IAPumpkin Pie No endorsement intended or implied. fBased an MSRP of JX 5-speed model. Freight, PDI, licenseAand taxes extra â€"â€"â€"* . .ww w............v. v, . , 1w 3. Cacciatore Salami ...... $1.49/1oo gr 1131 Notï¬nghilerate 0 825-2835 0 Open Sunchys 8-6 Gk?! Akbeyltalian Bakery NOW AVAILABLE HALLOWEE“ COOKIES r ‘ - WI Hmbno Cheese ......... $ 1 .29/ 100 gr Prosciutto Cotto ........... x "393/1009; , Reg. 3.99 gm, Reg..$2'.4o loomonperaxstomenacmesOctober31/93 Deli Spgcials 8 4:; Reo_.$2_40 Soft Kaisers 00 After this lengthy and conscientious process, the Halton Board of Education also accepted the name. h __ V- _' ..- uvv mwv uu-w wmwt 1)]‘7. ., raw *1 , Next, a pink flyer was sent home with students from all these schools asking par- ents to get involved in the naming process and specifying that’a meeting would take place on June 16th..At this meeting, several names were proposed and debated with one â€" Iroquois Ridge High School â€"coming out ahead. After this name .was endorsed by the residents association, it was further supported by 100 people attend- ing the Sept. 23rd commtmit'y meeting. - The ï¬rst step saw leay asking a class of White Oaks Secondary School OAC students to do a historical perspective of the-area and propose names. Then leay sought input ï¬om Grades 7, 8 and 9 students from schools that would eventually be sending their students to the new school, slated to open in September, 1994. Oakville trustee Linda Lane outlined the procedure to the Halton Board of Education recently. It involved input from the community through meetings arranged by the Iroquois Ridge Residents Association and Barry Finlay, the new school’s principal. Naming a new school may seem a simple matter but digging out a name for a new high school in nonheast‘Oakville took a little spade wOrk Community names new school The new northeast Oakville high school is going to be a “community†“White Oaks has something like 20 portables now,†says Barry Finlay, who will be the principal of the new high school. New River Oaks High School to spell relieffor White Oaks The opening of new $19 million Iroquois Ridge High School in September 1994 will spell welcome relief from the serious overcrowding at White Oaks Secondary School. By ANGELA BLACKBURN Oakville Beaver Suï¬ ' D0 Dealer may sell for less. Members of the community will be able to readily and easily use the school while classes are in progress without dis- turbing the leaming. That will be accom- plished through provision of a main con- course area providing access to offices, The design of the new high school, located on 13.5 acres of land on Glenashton Drive, will accommodated what Finlay calls a “strong service compo- school designed to meet an array of com- mtmity and educational needs, not just the needs of the students. Finlay explains, once those values are established, the community will decide how the new high school can best provide programs to achieve its goals, and break It’s no smalitask since itwill .addiess future needs that, in some cases, aren’t even known yet "Ihe next step is to identify what, as a community, we want to be exit outcomes, whai we want students to know, value and be able to 'do when they leave high school,†said Finlay. - v For further information, please call the park ofï¬cq at (905) 827-6911. Bronte Creek Provincial Park is located north of the Q.E.W. between Oakville and Burlington. Take exit 109 north onto Burloak Drive. Park hours are 8:00 am. to dusk. Entrance fee is $6.00 per vehi- cle and $3.00 for seniors or persons with disabilities. This committee has been meeting since Februaxy 1992 and has p'rovided advice, even down to the design of the school and how it might best meet needs - from everyone ’3 viewpoint Oneof his ï¬rst steps in that direction was to establish a committee representing the community, parents, the board, stu- dents, local business and industry, and oth- ers with a stake in the new high school. INVOLVE COMMUNITY . Finlay concedes education traditionally hasn’t involved the community. Respected for the direction he gave Oakville’s General Wolfe High School in his two years as principal there, he’s out to change the direction of traditional education. All participants will be awarded a “Master Carvers†certiï¬cate! Achildcareoentrewithitsownaccess drives'and drop-olfromes will be nearthe front of the building and have its own ' Carving will commence at 11:00 am. at the visitor centre and run throughout the day until 3:00 pm. Two hundred and fifty pumpkin vouchers will be available at the park gate, on a first come first serve basis starting at 10:30 am. Limit of one pumpkin per vehicle. A mice-story academio wirlg will be apart fromvthe bustle of the main front concourse as will a second-floor resource Acafetorium andtheatIearebodl near the school’s front 'door for easy use and the gymnasium in location in the interior of the building, leaving classrooms to the cmrior walls and natural lighting. special seruioes, co-op education, student council and a school stole. Bronte Creek Provincial Park, Sun., is holding its annual pumpkin carving extravaganza on Sunday, Oct. 24th. ONTARIO JUNIOR CITIZEN OF THE YEAR AWARDS CONTACT THIS COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER FOR DETAILS DEADLINE - OCTOBER 31, 1993 Pumpkin carving contest Sunday (See 'New school's . . . ' page 9)