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The British synthpop band Bronski Beat featured a mince pie-eating competition in Borstal with lead singer Jimmy Somerville winning the contest in the music video [13] of the cover song "It Ain't Necessarily So" from the album The Age of Consent. The Borstal is a punk rock band from Jakarta, Indonesia.
[citation needed] In 1982 he graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in American Indian Studies. [citation needed] His band has had the names the Wild Band of Indians, the Wild Javelinas, and Wild Onions. He has contributed songs to documentary films, including Homeland, Patrick's Story and Dodging Bullets.
The band is one of six Ojibwe bands in present-day Wisconsin and one of eleven federally recognized tribes in the state. [4] In Odanah during the late 19th century, the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration created St. Mary's School, an Indian boarding school.
Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Native Americans; Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians, and; Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon; The Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Native Americans is one of nine federally recognized indigenous Tribal Governments in the State of Oregon. [9]
The land where the Montana First Nation now sits near Wetaskiwin was originally set aside for the Bobtail Band of Indians. When the band was dispersed, the land was abandoned. After it lay substantially vacant for a period of time, Little Bear, son of Cree chief Big Bear saw it as a place for his band, which had previously taken up residence in ...
The Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe, [3] formerly known as the Port Gamble Indian Community of the Port Gamble Reservation or the Port Gamble Band of S'Klallam Indians is a federally recognized tribe of S'Klallam people, located on the Kitsap Peninsula in Washington. [4] They are an Indigenous peoples of the Northwest Coast.
Wompatuck was also known as Wampatuck, Josias Wampatuck, and Josiah Sagamore. Wampatuck translates to mean "snow goose" in the [[Wampanoag language]. It has also been ascribed by the City of Braintree, MA and Braintree school mascot debaters to the translation of “snow deer”, however a definitive Wampanoag tribal translation citation is required to clarify this dual or confusing etymology.
Phoenix, AZ: Indian Tribal Series, 1973. Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation. Sk"sk"stulex"s Sqélix: Names Upon the Land, a Tribal Geography of the Salish and Pend D'Oreille People. Pablo, MT: The Committee, 1996. Fahey, John. The Kalispel Indians. Civilization of the American Indian series, v. 180.