Brothers-in-law Tom Borden and Gary DuBois opened La Cocina in March 1976. After expanding with an upstairs bar, La Cocina became the hippest place in town.
First Nations introduces 2021 cohort for the Luce Indigenous Knowledge Fellowship
13 Native leaders selected for their passion and ingenuity in perpetuating Indigenous knowledge and strengthening Native communities
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(Image: Lisa J. Ellwood, Indian Country Today, from material supplied by First Nations Development Institute)
13 Native leaders selected for their passion and ingenuity in perpetuating Indigenous knowledge and strengthening Native communities
News Release
First Nations Development Institute
First Nations Development Institute (First Nations) and The Henry Luce Foundation (Luce) announced today the continuation of the Luce Indigenous Knowledge Fellowship with the selection of 13 new Fellows for the 2021 Cohort each one chosen for their work in their knowledge fields, as well as their contribution to this growing Fellowship, which was created in 2019 to honor and support intellectual Native leaders.
Whiskey Au Go Go arson murderer dies as new inquest opens One of the two men convicted of murder over the notorious 1973 Whiskey Au Go Go nightclub fire that killed 15 people has died.
Crime by Kay Dibben and Patrick Billings 29th Apr 2021 12:35 PM
Premium Content A man convicted of murder in the Whiskey Au Go Go firebombing has died. A pre inquest hearing into the Fortitude Valley nightclub arson, which killed 15 people, has heard James Richard Finch is dead. Finch and co-accused John Andrew Stuart were convicted of murder over the Whiskey Au Go Go crime in 1973. They pleaded not guilty but were convicted of the murder of the youngest victim of the firebombing Jennifer Davie, 17, and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Whiskey Au Go Go arson murderer dies as new inquest opens One of the two men convicted of murder over the notorious 1973 Whiskey Au Go Go nightclub fire that killed 15 people has died.
Crime by Kay Dibben and Patrick Billings 29th Apr 2021 12:35 PM
Premium Content A man convicted of murder in the Whiskey Au Go Go firebombing has died. A pre inquest hearing into the Fortitude Valley nightclub arson, which killed 15 people, has heard James Richard Finch is dead. Finch and co-accused John Andrew Stuart were convicted of murder over the Whiskey Au Go Go crime in 1973. They pleaded not guilty but were convicted of the murder of the youngest victim of the firebombing Jennifer Davie, 17, and sentenced to life imprisonment.