in alata haar enamel ESO PRETEEN! ata li inhale nina amnail al al ble naa tileitiiteaiad ashen catia ei tianlian TO: All Temporary and Regular Faculty FROM: Marilyn Smith, Dean of Educational and Student Services RE: Article 10 - Working Conditions At a recent meeting of the Labour/Management Committee, the related subjects of work week and contact hours were discussed. The following clarification of working conditions (Article 10) was unanimously agreed EGS 1. The recognized standard work week for the professional is 35 hours 2. Within that work week, faculty may be expected to teach, interview students, prepare for class and mark assignments, attend discipline/ department/campus or college meetings, develop and revise eurriculun, and/or meet other associated professional duties. 3. The college has the right to expect faculty to carry out these duties within the context of the defined work week. There is no such condition as a “guaranteed day off" within the work week. NOTICE OF MOVE The Institutes of Environmental and International Studies and the Community Communications Centre have moved their location from Surrey Campus to: Langley New Campus, 5950 Glover Road, Langley, 530=7391. The mailing address remains unchanged: Douglas College, P.O. Box 2503, . New Westminster, B/ClJ°V3L 5B2. NEW FILMS!!! The following films are now available from Douglas College library. MARGARET LAWRENCE, FIRST LADY OF MANAWAKA 52 min. (1978) This film is about the author and her prose. It traces Mrs. Laurence's life from her birth place in Manitoba to her present life in Lakefield, Ontario. Her first books were written in and about Africa. She subsequent- ly startled Canadian literary circles with the publication of "The Stone Angel", the first Manawaka novel. "It was very much a sort of coming home mentally," she says. “An attempt to come to terms with what you are." Readings from her work are read by Canadian actress Jane Eastwood. EMIGRANTE ( a film about prejudice) 13 min. "My boys know only a few words of Chinese, like hello and good-bye. They've known English right from the beginning so it's strange they would be told to go back where they came from because like me they were born right here in Vancouver." "we're all of us immigrants or the descendants of immigrants or the descendants of the descendants of immigrants or the descendants of the descendants of the descendants of the descendants of immigrants."