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Colorado college students to spend Thanksgiving at Standing Rock protest

More than 50 students, professors and others from Colorado’s Fort Lewis College head to the Dakotas to show solidarity

Native Americans march to the site of a sacred burial ground that was disturbed by bulldozers building the Dakota Access Pipeline, near the encampment where hundreds of people have gathered to join the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe's protest of the oil pipeline slated to cross the nearby Missouri River, Sept.  4, 2016 near Cannon Ball, North Dakota.
Robyn Beck, AFP/Getty Images
Native Americans march to the site of a sacred burial ground that was disturbed by bulldozers building the Dakota Access Pipeline, near the encampment where hundreds of people have gathered to join the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s protest of the oil pipeline slated to cross the nearby Missouri River, Sept. 4, 2016 near Cannon Ball, North Dakota.
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DURANGO — More than 50 students, professors and others from Colorado’s Fort Lewis College will spend Thanksgiving in the Dakotas to show solidarity with tribes protesting a controversial oil pipeline.

reports that a caravan of 14 cars left Durango Tuesday morning for the 16-plus-hour drive to the Standing Rock reservation. Since this summer, people there have been protesting the 1,170-mile Dakota Access Pipeline, which would transport 470,000 barrels of oil a day from North Dakota’s Bakken oil fields to other pipelines in Illinois.

The Standing Rock Sioux oppose the pipeline because they say it threatens drinking water on their nearby reservation and cultural sites. Pipeline developer Energy Transfer Partners has said no sites have been disturbed and that the $3.8 billion pipeline will be safe.

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