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Page 3 - எரின்ன் பார்காம்ப் பீட்டர்சன் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

KU Endowment ended year with $137M that could plug KU budget holes But should it? | News, Sports, Jobs - Lawrence Journal-World: news, information, headlines and events in Lawrence, Kansas

KU Endowment s offices on West Campus in Lawrence are pictured April 16, 2021. In the fundraising world, there is nothing quite like a check without strings. Think of a check that doesn’t come with any instructions on a particular building it should construct, a specific academic field it should support, or even a desire to see more wins on the football field. It is simply a check to be used for whatever is needed or maybe simply wanted – at the moment. In the field of higher education, such checks are a lot like a free lunch much desired but seldom received. The latest numbers at KU Endowment drive home that point. In the fiscal year that ended in June, KU Endowment received $124.2 million in contributions and grants that contained some sort of donor restriction. The organization received $820,000 in contributions free of restrictions.

With $25 million addition, outlook for Kansas higher education budget looking less grim | News, Sports, Jobs - Lawrence Journal-World: news, information, headlines and events in Lawrence, Kansas

Kansas Statehouse in Topeka The Kansas Legislature has passed a budget that includes an additional $25 million for higher education, a “big sigh of relief,” according to one Kansas Board of Regents member. Matt Casey, director of government relations for the Regents, shared the “good news” in his legislative update during Wednesday’s Regents meeting. Gov. Laura Kelly’s proposed budget, which was published earlier this year, had included a $27 million cut to higher education. The budget approved by the Legislature includes an additional $24.9 million to higher education. The Legislature’s budget is not set, however. Kelly would need to sign it for it to become law.

Kansas on its way back to normal according to governor, as all people aged 16+ become eligible for COVID-19 vaccine

Kansans over the age of 16 are now eligible to get the Covid-19 vaccination as the state moved into Phase 5 Monday, becoming the eighth state that has opened eligibility to all people. However, appointments are still proving to be hard to find. Mary Stenger, a University of Kansas sophomore, said she has been looking for a vaccine in Douglas County and in her hometown of St. Charles, Mo., but has found no luck in weeks of searching. Stenger works in the university’s residence halls and said she has been qualified for vaccination since Phase 2.   “I saw some other people getting it and I knew that I was qualified for Phase 2 so I felt frustrated,” Stenger said. “I didn’t really know what to do.”

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