heads a city of 48,000 people. Alan Harvey After over ten years managing the city government apparatus of Van- couver, Washington, a major port city on the Columbia River, city manager Allan Harvey has accrued a reputation as a meticulous technician with a fine' eye for budgetary detail, and a talent for organization among his high-quality staff. Harvey works for a non-partisan city council in Vancouver, a far cry from the fiercely partisan Ann Arbor council chambers. In fact, Harvey has been criticized for not being political enough in the job, often offending staffers and reporters by his bluntness, according to city hall reporters and editors. But on matters of budget, Harvey's expertise is unquestioned. And Harvey has been credited by most colleagues interviewed as being instrumental in forging better city-county relations, and in balancing off the competing demands of the two states, Washington and Oregon, that the city borders. His specific pet projects include in- stallation of a city-wide police com- munications system, a new computer for the city, and enforcing affirmative action programs for the city. From his hotel room at the.Campus Inn, Harvey last night said that they "full range of personnel problems" he faced in Vancouver are similar to Ann Arbor's. He also said he could work easily with a partisan council, em- phasizing that even in non-partisan Vancouver, there were always ".gradations of philosophy." more than 50,000, including the students at the University of Iowa. The seven- member city council, elected at large on a non-partisan ticket, leaned liberal for the past few years, but now has gone conservative, according to a reporter at the Iowa City Press Citizen. In his tenure in Iowa City, Berlin ac- tively promoted a "modified zero-based budget" process, similar to the limited ZBB program instituted here last year, According to Iowa City's director of finance, Rosemary Vitosh. Iowa City Council member John Balmer said that during the last four years downtown Iowa. City has developed quite rapidly. He confirmed that Berlin had been criticized for directing the city's housing inspection department to enforce the housing in- spection code too strictly. Balmer in- dicated that the Iowa City council was rewriting the housing code to make it more enforceable. Berlin has had to deal with council members at both ends of the political spectrum, Balmer said, "and he's done quite well in that regard. He's worked well with the business community too." Berlin was chief budget manager as city manager in Hanover, Pen- nsylvania before going to Iowa City. Terry Strenkle . Terry Strenkle, city manager of Ames, Iowa, also works with a non- partisan council in a strong city- manager type government. Ames, with a population of 50,000, is the headquarters for Iowa State Univer- sity. Strenkle, described as someone who "knows a lot about a great many technical things, administers a city with a transist system using both a fixed route and pickup system, similar to Ann Arbor's. 'Ames also has the nation's first solid waste recovery system, which separates usable glass, metal and other materials, similar to the one Ann Arbor is considering. Larry Curtis, Ames 'City Council member, said Strenkle had provided Ames with "just excellent leadership in terms of fiscal responsibility." A local media source said Strenkle was suppor- tive of affirmative action in his ad- ministration. This story was written by Patricia Hagen, with research by John Goyer, Mark Parrent,- Mark Wilson and Howard Witt. Background in- formation on the finalists was com- piled late last night from telephone interviews, and.some could not be reached for comment by press time. McGEORGE SCHOOL OF LAW UNIVERSITYOF THE PACIFIC Accredited: American Bar Association Member - Association-of American Law Schools SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA May 1, 1980 is application deadline for first year students seeking- juris Doctor degree in 3-year Day and 4-year Evening Program beginning in September 1980. Neal Berlin University graduate Neal Berlin has been city administrator in Iowa City, Iowa for the last six-and-a-half years. Iowa City has a population of slightly Pre-Law Discussion FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS BELCHER CREDITS COLLINS WITH 'SUPER JOB': Tue sday 11/13/79 TME: PLACE: 1a. m.- 2 p.m. FOR APPOINTMENT OR FURTHER INFORMATION Career Planning and Placement Godfrey Collins is running city i (continued from Page 1) acknowledged, weighing a thick report But, Collins said, "Once a decision is led the search for a replacement for in his hand. made by Council, that is what (the ad- ice Chief Walter Krasny, who will THE SOFT-SPOKEN administrator ministrator) follows." ire March 1. LFTER SERVING as city manager 'At it's dijfwnlt 10 Ji id lime to implemeit all Cldwnter for more than 17 a t interim system with Detroit's ''strong mayor" form of government. In Detroit, he ex- plained, the legislative and ad- ministrative branches of the system are not separate and both are directly supervised by a full-time mayor. The seven Republicans and four Democrats on council, currently are debating several controversial issues. The next administrator, Collins said, will have to implement decisions about a new runway at the Ann Arbor Municipal Airport, a solid waste shred- der proposed for the city landfill, or a recycling program. Other items that will- be high on the new administrator's agenda when he takes over here the first of the year are the details of the $53 million waste water treatment plant currently under construction and continuing the city's street repair program. Former Administrator Murray, Collins said, "brought fiscal solidity back to the city," and was able to make city operations more efficient despite personnel cutbacks. Collins said many of his duties have involved continuing Murray's un- finished business. But, he smiled, "sometimes you don't know what is going to happen. At the press conference last night to announce the finalists for the post, Mayor Louis Belcher said although a permanent administrator may start work Jan. 1, "We're in no hurry, Mr. Collins is doing a super job." SKI $1 Per Person Per Day The price includes 2 Meals