Just a 20-minute drive from the White House, Nancy Reagan is back in Washington. Now premiering at Atlas Performing Arts Center and showing through April 21, Nancy follows two women […]
ASHLAND, Ore. – An SOU Native American Studies professor is being accused of ethnic fraud by the Tribal Alliance Against Frauds. Professor Michele Pavilionis is a member of the Lenape Tribe according to an article on SOU’s website. But the Tribal Alliance Against Frauds believes Pavilionis has no Native American heritage in her family. TAAF’s […]
(The Center Square) - Two Oregon State University faculty are lead authors on a report that attempts to combine "Indigenous Knowledge" and Western science to "inform future climate-adapted land management decisions across the United States," according to OSU. The authors contend that their recommendations include “practical and cultural management interventions that could help avert the loss of thousands of acres of old-growth forest,” according to a release. ...
“It’s almost blasphemy for a physician to say,” but “the answer to addressing these things is not hiring more doctors and nurses,” said one doctor. “The answer is having more community-based preventions.”
“It’s almost blasphemy for a physician to say,” but “the answer to addressing these things is not hiring more doctors and nurses,” said one doctor. “The answer is having more community-based preventions.”
Stacker used data from the National Park Service and other sources to compile this list of 10 historical sites to learn more about AA & NHPI heritage.
A Native American-led nonprofit says it has purchased about 40 acres of land in South Dakota’s Black Hills area. The Cheyenne River Youth Project announced in a statement on April 11 that it bought the tract of land adjacent to Bear Butte State Park. The executive director of the project says the area is considered
A Native American-led nonprofit says it has purchased about 40 acres of land in South Dakota's Black Hills area
Native American-led nonprofit says it bought 40 acres in the Black Hills of South Dakota
A Native American-led nonprofit says it has purchased about 40 acres of land in South Dakota’s Black Hills area. The Cheyenne River Youth Project announced in a statement on April 11 that it bought the tract of land adjacent to Bear Butte State Park. The executive director of the project says the area is considered
Native American tribal leaders are pleading for more funding saying that Mexican cartels take advantage of their sparsely populated reservations to traffic fentanyl into the US.
The privately held, family-run company has more than 23,000 employees and operates convenience stores and gas stations in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, Ohio and North Carolina.