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Salon.com November 27, 2002 James Hagengruber |
Sitting Bull uber alles Some Germans are fascinated American Indian culture. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 Susan Konig |
Merrill's Long March for Native American Business Today, nearly two decades after Congress passed the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, it's obvious why Wall Street's multicultural-marketing efforts include Native Americans. But Merrill Lynch can claim that it was way ahead of this trend as the first retail brokerage to cater to this market. |
Wild West July 3, 2004 J. Jay Myers |
Tecumseh, Red Cloud and Sitting Bull: Three Great Indian Leaders Diplomacy, courage and charisma were among the attributes of this trio of great Indian leaders. |
Wild West December 2006 |
Letters from Readers Plenty of Gall... & Some Little Crow... Untimely Mistake... |
Smithsonian August 2007 Megan Gambino |
An Evolving Ritual The National Powwow showcases a mixture of tradition and competition. |
Wild West July 3, 2004 G. Sam Carr |
Sioux Chief's Ghost Dance Revival Two years after Wounded Knee, Chief Two Sticks was Ghost Dancing and more. |
American History December 2005 Charles Phillips |
Wounded Knee Massacre The intermittent war between the United States and the Plains Indians that stretched across some three decades after the Civil War came to an end on December 29, 1890, at the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. |
Wild West July 3, 2004 Nancy M. Peterson |
Interpreter Philip Wells: Wounded at Wounded Knee The son of a white father and a half-blood mother, Wells nearly lost his nose in the tragic 1890 affair but still managed to be merciful. |
Smithsonian May 2006 Tony Perrottet |
Destination America: Mount Rushmore With a Native American superintendent, the South Dakota monument is becoming much more than a shrine to four presidents. |
Smithsonian July 2005 Devon Jackson |
Points of Interest - Cowboys and Artists A ranch in South Dakota is the setting as Wild West scenes are re-enacted for sculptors and painters. |
Wild West Johnny D. Boggs |
Art of the West: Have You Heard About the Heard? For two days in March, they come in droves to the Heard Museum in Phoenix for one reason: Indian art. |
Wild West June 2006 Robert W. Larson |
Sioux Chief Gall: In the Shadow of Sitting Bull Soldiers gave the Hunkpapa leader his nickname because he was a dashing warrior who effectively teamed up with Sitting Bull in the 1870s. But after his surrender in 1881, Gall stood up for cooperation and peace at Standing Rock. |
Outside October 2002 Bill Vaughn |
The Snow on the Sweetgrass For newcomers -- meaning most of us -- they are merely picturesque. But for Native Americans, the sacred places of the Great Plains and Northern Rockies are alive with centuries of memory and meaning -- and something much, much bigger. |
Reason November 2005 Ted Balaker |
Domestic Outsourcing The Sioux aren't the only Native Americans benefiting from the domestic outsourcing boom; at four reservations in Utah, startups have created more than 150 jobs and are bringing in millions of dollars in revenue. |
Financial Planning March 1, 2007 Adam Piore |
Investing Across Cultures The founder of the first Native American-owned money management firm has a mission to serve the underserved, many of whom are millionaires. |
CFO February 1, 2007 |
Native American Facts and Fiction Letters to the editor: The 5 Empire... The Author Responds... Capital-market Shortcomings... |
CFO December 1, 2006 John Goff |
The 5 Cent Empire Native American tribes parlayed legalized gambling into a $22 billion lifeline. Now states want a piece of the action. |
Wild West February 2006 John D. McDermott |
Brule Sioux Spotted Tail's Pledge of Peace War and a terrible winter were fresh memories when the tearful Spotted Tail was allowed to bury his daughter at Fort Laramie. This helped convince the Brule Sioux leader to bury the hatchet forever. |
CIO October 1, 2001 Tom Field |
Outsourced in America American Indian tribes are breaking into the IT outsourcing business, offering offshore values at onshore sites. See how entrepreneurial American Indian tribes are offering onshore some of the same low-cost, high-quality IT services available offshore... |
Reason June 2002 Mike Lynch |
Ethnic Engineering An elementary school in the small Sierra Nevada town of Colfax, California, entered the era of educational accountability this year when the state withheld $31,000 in special funds on the grounds that 69 American Indian students had failed to measure up academically... |
Reason July 2004 Steven Vincent |
Grave Injustice Federal laws about burial remains put politics before science. |
Salon.com August 15, 2000 Jonathan Miles |
"The Heartsong of Charging Elk" by James Welch The latest from the Native American novelist probes the culture shock of an Oglala Sioux abandoned in France by Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. |
Salon.com March 8, 2001 King Kaufman |
Puck politics A Hitler-celebrating alum's cash convinces a North Dakota university to keep its degrading Indian mascot... |
Sports Central March 27, 2007 Diane M. Grassi |
Challenges Face Native American Prospects Baseball is arguably the sport most intertwined with its history and legacy along with its impact on society. Its past demands that it be revisited, as this article explores two notable and historically unique minor league prospects. |