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Instilling success speaker's goal

Page 14

Indian children should stand tall, be proud and go after their heart's desires.

That's Howard Rainier's message, and the 60-or-so young people at the

recent Ermineskin Youth Conference were listening.

Forget all the negative stereotypes about Indians, he told the students gathered at the gym at the Ermineskin Junior High School. He listed them on the portable backboard: silent, drunk, diry, poor bingo adilcts.

Instilling success speaker's goal

Page 14

Indian children should stand tall, be proud and go after their heart's desires.

That's Howard Rainier's message, and the 60-or-so young people at the

recent Ermineskin Youth Conference were listening.

Forget all the negative stereotypes about Indians, he told the students gathered at the gym at the Ermineskin Junior High School. He listed them on the portable backboard: silent, drunk, diry, poor bingo adilcts.

Instilling success speaker's goal

Page 14

Indian children should stand tall, be proud and go after their heart's desires.

That's Howard Rainier's message, and the 60-or-so young people at the

recent Ermineskin Youth Conference were listening.

Forget all the negative stereotypes about Indians, he told the students gathered at the gym at the Ermineskin Junior High School. He listed them on the portable backboard: silent, drunk, diry, poor bingo adilcts.

Students deal with real issues

Page 14

Presenting management students with real life issues affecting small business and communities is the focus of the recent publication of 27 case studies by the Centre for Aboriginal Management at the University of Lethbridge.

"This is the first publication series of its kind. Case studies on aboriginal issues have been done before but nobody has ever put them together as a collection and made

an effort to offer them to other institutions," said the centre's Kate Chiste.

Students deal with real issues

Page 14

Presenting management students with real life issues affecting small business and communities is the focus of the recent publication of 27 case studies by the Centre for Aboriginal Management at the University of Lethbridge.

"This is the first publication series of its kind. Case studies on aboriginal issues have been done before but nobody has ever put them together as a collection and made

an effort to offer them to other institutions," said the centre's Kate Chiste.

Students deal with real issues

Page 14

Presenting management students with real life issues affecting small business and communities is the focus of the recent publication of 27 case studies by the Centre for Aboriginal Management at the University of Lethbridge.

"This is the first publication series of its kind. Case studies on aboriginal issues have been done before but nobody has ever put them together as a collection and made

an effort to offer them to other institutions," said the centre's Kate Chiste.

Students deal with real issues

Page 14

Presenting management students with real life issues affecting small business and communities is the focus of the recent publication of 27 case studies by the Centre for Aboriginal Management at the University of Lethbridge.

"This is the first publication series of its kind. Case studies on aboriginal issues have been done before but nobody has ever put them together as a collection and made

an effort to offer them to other institutions," said the centre's Kate Chiste.

Slide closes sacred mountain

Page 2

A major rock slide on July 2 has closed one of the most sacred areas in North America.

Chief Mountain, an outstanding landmark in north central Montana and southwestern Alberta, and the primary spiritual place for the Blackfoot peoples and other Plains Indians, have been declared unsafe. Since the slide, trails in the area have been closed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Blackfeet Tribal Council.

Slide closes sacred mountain

Page 2

A major rock slide on July 2 has closed one of the most sacred areas in North America.

Chief Mountain, an outstanding landmark in north central Montana and southwestern Alberta, and the primary spiritual place for the Blackfoot peoples and other Plains Indians, have been declared unsafe. Since the slide, trails in the area have been closed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Blackfeet Tribal Council.

Slide closes sacred mountain

Page 2

A major rock slide on July 2 has closed one of the most sacred areas in North America.

Chief Mountain, an outstanding landmark in north central Montana and southwestern Alberta, and the primary spiritual place for the Blackfoot peoples and other Plains Indians, have been declared unsafe. Since the slide, trails in the area have been closed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Blackfeet Tribal Council.