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ArchivesThe Oscars '01By Laura Knoy on Monday, March 26, 2001.Last night millions of film fans tuned in Hollywood's listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
The Abenaki in New HampshireBy John Walters on Monday, March 26, 2001.Fred Wiseman is Professor At Johnson State College in Vermont, and Director of the Abenaki Tribal Museum and Cultural Center. He’s written a book titled, “The Voice of the Dawn,” published by University Press of New England. Prior to the European settlement of North America, the Abenaki lived in New Hampshire, Vermont, and western Maine. During the colonial period, they fared less well than other native peoples. Unlike the Iroquois, they weren’t allies of the English colonists, they haven’t received as much anthropological and historical attention as other tribes. Wiseman talks about the challenges the Abenaki have faced in preserving their culture in the years since colonization, and how surviving Abenaki have lost some of their tribal identity. He even speculates that the Abenaki, who became seafarers when they settled along the ocean, may have traveled as far as Europe, centuries before the voyages of the Vikings and Christopher Columbus. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
NH sculptors build a statue for Detroit's birthdayBy John Walters on Monday, March 26, 2001.Ann Feeley and William Kieffer live in Wilmot, NH . They?re sculptors, and they were recently commissioned to do a bronze sculpture of the French explorer Antoine Cadillac, who founded the city now known as Detroit, in 1701. The figure will be installed in Detroit on July 24th as part of the city?s 300th anniversary celebration. They talked with John about collaborating to create the sculpture, and about how they used a family member as a model for Cadillac?s features. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
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