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96-002 · Fonds · 1975-1995 (predominant 1992-1995)

This addition to the fonds consists of the following series: Personal Papers which includes family and personal correspondence, material from Scott Young's Moscow trip, correspondence and a certificate from Trent University, Dine with the Stars Celebrity Dinner, Scott Young Public School, Dublin Arrangements and Income Tax Returns; Professional Activities which includes papers and correspondence from Interviews and Lectures, Personal Background, Hockey Hall of Fame, Canada Council as well as Reviews; Correspondence with Agency and Publishers; Published and Unpublished Works; and Miscellaneous.

Young, Scott
23-013/003(06) · File · Apr. 11 – Apr. 18, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

SPECIAL SERIES:
Toronto Star: Their Native Land

  • Struggling against stereotypes
  • Story of one community reads like a conspiracy
  • Innu find new purpose in fight against NATO
  • Old-style chiefs want to exercise greater control
  • Unseen natives make Toronto biggest reserve
    Globe and Mail: James Bay
  • Crees, Quebec in power struggle over massive James Bay project
  • There's poison in picture-perfect Chisasibi
  • Native enterprises building foundation for arctic nation
  • Utility's nation-building potential disputed by Hydro-Quebec critics
  • Freshwater seal symbolizes fears for wildlife
  • Future of massive project depends on environmental review
  • Grassroots movement, lobby groups oppose Hydro-Quebec sales in U.S.
    Meech Lake, Self-Government:
  • Meech committee gets an earful in its first week
  • Let Meech die, start new talks Dene urge Commons committee
  • Guarantee talks, native leaders say
  • Voices of doubt
  • Native voices facing death of 1000 cuts
  • Native leaders criticize severe program cutbacks
  • Inuit bid for more autonomy
    Land Claims:
  • Dene, Metis sign land-claim deal with Ottawa
  • Natives took last chance for land claim
  • B.C. plan for wilderness park challenged by native land claim
    The environment, protests:
    Innu:
  • Innu fight against NATO flights rouses resentment
  • Innu denied injunction to halt flights
  • Priests who joined Innu protest against low-level flights is freed
  • Court turns aside Innu bid to halt Labrador jet flights
  • Priest sentenced for Innu protest
    Temagami:
  • Chainsaw to haunt Premier over Temagami
  • Crusaders vow to save virgin trees
  • Anti-logging protesters take to trees
    Fur Issue:
  • Lessons for an environmental age
  • Mild winters, market excess spell bad news for trappers
    Asbestos:
  • Mere mention of asbestos can reduce property value
    Akwesasne:
  • Tensions simmer on reserve as gambling supporter convicted
  • Mohawk guilty in blocking casino raid
  • Council refuses resignation of grand chief
    Youth, Education:
  • Native youth urged to dream for change
  • Native Olympic champ proud of being a drug-free athlete
  • Kashechewan school
  • Indians share skills with London pupils
  • Controversial native seminary finally finds home near Winnipeg
    Editorials, letters:
  • Charting a path for native people
  • Bilingualism is no plague
  • Small part of Temagami to be logged
  • Irrevocable destruction in Temagami
  • Human rights trampled at Goose Bay
  • Spend fireworks money on women, natives
  • Native people unfairly targeted
    Travel:
  • Where the Mounties met Sitting Bull
  • Back to Batoche: Recalling last battle fought on Canadian soil
    Upcoming events:
  • Keepers of Our Language Conference
23-013/003(05) · File · Mar. 9 – Apr. 9, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

Land Claims and Treaties:

  • Indian land claims deal breakthrough
  • Largest land claim must be declared "null and void": Quebec Crees
  • Hurdles remain in settling land claims
  • B.C. called "thief" during land claim trial
  • Negotiators optimistic Dene-Metis will sign
  • Judge clears Iroquois on hunting. charges, cites 1701 land treaty
  • New forum for treaty disputes
  • Standing committee on aboriginal affairs
    Akwesasne:
  • Mohawks stall probe of shots at copter
  • Roadblocks keep U.S. officials from reserve
  • Pro-gambling Indians burn two blockades
  • Police-Mohawk standoff enters third day
  • Gunfire from Mohawk land downs helicopter
  • Mohawks burn reserve blockades
  • Anti-gamblers rebuild roadblock
  • Judge refuses mistrial call
    The environment, protests:
  • Innu hope ruling will help end NATO flights
  • Ground jets during review, Innu say
  • Nato's base
  • Temagami group threatens to blockade road
  • U.S. militants to join protest
  • Province yet to decide on logging
  • Quebec Cree hope to stop hydro project
  • Native leaders meet mediator
  • Quebec natives continue paddle
  • Fur and loathing in Toronto
    Judicial inquiries:
  • Marshall "stuck to his guns"
  • Money can't ease ordeal, Marshall Sr.
  • Probing Minnie's death
  • Native artist spent 4 years at Alfred reform school
    Economy:
  • $5.8 million commercial complex announced Moose Factory
  • Native newspaper gets boost in funding
  • Prospectors stake claims in Temegami
  • Walpole faces deficit crisis
  • Walpole to have more say in running school
    Health Care and Social Issues:
  • Gov't "slow" to move on native AIDS risk
  • An eagle feather honors native AIDS victim
  • Alcohol abuse
  • Natives ask rights group to help trace children adopted by whites
  • Food prices soaring out of sight in N.W.T.
    Government:
  • NAN gets the go-ahead to look into restructuring
    Policing:
  • RCMP may allow natives with braids
  • Just like Canadians
  • Walpole Islanders oppose transfer of OPP constable
    Editorials, letters:
  • Shameful debt to native peoples
  • To focus on Canada's native peoples
  • Human rights begin at home
  • No distinct aboriginal society
  • Northern Canada's bleak statistics
  • Serving people who move
  • Meech Lake - letter to the editor
    The Arts:
  • Letting the stone speak
  • Theytus books: native material by natives
  • Fiddler from Wiki wins O.A.C. award
  • Open house at the new Indian Centre
  • Legend: Why the loon cries in the morning
    Upcoming events:
  • Neo Lithic: Stone carvings
23-013/003(04) · File · Mar. 29 – Apr. 1, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

Land claims:

  • Yukon land claim
    Akwesasne:
  • Reserve leaders gamble on plan to restore peace
  • Mohawk activist on trial
  • Roadblock
  • Wires to radio station cut
  • Mohawks oust head chief
    Health care, the environment:
  • Health care for Canada's natives
  • Eagles Nest officially opens
  • Protesting - Six Nations school conditions
  • Ohsweken water plant possible culprit?
  • The fears that asbestos can provoke - editorial
  • Ottawa, Alberta band agree in principle on land claim
  • Asbestos: the fears and facts
    Human rights:
  • Inuit seeking apology for forced move
  • Rights body assails native treatment
  • Racism alert nothing new, natives say
  • Floating demonstration
  • Hearings set on redress for Marshall
  • Police charge second Catholic cleric
  • Visiting native kids help bury stereotypes
    Native media:
  • Clark urged to champion native media
  • Native media get reprieve on budget
  • Communications - House of Commons debates
    Protests:
  • Logging foes vow final fight on Temagami
  • Half-canoe, half-kayak a symbol for protest
  • Cree protest James Bay
    Protests (contd.):
  • Referendum dates set for two weeks in April
  • Eight bands form coalition to fight dams
  • Mohawks call PCB cleanup plan first step
    Economy:
  • $2.5 million CAEDS Capital Corp. announced
    AFA, Self-government:
  • Funding policy 'dangerous'
  • Is it self-govt when decisions still rely on feds
  • Many jurisdictional aspects could bog down self-govt talks
    Editorials, letters:
  • Canada's .multicultural dream rapidly fading
  • Pot's empty for largest native volunteer program
  • Insensitive to natives
  • Diabetes among Indians
    The Arts:
  • The Shaman's Return
  • Other stories, other voices
  • McMichael Art Gallery celebrate 25th anniversary
  • Metis actress fights to find truth in roles
  • Cultural extinction and renewal
    Upcoming events:
  • Dance performance
  • 2nd Annual Great Lakes Pow Wow
  • Earth Spirit Festival
23-013/003(03) · File · Mar. 24 – Mar. 26, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • U.S. and Canada Indian tribes unite
  • Mohawks blockade leading to reserve casinos
  • Engineering newsletter causes uproar - Vancouver
  • Budget Cuts that hush a native voice - editorial
  • Marshall condemms budget - Ottawa
  • Smuggling fuels Akwesasne economy - Akwesasne
  • Police drive black/warrior white - Akwesasne
  • Reserve residents expect bloodshed - Akwesasne
  • Peterson's slight angers native people - Orillia
  • Rae assails inaction on asbestos - Toronto
  • PM makes plea for unity - Ottawa
  • No toast for Weiner at breakfast - Toronto
  • Chief foils Soo school closing - Sault Ste. Marie
  • McKenna proposes new deal on Meech
  • First immigrants imported their culture - letter
  • Leader says Ottawa keeps Indians poor - letter
  • Native broadcuts cuts must be restored - letter
  • Hagersville site of tire fire in '77 MPP reveals
  • New translation brings Bible home to Artie
  • Aboriginal group seeks native-language services
  • Blame for fire too hot to handle - editorial
  • Native media deride budget cut
  • Natives trying to flex muscles in Liberal race
  • Ministers to review plan to get rid of used tires
  • Test measures risk of diabetes
  • Mohawks fear violence as gambling talks fail
  • Police want braid - Calgary
  • Mohawks plan referendum on gambling - Cornwall
  • Indian history of Canada - book review
  • Modern native images that counter cliches
23-013/003(02) · File · Mar. 19 – Mar. 24, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Mohawk Chiefs call reserve referendum
  • Indians' diabetes linked to new lifestyle
  • Time to recognize native rights - letter
  • $100 gold coin is a cruel joke - letter
  • A splendid introduction to Coyote and his world
  • Queen's Park cracks down on tire dumps
  • No one knows why pair died in "white culture"
  • Native, police tell of differences - Saskatoon
  • Natives attack Tories over devastating cuts
  • Canada's bitter legacy of injustice - editorial
  • Why native groups alarmed by Meech - editorial
  • Nato choice won't end fight - Innu say
  • Liberals say that 9 seats should be for natives
  • Author likes hunters' way of life
  • Tire fire offers environmental lesson - letter
  • Mohawk factions seek end to violence - Cornwall
  • Museums giving up native treasures - but slowly
  • Ojibwa, Ottawa agree to negotiate self-government
  • Public service "downsizing" largely illusory
  • Chiefs eye lawsuit over budget cuts - Manitoba
  • The issues of native wife abuse - commentary
  • NAN gets the go-ahead to look into restructuring
  • A.I.A.I. reeling after 65% budget cut
  • Students taught Anishinaabe traditions - Winnipeg
23-013/002(13) · File · 18 February, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Tribal tribulations
  • 120,000 tins of juice recalled
  • Natives paddle to protest hydro's plans
  • Decision expected soon on armed force's offer to help battle tire fire
  • Tire inferno neighbors vent anger at officials
  • Tire King owner says ministry is to blame
  • McMaster conference targets bigotry, sexism in Canada
  • 600 evacuees told tires will burn for at least a month
  • Respect for native stories, letter
  • Mural was done by Ojibwa artist, letter
  • Metis eye courts to defend trapping
  • Experts still in dark over effect of blaze on environment and health
  • Ottawa team to assess risks to health
  • A towering achievement, photograph
  • Use tires as fuel for kilns, firm says
  • Fire fighters experiment with alternative ways to deal with blaze
  • Ottawa sends team to tire fire to check health risk fears
  • Proud Cree nation deserves much more than "funny" stories, comment
  • Use of portable showers considered for two towns
  • Spending cuts? Start at the top, comment
  • Marshall case bureaucrat resigns
  • MPs warned about computer virus
  • Weather grounds water bombers slowing battle against tire blaze
  • How the tires are burning, diagram
  • Everybody 's hiding behind tire fire, letter
  • Burning tire dump is major disaster, waste experts say
  • The fallout from burning tires, editorial
  • Lill examines culture shock with subtlety and sensitivity, theatre review
  • Dikes hold back oil flowing from blazing tires
  • Massive seepage of oil feared ·from burning mountain of tires
  • Elmira factory made 'deadly' Agent Orange
  • Report proposes native commission to uproot sexual abuse
  • Protest targets NATO flights over Labrador
  • Government accused of fraud in findings on low-level flights
  • 2,000 advised to leave as burning tires emit cloud of toxic smoke
  • Federal restraints feared on payments for health, education
  • Federal study of low-level flying ignores social costs, groups claim
  • Water bombers help fight fire
  • Reconciling cultural differences
  • Three-kilometre radius evacuated as millions of tires burn at depot
  • Forest panel chairman quits Ontario hearings
  • Bingo crackdown to aid charities
  • Absorbing history lesson
  • Divided they fall
  • Waiting for a tragedy
  • Akwesasne waste site renews tensions
  • Anti-fur protesters hurt native livelihood
  • Native women's writing poignant, personal
  • Walpole withdraws from A.I.A.I.
  • Native women's safehouse urged
  • Native hockey a lure for Leach
  • Consulting firm mum on progress into
  • Ohsweken's water problem
  • Water crisis spreading communities along Grand Scientists agree any exposure poses risk
23-013/002(12) · File · 12 February, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Native leaders disappointed by Chretien
  • Natives slam Chretien's performance
  • It's time to rectify ill-treatment, letter
  • Innu fighting back on challenges
  • RC priest local hero to natives
  • An uneven, bittersweet tale, theatre review
  • Pocahontas' unique view, theatre - review
  • Crazy Boy makes a lot of sense, theatre review 7
  • Divided Loyalties uncovers roots of 'old Indian feeling'
  • Angry demonstrators clash at Bloor St. fur rallies
  • Arctic pitch, photo
  • Sanctity of legends, letter
  • Myths and reality of language and nationhood
  • Racism rediscovered, letter
  • Canadian content that's alive with both intensity and truth
  • A Brant new story
  • Battle over language spreads to North
  • Tory ."JP denies racist slurs but his accuser has a witness
  • Train doctors in North: NDP
  • Bison herd in national park, letter
  • N.S. official may lose job for handling of Marshall
  • Security probe irks native leader
  • Pocahontas relives sting of stereotyping
  • Quiet town's way of life poisoned
  • End seal hunt ban, Chretien says
  • Judge touts native-run court idea
  • Tory MP accused of anti-native slurs
  • Conservative MP insulted Indians at meeting, native conductor says
  • Air around plant to be tested
  • Cp where he belongs
  • Play gives new life to Ojibway myths
  • Ontario and five Indian bands reach historic land claim deal
  • Canadian fur industry bites back
  • Indians, province strike first deal in land claim case
  • Uniroyal protests closing
  • Nova Scotia finally apologizes to Marshall
  • Canadian TV epic sparks its own war
  • 'Racist' Indian Act seems headed for the trash
  • Clash of Innu, court halts the trial
  • Queen is greeted by protests
  • Brazil to probe filming of Yanomami
  • Ottawa to spend S8,800 on parkas for visitors
  • Cards on the table, editorial
  • Northerners call for improvement to health care
  • Native conference
  • No misconduct found in CSIS native probe
  • Native leader says he has pledge from Ottawa over Meech concerns
  • Ottawa vows to consult natives on Meech
  • Safety of Elmira water supply questioned
  • Fears over asbestos in schools growing
  • Kahnawake Warriors block transfer of prisoner
  • Chiefs' fight freezes Mohawk bank account
  • A long litany of injustice, book review
23-013/002(11) · File · 5 February, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Chopsticks serve up wealth, Alberta
  • Painstaking publisher of natives
  • Native Indians deserve same rights, letter
  • More action urged over Uniroyal
  • Equal rights to stories, letter
  • Ottawa may help pay Marshall
  • Aboriginal children need own schools, Winnipeg
  • Inside out, Globe & Mail literary review
  • Investigation sparked by racist calendar
  • Group justice is no justice at all
  • Judge will review Marshall's bid for more money
  • Native theatre reaffirming 'the old truth'
  • Elmira skeptical on water cleanup
  • Probe of Marshall judges sought
  • Monique Mojica, native actress
  • Post office hiking rates to North
  • B.C. Indian band sues 3 pulp mills
  • Natives need own schools, Winnipeg told
  • Brant Museum tells a story
  • Marshall saga: Will N.S. take the torch?
  • Shots fired at Warriors Base in Akwesasne
  • Prairies inspire native novelist
  • Case of bingo fans postponed, Quebec
  • B.C. Indian event to fight logging
  • Implement native courts Ottawa told
  • Indian tales, this time from the pen of a native
  • Walpole's new justice of the peace, Jibkenyan
  • Children attending school for the first time
  • $30,000 NDMA research study commissioned
  • The Great Debate, Tekawennake, letter
  • Natives begin own encyclopedia, Micmac News
23-013/002(10) · File · 29 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Stinging rebuke to high officials in Marshall case - Boularderie, NS, commentary
  • Report on Marshall case finds racism widespread - Halifax
  • Officials open logging road in Temagami - Toronto
  • Native seminary meets only rejection - Winnipeg
  • Marshall case report urges anti-racism measures - Halifax
  • Shooting worries Akwesasne police - Toronto
  • Loggers celebrate road completion ·- Temagami
  • One of our greatest poets never wrote a word - Toronto
  • Donald Marshall still owed a debt - Toronto editorial
  • No home in their native land Toronto book review
  • Pemmican Publications stresses accuracy - Winnipeg
  • Old formulas, new sensibilities - Toronto book review
  • Inuit arts and crafts collection featured at Guelph
  • Huge Marshall report falls short of righting tragic error - Halifax analysis
  • Ministers got 'special treatment' - Halifax
  • Police investigating child abuse allegation - Poplar Hill
  • Man fined for gill netting through Lake Nipigon ice - Thunder Bay
  • Stop stealing native stories - Toronto commentary
  • Marshall wants ex-chief charged - Halifax
  • Poverty, teen-age pregnancies linked to higher infant death rates - Toronto
  • Native communities address family violence - Sarnia
  • City, Chippewa councils hold first joint meeting - Sarnia
  • Uniroyal, province reach deal on pollutant - Kitchener
  • Right to vote of off-reserve Lake Helen residents confirmed - Thunder Bay
  • New magazine on Arctic to be published in North - Toronto
  • Federal dept. critical of Hydro's Jackfish hydro - Thunder Bay
  • Saugeen band vows to clean beach - Toronto
  • Band considering court injunction - Armstrong
  • Native legal corporation to be in business soon
  • Cree take James Bay hydro fight to Washington - Montreal
  • More about Saugeen claim
  • Mohawks try to cope with split on reserve - Akwesasne
  • Reserve's anti-gamblers fear casinos linked to mob - Akwesasne
  • Environment union doesn't think Environmentalists know how to save forests ... or jobs - Ottawa backgrounder
  • How Indian culture can heal white society - Ottawa essay
  • Former radar base for sale -- again - Sioux Lookout
  • More about abuse of native women
  • Bison may face controlled killing - Edmonton
  • Twinkling stars of self-govt - Ohsweken editorial
  • Water crisis still in effect Ohsweken
  • Selling self-govt and Indian Act - Ohsweken editorial page
  • No way to achieve peace - Montreal editorial
  • Mississauga and Chippewa sign treaty - Sutton West
  • Pottawatomi treaty entitlement claim Sutton West
  • Chippewas of Georgina Island membership code - Sutton West
  • Chippewa headland-to-headland initiative - Sutton West
  • Chippewa tri-council seeks control of islands in Georgian Bay - Sutton West
  • Trust accounts management - Sutton West
  • Tri-council treaties and claims - Sutton West
23-013/002(09) · File · 22 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This folder includes

  • Six Nations can't get answers on water - Ohsweken
  • Judge presented question after ordering lawyer jailed - Toronto
  • Restless natives - Toronto commentary on native women and self-government
  • Ontario moves to protect oldest forests from logging - Toronto
  • Polluters get ultimatum - Toronto
  • Injustice and racism in True North - Toronto book review
  • Gambling feud puts Indians on brink of war - Akwesasne
  • New police recruitment program hopes to attract visible minorities - Toronto
  • Environment review may yet save Innu - Toronto
  • Feds will decide format of Lake Helen elections - Thunder Bay
  • Peace activists disrupt lunch at Empire Club - Toronto
  • Most native wives abused by husbands, study shows -Toronto
  • New book teaches language of Ojibwa - Winnipeg
  • Natives urge end to plan to kill bison - Fort Smith, NWT
  • Baffin Island tank leaks fuel - Toronto
  • Tourist camp operator promotes Ojibway cultural studies - Atikokan
  • Mohawk leaders fear deaths in gambling feud - Akwesasne
  • Natives seek own justice system - Regina
  • Casino profits siphoned from St. Regis reserve, gambling opponents say - Cornwall
  • Job-equity law under fire as minuscule gains found for women and minorities - Toronto
  • Arson destroys hopes for summer camp - Toronto
  • Civil servant seeks to polish a tarnished image - Ottawa
  • Ottawa, Indians sign talks pact - Vancouver
  • Casino boosts security after shooting - Ottawa
  • Inquiry winds up hearings on Bill C-31 - Thompson, Man.
  • Convicts go back to roots with sweat lodge rites - Guelph
  • Mohawks negotiate for native courts - Montreal
  • Native group pushes for self-policing - Vancouver
  • More about Temagami and court charges
  • Interim recommendations made by Walpole Council to alleviate deficit
  • Kahnawake bingo breaks Six Nations law: top chief - Montreal
  • Legalized gambling step toward independence for The Pas band: chief - Montreal
  • 3rd probe into death of Native - Ottawa
  • Funding, not racism said at root of native justice problems - Sioux Lookout
  • Indian-death probe becomes art exhibit - Winnipeg
  • Ontario releases new policy for native self-govt - Sioux Lookout
  • Natives have more disabilities: study - Sioux Lookout
  • Family wants compensation for skiplane accident - Sioux Lookout
  • Wawatay receives S30,000 grant - Sioux Lookout
  • Frontier Air plane first in Canada - Thunder Bay
  • Eagle's Nest building bargaining chip to speed school cleanup - letter to Ohsweken editor
  • General hospital should move independently of amalgamation: administrator - Sioux Lookout
23-013/002(08) · File · 15 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Native band claims part of Sauble Beach, thanks to century-old error - Toronto
  • Taxation and animal rights groups - letter to To. editor
  • 35 charged after hunting probe - Toronto
  • Distinct society, indistinct accord - Toronto editorial
  • Indians, Ottawa sign pact - Kispiox, BC
  • Gambling sparks reserve shootout - Cornwall
  • 'You have bestowed on Mother Earth grief' - Toronto commentary
  • Task force to look at why natives jailed - Edmonton
  • Territorial judge regrets rape remark - Yellowknife
  • Arson suspected in Indian society fire - Toronto
  • Nomadic natives denied status inquiry told - Toronto
  • In compassion, BC native village finds justice for all - Toronto
  • Ojibway subjected to 'ongoing insults,' federal report says - Regina
  • Scientists assail study on Labrador base - Ottawa
  • Treaty denial smacks of racism - Fredericton commentary
  • More about Sauble Beach claim
  • Police switching to semi-automatics on native reserve - Cornwall
  • Quebec to probe woman's death in Hull - Ottawa
  • Help natives save their languages - letter to Ottawa editor
  • Natives win gambling rights - Winnipeg
  • Natives 'frustrated' by red tape - Toronto
  • AFN plans own way of observing Columbus event - Montreal
  • Reopen church school Osnaburgh parents urge - Toronto
  • No male artists need apply - Toronto commentary
  • Indian Act changes causing rifts, native inquiry told - Toronto
  • Backs aboriginal language foundation - letter to Montreal editor
  • Self-determination a must for natives - Thunder Bay commentary
  • Ont. minister discusses logging, hunting, native - affairs - Thunder Bay
  • Threat to destroy Six Nations schools - Ohsweken
  • Monthly paper planned for Six Nations - Ohsweken
  • Native issues embarrassing - Hamilton editorial
  • New thinking needed on native policy - Montreal editorial
  • After called racist, judge to leave North - Dryden
  • Justice in Kahnawake - Montreal editorial
  • Six Nations school counsellor fired for speaking out - Brantford
  • Micmac treaty of 1752 now invalid: judge - Antigonish, NS
  • Natives vow to oust polluters at Six Nations - Toronto
  • Aspiring commercial pilot looks north - Pays Plat
  • Quebec eyes native-run justice system - Montreal
  • Education center deal back to square one? - Sioux Lookout
  • Real experiences sought by tourists - Sudbury
  • Has the issue already been settled'? - Sudbury commentary
  • Six Nations and New Credit school boycott - Letter to Ohsweken editor
23-013/002(07) · File · 8 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Indian Act probe due in Metro - Toronto
  • Restoration of lost status proving costly, Indians say - Toronto
  • Fictional reservations in foothills - Toronto
  • Artistic differences - Cardinal the architect - Toronto
  • Reopen church school, Osnaburgh Indian parents urge
  • Anger grows as officials unable to trace poison in Six Nations' water - Toronto 5
  • Judge rules Micmac treaty no longer valid - Antigonish, NS
  • Quebec Mohawks to be 'nation within a state' - Montreal
  • Four anti-fur groups face tax threat - Toronto
  • Other sources possible in water contamination, company official says - Elmira, Ont.
  • Native group misses deadline for base plans - Sioux Lookout
  • White Lake (Mobert) draft management plan - Marathon
  • Sioux Lookout still waiting for decision over radar base
  • Wider self-rule for natives foreseen in '90s - Toronto
  • A human rights issue - letter to Toronto editor about Temagami
  • Support the aboriginal languages bill - letter to Toronto editor
  • Webequie natives waiting for minister to unlock resource - Thunder Bay
  • Skills school project extended into 1990 still in doubt - Sioux Lookout
  • Decaying vegetation, muck, main features of reserves - Thunder Bay commentary
  • Nakina users develop fish plan
  • Planes banned from landing on Big Trout Lake
  • Indian band gets more control under new agreement~ Curve Lake
  • Should whites write about minorities? - Toronto commentary
  • Travelling play targets problem of illiteracy - Thunder Bay
  • Disregarding natives - Letter to Toronto editor
  • Mohawks divided over casinos - Akwesasne, NY
  • Six :\at ions social counsellor terminated - Ohsweken
  • Speller tells Cadieux any asbestos too much - Ohsweken
  • Fire protection training - Moose Factory
  • Mushkegowuk council's partners in change - Moose Factory
  • Community based teacher training - Moose Factory
23-013/002(06) · File · 2 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Fur-bidding sessions are link to past-Manitoba
  • Comments demand inquiry - Toronto commentary
  • B.C. bands on brink of self-government - Vancouver
  • Elmira plant· told to stop dumping of chemical
  • Toward native self-sufficiency - Toronto commentary
  • $50,000 spent to promote bingo on reserve - Toronto
  • Fighting for justice - Alberta
  • Food prices in North to jump - Montreal
  • Death arouses criticism - Winnipeg
  • Native people's dilemma: tradition vs. jobs-Edmonton
  • Reserve protests train cut - Winnipeg
  • Lubicons ask Getty to clarify offer - Edmonton
  • Candles lit to support Lubicons - Edmonton
  • Remove "racist, sexist" judge - Edmonton
  • Order of Canada honors skater - Toronto
  • Whitefish, Sturgeon Lake band claims finalized
  • Indians reach land deal - Calgary
  • Death rate triple for Indians under 35 - Toronto
  • Fur auction prices drop from last year's levels
  • Lubicons get better offer from province - Edmonton
  • Sexual assault in NWT less violent, judge asserts
  • New act requires police to hire more minorities
  • Remember the ones we too often forget - Toronto
  • Indian land claim threatened - Edmonton
  • Goose Bay opposes LIA petition
  • AFL backs Lubicon oil shutdown
  • Mohawks divided over casinos - USA Today
  • Games boost economies - USA Today
  • Bands without reserve status may have case heard again
  • Chiefs turn down offer to re-write Indian Act
23-013/003(01) · File · Feb. 28 – Mar. 12, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Native peoples downgraded, letter
  • Manitoba natives form Liberal club
  • Alliance of Indian bands forms to fight for rights
  • Military flights cancelled over NWT, Alberta
  • Heroes who battled tire fire fantastic volunteers
  • Inuit images of trees
  • Burn or recycle tires?
  • "Visual reminder" of Literacy Year
  • Cuts will kill native newspaper - letter
  • Funding reductions block dialogue - letter
  • RCMP bowed to N.S. politics
  • Rain could hurt Hagersville cleanup
  • Innu vow not to end protests over flights
  • RCMP admits bungling Marshall investigation
  • Who speaks for Cree? - letter
  • Sequel puts Phillips in contact with his native roots
  • N.S. court gives Micmacs constitutional right to fish
  • RC church building NWT centre for natives
  • Cabinet sifts plans to fix tire hazards
  • The unkindest cut - political cartoon
  • Micmac rights case hailed as landmark
  • Carl Beam
  • Native novel explores white appropriations
  • Indian leaders call for flexibility in uses for welfare payments
  • Ontario band chief in U.K.
  • Chretien's policies too vague, natives say
  • Mulronev "sceptical" low-level base will be built
  • Temagami protesters interrupt meeting
  • Why multiculturalism can't end racism
  • Metro's tire-recycling plant may close
  • Dancing boosts native children's images
  • Ottawa hypocritical in marking Inuit literacy
  • Close women's jail - native leader
  • Akwesasne propose closing the border
  • Akwesasne
  • Welcome to Mulroney's latest $30-billion bonfire
  • Canada's growing intolerance
  • Kanesatake chief fails to renew court injunction
  • More shooting hist Mohawk's reserve
  • Ottawa, natives hit treaty snag
  • Native people need to reassess their values, says psychiatrist
  • Native people must solve own problems
  • 500th anniversary of Columbus' arrival no cause for celebration S.A. Indian says
23-013/002(05) · File · 18 December, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Indians suffer ill treatment, 35% tell poll - Toronto
  • Province must help natives, NOP insists - Toronto
  • Ottawa's S1.4 billion restraint package - Toronto
  • Rules issued for talks on native self-govt. - Toronto
  • Ontario willing to negotiate native self-rule - Toronto
  • Munro trial may not start until '91 - Ottawa
  • Ojibwa model finds native look may lead to success in Paris - Toronto
  • Civil service urged to hire low-paid groups - Toronto
  • More than one way to grow a new forest - Thunder Bay
  • Lakehead university president named fund administrator
  • Lubicon braced for RCMP action - Calgary
  • Passion of the Metis people remembered - Edmonton
  • Many trials, tribulations in Munro's life - Toronto commentary
  • Lake Helen band office closed in 'coup' attempt - Thunder Bay
  • Mediation in Little Jackfish hydro project - Thunder Bay
  • Temagami braces for next round in road war - Toronto
  • Stalled negotiations with Ottawa provoke more Lubicon threats - Edmonton
  • Decision Feb. 28 in night hunting case - Thunder Bay
  • Micmac agreement unfair, unsafe - Halifax commentary
  • Pulling images out of the bear - Vancouver art review
  • Suzuki meets with native people - Sarnia
  • Race relations workshop held - Wallaceburg
  • Two area native groups receive grants - Sioux Lookout
  • It's another fine mess - Brantford editorial about Six Nations education
  • Study of programs may bring education changes - Sioux Lookout
  • Province urged to follow multi-use Crown land policy - Sudbury
  • Expansion of federal building - Sioux Lookout
  • Dispute sparked by removal of principal - London
23-013/002(04) · File · 4 December, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • OPP bill almost $1 million in Temagami logging fight
  • Indian bands back protest on logging
  • Wells close after Lubicon band's threat - Little Buffalo
  • A Lesson in Misery - Canadian Indians look back in anger at residential schools
  • Attempt to squelch Meech discord inflames showdown
  • Six Nations Schools
  • Violence feared over crackdown on bingo - Montreal
  • Native groups demand role in Alberta mill - Edmonton
  • Opponents of pulp-mill projects give Environment Minister earful - Calgary
  • Ottawa sets up panel on Indian health care
  • Indian status didn't change - Toronto
  • Lubicon land-claim offer won't change - Calgary
  • More about Six Nations
  • Police issue warrants for top 3 organizers of Kahnawake bingo
  • Native dancer's sci-fi connection - Toronto
  • More about Kahnawake
  • MP demands judicial inquiry into native suicides
  • Chief acclaimed - Brantford
  • Companies hire too few minorities - Ottawa
  • Native Women challenge art ideas - Ottawa
  • More about Kahnawake - Montreal
  • Foes of Meech riding a wave of intolerance Peterson says - Saint John
  • more about the Lubicons
  • Disabilities hit Indians on reserves at almost twice rate in non-natives
  • Chief encourage Innu to shoot at military jets - Winnipeg
  • The native nightmare of Alberta - Standoff, Alta.
  • more about disabilities on Northern reserves
  • more about the Mohawks of Kahnawake - commentary
  • Shots fired at police car on reserve - Cornwall
  • Letters about native housing and Temagami to Toronto editors
  • Their brother's keeper - Edmonton
  • Shooting at phantoms - Halifax commentary
  • Indians will set up schools if no teaching reforms are made native Manitoba judge warns - Winnipeg
  • Indians to be consulted on education - Ottawa
  • Speed lands claims officials told - Winnipeg
  • Inquiry ends with calls for native legal system- Winnipeg
  • more about Six Nations schools
23-013/002(03) · File · 30 October, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Temagami blockade to resume after bid to win injunction fails - Toronto
  • A poor showing - letter to Toronto editor about new national museum
  • Armed Mounties guard border near Mohawk reserve - Cornwall
  • 1,000 rally to fight logging in Temagami - Toronto
  • Is Meech Lake accord really worth saving? - Ottawa
  • 1,600 federal workers poised to picket today - Toronto
  • Cree's 'attorney general' a passionate advocate - Ouje-Bougoumou, Quebec
  • Reserve promised new school, asbestos study - Ohsweken
  • Meech Lake foes blaze trail for PM - Toronto editorial
  • What Meech Lake accord is all about - Ottawa
  • Temagami battle is about who uses bush best - Toronto commentary
  • More about Temagami
  • Getting to know you - Toronto
  • More about Temagami
  • Three brothers hoping to stay together - Today's child - Toronto
  • Where The Spirit Lives triumphs as a powerful study of native injustice - Toronto TV review
  • More about Six Nations schools
  • More about Temagami
  • Auditor general likes morale-boosters - Ottawa commentary
  • More about Meech Lake accord
  • More about Innu protest
  • Panel urges demilitarized Arctic - Ottawa
  • More about Innu protest
  • Is there any hope for Meech Lake? - Toronto editorial
  • More about Meech Lake
  • More about Whitedog settlement
  • Ontario's new ombudsman is a proud Mohawk peacemaker - Toronto commentary
  • Indians to appeal fishing conviction - Cape Croker
  • NS Indians seek salmon fishing rights - Truro
  • Negotiator named to settle Inuit claim - Ottawa
  • Quebec Inuit village copes with double sales tax - Ottawa
  • Coffee's always on at native centre - Thunder Bay
  • Not worth fighting for? - Toronto commentary
  • Hunters upset with Indian hunting privileges - Hunters Mountain, NS
  • At the government's door - letter to Toronto editor
  • Native fishing talks set to resume - Toronto
  • Clash averted as Mohawks compromise - Cornwall
  • Mafia .backs big bingo in US, informer says - Montreal
  • Chief sees progress over island - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Nishnawbe-Aski chiefs take next step toward new structure - Thunder Bay
  • Education council asks Mennonite school to abolish strap - Sioux Lookout
  • Local woman crushes chiefs resolution on crisis centres - Sioux Lookout
  • Webequie students miss more classes - Sioux Lookout
  • Natives plan for better stores - Atikokan
  • Next round of Whitefish Island negotiations set - Sault Ste. Marie
  • More about Six Nations schools in senate - Ottawa
  • More about John Kim Bell
  • Great Lakes plan disparaged - Ottawa
  • Grade Nine plus TYP equals university - Toronto
  • The art of fighting fires - Toronto
Academic Skills Centre
23-013/002(02) · File · 23 October, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • Film hits sensitive nerve in native community - Toronto
  • Prize means a lot to all native artists - Toronto
  • Cadieux to meet band chief - Toronto
  • Native groups urged to bolster blockade - Ottawa
  • Native students' Catch 22 - Toronto
  • Trappers to cull wolves under bounty program - Edmonton
  • NWT makes native new speaker - Norman Wells , NWT
  • Three hunters killed in tent fire - Marathon
  • Animal rights group assails museum fur trade exhibit - Winnipeg
  • Indians fight clear-cutting of Quebec wildlife reserve - Maniwaki
    -Mohawks ' showdown delayed at Cornwall
  • Buddy, 8, loves hiking, exploring - Toronto Today 's Child
  • Temagami road construction halted pending court case
  • Whitedog gets S2.4 million for flooding
  • Freed Mohawk casino owner must stay off Cornwall reserve - Syracuse, NY -
  • Ojibway model proud to be native - Toronto
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • More about Whitedog settlement
  • Native awareness focus of week - Fort Frances
  • Probation for former housing manager - Thunder Bay
  • Chief arrested at blockade - Toronto
  • More about Cape Croker fishing fines I I
  • Pottawatomi take battle over land to US congress - Washington , DC
  • Micmacs claim first moose under new NS hunting rights - Hunter ' s Mountain, NS
  • Robert Jamieson gets rave reviews as new ombudsman - Toronto
  • Giving Canada's Indians provincial status would salve many wounds - Ottawa commentary
  • Aboriginal peoples' quest for justice - letter to Ottawa editor
  • Non-native hunters protest .Micmac agreement - Halifax
  • Chief wants OPP to quit border post -Cornwall
  • Absence in natives of Alzheimer's probed - Winnipeg
  • Mohawk reserve battles over bingo - Montreal
  • Buses turned back in Mohawk bingo dispute - Hogansburg
  • Law and order a target in Mohawk feud - St. Regis
  • Tax (cigarettes) dollars go up in smoke - Montreal
  • 51% say courts unfair to natives - Ottawa
  • Natives fear violence over unlicensed bingo - Montreal
  • Indians paid dearly for benefits - letter to Thunder Bay editor
  • More about fines for blocking traffic - Marathon
  • Homes opened - Fort Frances
  • AFN supports Six Nations in attack on Indian Affairs minister - Ottawa
  • Native education rights supported - Calgary
  • Most feel natives get unequal treatment - Ottawa
  • Copps offers support to halt river dredging - ·Walpole Is. 33
  • Profits tucked away out of taxman's reach•- Montreal
  • Environment No. l issue, says chief - Walpole Island
  • Stored toxic wastes seeping in river area - London
  • Natives right to mistrust dredging - letter to London editor
  • Native reliance on govt. over, Treaty 3 chief says
  • Misunderstanding - Thunder Bay editorial about medical treatment residence
  • Supports multiple use for crown land - letter to Elliot Lake editor
  • Metis send invoice to government - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Weekend elders' conference - Ohsweken
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • Blockade is becoming a pain in neck - Decaen - North Bay
  • Skeletal remains handed over to Caldwell band - London
23-013/002(1) · File · Sept. 27 - Oct. 16, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • 11 men jailed, fined for illegal sale of trout - Wiarton
  • Bingo hall opening draws demonstrators - Montreal
  • History of discrimination - letter to Toronto editor
  • Native woman to be named ombudsman - Toronto
  • N.S., Micmac groups sign pact on hunting - Halifax
  • Native people deride discovery of America - Toronto
  • Natives ask court to stop low jet flights - Yellowknife
  • Teachers won't end boycott at New Credit - Toronto
  • Iroquois longhouse, artifacts found in dig at Barrie site
  • Columbus introduced slave trade - Toronto
  • Temagami trees at risk, study finds - Toronto
  • Innu struggle to survive as a distinct nation - Toronto
  • Innu seek U.K. help to ban jets - London
  • Armed guards protect Cornwall Island border post
  • Obituary - John- Wesley Beaver - Toronto
  • Indians renew blockade - Maniwaki, Que.
  • Ojibwa bands 'ripped off' historian says - Walkerton
  • More about Temagami
  • A noble dissent - Toronto editorial about Marshall case
  • Pediatrician sees trauma among Labrador children - Halifax
  • Soup kitchens try to ease hunger for Regina's children
  • Letters to editors about Labrador Innu
  • Calgary native column lauded
  • Booze at root of problem - letter to Calgary editor
  • Suicide concern - Thunder Bay
  • Defence pact not a priority - Thunder Bay
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • Native justice system a matter of time - Sioux Lookout
  • Chiefs call for aboriginal health authority - Thunder Bay
  • Manitoba hunters may be charged - Fort Severn
  • Two bands tell task force of reserve conditions - Sioux Lookout
  • Story on alcohol and native people - Sioux Lookout
  • Diesel fuel spilled near Fort Albany
  • New goal for Lakehead University - letter to Sioux Lookout editor
  • Native nurses program falling between cracks - Thunder Bay
  • Money for education center still being sought - Sioux Lookout
  • Appointment of members to Nishnawbe-Aski legal service corporation - Thunder Bay
  • Solar power brightens northern Ont. village - Toronto
  • $50,000 grant to skills group - Elliot Lake
  • Merit isn't necessarily meritorious - Ottawa commentary
  • How we were - Ottawa review about Poundmaker book
23-013/002(15) · File · Feb. 25 – Mar. 5, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Why wasn't the Fire Code enforced?
  • She found poem -- and a lot more
  • Cuts silence natives, band says
  • Sharks may spawn new Arctic industry
  • Flames out but cres still fight tire fire
  • Ontario vows to prevent tire fires
  • Temagami Indian band loses bid to save trees
  • Silent about insult
  • Metis win chance to pursue huge claim
  • Town in NWT declares four official languages
  • Battling pollution rush target at tire dump
  • No more tire fires - editorial
  • Low level flights - political cartoon
  • High schools told to change "Redskins" name
  • How children see the disaster
  • Tire fire reported snuffed out
  • Tory cuts seem aimed at muzzling critics
  • Mint begins pitch for gold coin
  • 5 N.S. judges face hearing over Marshall
  • "End in sight" to tire blaze
  • Budget cuts hit northern radio
  • Native programs singled out - editorial
  • The better way to burn old tires
  • N.W.T. judge gets desk job during probe
  • N.S. Micmac group closes its office
  • Native writing anthology on list of spring books
  • Where there's smoke, there's buyers
  • Cuts show bias, native leaders say
  • Native press is killed in one cynical stroke
  • Natives vow to expand subsidized housing despite neighbor's bias
  • Mennonites to protest Labrador NATO bases
  • Spending on natives "at minimum level"
  • He's the last of the lacrosse-stick makers
  • Funding for Wawatay axed in federal budget
  • Bigotry on the rise, poll finds
  • Nation of bigots? - editorial
  • Tires continue to burn as officials pin hopes on warmer weather
23-013/002(14) · File · Feb. 8 – Feb. 26, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Good news on two fronts in Hagersville
  • Hagersville residents weary of publicity
  • $50 million added to native child welfare
  • Ottawa charges video on Ojibway 'biased', seeks return of funds
  • Budget clobbers native Canadians
  • Temagami protesters fined
  • Our official languages ignore native peoples, letter
  • Dioxin found in ditch water near tire fire
  • Tire dream sparks nightmare
  • Marshall gets 'sincere apology' from legislature
  • The rubber match in Hagersville
  • High levels of toxic chemicals detected in creek near fire site
  • Ontario to compensate victims of tire fire
  • Gravel, cement dust used to douse U.S. tire blazes
  • Power exports lead to genocide, Cree leader tells energy board
  • Ottawa kills grants to native groups
  • Assault on civil service misses job-trimming goal
  • Funds reduced or ended for outspoken women's, native groups
  • Tire fire offensive a rain-out
  • Lots of blame to share in Hagersville fire
  • Tory budget focuses on wrong 'green', editorial
  • Now it's time to stand up for tolerance, letter
  • Burning rubber, editorial cartoon
  • Water bombers pause as tire fire oil removed
  • Foam clobbers firefighter
  • Native program cuts called 'intolerable'
  • Elmira finds contamination in fourth well
  • Ray passes the bucks, photo (new $100 coin)
  • Trappers, opponents try to snare young minds
  • Water-bomber salvos launch tire fire drive
  • Brantford residents want probe of chemical dumping into river
  • New road brings hope to crews
  • Blazing tires' owner feels 'badly hated'
  • Budget lean but not mean, comment
  • 'Tough, necessary decisions to protect Canada's future', text of the budget speech
  • Spending lid hits natives
  • Lack of Innu translators delays trials for 2nd day
  • Delegation threatens boycott of furs
  • When entertainment breeds ignorance
  • Public Service 2000
  • Anti-logging activists invade stress seminar
  • Amen to letter on Hagersville fire
  • Let the fur fly in flurry of facts
  • North enlists Super Shamou to stop 'sniffing'
  • Self-Gov't pacts won't be protected by Constitution
  • Native newspapers fear government's budget axe
  • Kashtin cashes in on novelty craze - Montreal
  • Gov't stays away from conference on land claims - British Columbia
  • Those who live in glass houses ... , comment
  • "Warrior Society", letter, Tekawennake News
  • Ohswekan water okay for bathing, washing, says Health and Welfare
  • Struggling with the issue of a Native justice system, Wawatay news
  • Native trappers group looking to set-up network of northern trappers
Gilbert C. Monture fonds
97-017 · Fonds · 1912-1983

This fonds consists of miscellaneous personal documents relating to Gilbert Monture, including his family tree and a copy of his birth certificate. Also included are various speeches and articles by Monture, correspondence ranging from 1912-1983, newspaper clippings, miscellaneous photographs, materials relating to Pauline Johnson, correspondence and minutes relating to the Canadian Correction Association project "Indians and the Law", and documents regarding an exhibit at the Indian Hall of Fame, Canadian National Exhibition.

Monture, Gilbert C.
01-004 · Fonds · 1986-1999

Fonds consists of letters written to Peter Gzowski in his role as broadcaster for CBC's "Morningside" show. The hundreds of letters include such subjects as literacy, Prime Minister Jean Chretien, and Edith Babb. Also included are contracts, correspondence, notes, and memos relating to Peter Gzowski's career with CBC; records relating to Gzowski's association with the "Peter Gzowski Invitational Golf for Literacy" tournament; Gzowski's association with Ridley College, and Trent University (Margaret Laurence tribute, Timothy Findley conference, chancellorship); and greeting cards, personal calendars, photographs, family genealogical information, and correspondence relating to awards received. The fonds also includes correspondence, partial manuscripts, and notes relating to various books which Gzowski has written.

Gzowski, Peter