MONDAY, JUNE 19, 2017 | VOLUME 134 ISSUE 03
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT VOICE SINCE 1904
CHANDLER BOESE @Chandler_Boese
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ext year’s tuition and fees have officially been set at one of the smallest increases in recent years. The Board of Regents voted Thursday to approve a 2.5 percent increase in standard tuition at the University’s Lawrence campus. The rate for the tuition compact, which allows firsttime freshmen to opt-in to a locked price for four years, will increase by 5.5 percent. These increases will put next year’s standard tuition at $4,908.75 per semester for in-state undergraduates and $12,792.75 for out-of-state undergraduates. Graduate students will pay either $4,858.20 or $11,365.20, depending on their residency. Incoming freshmen opting in to
Caitlynn Salazar/KANSAN Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little attends the Board of Regents meeting in April, hosted by Capitol Federal Hall at the University of Kansas. Before the official meeting, the Chancellor talked with the Chair of the Board Zoe Newton.
the tuition compact (which is estimated to be below 11 percent this year) will pay $5,531.25 or $17,689.46. The University’s proposal for standard tuition falls in line with the other increases proposed at the meeting. Wichita State also proposed a 2.5 percent increase and the other four universities proposed in-
creases between 2.6 and 2.9 percent. The University’s Medical Center was approved for higher increases, with all rates at the school increasing by 5 percent. Undergraduates at the Med Center will pay $5,031.45 per semester for in-state students or $13,105.05 for outof-state students. Graduate
students will pay $4,718.70 or $11,088.00, depending on residency. Students at the School of Medicine will pay $17,689.46 or $31,319.35. During their Wednesday meeting, some of the Regents said they were more comfortable with the Med Center’s raises because of the age of students who attend that campus. The Regents expressed some reluctance toward the general tuition increases during their Wednesday and Thursday meetings, many of them suggesting that they would have hoped for an increase closer to 1 or 2 percent this year, given the steady state funding the universities received this year. As a result of these conversations, Kansas State University did reduce their SEE TUITION PAGE 2
% increased
Small tuition increase approved for next year tuition per semester
In-state undergrad.* $4,789.50
2.5%
$4,908.75
Out-of-state undergrad.*
$12,480.75
2.5%
$12,792.75
In-state grad.
$4,740.00
2.5%
$4,858.20
Out-of-state grad.
$11,088.00
2.5%
$11,365.20
2016-17
tuition per semester
2017-18
Lawrence Campus
Medical Center In-state undergrad.
$4,791.94
5%
$5,031.45
Out-of-state undergrad.
$12,481.09
5%
$13,105.05
In-state grad.
$4,718.70
5%
$4,954.68
Out-of-state grad.
$11,088.00
5%
$11,642.40
In-state medical students
$17,689.46
5%
$18,573.93
Out-of-state medical students
$31,319.35
5%
$32,885.32
Medical Students
Information via the Kansas Board of Regents * first-time freshmen can opt-in to compact tuition rate instead
Orientation preparing freshmen for campus carry DARBY VANHOUTAN @darbyvanhoutan
Editor’s Note: This story is the second in a series of stories looking at upcoming implementation of concealed carry. On Tuesday, the first day
of orientation, incoming students and their families filled the Kansas Union. One of the first things on their itineraries? A new safety panel for parents and guests. According to Katie Treadwell, associate director for orientation in the Office of First Year Experience, one of
the largest topics discussed by this panel and one of the largest questions on the minds of these parents and guests is concealed carry. “KU Public Safety Office (KUPSO) will introduce all of the resources they use on campus to keep us safe and introduce the concept of con-
cealed carry,” Treadwell said. Of course, she added, the panel also includes the representatives from the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Center who will speak on issues regarding sexual assault and consent, as well as Student Affairs who will discuss campus safety as a
whole. With the exemption that kept weapons off public Universities set to expire on July 1, the issue of concealed carry is one that is undoubtedly weighing on students’ and parents’ minds. Over the past few years, administrators and groups
like those presenting on the panel have gathered, from things like from town halls and orientations, student questions regarding the 2013 state law, which allows individuals over the age of 21 to carry a concealed weapon in SEE GUNS PAGE 2