Welcome to AMMSA.COM, the news archive website for our family of Indigenous news publications.

Powwow one of last

Page 16

Francis Bad Eagle and his Eagle Claw Society hosted one of the season's final yearly powwows at Edmonton's Airport Hangar along Kingsway Avenue from Oct. 17 to 18.

Close to 170 dancers and hundreds more visitors crowded the hangar to view or participate in the late season event which attracted people from all over Alberta in addition to a few out-of-province guests .

Powwow one of last

Page 16

Francis Bad Eagle and his Eagle Claw Society hosted one of the season's final yearly powwows at Edmonton's Airport Hangar along Kingsway Avenue from Oct. 17 to 18.

Close to 170 dancers and hundreds more visitors crowded the hangar to view or participate in the late season event which attracted people from all over Alberta in addition to a few out-of-province guests .

Powwow one of last

Page 16

Francis Bad Eagle and his Eagle Claw Society hosted one of the season's final yearly powwows at Edmonton's Airport Hangar along Kingsway Avenue from Oct. 17 to 18.

Close to 170 dancers and hundreds more visitors crowded the hangar to view or participate in the late season event which attracted people from all over Alberta in addition to a few out-of-province guests .

Dreamcatcher conference a hit

Page 16

The Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference was in itself a dream come true for many of the Aboriginal youth attending.

The three day conference from Oct. 24 to 26 was attended by over 1,500 youth aged 10 and over from communities across north and western Canada, including Old Crow, Yukon and Providence, N.W.T., Manitoba, B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan.

This was the fifth year for the Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference. It was hosted by the Child and Youth Care Program at Grant MacEwan College.

Dreamcatcher conference a hit

Page 16

The Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference was in itself a dream come true for many of the Aboriginal youth attending.

The three day conference from Oct. 24 to 26 was attended by over 1,500 youth aged 10 and over from communities across north and western Canada, including Old Crow, Yukon and Providence, N.W.T., Manitoba, B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan.

This was the fifth year for the Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference. It was hosted by the Child and Youth Care Program at Grant MacEwan College.

Dreamcatcher conference a hit

Page 16

The Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference was in itself a dream come true for many of the Aboriginal youth attending.

The three day conference from Oct. 24 to 26 was attended by over 1,500 youth aged 10 and over from communities across north and western Canada, including Old Crow, Yukon and Providence, N.W.T., Manitoba, B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan.

This was the fifth year for the Dreamcatcher Aboriginal Youth Conference. It was hosted by the Child and Youth Care Program at Grant MacEwan College.

Local wins art contest

Page 14

Rocky Barstad, a descendant of the Tsuu T'ina First Nation, and one of the mural artists featured in the soon-to-be-opened Aboriginal Peoples Gallery at the Provincial Museum of Alberta in Edmonton, is the winner of the 1997 Peace Hills Trust Native Art Contest.

This is the 15th year the competition has been held.

Local wins art contest

Page 14

Rocky Barstad, a descendant of the Tsuu T'ina First Nation, and one of the mural artists featured in the soon-to-be-opened Aboriginal Peoples Gallery at the Provincial Museum of Alberta in Edmonton, is the winner of the 1997 Peace Hills Trust Native Art Contest.

This is the 15th year the competition has been held.

Local wins art contest

Page 14

Rocky Barstad, a descendant of the Tsuu T'ina First Nation, and one of the mural artists featured in the soon-to-be-opened Aboriginal Peoples Gallery at the Provincial Museum of Alberta in Edmonton, is the winner of the 1997 Peace Hills Trust Native Art Contest.

This is the 15th year the competition has been held.