._ ‘ - ” ‘ i3; » _ i ‘ s ' I, H THE. UPEF SUN,-1Thu‘rsnday, February 21,’ 1980, page 13 14L ’ I -, - : I t X, _ , H _ I - {5M .;.;....~;a:—-—- ‘ i L } ‘ . ' " - _ _ r ' . . i~s:L__J~ gal fig If“ 3i »‘) #:2m A Jm; -“ i “ " ‘ ~ ' ‘ éflfifiissfiiffi*%irW§ - ' . Eiagfi‘ " ~‘~‘;‘;4 .42, .;j ,.- 5;,7_Adrn,fiig_fl 5 “' in the Fall who have v ~Economics who at; study in any profeSSional graduated from a High Present is engagbd in» field’or céreer ralated to School in New Brunswick. 0? Who is Plannihg‘to youth serV1ce§’SUCh as, CANADIAN HOME ECONOMICS undertake graduate Study but EOF PestrlCted to, ASSOCIATION for a higher degree. phySical and health educ— ThlS assoc1ation offers “‘There are WW0 awards. atlon? pSyChologyi four particular awards: eaCh $33500'00rf0r a teachlng’ the mlnlStry* 4$2,000.00 scholarship‘ graduate in the field and SOClal;W°rk- to be awarded to a ‘ of Home Economics or DEADLINE MARCH 1,1??0 'graduate in_Home ‘ 7(preferably)in the field UNIVERSITY WOMEN S iEcoanics who is planningof Home Economics Education, CLQB OF SAENT JOHN. ’to undertake,or who at hOldeP Of a ProfeSSMmal Thls CIUb 1? Offegln%_ M .g.... _ , ,. present is engaged in, teaghing certificateaengaSEd :Osghgiigizlgtigenio ,w‘ ‘ fl' "- ’ raduate stud‘ ro ' in u 1 time graduate stu y . _ by th? Pendergast' a $0 an advanceg-geg:::?lngai the master's‘level- Who wtll be entgrlng Following are a few”" _$500.00 award will be DEADLINE MARCH 31,1980 her final_year in awards that should I ‘Presented to a graduate- TAYLOR STATTEN MEMORIAL Seetsmber 1980-TO be hold particular inter— .in Home Economiés who FELLOWSHIP eligible a student eSt tor Home Economic fis planning to undertake ThlS f8110WShipjiS valued must hay? graduated. students,graduate . graduate Study at $1500.00.AppLicants from a high school in students interested in in foods or foods _must be under the age of New BrunSWick Districts a‘career r§lated to proceeding to a higher 25 and graduates Of a t9 or 20°The SChOlarshl' YOUth seerces’and . «degree. ‘ “Canadian University.The ls awarded on the basis feméle StUdentS entering -$2,000.00 scholarship award has been established Of a §FUdent'S academic their final year afor a graduate in Home to assist post—baccalaureatestanding and need. DEADLINE MARCH 31 19 Em loyment and ' Emploiet . '* Immigration Canada Immigration Canada Recently a recruiter came to see me to ask' if a Interested Seniors should leave their names he could recruit at U.P.E.I. Ofcourse, employers _ at our office and interview dates can be are always more than welcome.\ When he told me his - arranged. company was that of Life Insurance sales, I began ‘ , . I _ to wonder what sort-of interest I might be able ‘0 A Resgme Session will be held on Tuesday. generate from seniors of all disciplines. "1 dis— \ Feb. 26th, at_2.oo pd“. . If interested, please cussed this with Explaining I wished I"could“" relate effiectively to students the sense of satis- ‘ faction most. Life Insurance representatives seem , P a to have. I suggested he might put something r——f———fi .. ouze’me deJ0n3-_ together and I woulduse this article to share it. = r ' I Well the very next afternoon here he was, with . . . article in “hand (now I see why his sales» have B LOW PtOfessor WI” deliver Lecture gone so well;). ‘So here it is .... ‘ n I leave your name at CEC(OC), Main Building. " V From Topics LOOKJ-ng For: The Futifre j-'_ b0 'f.t that. . m ' . Janet Debicka, Professor of Law at‘the University ,Some 3°?” proYlde lme.1a e ene l S _. ON of Manitoba, will deliver thesecond lecturein the are interesting, like prestige, salary, etco, _ 155515 , 1 _, _ _ , , , whereas other; offer long range benefits that are series Livmg the Reality. Women In Modern Socnety not always neye_catchingu.j One of these is Life ' | slatedfor Friday evening February 29. The topic v Insurance. Some of the initial reaction is ... 'Me? Selling Life_Insurance? -No way. I didn't Spend 3, h or 5 years at university to do that." It's a normal reaction because Life Insurance used to be sold door to dobr, part time and in small amounts by amateurs. g 4 But for several years now, more than 50%'of all people who enter'the field of Life Insurance have a university background. ‘They deal with ,taxation, estate planning, business arrangements, to name just a few, and if the agent cannot deal with these,~he/she will simply have to limit his/ her Objectives. . ' . , The business of Life Insurance is not an easy 30b from 9 to 5, but it compensates largely with Such benefits as: Flexibility (you work your own hours), Higher Than Average-Revenue (you are re- warded accOrding to your efforts), and Securit . no cut back here - you are your own Boss . And-Finally, it is a very good all around_ Practical business formation. In other words, a good step towards'many other careers. If you have not investigated Life Insurance as a career; take a few minutes to do so ... at least think about it. _ . ‘ President of the Canadian Labour Congress , 000000000 -m, ’ . fame“ ngmgxg‘xggasmaxxmixxxgtaxasmnutuxu LiktiJAJJJJAJJJ. . -. ..........-......”........ a... . .. .. . . . a . ... .3. . . ,. . . . ...... . .. .......... . v t of. her lecture is Women in Law Today, which will include discussion on marital property Acts and marriage contracts. A questionperiod and reception will follow, and'will provide an opportunity to meet the guest lecturer. Born in Northern England, Dr. ,Debicka studied Soiliet Law in Poland before coming to Canada in 1967. She has had a number of ’firsts’ to her credit: the first woman in Canada to be made a full law professor; first woman president of the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (1978-79); consultant for thejfirst all-women law firm in Manitoba; first woman'president of the Social Science Federation of Canada (1977-78), and all achieved by the age of 36. ' Chatelaine, January-1980 issue, declares that Dr. Debicka is one of the '25 women to watch' in an article entitled Women in the Eighties. The lecture, to begin at 8:00 pm. will be given in the Robertson Library Lecture Theatre. The series is co—sponsored by the Department of Extension and the Canadian Committee on Learning Opportunities for Women. The next speaker will be Shirley Carr, Executive Vice- #fl'OJJab-flmov—p