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VISITORS INFORMATION
Economics Department
Information -
http://www.ksu.edu/economics
Faculty: 20 Lines
Krishna Akkina -
Minnesota (1972) - Macroeconomics,
Econometrics, International Trade.
Michael Babcock - Illinois (1973) -
Transportation Economics, Urban Economics,
Regional Economics.
Lance Bachmeier - Texas A&M (2002) - Time
Series Econometrics, Macroeconomics, Energy
Economics.
William Blankenau - Iowa (1997) -
Macroeconomics, Open Economy Macroeconomics,
Econometrics.
Steve Cassou - Minnesota (1989) -
Macroeconomics, Public Finance,
Econometrics.
Inkyung Cha - Texas A&M (2004) - Public
Economics, Microeconomics
Yang-Ming Chang - SUNY Buffalo (1985) -
International Economics, Microeconomic
Theory, Industrial Organization.
Wei Chi - Minnesota (2003).
Philip G. Gayle - Boulder (2002) -
Industrial Organization, Econometrics,
International Trade
Patrick Gormely - Duke (1967) -
International Economics, Development
Economics.
Daniel J. Kuester - Missouri (2000) -
History of Economic Thought, Business Cycle
Theory
Dong Li - Texas A&M (2000) - Econometrics,
Health Economics.
Wayne Nafziger - Illinois (1967) -
Development Economics, International
Economics, Comparative Economics.
Michael Oldfather - Ohio University (1980) -
Economic Education, Monetary Economics,
Labor Economics.
Jim Ragan - Washington University (1975) -
Labor Economics, Applied Microeconomics,
Public Policy.
Lloyd Thomas - Northwestern (1972) -
Monetary Economics, Macroeconomic Policy.
Roger Trenary - Wayne State - Economic
Education.
Tracy Turner - U.C. Davis (2000) - Public
Finance, Applied Microeconomics,
Econometrics.
John T. Warren - Kansas State (1997) - Labor
Economics, Microeconomic Theory, Industrial
Organization
Dennis Weisman - Florida (1993) - Economics
of Regulation, Industrial Organization,
Applied Microeconomics.
Roughly 45 Graduate Students, and 80
Bachelors.
Kansas State
University -
http://www.ksu.edu
Kansas
State University, founded in 1863 as a
land-grant university, has a total
enrollment of approximately 21,000 students,
including more than 3,300 graduate students.
The school has a strong academic emphasis
among faculty and students. Carnegie
designates the university as a
ˇ°doctoral-research extensiveˇ± (i.e.,
Research I) university. In 2001, Kansas
State University ranked first nationally
among all 500 state universities in Truman,
Goldwater, and Udall scholars since each
foundation began awarding scholarships. KSU
ranks sixth (next to Harvard, Princeton,
Yale, Stanford, and Duke) among all
four-year colleges and universities in the
number of of Rhodes, Marshall, Truman and
Goldwater scholarships awards, 1986-2001.
http://www.mediarelations.ksu.edu/WEB/News/NewsReleases/scholarschart.pdf
City of
Manhattan:
http://www.manhattan.org
http://earth.geol.ksu.edu/sgao/manhattan/about.manhattan.html
http://www.ci.manhattan.ks.us
Map of Manhattan:
http://maps.yahoo.com/py/maps.py?Pyt=Tmap&&csz=Manhattan+KS+&Get%A0Map=Get+Map
For a tour of Kansas
State University, see
http://www.ksu.edu/facilities/tour/tour.htm
Today’s weather
information:
http://www.wunderground.com/US/KS/Manhattan.html
Visitor’s guide
(including restaurants, lodging, shopping,
and what to see and do (museums, natural
history, Konza Prairie, outdoor recreation:
http://www.manhattan.org/visitguide/visitor.html
http://www.manhattan-ks.net/
provides links to information on arts &
entertainment, business, computer & internet
firms, events, financial services,
libraries, local news, parks, real estate,
recreation (including golf courses), and
religious organizations.
http://www.ci.manhattan.ks.us/Airport/
on Manhattan Regional Airport.
Location: About 120
miles (2 hours by car) west of Kansas City,
Missouri and 60 miles west of Topeka,
Kansas, the state capital.
http://www.kansascity.com/
has a guide to Kansas City.
Terrain: The flint
hills is a gently hilly region running
North-South from Nebraska to southern
Kansas. Manhattan is located in the Kansas
River Valley, which runs through the flint
hills. The area has varied vegetation, with
much of the upper elevations of the flint
hills consisting of grassy prairie while the
river valleys, including Manhattan, being
moderately forested.
The Konza Prairie
Biological Station is 13.5 square miles of
native tallgrass prairie, owned by the
Nature Conservancy and Kansas State
University and managed by the Division of
Biology. The Konza is an attractive place to
hike and see prairie landscape within the
Flint Hills.
http://www.ksu.edu/konza/keep/
Climate: Winters are
relatively moderate. There are a handful of
cold days mixed in with mostly cool days.
There are a few snowfalls in a typical year,
but most of the snow melts off within a few
days. Summers are generally hot and dry.
June and July temperatures will top out in
the low 90s F, while summer averages a few
days over 100 F. Spring and fall are very
mild and comfortable.
City Statistics:
Manhattan has a population of about 45,000.
Most housing consists of single family homes
which are moderately priced relative to the
national average. (Real estate information
can be found at
http://www.home-guide.net/realtors)
There is virtually no traffic congestion in
town except perhaps near the football
stadium on a game day. The town has typical
suburban shopping facilities, including a
major shopping mall, several smaller strip
malls and a few older city blocks, including
Aggieville near the university, with a
mixture of stores and dining establishments
(see visitor’s guide).
City Activities: On
campus is McCain Auditorium, which hosts
touring productions of music, plays and
other performances, as well as major
university sponsored lectures. Nearby Tuttle
Lake, with 112 miles of coast line, offers
boating, fishing, swimming, camping and
other recreational activities.
Konza Prairie (http://climate.konza.ksu.edu/HomePage.html)
wildlife refuge offers hiking.
City Schools: (http://www.usd383.org)
Considered among the best in the state, the
city offers elementary and secondary
education with average class sizes of around
15 students.
The Faculty Newletter
is at
http://www.mediarelations.ksu.edu/;
click InView on the gray bar. The campus
student newspaper is at
http://www.kstatecollegian.com/
and the local newspaper
http://www.themercury.com/
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