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Tribal Tribune (tribal newspaper owned by the federally-recognized Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, [82] received a 2019 National Native Media Award. [67] Tribal News (Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska) published by the Tlingit and Haida Central Council [83] Tribal Observer (Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Nation) [84]
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The publication was launched by Greg Archuleta in or before 1978, initially as a single or multiple sheet, monthly newsletter mailed to tribal members. In April 1987 it adopted a tabloid format on traditional newsprint. In 1995 it began publishing twice month. [2] Smoke Signals' coverage has been cited in news publications and the academic ...
Gail Lorraine George (born Gail Lorraine Kahgegab; May 18, 1946 – December 11, 2020) was a healthcare professional and leader within the Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Nation. She served as the tribe's first female Tribal Chief from 1993 to 1995.
The following year, efforts on cannabis reform were more successful, with the Tribal Council passing a resolution instructing the tribal attorney general to draft legislation legalizing medical cannabis. [5] A new feasibility study was approved in 2019, analyzing the pros and cons of medical cannabis legalization. [6]
The tribe has about 6800 members with approximately 4,000 tribal members living on the Flathead Reservation as of 2013, and 2,800 tribal members living off the reservation. Their predominant religion is Roman Catholicism. 1,100 Native Americans from other tribes and more than 10,000 non-Native Americans also live on the reservation.
Aaron Carapella is an American self-taught cartographer who makes maps of the locations and names of Pre-Columbian Indigenous tribes of North America circa 1490. At age 19, he began his map-making research and as of 2014, he has made maps of Indigenous tribes with their original names for the continental United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Within two decades, the numbers had been halved, with 200 remaining, as a result of what one observer stated was 'the rifle and syphilis'. [1] A branch of the Maikulan soon shifted down the Norman River to settle around Normanton , which misled some early reports to take them to be indigenous to the latter area.