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Gallery

Please browse the gallery below for all photos relating to Getting the Word Out. Select an image to enlarge and read the image description. You may also click on a collage for a list and description of each resource featured.
A collage of clothing with various political messages.
A collage of clothing with various political messages.
A collage of clothing with various activist messages.
A collage of eight buttons.
A collage of eight buttons.
The image on the left is the cover of the Manifesto of the Native Peoples' Caravan, addressed to the people of Canada and the Government of Canada. The image on the right is the cover of Vern Harper's book, Following the Red Path: The Native People's Caravan, 1974.
A handheld camera with a leather body and metal lens assembly. On top of the camera are various knurled metal knobs and buttons.
A sign on the side of the highway, with a dark pile of toxic waste beside it on the right. The sign says: A Tribute to the Government of Canada. Here lie the remains of what was once the Cutler Acid Plant - 9000 truckloads of contaminated waste. Owned and operated in consecutive eras by Noranda Mines and CIL, the plant shut down in 1963, leaving us with this great legacy. DIA negotiated the lease on behalf of the Band and settled it without including us. The People of Serpent River Indian Ban dedicate this site to them, in recognition of their relentless pursuit of good on our behalf. God Save the Queen.
A yellow cover with the title WAM in red bubble letters featuring a comic of a shopper and a cashier making a joke that states Anyone who buys the line the deficit is killing us would also buy an ocean-front lot in Oleander Saskatchewan.
A photographic darkroom illuminated by a pale red light. Visible in the photo are several trays holding liquids. Exposed and drying photographs are on the table beside them.
A Special Private Receiving Station License from the Department of Transport Radio Division in 1948-49. The license is signed by Mr. William John Campbell from Fredericton New Brunswick on July 31 1948.
97.3 FM CKON's logo includes a music staff with various notes. Above the staff is the radio station's title, 97.3 FM CKON. Below the staff is the text: Live & Local. Akwesasne Mohawk Radio.
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