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Tim Giago, the founder of the first independently owned Native American newspaper in the United States, has died at age 88, his former wife said.Giago, who died at Monument Health in Rapid City, South Dakota, on Sunday, created an enduring legacy during his more than four decades of work in South Dakota journalism, his colleagu [url=https://www.stanleycups.at]stanley becher[/url] es said.Giago, who was a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe, founded The Lakota Times with his first wife, [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cups[/url] Doris, in 1981, and quickly showed that he wasn t afraid to challenge those in power and advocate for American Indians, she said.Launching the paper, even years after the 1973 Wounded Knee siege between U.S. marshals and the Native American Movement, was challenging because wounds still existed on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and in South Dakota, Doris Giago said.Tim Giago blamed the American Indian Movement for violence on the reservation. Windows at the paper were broken and the office was firebombed. And through it all, Tim never backed down, said Doris Giago, who was married to him from 1979 to 1986.The Lakota Times was eventually renamed Indian Country Today. In a July 2021 interview with the paper, Giago recounted that tense period and some of the hard things that came out of work. One night got in my pickup and somebody put a bullet through my [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley website[/url] windshield and just missed my head, Giago told the newspaper. So, I mean, if that s what it took to get the freedom of the press going on the reservation, I guess that s what it took. Giago, a Tmpx Dash cam video shows car lose control, slam into police cruiser while officer tends to accident
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