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Paths to Changing News!!!
"Special Reports!"


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    ** The Following News From, Lakota Student Alliance
    • Dark Deeds in the Black Hills:
      Daschle's Deal Dooms the Sacred Land of the Sioux
      By Jeffrey St. Clair Counterpunch Magazine
      Counterpunch Magazine August 1, 2002
      Re-Published Lakota Student Alliance
    • Letter to Indian Affairs Committee
      'Illegal Land Transfer of Missouri River Treaty Lands'
      Re-published Lakota Student Alliance
      "On August 17, 1999, Public Law 106-53 (Title VI) known as the
      controversial "Mitigation Act" was passed with many intentions
      to violate existing treaties between the Great Sioux Nation
      (Lakota Confederacy) and the United States. The US Army Corps
      of Engineers, Presidents of both the Cheyenne River and Lower
      Brule Sioux tribal councils, the controversial governor of South
      Dakota William "Wild Bill" Janklow, and an ambitious U.S. Senator
      Tom Daschle introduced injustice known as the "Mitigation Act",
      into national history."

    ** The Following News From,
  • The History Net
    • Articles from American History Magazine
    • Ten Myths of the Little Bighorn
    • Abraham Lincoln: Deciding the Fate of 300 Indians Convicted
      of War Crimes in Minnesota's Great Sioux Uprising
      "Even as the Civil War intensified, President Abraham Lincoln faced
      the aftereffects of a bloody Indian war in Minnesota. More than 300
      men faced execution, but the death sentences required the president’s
      approval." By Daniel W. Homstad and originally published in American
      History Magazine in December 2001. Daniel W. Homstad is a lawyer
      and writer from Minnesota.
    • Andrew Jackson and the Indian Removal Act
      Andrew Jackson had been an Indian fighter, and he continued the
      struggle as president. His new weapon was the Indian Removal Act,
      which would force Eastern tribes to relocate west of the Mississippi.
      By Robert V. Remini
    • Cherokee Stand Watie
      Cherokee Stand Watie exhibited bravery and leadership while fighting
      for two lost causes. By Jim Stebinger
    • Ned Christie: Cherokee Outlaw
      "Unwilling to stand trial for a murder he said he did not commit,
      Ned Christie stood his ground in his Cherokee homeland and became
      the most notorious outlaw in Indian Territory. By Bonnie Speer
    • Wounded Knee Massacre: United States versus the Plains Indians
      Some 30 years of warfare between the United States and the Plains
      Indians reached a grisly climax on December 29, 1890, at South
      Dakota's Pine Ridge Reservation. By Charles Phillips
    • Lakotas: Feared Fighters of the Plains
      "The Teton Sioux, or Lakotas, battled other tribes to become the
      dominant force on the Northern Plains and then took on the U.S. Army
      in an effort to maintain their way of life." By Gregory Lalire
    • George Crook: Indian Fighter
      Against the Apaches in Arizona Territory and the Sioux and Cheyenne
      in the northern Plains, Crook did his job more effectively than most
      Army leaders on the Plains. By J. Jay Myers
    • The Indian Tax Rebellion of 1851
      When San Diego County officials slapped a property tax on the
      dirt-poor Indians of the area, the natives complied in 1850,
      but then trouble came a year later when Major General Joshua
      Bean instructed them not to pay. By Bob Grubb

    ** The Following News From, Chronicale of Higher Education
    • A Battle Over a Name in the Land of the Sioux
      "A controversy over a mascot at the U. of North Dakota turned
      surreal when a benefactor threatened to withdraw $100-million."
      By Andrew Brownstein, Grand Forks, N.D
      Published Chronicale of Higher Education Friday, February 23, 2001
      • A $100-Million Donor's Ultimatum "December 20 letter
        from Ralph Engelstad, a Las Vegas casino owner who pledged
        $100-million to the University of North Dakota."
        Published Chronicale of Higher Education Friday, February 23, 2001

    ** The Following News From, Simon Frazer/Survival, for tribal peoples
    • General information about the Innu
      "Who are they? The Innu are the indigenous people of
      most of the Labrador/Quebec peninsula, in eastern Canada.
      They were formerly referred to as the Montagnais-Naskapi
      Indians, and are unrelated to the Inuit (or 'Eskimo') who
      live further north."
    • Innu Video Gallery ~ Innu Audio Gallery
      "The Innu are the indigenous people of most of the Labrador-Quebec
      peninsula, in eastern Canada. They were formerly referred to as
      the Montagnais-Naskapi Indians, and are unrelated to the Inuit
      (or 'Eskimo') who live further north."
    • Manteskueu's Story My name is Mary Georgette Mistenapeo.
      My Innu name is Manteskueu.

    ** The Following News From, Haisla First Nations
    • [PDF] Haisla Pole Repatriation History
    • Treasured totem pole returned to B.C. tribe
      "A sacred totem pole belonging to an indigenous
      tribe in northern British Columbia returned home
      after 77 years in a Swedish museum."
      By CTV.ca News Staff
      Published CTV.ca
      Wednesday, April 26, 2006
    • Aboriginal Celebration Marks Historic Repatriation
      For Immediate Release - June 21, 2006
      Office of the Premier Ministry of
      Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation
      [Haisla Nation Totem Pole and Cultural Centre Project
      G'psgolox Pole is home! - The G'psgolox Pole left the Museum of
      Anthropology on June 28, 2006 and travelled by transport truck,
      arriving in Kitamaat Village, BC on June 30, 2006. The official
      welcome of the pole and celebration of this historical event was
      marked by a community feast and official unveiling on Saturday,
      July 1, 2006 at the community Recreation Center.]

    ** The Following News From, CSI, UofIL, Archaeology.org

    • BIG MOUNTAIN, ARIZ. - Caught in a tangled web of US-Indian history
      "In their long fight to remain on ancestral lands, Navajo dissenters opposed to forced
      relocation hope the United Nations will take up their cause." With map. --By Daniel
      B. Wood Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor (Tuesday, January 26, 1999)
      "The story of this country, the coal mine, and a group of Navajo families is a morality
      play of the American Southwest - one rooted, as is often the case in this part of the country,
      in a pitched battle over how to use the land. "This story encompasses every key dynamic of the
      postwar West - cultural change, redistribution of wealth and power, transition from agrarian
      to industrial society,limited resource bases, and questionable futures," says historian Catherine
      Feher-Elston."
      UNLIKELY REBEL: Photo "Sally Young, a Navajo elder, says a nearby coal-fed
      power plant has polluted her Arizona homeland. Protesters say coal mining is also behind the
      forced relocation of 125 Navajo families."

    ** The Following News From, National Geographic


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