Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. University Says Spike In Foreign Applications May Be Due To Trump Policies

Darpan News Desk, 28 Apr, 2017 11:00 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Thompson Rivers University in B.C.'s Interior has been deluged in applications from international students for its summer session, and a spokeswoman for the institution credits the policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.
     
    Baihua Chadwick, vice-president of TRU World, the wing responsible for international students, says the  Kamloops-based institution has received 500 applications from India this year, five times the number submitted last year.
     
    Chadwick says the surge from India is just one example, and she believes changes in travel policies south of the border are responsible.
     
     
    Traditionally, American universities are the most popular choices for foreign students, but Chadwick says many students and their parents are telling her they no longer feel safe or comfortable with a U.S. destination.
     
    International students must obtain visas to study in Canada.
     
    Chadwick says those regulations could prevent as many as half of prospective students from attending classes in Kamloops this summer. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mathura: Two Women Wish To Live Together As Married Couple, Seek Police Help

    Mathura: Two Women Wish To Live Together As Married Couple, Seek Police Help
    Cops at Mathura’s Raya police station found themselves in a peculiar situation on Saturday when two women approached them seeking help to live together as a married couple.

    Mathura: Two Women Wish To Live Together As Married Couple, Seek Police Help

    B.C. To Raise Disability Assistance Rates By $50 Per Month As Of April

    B.C. To Raise Disability Assistance Rates By $50 Per Month As Of April
    The provincial government says it is investing $199 million over three years in order to raise the monthly payments.

    B.C. To Raise Disability Assistance Rates By $50 Per Month As Of April

    Cambridge, Ont. Councillor Mike Devine To Be Publicly Reprimanded For Calling Constituent 'Sexy Gram

    Cambridge, Ont. Councillor Mike Devine To Be Publicly Reprimanded For Calling Constituent 'Sexy Gram
    The mayor of Cambridge, Ont., will publicly reprimand a city councillor who admitted to making lewd comments to one of his constituents.

    Cambridge, Ont. Councillor Mike Devine To Be Publicly Reprimanded For Calling Constituent 'Sexy Gram

    B.C. Spends $150M To Plant Millions Of Trees, Create 3,000 Rural Jobs

    Premier Christy Clark says the funding will go to the Forest Enhancement Society of B.C. to advance environmental stewardship and focus on reforestation initiatives throughout the province.

    B.C. Spends $150M To Plant Millions Of Trees, Create 3,000 Rural Jobs

    B.C., Ottawa Sign Health Agreement Worth $1.4 Billion, $65 Million For Overdoses

    B.C., Ottawa Sign Health Agreement Worth $1.4 Billion, $65 Million For Overdoses
    Money from Ottawa to fight an ongoing overdose crisis helped sway British Columbia into signing a new 10-year, $1.4 billion health funding deal, says the province's health minister.

    B.C., Ottawa Sign Health Agreement Worth $1.4 Billion, $65 Million For Overdoses

    B.C. Transplant Specialist Says Drug Overdose Organ Donors On The Rise

    B.C. Transplant Specialist Says Drug Overdose Organ Donors On The Rise
    VANCOUVER — There has been a spike in the proportion of organs coming from donors who have died of drug overdoses in British Columbia, says a leading transplant specialists.

    B.C. Transplant Specialist Says Drug Overdose Organ Donors On The Rise