THE LOVE CHILDREN OF ARTS AND SCIEN CES, PAGES 10 & 11
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Verniers talk troubled îconomy in Montreal
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V olum e 28 Issue 8 • O cto ber 2 1 ,2 0 0 8
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Provincial and territorial prem iers m et for Founcil of the Federation m ee ting in d o w n vn M ontreal yesterday to discuss possible ponses to the current eco nom ic crisis.
The Council, formed in 2003 to give preers a federal voice, called the meeting last iek after Prime Minister Stephen Harper's nservatives formed another minority govîment in Ottawa. Though invited to the îeting. Harper did not attend. The premiers arrived at 1000 Place Jeanul-Riopelle at 9 a.m. They briefly fielded lestions from journalists before heading to e 14th floor. M anitoba Premier G a ry D oer said the goal th e m eeting was to reassure the public w hile m ly addressing th e issues. "You've g o t to m ake sure yo u do n 't suircoat what's g o in g on, but at the same tim e •u're no t too fearful and u n d e rm in e confi;nce. So that's the kind of right balance we're /ing to have," D oe r said. T h e prem iers em e rge d from the closed eeting for a press conference at 3 p m ., hich had been delayed to avoid overlapping ith Liberal leader Stéphane Dion's afternoon ieech. O ntario Premier Dalton M cG uinty, ?w Brunswick Premier Shaw n G raham , and ava Scotia Premier R odney M a cD onald left ;fore the press conference because of prior
com m itm ents. Q u e b e c Premier and C ouncil of the Fed eration Chair Jean Charest em phasized that Canada was in a m u ch better position than m ost other nations. "Th e situation in Canada is different from the United States and Europe in a great part, we're an exception to the rule. O u r banks are better capitalized, ou r institutions are better financed, and in that respect we're in better shape, but have a very o p e n e co n o m y and we're obviou sly affected," Charest said. T h e prem iers agreed on seven future di rectives designed to address th e econom ic slo w dow n at th e m eeting: pursuing a "pru d en t and responsible approach" tow ards fi nancial m a n ag em ent, increasing fu n d in g for infrastructure and innovation, reaffirm ing their c o m m itm e n t to achieving full labour m obility, elim inating provincial trade barriers, o p e n in g n e w markets to trade, preparing for a First M in isters' conference, and endorsing the Bank of Canada's interven tion in m arket liquidity. Charest em phasized th e im po rtance of extensive preparation for the proposed First Ministers' conference, in w h ich premiers m eet w ith the prim e minister. "W e believe that if [a conference] is g o in g to be productive, it m ust be very carefully pre pared,"Charest said. "This isn't just a m eeting to
See CHAREST on page 3
Players' Theatre opens their season with a tale best described as m e e ts - O k la h o m a - m e e ts - H a r r y P o tt e r . See review on page 15 .
R o m e o a n d Ju lie t-
;SMU Council votes down failed GA motions
It u d e n t le g is la t o r s d e b a t e m e rit o f e x e c u t iv e 's p r o p o s a l 1T-1h e
J am es G
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The Students' Society Legislative Council voted against ifying six General Assembly motions as interim SSMU policy last Thursday's meeting. The council motion, which was moved by SSMU President y Turner and seconded by Vice-President External Devin Faro, would have seen the six motions approved at both the itober 7 GA and in the ensuing online ratification vote adited as policy until the next GA.
• u r ln n t û H ac C C M I I six m otions could not be directly 5ado pted as SSM U
policy because the fall G A failed to m eet SSMU's n e w qualified q u o ru m requirem ents, sending th e m to an online ratification vote. Qualified q u o ru m at GAs is tw o per cent of the student body, currently 3 9 7 people. Approxim ately eigh t per cent of the undergradu ate student b o d y voted online, however, fall ing far short of the required 15 per cent. T h e council m otion, w h ich was discussed a m o n g the SSM U executive before being proposed, called for the m o tions, if ado pted as interim policy, to be voted on at th e next
f^A n H çscrapped r r a n n p r l aas s policy if not passed. G A, aand
Tu rn e r defended the im petus beh ind the m otion, argu ing that it was m eant to both dem onstrate respect for student consultation, and satisfy SSMU's constitutional requirem ents. "Th e constitution was com ple tely respected in this; all that the constitution specifies is that if these m otions d o not m eet q u o ru m th e y have to g o back to the G A , and it w as ex plicitly stated in th e m otion that th e y w ere g o in g to g o back
See QUESTIONS on page 2
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