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Windspeaker Publication

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Janice Duncan, Windspeaker Contributor, Toronto Ontario

Page 17

Floyd Favel is a hard man to find.

Between his two jobs, artistic director at Native EArth Performing Arts and director of Toronto's Native Theatre School, he's a busy man with little time to sit and chat.

But now the showcase of playwrights that Native Earth presented at the end of last year is over, he can sit down and reflect on what he's trying to achieve, and…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Dina O'Meara, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Thunder Bay Ontario

Page 16

The Ontario Native Women's Association is a force to be reckoned with.

What started out as a grassroots provincial group defending women's rights has become a political advocacy group influencing Native groups across the country.

It was dogged determination that saw ONWA representatives sit with male Native leaders during the Charlottetown negotiations. And…

  • Doug Dahl, Windspeaker Contributor, Regina Saskatchewan

Page 14

The cliche in hockey is that good goaltending wins championships.

That was the case at the fourth annual SIFC cup '93, First Nations Hockey Tournament in Regina March 12-14.

The Pas Blues, backed by their player-of-the game, goal tender Chris Medicine, claimed their second consecutive tournament title with a 5-2 win over the Winnipeg Tobans in the A-B-Final at the…

  • Doug Dahl, Windspeaker Contributor, Regina Saskatchewan

Page 14

The cliche in hockey is that good goaltending wins championships.

That was the case at the fourth annual SIFC cup '93, First Nations Hockey Tournament in Regina March 12-14.

The Pas Blues, backed by their player-of-the game, goal tender Chris Medicine, claimed their second consecutive tournament title with a 5-2 win over the Winnipeg Tobans in the A-B-Final at the…

  • Doug Dahl, Windspeaker Contributor, Regina Saskatchewan

Page 14

The cliche in hockey is that good goaltending wins championships.

That was the case at the fourth annual SIFC cup '93, First Nations Hockey Tournament in Regina March 12-14.

The Pas Blues, backed by their player-of-the game, goal tender Chris Medicine, claimed their second consecutive tournament title with a 5-2 win over the Winnipeg Tobans in the A-B-Final at the…