The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 03, 1972, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    Indian Week aids tribal leaders, students
Anca,n ,nd,an Cultural Week activities begin in
the Nebraska Union Wednesday and conclude with a
two-day powwow in the mall north of Love Library
-"van iri .. ft-- . . i
ocoraing to American Indian student Rick Pille
the week s activities will not only provide a valuable
learning experience for students but will be helpful to
tribal leaders also. It will give leaders an opportunity
to get together and compare notes, he said
All the Nebraska tribal leaders have been invited to
come and discuss problems pertinent to their locale.
The speakers taking part in the three-day program
will discuss Indian problems and theorize possible
solutions to them, Pille said.
Thursday's speakers will include Pulitzer Prize
winning author Scott -Momaday who received the
award for his book "House Made of Dawn." Pille said
the book deals with the clash between the white and
Indian cultures.
Author of "Custer Died For Your Sins" and other
books. Vine Deloria will also give an address
Thursday. Medicine Man Leonard Crow Dog is
scheduled to speak on Indian religion.
The head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs was
invited but can't make it, Pille said. A representative
is being sent from that offie but his name is not
Known ax mis time, he added.
"Representatives from the American Indian
Movement (AIM) are going to be here and I'm sure
that's why he couldn't make it," Pille said. "The
confrontation between AIM leaders and the
representative from the Bureau of Indian affairs
should be one of the highlights of the program," he
added.
AIM is very verbal, pulls no punches and will
confront the Bureau representative with questions for
which he will have no answers. Pille said.
Pille said the recent disturbance at Gordon which
arose after the death of Raymond Yellow Thunder
will probably be discussed by the speakers.
Saturday and Sunday activities will feature singers
and drummers from many different tribes. The
powwcw will start at noon and continue until one
a.m both days.
There will be a dance contest in which anyone can
take part. One thousand dollars in prize money will
be awarded to the winners. The dancers will be
judged for their costumes and proficiency in dancing.
Everyone is invited, Pille said. "Powwows are for
everyone, that's the nature of them."
Indian soup and fry bread will be served free.
i ri ( il (Mil
Schedule";
The schedule for Indian
Cultural Week is as follows. All
events are to be in the Union
Ballroom unless otherwise
indicated.
Wednesday
9:30 a.m. Invocation by Leonard
Crow Dog
lO a.m. Opening Address by
Charley Archambautt. UNL
naian sxuoent counselor.
am. Bob Mackey. Nebraska
ndian commissioner; "The
American Indian in Nebraska"
p.m. Executive Director of
National Congress of American
Indians, ""The Future of the
American Indian"
2: IS p.m. Statement by Eddie
Kline, tribal chairman of Omaha
Indians
2:35 p.m. Statement by Louis
La Rosa, tribal chairman of
Winnebago Indians
2:55 p.m. Statement by John
LaPointe, tribal chairman of
Santee Indians
3:15 p.m. Open discussion with
Leon Cook. Bob Mac key. Eddie
Kline. Louis LaRose. and John
LaPointe
Thursday
10 a.m. Address by Webster
Robbtns, UNL faculty member;
"The Future of Indians in
Education
10:30 a.m. Harry EaglebuJI.
Aberdeen area Bureau of Indian
Affairs (BIA) education officer
11 a.m. Terry Walters. Winnebago
BIA education officer
11:30 a.m. Nelson Levering, Omaha
BIA education officer
1 p.m. Panel discussion with Harry
Eaglebull, Terry Walters and
Natson Levering.
2 p.m. Address by Vine Deloria
3 p.m. Address by M. Scott
Momaday
4 p.m. Question and answer period
with Vine Deloria and Scott
Momaday
Friday
10 a.m. Leonard Crow Dog,
medicine man, speaks on Indian
religion
1 p.m. Representative of Bureau of
Indian Affairs. Washington, O.C
Photo by Gail Fofda
2 p.m. Address by Dennis Banks,
National coordinator of
American Indian Movement
(AIM)
3 p.m. Address by Lehman
Brightman, director of Indian
Studies department. Berkeley.
California.
4 p.m. Question and aniwar period
with Dermis Banks and Lehman
Brightman
Saturday and Sunday
12 noon to 1 a.m. Pom
scheduled for the mall norm of
Love Library. In the event of
rain, the pow wow is tentatively
scheduled to move to the
Coliseum,
Of I lk i a" I"l Sf , a. m m. L. . . I
rukjui i ikzui u iyo c?AUfifftf UyluvVS
Public hearings on the proposed University
bylaws drafted by the Commissicwi on
Governance will open at 9 jm. Mondty m 232
Nebraska Union and continue through Tuesday.
Notice of the hearings was given by Harry
Allen, UNL director of institutional research
and planning, who is also secretary of the
Commission on Governance.
Drafts of the proposed bylaws have been
sent to the ASUN office and departmental offices
of the University, interested persons may see
them there or in the University libraries.
The purpose of the hearings is to give
interested persons an opportunity to suggest
revisions to the commission before the
drxx-rrwrrt joes to the Ccrd of Regents,
hopefully in June. Those who have suggestions
should be prepared to submit them to the
commission m writing, Allen said.
The commission, an inter-campus agency, is
composed of faculty, student and
administration representatives with eight
members named by the regents to represent the
covsming board. The Commission has been
working on the draft of the bylaws since last
summer.
KULI I N
inuuci winner spetjKS
on economics in election
Noebel Prize winner Paul A. Samuelson will speak on "The
American Economy Through the tioyeirSjer, 1972,
Elect ion-and Beyond," 8 pjn. Friday in Love Library
Auditorium.
Samuelson, professor of economics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, was awarded the Nobel Memorial
Prize in Economics in 1970.
Samuelson has also been awarded the John Bates CJaHc
Medal of the American Economic Association and is a past
president of the American Economic Association. " .
He will hold an informal seminar in the third floor Faculty
Lounge of the College of Business Administration 3 pjn,
Friday,
WEDNESDAY. MAY 3, 1972
THE DAILY NEBRASKA,
PAGE 3