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        Newspapers and magazines

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            Newspapers and magazines

              671 Archival description results for Newspapers and magazines

              31 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              23-013/004(03) · File · Jun. 20 and May 2, 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:
              • Veterans 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
                EDITORIALS:
              • Sleazy strategies
              • Court cautions on aboriginal rights
              • We must teach youth the history of bigotry
              • Natives give own views on what's needed to get Indian self-government
              • The Hill's class of '88
              • Let the managers manage
              • Employment equity - nice name for discrimination
                UPCOMING EVENTS:
              • Res '90: Economic Development Conference
              • Books about Young Offenders
                Government:
              • Kettle Point chief won't seek re-election
              • CESO steps up promotion of Band Support Services
              • Ojibway chief urges prudence in inheriting federal programs
                Business, Education:
              • Native business centre tackles financing problems
              • "Find your niche," says Diamond
              • Job market holds promise for grads
              • Are you Native and Graduating from High School?
              • Native program may disappear
              • College introducing variety of new programs
                Culture:
              • Native languages "not just words, they're everything we are" - Blondin
              • Federal cuts are killing native voice
              • Aroland chief says "warfare" possible over aboriginal hunting rights
              • From one chief ... to another
              • The ascent of early New World man
              • Hopi elder spins prophecies of earth's damage
                Arts:
              • Indian sculptor practises aret of the "cosmic giggle"
              • Theatre for the far North
              • Yorkville native arts centre features fun, funky fashions
              • Drummers, dancers part of festival
              • Native foods focus on natural
                Editorials, letters:
              • Independence would settle Akwesasne woes
              • Building new longhouses
              • Indian money always goes to wrong Indians
              • Natives must forgive the white Canadians
              • Respect cultures, languages of those who were here first
              • Thanks for series on native peoples
              • Where were stories on native MPs?
                EDITORIALS, LETTERS:
              • Indians deserve self-government
              • Who has the right and power to govern?
              • Memories for Mother's Day
              • Low-level flight noise a red herring
              • Fete of clay?
              • Natives manipulated
              Lightbody family fonds
              Fonds · 1960-2016

              Fonds consists of records documenting Robert Lightbody's experiences with Trent University, as a student, lawyer, fundraiser, and active alumnus. Records include correspondence, meeting minutes, photographs, newspaper clippings, planning records, student records, pamphlets and other ephemera, course syllabi, and student governance records. Fonds also includes a speech and pamphlets from a talk given by Margaret Lightbody for the Canadian Federation of University Women (CFUW).

              Fonds is organized into 11 series. Trent University student life; Student government and groups; Course materials; University development; Athletics building; Alumni Association and reunions; Trent properties, funds, and development; Bagnani Endowmnent; Photographs and alumni reunion; Newspaper clippings and images; Margie Lightbody CFUW speech.

              Lightbody family
              89-004 · Collection · 1916-1919

              This fonds consists of bound volumes of newspaper clippings, mostly concerning the Legislative Assembly of Ontario between 1916 and 1919. Four of the six volumes have the name J.J. Preston inside the front cover. One volume has the name J.C. Elliott on it. Elliott was the member for Middlesex West. The newspapers are from "The Globe" and the "Daily Mail and Empire".

              Preston, Josiah J.
              INC · Collection · 1969-1991

              Collection consists of several Indigenous newspaper titles. The publications are dated primarily in the 1970s and 1980s and are, in most cases, Canadian in origin. See file listings for more information on each individual title.

              23-013 · Collection · 1989 - 1990

              Collection consists of photocopies of newspaper clippings gathered as part of the press clippings service for Indian and Northern Affairs from June 10 1989 to August 30 1990. The photocopies are on a wide range of topics all concerning Indigenous peoples and communities. A large portion of the articles are about the Oka Crisis with mention to Alanis Obomsawin and the Kanehsatake Resistance, as well as the Meech Lake Accord with mention to Premier Robert Bourassa and the groups, The Native Council of Canada, The Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, and The Assembly of First Nations.

              Early Canadian Life
              91-1010 · Item · October 1978

              This item is a magazine in tabloid newsprint format dealing with articles on Canadian history. This item is Vol.2, from November 10, 1978.

              Early Canadian Life
              Claire Muller fonds
              03-010 · Fonds · 1974-2003

              Fonds consists of a complete set of the Wilderness Canoe Association periodical. The periodical was first named Beaverdamn (1974), then The Wilderness Canoeist (1975-1981), followed by Nastawgan (1982-current). Also included are miscellaneous records related to the Wilderness Canoe Association, i.e., membership list 1989, brochures, letterhead, by-laws, minutes of one meeting (2002), and 33 photo contact prints.

              Muller, Claire
              86-010 · Fonds · 1890-1899; 1913-1921

              This fonds consists of 45 issues of the magazine: Canadian Horticulturalist and Beekeeper which was published in Peterborough, Ontario from 1881. Four additional issues (March, 1897, November, 1897, March, 1898 and January 1899 were donated in 1993 by Jean Cole via the Friends of the Bata Library) and in 1994, additional issues (May 1890-June 1896, scattered) were added courtesy of the Friends of the Bata Library.

              Canadian Horticulturalist and Beekeeper
              INC/001(02) · File · 1979-1980
              Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

              This newspaper is a Mohawk publication and is published by the Program in American Studies of the State University of New York at Buffalo, co-publisher D-Q University, California. It includes articles on the Iranian Revolution, the energy crisis, Hopi land rights, and Akwesasne sovereignty.