l New building opens at Humber The new Phase 11 building at the Northern Campus of Humber College of Applied Arts and Technology (west of Highway 27, North of Rexdale Blvd.,) will be ofâ€" ficially opened by Education Minister, William Davis, on Tuesday evening, March 3 at 8:30 p.m. _ _ â€" THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 1970 The second in a planned series of campus buildings was completed at an estimated cost of $4.7 million and it represents the gradual expansion of Humber‘s Northern Campus into a permanent location for the entire staff and student body. Within the next decade, Humber expects to have total enrolment of 9,500 fullâ€"time students, with separate buildings for each of its teaching divisions. The 150,000 sq. ft. addition will house the college‘s Business and Applied and Liberal Arts Divisions. Approximately 2,000 day and 1,500 evening students will use the new facilites. According to the college architects, Allward & Gouinlock, the buildings presently agreed on at the Northern Campus, are organized in such a way that, depending on actual needs, future additions can be made in the most practical and economical fashion without Humber College students began making waves this week ... radio waves. The school‘s interâ€"campus station CHBR began broadâ€" casting on Monday, February 23. The station will be run by Journalism and Public Relations students, with most of the programming provided by them. But students from other courses will also take an active part, announcing and programâ€" ming in the five hours of saily broadcasting. The completed Phase 11 of the northern campus of Humber College stands clean and shining â€" ready for the opening next week. "We are working towards integrating the whole campus, however large it becomes," said planning specialist The station is linked to the North Campus in Rexdale, the South Campus on Lakeshore Blvd. West, and the Queensway Campus; broadcasting to more than 1,700 students over a cable link of 26 miles. Ray Harsant, student station manager, said that CHBR . will reflect the campus community. "The station‘s function will be to keep in tune to the pulse of the school and program accordingly. CHBR is not a plaything, but a meaningful probe in establishing an identity and feeding this sense of identity back into the campus,‘"‘ explained Mr. Harsant. CHBR will transmit a wide range of packaged music shows _ ranging _ from traditional Berlioz and Bach to the raw guttural blues of College begins broadcasting A covered concourse is complete with an inâ€" formation booth; special career counselling centre; main library; exhibit area; sidewalk cafe, and sweeping staircases leading to upâ€" stairs study areas. Phase 11 is a long, low modern structure of white stucco, glass and steel. Upper floors are crissâ€" crossed with exterior steel truss, which eliminates the need for indoor columns on the class room floors, to give complete freedom for use of the moveable steel wall partitions. A â€" career â€" counselling centre with special careers library will enable students to discover in detail what sach career involves before deciding on a specific area. Heavily peopled activities will be located at ground levels: the concourse, staff and student lounges; the 400 seat auditorium (which will serve as a lecture room, theatre or concert hall, according to demands); food service; locker rooms and washrooms; the college‘s creating disharmony in either the building complex or the total environment. Two upper floors will contain classrooms, seminar rooms and administrative offices. John Lee Hooker. "We will be giving pertinent backiground, insights and interviews to the discs we spin,"‘ Program Manager Sandy Bull said. With this eye to the future, the station‘s News Departâ€" ment is already linked closely to a television cable company. _ Journalism students are currently producing _ a weekly television news cast for Terracom Five in Clarkson. Student Radio© and Still in its infant stages, the station was built on a budget of approximately eight thousand dollars supplied by the administration, student union, and Applied and Liberal Arts Division. The radio booth contains a Sparta control with 22 outlets, two turntables and three stereo tapeâ€"machines. Equipment will be added as needed. "Hopefully, in Humber‘s third phase of construction, there will be two radio studios," said Supervisor of Journalism Programs Walt McDayter. One will be used for student training, while the other will be used for broadcasting to the three campusés. In phase four, the school will have a compreâ€" hensive production centre which _ could _ provide programming off campus. Television News Director Dan Mothersill sees news as being a vital part of programming. ‘"We do not merely want to report what has ahppened, we must convey what is happening." For CHBR oneâ€"third of the entire air time is devoted to news and public affairs. "The station won‘t become a mere ‘"juke box‘‘ for students playing cards in the cafeteria or sleeping betâ€" ween classes. CHBR should be earmarked as a source of information and _ conâ€" versation,‘"‘ added Mr. Mothersill. "CHBR has three basic aims,‘"‘ said Mr. McDayter. "It provides students with a training ground in radio announcing and writing. The station will act as a cohesive agent in Humber‘s multiâ€" campus system and hopeâ€" fully will encourage students from other courses to take active part in programâ€" ming." Philip Carter. "All buildings will be physically connected to give the college a sense of unity, just as Phase 11 is now linked to Phase 1." Humber College President Gordon Wragg said that the radio station will be a tremendous vehicle for keeping students informed. "Most problems that occur in the college are due to a lack of communfcations. With CHBR, the whole school Humber‘s president, Gordon Wragg, said that "through the coâ€"operation of literally thousands _ of citizens, the talented and imaginative contributions of governors, staff and faculty, and the interest and initiative of our students, we have overcome some initial growing pains and difâ€" ficulties occasioned by restricted quarters‘". computer center, and other areas where noise level is Mr. Wragg believes that Humber has succeeded in establishing itself as a recognized source of the new and creative type of postâ€" secondary education now available in Ontario. The aim of Humber, he points out, is to produce a "whole citizen‘‘, rather than a person who is merely trianed to fulfill a specific moneyâ€" earning role". Since its inception in September 1967, Humber College has increased its initial enrolment of 500 students and one location, to a presentâ€"day total of 1,600 day and 1,600 evening students (total at both the Northern ~and Southern campuses); and 1,100 at the Queensway campus. Humber College first established a foothold in the THE WESTON TIMES community at the former James S. Bell Public School, 3495 Lakeshore Blvd. West (Southern campus). In April 1968, Humber absorbed the Etobicoke‘s Adult Training Centre, Queen Elizabeth Blvd., into its structure. This, the Queensway Campus, is responsible for organizing and conducting the Ontario Manpower Retraining and Apprenticeship _ programs sponsored jointly by the Province of Ontario and the Federal Government. These tw o programs are specifically designed to enable students improve both their academic and trade skills. Phase 1 building at the 200â€" acre site of the Northern Campus, was completed in September 1968 and conâ€" struction of Phase 111 building is expected to commence in April, 1970. An Open House will be held at the Northern Campus as follows: midnight) March 4 â€"6 (6 p.m. to midâ€" night) Displays and exhibits outlining the programs, careers, campus life and people of Humber, will be featured throughout the campus. will be supplied with a vital communications link,‘‘ President Wragg said. 0000000000000 00000900909009000000 ©® CANADA‘S LARGEST TRANSMISSION SPECIALIsTS _ ® OPEN 8 a.m. â€" ‘7 p.m. Daily € :. 8 a.m. â€" 3 p.m. Sat. = e 1 DAY SERVICE â€" e _, LIFE TIME GUARANTEE $ ....‘....Q‘....Q.....QQ..Q“P‘ March 3 (8:30 p.m. to 1132 WESTON RD. @t Egtinton) Ph. 763â€"1151 3“““"‘ TRANSMISSION _ ANNOUNCES OF THEIR NEW LOCATION stages. 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