University Daliv Kansan, September 7, 1982 Page 3 Proposal changes tenure committee By STEVE CUSICK Staff Reporter The University Senate Executive Committee recently approved a rule change that would give the chancellor more control when selecting members for the University Committee on Promotions and Tenure. The rule change ends a summer-long debate about how members of the promotions and tenure boards are seated. James Seaver, chairman of SenEx, said yesterday. The debate was sparked last spring when legislators in Topeka voiced concerns that the chancellor's office controlled the control of the committee, Saver said. In the past, SenEx nominated 12 members to the committee and then the chancellor essentially rubber-stamped those appointments, Seaver said. "We would make the nominations and we would make the appointments," he said. UNDER THE NEW proposal, SenEx would consult with the chancellor's office and then make suggestions on an indebted number of nominees, ever said. "This way the chancellor wouldn't be delegating his authority at all." Seaver wrote in a letter to Chancellor Gene A. Budig in August. The group decided Friday to send the proposal to the Faculty Council for approval. In response to the criticisms last spring, members of the promotions and tenure committee first had proposed SenEx Make 24 nominations to the board. Under that proposal, the vice chancellors for academic affairs and for research, graduate studies and public services at UNC will be 12 members out of the 24, Seaver said. SenEx members did not agree with the tenure committee proposal, Seaver So SenEx came up with the alternative proposal. said. "We didn't understand really why we needed twice as many nominees," he said. THE FACULTY COUNCIL will consider the SenEx proposal, which requires a change in the Faculty Senate rules and regulations, in October. That change already has Budig's approval, Seaver said. Seaver said some of the council members probably would not want to relinquish the University governance control over the committee. "I'm not sure how it will go in the council." he said. But he, he added, he did not believe Senex was giving up an undoubted amount of money. "Some of us don't see that it's going to be such a tremendous change," he said. "Besides, this has always been a chancellor's committee." Faculty members serve on the promotions and tenure committee, which now is chaired by the vice chancellor for academic affairs. The vice chancellor for research is an ex officio member and the Faculty Senate Executive Committee also names a member to the committee. The rest of the committee is composed of faculty members. funded by RSA and Ks. SRS Smith said there was a need for "guidelines in determining tuition," and said that the 25-percent fee/cost ratio was a fair proportion. He cited a 1977 study by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education that recommended that students should pay a third of the cost of education. Resident tuition at the University of Kansas will be raised by $88 to a total of $410 per semester. Non-resident tuition will go up to $1,200 per semester, a $200 increase. Those figures do not include additional charges for buildings, les- In 1968, Glee Smith Jr., then a member of the Kansas Legislature, was chairman of a special committee formed to study tuition policies at state colleges. Smith and the committee decided then that students' tuition should pay about a quarter of the state's higher education expense. The Regents, in a move to increase the state college's tuition ratio towards the 25-percent average, proposed a 20-percent increase in individual tuition for all students, and asked students to pay about 23 percent of the total educational cost, Smith said. By DIRK MILLER Staff Reporter tution," Smith said. The percentage had fallen as low as 19.9 percent in 1976, according to a 1982 report issued by the Regents. The 28-percent fee/cost ratio was originally expected by the Board of Regents to be an average, Smith, now a member of the Regents and chair of the budget委员会, said in an interview last week. It has not worked out that way. "The ratio has become a ceiling, rather than an average, in setting tuition," Smith said. The percentage had fallen as low as 19.92 according to a report to 1992. Now, 16 years later, that is still the policy used by the Board of Regents when determining tuition rates. mined by taking the total tuition figure for state schools and dividing it by the total education cost, the amount the state spends on state colleges. The average student pays about 25 percent, the amount endorsed by the Regents. 16-year-old method still decides tuition main union level 2,satellite shop union bookstores kansas THE FEE/COST RATIO is deter THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 PRESENCE OF HERN'S DAILY during regular school year & Monday and Thursday during summer session, except Sat, Sun, holidays & final period. 4. COMPLETE MAKING ADDRESS OF NORTH POINT SCHOOL, 2650 W. 17th St., Burlington, NC 28387 5. FIRST FILL Hall; University, Lawrence, KS, Douglas County 64065 6. INVITE US AT: Larry McIntosh, Lincoln School, Lawrence, KS, Douglas County 64065 103 Hint Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, ES, Douglas County 66045 FULL WORK AND COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS OF PERSONS EDITOR AND MANAGER, AND WRITING ASSISTANT. WWW.NUMBER25.COM STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION Disabled doesn't mean unable. Ask us what we can do to help you help yourself. Transportation, Advocacy, Counseling, Attendant care, Housing. Independence, Inc. 1910 Haskell Lawrence, Kansas 66044 The University of Kansas, State of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. 60645 841-0333 TTY 841-1046 MANAGING EDITOR (Home and Complete Mailings Address) ALEXANDRA DAVENPORT VANZER RADIO5 Gene George, B Strouffer Place, F7, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 7. **CONSIDERATION** You may be a consultant or a client and address their needs and information in accordance with the law, the nature and adequacy of your research or the requirements of your project or job or as required by the contract or agreement you have entered into with the employer. If you are not an expert in any area of the job or the industry, be sure to consult with a professional in that area if possible. A PUBLICATION NO. 8 3 5 0 4 8 4 0 B DATE OF RELEASE Sept. 6, 1987 B A DEPARTMENT OF JESUS PURCHASED B ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION 252 in Court 164 COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS Duplessan County Lawrence, Kansas 66035 4. FOR COMPLETION BY NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION AUTHORIZED TO MAN, AT SPECIAL RATES (see section 413A, C002 Only) The organization and the carrier are required to complete this form on time. B. ELEVEN AND NATURE OF CIRCULATION A. TOTAL NO. CORRESPONDENTS FROM PALE B. A NUMBER OF CORRESPONDENTS FOR THE STUDENTS C. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS D. TOTAL PUBLIC CIRCULATION (total of 199 and 180) E. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS F. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS G. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS H. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS I. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS J. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS K. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS L. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS M. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS N. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS O. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS P. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS Q. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS R. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS S. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS T. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS U. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS V. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS W. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS X. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS Y. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS Z. A NUMBER OF SUBSCRIBERS FOR THE STUDENTS 3. CERTIFY that the statements made by me above are correct and complete. General Manager Page 14 CHEAP BEER! Tuesday $1.50 Pitchers! Monday Big Mo Madness—75° Big Mos! Thursday Quarter Draws! Friday TGIF! 1-3 $1 Pitchers, 3-6 $1.50 Pitchers Wednesday Ladies Nite—25° Draws! ALL WEEK EVERY WEEK! 715 MASS. David Adkins, KU student body president and a member of the student advisory committee to the Board of Regents, said the committee had made a number of tuition recommendations to the Regents. The committee asked for annual tuition increases, rather than a large one every four years, and sons, examinations, laboratory work and departmental charges. THE TUITION PERCENTAGE is actually staggered at the state colleges; smaller school's tuition ratios are lower than the ratios of larger institutions, like KU. The combined percentages for Emporia State, Pittsburgh State and Fort Hays State universities was 15.7 percent of the state's expenditures from 1977 to 1980. At KU, Wichita State University and Kansas State University, the ratio was 21.5 percent, according to a report from the Kansas Legislative research department. it requested that announcements of the increases be made at least a year before they take effect. IN ANSWER to that, the Board of Regents adopted a new budgetary cycle that allowed it to schedule the increases 15 months in advance, Smith said. The proposal to increase tuition annually is being studied by the Regents. "Student body presidents have always favored the larger four-year jump in tuition," Smith said, but with today's smaller classes, prefer smaller increases annually." Adkins said that if the tuition were increased annually the increases would not be as large. "The students would be able to react to the increase," he said. The policy of the Regents has been to freeze tuition for four-year periods in an attempt to hold it steady for an individual's college years, said Adkins. "If in fact we're willing to buy into the ratio, then we have to be willing to accept tuition increases to maintain the 25 percent." Adkins said. BOOKS AND COMICS Reasonably priced hardback books, half-price paperbacks, and over 25,000 Comic books, Playboys, etc., etc. THE BOOKEND & MAX'S COMICS Quantrills Flea Market 811 New Hampshire Weekends Only 10-5 We also buy Books and Comics MUSICIANS SINGERS • SONGWRITERS • MUSIC IS A BUSINESS! LEARN THE SECRET OF SUCCESS! 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