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Sagatay, February / March 2009

Waciyea! Happy New Year to all of you.
Nellie Matthews’ beaded art pieces attract this and similar comments of praise during Art Zoom, an art tour hosted Dec. 6 by several venues in Thunder Bay.
Nellie Matthews begins her beading projects by concentrating on a shape, which eventually evolves into her design, which she then draws onto the material she will be beading on.
Wasaya Group Inc. and the Wasaya Group of Companies have steadily grown over the last 20 years from a small float plane operation based in Pickle Lake to what can now only be described as one of the most successful First Nation business entities in northern Ontario!
I  take quick sips of my hot coffee, which burn my lips. I can’t feel the pain, as I pace up and down the carpeted walkway at the Thunder Bay airport.
James Mamakwa is surprised he is once again the chief of Kingfisher Lake First Nation. Although he was the fifth or sixth person nominated for chief this past September, then tied for second behind incumbent Matt Winter after the first round of voting, he garnered the most votes in the final round of voting.
I joined the Ontario Department of Lands and Forests at Parry Sound, Ontario in 1949. In 1950, I began working out of the Sioux Lookout office as a field man on a conservation program launched jointly by the federal and provincial governments.
ᐁᐧᑎ ᐯᕑᐃ ᓴᐤᐣᐟ ᐁᐃᔑᓂᑲᑌᐠ ᐅᑌᓇᐠ ᔕᐊᐧᓄᐠ ᐅᐣᑌᕑᐃᔪ ᐊᒥ ᐊᐱ ᓂᐢᑕᑦ ᑲᑭᒪᑕᓄᑭᑕᒪᐊᐧᐠ ᐊᒥᑯᑭᒪ ᒣᑲᐧᐨ 1949 ᐁᔭᑭᐊᐧᐠ. ᐁᑲᐧ ᐊᐱ 1950 ᐁᔭᑭᐊᐧᐠ, ᐣᑭᒪᑕᓄᑭ ᐊᐧᓂᓇᐊᐧᑲᐠ ᐁᑭᐃᓇᓄᑭᐦᐃᑯᔭᐣ ᒋᐸᐸᒥ ᓇᓇᑲᒋᑐᔭᐣ ᐊᐧᓂᐦᐃᑫᐃᐧᓇᐣ ᑲᑭᒪᐦᒋᑐᐊᐧᐸᐣ ᐅᐣᑌᕑᐃᔪ ᒥᓇ ᑲᓇᑕ ᐅᑭᒪᐃᐣ.

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