For the Party You Earned ... Party With Us. We’re the people who ‘help make the Tradewind rock...six nights a week. Ladies Night : - Guys wednesday Blast <4>7 welcome Wing Night to - 225.259 in prizes Free. ~ the Past is to be won Chicken Wings Night Prizes and Surprises we Monday | riday Thursday ‘ Hi waa Birthday Party. Rack Sate Night Top Forty Free Cake with parties of five or more 5 minute specials pop up throughout the night - every night Tne 3 Hour Happy Hour - 7to1pm Monday thru Thursday “Fill Shire Roots o eo \ j ae Come Party With Us! er Ae Bases 189 Kent St., Charlottetown 894-4291 Students Singing In The Rain Over C-33 OTTAWA (CUP) - Their faces were streaked with red, blue and green. They were hordes of scream- ing students. They were tooting blowhorns, kazoos and a bevvy of assorted noisemakers, but they weren’t at a football game. They were, in fact, on Parlia- ment Hill in Ottawa to protest Bill C-33 last Thursday. The noon-hour rally took place on the steps of a chilly, rain-soaked na- tional capitol before the Cana- dian Federation of Students’ lob- bying effort. Ink from ”Kill the Bill” and other anti-Tory placards had dribbled onto their bearer’s faces. In between speeches by stu- dent leaders from across Canada the students chanted ”Hey hey, ho ho education cutbacks have got to go,” and ” We want Brian,” as the rain poured down. Rally organizers didn’t get anything like the 2000 students from Carleton and the University of Ottawa they had planned, but at least 500 showed up. Bill C-33 will cut federal pay- ments to the provinces for health care and post-secondary educa- tion. The bill will reduce the growth rate for the payments to the under the Established Pro- grams Financing program (EPF), by one per cent per year. It would be in effect for 1990/91. Finance Michael Wilson told parliament in April that the reduced growth minister rate would cut $200 million in 1991 alone from the payment pro- gram, which will transfer $34 bil- lion to the provinces this year. Because the EPF represents 23 per cent of all federal spend- ing, Wilson argued, it had to be cut back as part of the conserva- tive deficit-cutting program. Canadian Federation of Stu- - dents (CFS) researcher Mike Old said C-33 will mean $900 mil- lion less in federal payments for post-secondary education be- tween 1991 and 1995. Ministry of finance officials say although federal spending will be reduced, it will not fall be- low the rate of inflation, and ex- tra payments to poorer provinces will continue. But C-33 is not the first cut-— back in federal transfer payments. In 1984, the liberal government limited growth in transfer pay- ments as part of it’s ‘6 and 5’ re- straint program. The Conservatives’ C-96, in- troduced in 1986, reduced the growth rate by two per cent. Old says between C-96 and C- 33, the total loss to post- sec- ondary education funding will be $6.8 billion by 1995. ”You have to wonder what the feds are doing when Mulroney makes these comments about how education and research are meant to be priorities, and then they turn around and announce these cutbacks,” Canadian Federation of Students chair Jane Arnold said. Chairperson Needed Are you looking for a fun, challenging, and educational oppor- tunity? Here is your chance to get invoived at UPEI. The Student Union needs volunteers for the following 199¢ positions: Winter Carnival Chairperson — in coordination with the VP Operations plan the 1990 Student Union Winter Carnival. Winter Carnival Assistant Chairperson — assist the Win- ter Carnival Chairperson. Frosh Week Chairperson — will become 4 raember of the UPEI Orientation Committee starting January 1990. —organize the Frosh Week Committee and call meetings during the summer. in coordination with the VP Operations and the Student Ser- vices Department, organize Frosh Week 1990 activities. To ful- fill these duties you must be in the Charlottetowr. area during the summer of 1990. Frosh Week Assistant Chairperson — to assist the Frosh Week Chairperson. ; To apply please fill out a Volunteer Bank file card and drop it off at the Student Union Office, or call Betty Johnston, Student Union Administrative Assistant, 566-0530. Thursday November ‘16 2298 se me i er ene