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The voice of Tillie Black Bear won’t be silenced Says funding freeze is an effort by Tribe to take away Society’s independence.
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Kiowa soldier honored for service HOBART, Okla. – Virgil Hovakah Wolf, the only remaining survivor of an all-Native American tank crew, was honored recently for his military service at a veterans’ powwow at Kiowa Tribal Headquarters in Carnegie, Okla. Virgil, of Hobart,
Original Navajo Code Talker still tells his story ALBUQUERQUE (AP) – Tourists hurry inside a shop here to buy books about the famed Navajo Code Talkers, warriors who used their native language as their primary weapon.

Study in Cherokee Nation to cover language, history, more

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CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Twelve students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will experience a different kind of study abroad this summer as they live and learn in the Cherokee Nation.

Participants in the Cherokee Nation study abroad program stand on the steps of Northeastern State University’s Seminary Hall.


The new American studies course, developed by UNC faculty members Theda Perdue and Tol Foster in the College of Arts and Sciences, represents a partnership between Carolina and Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Okla. Northeastern State has the highest enrollment of American Indian undergraduates in the world — and some of those students will join their UNC peers and share their understandings of the contemporary Cherokee Nation.

UNC students will live in Tahlequah from May 24-June 14. The course will combine formal classroom time with field trips, and students will be required to blog about their experiences. Students will take introductory Cherokee language; study contemporary Cherokee film, animation, art and literature; and take the law and history course designed for employees of the Cherokee Nation by tribal council member

Julia Coates. Coates is assistant professor of American studies at the University of California, Davis.

Students also will participate in cultural activities including Cherokee marbles, stickball and the stomp dance. They will go to Cherokee Nation tribal headquarters and meet with Principal Chief Chad Smith. They also will visit Sequoyah High School; Fort Gibson, where the Trail of Tears ended for many Cherokees; the house of Sequoyah, credited with developing a written form of the Cherokee language; and the historic Cherokee Female Seminary, among other sites.

In 1838 and 1839, as part of President Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal policy, the Cherokee Nation was forced to abandon its lands east of the Mississippi River and migrate to Oklahoma. During this forced march, now known as the Trail of Tears, more than 4,000 of the 15,000 Cherokees died of hunger, disease or exhaustion.

Phyllis Fife, a citizen of the Mvskoke Creek Nation and director of the Center for Tribal Studies at Northeastern State, will coordinate language instruction for the UNC students, along with other cultural experiences.

“This unique program will allow students to be fully immersed in the contemporary cultural life of one of the most dynamic and successful tribal nations in the world,” said Perdue, the Atlanta Distinguished

Professor of history at UNC. Perdue has been writing and teaching Cherokee history for 35 years. As a former resident faculty member of a UNC study abroad program in London, she wanted to develop a similar experience for students in an American Indian community.

Foster, a citizen of the Mvskoke Creek Nation and assistant professor of American studies, will be the residential UNC faculty member in Oklahoma and teach the course component on literature and film. He specializes in American Indian literature as well as Oklahoma tribal regional studies, and he grew up in eastern Oklahoma.

“We are excited about the chance for this summer class to follow the Cherokee exodus 1,000 miles west to the national Cherokee capitol,”

Foster said. “Students will have unparalleled access to the people who make up a contemporary sovereign tribal nation – Indian health experts, tribal policemen, Cherokee animators, environmental officers, scholars and cultural leaders.”

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Life

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) – Like the proverbial lemon that became lemonade, a racial insult aired on an Anchorage radio station has been embraced as a teaching tool, in an Alaska Native effort to heal the...

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The first commercial showing of “Pearl” in Oklahoma will begin Friday, Sept. 10 at the Warren Theater, 1000 Telephone Road, Moore, Okla.
Produced by the Chickasaw Nation, “Pearl” focuses on...

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TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) – Terre Haute's mystic Tootooch, or “Thunderbird,” is getting a much-needed makeover.
The 20-foot totem pole that faces South Sixth and Washington streets is getting a...

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News

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PHOENIX (AP) – Members of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community will vote for a tribal president next week in an election that will also gauge how they feel about a new casino resort and spring-training...

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Proposal would create tribal national park
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SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) – Thousands of acres taken from the Oglala Sioux Tribe nearly 70 years ago would be returned...

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PEMBROKE, N.C. (AP) – The Lumbee Indians of North Carolina are not slowing down in their effort to win federal recognition by January.
The Robesonian of Lumberton reports that a new campaign office...

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Business

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(Open only to Indian-Owned Companies and/or Enterprises)

DATE ISSUED: September 8, 2010

BY: Choctaw Housing Authority

PROJECT: Project 92-34 & 92-35
32 New Housing...

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(Open only to Indian-Owned Companies and/or Enterprises)

DATE ISSUED: September 8, 2010

BY: Choctaw Housing Authority

PROJECT: Project 92-36 
10 New Housing units Read More...

CATTARAUGUS INDIAN RESERVATION, New York (AP) – As New York state's tribal leaders battle in courtrooms to preserve their tax-free cigarette market, tensions are rising on reservations, where the state's...

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Sports

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Verona, N.Y. (August 30, 2010) – The Notah Begay III Foundation (NB3 Foundation) today announced the names of 14 Native American youth selected to participate in the NB3 Foundation Course Crew, an initiative...

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SAN FELIPE PUEBLO, N.M. (August 24, 2010)– The Notah Begay III Foundation (NB3 Foundation) helped the San Felipe Pueblo community officially open its brand-new, $785,000 soccer field and community park. ...

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Albuquerque, New Mexico  will be the site of the 2010 Native American Amateur Boxing Championships. The prestigious tournament will be held on October 14,15,& 16 in conjunction with the Native American...

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Latest Job Postings

  • INVITATION FOR BIDS - 32 New Housing units (Open only to Indian-Owned Companies and/or Enterprises) DATE ISSUED: September 8, 2010 BY: Choctaw Housing Authority PROJECT: Project 92-34 & 92-35 32 New Housing units LOCATION: Tiak Chitto Subdivision, M.B.C.I. Pearl River Reservation, Philadelphia, MS COUNTY: Neshoba County   CONTRACTING...
  • INVITATION FOR BIDS - 10 New Housing Units (Open only to Indian-Owned Companies and/or Enterprises) DATE ISSUED: September 8, 2010 BY: Choctaw Housing Authority PROJECT: Project 92-36  10 New Housing units LOCATION: Pearl River, Tucker, and Red Water Communities located on the M.B.C.I. Pearl River Reservation COUNTY: Neshoba County and...
  • Parenting Para-Professional Cherokee Nation whose headquarters are located in beautiful Tahlequah, Oklahoma is a national leader in Indian tribal governments and economic development in Oklahoma, We are a dynamic, progressive organization, which owns several business enterprises and administers a variety of services for the...
  • Electrician Cherokee Nation whose headquarters are located in beautiful Tahlequah, Oklahoma is a national leader in Indian tribal governments and economic development in Oklahoma, We are a dynamic, progressive organization, which owns several business enterprises and administers a variety of services for the Cherokee...
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