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Newsletters
3 · Series · 1987-2007
Part of International Camping Fellowship fonds

Series consists of International Camping Fellowship newsletters from 1987-2007. Series includes a large bound book of newsletters from 1988-1997. ICF newsletters provide specific information related to International Camping Congress (ICC) events, including details about keynote speakers, presentation topics, workshops, and other activities associated with the ICC, and documents the activities, achievements, initiatives, and contributions of the ICF community.

23-013/005(03) · File · Aug. 16 – Aug. 22, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

NORTHERN ONTARIO RAILWAY BLOCKADES:

  • Fresh barricades clog 2 rail routes
  • CP line blocked as Ontario band takes up protest
  • Indifference may fuel militance, lawyer says
  • CP Rail wins injunction against blockade
  • Ojibwa served with order to clear CP line
  • Ojibwa lift CN rail blockade
  • Ojibwa ordered to let trains pass
  • Ojibwa offered top-level attention
  • Ottawa tells CN to clear tracks
  • Trains focus of protests
  • Bleak life on remote reserve triggers Indians' demands
  • Key rail lines to be blocked indefinitely
  • Blockades force Via to cancel trains
  • Blockades set up in Ontario
  • Indians blocking rail lines
  • Blockade disrupts VIA trains
    OKA DISPUTE:
  • Mohawks demand amnesty for bingo
  • Talks resume in Mohawk standoff
  • Time seen running out in Oka talks
  • Army gives in to Mohawk protest
  • Army in place at Mohawk barricades
  • Mohawks balk at talks after troops move up
  • Riot-weary police welcome army relief
  • Oka Mohawks demand new talks, say Warriors not representative
  • Troops moving in to face Mohawks early tomorrow
  • The Oka standoff (Warriors see selves as freedom fighters)
  • Troops to replace police in standoff
  • Federal official is 'optimistic' as talks adjourn
  • Natives and the politics of tobacco
  • Bickering over process bogs down Oka talks
  • Indians doubt Siddon's promise
  • Bourassa considering new move
  • Talks to continue in Montreal today
  • Couple to hold wedding reception circled by troops
  • Some Quebeckers angered by deal
  • Chateauguay enjoys first quiet night since Sunday
  • Military might leaves tiny St. Benoit agog
  • Newlyweds will hold reception amid army base
  • Violence urged if Mohawks attacked
  • Bridge may be mined minister says
  • Standoff may delay start of school year
  • Would-be escaper bound for reserve
  • Alleged French slur at blockade derided
  • Oka cops try new tack
  • Quebec Mohawks resume talks
  • Army moves toward Oka
  • Talks await 24 observers taking posts at barricades
  • Riot erupts as troops approach
  • Journalists' groups condemn police attacks on cameramen
  • Nobel peace prize laureate sees reason in Oka militance
    ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU'S VISIT:
  • Tutu to take up native problems with Mulroney
  • Tutu urges 'justice, fair play' for Canadian native people
    -PROTESTS, LAND CLAIMS AND SELF GOVERNMENT:
  • B.C. vows to call on RCMP
  • UOI harvesting strategy
  • Native cases called landmark decisions
  • First Nations get help
  • Chiefs support new warriors society
    EDUCATION:
  • NTCP: a new generation of teachers
    ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS:
  • Quebec natives' new weapon is Education
  • Temagami faces 'disastrous' days
  • Beyond Bingo
  • Natives threaten court action over GST
  • Toxic tire-fire runoff being stored in lagoons
  • Indian Affairs seeks additional $2-billion
    POLITICS
  • Partisan Manitoba natives join Harper on election trail
  • Chiefs split over offer to meet with Filmon
  • Canada cannot tolerate violence as a political tool
    CRIMES COMMITTED ON NATIVES
  • Raped on reserve, woman awarded $75,000 damages
  • Police probe set into death of native
    EDITORIALS, COMMENTARY, LETTERS:
  • Time to reopen Mercier bridge
  • Where is the Prime Minister of Canada?
  • Tutu and Indians
  • Oka and Indians
  • A bridge too far
  • World Woes overshadow Mulroney's failings
  • How will the civil authorities deal with the
  • Mohawk Warriors' weapons?
  • What Sartre had to say about Oka
  • When bad faith sabotages a system
  • PM's post-Meech words hollow
  • It cannot be business as usual when the barricades come down
  • National Affairs
  • Natives accuse army of spying by night
  • Divide-and-conquer tactics won't work anymore
  • Our leaders go missing just when needed
  • The demands by native leaders for full sovereignty cannot be met
  • No salutes necessary!
  • Home and natives' land ... ?
  • After Oka, no more illusions about natives
  • Bourassa's hesitation over Oka puts him in nightmarish dilemma
  • See how Bourassa handles distinct society in Oka
  • Mulroney's promise far from fulfilment
  • Flawless irony
  • Creative ideas
  • Mulroney thinks American on most foreign policy issues
  • Cultural regeneration vital as winning rights to natives
  • Police protection
  • Mulroney should show some gumption at Oka
  • Tutu's suggestions not appreciated here
  • Bureaucrats too, please
  • Mohawks anticipate retaliation by Quebec
  • Wick's outcasts
  • Media reporters at Oka lacking in enterprise
  • Native housing
  • Natives silenced
  • Political cartoons
    ARTS, CULTURE:
  • Culture Comes To Kwawinga (Fiction)
  • Innu rockers sidestep politics for pure pop sound
    UP COMING EVENTS:
  • Conference on Adolescent Treatment
  • Join the Circle Campaign
  • Mob attacks Mohawks
  • Mohawk chief says agreement near
  • PM warns of bloodshed if Mohawks resist army (Mulroney aims to stop crimes of "extremists")
  • Protest vigil held at Indian Affairs office
  • Families flee reserve under "rain of rocks"
  • Indians say sabotage may follow army move
  • Protest blocks traffic at Tory office in Metro
  • Frightened residents are preparing for the worst
  • What the Mohawks are after
  • Mohawks ask "for peace" at Kanesatake
  • Mohawk Warriors say they'll fight back
  • Women, kids "afraid of war" flee reserve
  • Mohawk standoff steeped in history
  • Sending army against barricades a "declaration of war," chief says
  • "Our spirits are strong" say defiant Mohawks
  • Army sent to remove Mohawk barricades
  • Stop "insanity," Mohawks urge Canadian public
  • Government resolve: to stay in power
  • Anti-Mohawk mobs barring food, observers say
  • Mohawks prepared to open lane on Mercier Bridge (Mohawk move aimed at encouraging talks
  • Ottawa's patience wearing thin, PM says
  • Lumberman willing to negotiate with Indians
  • Mohawks offer olive branch
  • "Special show" by PM boosts Quebec MPs
  • Indian and Northern Affairs-- Media update
  • Warriors represent only themselves, say Six Nations Chiefs
  • Soldier of Fortune editor says Warrior attack could be costly
  • All are Warriors
  • Supplies depleted
  • Lodged complaint
  • Pessimism about chances for progress in Negotiations
  • Native Blockades darken our image abroad
  • Mohawk talks stall on guns, amnesty
  • Assault would be folly, Erasmus says
  • Oka talks vigorous but tense
  • End blockade, bishops tell Mohawks
  • 3 Kanesatake Mohawks in court, more arrests planned over gun battle
  • South Shore residents block natives
  • Army provocation could start a "bloodbath", chief warns
  • Key talks pending in "tense" Mohawk" standoff
  • Warrior official Thompson charged with possessing cigarettes
  • Cannot tolerate anarchy, Justice Minister declares
  • Soldiers advance, halt talks at Oka
  • Talks break down as tension increases at Oka
  • Warriors' smuggling, gambling key to Oka dispute, chief says
  • Mohawks, soldiers in face-to-face standoff
  • Campbell rejects amnesty for Mohawks who break law
  • 44% believe natives are treated badly
  • Mohawks tricked Quebec, minister says (Talks at Oka "arduous")
  • Time almost up for Oka talks, Bourassa says
  • Mohawks table demands in talks to end standoffs
  • Indian war veterans shoved by Quebec police atblockade
  • Food relief organizers -plead for support
  • Police pullout removes major irritant(Talks to resume after breather)
  • Church condemns "racism"
  • Army to relieve police at Quebec's standoffs

FOR COMMENTARY, EDITORIALS, LETTERS AND POLITICAL CARTOONS
REGARDING THE OKA DISPUTE SEE EDITION 90-33.2.

23-013/003(11) · File · Apr. 24 - May 23, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

INNU - NATO LOW LEVEL FLIGHTS:

  • NATO members shelve plans for fighter base
  • NATO rejects Goose Bay for base, Innu protesters claim victory
  • Low-level flights - Commons Debates
  • Labrador town awaits NATO-base decision
  • Innu group disputes NATO version of jet crash
  • The unconsidered option
    MEECH LAKE:
  • Committee perpetuates myth of 2 founding nations, natives say
  • MPs favor key "add-ons" after Meech accord passes
    LAND CLAIMS:
  • Land claim controversy shatters cottage-country calm
  • Ottawa offers band $2.47 million deal
  • Webequie reserve in the wind
    THE ENVIRONMENT, PROTESTS:
    Water:
  • Health hazard found in Ohsweken tap water tied to treatment plant
  • Band won't drink water
  • Nipigon hits "panic button" for tap water
  • Hagersville effect not as bad as feared
  • Severn bands battle dams
    Temagami:
  • More battles predicted for Temagami
  • Act now or lose forests, group says
    AKWESASNE:
  • Casino owner predicts chief will lose bid for re-election
  • Mohawks worry that culture being lost to lure of gambling
  • Gambling on tradition
  • RCMP was on alert
  • CTV may sue over cop raid
  • Gambling opponent charged in murder of Akwesasne Mohawk
  • Mohawk murder charge laid
  • Mohawk police break ties with Quebec Police
  • 4 men held in reserve slaying
  • Mohawk slain in bar
  • Warriors angry about drug raid
  • Officials ignored Indian 's prophecy
  • Area Indians feel sad, stunned by violence among brothers
  • Grand Portage to get casino
    BUSINESS:
  • Native firms growing Air Creebec chief say s
  • White corn industry booming, gets boost
  • Greenland sealskin saga
  • Wawatay wins former Sioux Lookout radar base
    BEDO Newsletter:
  • New programming in Economic Development
  • From the Editor's Desk
  • Training ... that will make the difference
  • Calmeadow loan program
  • In harmony with the environment
  • Economic Development the future
  • News Flash
  • Reflections and Projections
  • Meet your BEDO
    HEALTH:
  • Province will train doctors in North
  • Fasting for better health care
  • Native AIDS epidemic feared
  • Infection sparks personal crusade
  • Native services set to combat AIDS
  • "Shaman lady" took away illness, man with AIDS virus says
  • Diabetes spreading quickly among groups
    EDUCATION:
  • Few colleges, universities operate special programs
  • Counselling service
  • Education key to a better life, counselor says
  • Twelve nations become one mind
  • Are you Native and graduating from high school?
  • Big Trout Lake syllabics teacher doesn't go by the books
  • Six Nations Council Meeting
  • Funding for literacy groups
  • Students walk out to protest crest ban
  • Pupils fight Redmen ban
    ARTS AND CULTURE:
  • Government urged to restore funding
  • An art form that helped shape our country
  • Art '90 exhibit gives expression to variety of Native experiences
  • Native spirit
  • Out of the pens of babes does pure art come
  • Thomas King and Lenore Keeshig-Tobias discuss native literature
  • California Cree medicine woman's Canadian link
  • A remarkable woman
  • Six Nations festival celebrates friendship
  • Natives absent in historical plaques
  • Native awareness week - Commons Debates
  • Arctic cruise to silent splendor
  • Island hopping can be enjoyed close to home
  • The quest for truth and purpose in life
  • Feminists proclaim a new era
23-013/004(05) · File · Jun. 16 – Jun. 20, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

MEECH LAKE:

  • Please see Newsclippings, Edition 90-25.1 for special coverage of Meech Lake.
    EDUCATION:
  • Sod-turning for new school
  • Juggling the budget to keep promises
  • Students would rather go to jail than pay fine for trespassing
  • Fines paid
  • Increasing Native literacy
  • High school gang fights threaten the education of some Native students
    POLICING, JUSTICE:
  • Braids now allowed for native officers
  • Police, natives try to close the gap
  • Controversy grows over police braids
  • Number of arrest rise after youth program cut
  • Aborigines caught in cycle of despair
    AKWESASNE:
  • "It's not over bingo"
  • Police occupation of Akwesasne Mohawk territory
    THE ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH:
  • Temagami wilderness agreement unsatisfactory to many
  • Safe water
  • Water ban lifted
  • Indians want to handle health
    EDITORIALS, LETTERS:
  • A legitimate use of crime statistics
  • Native self-policing
  • The curse of civilization
  • No objectivity in low-level assessment
  • I am a Canadian
    HISTORY, ARTS AND CULTURE:
  • Indian chief on wheels
  • The lost tribe of Georgian Bay
  • Indian village excavated on path of 403 extension
  • Ancestral remains uncovered in southern Ontario
  • Government rejects protests over purchase of native artifacts
  • Kids enjoy Indian lore at day camp
  • From igloo to art gallery
  • Carving or sculpture?
  • Native rights and universal images
  • Indian Country paints picture of the dreams, hopes of natives
  • Indian athletes shine in history
  • Thunder Bay no longer rough but always ready for fun
  • Inuit hunters harvest polar bears for cash
  • Native grads keep occasion all in the family
  • Commons Debates - Literacy
  • N.W.T. will try to teach tolerance
  • Native students succeed at Daniel Mac
  • Unity sealed
  • Are you Native and graduating from high school?
    HEALTH:
  • Battle against killer AIDS supported by Atlantic chiefs
  • Micmacs coming to grips with AIDS
  • AIDS: Breaking the silence
  • A Deadly Fear: AIDS
  • Native nurses tackle tricky family abuse issues
    ARTS AND CULTURE:
  • Vetrans observe Decoration Day
  • Wet Bread and Cheese weekend
  • Elder holds key to studying site
  • Elder shares his knowledge of sacred belts
  • Biggest swindle in history of Canada
  • Altering our notions of the Indian
  • History, heroes, horses on Brantford getaway
  • Cree artist outlived reputation as a dangerous man
  • Hard and Soft
  • Ontario Arts Council First Nations Grants
  • Grey Owl from the shadows
  • Professional troupe dedicated to natives
  • COUNCIL FOR CHANGE, PS 2000
  • Racism to be probed in Indian Affairs
  • Public Service 2000
  • PS 2000 more than PR exercise
  • "Downsized" public service still growing
  • Red Tape: Rules and rigidity choke public services
  • Sex, lies, and black-market Bach
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
23-013/005(01) · File · Jul. 31 – Aug. 6, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

OKA DISPUTE:

  • Mohawks dismiss Quebec's threat
  • Groups say Ku Klux Klan is active in Chateauguay
  • Adviser fears Bourassa set to send troops
  • Solidarity run
  • Klan moving in, rights groups say
  • Bourassa fires ultimatum at Oka Mohawks
  • Bourassa sets 48-hour ultimatum for Indians
  • Quebec rejects "unacceptable" Indian plan
  • Fury in the ranks
  • An ancient Warrior code
  • Mohawks claim deal in works to start talks
  • Residents protest Mohawk blockade
  • Residents strike back
  • Police ordered not to view tapes
  • Quebec okays observers for standoff
  • Gunshots at Oka put police force, Mohawks on alert
  • Baby clothes delayed by police at Oka
  • Blockade reporters rebel at restrictions of armed Warriors
  • Angry commuters threaten to raise counter blockade
  • Oka land-purchase plan highlights flaws in claims settlement process
  • It has rights too, village says
  • 12,000 protest Mohawk blockade
  • End bridge blockade, furious merchants insist ·
  • Antique store vandalized after owner urges "reason"
  • Indians deny militants move in
  • Minister must see Mohawks, Chretien says
  • Mohawks hail observer plan as "breakthrough"
  • Siddon rejects "barricades", turns attention to B.C. claims
  • Oka refuses to sell land until Mohawks disarm
  • Standoff seen hurting Canada
  • Police barricade can stay up, judge rules
  • It's up to the Mohawks now, Quebec says
  • U.N. body ponders Oka dispute
  • Ontario, B.C. Indians slow traffic over land claims
  • Bridge blockade
  • 2 Mohawks file class-action suit for losses caused by police barricade
  • Teacher has harrowing ride to school
  • Human rights official arrives from Paris
  • Business is booming for canteen operator
  • Unity dance part of Hamilton protest supporting Oka
  • Six Nations and New Credit residents rally to the aid of Mohawks at Oka
  • Positions harden as Quebec standoffs continue
  • Micmacs join Mohawk protest
  • A stand of support
  • Natives block lane of Hwy.69
    LAND CLAIMS, NATIVE 8IGHTS:
  • RCMP deny any move on dam
  • Indians threaten water supply to Albertans
  • Indians reject view of history
  • Ottawa land bid withdrawn, lawyer says
  • Ottawa won't pay B.C. land claim bill
  • Feds, natives sign deal
    JUSTICE:
  • Aboriginal justice system recommended
  • Indians to get own courts and police
  • Council asked to review remarks
    FOREST FIRES:
  • Fires threaten 2 communities
  • Water bombers may be sent to northern fires
    HEALTH AND HOUSING:
  • Community control aids native health
  • Trio's tugboat journey to aid Inuit kids
  • Natives say Lalonde owes them apology
  • Lalonde reverses on native housing
  • Bad solution to Vaniers vicious circle
  • Indians protest Vanier bid to limit native housing
    EDITORIALS, COMMENTARY, LETTERS:
  • To address native land claims
  • Oka talks needs clear focus
  • Public support crucial in Oka debacle
  • Negotiate with the first people
  • Haunted by history's lively ghosts
  • Did Harry Swain really misspeak?
  • Don't let Peterson ignore this issue
  • Anti-native racism exposed in wake of Oka tragedy
  • A meeting of nations
  • White politics drive Mohawks into warrior mode
  • The Indians have not forgotten their warriors
  • Japanese Canadian discover a common cause
  • When Ottawa tries to "manage" opinion
  • Lessons of the Iroquois
  • Both sides deserve better
  • Mohawks locked in power struggle
  • The days are past when an Indian Affairs minister could sit out the job
  • How TV twists the truth
  • Oka dispute evokes bitter memories
  • We must recognize our native's dignity
  • Respect and honor bestowed upon a new Canadian hero
  • Let's not allow a golf course to ruin us
  • Letters to Toronto Sun
  • Police search young people
  • License only natives to hunt and fish
  • Quebec, federal forces are gang of criminals
  • Enforcing letter of law can't be done at Oka
  • Remove the government guns at Oka
  • Golf course sale raise more questions
  • Letter to Toronto Sun
  • Ottawa should give Oka land to Mohawks
  • Ben Wicks cartoons
  • Does history have a lesson for those using loaded words on Oka?
    ARTS, CULTURE:
  • Indians' fish tales tall, but true
  • From the solemn to the casual
  • "Ancient images" on national tour
  • Spirit, rage fuel Baker's potent poetry
23-013/005(02) · File · Jul. 2 – Aug. 14, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

OKA DISPUTE:

  • Observers arrive for talks to end Mohawk standoff
  • Tear gas fired again in skirmish at bridge
  • Residents, police clash near Mercier Bridge
  • Mercier Bridge crowd tear-gassed by police
  • Police tear-gas mob protesting native blockade
  • Mohawks split over continued bridge blockade
  • Mohawk talks back on track after fears on army eased
  • Mohawks applaud mediator's approach
  • Can't compare troop's roles, PM says
  • Ottawa ready to be patient in ending of standoffs, PM says
  • Soldiers awaiting orders on Oka
  • Province to cover losses from standoff
  • Calling the shots behind the Mohawk mask
  • Ottawa sending troops to Quebec
  • UN questions Canada's image
  • Quebec will control army at blockades
  • PM sends in troops to defuse Mohawk standoffs
  • Army's role at barricades still unclear
  • Bridge to Montreal open "very soon", chief predicts
  • Mohawks relieved police to move out
  • Oka council okays land deal
  • Oka residents flee, fear battle looming
  • Troops might not go to Oka, military commander says
  • Mohawk might
  • Oka residents flee possible showdown
  • Ottawa still refuses to negotiate
  • Churches ask PM to avert violence
  • Frustrated residents demand army be sent in
  • Native activist fears bloodshed
  • Prime Minister's statement on Oka
  • Oka relief drive still underway locally
    ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU'S VISIT:
  • Tutu supports Ojibwa
  • Ojibways warn Tutu of more violence
  • Tutu upholds native struggle
  • Tutu says he's willing to help out in Oka crisis
  • Many faiths to see Tutu in Metro
  • Ojibwa leaders keen to share problems with Tutu
  • Live television exchange planned
    CHIEFS' MEETING:
  • Chiefs demand premiers open annual meeting
  • Chiefs fail to crash meeting of premiers
    RACE RELATIONS, SOCIAL JUSTICE:
  • Report recommends working together to cure
  • Sioux Lookout social illness
  • Angeconeb resigns from Race Relations Committee
  • Chiefs appeal for children and justice
    LAND CLAIMS:
  • Policy reversed on land claims
  • B.C. will join talks on land claims
  • B.C. gets warning on claims
    THE ENVIRONMENT, PROTESTS:
  • Council supports move to ban MNR pesticide spraying program
  • Chemicals meet federal guidelines says MNR district forest manager
  • Father and daughter will risk health to stop chemical spraying
  • 400 protest Lake Huron nuclear plant
  • Indians block CN rail lines
  • Chief issues warning
  • Cree compensation deal in jeopardy
    ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS:
  • Indians join non-natives to build posh tourist resort
  • Natives join developer
  • Officials differ on future of Temagami
  • Seven bands start fuel supply business in Pickle Lake
  • Two bands get grants to expand television service
  • Bands minding their own business
  • Communications society struggles to stay on air following funding cuts
    HOUSING:
  • Affordable housing project launched on
  • Cornwall Island
  • Talks aim to end Third-World conditions for native groups
    EDUCATION:
  • Literacy program helps Natives to upgrade their literacy skills
    EDITORIALS, COMMENTARY, LETTERS :
  • One law for all
  • No role for Tutu
  • Inching towards an Oka solution
  • The Mohawks should come to the table
  • An ultimatum sure to backfire
  • Racism is alive and well in Canada
  • National mythology behavior lesson
  • Did Bourassa dither too long over crisis in Oka?
  • Standoff in Quebec remains perilous
  • Bourassa unlikely to send in the troops
  • MNR's fire-fighting "strategy" in North baffling
  • Wick's Outcasts
  • Carrying a gun no way to negotiate
  • Bring Clark to Oka
  • Native peoples want no more token gestures
  • Let red ribbons fly across Canada in support of our native people
  • Native justice system long overdue
    ARTS, CULTURE:
  • Focus on native issues
  • Obomsawin kicks off Reel World after visit
  • Winnipeg wants to build road over The Forks
  • Longs for old ways
  • Chippewa powwow a chance to promote Indians' culture
  • Powwow enjoys international popularity
  • Grand River Pow Wow - Bigger and Better
  • Powwow helps preserve culture
  • Native people changing ways of seeing
    OP COMING EVENTS:
  • Conference on Adolescent Treatment
  • Join the Circle Campaign
23-013/003(09) · File · May 2 – May 8, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

Akwesasne:

  • Reserve police force suggested by Cuomo
  • Lack of autonomy cited in Akwesasne violence
  • Mohawk victim was innocent bystander
  • Sovereignty is solution to strife
  • Gunfire and gambling
  • "Death list" keeps Mohawks from returning
  • Mohawks wait out strife in government barracks
  • Gun silent but the fury remains
  • Akwesasne counts cost of blood
  • Stability possible native leaders say
  • Ruling body proposed for entire reserve
  • A cautious return
  • Single native governing body may be solution
  • Police peacekeepers will stay until reserve safe
  • Warriors have hit list
  • Five governments meet
  • Show of force halts gambling war
  • Cadieux defends reserve inaction
  • The Akwesasne war: why can't the Mohawks settle it themselves?
  • Split by a river and a mishmash of differences
  • Mohawk factions fight nine-hour gun battle
  • Police enter Mohawk reserve; army sends backup
  • Emergency talks set to quell native violence
  • Police asked to stop gun battles
  • Prepared to send in troops - Cuomo tells Mohawks
  • 500 Mohawks waiting off reserve amid peace talks in casino war
  • Akwesasne battle creating refugees
    The environment, protests:
    Temagami:
  • Deft dealing
  • Temagami not yet saved, group says
    James Bay:
  • Quebec Inuit reconsider Hydro project
    Land claims:
  • Final Arctic agreement signed in Canada's largest land claim
    Adoption:
  • Canadian-born Indian angry over adoption by family in U.S.
  • Manitoba Indians try to trace lost generation"
    Justice:
  • Canada urged to bar extradition of Indian
  • Women's prisons
  • Native women's advocacy group
  • Native volunteers needed in crime prevention
  • Racism still a problem, Alberta native probe told
  • Reserve radicals terrorize elders
    Health:
  • Cree with AIDS wants to help other Indians with the illness
  • The joy and sorrow of sobering up Alkali Lake
  • Remains mailed in jam box
    Youth, education, culture:
  • Commons debates: Aboriginal people, needs of youth
  • Support urged for native languages foundation
  • Marshall urges young natives to be proud
  • Hopi travels globe with message
  • Native educator helps break down teepee stereotype
  • Native school concept pushed
  • Sweat-lodge tradition arrives
  • 32 native students to graduate with degrees
  • Native graduates "beat odds"
  • Nicola Valley Institute of Technology
  • Interest groups doom school's "Redmen" logo
  • Nature of lake accurately dates Indian villages
  • Lessons in democracy from the Big Stones
  • Buffalo hunts vivid memory
    Arts:
  • Her poetry has phases, like the moon
  • Poet strives for "authentic" sketches of natives
  • Native designer makes fashion statement
  • Retailing tradition at Treeline Trappings
    Editorials, letters:
  • Akwesasne
  • Do we really care?
  • Law and disorder
  • Who's in charge here?
  • Problems allowed to build
  • Chiefs must work for peace
  • Mohawk unrest obscures native entrepreneurship
  • Hope remains for Meech Lake
  • Abolish racist legacy
  • CTV report on Akwesasne was factual
  • Bad for the natives
  • Reinstate funding for native programs
23-013/001(06) · File · July 28 - Aug. 6, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • Manitoba natives seek Queen's help in school dispute -London
  • Haida claim to Moresby is delaying federal park - Queen Charlotte Islands, B.C.
  • Promises not enough to sustain logging town - Sandspit, B.C.
  • Mohawks set to vote on casinos at reserve - Toronto
  • Forest fire victims head home - Winnipeg
  • Native 'Fred Astaire' still willing, nimble at 71 - Sarcee Reserve, Alta.
  • B.C. grants new reserve to Indian band forced off land - Prince Rupert, B.C.
  • RCMP were diligent, native inquiry told - The Pas , Man.
  • Alberta native bands still suffering year after reserves ravaged by fire - Sunchild-O'Chiese Reserves, Alta.
  • Immunity deal void if witness lies, aboriginal justice probe told - The Pas, Man.
  • Sovereignty of Mohawks issue in case - Hogansburg, N~Y.
  • Native feminist, 54, spends time fighting for women, families - Inuvik, N.W.T.
  • The hidden price of power exports - Ottawa
  • Natives did too little to bring teen's killers to trial, inquiry told - The Pas, Man.
  • Let us not neglect our native people - letter to Ottawa editor
  • Singing to save the trees - Vancouver
  • The new lineup (Ont. cabinet) is ... - Toronto
  • More about Osborne case
  • Chemical Valley spills bedevil Ontario town - Sarnia
  • Excavating an Indian village - Toronto
  • Indians' quest for an equal place - letter to Toronto editor
  • Nurses on reserves threaten to resign - Winnipeg
  • More about Akwesasne blockade
  • Crews fly to northeastern Ontario blazes - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Hand-picked officers to teach race relations to police forces - Toronto
  • More about Osborne case
  • More about Akwesasne blockade
  • Divide and conquer - Toronto editorial
  • No move yet by district natives to sign defense pact - Thunder Bay
  • Four native students help in post-secondary program - Sault Ste. Marie
    • More about forest fire danger - Parry Sound
  • Animation of Inuit legend - Ottawa
  • Concern for economic future - Temagami
  • Chief asks annexation delay - Blind River
  • More about Akwesasne blockade
  • More about Temagami
  • Other native groups will seek status as bands - Ottawa
  • Sharing the cost of the fires - Winnipeg editorial
  • An educational failure - Winnipeg
  • Treatment centre opens at Rat Portage - Kenora
  • More about Temagami
  • Cultural genocide and child care - Toronto
  • Cape Croker basket weaver - Owen Sound
23-013/004(01) · File · May 30 – June 1, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

ABORGINAL RIGHTS:

  • Natives say fishing rights victory will help with land claims
  • Natives acclaim court's decision
  • Governments can't ignore aboriginal rights, court rules
  • Impact of ruling on native fishing is disputed
  • Provinces must respect native rights, judges rule
  • Aboriginal rights
  • Unhappy hunting
    JUSTICE:
  • Give "culturally sensitive" award, Donald Marshall's lawyer argues
  • Nova Scotia accused of trying to limit Marshall compensation
  • N.S. judges still insist Marshall shares blame for murder conviction
  • Special compensation urged in Marshall case
  • Marshall judges facing inquiry
  • Defense lawyers want full disclosure
  • Donald Marshall's lawyers billed $588,000
  • Donald Marshall to blame for conviction, probe told
    POLICING:
  • Chiefs blast Ottawa policing report
  • RCMP changes policy for natives
  • Darts and Laurels
  • Shooting of J.J. Harper
    MEECH LAKE:
  • Doer vows to stall Meech if women, natives ignored
  • Native leaders press for role at conference
  • Natives want to participate in conference
  • Commons Debates - Aboriginal Affairs
    AKWESASNE:
  • Pro-gambling candidate's victory sparks charges of "irregularities"
  • Gambling supporter wins election as chief of embattled Mohawk tribe
  • Tensions remain high on Mohawk reserve
  • Natives hire lawyer in bid to oust leader
  • N.Y. police end blockade of the Akwesasne reserve
  • Mohawk Warrior in court on weapons charges
    NATIVE GOVERNMENT:
  • Walpole Island council getting back to normal
    THE ENVIRONMENT, PROTESTS:
  • Gull Bay's tree cutting called model
  • Natives pushing for bigger share of forests
  • Native forestry effort encouraged to continue
  • Natives must work for more control of forests
  • Hagersville Tire Fire cleanup costs pegged at 15 million
  • Hydro progect's impact on environment to be assessed
  • Crees call Quebec hydro hearings a sham
  • The cold facts about testing nuclear arms in the Arctic
  • Cadmium, mercury found in flesh of Arctic whales
  • Innu ecstatic with NATO base decision, but know training flights will continue
  • Innu fear toxic fumes from crash site of F-16s
  • Innu question claims of high-altitude crash
    EDUCATION:
  • Convicted trespassers will appeal or opt for jail
  • Student group blasts native prosecutions
  • Prosecutions anger students
  • Native women take control of airwaves
  • Meech - Lake accord will add to plight of our native people
  • What hypocrites we Canadians are
  • Canada's treatment of native people is a cause for national shame
  • Wick's outcasts
    Upcoming events:
  • Images '90
23-013/001(01) · File · June 22- July 4, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes:

  • Temagami battle could have been settled years ago Toronto commentary
  • Inquiry lifts 18-year veil of secrecy on murder The Pas, Man.
  • Indians guided Mackenzie to Pacific -letter to Toronto editor
  • Judge won't rule on police notebooks -Winnipeg
  • Alberta MP, Sarcee chief stampede toward resolving bridge blockade- Calgary
  • Land deal with Metis called breakthrough -Kikino, Alta.
  • Different -in a manner of speaking -Toronto commentary
  • Native people want more respect -Toronto commentary
  • Collecting native art riddled with controversy -Toronto
  • Archeologists losing battle with site looters -Toronto
  • Land-claim deal upsets Nfld. Tory -St. John's, Nfld.
  • Time of slings & arrows for Cadieux -Toronto commentary
  • Health care payments violate treaty rights, natives tell Ontario -Toronto
  • Mohawks win special rights on boarder taxes -Cornwall
  • Alberta Indians block armed forces use of land -Calgary
  • Five centuries of misunderstanding Indians -Toronto book review
  • Panel calls for native health authority -Muskrat Dam
  • BC Indians given tax break on reserves -Vancouver
  • National registry set up to reunite aboriginal families -Vancouver
  • Soviets to let Inuit attend Arctic parley -Ottawa
  • More about health panel report
  • Kee Way Win band to continue pushing for status as reserve -Thunder Bay
  • Debris cleaned up -Pikangikum
  • Temagami logging road too costly, critic says -Toronto
  • Mohawks join fight in support of Crees -Montreal
  • Natives lose bid in persuading Commons committee on education policy -Ottawa
    -Summer Beaver's prospects for new school called good Thunder Bay
  • Band opens Gardens Village apartment complex -North Bay
  • More for native education -Winnipeg editorial
  • Demonstration draws attention to education and budget cutbacks -Ottawa
  • More about education as treaty right
  • Canadians just can't stop honoring native treaties -letter to Sault Ste. Marie editor
23-013/003(12) · File · May 18 – May 29, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

INTERNATIONAL VISIT:

  • Trip to Osnaburg by Desmond Tutu
    BUSINESS:
  • Greater GST relief sought by Indians
  • Foundation's loan program expanding to non-natives
  • Dress business expanding into new building on Tyendinaga reserve
  • Down Home shop marks 256th business on S.N .
  • Tourism: Natives are sitting on a gold mine
  • Natives overcoming barriers
  • Native youths urged to become active
  • Ministry announces grant for Sandy Lake
    LAND CLAIMS, TREATIES:
  • Supreme Court ruling on treaty called victory for natives in Quebec
  • Indians hail "historic judgment" on 1760 treaty
  • Land selection hits a snag in Delta
    MEECH LAKE:
  • We must keep talking
  • Oral Question Period - Commons Debates
  • Special Commons Committee proposals
    AKWESASNE:
  • Pro-gambler faces weapons charge
  • Mohawks protest police on reserve
  • Minnesota casino looks to Ontario
  • News editor out on bail in reserve killing
  • Tony Laughing discovers he has no deal on avoiding jail
  • On St. Regis Mohawk Reservation, dogs prove trooper's best friends
  • Warrior spokesman charged in dispute at police roadblock
  • Lawyer claims police out of line during arrest
  • "Lousy shot" George not murdering type
  • Cuomo says traditionals to have role
    POLICE RELATIONS, JUSTICE:
  • Rights body seeks probe of police-relations
  • Native justice system encouraged
    EDUCATION:
  • Natives push for aboriginal language education
  • Unity sealed
  • Native students get taste of Metro
  • Native students need role model
  • Webequie school empty since March
  • School year slipping away for Webequie students
  • Protesters merely exercising their rights, lawyer says
  • Are you native and graduating from High School?
    THE ENVIRONMENT, PROTESTS:
  • Downtrodden hold the key to saving the planet
  • Time running out
  • Ten Temagami protesters to be tried sometime in September
  • NATO defense officials nix base on Innu land
  • NWT, natives complain Defense changing tune
  • Natives upset over jet base
  • Minister gave warning on Indian funds
  • Vancouver Island Indian bands want compensation
    HEALTH:
  • Fasting for better health care -- Part 1
    ARTS AND CULTURE:
  • Wild game gets "canned" in Peawanuck
  • Timmins gathering has become a tradition
  • Paula Gunn Allen
  • Lessons that natives can teach whites
  • Puppets of their own past
  • A life in spirals
  • AGO exhibits new Inuit donation
  • National Museum home to 400,000 pieces of the Yukon
  • Blackfoot artifacts are returned to Alberta
  • Native theatre group
  • Papers will try to continue
  • CP establishes native scholarship
    TRAVEL:
  • More the merrier in Heritage Year on Manitoulin
  • Head-Smashed-In lives on to recall buffalo glory
  • Young brave suffered for curiosity
  • Danger and beauty on Ellesmere Island
    EDITORIALS, LETTERS:
  • Tear it up and start again
  • Witness to native betrayal
  • Stop shuffling ministers
  • Warriors fall to Trickster
  • 200 years ago animals were fair game
  • Rename Victoria Day
    UPCOMING EVENTS:
  • Pow Wow Summer
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
23-013/001(12) · File · Sept. 14 - Oct. 10, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • Churchill is the solution - Toronto commentary
  • Dredging halt demanded by Walpole Island - Toronto
  • Shots fired as buses leave bingo parlor - Cornwall Island
  • Band extends school boycott over buildings - Ohsweken
  • Ottawa using Indian funds as source of cheap loans, band says - Toronto
  • Marshall case judges cannot be questioned, Supreme Court rules - Ottawa
  • Native system of justice is possible: - Sioux Lookout ex-grand chief
  • Public review expected for Jackfish power plans - Thunder Bay
  • Native self-govt hinges on changing opinions: leader - Thunder Bay
  • Bones unearthed at Whitefish reserve - Sioux Narrows
  • Group fighting for Shoal Lake mine gets nod for grant - Winnipeg
  • 9 protesting jets over Innu land dragged from ·govt sit-in- Toronto
  • Manitoulin chiefs seeking cash settlement for lands - Gore Bay
  • Almost 1 in 4 family murders involves natives - Toronto
  • More about Six Nations schools
  • Low-level jets draw legal flack - Toronto commentary
  • Manitoba native-justice inquiry holds up a mirror with ugly reflections - Toronto commentary
  • Museum scraps plans for native showcase - Ottawa
  • Racism in 1971 fed coverup of killing, native probe told - Winnipeg
  • A headdress for a new chief - Toronto
  • More about the Manitoba justice inquiry
  • Animal rights activists launch anti-fur protests - Toronto
  • Native producer hopes tape will help reduce racism - Ottawa
  • Natives should take lesson from Japanese: native MP - Edmonton
  • Native mental health conference in Thunder Bay
  • Native justice system a threat to charter, attorney general says - Ottawa
  • Why don't we work with nature instead of fighting it - Toronto commentary
  • Cadieux: we need more places like technical school - Belleville
  • Minister promises more funding - Belleville
  • The sky's the limit for these natives - Belleville
  • Tyendinaga institute opens aerospace program for natives - Kingston
  • More about Walpole Island dredging concerns
  • Native Canadians focus of church events - Kingston
  • The Temagami road protest - Sault Ste. Marie editorial
  • Six Nations claims Edinburgh Square - Ohsweken
  • Lack of funds cited as mining problem - Dryden
  • Sarnia force hires first native female
  • Looking out for aboriginal rights - Ottawa commentary