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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.
Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi (also known as the Gun Lake tribe), based in Dorr in Allegan County, Michigan; Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi, based in Calhoun County, Michigan; Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, Michigan and Indiana; and; Prairie Band of Potawatomi Nation, Kansas (and since 2024 Illinois).
Borstal is a location in the Medway unitary authority of Kent in South East England. Originally a village near Rochester , it has become absorbed by the expansion of that town. The youth prison at Borstal gave its name to the Borstal reform school system.
During the past 30 years, the appreciation for American Indian art has been on the rise, and the art has become in demand – specifically Pomo Indian basketry. Dr. Joallyn Archambault, director of the American Indian Program at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History says: "Since the 1880s, when Pomo baskets first ...
The Pembina Band of Chippewa Indians (Ojibwe: Aniibiminani-ziibiwininiwag) is a historical band of Chippewa (Ojibwe), originally living along the Red River of the North and its tributaries. Through the treaty process with the United States, the Pembina Band was settled on reservations in Minnesota and North Dakota. Some tribal members refusing ...
North Sea Camp opened as a borstal in 1935, having been established by a group of Borstal Trainees who had been marched cross-country from Stafford. [1] They set up a campsite, and immediately began work building a sea wall to protect the site from the North Sea.
The name of the village is usually spelled "Mitutanka" now. Located on the west bank of the Missouri River, it was burned by Yankton Sioux Indians in 1839. Mandan earth lodge, photographed by Edward S. Curtis, circa 1908 Snow scene of a modern reconstructed earth lodge at the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota
The reservation was a proposed location for an 820-acre (330 ha) dry cask storage facility for the storage of 40,000 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel. Only 120 acres (49 ha) are for the actual facility, and the rest of the land is a buffer area. 8½ years after application, this facility was licensed by the NRC .