Fine Day
Fine Option Program: Gov't Introduces Program
The First Canadian Program of Legal Studies for Native People
The First Expedition for the Relief of Battleford Attacked by Halfbreeds - Sketch. - 1885.
First Indian in Province to Become Hotel Manager
First Indian School Board in Saskatchewan
First Nations Health in Saskatchewan 1905 - 2005
First Nations SchoolNet
First Nations Weather
First Nations Women and Sustainability on the Canadian Prairies
First Shell into Batoche, May 9, 1885
Fish Creek Dead
Fish Creek From the North
Follow the Drum
Highlights Gerald Okanee, lead singer of Saskatchewan's Big Bear Singers, who shares his knowledge about the drum and how the beat pits the powwow dancer's style against that of the the drummer's, sometimes "bucking off" the dancer.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.19.
Forging New Relationships: The Foundational Document on Aboriginal Initiatives at the University of Saskatchewan
Fort Carlton, 1885
Fort of Refuge, Prince Albert, March 31, 1885
[Four Sky Thunder]
FSIN & The AFN Reject The Proposed Federal Government Policy on The Health Consent Form
Funding Secured for Additional Aboriginal Programming
Fur Traders in Conversation
The Future of the Churchill
Gabriel Dumont - Portrait
Gabriel Dumont : The Métis Chief and His Lost World
Gaming Jurisdiction
George E. Lafond
Governing Ourselves: The Journey Begins
Government Surveyors (Scout) Corps During the 1885 Uprising
Grenadiers at Fish Creek
Grenadiers Relieving the 90th Battalion at Fish Creek, N.W. Rebellion, 1885
Guardhouse, N.W.M.P. Post at Regina, Sask., Where Louis Riel was Confined
"He shot Capt French"
A Healing Approach to Teaching: A Case Study
Herchmer Community School " Learning for All " Pilot Project: Action Research Report
The Heron Collection: Antelope Creek and Miry Creek Sites, Southwest Saskatchewan
A History of Riel's Second Rebellion and How It Was Quelled
The History of the File Hills Farming Colony
The History of the North-West Rebellion of 1885
HIV/AIDS and Aboriginal Women in Saskatchewan: Colonization, Marginalization and Recovery
Horses Still Have Special Meaning
House at Batoche used as a Barracks by the Metis in 1885
Human Rights Complaint Filed Against MP Pankiw
Discusses the Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint filed by John Melenchuk regarding a controversial pamphlet sent out by Saskatoon Member of Parliament Jim Pankiw. At one point in the article Michael Woodiwiss contends that the essential difference between crimes committed by colonizers and contemporary Aboriginals is that the formers’ crimes went unpunished and mostly unrecorded.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.8.
The Illustrated War News, Nos. 1 to 18 Inclusive: Containing All the Illustrations Referring to the North-West Rebellion of 1885, from Its Outbreak to the Return and Disbanding of Troops
Includes text and images.