Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Native Press (Independent news organization) [54] The Native Tribe of Kanatak (Native Tribe of Kanatak) Wasilla, Alaska [55] Navajo-Hopi Observer, Flagstaff, AZ. Navajo Times, (Navajo Nation), Window Rock, AZ, founded in 1959 [56] News from Native California, intertribal magazine, Berkeley, CA.
MIAMI, Okla. — Representatives from the nine different Ottawa County tribes participate in an event to get more Native Americans to vote. “When everybody votes, everybody wins,” said Ben ...
The Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 took effect nine months after Smith was born, recognizing Native Americans as U.S. citizens and, on paper, extending the privileges of citizenship to them. Yet ...
Native American newspapers are news publications in the United States published by Native American people often for Native American audiences. The first such publication was the Cherokee Phoenix, started in 1828 by the Cherokee Nation. Although Native American people have always written for state and local newspapers, including the official ...
Native Americans, sometimes called American Indians, First Americans, or Indigenous Americans, are the Indigenous peoples of the land that the United States of America is located on. At its core, it includes peoples indigenous to the lower 48 states plus Alaska; it may additionally include any Americans whose origins lie in any of the ...
Native American students are underrepresented in higher education at the bachelor's, master's and doctoral levels. [61] The recruitment and retention of Native American students at a university level is a major issue. [56] Native American professors are also underrepresented; they make up less than one percent of higher education faculty. [65]
Patty Talahongva. Patty Talahongva (native name: Hopi language Qotsak-ookyangw Mana, born 1962) is a Hopi journalist, documentary producer, and news executive. She was the first Native American anchor of a national news program in the United States and is involved in Native American youth and community development projects.
t. e. The history of Native Americans in the United States began before the founding of the country, tens of thousands of years ago with the settlement of the Americas by the Paleo-Indians. Anthropologists and archeologists have identified and studied a wide variety of cultures that existed during this era.