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UPC/017(11) · File · [197-] to [200-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos of Trent Varsity Rowing (mixed teams, men, and women) rowing down the Otonabee, racing in Head of the Trent, loading into their boats, carrying their boats , working out on rowing simulators, and team photos. 4X, 8X, and singles are mostly pictured. A few doubles.
Head of the Trent photos showing crowds lining the river banks and bridge to cheer on the rowers in their Trent attire.
Many good close up photos of the rowers on boats.

Names: ? Adams, ? Ferguson, ? Smith, ? Kostashuk, ? Coglem, ? Heron, ? Bruncer, Christine Bell, Lyse Boyce, Louise Holt, Laurie ?, Holly ?, Patti ?, Christine ?, Suzie? ?, Susan Neale, Andrea ?, Patti ?, Margot ?, Brian Saunderson, Terry Paul, John Houlding, Harold Backer, Rob Marland, Bruce Chadwick.

Students- Sports: Swimming
UPC/017(16) · File · [197-?] to [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Action shot photos taken during intermural and competitive swim races (diving in and swimming in the lanes).
Photos of students and families playing in the pool, some on intertubes.
Photos of Lifeguarding, CPR, swimming, and diving lessons being taught. (Young kids in lots of photos)
Team photos, swimmer portraits, and students posing for photos.

Trent 1981 Womens Swim Team: Reg Chappell (coach), Janet McLellen, Sheila Kinlaid, Maria ?, Barb Kettle, Tracy ?.

Students- Sports: Skiing
UPC/017(13) · File · [198-] to [199-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Mostly action shots of people cross country skiing around campus. Good views of Bata Library and the Otonabee River can be seen in the background. A few downhill/ski jumping photographs. Student skier portraits.

Students- Sports: Hockey
UPC/017(08) · File · [197-] to [198-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos of in game plays, many team photos and photos of the team in the dressing rooms. Player portraits, photos of the team celebrating a win, and photos of players with trophies. Intermural teams, Trent Varsity team, Team Trend, and different teams from the colleges all depicted. A few outdoor hockey games are photographed along with the indoor rink games.

UPC/017(09) · File · [197-?] to [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Team photo of the cheerleading team, many action shots and portraits of runners, photos of people using gym equipment. View of the athletic centre from across the river. Photos of the relay team included. Runners are pictured racing all over campus, clear image of them running across Stephenson bridge from Lady Eaton College.

Students- Sports: Rugby
UPC/017(12) · File · [197-?] to [199-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos of in game battles, games against Brock University and England pictured. Photos of practices, alumni games, and scrimmages. Many good close ups of players. A few team photos.

Players named: Jeff Boal, Nigel Roulet, Dan Murphy, David Glassco, P.S.B. Wilson, Naomichi Aoki.

Students- Sports: Volleyball
UPC/017(17) · File · [198-?] to [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos of games, both competitive and intermural. Photos of practices including shots with coaches. Team photos, player portraits, and college teams. All look to be played in the Athletic Centre.

Students- Sports: Soccer
UPC/017(14) · File · [2000-2010], Predominant [198-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photographs depicting games at Justin Chiu Stadium, in the Athletic Centre, and on the Athletics Field. Photos also of players resting and cheering on the side of the fields/court and team photos.

Students- Sports: Football
UPC/017(07) · File · 1966, [197-?] to [198-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos showing football teams practicing and playing. As well as team photos and photos of players in a huddle with their coach.
Photos of the women's flag football team from the 1980s playing in a game.
Photos of Trent students having fun playing football in the summer and winter. The summer game is being played in front of 741 George Street N and the winter game is played in front of the Drumlin.

UPC/017(06) · File · [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

A team photo, an in game photo of two female players fighting for the ball, 2 portrait photos of a blonde female player posing with her field hockey stick in front of the athletic centre, and a portrait of a player named Cori Carveth posing on the field with her stick.

IMC-018 · File · 1818-1924
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

Folder 1 of 2: Materials consist of 14 photographs including St. George's Church, Gore's Landing; Richard C.P. Brown; Col. Robert Brown; Frederick William Barron; Hariette Sarah Barron; Hariette Sarah Gore (1818-1893); Thomas Sinclair Gore (1819-1854); John & Lizzie Muskrat, Hiawatha Indian Reserve; Rathburn's drive of logs on Rice Lake, 1898; Cookery and sleeping crib on Trent River, Rathburn's drive; Boat going through saw logs on Trent River; "White House" Rice Lake Hotel, Henley Sorby - Rice Lake canoeing; "Glenavy", Gore's Landing, ca. 1880; Archibald Lampman (photographic reproduction).

Folder 2 of 2: Colonel Robert Brown scrapbook (Col. Brown was a colonel of the Royal Scotch Fusiliers. Thomas Traill and J.W.D. Moodie were in his regiment). The scrapbook includes newspaper clippings pertaining to his interest in USA relations, campaigns abroad, and matters relating to colonial affairs in Upper Canada; it also includes several original paintings of noteworthy soldiers with whom Brown had come into contact. Also included is a painting of an Indigenous woman entitled "One of the Indian Women who received His R.H. the Prince of Wales... 7th Sept. 1860."

Also included are 4 original sketches: 1. [original] Gore homestead at Gore's Landing, Ontario - a watercolour from memory by T.S. Gore Jr.; 2. "Hazelbank, Rice Lake"; 3. "Mavis Bank, Rice Lake' by J.T. Mercer (cottage); 4. "Plan of St. George's Church Yard, Rice Lake". Also, an original Christmas greeting card with sketch from Gerald & Ivy Hayward, New York, 1924; photographic reproductions of Rice Lake sketches by Charles Fothergill and an offprint of a photo of Fothergill; miscellaneous sketches and notes.

Delaney, Reverend Lloyd
Students- Sports: Cycling
UPC/017(04) · File · [1981], [1989-1990], [1996]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Photos of cyclers getting ready for their events. 1 photo from Tour de Trent 1981, 1 photo from a triathlon in 1989/1990, and two photos of campus mail couriers on bikes. The Tour de Trent racer is on Nassau Mills road with a clear view of Champlain College behind him. The triathlon racer is standing inside the Athletic Centre holding his bike. The two mail couriers are standing with their bikes in an empty parking lot on Eastbank.

Students- Sports: Broomball
UPC/017(03) · File · [198-?], [possibly between 2009 and 2012]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Many photos of people playing friendly broomball games on an ice rink. A mix of action shots, team photos, portraits, and people having fun on the ice. A few curling photos in the mix. The rink in some photos sits beside the Drumlin. Many photos taken during Champlain Winter College Weekend and many games look to be played between Lady Eaton College and Champlain College.

Students- Sports: Basketball
UPC/017(02) · File · [199-?] to [200-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

Most photos are action shot photos of players in games. A mix of womens and mens teams, including a photo from when Team Canada played Team Russia on Trent Courts. A few group photos and a few photos of courts, indoor and outdoor.

Students- Sports: Baseball
UPC/017(01) · File · [198-?] to [199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

A mix of action shots of people playing on the fields, team photos, and portraits of players on the bench or in the dugout.
Games pictured played in the Lady Eaton College South Field, behind the Champlain College residences, and in the Trent Sports Field. Games photographed during the summer and winter/spring. There is a picture of the Alumni baseball team.

IMC-120 · File · 1894-1984
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

File includes a broadside advertising the auction sale of Northcote Farm on Lake Katchewanooka, property of Dr. Campbell Mellis Douglas. Most of Northcote Farm became part of Lakefield College School in 2007; a small part of Northcote is retained by the Gastle family. Also included are two small hand-drawn maps by George Douglas of Northcoate Farm, ca. 1909.

Additional items were added in 2020

  • Chart: Department of Railways & Canals Canada, Trent Canal Chart No. 13, Lakefield to Young's Point, 1923
  • Map: hand-drawn by George Douglas of waterway from Lakefield to Young's Point, n.d.
  • Map: Lake Simcoe, Ontario, Department of National Defence,1940 (partial map only)
  • Map, 1984 reproduction of 1784 Canada, including that part later named Ontario Exhibiting the adjacent countries and Indian - Nations
  • Postcard: Little Lake, Peterboro, n.d.
23-013/005(05) · File · Aug. 10 – Aug. 30, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

NORTHERN ONTARIO RAILWAY BLOCKADES/LAND CLAIMS & PROTESTS:

  • CP Rail traffic back to normal
  • Indians block road
  • Schedule normal again for CP rail
  • Native rail blockades razed
  • PM under fire over blockades
  • Band lifts blockade of CP Rail
  • Governments turn ear to natives
  • Worry grows over cost of Indian rail blockades
  • Pays Plat band told to clear track
  • Band lifts CN blockade after injunction granted
  • Court order won't open route
  • Peigan Indians attempt to divert Oldman River
  • CN asks court to remove natives (Railway blockade costs mount)
  • Natives block highway
  • Railway blocked at Long Lake
  • Indian Commission agrees to disagree
  • Quick-fix plan on land claims seeks progress within a month
  • Federal commitment to Ontario Indians confirmed
  • Report makes far-reaching recommendations for four Windigo communities
    ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES:
  • 4,000 bison should be killed federal panel says
  • Northerners return home after fire evacuation
  • Chemical spraying north of Sioux Lookout postponed
    ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU'S VISIT:
  • Tutu visit made Ojibwa reserve visible-- briefly
  • Support for Indians seen as trap for Tutu
  • Tutu comes to Osnaburgh (Tutu brings message of hope to residents of Osnaburgh)
  • Wawatay broadcast of Tutu visit cancelled
  • People come from near and far to shar~ in Tutu's visit to Osnaburgh
    RACE RELATIONS AND NATIVE RIGHTS:
  • Race relations training plan to be tested by Metro Police
  • Report reveals Sioux Lookout has a race relations problem
  • Independent First Nations Alliance calls Geneva trip "fruitful"
    EDUCATION/ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT:
  • Obstacles bar chief's quest to finance Inuvik College
  • Indians continue cross-country run
  • Education Task Force Up-Date
  • MDs urged to remove barriers to natives
  • Reserve to have woman's shelter
  • Band in charge of nursing station construction
  • Native nursing hone proposal rejected by Health Ministry
  • Council stands firm against GST
    CRIMES COMMITTED ON NATIVES
  • Slashed body identified as drifter, 27
  • Hunt for long-lost son has tragic end
    POLITICS:
  • Status Indians number half a million
  • Land-claim dispute may hurt NDP
  • Manitoba native woos northern vote
  • Difficulties stem from archaic, paternalistic Indian Act
  • A different, quieter point of view: Canada's native MPs and senators
    COMMENTARY, EDITORIALS, LETTERS:
  • Commentary
  • Rae speak with forked tongue?
  • The first native blockade
  • PM's style invites crisis
  • Support this native protest
  • Warriors respect soldiers
  • Does Canada want a Wounded Knee?
  • People who throw stones
  • A royal commission could help all Canadians grapple with native issues
  • Don't stop to conquer
  • We're on the brink of civil war
  • Army ready to smash way in
  • First Nations or one nation?
  • Inquiry must end this mess
  • Next steps after the barricades come down
  • The trouble with using the military is that force has unintended results
  • Where were the other voices?
  • Emergency projects offer commuters dubious gains
  • Tell us what's happening, please
  • Recall Parliament to deal with crises
  • Shifting Political landscapes in a surreal Quebec
  • Time for Unity
  • Hanging Frogs & Burning Indians
  • CBC's usually staid Journal flips over the Mohawk crisis
  • Repeal the Indian Act and stop blockades
  • Strange images of Canada
  • The Ugly Canadian
  • Native justice denied
  • A resource of people
  • Editorials
  • Two-faced justice in Mohawk crisis
  • No winners here
  • How support is lost for native causes
  • Playing for time
  • Quebec's justice is on trial
  • The Summer of Discontent
  • How will the civil authorities deal with the Mohawk Warriors' weapons?
  • The Squeaky-Wheel Syndrome
  • Unpack your troubles...
  • Seaway motor road: yes, but
  • Peaceful outcome is possible
  • Natives in Parliament
  • Letters
  • Indian land claims are preposterous
  • No empty promises
  • How much longer are we going to allow native people to defy the law?
  • Improved by Indians
  • Mohawks not subject to Canadian law
  • Invisible native people
  • Wicks' Outcasts
  • Canada's natives, wild animals exloited by fur lobby
  • MOHAWKS: Is it right to punish them for our prolonged neglect of their plight?
  • Political Cartoons
    ARTS, CULTURE:
  • Common mother tongue speaks to the brotherhood of man
  • Can authenticity flourish within boundaries?
  • Native display besieged at CNE
  • Book review: One man's attempt to understand the Indian experience
  • Oka understood by native conductor and benefactor
    UP COMING EVENTS:
  • Conference on Adolescent Treatment
  • NIPA '90: A Conference on Native Photography and Art
  • Sound of the Drum Conference
  • Join the Circle Campaign
  • National Addictions Awareness Week
  • Do You Need Our Help? (Native Canadian Centre of Toronto)
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.

23-013/005(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