Showing 43 results

Archival description
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
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(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(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