pape 14; January:5, 1977 '- North: Shere‘News* CEDA04 READING SKILLS _— Monday 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. starting Jan. 24 10 sessions Fee: $30 | Lynnmour Centre NC205 A course in the basic skills, techniques and interactions relating to efficient reading. Emphasis will be on comprehension as well as speed. The student will be expected to participate in class-centered activities class work to everyday reading requirements may be used as an assignment. This course if for people in business, the professions and for anyone seeking to significantly improve. their reading efficiency. instructor: Dennis Wright Students should expect to pay up to $5.00 for required texts. CEDAOG6 FASHION WORKSHOP FOR MEN & WOMEN Wednesday 7:60 to 10:00 o.m. starting Jan. 26 6 sessions Fee:-$20 Lynnmour Centre A215 Under the stimulating guidance of a fashion group leader, these» sessions will give both men and women the opportunity to discuss and sew their own wardrobes and accessories. Itndividual wardrobe analyses will be made and the classes will include basic sewing techniques (sewing machines available), alterations of ready-to-wear, and fitting problems in commercial patterns. Instructor: Trish Keating CED924 MERCHANDISING THE FASHION PACKAGE [SEMINARS] Tuesday 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. starting January 25 5 seminars Fee: $8/seminar; $25/series Lynnmour Centre A215 For the people in the fashion industry or in the general community, this series of seminars offered by faculty in the Retail Fashions Program is designed to provide up-to-date ideas and methods of merchandising in the Fashion industry. The seminars may be taken individually or as a package. The five seminars are as follows: Jan. 25: ; Merchandising; Feb. 1: Consumerism in Fashion; Feb. 8: Advertising and Promotion; Feb. 15: Display Techniques; eb. 22: New Data on Textiles. Instructors: Trish Keating, Peter Podolak, Mariiyn Taylor, and Eleanor Best | | | | CEDA12 HANDWRITING ANALYSIS Wednesday 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. starting Jan. 26 8 sessions Fee: $16 Lynnmour Centre NB108 Analysis of handwriting is an avenue to understanding oneself and other people better. The lecture method is based on the eight steps _ taught by the International Graphoanalysie Society (Chicago) which has been operating for over fifty years. Required text for course costs $8. Instructor: Helen Christie a Se CEDA13 MATHEMATICS RESOURCE CENTRE Thursday 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. starting Jan. 27 8 sessions Fee: $25 Lynnmour Centre NF108 [Math Lab] The Mathematics Department of Capilano College is offering this course to the North Shore community to fulfill a variety of needs in the area of mathematics. It will basically offer to students of all ages access to diagnostic materials designed to assess his/ her present mathematical abilities, and self-paced programs at primarily the high school level. Some participants may set successful completion of the provincial Math 12 equivalency test as a specific goal, while others | | may be interested in pursuing refresher programs to enable them to | perform their jobs more satisfactorily or to remain conversant with what their children are studying in school. There would be no- examinations or any other formal evaluation of the student’s progress, however, through self-testing a student should be able to measure his/her progress and readiness to continue to the next level. Instructors: Dr. Ted Bentley and Bill Goff CEDA14 LOCAL HISTORY: SOURCES AND RESOURCES A. Thursday March 10 4:30 to 10:00 p.m. B. Friday March 11 4:30 to 10:00 p.m. G. Saturday March 12 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Fee: $10/session; $25 séries Lynnmour Centre NF202 These three seminars will show you how to locate information concerning the history and development of the North Shore. They may be taken separately or as a series. The first session will concentrate on the North Shore and will include resource people from the North Vancouver Museum and Archives Committee. Friday's session will focus on information on Vancouver and Provincial sources. Representatives from the Provincial Archives will be present. Saturday will be spent visiting local and city resources, including the Indian Resource Centre at U.B.C. Coordinators: Pat Biggins and Caroline Price : in small groups to perform sim CEDA15 SEARCHING FOR YOUR FAMILY TREE . Saturday 9:30 to 4:30 p.m. March 5 . : Fee: $5 [includes instructional materials] _ 7 iyvnnmour Centre A110 [Learning Assistance Cenire} A one day seminar on theoretical and practical aspects of searching for — your ancestors, to be given by specialists from the B.C. Genealogical Society. Seminar will inciude a field trip to the Genealogical Branch Library in Burnaby which holds microfilm of records from all over the world. Coordinator: Pat Biggins | . ; CEDAI6 THE BUILDERS OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. starting Feb 1 . 5 sessions [no class Mar 12] Fee: $25. Lynnmour Centre NF202 _ The personalities who peopled the events in the history of B.C. must surely be amongst the most colourful in the settlement of North America. Let B.C.’s history come alive for you through narrative, class participation, films, slides and archival material. From the eariy days of Sir James Douglas, Bill Smith (Amor de Cosmos), Cariboo Cameron, Emily Carr, Percy Williams, Alan Young ana many others, to the personaiities and history makers of today with guest lecturers and firsthand accounts and reminiscences, this course will entertain and inform. . . , Instructor: Bill McPhee — aS CEDA17 LABOUR POLICY: IT’S SIGNIFICANCE FOR YOU! Tuesday 7:30 to 10:00 p.m. February 8 and 15 Fee: $15 Lynnmour Centre NC207 In the light of possible changes in the labour code, these two sessions will provide the opportunity to examine the implications of such issues as right to work, financial disclosure, supervised strike votes and their effects on unionized workers. Instructor: Sonja Sanguinetti CEDAO3 NUTRITION: FACT OR FANCY Thursday 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. starting Jan. 27 6 sessions Fee: $20 Capilano Community Services Centre This course will enable you to get maximum value for your food dollar by showing you how to identify the foods necessary for good health, and to prepare more varied and nutritious meals. It will be of particular interest to parents of young children, retired peopie, singles and will - cover such topics as: nutrition in our changing society, the need for vitamins in the diet; carbohydrates, fats, bulk and the role these and other factors may play in the health of our families; organic foods; food additives; fad diets; the need for protein and minerals; and a review of the changing needs of the different age groups. Separate the fact from the fancy by getting your nutrition information from a reliable source: i.e. a professional nutritionist and registered member of the Canadian Dietetic Association. Instructor: Margaret Rawsthorne CED404 . OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH FOR WORKERS Thursday 7:15 to 10:15 p.m. starting Jan. 27 5 sessions Fee: $15 | - B.C. Federation of Labour offices Very few public educational programs are available for workers which focus sharply on the actual day-to-day health hazards faced by workers in their jobs and those that do mainly concentrate on trauma, accident, and injury, rather than disease, ill-health and general well-being. ' These sessions will cover basic economic, social and legal issues, e.g. who are the responsible government bodies in B.C., how much ill-health is there because of work conditions in relation to noise, lighting, heat and cold, chemical contamination, dust contamination, -etc.? General sources, effects and controls will be studied and for each hazard discussion will attempt to focus upon the best self-defence _ tactics, particularly through the use of measuring devices. Wherever possible, actual instruction in the use of measuring devices will be included. Instructor: Craig Paterson | _CED405_~—-—s PRACTICAL CONSUMER CHEMISTRY Monday 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. starting Jan. 24 6 sessions Fee: $35 [includes $5 lab fee] Lynnmour Centre C-3 [Chemistry Lab] This course will help the local consumer to appreciate the chemical nature of materials used in everyday living, and will engender an awareness of both the dangers and benefits associated with | consumer’’ chemicals. Each session will involve a one-hour lecture | followed by a two-hour lab-cum-discussion period. Students will work ple experiments to demonstr effects of the chemicals. Topics will be drawn from the rollowing ist the language of chemistry; food additives; pollution; chemistry and advertising; cosmetics (what we do to our skin and hair!); medicine (pain-killers, antacids, drugs, etc.); chemistry and garden produce; manmade fibres (nylon, polystyrene, etc.): dye paints; chemistry of cleaning; ); dyes and dyeing (and vitamins, enzymes, etc. Instructors: Dr. Dale Read, Dr. Penny LeCouteur, Dr. Alan Gilchrist