Page 4

Page 4, March 17,1995 the CONCORDIAN fine shoes 114 Broadway, Elm Tree Square Mall Downtown Fargo •JosefSeibel Clogs and Sandals • Haflinger Slippers and Hut Shoes - Casual Classics • Newport Outfitters KB. Evans Slippers 5H0EfREPAIR INC same location • quality shoe repair Tropicaf Tan 817 Center Av...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Language:unknown
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16921coll4/id/15532
Description
Summary:Page 4, March 17,1995 the CONCORDIAN fine shoes 114 Broadway, Elm Tree Square Mall Downtown Fargo •JosefSeibel Clogs and Sandals • Haflinger Slippers and Hut Shoes - Casual Classics • Newport Outfitters KB. Evans Slippers 5H0EfREPAIR INC same location • quality shoe repair Tropicaf Tan 817 Center Avenue Moorhead, MN 56560 (218)233-3161 Hours: Monday-Thursday £-10 p.m. Friday 8-8 p.m. Saturday 8-6 p.m. Sunday 12-6 p.m. ""TFREE'TANS""" WITH PURCHASE OF A PACKAGE Package Prices: 5-$14.95 10-$26.95 15-$35.95 20-$41.95 "SAVE ON'ANY"""""^"19 mTANNING CALIFORNIA PRODUCT I :• NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Thanks, Ronda & Steve Tropical Tan BURGER; FRIES SOFT DRINK ANYTIME MONDAY- FRIDAY * FRESH, HAND-PATTIED \ LB. BURGER Expires March 31, 1995 seeking new visions The Native American Office emphasizes the fact that all events, except for the play, are free and open to the public. This is to encourage attendance of people from all walks of life, not just Native Americans. Dahl characterizes the week as a time "to get together with all Indian and non-Indian friends to laugh and celebrate — and maybe eat some fry bread!" Concordia College is scheduled to host the first event of Native American Week in the Knutson Center Centrum. Celebration begins at 9:45 a.m., Monday, with a pipe ceremony and drum song. In addition, the first speaker of the week, Sam Ardito, dean of Native American Education Services (NAES) College, which has campuses in Chicago, Montana, Wisconsin and Minnesota, will speak on treaty laws. His presentation will be held at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. in Old Main 302. Larry Aitken, president of Leech Lake Tribal College located in Cass Lake, Minn., will be speaking on the "Importance of Communication in Native America," at 11:50 ajn. in the Centrum. Zandbroz (420 Broadway, Fargo) will host the nightly event of Mar. 20 featuring Native American author Adrian Louis in a reading and book signing at 7 p.m. In addition to being an author, Louis is an English teacher at Oglala Lakota College on the Pine Ridge * Reservation of South Dakota. Dwight Gorneau, vice presi-dent of Uniband, a tribal enter-prise of the Turtle Mountain Chippewa band, speaks Tuesday. Gomeau will be in the Knutson Center Centrum at 1 p.m. His organization, Uniband, has created hundreds of jobs near Belcourt, N.D., after signing a $24 million contract to perform computerized data processing for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. y ^ t MUSIC AT LONCORDIA IN MARCH 20 Chapel Choir Home Concert Featuring John Tavener's Funeral Ikos with visual imagery Christopher M. Cock, Conductor Monday, 8:15 p.m. Knutson Center Centrum Free admission Concordia College M O O R H E A D M I N N E S O T A in an effort to make our programs and activities accessible to all interested people, we ask that those individuals requiring special accommodations for a disability ptease contact the music department prior to the event. II is the policy of Concordia College to provide equal opportunity tor all qualified persons in its educational programs and activities. The college is in full compliance with the taws ol the United Stales and all applicable regulations. The college does not discriminate on the basis ol race, creed, color, national origin, age. sex or physical handicap in the educational programs that it operates. © 1995 Concordia College, Moorhead, Minnesota PIZZA PATROL Medium Classic Thin Crust Pepperoni Pizza $$4.99 Pan Style add 504 Large Premium Pan or Classic Thin Crust Pepperoni Pizza $7.99 tax NEW ITEM • BREAKFAST PIZZA TRY IT NOW! FREE DELIVERY IN THE FARGO-MOORHEAD AREA 24 HOURS 241-9000 "Best Tasting Pizza at the Best Price" From page 1 An education discussion panel will be held at 10:30 a.m., Wednesday, Mar. 22, also in the Knutson Center Centrum. Presenters are Jim Postema, assis-tant professor of English and coor-dinator of the Native American Stereotype Awareness Internet project; Joy Lintelman, assistant professor of history; and Iva Trottier, assistant professor of psy-chology. In addition to the presentation, the American Indian S tudent Association, TRIBES, will be sell-ing dream catchers in the Knutson Center courtyard. A late addition to the program dots Thursday's agenda. Dancers from the Wahpeton Indian School will give a pow-wow demonstra-tion 2:40-4:30 in the Centrum. Later that evening, at 7 p.m., two of the Navajo Indian "code-talkers" will speak at Beckwith Hall on NDSU's campus. During World War II, the Navajo language was used effectively by the United States and allied forces. "[The presentation] not only cele-brates Native American Week, but also commemorates the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II," said Patrick Needlham, interim director of Minority Student Affairs at NDSU. The last event of Native American week to be held on Concordia's campus will be a dis-cussion concerning the theatre presentation of "Turtle Island Blues" and will be held at 9:30 am. in the Centrum. 'Turtle Island Blues," a play by Bemidji playwright William Borden, will be performed at Weld Hall Auditorium on the Moorhead State University campus Friday night. The play, a "humorous, poignant, tragic and celebratory look at 500 years of American his-tory seen through the eyes of Native Americans," will be per-formed by the Listening Winds Theater of Bemidji. Tickets can be purchased at the door for $5. Dahl will give a presentation entitled "Grass Dancing and What a Pow Wow Means to Me" at 11:50 a.m., Mar. 24, in Old Main 331. The Tri-College Native American week will close with a 10-hour pow-wow beginning at noon at the Fargo Civic Center (207 N. Fourth St.) on Mar. 25. This "annual celebration of life" began in 1988, and features many types of traditional Native American dances. Crafts will be sold at the event. Dahl believes that if "you can't make it to anything else, come to ' the pow-wow. It's the best thing that people can attend. It gives the community a chance to see Native Americans as we are." Dahl believes that Native American week is very important for the heritage of the Indian peo-ple, and cites his reason for com-ing to Concordia was to improve its Native American programs, and "so that people on our campus could stand up and say *eya Anishinabeg dash ishpeninio' (yes, we are Native American and proud)."