<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT SIZE=2>In a message dated 12/14/2000 12:48:35 AM, LanceDM@MISSOURI.EDU writes:
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<BR><< "Indian" is definitely unPC and is now avoided. >>
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<BR>When I visited Alaska in 1974 I was informed that one did not ask a Caucasian <BR>if s/he were a "native Alaskan" because in Alaska the word "native" referred <BR>specifically to members of the three aboriginal races, namely the Eskimo, the <BR>Aleuts, and those people who in the lower 48 are and were generally referred <BR>to as "Indians".
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<BR>(I am not trying to be PC; rather I am trying to avoid ambiguity. I work for <BR>a company owned by a "real" Indian---a Gujarati from Bombay.)
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<BR>Incidentally, in Alaska in 1974, specifically in the city of Anchorage, <BR>"Texan" was a strongly perjorative word. At the time there were a number of <BR>unemployed people who came to Anchorage in hopes of getting jobs in the <BR>Prudhoe Bay oil boom. These people were collectively referred to as "Texans" <BR>although certainly some came from other states than Texas. I do not not know <BR>what events led to it, but these so-called Texans had acquired a reputation <BR>among the existing Alaskan residents as thieves/vagabonds/no-goods/etc. <BR>Hence "Texan" was perjorative.
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<BR>I received an eyewitness account of a black cabdriver in Anchorage who <BR>delivered a diatribe about "those dirty Texans who moved in and ruined the <BR>neighborhood." The eyewitness (who was from Baltimore) described that black <BR>cabdriver as "sounding just like a member of the White Citizen's Councils".
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<BR> James A. Landau
<BR> systems engineer
<BR> FAA Technical Center (ACT-350/BCI)
<BR> (Basic Commerce and Industries, Inc.)
<BR> Atlantic City Airport NJ 08405 USA
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