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Show to fill the term of J. M. Cornwell who was elected secretary and treasurer. President William B. Wallis gave his annual report, which shows the association in better shape than at any other time. Russell Innes' business office of-fice report shows the best year yet. The annual association banquet ban-quet was preceded by a cocktail party courtesy of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce. Featured during the banquet were, former Mayor Earl J. Glade, who gave the keynote speech, Gov. George D. Clyde, Dan Valentine, the Ambassador Quartet. Darrell Welling, Utah Motor Transport, presented the publishers' wives with imported purses. After a past presidents breakfast break-fast Sunday morning, John M. Stahle, Jr., conducted devotonial exercises which featured A. N. Rytting as the speaker. A sales film for the auto industry in-dustry prepared by WNR was shown, followed by a talk by Marion R. Krehbil on "What Is Your Newspaper Worth." After the concluding panel on "New Equipment Doesn't Really Cost, it Pays," moderated by Sam M. Taylor, the annual awards sponsored spon-sored by all the paper companies gave the outstanding publishers awards for the year's work on their papers. propriations in recent years were as follows: 1953, 42.2; 1954, 40.0; 1955, 39.1; 1956, 41.9; 1957, 35.7; 1958, 33.6. For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1958, student fees accounted for 16.8 per cent of the university's univer-sity's income; federal government, govern-ment, 0.6 per cent, and private sources, 11.3 per cent. As for expenditures in the past fiscal year, 45 per cent went for instruction; 27 per cent for organized or-ganized research; 9.5 per cent for administration; 9 per cent for operation and maintenance of the physical plant; 3.8 per cent for the Extension Division; 2.3 per cent for libraries, and the remainder for miscellaneous expenses. ex-penses. Or, breaking down the expenditures expen-ditures in a different way, 54 uper cent went for salaries; 26.6 per cent for supplies and expense; ex-pense; 11.5 per cent for assistance; assist-ance; 6.3 per cent for equipment and improvements; 1.6 per cent for travel. University Reports j Rising Costs Of '58 Education It cost more to educate each University of Utah student in the 1957-58 year than ever before, be-fore, according to the university's annual financial report released this week by L. D. Garrett, secretary sec-retary and controller. Whereas the cost of living, based on 1949-40 slightly more than doubled by the 1958 fiscal year, the cost of educating a U. of U. student increased nearly four times in the same period. Expenditure by the university per student in the fiscal year ended last June 30 was $794 (not including costs of capital additions, organized research the Extension Division or activities not clearly related to student education) . This compared with $669 in the fiscal year ended June 30, 1967; $725 in the previous pre-vious high year of 1955-56 and $208 in the 1939-40 fiscal year. The University of Utah received re-ceived $14,486,295 during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1958, and expenditures totaled auxiliary auxili-ary enterprises as bookstore, University Press and the Union Building. These auxiliary enterprises enter-prises spent $1,787,644. Although appropriations to the U. of U. by the state legislature have increased steadily over the years, actually the proportion that state appropriations occupy in the overall revenues of the university have declined since 1953. Of the $14.5 million total income in-come last year 27.12 er cent was from general fund appropriations, appropria-tions, 3.75 per cent from state anproriations for the College of Medicine and .12 of 1 per cent from appropriations for the State Geological and Mineralogi-cal Mineralogi-cal Survey. If income from auxiliary enterprises en-terprises is excluded (leaving a total income of approximately $12.5 million), appropriations accounted for 33.6 er cent of the university's income. Percentages of the University of Utah's income in-come which came from state ap- |