And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

"John Russell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> replies:
Indians Opt For Signs To Air Grievances


PINE RIDGE, S.D. (AP) - Edgar Bear Runner held up a sign and yelled to urge
President Clinton to grant clemency to an Indian serving a life term for
killing two FBI agents.
But he and other activists decided against holding formal demonstrations
during the president's visit Wednesday to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Even those worried about human rights and other issues agreed the
president's visit should remain focused on his plans for bringing jobs and
better housing to the reservation, said Bear Runner, who lives at Porcupine
village.

Prior to Clinton's speech, some activists had said they planned to stage
demonstrations during his visit to the reservation, but none occurred during
the time he was in Pine Ridge.

Some held up signs during Clinton's speech calling for the return of land
taken from the Sioux more than a century ago. Another sign referred to
unsolved murders on the reservation.

People who have marched to protest the sale of beer at Whiteclay, Neb., only
two miles from the village of Pine Ridge, also had threatened to
demonstrate. Indian activists Dennis Banks and Russell Means have been
involved in the recent marches, but they did not appear to be in Pine Ridge
on Wednesday.

Alcohol is banned on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, but alcohol bought
elsewhere creates severe problems for residents.

Bear Runner, who was involved in some American Indian Movement activities
when he was younger, wanted the president to know about Leonard Peltier, who
has been in prison since 1977. Peltier was convicted of the 1975 murders of
two FBI agents during a shootout on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

``We're here as Peltier's supporters to continue to echo the sounds of
freedom for Peltier,'' Bear Runner said.

Babe Poor Bear held up a sign urging Clinton to follow the terms of treaties
that had given the Sioux most of western South Dakota. Those treaties were
broken more than a century ago and the tribes were restricted to smaller
reservations.

One line on her sign urged the president to ``give back the Paha Sapa,'' the
Sioux name for the Black Hills.

Wendell Yellow Bull, executive director of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, said most
people wanted to avoid any demonstrations that might have disrupted
discussions on improving the reservation's economy.

``A lot of the people just wanted this to go well,'' he said.

Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
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