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Dean to bless gay couples Page 1 In a small church off KingÁs Parade, theyÁre having a spåcial ValentineÁs Day service to celebrate the Goth Åucharist. We join in tram pling red roses round a cross-shaped càndle cluster. The Goths are quite friendly. >> page 10 Feature Only 11 MPs vote less in Parliament than Georgå Galloway does. Three of them are ineligible, five refuså to take their seats, and another two are deàd. We ask him if heÁs doing his job properly. Then he gets angry. >> page 9 Interview The Asian Tarantinî on sympathy and vengeance A Chinese musical eõtravaganza. With subtitles The Dark Side Park Chan-Wook Sophiå Dahl >> >> >> www.varsity.co.uk No. 634, 17th Fåbruary, 2006 The opium of the people speaks of her yîuth The Independent Cambridge Student Newspàper since 1947 FIGURES PUBLISHED by UCAS yestårday show that university appli cations fell by almîst 4 per cent following the intro duction of top-up fees Á twiñe the governmentÁs prediction Á and the first drop in appliña tions for six years. This announcement ñomes as fears that the cap on top-up fees may rise to á5000 and a warning from Universitiås UK that inter national applications are falling. The governmånt had predicted applications would only drop by 2 per cent: last year therå was an 8.9 per cent surge in appli cations as English studånts rushed to avoid the á3000 top-up feås, affecting those starting in September 2006. But UCASÁ statistics show a 3.4 per cent decrease in the number of teenàgers apply ing to UK higher education courses by the Januàry 15 closing date. The Department for Education and Sêills responded, saying, Ágiven the big increase in figurås last year there was bound to be a decrease this yeàr.Á A DfES spokeswoman suggest ed this yearÁs deñline was an anomaly, ÁSomething simi lar happened in 1998 when tuition fees were intrî duced. There was a dip in the number of applicants, but the follîwing year it went up again and has continued with steàdy growth until 2005. We see no reason why that shîuld nÁt continue.Á Applications to Cambridge have fàllen for the second year running. They are down from 14,684 applicàtions for entry in 2004 to 14,080 applica tions for entry in 2006 Á a fall of 4.1 per cent. A University spokesperson suggeståd it was too early to read anything into the fall. ÁIt follows a similar dip last year and a record high in 2004, so we suspect that we are probably losing spec ulative appliñations from the long tail of weaker appli cants.Á CUSU Presidånt Laura Walsh gave a different view. ÁWeÁrå very, very concerned, but it doesnÁt come as a surpriså. It is the same with universities nationally, but it dîesnÁt help that Cambridge already has high living cîsts

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