f 6 YOUR - COMMUNITY Racer WIN # Fras os Ma ieeRz tran 86-1337 48 pages ~ Toy - NEWS photo Teny Peters -VANCOUVER'SPCA worker Len Golder, also knowa sis Uncle Len; bottle id’ puppy: found Oct. 8 in a Burnaby garbage can. The pup was “passerby and.was brought.to the SPCA in hopes that a nursing mother ‘for the dog.’ When: North Vancouver SPCA officials decided no. cept the puppy, the little fellow was sent to the Delta SPCA where he A predicts it is.one. of the smaller breeds of dog. — uae ele SSRN Ts de 3, @ bottle fed. Although it is too early to identify the breed of puppy, Golder | EXOTIC TR YOU COULD be a lucky winner in the North Shore News’ Win Your Way Across the Pacific contest. Winners will have the choice of picking an exciting, adventure-filled trip to Hong Kong or New Zealand. Ail you have to do is fili out an entry form at one of the 142 businesses participating in the News contest. No purchases a necessary, Details in today’s paper on pages 36 and 37. 25¢ Bars Srenn Saree FACULTY AT Capilano College will take a strike vote Thursday in an attempt to convince college administration to accept a compromise proposal over the contentious issue of teacher work-load at the college. “The college is seeking to make permanent what we agreed to as a temporary measure,’’ Ed Lavalle said Tuesday. ‘'Work-load is not just the main issue here, it is the only issue."' The chief negotiator for the Capilano College Faculty Associa- tion (CCFA) said all other issues in negotiations with the college, in- cluding seniority and severance pay, have been resolved or were well on their way to being resolv. ed, In May 1985, the CCFA signed an interim agreement with the col- Jege’s board of directors that re- quired faculty to teach nine instead of eight sections annually. The increase, Lavalle said, worked out to about 12.5 per cent and required most faculty members to work 50-hour weeks. He said the faculty signed the agreement to help the college deal with another reduction of its operating budget. Since 1983, the college’s budget has been cut from $14.5 to $11.7 million. Under the restraint for- mula, the college must reduce its budget by 7.5 per cent, while maintaining productivity, over @ five-year period that began in 1983. Capilano College president Dr. Doug Jardine said she increase in teacher work-load was needed to allow the college :o retain its fevel of service with less money. That increase allowed the college to recoup $1 million. Reporter Jardine said a return to old work-load levels would mean that the college ‘‘would be $1 million short. And we can’t afford that. So we can't offer a reduction in work-load, but we don’t want to increase that work-load cither.”’ rie XN. CAPILANO Coliege president Dr. Douglas Jardine...return to old work-load levels means that the college “would be $1 million short." He said other community col- leges in the province, such as Malaspina, had moved to a 10- section teaching system. Sea Teachers