i i; 9 .Gfimdidxea. . . . Page 18 The Guardian Thun, July 10, 1958 Plan Six Weeks Peering By GERALD FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (OP) —— Profes- sionals in varied fields will trek up Mount Royal to the University of Montreal this summer to peer for six weeks through a window in the Iron Curtain. About 100 are expected to en- roll in ‘a summer session in So- vietology — the study of Russian life - opening July. 2. Officially termed “Slavisti-cs and East Eu- ropean studies," the courses are sponsored by the university’s de- partment of Slavic studies. Students learn how com- munism was built on toundations ‘ laid by Peter the Great, and how the Germans spirited Lenin into Russia during the First World War to lead the 1917 Revolution. Beginners will sputter their first mouthfuls of Russian. Vet-, erans at the tongue will be able to keep abreast of current Rus- sian thinking from, among other data, copies of the newapanpers -Pray>da. and Izyestia flown “in from Moscow within two days of publication. The aim of the session is to provide a view. distorted as little as possible by ropaganda, of Russians and t '1' way of life against the backdrop of their his- ' tory, traditions, literature, econ- omics and philosophic concepts. VARIOUS APPLICATIONS , Yugoslav-(born Prof. Velj‘lno La- ‘ lich, dealing with registration for the summer courses, said appli- j cations came from a nurse, 1m engineers, a musician, several radio station employees, an army 1 atticer, a military attache, a ‘ physics professor, a teacher, an ‘ economist tor a brewery, a doc- tor, a Hungarian - born account- ant and two press correspond- ‘ ants. He declined to disclosc‘their names. They will be served up choices among linguistic laboratories in : Russian, P o l i s h, Hungarian, I, Senbo - Croatian and Ukrainian; courses in elementary, intermed— iate and'tadva-nced Russian and Russian translation, a critique of Marxism and Leninism, home and fioreign policy of the U.S.S.R, history of the Slavic and East European countries, and semin- ars on literature and the history, geopolitics and economics of Sla- vic countries. _ _ Professors connt on recruiting Through Curtain Window awakened at the summer session for regular day or night courses during the year. » Professors recall that one can- didate for his PhD. degree last year faced a battery of five ex- aminers, each of whom ques- tioned him on his qualifications in a different language. He passed the test, received his doctorate, and was snapped up by the external affairs depart- students whose in t e res t is { ment. Nova Scotia Fishermen See Shares ’lnvaded’ From N. B._ DDGBY, NJS. (CPL—Fisherman from working within 2,000 feet of Ham“ Orwell dipped 100,000 a weir. But the weir fishermen pounds of herring from his Bay of Fundy weir oft nearby Sandy Cove a week ago. ' By last Wednesday his catch had dropped to 9,000 pounds of mackerel and herring. Since then he hasn’t gotten a fish. Growell and others along the Fundy coast of Nova Scotia say their fishing grounds have been “invaded” by fishermen from New Brunswick who use huge seine nets to reap thefiish which rightftu should be in Nova Sco- tian weirs. The weir fishermen say they will send a delegation to Ottawa to protest the encroachment. Crowell says if the seining is not stopped he will have to abandon his operations. A weir costs between $3,500 and $5,009 It consists of poles driven into the sea bottom and covered with netting to form a “non ." As the tide recedes herring are funnelled into .the “non ” by an underwater fence and mapped. ’ ‘ SEINE LIMITATION Seine fishermen, who operate with large nets cast from their boats, ere 'porhibited by law; say‘they have observed seiners at night working inside the limit. Five seine boats spotted by fishermen here are believed to be from the Grand Manon area of southern New Brunswick. They sell their catch to plants in New Brunswick and Maine, the Nova Scotia fishermen sa-y. Weir fishermen claim the sein- ens spoil fishing by breaking up the schools of herring and stir- ring up mud tram the bottom . which keeps the fish from return- ing. They also complain com- petition firom the seiner: has caused a drop in the market price oi herring. 'llhey say they have to sell their catches for fer- tilizer at four-tenths of a cent a pound rather than the one and one-half to two cents paid by pro- Fire - Auto - Marine G. G. K. 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