American Indian linked to federal artifacts looting case
The News Review:
- American Indian linked to federal artifacts looting case
- UNRESERVED: American Indian Art and Fashion Alliance launches
- American Indian art and culture converge annually in Santa Fe
- American Indian history Time travel an easy hike
- New border rules affect Indian citizenship identity
- UW Program Helps Teachers f American Indians
American Indian linked to federal artifacts looting case
Salt Lake Tribune
Federal court papers filed in New Mexico say thousands of dollars’ worth of those artifacts that Santa Fe resident Thomas “Tommy” Cavaliere is alleged to have sold to an undercover operative — identified in Utah filings only as “the Source” — ended up in the hands of federal authorities during a 2½-year undercover investigation of illegal artifacts trafficking across the Four Corners region. The documents show how an investigation spread across four states after a former antiquities dealer offered his services in 2006 to the FBI in Utah saying he wanted to infiltrate the worlds of amateur and professional collectors to curtail illegal trading. The documents also reveal more about Steven Shrader a Santa Fe man who stunned federal law enforcement officials when he shot himself to death in Illinois a week after he and 23 others were arrested and charged in Utah on more than 115 felony counts and a handful of misdemeanors. Affidavits accompanying search warrants served on four Santa Fe residents the Source dealt with in 2008 depict a tony network of art and antiquities dealers who acquired relics such as kachina masks fetishes and bowls purposely broken by Advertisement yld_mgr.
UNRESERVED: American Indian Art and Fashion Alliance launches
Indian Country Today
indiancountrytoday. com%2Fliving%2F52675567. Kellogg Foundation.
Related from Inkfeenz: Call For Designers: Glasgow Fashion Week
American Indian art and culture converge annually in Santa Fe
Fort Worth Star Telegram
22-23 the Santa Fe Plaza and adjoining streets will be lined with booths displaying beadwork baskets carvings pottery sculpture jewelry masks dolls drums leatherwork weavings and paintings. The vast variety of artwork and artisanship will be complemented by plenty of food music a.
American Indian history Time travel an easy hike
San Francisco Chronicle
” As a young boy who had a thing about digging holes (for no reason) in the backyard of our home on the Peninsula I found that hard to believe but he went on. “It’s a California horned snail. The Indians would break off the end and suck out the snail for a snack. That was my first lesson in the Bay Area’s American Indian history. It seems now that just about everywhere you turn in a Bay Area park if you know what you’re looking at there is proof that you are walking a trail through history. Since James Benney self-published a 60-page booklet “Native American Indian Sites in the East Bay Hills” that detailed more than 40 sites in parks there’s been a dispute over whether it is good or bad to reveal these locations:Why it’s good: It’s good because exploring parks and discovering artifacts connects the visitor to the past and instills reverence. We conserve only what we know and love.
New border rules affect Indian citizenship identity
Indian Country Today
The WHTI regulations include the ability of American Indian tribes to provide documents for their tribal members or citizens. Now tribal governments must produce an identification card with a photograph and security measures that meet security standards similar to passports. A tribal member can enter and re-enter the U. with an approved enhanced tribal identification card.
UW Program Helps Teachers f American Indians
cbs4denver.com
Lander teachers Marty Conrad and Christine Rogers recently completed the program. Both are instructional facilitators in Fremont County School District 1. The certificate program consists of five graduate courses. It’s intended for certified teachers who want preparation to meet the unique learning needs of American Indian students.
Written by admin on August 7th, 2009 with
no comments.
Read more articles on News.