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Page R7
More than 300 students representing 23 programs graduated from Alberta Vocational College in High Prairie June 11.
The students represented 23 different courses held at Grouard, plus six satellite campuses located in the Metis Settlements of East Prairie, Gift Lake and Peavine, and the communities of Atikameg, Valleyview and Smokey River.
Conservative MLA for…
Page R7
More than 300 students representing 23 programs graduated from Alberta Vocational College in High Prairie June 11.
The students represented 23 different courses held at Grouard, plus six satellite campuses located in the Metis Settlements of East Prairie, Gift Lake and Peavine, and the communities of Atikameg, Valleyview and Smokey River.
Conservative MLA for…
Page R7
More than 300 students representing 23 programs graduated from Alberta Vocational College in High Prairie June 11.
The students represented 23 different courses held at Grouard, plus six satellite campuses located in the Metis Settlements of East Prairie, Gift Lake and Peavine, and the communities of Atikameg, Valleyview and Smokey River.
Conservative MLA for…
Page R7
More than 300 students representing 23 programs graduated from Alberta Vocational College in High Prairie June 11.
The students represented 23 different courses held at Grouard, plus six satellite campuses located in the Metis Settlements of East Prairie, Gift Lake and Peavine, and the communities of Atikameg, Valleyview and Smokey River.
Conservative MLA for…
Page R7
Working between semesters often means taking on boring jobs that add nothing exciting to a student's resume.
Not so for a group of 25 students from Western Canada. Following this summer, they can tack small arms training, crowd control, and administrative duties on to their resumes.
The group, five each from British Columbia, Alberta, and Manitoba, and 10 from…
Page R7
Working between semesters often means taking on boring jobs that add nothing exciting to a student's resume.
Not so for a group of 25 students from Western Canada. Following this summer, they can tack small arms training, crowd control, and administrative duties on to their resumes.
The group, five each from British Columbia, Alberta, and Manitoba, and 10 from…
Page R7
Working between semesters often means taking on boring jobs that add nothing exciting to a student's resume.
Not so for a group of 25 students from Western Canada. Following this summer, they can tack small arms training, crowd control, and administrative duties on to their resumes.
The group, five each from British Columbia, Alberta, and Manitoba, and 10 from…
Page R7
Working between semesters often means taking on boring jobs that add nothing exciting to a student's resume.
Not so for a group of 25 students from Western Canada. Following this summer, they can tack small arms training, crowd control, and administrative duties on to their resumes.
The group, five each from British Columbia, Alberta, and Manitoba, and 10 from…
Page R5
Schools in New Brunswick will be graced with a new flock of teachers this year.
The 1993 graduating class of the Indian Studies Program is letting go of four graduates. Rhonda Alaine, James Augustine, Beverly Googoo, and Newfoundland native Roderick Jeddore received their Bachelor of Education degrees this spring through the program.
The Indian Studies program…
Page R5
Schools in New Brunswick will be graced with a new flock of teachers this year.
The 1993 graduating class of the Indian Studies Program is letting go of four graduates. Rhonda Alaine, James Augustine, Beverly Googoo, and Newfoundland native Roderick Jeddore received their Bachelor of Education degrees this spring through the program.
The Indian Studies program…
Page R5
Schools in New Brunswick will be graced with a new flock of teachers this year.
The 1993 graduating class of the Indian Studies Program is letting go of four graduates. Rhonda Alaine, James Augustine, Beverly Googoo, and Newfoundland native Roderick Jeddore received their Bachelor of Education degrees this spring through the program.
The Indian Studies program…
Page R5
Schools in New Brunswick will be graced with a new flock of teachers this year.
The 1993 graduating class of the Indian Studies Program is letting go of four graduates. Rhonda Alaine, James Augustine, Beverly Googoo, and Newfoundland native Roderick Jeddore received their Bachelor of Education degrees this spring through the program.
The Indian Studies program…
Page R5
Blackened fingernails and sore shoulders are badges of honor carried by recent graduates of a construction training program at Six Nations Reserve.
The residential construction apprentice program is a one-year certificate program sponsored and developed jointly by the Six Nations council and the Ministry of Education and Training.
The roots of the project sprang…
Page R5
Blackened fingernails and sore shoulders are badges of honor carried by recent graduates of a construction training program at Six Nations Reserve.
The residential construction apprentice program is a one-year certificate program sponsored and developed jointly by the Six Nations council and the Ministry of Education and Training.
The roots of the project sprang…
Page R5
Blackened fingernails and sore shoulders are badges of honor carried by recent graduates of a construction training program at Six Nations Reserve.
The residential construction apprentice program is a one-year certificate program sponsored and developed jointly by the Six Nations council and the Ministry of Education and Training.
The roots of the project sprang…
