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Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 3 Apr 2014, p. 20

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•Th e IF P• H al to n H ill s • Th ur sd ay , A pr il 3, 2 01 4 20 $299$99 $1049Iron Futon FrameOnly Milan Bed Box Spring Available For All Models FREE CHOICE Choose one of: Delivery • No HST • Bed Frame • Pillows • Mattress Cover Double 289 Queen 309 King 429 HOURS:Mon -Wed 10am - 6pm • Thur - Fri 10am - 8pm • Saturday 9am - 6pm • Sunday 11am - 5pm MILTON 238Main Street East 905.878.4606 BRAMPTON 160Main Street South 905.453.9760 MATTRESS SALE Electric Bed TwinXL With any matching mattress set purchased. Single Mattress $199 RALLIS BURGER& GRILL Come See Why We're Voted #1 Breakfast Place 499 Bacon, Sausage or ham, 3 eggs, home fries & toast 649 Pancakes (and/or) French Toast, 3 eggs & home fries Serving All-Day Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK 8am-9pm 8-11AM Mon-Fri Specials 294 Queen St. Acton | 519-853-5775 www.rallisburger.com $500 OFF any order of $25or more before tax. ✃ Chong up to the challenge Michael Chong, Member of Parlia- ment for Wellington-Halton Hills, was on the hotseat last Friday as students from Halton Hills Christian School peppered him with questions on Canada's position on a number of is- sues regarding education at home and abroad. The 90-minute interactive "Report- Back Session" resulted from a letter sent to Chong by a group of Grade 8 students who participated in a mock United Nations symposium last year at HHCS in the international devel- opment course for the graduating students overseen by former UN staff member Wayne Gill, who volunteers to teach the program at the school. One student asked Chong about what Canada was doing to protect women and girls in Afghanistan who in the past had been banned from even appearing in common public areas. "We're putting pressure on Afghani- stan's president, Hamid Karzai, by withholding aid money if they don't preserve the rights of those people," Chong responded. "But ultimately, the Afghan people need to control and govern themselves in the long run." Chong was also queried on the state of education amongst aboriginals in Canada, 40 per cent of whom don't graduate from high school. In some cases, students must move hundreds of kilometers away from home in order to attend school almost year-round. The MP responded by pointing to the establishment of the Indian Resi- dential Schools Truth & Reconciliation Commission in October of last year to investigate human rights abuses on native reserves in this country. Chong acknowledged that the fed- eral government's track record with re- spect to providing education to aborig- inals in remote areas has been poor, given that schools usually fall under provincial jurisdiction. In response, more financial support has been forthcoming from the Cana- dian government and a better work- ing relationship has been forged with provinces in order to provide better education on reserves. A student at the microphone poses a question to Wellington-Halton Hills MP Michael Chong during the Report-Back Session last Friday at Halton Hills Christian School. The question-and-answer session was billed as the United Nations Simulation on Education. Pictured at right is Grade 8 HHCS student Jade Hoekstra. Photo by Eamonn Maher By EAMONN MAHER Staff Writer Local-area MP visits Halton Hills Christian School

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