Television public affairs program featuring reports and interviews.~Bill Boyd talks with Americans Dr. Morton H. Halperin, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Major General Norman J. Anderson, Dr. David Mozingo, Dr. Raphael Littauer of Cornell University, and Dr. Robert B. Hotz, editor-in-chief of "Aviation Week and Space Technology", who give their analysis of the military strategy of the American forces in the Vietnam war. They talk about: the objectives of North Vietnamese in their present campaign, the selection of terrains for warfare, the use of the ariforce and its effectiveness, the great motivation and determination of North Vietnamese as opposed to the lack of motivation of American soldiers to win this war, the experience of General Giap during the Indochinese war. Included shot of General Giap. They also talk about the concept of vietnamization as opposed to air warfare, the consideration of political constraint in regards to bombing North Vietnam, the ingenuity of North Vietnamese in hiding their oil storage from American bombers. Alternately, throughout this report, President Richard Nixon delivers a speech concerning the attempt of peace negotiations that have been proposed to North Vietnam, and he concludes saying that he would have no choice but to order a massive bombing on North Vietnam if there are no signs of deterioration of war.~A look on the labour disputes of public service in Canada, reported by Knowlton Nash. Sequence on the findngs of a nationwide public opinion poll regarding the question of who should have the right to strike. Then, Doug Collins talks with Mayor Walter Fitzgerald of Halifax, John Wilson, of the Halifax Local International Association of Firefighters, Robert Prittie, Mayor of Burnaby in British Columbia, Jack Phillips, National Representative of CUPE, Tony Peskett, president of the Employers Council of British Columbia; they all give their views concerning this matter. Sequence on the three Labour Federation of Quebec along with their leaders Louis Laberge, Marcel Pépin, and Yvon Charbonneau, marching to the Quebec City court house for a contemptive court hearing, after been accused of having defied court injunction ordering them to provide essential services in hospitals during the strikes; then, seeing that the court house was full of riot police waiting for them and the absence of the judge, they marched away. Also interviewed are Michel Bourbon, vice-president of the Montreal Central Council, CNTU, Louis Laberge, president of Quebec Federation of Labour, Jean-Paul L'Allier, Minister of Communications in Quebec, who among other things talk about the negotiations for essential services and refer to this battle as a social revolution. Then, some of the interviewees are asked to give their suggestions of a substitude for the right to strike. Among them, are Frances Bairstow, director of McGill Industrial Relations Centre and Byron Anthony, of Dalhousie Institute of Public Affairs.~From Ottawa, Clive Baxter gives his views on what can be expected of the new federal budget, to be presented by the Minister of Finance John Turner, the following night; and, according to Baxter's expectations, this budget should by playing a most important and decisive role in the come-back of a Trudeau government in the next election. <60mn>