University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 25, 1986
Fees
5
Continued from p.
Regents schools' budget reductions from state general fund
| Original Fiscal Year 1987 Funds* | Required Reduction |
|---|
| University of Kansas | $84,404,736 | $3,166,697 |
| KU Med Center | 54,492,510 | 2,044,450 |
| Kansas State | 81,577,182 | 3,060,612 |
| K-State Veterinary Med Center | 6,119,175 | 229,579 |
| Wichita State | 37,138,273 | 1,393,354 |
| Emporia State | 16,674,096 | 625,579 |
| Pittsburg State | 16,536,732 | 620,425 |
| Fort Hays State | 16,212,044 | 608,243 |
| Kansas Technical Institute | 3,264,569 | 122,480 |
| Subtotal | $316,419,317 | $11,871,419 |
| Board Office | 6,200,496 | 232,630 |
| Total | $322,619,813 | $12,104,049 |
| *Includes funds for capital improvements |
Source: Kansas Board of Regents
Bill Skeet/KANSAN
Zimmerman said the administration had decided to cut the area of academic affairs by 2.3 percent. The administration further decided to reduce areas within the University by 3.85 percent.
Administrators are discussing possible centralized reductions, he said, which include areas the University uses as a whole, such as the money supporting computer operations.
The University might, however,
lose $5.1 million because of a proposed
3.8 percent state spending cut
ordered Wednesday by Governor-
elect Mike Hayden.
The Legislature must grant final approval to Hayden's proposal before the cuts would take effect.
The Lawrence campus would lose $3,166,697 and the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., would lose $2,044,450.
KU must absorb the budget cuts in the next seven months.
The University will present a plan to the governor's office, Zimmerman said, during the first week of December.
The plan will detail how the University will absorb the budget reduction.
Election
Clark Coan, a board member and associate dean of student life, said he thought the ballots could have confused voters because of the ballots' design. He suggested that the board accept the 224 ballots.
Continued from p. 1
When the board discussed complaints about audits, Quincy told the board she accidentally had mistaken the date of the deadline for final audits.
"I would hate to see my entire coalition penalized for my mistake," she said.
Bergman said after the meeting that according to Senate rules, if a coalition overspend or failed to file an audit by a deadline, the Elections Review Board could decide to remove all its candidates from office.
"Because we made a good-faith mistake, we put ourselves in a position where we had to compromise," she said. "My main concern was with our senators who got in fair and square. I would never jeopardize their seats."
Michael Anderson, who filed the complaint against Cheers, said he hadn't wanted to compromise because he thought Cheers candidates had overspent and should be penalized. He agreed to compromise after Bergman asked him to be said
Michael Foubert, graduate school senator, who filed the complaint with Anderson, said after the meeting that he had not agreed to the compromise and would insist that the elections review board hear his complaint.
Foubert, who ran independently in the election, said that if the board refused, he would appeal the decision to the University Judicial Board.
But Martie Aaron, who was Stanton and Milligan's campaign manager, said she was glad the two sides had compromised because the complaints were so complex.
Amy Carter protests CIA and is arrested
AMHERST, Mass. — Veteran political firebrand Abbie Hoffman and Amy Carter were among 60 people arrested last night for seizing a University of Massachusetts building to protest CIA recruitment on campus.
United Press International
State and university police in full riot gear arrested 51 protesters and charged them with trespassing. Nine more, including Carter, the daughter of former President Jimmy Carter, were arrested for trying to hinder the arrests, university police said.
The protesters were loaded into three buses and taken to Northampton District Court. Arraignments were scheduled for this morning.
Carter, 18, who attends Brown University in Providence, R.I., was among a group of 100 who tried to block the buses taking the demonstrators to jail.
Bail for some of the protesters was set at $15. Some refused to post the bond and instead chose to remain in jail. Others were released, a court official said.
The protesters had occupied Munson Hall, which contains the university's Office of Public Information and the administration's newspaper office and refused to leave until a list of their demands were met. School officials did not comply with the request.
Protesters said they wanted the university to agree not to allow government agencies to recruit on campus if they have been found in violation of international law and to assure students their First Amendment rights would take precedence over the university's picketing code.
A small group of U.S. flag waving demonstrators presented afflicted U.S. protesters.
Hoffman, a defendant in the Chicago Seven trial of anti-war activists, and other protesters, most of them students, took over Munson Hall after a noon rally at the 25,000-student school in western Massachusetts.
Hoffman, just six days shy of his 50th birthday, told rallying students he came to the university because he felt it had overreacted in arresting 11 students earlier this month.
Continued from p.1
Deans
Departments in the college with the most uncommitted resources will be affected the most, Lineberry said, but he declined to say which departments these were.
"There will be a very significant reduction in summer school," he said. He described this as being between "no summer school and some summer school," but said it was too early to know exactly how many
He said that budgets in the college already were strained because of the enrollment increase and that the cutback would only aggravate existing problems.
"That's a very significant consideration," Lineberry said.
Enrollment in the college increased by 9 percent this fall.
courses would be affected.
Drug fumes may affect bystanders
United Press International
BALTIMORE - A study commissioned by the U.S. Navy showed that secondhand exposure to marijuana smoke can result in positive drug tests, a report said yesterday.
The study, conducted at the federal Addiction Research Center in Baltimore, involved placing people who did not use marijuana in a small, unventilated room with marijuana smoke.
Those exposed to the smoke of 16 marijuana cigarettes for one hour a day, for six days, all tested positive for drug use.
The positive findings lasted an average of two to three days after the exposure ended, said Edward Cone, a physician and chief of the chemistry and drug metabolism laboratory at the center. One participant tested positive five days later.
"This is another situation that proves drug testing is not conclusive," said Jeannette Abrams, a spokeswoman for the American Federation of Government Employees. The federal workers union opposes proposals to routinely check its members.
But Navy officials said the findings confirmed their position that anyone showing the quantities of marijuana would have to have used the drug.
The study was conducted for the Navy last year by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Cone said it was unlikely anyone would go to an arena or auditorium and inhale enough smoke from another person's cigarette to test positive for marijuana.
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