c • I 1 " I" It' · 29(of the amendment) that state uId &tiD fjn·nce the �)fb( •• of DeCeIIIry COlts of IDd services the in 1978,- • aul Zim- mer, · attomcy general for education. 'What to know is t arc tbc DCCCSSary , . costs? I , "Did the tate require local I units to (run the programs) backthen?- i Fitzger ld contends th t :11 ed • itself . mandated .act, Zimmer said. The school's Ie d co 1, Dennis Pollard, of Clark, Hardy, Lewis, Pollard and P ':! la offices, said the question · not ODe necessary costa, b of percentages. Pollard · Sec- . tion 29 prohibita any cuta in . state funding to any locally provided servicea. :� sun IS bout the·fad ,. that FJUFrald' fundiag went down dramatically: said Pol­ lard. "Virtually every scbooI dis­ trict in the state would ba'le the e claim. -In fact, virtuaUy every ru Farra o ahn 1 firmative action guidelines aDd four other board members voted to ppoint GeorF Per MSU Jetic director, accused of contradicting MSU policy FibBt.akf,s a aipificut deere tate J'C\a as a percent. of the chool's expenditures. AI­ tboQlb FiDprald's bud&et in­ creased &0 $9.1 million in 1978-19 to $11.9 million in 1985- 86 the amount of state aid dropped &om Dear $1.3 million to S97,324 in the same ci&bt �a�� ----�--------��----�--+-----------�--�----�-------- 13perceDL The school's atate ai dropped in programs such bilingual education, whic &bowed aD 84 perceDt . and special education, which dec:reaaed by 19 percent. THE STATE'S FUNDING for general education programs, which was slightly more than $1 million in 1978-79, cut out completely in 1982- 83. Zimmer said the case is not a matter of tatistics because the problem is how Fitzgerald com­ p tes funds. -We don't agree with the • • e nts ant r tract lur Scott issued $5,000 to briD& ministei Farrabhn to MSU. The provost • ssm of oncy 10 that As ODe could reserve the MSU auditori for FarrabIm. T ee Dade tioned that a 51,000 moratioriu be placed 0 --,-&cD the pr