Abstract

Quarterly (14:2, pp. 147-154, Spring 1990), William W. Quinn, Jr., formerly historian with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, sounds alarm that warrants more than passing interest. Underscoring his urgency, he chooses not to provide a scholarly disquisition in full pedagogic garb, complete with notes and bibliography, but instead, an informal description based on several years of direct experience as ethnohistorian with the Bureau of Indian Affairs' Branch of

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