Newspaper Page Text
I
The Red and Black • Friday, June 8. 1990 • 3
STUDENTS
From page 1
“Other countries around the
world have steeper penalties for
drugs and drunk-driving offenders.
They value education more be
cause they have been deprived,”
Davis said.
Michael Padilla, science depart
ment head in the College of Educa
tion, said the international test
scores represent differences in so
cieties.
“Japan has a homogeneous so
ciety; there are few minorities.
Ninety-five percent of the society is
middle-class,” he said.
Glynn said, “It is easier to edu
cate children when dealing with a
smaller population that is more
similar.”
Davis said the quality of tea
ching and teachers is an easy
target for blame.
“We have better teachers now on
the firing line,” he said. Teachers
have studied more and are the
“beneficiaries of what we have dis
covered about learning and tea
ching in the past two decades.
“It’s an educational enterprise.
We need to value teachers and edu
cation if we are going to be produc
tive citizens.”
American teaching aids and pro
grams have spread to other coun
tries.
“Japan is adapting our materials
better,” Padilla said.
Davis said, "Our children seem
to like school. The Taiwanese are
well-read in American education.
We teach problem-solving. They
teach factual information and
ideals. They want to learn how we
teach.”
Comparison of U.S. 13-year-olds
to those of other countries
□ MATH SCORES
□ SCIENCE SCORES
Britain
Ireland
□ 2HRS./HOMEWORK
□ SHRS./T.V. (per day)
(source: Education Testing Service andU.S. Department of Education/1988)
Davis O'Keeffe /The Red & Black
FOUNDATION
From page 1
The foundation budget was
amended accordingly.
Weatherford said he wasn’t sure
why contributions were down, but
added that the original budget’s
revenue is based on a what is
needed to meet the requested ex
penditures and not contribution
projections.
The fiscal 1991 foundation
budget is based on a projected
$1,220 million in unrestricted con
tributions and a total revenue pro
jection of $2,551 million.
The budget is divided into three
categories: Academic Support, Of
fice of Development and University
Relations Support and Administra
tive Services.
According to the fiscal 1991
budget, Academic Support will re
ceive $1,396 million, a 13 percent
increase from the fiscal 1990
amended budget; Development
and University Relations will re
ceive $781,273, the same as last
year; and Administrative Services
will receive $373,665, a 2 percent
increase.
Scholarships, Institutional Sup
port Funds and Vice Presidents’,
Deans’ and Directors’ Discretio
nary Funds make up the Academic
Support budget. Scholarships are
the largest portion of the founda
tion budget.
The $1,137 million scholarship
budget includes $231,000 for Foun
dation Fellows Scholarships; $31,-
000 for Graduate Fellowships;
$875,496 for Alumni Scholarships;
and an additional $319,836 ob
tained from restricted scholarship
accounts to supplement the
Alumni Scholarship Program.
The $231,309 institutional sup
port budget stayed at fiscal 1990
levels. This portion of the budget
includes:
• $74,169 for the two separate
President’s Discretionary Funds.
• $58,710 for Foundation Fel
lows Program expenses.
• $20,000 for President Eme
ritus Henry King Stanford’s office
in Americus. President Emeritus is
an honorary title extended as a re
ward for service given to the Uni
versity.
• $17,000 for Key Faculty
Moving Expenses which is distrib
uted through the office of the vice
president for Academic Affairs.
• $16,000 for University Presi
dent Charles Knapp’s salary
supplement which must be ap
proved by the University System
Board of Regents.
• $16,000 for Admissions.
• $15,000 for Student Recruit
ment.
• $5,000 each for Search Com
mittees and the Lilly Fellows Pro
gram expenses.
• $2,930 for Meigs Teaching
Awards and General Faculty Im
provement.
• $1,500 for Honors Program ex
penses.
FUND
From page 1
work closely with alumni.
“A clear concern for us is the
number of givers,” Edes said. “I un
derstand that and the foundation
trustees understand that.”
Edes said he wants the Third
Century Capital Campaign to be a
catalyst for new alumni contribu
tions, and it will lead to sustained
annual contributions.
Sohn said the key to future suc
cess is alumni invplvement.
“If we could get everyone to join
and be active,” he said, “we would
be in wonderful shape.
“We’re never happy with the
numbers, we always want more,”
Sohn said. “But we are in a good
position for the future.”
Measles emergency might be declared over
If no new measles cases were re
ported by 12 a.m. this morning,
University Health Services offi
cials said Thursday, the measles
emergency at the University will
be declared over.
The University’s 44th case was
diagnosed Friday, May 25. Under
State Division of Public Health or
ders, anyone born on or after Jan.
1, 1957, who isn’t immune from
measles must remain off campus
until two weeks after the last case
has been diagnosed.
As of Thursday afternoon, no
new cases had been reported,
which means people excluded from
campus should be able to return to
campus. Health Services recom
mends that these people wait until
Monday to return for precau
tionary reasons.
Since today is the last day of
classes, many students will prob-
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As of Thursday
afternoon, no new
cases had been
reported, which means
people excluded from
campus should be able
to return to campus.
ably need to take grades of incom
plete, said Delmer Dunn, associate
vice president for Academic Af
fairs. These students will have
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three quarters to complete the
course requirements, he said.
If new cases are discovered after
today’s deadline, the University
will probably require summer
quarter students, faculty and staff
who aren’t already immune to re
ceive a vaccination, said University
Health Services Director Jac
quelyn Kinder.
Of the more than 22,000 stu
dents and employees in the target
age group, about 21,000 received
vaccinations and 1,000 provided
evidence of immunity to the virus.
As of Wednesday, 93 students
and three employees were still ex
cluded from campus for not com
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mandatory inoculation program.
More than 100 were excluded for
medical or religious reasons from
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Program expenses are costa as
sociated with running the pro
grams, including printing, utility,
administrative, travel and enter*
tainment expenses.
The discretionary budgets for
vice presidents range from $5,000
for tne vice president for Devel
opment and University Relations
to $2,000 for all the others except
the vice president for Academic Af
fairs which has a $3,000 discretio
nary budget.
Deans’ discretionary budgets
ranged from $500 to $800 with the
exception of the College of Arts and
Sciences which receives $1,000
from the foundation’s unrestricted
funds.
Dicretionary funds are given to
administrators to cover expenses
when state funds can’t be used,
such as entertainment expenses.
The Office of Development and
University Relations budget is di
vided between the Vice President’s
Office budget of $30,100, a 45 per
cent increase over fiscal 1990; the
Alumni Relations budget of $121,-
223, a 15 percent decrease; the De
velopment budget of $274,159, an
18 percent decrease; the Donor Re
search and Alumni Development
Services budget of $161,626, a 20
percent increase; the Donor Rela
tions budget of $15,300, down 25
percent; and the Public Informa
tion budget of $178,865, up 21 per
cent.
Weatherford said the total
$781,273 budget hasn’t increased
in three years.
However, Landrum said this
was possible largely because of an
administrative decision by Knapp
to support Development and Rela
tions salaries with state funds for
the University’s operating budget.
‘They were always state em
ployees," Landrum said, “but the
foundation was the source of their
budget."
The allocation shift was decision
by Knapp regarding the use of
state funds, Landrum said. Presi
dents and university administra
tors make the same kind cf
decisions about their budgets every
year.
The decision freed foundation
funds to be used where state funds
couldn’t, he said. Subsequently,
the foundation increased its sup
port to scholarships at the same
time.
The Administrative Services
portion of the foundation budget
includes the rent and expenses of
the foundation’s office in Atlanta
and the accounting and legal fees
involved in managing the founda
tion’s funds.
Harvey doing better
University junior Sarah
Harvey is now out of the inten
sive care unit of the Macon Med
ical Center, but faces a long road
to recovery, her father said
Wednesday.
Harvey, a recreation major
and Alpha Chi Omega sorority
member, was hospitalized fol
lowing an auto accident April 16.
in which Jan Hester, a senior ac
counting major and fellow so
rority member, died.
“She gets a little better day by
day,” Ralph Harvey of Americus,
Ga., said from a waiting room at
MMC. “She has her ups and
downs.”
Harvey said his daughter sus
tained head injuries and that she
may be placed in a rehabilitation
center for head-injury victims
once she is released from the hos
pital.
Sarah is now fully conscious
and is only able to move one of
her arms.
“She’s getting her little things
to work again; this is a long-term
deal," he said.
“She’s working very hard and
using all the wonderful prayers
and support everyone’s been
sending ner.”
Christy Taylor, a junior mar
keting major and fellow sorority
member, said, “People go down
there randomly to see her; every
thing keeps sounding better and
better."
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