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Ed Castillo Edward Castillo, of the Luiseño-Cahuilla tribes, is a Native American activist who participated in the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz in 1969. Current professor and director of Native American Studies at the Sonoma State University in California, he wrote several chapters in the Smithsonian Institution's ''Handbook of North American Indians'' and in ''Mission Indian Federation: Protecting Tribal Sovereignty 1919-1967'', published in the ''Encyclopedia of Native Americans'' in the 20th Century. He is editor of Native American Perspectives on the Hispanic Colonization of Alta California and The Pomo, A Tribal History. Castillo is a regular contributor of book reviews to historical journals such as Indian Historian, Journal of California Anthropology, Western Historical Quarterly, American Indian Quarterly and California History.〔Smith, Paul Chaat., and Robert Allen. Warrior. Like a Hurricane: the Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee. New York: New, 1996. Print.〕 ==Early life== Castillo was born in 1948 in California. He was raised on a rancheria outside San Jacinto.〔Eagle, Adam Fortunate., and Tim Findley. Heart of the Rock: the Indian Invasion of Alcatraz. Norman: University of Oklahoma, 2002. Print.〕 After high school, he enrolled in the University of California, Riverside with a major in American frontier history and a minor in Latin American studies. After graduating in 1969, Castillo took a minority counseling position at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In that same year he was hired as a graduate student instructor in UCLA’s newly established Native American Studies program.〔
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