wantlen College named by Dan Hilborn Kwantlen College was the name announced last Thurs- day as the name chosen for the college to serve the south side of the Fraser River after the college split next fall. by Tom Douglas College student society passed the final fall budget at Monday's multi campus council meeting. Most of the council debate was surrounded on the Mamount allocated to activities @es500) $300. of which is being spent on pool and raquetball facilities for stu- dents. Bill Carvell argued that the remaining $200 left over was ‘insufficient’ for dances and pub nights. He asked council that if Surrey’s pub night on Friday ‘‘goes tits up’’ would mean that ‘‘we can’t have any more pubs or dances?”’ “If this is the case, that’s stupid,’’ he said. Kevin Hallgate, student society president, then said that the profit made on New Westminster's pub night, -($675) the expected additional student fees, as well as money taken in from dances, would go in to the activities fund ‘Remember that council is voting on the budget as it is being presented. There will be enough additional funds for activities,’’ he said. The budget was drawn up on the projected amount of 5,000 which is the least then The name, which was taken from an Indian tribe that lived in the college region, was submitted by Stan McKinnon, Surrey Leader news editor, as one of two hundred names en- tered in a name-the-college Final studen Schoenewolf amount of money expected from student activity fees. Hallgate says the amount will be slightly greater than the projected $35,000, “It won't be much more, but it will be more. Any addi- tional funds can be amended at further meetings,’’ he said. The $3300 spent on swim- ming and raquetball enables students to use their student | cards for admission to the Canada Games Pool, and the Surrey, Richmond and Co- quitlam pools, beginning Oct. 1 Student society will subsi- dize 70 cents per students to use the raquetball facilities Richmond Super Court, Other budget allocations include: e $8,700 for the Other Publications Society e $6,000 for office ad- ministration e $3,000 for office ex- penses e $2,500 for campus coun- | cil grants e $2,500 for clubs and associations. Ron Bernstad, DCSS trea- surer, will be presenting on the request of council a mE ENY update of the bud- get Pinion publishes Pat Burdett The Douglas Pinion, the other newspaper on the col- lege will publish its first edition on Monday, Septem- ber 29. The Pinion, which will be published three times this semester is put out by the college’s journalsim depart- ment as part of the lab course COM 265. This year the paper will be edited by David King with assistance from news editor Jeff Beamish. Eight other students make up the report- ing statt and instructor Char- lie Giordano will oversee the paper. The paper will concentrate on feature type material due to the reletively long periods between issues, but it will contain some hard news. Generally it will follow much the same format as it did in the Spring semester. This semester, the Pinion will be without newswriter Russell Akins and popular columnist Omar Fortune (Mike Vance). contest. Groundwork that has to be finished before the split is being handled by a steering committee headed by G. Fisher. Campus libraries have al- ready encountered problems because of the split. The New Westminster librarian has asked for a grant of 20,000 books to compensate for the loss of over 50,000 volumes to the new college. The split is being manag- ed with few problems so far and most administrators feel that it is a move that will benifit the quality of educa- tion at the colleges. ‘‘With the proliferation of campuses the college is so large that we (the college) will be more effective after the split,’’ said Stuart Graham of the college bo- ard. Bill Day, winner of the infamous red brick, grins smugly, Committee seeks questions by Pat Burdett tion; he must administer the that the student view may The committee that will be policies set by the college be well represented in the hiring the presidents for Douglas and Kwantlen Col- leges is giving students a chance to suggest questions to be asked in the interviews, Any suggestions should be given to the student society by Friday afternoon so they can relay them to the hiring committee, When asked if they had any ideas for questions, the stu- dents would generally reply with something like, ‘‘The college president, who is he? Does he have anything to do with us?’’ The College president, whose duties are currently being performed by Reg Prid- ham, must supervise the hierarchy of the administra- board; and he is responsible to the board for what is happening in the college. In short, he is a_ very influencial person in the col- lege, The questions that students did suggest were concerned} with how liberal the applicant was to current moral questions Such as marijuana and pre- marital sex. Another question, about tenure for teachers, seeks to determine how defensive the applicant would be of his teachers, even if they were bad. All students are strongly urged to submit any ques- tions they think relevant so interviews.