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University creates the club with no peer
Source.
Harriet Alexander Higher Education Reporter
June 8, 2007
THE pub with no beer has met its tragicomedic match: the student union with one student.
The organisation set up by Macquarie University to replace those liquidated in the wake of scandals surrounding the former undergraduate president will only have one student on its board.
And he has been appointed by the university, rather than elected by his peers.
The university circulated an email this week outlining the shape of U@MQ, which has already started operating in place of the sports association, student representative council and union to provide catering, clubs, sport and shops on campus.
The psychology student Nicholas Mueller, who will replace the controversial Victor Ma as the student representative on Macquarie's governing body, was announced as the sole student representative on U@MQ.
Mr Ma was sacked as president of the union, and resigned from the university and student councils after an investigation by the university and police into the financial management of the bodies he controlled, and the transfer of more than $200,000 from their accounts.
The university will next year hold elections for a student representative to sit on its governing body, and whoever wins this place will also be appointed to the U@MQ board.
The National Union of Students believes Macquarie is now one of just three universities without an elected body to represent students on campus.
Tim Quadrio, the student representative to the university's law department, said any student who was appointed would be compromised by owing their position to the university.
"Someone who wants to protect that position will possibly not speak out as strongly as one who has a mandate from the students," Mr Quadrio said.
"We're happy to see the end of Victor Ma and his cronies, but to have thrown out the baby with the bathwater seems a bit sad."
Richard Kerr, the project manager of U@MQ, said students would continue to have input by sitting on various committees and through an employment program. "What we're looking at is broadening this definition of student representation, broadening it to general student engagement," Mr Kerr said.
Mr Mueller said he and other students hoped to revive the concept of an elected student body but it was too early to say how this would be done.
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The bit about Nick being appointed by the uni seems like a bit of a half-truth...
Source.
Harriet Alexander Higher Education Reporter
June 8, 2007
THE pub with no beer has met its tragicomedic match: the student union with one student.
The organisation set up by Macquarie University to replace those liquidated in the wake of scandals surrounding the former undergraduate president will only have one student on its board.
And he has been appointed by the university, rather than elected by his peers.
The university circulated an email this week outlining the shape of U@MQ, which has already started operating in place of the sports association, student representative council and union to provide catering, clubs, sport and shops on campus.
The psychology student Nicholas Mueller, who will replace the controversial Victor Ma as the student representative on Macquarie's governing body, was announced as the sole student representative on U@MQ.
Mr Ma was sacked as president of the union, and resigned from the university and student councils after an investigation by the university and police into the financial management of the bodies he controlled, and the transfer of more than $200,000 from their accounts.
The university will next year hold elections for a student representative to sit on its governing body, and whoever wins this place will also be appointed to the U@MQ board.
The National Union of Students believes Macquarie is now one of just three universities without an elected body to represent students on campus.
Tim Quadrio, the student representative to the university's law department, said any student who was appointed would be compromised by owing their position to the university.
"Someone who wants to protect that position will possibly not speak out as strongly as one who has a mandate from the students," Mr Quadrio said.
"We're happy to see the end of Victor Ma and his cronies, but to have thrown out the baby with the bathwater seems a bit sad."
Richard Kerr, the project manager of U@MQ, said students would continue to have input by sitting on various committees and through an employment program. "What we're looking at is broadening this definition of student representation, broadening it to general student engagement," Mr Kerr said.
Mr Mueller said he and other students hoped to revive the concept of an elected student body but it was too early to say how this would be done.
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The bit about Nick being appointed by the uni seems like a bit of a half-truth...