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Native American

Oct 22, 2013

Coconino County Jail adding sweat lodge for Native American inmates

Kelvin Long, a Navajo who will serve as cultural adviser for a Native American religious program at the Coconino County Jail, inspects a circular rebar frame that will be covered with blankets to form a sweat lodge.

Aug 15, 2013

Study: Chances of climbing the economic ladder are mixed in state

Location matters when it comes to the chances that a child born into poverty in Arizona will move up the economic ladder during his lifetime, a recent study shows.

Dec 20, 2011

Casinos muscle in on traditional “Five C’s” behind Arizona economy

The “Five C’s” that traditionally made the bulk of Arizona’s economy – copper, climate, cattle, cotton, citrus – may need to make room for a sixth: casinos.

Dec 12, 2011

Elections officials grapple with new Native American language rule

Coconino County election officials have provided translators at the polls for Navajo speakers. They have done the same for Hopi voters.

But Yuma has them stumped.

Dec 2, 2011

Escaping from the Phoenix Indian School

Anglos moving into the Arizona Territory during the late 1800s believed that the Native Americans already there should be acclimated into Anglo culture. During that time, Indian boarding schools were built and native children were removed from their homes and placed into these schools. For one Hopi, however, going to the Phoenix Indian School was a choice he made reluctantly out of respect for his[...]

Dec 2, 2011

Navajo Nation president wants leeway in federal rules on coal-fired plants

Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly told a Senate committee Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency “ignores reality” by insisting on the most-advanced pollution control technology to update coal-fired power plants.

Aug 12, 2011

Flagstaff leaders seeking split from tribes in redistricting

During the last redistricting cycle, Flagstaff narrowly avoided being split into two legislative districts. But in order to keep the city whole, it was coupled with the expansive, Native American-dominated Legislative District 2, a district so heavily Democratic that not one Republican ran for the Legislature there in 2010, an otherwise GOP-wave year.

Now leaders in Flagstaff say they w[...]

Jun 3, 2011

Fort Defiance

Fort Defiance, established in 1851, was the first military post established in what would become the Arizona Territory, and its post office, established in 1856, provided the future territory’s first postal service.

May 3, 2011

Senate official: Wrong to link bin Laden, Geronimo

Geronimo was known as a legendary Apache warrior whose ability to walk without leaving footprints allowed him to evade thousands of Mexican and U.S. soldiers, much like Osama bin Laden evaded capture for the past decade.

But for Native Americans, there's an important difference: Geronimo was a hero a�� not a terrorist.

Apr 11, 2011

Why Father Kino?

You can still see his name everywhere, on hospitals, parkways, schools, swimming pools, and even a sports complex. So the question on every newcomer’s mind in Arizona is, why Kino?

Jan 28, 2011

Hopis vote down proposed constitutional changes

Hopis have voted down a proposed constitution that would have made sweeping changes to their tribal government.

Jan 27, 2011

Hopis vote on overhauling tribal constitution

Members of the Hopi Tribe are voting Thursday on whether to approve proposed changes to their constitution.

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