THE UNCERTAIN FUTURE OF THE LOWER FRASER What comes to your mind when you think of the Lower Fraser? Muddy water? Second largest salmon run in the world? Sewers discharging domestic and industrial wastes of Greater Vancouver? Port for world-wide trade? Floods? Major resting place for birds on the Pacific Flyway? Explorers and developers route to the interior? Sink for pollutants washed from the air and land by prodigious rains? Jobs in the fish and forest products industries? Probably many of these characteristics come to mind, and at the same time, a question - Are we polluting this river so badly that our health, the ecosystem and livelihoods dependent on the Fraser are threatened? The Westwater Research Centre at The University of British Columbia is now completing a three year study of this question and will report its findings in a series ot seven illustrated lectures beginning January 8. They will be held in the Auditorium of the H.R. MacMillan Planetarium and are open to the public with no charge for admission. The lectures will begin at 8:00 p.m. and will be followed by an opportunity for questions and discussion with Westwater staff. January 8 Control of Pollution in the Lower February 26 Biology of the Lower Fraser and Fraser: The Problem in Perspective. Ecologic Effects of Pollution. Tom Irving Fox, Director, Westwater Northcote, Professor (Aquatic Biology) Research Centre. Faculty of Forestry, Institute of Animal Resource Ecology and Westwater Research Centre. January 15 The Administration of Pollution Control Activities: How Decisions are Made. Mark Sproule-Jones, Associate March 11 Technologies for Controlling Pollution Professor Political Science, University of the Lower Fraser and of Victoria. Ken Peterson, Research Implementation Policies. Anthony Associate, Westwater Research Centre. Dorcey, Assistant Director, Westwater Research Centre. January 29 The Quality of Water in the Lower Fraser and Sources of Pollution. Ken March 25 Strengthening Water Quality Hall, Assistant Director, Westwater Management in the Lower Fraser: Research Centre and Assistant Research, Policies, and Administration. Professor of Civil Engineering, U.B.C. Panel: Irving Fox, Chairman, Anthony Dorcey, Ken Hall, Ken Peterson, Mark Sproule-Jones and John Wiens. February 12. The Quality of Water in Tributaries of ... the Lower Fraser and Sources of Pollution. Ken Hall and John Wiens, Assistant Professor of Soil-Science and Westwater Research Centre, U.B.C. Further information can be obtained from the Westwater Research Centre, telephone in Vancouver, 228-4956.