Monday,  September 10, 2012 • Vol. 13--No. 055 • 30 of 47 •  Other Editions

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about the brutal African warlord Joseph Kony is coming to South Dakota on Monday.
• The group Invisible Children is scheduled to give a presentation at Black Hills State University at 7 p.m. in Meier Recital Hall. The nonprofit organization was founded to try to end the Lord's Resistance Army, which is led by Joseph Kony. Invisible Children created a 30-minute film called Kony2012 that went viral on the Internet.
• The 7 p.m. presentation is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by BHSU's Mass Communications Department and student newspaper, the Jacket Journal.

Buffalo Bill performer remembered during ceremony
KRISTI EATON,Associated Press

• MANDERSON, S.D. (AP) -- Descendants of a Native American man who died more than a century ago while touring with a western-themed show gathered together Sunday to honor his life and celebrate his remains coming home to a South Dakota reservation.
• About 75 people gathered at a gymnasium on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation to take part in a traditional Lakota funeral for Albert Afraid of Hawk, who died at the age of 20 at a Connecticut hospital in 1900. A ceremony at a nearby cemetery followed Sunday's service.
• "He's going to make his journey today after over 100 years," said Lakota medicine man Rick Two Dogs.
• Afraid of Hawk died after a bout of food poisoning while traveling with Buffalo Bill's Wild West show and was buried in an unmarked grave in Connecticut. Family members weren't sure where he was buried until Connecticut history buff Bob Young uncovered records of the Oglala Sioux member's death and burial. A few years ago, Young pieced together the details and reached out to Afraid of Hawk's family members.
• Last month, Daniel Afraid of Hawk, Albert Afraid of Hawk's last living nephew, and other relatives traveled to Connecticut from their homes on the Cheyenne River Reservation in South Dakota to witness the disinterment of Albert's remains. On Sunday, Daniel celebrated his uncle's life by singing him a song in Lakota before Two Dogs and others performed a traditional smudging ceremony with herbs to bless Afraid of Hawk.
• Other people involved in the repatriation of Albert Afraid of Hawk, including Young and his wife, Mary Jo, spoke at the service about the process of bringing the

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