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One of Hollywood’s leading Native American figures is being accused of faking her claims of Cherokee heritage, The Post can reveal. Award-winning Heather Rae, 56, serves on the Academy of Motion ...
The National Congress of American Indians was given the rights to Keep America Beautiful's 1971 "Crying Indian" ad, a recognizable anti-pollution advertisement featuring Iron Eyes Cody.
Three Indian American tech figures have spoken to Newsweek about the value of bringing skilled workers to the U.S. on H-1B visas amid MAGA attacks on the program. The "blowback reflects a deep ...
Keep America Beautiful announced that it will retire the “Crying Indian” ad, which made its first appearance in 1971, and transfer the rights to the National Congress of American Indians Fund.
A Community Powwow, hosted by the American Indian Center, celebrated Indigenous culture within the Pilsen neighborhood of ...
Test your knowledge of Native American history, culture, and tribes with this quiz. Explore Quiz questions with answers about ...
The thematic climax of the documentary “Imagining the Indian: The Fight Against Native American Mascoting” comes with the reluctant and long-delayed 2020 decision by Washington’s NFL team to ...
The ad drew accolades when it first aired in 1971 but also, more recently, derision. A Native American advocacy group that acquired the rights to the ad said it would be “put to bed.” ...
From Independent Lens: "Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.” This was the guiding principle that removed thousands of Native American children and placed them in Indian boarding schools.
Three Indian American tech figures have spoken to Newsweek about the value of bringing skilled workers to the U.S. on H-1B visas amid MAGA attacks on the program. The "blowback reflects a deep ...
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