Indian artifact program set Tuesday at Union Station
The News Review:
- Indian artifact program set Tuesday at Union Station
- Renew the Fairness Doctrine
- Northwest Indian College continues to grow impress
- Indian group brings community together
Indian artifact program set Tuesday at Union Station
Kansas City Star M -
Dyer was posted at Fort Reno in what is now central klahoma. Although Ida Dyer was fully steeped in the anti-Indian prejudices of the time she was an intense admirer of American Indian objects spending all her pin-money on what she called “barbaric gems. The lecture begins at 6 p. in Union Station’s Town Hall 30 W.
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Renew the Fairness Doctrine
Philadelphia Inquirer PA -
This wouldn’t have happened under the Fairness Doctrine when stations were required to keep track of the amount of time allocated to minority points of view. Those records were submitted at license renewal time and helped determine if a station stayed in business. As a result many stations began to air shows hosted and produced by members of minority races including American Indians. Around Indian country white listeners and viewers were introduced to a perspective that had existed in their neighborhoods for years but was totally new to them. An American Indian point of view began to surface.
Northwest Indian College continues to grow impress
Bellingham Herald WA -
Some live in the newly opened dormitory but many attend classes via Webcam at classroom facilities at six other tribal reservations in the region. Students from about 100 tribes are enrolled. About 20 percent of the student body is not American Indian. The dormitory with 67 beds was just the first part of the ambitious plans to create a new more permanent campus for the college at Lummi to replace the current portables and modular buildings. ther recent buildings include a new classroom building and an early-learning center that provides child care for children of students. The college also expects to break ground this year on a $3. 7 million Center for Student Success an office building that will bring together student services now spread around the smaller existing buildings.
Indian group brings community together
Aiken Standard (subscription) SC -
STNE Staff writer CLEARWATER — The Little Horse Creek American Indian Association and Cultural Center offered a day of prayer fellowship food and music to bring the community together Saturday. The Cultural Center located on U. Highway 1 in the former North Augusta Boxing Club building hosted a Keeper of the Word spiritual gathering with drumming at 3 p.
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