Television public affairs program with hosts Kay Sigurjonsson and Peter Desbarats presenting a report on the leak of the Herb Gray Report, a leak on the cabinet document which outlined the government's plan to implement its main recommendation which was to set up an agency that would screen foreign money. Larry Zolf talks with John Walker, Nick Hills and George Brimmel, all of Southam News Services. Peter Desbarats continues reporting on all the government leaks of the past that have ruined political careers and even governments. Sequence on film clip of John Diefenbaker when he won the elections with a majority, and the leak on the LeDain report on drugs during Trudeau's leadership.~Kay Sigurjonsson raises the question "Can the organizations such as the Secretary of State and the department of Indian Affairs, representing Indians, do an honest job if they are dependent on government financial support?" Following this, Peter Desbarats interviews Harold Cardinal, author of "The Unjust Society" and president of the Indian Association in Alberta, regarding his charges against the federal government. After their last protest activity, supporting a strike by Indian children and parents against the government policy of financing school facilities for Indians in non-Indian communities, and subsequently occupying the Indian Affairs' office in St-Paul and Edmonton, the association decides to refuse any further program or financial support from the government. In the interview, Cardinal describes the situation and presents government documents in which many of the Cabinet's decisions and plans are revealed concerning the cultural program of the Indians and the Indian Association of Alberta that verify the reasons for the Association to refuse help from the government and to stop any further operations.~Michael Maltby reports on an agreement between New Brunswick and the federal government for rural economic development of the North East of New Brunswick. Maltby interviews several people regarding the existing problems regarding the two cultural communities, the Anglo-Saxon and the Acadians, poverty and non-educated citizens who cannot find employment and employment cannot be created for them, the centralization of schools, the injustice to the local fishermen, job training, the failure to create jobs for them, and many other problems. Interviewed are: Euclide Chiasson, of the School Board Trustee; Dr. Alexandre Savoie, of the C.I.C. Administration for N.E. Bathurst Office; Claude Boucher, of the Adult Education, New Brunswick Board of Education; Marcelle Mersereau, case worker for the C.I.C.; Yvon Morault, of the N.B. Public Servant; Martin Légère, of the N.B. Industrial Board; Mathilde Blanchard, secretary of the Fishworkers' Union; and Léo Paulin, fishermen in Caraquet. Shots of public signs with slogans "French Power" painted over them.~Don McNeil reports on the incident of Machias Island, an island that both the United States and Canada claim as their own. McNeil continues explaining that the confusion is due to the surveyors who were drunk and seasick when came the time to lay out the boundary lines. Recently, the Canadian fisheries' patrol vessels ordered the American lobstermen out of the area. Interview with Ken Wood, U.S. lobsterman who was ordered out; he gives his views on the incident; also an interview with Jack Russell, lighthouse keeper on the island, a Canadian who thinks that the island belongs to the Unites States. <60mn>