e Cadre + 27 October 1998 y JEREMY NELSON TINIPEG (CUP) -- Univer- ity of Manitoba students may soon be without their campus newspaper thanks to a contro- versial motion passed at the student union’s general meet- dent union to cut the $6-per- student levy the newspaper the Manitoban presently re- ceives to $4 per student for the 1999-2000 publishing year, and to $2 for all following years. Introduced last week by engineering students’ rep- resentative Chad Silverman, began by saying the Manitoban “sucks.” The general meeting is the only event where average students can make direct mo- tions, providing quorum of 200 National News i 7 threatened with shut down individuals is reached. “I voted in favour ofthe motion because | just wanted tocut,” said Silverman, adding that many engineers were also angry about the removal of a cartoon the paper used to run. The syndicated comic strip was pulled after students expressed concerns it was sexist. “I felt | was paying out too much to different student organizations that needed money.” Under the newspaper’ s budget forthe 1998-1999 pub- lishing year, $2 per student would not even cover the cost of printing the paper. The motion received lit- tle discussion. It is now before a student council committee before being sent for final ap- proval by the student union. However, the motion may be retroactively ruled out-of-or- der because it may have vio- lated student union by-laws. The regulations state motions must be posted well prior to meetings so students have an opportunity to express their “I voted in favour of the motion because | just wanted to cut” views before a vote. “We are talking to our lawyers to discover whether the motion was appropriate and a legal motion, and then they'll take it from there,” said Kelly Friesen, director of public rela- tions for the student union. The Manitoban will also one ee ee the student union and those University enrolment down: Statistics Canada By ANGELA PACIENZA TORONTO (CUP) -- The number of people choosing to attend university has once again decreased, recently re- leased government figures show. University enrolment across Canada declined by nine as cent in the past five years th some regions experienc- ng as much as a 44 per cent uction, the October 14 re- port from Statistics Canada indicates. _ The attributes the eee line toa 24 per cent -time students since the 19 -1993 academic year. Among mature part- time students, ages 25 to 44, enrolment declined 28 percent for men and 31 per cent for women. Some provinces saw more of a decline than others. Prince Edward Island, New- foundland and Manitoba all aa more than a 40 per cent decrease in part-time ner Tid bagel nconion oF increase 0 full-time students occurred in British Columbia where 16 per cent more students are attend- ing school, the annual report showed. Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Alberta and Saskatch- ewan also experienced sub- stantial increases. But student leaders sa ay the numbers only tell one si of the story. The head of one na- tional student lobby group says the report doesn’t acces hidden factors -- like high tui- — ne = ve ieebly evels -- ve probab contributed to the decline. “Enrolment figures should always be perceived with caution because "re not always clear,” said Eliza beth Carlyle, national cha woman of the Canadian Fed- eration of Students. Carlyle added the sta- Geticg Cree ees picture of trends in education in Canada. “The federal gov- emment has not commissioned adequate studies to track roa te wack post income aan of people at- a ut Fromowitz added those figures may be mislead- ing, since the university doesn’t count students in full-time fac- ulties who are taking a partial Oe calculati average calculation for a part-time student across Canada is three courses or less. However, Nicola Paterson, an analyst with the Center for Education Statis- tics, says there’s no standard definition of part-time and full- time studies. “That can have an im- pact on the figures,” she said. involved in the motion ifit is not ruled out-of-order, said the paper's editor Ed Janzen. He says the motion not only violates student union by- laws but also flies in the face ofa 1997 referendum in which 1,814 students voted in favour of both the $6 levy and givin the Manitoban full editorial financial autonomy. “I was struck by the disorganization and the con- tradictory nature of the [mo- tion] organizers’ complaints with the Manitoban,”said Tel (902)566-2345 Fax (902)566-2145 Keyin College Information Technology Computer Science Have you considered a carcer in the most rapidly advancing field in industry today? 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He added the $6 each student pays to finance the fm isn’t that expensive. “The six-dollar levy works out to 25 cents per student per issue, which is a very small amount, especially when you take into account that we are charged with the responsibility of covering events and issues at one of Canada’s largest uni- versities,” he said. “UMSU collects 30 times the amount students pay to the Manitoban,” he added. Intro to HTLM Intro to Graphic Design Intro to MS Word _Intro to MS Excel Windows °95 Intro to Internet Visual Basic Keyin college in Charlottetown is now starting enrollment for it's January programs. For further information, please contact: Keyin college member Charon oe re Charlotictown, PE