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The tribal center on the land is the location of an annual Powwow and Fall Festival. [2] Wayne Adkins, a member of the Chickahominy Tribe, represents the tribe in the UK. The Chickahominy are led by a tribal council of 12 men and women, including a chief and two assistant chiefs. These positions are elected by members of the tribe, by vote. [2]
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On March 3, 1881 the tribe sold all of their land in Nebraska to the federal government and moved to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). In 1830 the Fox Meskwaki and the Sauk, distinct Algonquian-speaking tribes that were closely related, ceded a great deal of land in Nebraska to the United States. [13] Today the tribes are federally recognized ...
An attempted robbery at a highway rest area in eastern Nebraska left a 72-year-old man dead and his 71-year-old wife critically injured in a knife attack Wednesday, authorities said. The Hall ...
Nebraska Advertiser – Brownville (1856–1899) [15] The Nebraska Advertiser – Nemaha City (1899–1908) Nebraska Palladium – Bellevue (1854–1855) [16] Nebraska State Journal – Lincoln (1867–1951) The New Era – Omaha (1921–1926) The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal – Norfolk (1900–1912) [17] The Norfolk weekly news – Norfolk ...
Judi M. gaiashkibos (born 1953) is a Ponca-Santee administrator, who has been the executive director of the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs since 1995. According to journalist John Mabry, her surname "is pronounced 'gosh-key-bosh' and spelled without a capital in recognition "that the two-legged are not superior to the four". [1]
Between 1854 and 1861, the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska and the Sac & Fox Nation of Missouri in Kansas and Nebraska gave up lands except small reserves on the Kansas-Nebraska border. In 1858, a new Great Nemaha Agency headquarters was built on the Iowa Reserve, just east of Great Nemaha River and north of the Kansas-Nebraska line."
Native American journalists are vastly underrepresented in mainstream media, and the majority of them work in tribal enterprises. At times, the sponsorship of tribal publications by tribal governments has led to censorship. This happened with the Navajo Times, which the tribal government shut down during the 1980s for questioning tribal ...