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23-013/001(04) · File · June 10 - July 24, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

Folder Includes:

  • Soviet Inuit to join Arctic discussions -Sisimiut
  • Inuit from four lands at top-of-world summit
  • Forest fires force 16,500 to flee homes -Winnipeg
  • More on forest fires Standoff between militants, police draws to end at Mohawk reserve -Hogansberg, N.Y.
  • More on Akwesasne blockade Extradition fight, fall from grace occupy exiled U.S. Indian activist -Vancouver
  • Manitoba Indian bands to sign defence treaty
  • Summer low-level jets fly right over the Innu letter to editor -Toronto
  • 5 die on Ontario roads in weekend accidents
  • Sarcee sign agreement on military clean-up -Calgary
  • Leg amputated -Kashechewan
  • Navajo dispute -Window Rock, Ariz. Saskatchewan
  • Cree community blames federal housing policy for massive tornado damage
  • More on U.N. probe
  • $15,000.paid over infant's airport x-ray
  • CBC urged to hire more natives
  • Sons of the Chief -book review -Toronto
  • Time to overhaul outdated Indian Act, official says
  • More on U.N. probe
  • More on native defence pact
  • Mohawk Indians occupy St. Nicholas island -Montreal
  • More on Akwesasne blockade
  • Federal payments cut by $2.2 billion
  • More on U.N. probe
  • More on Temagami logging
  • More on forest fires
  • Better Indian relations new directorate's goal Edmonton
  • Sault Ste. Marie fishing dispute
  • Photo of native dancer
  • More on U.N. probe
  • More on forest fires
  • Program S -Toronto
  • More on forest fires
  • More on U.N. probe
  • Man drank fatal amount, native probe told -Lethbridge
  • More on Temagami logging
  • More on post-secondary education
  • Act fast on Shoal Lake, editorial -Winnipeg
  • More on Temagami logging
  • More on U.N. probe
  • Canada's racism record: some cause for optimism
  • Rights board probes CBC, Bell Canada over hiring policies -Ottawa
  • Rufus Prince, won fight for native hunting rights obituary -Brandon, Manitoba
  • More on forest fires
  • Government grants to study Ontario's forest management
  • More on forest fires
  • Indians across the country step up protests in quest for power -Ottawa
  • More on forest fires
  • City's water threatened -Winnipeg
  • Native indict The Pas -Winnipeg
  • Aboriginal court sets gov't eviction date
  • More on U.N. probe
  • Ottawa must deal with natives, editorial -Sault Saint Marie
  • INAC encourages women bosses
  • Recollet eyes justice system changes -Sault St. Marie
  • Whitefish Island land claim
  • Native group challenges the Canadian Indian Act
  • DIANO Minister gets 'D' on columnist's report card Political cartoon -Vancouver
  • Nun's efforts in native education rewarded
  • Letter of thanks re: fire evacuation -Geraldton
  • More on post-secondary education
  • Claim to be pursued with, without treaty -London
  • Indians want base back -London
  • Walpole band farm gets S600,000 grant
23-013/001(03) · File · July 5 - July 17, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

Folder includes:
Foundation offers loans for women's business -Toronto

  • Campaign of civil disobedience has won little action from Ottawa
  • Huron mission thrives today -Midland, Ont.
  • Fire officials on standby for evacuation of reserve Deer Lake, Ont.
  • Sarcee sacred bundle returned by museum -Hull
  • UN rights body to investigate Canada's treaties with natives -Toronto
  • Province can start Temagami road work -Toronto
  • Crawford's still waters run deep in history (reconstructed Indian village) -Campbellville, Ont.
  • Heritage of myth and legend -Toronto book review
  • More about UN rights agency probe
  • Erasmus wins second term as Dene president -Inuvik, NWT
  • Court won't hear llth-houi:-bid to block Temagami logging road~ Toronto
  • Lubicon chief to meet Getty on July 24 -Edmonton
  • Indian land dispute given to committee -Calgary
  • Snapshots of native community life -Toronto editorial
  • Pour des peccadilles -lettre au redacteur -Montreal
  • Women the losers as federal jobs cut -Ottawa
  • $4.6 million for six N. Ont. schools -Thunder Bay
  • Indians distrusted police too much to give evidence, probe told -Lethbridge, Alta.
  • Thanks for fire evacuation assistance -letter to Geraldton-Longlac editor
  • Ottawa obliged to pay natives' hospital costs letter to Toronto editor
  • Confrontations feared at Whitefish Island 'unless Ottawa acts' -Sault St. Marie
  • Path to violence -letter to North Bay editor
  • Natives frustrated by cutbacks -Thunder Bay editorial
  • A dubious defense pact for natives -Toronto commentary
  • Indians' lawyer dumped after lengthy fight -London, Ont.
  • Gap between American and Canadian news grows -letter to Ottawa editor
  • Canada Customs staff want RCMP protection -Cornwall
  • Woman convicted of assaulting police -Calgary
  • McKnight, Sarcee chief to set up dispute committee Red Deer Lake, Alta.
  • Chief ready to talk -Calgary
  • Six Nations Indians make claim for riverbed -Toronto
  • Indian blockades, occupations are becoming 'fact of life' -Bell -Sault Ste. Marie
  • Who gave· the natives the right to mistreat others? letter to Sault Ste. Marie editor
  • Cabinet: From A to F -Toronto
  • Harry Laforme appointed Indian commissioner -Ottawa
  • Few Indians apply for airlines work -Vancouver
  • Post-secondary funding for Natives -Kenora commentary
  • Events a reminder of long native presence -letter to Sault Ste. Marie editor
  • Big Grassy' s new constable -Rainy River
  • Natives lost land, way of life -letter to Sault Ste. Marie editor
  • Pays Plat supports concerned citizens -letter to Terrace Bay/Schreiber editor
  • Native students making the grade -Sioux Lookout
  • New protests against genocide of a native people Atlantic regional commentary
23-013/001(05) · File · July 13 – July 21, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

Folder includes:

  • Siblings reunited by fire -Winnipeg
  • Chiefs take case to London -Winnipeg
  • Inuit adopt strategy on saving polar area Susimuit, Greenland
  • Mohawks oppose golf course plan -Oka, Que.
  • Blacks in U.S. got vote before Canada's natives letter to Toronto editor
  • Mohawks seek end to dispute over raid -Hogansburg, N.Y.
  • Appeal set in killing of elderly native man -Toronto
  • Inuit urged to welcome progress -Sisimuit, Greenland
  • Tale of big Manitoba blazes will live on -Winnipeg
  • Natives flown home as fires die -Thunder Bay
  • Native journalism students wary of typecasting -Toronto
  • More about, Manitoba fires
  • Northwest's fire evacuees beginning to return home~ Dryden
  • Bell appeals discrimination investigation -Montreal
  • Group threatens blockade if Ternagarni logging road proceeds -Toronto
  • Week-long blockade by police fuels tension among Mohawks -Hogansburg, N.Y.
  • Inuit meeting endorses environmentalist strategy Sisirnuit, Greenland
  • Bell wants court to set aside probe of its hiring practices -Montreal
  • Ouje-Bougournou advance -Montreal editorial
  • More about Hogansburg blockade
  • Native people continue to suffer -letter to Ottawa editor
  • Cynical treatment of the Lubicons -Edmonton editorial
  • Ottawa's recognition of new band clouds Lubicon deal Edmonton
  • Independent review urges on darn project -Toronto
  • Quebec Cree court puts Ottawa on trial for tax evasion Ouje-Bougournou, Quebec
  • All burning prohibited in Northern Ontario because of fire threat -Toronto
  • Move to split Lubicon band called immoral -Edmonton
  • Inuit accuse fur activists of 'cultural genocide' Sisirnuit, Greenland
  • More about Hogansburg roadblock
  • Capturing the faces of then and now -Saskatoon book review
  • More about Northern Ontario fire evacuations
  • More about Osborne case in Manitoba
  • Proposal for native employment in forestry -Longlac
  • Mohawks to vote on casinos -Hogansburg, N.Y.
  • Growing native militancy -Sault Ste. Marie editorial
  • Canada on trial over native abuses -Toronto editorial
  • Ottawa double-crossed us, Indians say -Vancouver
  • Natives seek UN aid in bid to regain pride -Geneva
  • Audubon group out to delay hydro plan -Montreal
  • Lubicons denounce creation of new band -Edmonton
  • More about NW Ont. fires
  • PM asks Tellier to stay on -Ottawa
  • Racism compounds woes of poverty -Winnipeg
  • Police seek substance that killed two men -Toronto
  • Prejudice apparent survey -Sioux Lookout
  • Chief asks Blind River council to delay annexation discussion -Blind River
  • More about NW Ont. fires
  • Native people see their treaties as living agreements Sudbury commentary
  • Fired manager considers running for Garden River chief
  • A seat for Soviet Inuit -Toronto editorial
  • Quebec's deal with Crees chides Ottawa -Toronto
  • More about Hogansburg gambling raid
  • Attempted murder charged in shooting of special constable -Moose
  • Factory Canada plans PCB cleanup in Arctic Inuit meeting told Sisimuit, Greenland
  • Native builder plans big resort for Athabaska -Edmonton
  • Native language course graduates -Thunder Bay
  • Treaty rights -letter to Sault St~. Marie editor
  • More about NW Ont. fires
  • Mohawks say occupation to reclaim land -Montreal
  • Shortage of natives in CBC jobs 'scandalous' -Saskatoon
  • More about Heron Bay hydro project
  • More about NW Ont. fires
23-013/001(02) · File · June 19 - July 10, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

Folder contains:

  • $5 bills on treaty day reaffirm treaty rights Glenevis, Alta.
  • Explosion could help Sarcee cause -Calgary
  • More about the Osborne slaying in N. Manitoba
  • BC Indians issue warning over logging roads -Vancouver
  • Cree band ends Quebec road blockade -Chibougamau
  • Nine Indian bands sign pact for mutual defence -Quebec
  • Innu and Inuit different -letter to Toronto editor
  • Task force to examine high number of natives in jails Edmonton
  • Native people losing supporters in Quebec -letter to Toronto editor
  • Innu struggle in Labrador is for justice -letter to Toronto editor
  • Inca treasures in Montreal exhibition -Toronto
  • Sarcee Indians agree to talks with minister -Calgary Indian commissioner -Toronto
  • Print fosters stereotype of natives, artist says -Calgary
  • Cadieux angers natives again despite attempt to mend fences -Quebec City
  • TV movie being made about Joseph Brant -Toronto
  • Natives given more control in operating legal services Toronto
  • Dead Blood's alcohol level found to exceed legal limit Lethbridge, Alta.
  • Wanted: native Canadians who want to learn to write Penticton, BC
  • NS law school launches program to encourage native, black students -Halifax
  • Native cultures on the brink -letter to Toronto editor
  • Land transfer for Chapleau Cree -Toronto
  • More about Alberta and Quebec native blockades
  • More about Innu protests over low flights -Toronto
  • Far North is latest battleground in Canadian airlines' war -Yellowknife
  • Missing boy is found thin, dirty -Winnipeg
  • To their health -Thunder Bay editorial
  • Pharmacist fined for refusing a native rubbing alcohol -Edmonton
  • More about missing boy in Winnipeg
  • Trappers help museum focus on native role in region's past -Ottawa
  • More about Sarcee protest over military clean-up
  • The white man's game -treaties, etc. -Toronto
  • Sheriff admits silence on killing -The Pas, Man.
  • Native art: Should it be shown in museum or gallery? Ottawa
  • Rickets found widespread in native reserve -Halifax
  • $2.4 M pact signed -Big Island First Nation -Morson
  • Kahn-Tineta Horn: Her '60s zeal for justice undimmed Ottawa
  • Innu leaders willing to talk -letter to St. John's, Nfld. editor
  • Native alliance formed -Sioux Lookout
  • Reserve 58 opens new housing -Geraldton-Longlac
  • Stangecoming band celebrates new reserve -Fort Frances
  • Native childcare agency almost 50 percent over budget
  • Winnipeg Electricity fix delayed -Fort Hope, Ont.
  • Moving from reserve to city terrifying -Toronto
  • Natives said ready for confrontation over rights Moraviantown, Ont.
  • Walpole Island agriculture steps forward Unified health care is coming -Timmins
  • Temagami band declines invitation -North Bay
  • CESO native program celebrates 20 years -Toronto
Newman, Peter
JWRF/011(08) · File · 1971-1987
Part of John Wadland research files collection

File consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on Peter Newman. This file contains magazine articles, and newspaper clippings. Topics include criticism on Newman's approach to history, opinion pieces on Newman’s inability to fulfill promises, as well as Newman’s writing of realism in political journalism.

Newhouse, David
UPC/007(06) · File · [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of photographs of David Newhouse, a professor of Indigenous Studies within the School of Chanie Wenjack School at Trent University.