AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Jun 05 2024
News
Sioux Falls native, Lundin named All-American
COLUMBIA, MO (KELO) — Sioux Falls native, Jack Lundin just completed one of the best seasons in the University of Missouri men’s golf history and now he’s receiving national honors. Lundin was honored on Wednesday claiming a spot on the Division I PING All-America Second Team. He’s the first Missouri Tiger to claim the award since Stan Utley in 1983 and 1984. Lundin is the nation’s 22nd ranked
KelolandMay 15 2024
News
Noem banned by seventh Native American tribe
A seventh Native American tribe in South Dakota has banned Gov. Kristi Noem (R) from its reservation after she commented earlier this year that tribal leaders benefited from drug cartels. The Crow Creek Sioux Tribe in central South Dakota voted Tuesday to ban Noem from its reservation, citing her cartel comments, the tribe confirmed on social media. The vote means just two of her state’s nine
The HillMay 31 2024
News
Soldier honors Native American heritage after religious accommodation
An Army major is celebrating one year of having earned approval to wear his hair and tribe-specific regalia items in a way that honors his Native American heritage during appropriate service ceremonies. Maj. Patrick Sorensen, a marketing and operations officer in the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command, shared photos online displaying his longer hair adorned with eagle feathers meant to
Yahoo NewsJun 03 2024
News
Native American sanctuary in Salem County gets permit to be a worship site
From Camden and Cherry Hill to Trenton and the Jersey Shore, what about life in New Jersey do you want WHYY News to cover? Let us know. Nine months after the Native American Advancement Corporation (NAAC) bought 63 acres in Quinton Township, it finally received the permits it was seeking. “Nine has a lot of significance to us,” said Tyrese Gould Jacinto, a member of the Nanticoke Lenni Lenape
WHYYJun 05 2024
News
Disco dance music meets Native American language preservation in Spoleto's 'Wampum'
Barefoot with braids and in a long, shiny black, gold and silver dress that merges tradition and futurism, Elisa Harkins took the stage at the Charleston Music Hall with not only her music but her culture to share. Harkins, who introduced herself as Cherokee and Muscogee Creek Nation, part of the Bear Clan, is working to preserve and present Native American language through the
The Post and CourierMay 15 2024
News
Why Native American tribes are banning Kristi Noem
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) has been banned by at least six of the nine Native American tribes in her state as of Wednesday, after she made comments earlier this year that they say were offensive. Relations between the governor and the tribes have been strained since she took office in 2019, but her comments, like saying tribal leaders benefit from drug cartels, have caused the tribes to
The HillMay 29 2024
News
A Century Ago, This Law Underscored the Promises and Pitfalls of Native American Citizenship
When Calvin Coolidge’s motorcade arrived in the southwestern corner of South Dakota on August 17, 1927, he became the first United States president to make an official visit to a reservation. As the New York Times reported, Coolidge appeared in front of “10,000 Sioux Indians as supreme chief”—a nod to a recent ceremony that had awarded him the Lakota name Wanblí Tokáhe, which translates to “
Smithsonian MagazineJun 03 2024
News
Essential Books by Native American and Indigenous Authors to Add to Your TBR List
On the eve of the publication of his new novel, (out June 4 from Tin House Books), PEOPLE asked award-winning author Morgan Talty to recommend a few of his favorite books by Native American and Indigenous writers. Fire Exit , Talty's debut novel, is a book about secrets. It follows Charles Lamosway, a man who has watched his neighbor Elizabeth grow up across the river on Maine's Penobscot
PeopleMay 25 2024
News
Kyle Rittenhouse Tells Native Americans They Can ‘Leave’ If They Hate America
Listen: It’s no accident that Kenosha Killer Kyle Rittenhouse turned out to be a white conservative sweetheart who fits right in with MAGA America like a custom-made glove. The guy who became the poster child for white privilege by killing two people and getting acquitted after he cried about it is just as dense, simpleminded, uneducated, and easily offended by any criticism of America as one
News OneMay 17 2024
News
U.S. officials: Tulsa is breaking the law by prosecuting Native Americans
Officers from the Muscogee Nation Lighthorse Police and Tulsa County Sheriff's Office arrive at the scene of an abandoned stolen car in this July 2023 file photo. U.S. officials moved to intervene this week in a lawsuit filed by the Muscogee Nation over Tulsa’s refusal to stop ticketing and fining Native American drivers. The federal government contends Oklahoma’s second largest city is
Yahoo News