Friday, July 30, 2010
   
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Indian Relays: Think horse racing with pit stops SHERIDAN, Wyo. (AP) – Summer has brought another season of Indian Relay racing to the northern Rockies and high plains, sending tribal teams in motion across the region as they haul their horses in search of reservation jackpots, rodeo purses and bragging rights.
Lacrosse team finds victory in loss BUFFALO, New York (AP) – Percy Abrams stood outside a lacrosse field downtown, an ocean away from his sport’s world championships.
Abrams is executive director of the Iroquois Nationals and he was left to dwell on what was won and what was lost by refusing to travel to England on non-Native passports.
Progress being made on American Indian Cultural Center OKLAHOMA CITY – On July 22, 2010 at 8:30 a.m. the final stones were symbolically positioned on the North wall of the two East Gate Entry walls at the American Indian Cultural Center & Museum located at the intersection of (I-35 & I-40), 659 American Indian Boulevard, Oklahoma City, OK 73129.
Three-man team walks business district with police support RAPID CITY, S.D. – Mission accomplished.

“Our only goal was to get them to see us … to get them to know us,” said James Swan, organizer of Rapid City’s new Urban Patrols – a program that’s designed to prevent conflict between Indians and non-Indians.

Tribal images featured in Red Earth Museum exhibit

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Images are by noted photographer M.J. Alexander


OKLAHOMA CITY – A photographic exhibition entitled Indian Territory: Portraits of 21st Century Native American Dancers and I.T. Born Tribal Elders is currently on view at the Red Earth Museum in Oklahoma City through October 31.  The series of 34 photographic images by Oklahoma City photographer and writer M.J. Alexander includes fascinating and concise interviews of the photo subjects.

Carlos Lightning Black of El Reno, OK, age 7, a member of the Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes, taken during the 2008 Red Earth Native American Cultural Festival PHOTO BY  M.J. Alexander


Alexander will be the featured speaker during a “Conversation with the Artist” and reception scheduled Thursday, Oct. 1 at 6 pm in the Red Earth Museum, 2100 NE 52nd Street in Oklahoma City.  The event is free and open to the public.

Subjects for Alexander’s photographs range in age from 3 to 105 years of age, and feature numerous images of American Indian dancers in full tribal regalia taken during the annual Red Earth Native American Cultural Festival in downtown Oklahoma City.   The images are printed on varied media including metallic sheets, sheer scrims, hanging canvases and photographic paper. Artifacts from the Red Earth Museum’s permanent collection accompany the photographic images.

The Indian Territory born tribal elders featured in the M.J. Alexander exhibit are included in the book Salt of the Red Earth: A Century of Wit and Wisdom from Oklahoma’s Elders published in 2007 by the Oklahoma Heritage Association.

Alexander is a writer and photographer whose images have been published worldwide.  Museums throughout the country have showcased her work including the Pleiades Gallery of New York City and New Mexico’s Hubbard Museum of the American West.   She has degrees from Vassar College and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism in addition to teaching news writing at New York University and serving as Chairman of the journalism department at Saint Michael’s College in Vermont.

She is a citizen of both Canada and the United States and makes her home in Oklahoma City where she resides with her husband and two children.

The Red Earth Museum is open every day, except Thanksgiving and Christmas, inside Science Museum Oklahoma at 2100 NE 52nd Street in Oklahoma City. Red Earth, Inc. is a non-profit organization that promotes and presents the rich traditions of American Indian arts and cultures through educational programs, the annual Red Earth Native American Cultural Festival and the Red Earth Museum.

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Life

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SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) – With more law enforcement officers needed on American Indian reservations, federal lawmakers and tribal leaders hope to create more opportunities close to home for people to...

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DEADWOOD, S.D. (AP) – The remains of an early Deadwood resident, who was either of Native Indian or Asian descent, are back from anthropological examination and will be laid to rest on the afternoon...

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – Three Oklahoma universities are atop a list that measures the number of bachelor's degrees awarded to students of American Indian descent.
The report by Diverse Issues in Higher...

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News

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SAO PAULO (AP) – Protesters released rank-and-file workers early Monday from the construction site of an Amazon hydroelectric plant that Indians say is being built on an ancient burial ground.
Only...

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MAE LA CAMP, Thailand (AP) – “Colonel Peacock, Major Hogan, Captain Bower ... Shoot from the hip! Quick march! Right turn!” The names, ranks and barked commands of World War II British officers tumble...

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MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) – Vermont's commission on Native American Affairs is seeking nine new members.
A new state law that sets up a process for state recognition of Native American tribes also has...

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Business

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LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) – A proposal by the Jemez Pueblo tribe to build a $60 million, off-reservation casino and hotel some 300 miles from tribal land has resurfaced.
Pueblo officials and representatives...

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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) – Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said Monday that he's going to court to try to block a gaming development proposed by the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and will hire an outside...

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AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) – A new coalition is speaking out against a referendum in November's election asking voters if they want to allow a new casino in western Maine.
The coalition calls itself Citizens...

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Sports

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Osseo Fairchild has 1 year to comply


MADISON (AP) - The Osseo Fairchild School District in western Wisconsin has been ordered to drop its Chieftains nickname and logo after the state determined...

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Indian Relays: Think horse racing with pit stops

SHERIDAN, Wyo. (AP) – Summer has brought another season of Indian Relay racing to the northern Rockies and high plains, sending tribal teams in motion across the region as they haul their horses in search...

Read More...
Lacrosse team finds victory in loss

BUFFALO, New York (AP) – Percy Abrams stood outside a lacrosse field downtown, an ocean away from his sport’s world championships.
Abrams is executive director of the Iroquois Nationals and he...

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