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Tag: Native American

  • Man Pleads Not Guilty to Casino Stabbing Death

    Posted on: February 7, 2026, 12:28h. 

    Last updated on: February 6, 2026, 02:29h.

    • A North Dakota man says he did not stab a woman to death inside a tribal casino
    • Casino surveillance doesn’t show any person entering or exiting the hotel room
    • The suspect says he awoke to find a dead woman in his hotel room

    A North Dakota man accused of stabbing a woman to death inside a tribal casino hotel room has pleaded not guilty.

    stabbing death Sky Dancer Casino
    North Dakota’s Rolette County Sheriff’s Office alleges that Rigoberto Mendez Morales, 58, stabbed a woman to death inside his Sky Dancer Casino & Resort hotel room. Mendez Morales claims to have no recollection of the murder and has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in Indian country. (Image: Rolette County Sheriff’s Office)

    Last month, law enforcement officers with the Rolette County Sheriff’s Office responded to the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort in Belcourt, North Dakota, where 58-year-old Rigoberto Mendez Morales said he awoke to find a woman dead in his hotel room. The victim was identified as a Native woman enrolled with the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation.

    During a Zoom appearance in the North Dakota’s US District Court from the Ward County Jail, Mendez Morales, through his Spanish interpreter, pleaded not guilty to the charge of second-degree murder within Indian country.

    US Magistrate Judge Alice Senechal ordered that Mendez Morales remain in custody until his jury trial begins on April 14.

    Affidavit Shines Details 

    The criminal complaint details that at approximately 6:07 am on the morning of Jan. 10, 2026, the Rolette County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call stating there was a person dead at the Sky Dancer Casino & Resort. Police officers responded to the property, owned and operated by the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa, where they found Mendez Morales sitting on the hotel room’s bed.

    A female, identified only by her initials BTM, was located on the floor. Investigators said Mendez Morales had blood on his clothing and face, and his right eye was swollen and bleeding. BTM was determined to have been stabbed to death.

    Video surveillance from the hotel hallway showed Mendez Morales and BTM enter the room shortly after midnight. No one else entered or exited the room until the police arrived.

    When law enforcement detained Mendez Morales, they found he was in possession of a multi-tool (Leatherman-type), which was covered in what appeared to be blood. The FBI later collected the Leatherman multi-tool as evidence pursuant to a search warrant. A substance that appeared to be blood was observed on the knife blade of the Leatherman as well as what appeared to be long black human hairs, which law enforcement observed to be consistent with BTM,” the charging complaint detailed.

    “Mendez Morales stated he consumed three alcoholic drinks while gambling. Mendez Morales did not recall returning to his room. Mendez Morales could not recall why he had blood on his pants, shirt, and multi-tool, and denied touching BTM when he saw she was on the floor and covered in blood. Mendez Morales stated he woke up on his bed and saw BTM was not moving,” the affidavit continued.

    Possible Sentence

    The US attorney alleges that Mendez Morales “did unlawfully kill a human being, namely, BTM, an Indian, with malice aforethought.” The federal crime is prosecuted under the Major Crimes Act.

    A person found guilty of second-degree murder in Indian country faces life in prison.

    Devin O’Connor

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  • Northwest Native Nations could lose hundreds of millions in federal funding, report says

    Lucy Suppah, a member of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, attends a protest in Madras on Saturday, April 5, 2025. (Photo by Julia Shumway/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

    A new report from Portland State University found that budget cuts under President Donald Trump’s new spending bill threaten nearly half of federal funding allocated to federally recognized Native American and Alaska Native nations last year.

    Roughly $530 million of the $1.19 billion allocated to Northwest tribal nations in fiscal year 2024 — used to fulfill the federal government’s trust and treaty obligations to Native American and Alaska Native tribes — is at risk of being cut. The congressionally allocated funds serve myriad functions for tribes in the Northwest, including providing clean drinking water, affordable housing, schools, transit and land management. Funding is decided by Congress on a yearly basis and can be disbursed over a period of time that exceeds the calendar year it is allocated.

    “All across the board tribes are worried about the funding cuts that are happening right now,” said Serina Fast Horse, who is Lakota and Blackfeet and serves as the co-director of the Northwest Environmental Justice Center, which provides grant application assistance and advising to Indigenous communities in the Northwest.

    Fast Horse says there are serious concerns among Northwest tribes about further cuts to vital programs ranging from health and wellness to early childhood education. The report warns of vulnerabilities to programs and grants that tribes rely on for resilience in the face of climate change, like improving home weatherization, managing forestland and renovating aging homes. Federal dollars to help Northwest tribes bolster their infrastructure against the increasing threats from wildfire, drought and sea-level rise could also be slashed.

    The Portland State report found millions in Clean Air Act funding could also go away — the Environmental Protection Agency earmarked nearly $2 million in 2024 for Northwest tribes in a series of grants for monitoring air quality and pollution. Much of the congressionally allocated funding has yet to be distributed to tribes and is now at risk of being cut altogether.

    The report demonstrates how proposed major reductions across the federal government, including at the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of the Interior and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, could reverberate across Indian Country.

    Tribal officials shared concerns that drastic cuts could cause the federal government to fall short of trust and treaty obligations that mandate the federal government support tribal services, uphold tribal sovereignty and protect tribal treaty resources — responsibilities that courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have repeatedly upheld.

    “All the funding reductions addressing clean water, air and dealing with climate change have impacts on the Tribes’ culture and treaty protected resources,” said William E. Ray Jr., chair of the Klamath Tribes.

    Researchers declined to disclose specific projects at risk of elimination for fear of retaliation, and a number of tribes and tribal organizations declined to comment to InvestigateWest, citing similar concerns.

    “Trump and Congressional Republicans are wreaking havoc on Tribal communities with their ‘Big, Ugly BETRAYAL’ of a law that arbitrarily cuts many programs supporting folks in Indian Country, where chronic underfunding is already impacting services and exacerbating disparities,” said Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley, a Democrat.

    He added that the federal government plays an outsized role in funding essential services to tribal communities, including health care, education and public safety, and that the Inflation Reduction Act took important steps in advancing funding for water infrastructure and environmental programs for tribes.

    In 2024, Clean Air Act related funds were used to fund 15 projects for 12 Northwest tribes. The Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, and the Tulalip Tribes are some of the Native American nations set to receive research grants for improving air quality and pollution monitoring. Among 12 tribes selected for funding, several of them focus on minimizing exposure to poor air quality and harmful pollutants to their elderly and medically vulnerable residents. Other tribes intend to study impacts of pollutants on important first foods — culturally significant staple foods consumed before colonization — that officials say are critical to improving health outcomes for their citizens.

    Researchers at PSU examined 469 programs impacted by President Trump’s reversal of former President Joe Biden’s Executive Order 14008, which sought to address climate change and created a number of environmental justice initiatives. Sixty of the programs identified by researchers were specifically named in the Republican-led spending bill for cuts, and 17 of those provided funding directly to tribes. The programs accounted for roughly 35% of all federal investments in tribes in 2024. The report says not all of the funding will be cut, but a significant portion of it could be.

    The cuts come at a time when Native Americans and Alaska Natives already have limited access to federal services and funds, according to a December 2024 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan congressional watchdog. It found when tribes had to compete with other entities for federal funding, they may receive a small portion of the total amount, and that limited access to federal services and funds contributes to known disparities for Native Americans and Alaska Natives compared to other Americans.

    Of the $20.15 billion in federal funding that went to tribes between 2010 and 2024, tribes within the boundaries of Idaho received a total of $304.56 million, Washington tribes $1.81 billion, Oregon tribes $690.76 million, and Alaska Native tribes received $2.35 billion.

    Other programs at risk of being cut include the EPA’s embattled Environmental Justice Government-to-Government Program, which funded initiatives by states, tribes and local governments to support activities that lead to measurable environmental or public health impacts.

    Under that program, in 2023, the EPA awarded the Tulalip Tribes $977,000 to work in conjunction with the Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation to create a tool to detect which homes are at greatest risk from wildfire smoke infiltration and dangerously hot weather, which are growing issues affecting both communities.

    While the federal government has repeatedly affirmed its obligations to tribes, actual allocations remain disproportionately small compared to population figures. In 2024, Native American tribes received just 1.7% of federal energy and environment spending, despite Native people making up 2.9% of the U.S. population.

    Between 2010 and 2024, tribes within the bounds of Idaho, Washington and Oregon received roughly $2.81 billion in federal investments in energy and environmental infrastructure, which represents roughly 14% of the $20 billion in allocations made to tribes nationwide.

    The researchers determined that programs funded under the Inflation Reduction Act, Biden’s 2022 climate, health and tax law, are at particular risk of being eliminated. The funding allocated to tribes under the IRA represented a historic investment in infrastructure in Indian Country, more than doubling energy and infrastructure investment from $1.51 billion nationwide to $3.94 billion in 2024, around .04% of total federal grant spending obligations for 2024.

    “When you put them in the context of how much money the federal government actually spends on certain things, it’s pennies on the dollar,” said Sophie Lalande, a co-author of the PSU report.

    Soon after taking office and without consulting Congress, the Trump administration suspended some grants that tribal communities used heavily, such as community change grants, distributed by the EPA’s Offices of Environmental Justice and of External Civil Rights Compliance during the Biden administration, to support climate resilience and clean energy. Distributed as a part of the Inflation Reduction Act, the grants were suspended as part of the Trump administration’s anti-diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

    The grants helped tribal communities in the Northwest tremendously, according to Fast Horse.

    “They were providing hundreds of thousands of dollars to communities for infrastructure improvements, like access to clean drinking water and climate resilience hubs, just really essential pieces of community development for health and safety of communities,” she said.

    The report stresses a multiplier effect from investments made in tribal communities. Infrastructure dollars invested on tribal lands often serve as anchors for broader local development, since tribal lands often share regional infrastructure like power grids, roads or water systems with non-Native communities, with the power of dollars rippling outward into surrounding rural towns and cities.

    Bobby Cochran, a researcher with Portland State University and senior project manager at the National Policy Consensus Center, co-authored the report.

    “We just haven’t made a major investment in infrastructure since the ’60s or ’70s, so this wasn’t fluffy,” he said. “It’s really important stuff that was just trying to play catch-up.”

    InvestigateWest is an independent news nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism in the Pacific Northwest. Visit investigatewest.org/newsletters to sign up for weekly updates.

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  • Morongo Awards $40,000 in Scholarships to Native American Students

    Four Native American students from across the state have each been awarded a $10,000 scholarship by the Morongo Band of Mission Indians, located near Palm Springs. These awards were granted through the Tribe’s 20th Annual Rodney T. Mathews Jr. Scholarship Program.

    Since its founding, the program has supported 66 Native students pursuing degrees at universities nationwide. Open to enrolled members of federally recognized tribes in California, the scholarship aims to help address the persistent underrepresentation of Native students in higher education—where American Indian and Alaska Native students still account for less than 1% of undergraduates in the U.S.

     

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    The 2025 recipients of the Mathews Scholarship Program include:

    • William Feather, a member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes, is pursuing a Doctor of Education (EdD) at Chaminade University in Honolulu. Residing in Ukiah, California, he works as a Special Education–Mental Health Counselor for the Ukiah Unified School District. His career goal is to become a school-to-prison prevention specialist and drive systemic reforms grounded in Indigenous knowledge and intergenerational healing. This marks his second time receiving the Mathews Scholarship, having also been selected in 2019.

    • Gabriella Salgado, a member of the Cahuilla Band of Indians, has spent her life on the Morongo Reservation in Banning. She is continuing her studies at California State University Monterey Bay with a major in Marine Science. Passionate about ocean life, she hopes to explore global marine environments and return home to educate youth about protecting ocean ecosystems.

    • Mary Pojas, a member of the La Jolla Band of Luiseño Indians, is currently working toward a bachelor’s degree in American Indian Studies at San Diego State University. Living on the La Jolla Indian Reservation in Pauma Valley, she aspires to a career in tribal law and leadership. She serves on her tribe’s Youth Council and participates in cultural exchange programs, traveling to share and preserve her tribe’s heritage.

    • Nusun Pojas, also a member of the La Jolla Band of Luiseño Indians, lives in Valley Center and will begin her studies at San Diego State University this fall. She plans to major in American Indian Studies with an emphasis on business and marketing. Her goal is to help build accessible healthcare services for her tribal community. Nusun has been involved in intertribal sports as both a participant and youth mentor and serves on the Youth Council.

    The scholarship program was created in memory of Rodney T. Mathews Jr., a Morongo tribal member and graduate of Hastings Law School. Mathews worked as an attorney in Banning for two decades and served as a judge pro tem for over 10 years before his passing in 2004.

    His mother, Eunice Mathews, noted that the scholarship reflects her son’s lifelong dedication to education and justice, and continues to inspire future generations of Native students to pursue their goals.

    Scholarship selection is based on academic achievement and community involvement. To be eligible, applicants must be full-time students at accredited colleges or universities, complete 60 service hours with a designated California Indian agency, and actively engage in the Native American community.

    About the Author: “Native News Online is one of the most-read publications covering Indian Country and the news that matters to American Indians, Alaska Natives and other Indigenous people. Reach out to us at editor@nativenewsonline.net. “

    Contact: news@nativenewsonline.net

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  • Oglala Sioux Tribe, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Launch Urgent Syphilis Response Effort

    Oglala Sioux Tribe, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Launch Urgent Syphilis Response Effort

    Press Release


    Apr 9, 2024

    Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board and Federal Agencies to Join Effort

     The Oglala Sioux Tribe, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe are uniting to combat a surge in syphilis cases across the Great Plains Region. From April 15 to 26, public health teams will conduct intensive contact tracing on the Pine Ridge, Rosebud, and Cheyenne River Reservations to curb this resurgent disease. These efforts stem from proactive measures by the tribes, in partnership with the Great Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center (a division of the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board), federal officials, and local tribal programs, to address rising syphilis rates. Led by experts from the Epidemiology Center, these teams will ensure medication availability and seek residents for treatments.

    Recent data from the Great Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center shows a 1,865% surge in syphilis rates among American Indians and Alaska Natives in the region, surpassing national increases. Alarmingly, cases of congenital syphilis have risen, affecting 2.5% of all Native births in certain areas. Public health resources have struggled to match this crisis, with a nearly 19-fold increase in cases between 2020 and 2023. Nationwide, syphilis infections hit a 70-year high in 2022, coinciding with a penicillin shortage, leading to significant health complications and fatalities.

    The Great Plains Tribal Leaders’ Health Board and leaders from several states have urged Federal Health Secretary Xavier Becerra to declare a public health emergency. Native Americans, particularly in rural areas, face challenges accessing prenatal care and syphilis testing due to limited services and cultural barriers, exacerbated by hospital closures.

    Source: Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board

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  • Cambridge Central holds mascot forum ahead of vote

    Cambridge Central holds mascot forum ahead of vote

    CAMBRIDGE, N.Y. (NEWS10) -Cambridge Central School District students were once known as the Cambridge Indians. Just like other New York schools, the district had to take down its Native American imagery or lose state funding.

    “We’re trying to find a mascot that surely paints the culture in a good light and isn’t debatable,” stated Cambridge Senior and President of National Honor Society, Kateri Murphy.

    Cambridge CSD asked students at its mascot forum to keep a few characteristics in mind when choosing a new name and image. The orange and black school colors are here to stay.

    “Strength, power, courage, pride, and ferociousness. The top two right now that we have from the students are the tigers and the eagles, which came out of that survey,” explained Cambridge Senior and Class of 2024 President, Deacon Schneider.

    Before the forum, the student body was given a survey on what they would like to see symbolized. A majority said they want the mascot to be tied to local history in some way.

    “Eagle feathers, they give as gifts as a symbol of wisdom and pride. So that would be a great healing sense to our last mascot,” described Murphy.

    Some members of the community and Board of Education expressed that no matter what is chosen as the Cambridge mascot, they are glad the students are involved.

    “A symbol can bring that awareness and put on a platform to really educate the kids. A constant reminder of who we are and where we came from,” said Board of Education Member, Dillon Honyoust.

    A board workshop is being held on March 7 at the school to review the survey and community comments. The March 14 board meeting will adopt a new mascot.

    Anthony Krolikowski

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  • Tribal Leaders Urge HHS Secretary to Declare Syphilis Emergency

    Tribal Leaders Urge HHS Secretary to Declare Syphilis Emergency

    In response to an alarming surge in syphilis cases sweeping across the Great Plains Region, tribal officials representing nations spanning North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa, are urgently appealing to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Bacerra for a formal declaration of a public health emergency. 

    Jerilyn Church, CEO of the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board based in Rapid City, SD, conveyed this pressing message to Secretary Bacerra in a letter dispatched today. 

    “The elected leaders from each of the Great Plains Area tribal nations implore you to issue a Public Health Emergency Declaration under Section 319 of the Public Health Service Act, acknowledging the significant outbreak of syphilis and congenital syphilis affecting American Indian and Alaska Native communities in our region,” Church wrote. 

    Established in 1986, the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board (GPTLHB) serves as the official representative body for 17 tribal nations and one service unit in the Great Plains area on health issues.  

    “The syphilis rate among American Indians and Alaska Natives in the Great Plains now surpasses any recorded rate in the United States since 1941, predating the availability of penicillin for infection treatment,” Church emphasized. 

    Section 319 of the Public Health Service Act empowers the Secretary of Health and Human Services to implement measures aimed at preventing the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable diseases, including the formulation and enforcement of regulations, along with resource mobilization for this purpose. 

    Data from the Great Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center paints a grim picture: In 2020, syphilis rates among American Indians and Alaska Natives in the Great Plains mirrored the national average. By 2022, however, these rates had skyrocketed by 1,865%, far outpacing the 154% increase seen nationally. Similarly, cases of congenital syphilis have spiked alarmingly, with certain areas witnessing rates where more than one in every 40 American Indian and Alaska Native babies born in 2022 were diagnosed with the condition, constituting 2.5% of all Native births in those communities. 

    Yet, despite this unprecedented crisis, public health resources have not matched the scale of the challenge. Between 2020 and 2023, frontline health workers have grappled with nearly a 19-fold increase in syphilis cases without a corresponding boost in funding or workforce capacity, according to the Great Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center. 

    The Health Board is demanding immediate action, including emergency data access from the Indian Health Service and other pertinent department sources, the deployment of credentialed staff from tribal public health agencies to collaborate with the Indian Health Service in coordinating the syphilis response, the dispatch of at least 50 personnel from the Public Health Service to the Great Plains Area to bolster syphilis and congenital syphilis diagnosis and treatment efforts, provision of ample supplies for syphilis treatment, allocation of emergency funding, and the formulation of a comprehensive plan for supporting and monitoring children afflicted with congenital syphilis. 

    “Many of these hundreds of children will face significant long-term health challenges. It is imperative to commence planning for their care now to ensure they are not left behind,” Church emphasized. 

    Source: Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board

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  • Oscars 2024: Potential historic moments to watch for at the 96th Academy Awards

    Oscars 2024: Potential historic moments to watch for at the 96th Academy Awards

    A lot of history could be made at the 2024 Oscars.

    The 96th Academy Awards, set for March 10, could see both films and individuals land impressive and significant wins.

    MORE: See full list of the 2024 Oscar nominations

    Better yet, these achievements could happen across all types of categories, from best picture and directing to acting and various technical categories.

    While you get your predictions in order for Hollywood’s biggest night, we’ve got you covered on potential historic wins you should keep an eye on.

    Here are some moments to watch out for at the 2024 Oscars.

    Lily Gladstone could make history for Native Americans

    This image released by Apple TV+ shows Lily Gladstone, center, in a scene from “Killers of the Flower Moon.” (Apple TV+ via AP)

    Apple TV+ via AP

    Lily Gladstone would be the first Native American woman to win the Oscar for best actress should her performance in “Killers of the Flower Moon” triumph against the competition.

    Not only that, but she would also become the first person of Native American heritage to win an acting Oscar.

    MORE: Lily Gladstone talks about her history-making Oscar nomination

    In a phone call with ABC News after her historic nomination, Gladstone said she is excited for others in her community to “feel seen and represented.”

    Gladstone is of Siksikaitsitapi and NiMíiPuu heritage and uses she/they pronouns, according to her Instagram.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ could join — or beat — an elite group of films

    This image released by Universal Pictures shows Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer, left, and Emily Blunt as Kitty Oppenheimer in a scene from Oppenheimer.

    This image released by Universal Pictures shows Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer, left, and Emily Blunt as Kitty Oppenheimer in a scene from “Oppenheimer.”

    Universal Pictures via AP

    “Oppenheimer” scored an impressive 13 nominations this year, positioning the film to potentially tie — or even break — the record for the most Oscar wins by a single film.

    The record currently stands at 11 and is held by “Ben-Hur” in 1960, “Titanic” in 1998 and “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” in 2004.

    Martin Scorsese could set a new record for best director

    Martin Scorsese waves while holding his Oscar for his work on The Departed as he arrives at the annual Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, Calif. on Feb. 25, 2007.

    Martin Scorsese waves while holding his Oscar for his work on “The Departed” as he arrives at the annual Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, Calif. on Feb. 25, 2007.

    AP Photo/Danny Moloshok

    With his best director nomination for “Killers of the Flower Moon,” Martin Scorsese became the most-nominated living director.

    This is Scorsese’s 10th nomination in the category, putting him two behind the late William Wyler, who holds the record with 12 nominations.

    This year, Scorsese also became the oldest nominee in the category’s history at 81 years old. If he wins the Oscar, he would become the oldest best director winner.

    Sandra Hüller could score a historic win

    This image released by Neon shows Sandra Hüller in a scene from Anatomy of a Fall.

    This image released by Neon shows Sandra Hüller in a scene from “Anatomy of a Fall.”

    Neon via AP

    If she wins the best actress Oscar for her role in “Anatomy of a Fall,” Sandra Hüller would become the 1st German-born actress to win in the category in more than 60 years.

    Simone Signoret, who was born in Germany but is best known as a French actress, won the best actress Oscar for “Room at the Top” at the 1960 ceremony.

    A non-English language film could make history in the best picture category

    This image released by A24 shows Greta Lee, left, and Teo Yoo in a scene from Past Lives.

    This image released by A24 shows Greta Lee, left, and Teo Yoo in a scene from “Past Lives.”

    Jon Pack/A24 via AP

    Three films in the best picture category — “Anatomy of a Fall,” “Past Lives” and “The Zone of Interest” — could make history with a best picture Oscar win this year.

    Only one non-English language film has won best picture. The first to do so, “Parasite,” won the top prize in 2020.

    “Anatomy of a Fall,” from France, features French, English and German spoken throughout the film. “Past Lives,” an American film, features both English and Korean.

    “The Zone of Interest,” a co-production between the United Kingdom and Poland and the U.K.’s submission for international feature film, is the only film to feature no spoken English. German is predominantly spoken throughout.

    Emma Stone could achieve a rare feat

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone in a scene from "Poor Things."

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone in a scene from “Poor Things.”

    (Searchlight Pictures via AP)

    With her nominations for best actress for her performance in “Poor Things” and for best picture for producing the film, Emma Stone could pull off a rare double win.

    Stone would become the second woman to win for acting and best picture for the same film, the first being Frances McDormand for “Nomadland” in 2021.

    Colman Domingo could win big for Afro-Latinos

    This image released by Netflix shows Jeffrey Mackenzie Jordan, left, and Colman Domingo as Bayard Rustin in a scene from Rustin.

    This image released by Netflix shows Jeffrey Mackenzie Jordan, left, and Colman Domingo as Bayard Rustin in a scene from “Rustin.”

    Parrish Lewis/Netflix via AP

    Colman Domingo could make history if he wins the Oscar for best actor for playing gay Civil Rights activist Bayard Rustin in “Rustin.”

    Should he take home the trophy, Domingo would become the first actor of Afro-Latino descent to win in the category.

    ‘American Fiction’ could deliver historic double win for Black actors

    From left to right: Jeffrey Wright and Sterling K. Brown pose for portraits during the Oscar nominees luncheon on Feb. 12, 2024 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    From left to right: Jeffrey Wright and Sterling K. Brown pose for portraits during the Oscar nominees luncheon on Feb. 12, 2024 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    Jeffrey Wright and Sterling K. Brown play brothers in “American Fiction,” and each earned Oscar nominations for their work in the film.

    If Wright wins best actor and Brown wins best supporting actor, it would mark the first time two Black male actors won Oscars for the same film.

    Bradley Cooper could direct himself to acting win

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from Maestro.

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from “Maestro.”

    Jason McDonald/Netflix via AP

    Bradley Cooper, who is up for best actor for playing famed composer Leonard Bernstein in “Maestro,” could join a small group of people who have directed themselves to acting wins.

    If he achieves this, Cooper would be just the third person to do so. The first was Laurence Olivier for “Hamlet” in 1949 and Roberto Benigni for “Life Is Beautiful” in 1999.

    Thelma Schoonmaker could become most-awarded film editor

    Thelma Schoonmaker arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Thelma Schoonmaker arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

    Thelma Schoonmaker, Scorsese’s longtime film editor, could make history as the winningest person in the best film editing category if she wins for her work on “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    With a potential fourth win, Schoonmaker would have more Oscars for best editing than anyone else in history.

    Schoonmaker has previously won Oscars for editing “Raging Bull,” “The Aviator” and “The Departed.”

    John Williams could hit a high note

    Composer John Williams poses on the red carpet at the 2016 AFI Life Achievement Award Gala Tribute to John Williams in Los Angeles on June 9, 2016.

    Composer John Williams poses on the red carpet at the 2016 AFI Life Achievement Award Gala Tribute to John Williams in Los Angeles on June 9, 2016.

    Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File

    With his nomination this year for best original score for “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” John Williams became the oldest person to be nominated for an Oscar across all competitive categories at the age of 91.

    Having recently celebrated a birthday, the 92-year-old could become the oldest person to win an Oscar if he takes home the trophy this year.

    James Ivory currently holds the record as the oldest Oscar winner with his win for best adapted screenplay for “Call Me By Your Name” at the age of 89 at the 2018 ceremony. Ivory is now 95.

    Williams is the most-nominated living person in Academy Awards history with 54 nominations — only behind the late Walt Disney, who has the most nominations ever for a person, with 59.

    Justine Triet could become latest female best director winner

    Justine Triet poses for a portrait during the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Justine Triet poses for a portrait during the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    With her nomination for best director, Justine Triet became only the eighth woman to be nominated in the category in Oscars history.

    Should she win, Triet would become just the fourth woman to win best director, following in the footsteps of Kathryn Bigelow, who won in 2009 for “The Hurt Locker”; Chloé Zhao, who won in 2021 for “Nomadland”; and Jane Campion, who won in 2022 for “The Power of the Dog.”

    March 10 is Oscar Sunday! Watch the 2024 Oscars live on ABC.

    Red carpet coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET 10 a.m. PT with “Countdown to Oscars: On The Red Carpet Live.” At 4 p.m. ET 1 p.m. PT, live coverage continues with “On The Red Carpet at the Oscars,” hosted by George Pennacchio with Roshumba Williams, Leslie Lopez and Rachel Brown.

    Watch all the action on the red carpet live on ABC, streaming live on OnTheRedCarpet.com and on the On the Red Carpet Facebook and YouTube pages.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years.

    The Oscars are followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

    GMA

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  • Anderson: Now The Left Is Erasing Native American History

    Anderson: Now The Left Is Erasing Native American History


    Politics

    Joe Mabel, via Wikimedia Commons

    Last week, the American Museum of Natural History in New York closed two major Native American exhibits to the public in its latest push to comply with the White House requirement to repatriate Native American items. The requirement to return cultural items to Native American tribes was first instituted decades ago but has received a boost from President Joe Biden.

    Tribes have long argued that the museums and other institutions have dragged their feet in complying with the repatriation law. Now, many are celebrating the removal of their history from institutions of learning in the name of cultural healing.

    But at what price does society and, perhaps more importantly, the tribes affected by this action have to pay?

    More harm than good

    The famous American Museum of Natural History in New York shut down two Native American exhibits last Friday.

    Museum president Sean Decatur said:

    “The halls we are closing are artifacts of an era when museums such as ours did not respect the values, perspectives, and indeed shared humanity of Indigenous peoples.”

    The action of the New York museum comes on the heels of the Biden administration’s requirement that museums and universities repatriate human remains and cultural items associated with Native American tribes within the next five years. The requirement comes from the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act or NAGPRA from 1990, which required the same.

    So why has it taken so long for museums and other institutions to repatriate said items? Many argue that the lack of historically verifiable documentation within the Native American community to prove the ownership of said items has made it difficult for museums and universities to ensure the proper repatriation of remains and items.

    RELATED: Extreme Gender Ideology Comes for the American Anthropological Association

    However, thanks to the Biden administration, curators are now required to:

    “…defer to the Native American traditional knowledge of lineal descendants, Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations.”

    Essentially, in the often-found event that documentary proof is unavailable, curators are to take the word of tribal leaders when returning items. Not only is this unscientific, it opens the doors to all manner of mishaps, including inaccurate repatriation, tribal squabbling over said items, and worse yet…the loss of these historical items forever.

    It’s not just about bones

    As usual, the government tends to make almost any situation worse. San Jose State Professor of Anthropology Elizabeth Weiss has been warning against this from the start.

    Professor Weiss wrote to The Political Insider:

    “I’ve predicted that the new NAGPRA regulations would bury our ability to carry out objective scientific inquiries, hide our discoveries about the past, and ruin biological anthropology.”

    Professor Weiss goes on to explain the more profound implications of the NAGPRA regulations outside of science:

    “However, the new regulations will impact more than just science and natural history museums – new targets include art purchased from contemporary Native American artists. In a recent NAGPRA information session about the new regulations, curators were told to consult with tribes over the display of modern art created by Native American artists that had been recently purchased by the museums.”

    RELATED: Birds Getting New Names In ‘Anti-Racism’ Effort

    The professor isn’t wrong, as evidenced by the Cleveland Museum of Art covering Native American pieces in the name of NAGPRA. Other items are also being removed from other museums, including Native American musical instruments from the famed Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

    Lost forever

    What happens to the history, forensic scientific study, and cultural appreciation of these tribes when these items are removed from displays and institutions of higher learning? What happens to that culture if there are no items for scientists to study and no cultural pieces for society to admire?

    While claiming to honor the cultures of these tribes, society is enabling the erasure of their existence, robbing them of their historical voice and place in the grand timeline of humanity. The progressive woke mind virus isn’t just a danger to education, science, and culture – but to those they claim to fight for.

    The best way to preserve the culture of “marginalized” groups isn’t to remove their history from museums and universities – but to display more of it. The world and societies are made richer and stronger by studying those who came before them, not by burying or hiding them from sight.

    If we aren’t careful, all that will survive of the tribal communities will be their sacred oral histories that, with the passage of each new generation, are in danger of disappearing like a whisper in the winds of time.

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    USAF Retired, Bronze Star recipient, outspoken veteran advocate. Hot mess mom to two monsters and wife to equal parts… More about Kathleen J. Anderson

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    Kathleen J. Anderson

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  • Natuv Inc. Will Attend SHOT Show 2024

    Natuv Inc. Will Attend SHOT Show 2024

    Meet Natuv Inc. at SHOT Show 2024

    Natuv Inc. is excited to once again attend SHOT Show. 

    Some of Natuv’s key personnel will be in attendance. 

    “For us, it’s always exciting, and we make the best connections at this event,” mentioned Ricky Brava, Chief International Officer, Natuv Inc.

    “Natuv Inc. is looking to expand at a national and international level and SHOT Show is always a great way to do so,” says Andrew Zambrowski, Chief of Business Development, Natuv Inc. 

    “Wherever you go during SHOT Week, you’ll meet members of our industry ready to share ideas and connect,” says Frank Anthony, CVO, Natuv Inc.

    SHOT Show is Jan. 23–26, 2024. Admission at the SHOT Show is open to businesses and government entities in the shooting, hunting and outdoor trade as well as commercial buyers and sellers of military, law enforcement and tactical products and services ONLY.

    About Natuv Inc. 

    Our mission is to deliver optimization and advancement to federal, tribal, state, and local governments through reliable, quality, and innovative technology, defense and logistics solutions. Natuv Inc. is an FFL-10 and FEL certified vendor. We support law enforcement, federal government and other regulated institutions with effective defensive solutions, arms, ammunition, surveillance technology, protective gear, less lethal armament and training, and combat drone technology, to name a few.

    For media and business development inquiries, contact Andrew Zambrowski, Chief Of Business Development, at andrew@natuv.email. For more information, visit https://www.natuv.com.

    Norman Office
    119 W. Main St.
    Norman, OK 73069 
    (405) 928-6111

    Logistics Distribution Center
    3700 South Purdue
    Oklahoma City, OK 73116
    (405) 928-6111

    Peru Branch Office
    Residencial San Pietro
    Calle Flora Tristán 486
    Oficina 1404
    Magdalena del Mar 15076
    Lima, Peru
    Office +511-493-9555
    Direct +1-347-755-0235

    Source: Natuv Inc.

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  • Natuv Inc. Range Day Marks a Remarkable Day of Unity and Collaboration

    Natuv Inc. Range Day Marks a Remarkable Day of Unity and Collaboration

    Natuv Inc. is thrilled to announce the resounding success of “Natuv Range Day,” a day of unity that took place on Aug. 29 2023 at the picturesque Las Vegas Metro Police Department Range. 

    This event brought together Native American law enforcement departments from all over the country along with defense industry representatives fostering camaraderie and promoting responsible firearm usage.

    Natuv Range Day took place during the National Native American Law Enforcement Association’s (NNALEA) 30th annual training conference. Natuv also participated in NNALEA, exhibiting with Walther and Black Rain Ordnance, and providing CLEET certified training with Paradigm Tactical Systems on less lethal advancement and deployment strategies.

    Natuv Range Day featured a wide range of firearms, including Walther’s PDP line, Black Rain Ordnance’s BRO-SPEC-15 in various calibers and sizes, Patriot Sports 9mm Ammo, Paradigm Tactical Systems Long Range Less Lethal, B&T APC9 PRO SD Fully Auto, Zev Technologies Core Combat Elite Rifle kitted with Antimatter’s new scope switch, Desert Tech MDRX, and the Desert Tech HTI .50 cal.

    “This event exemplifies the importance of continued support of Native American law enforcement and the sense of community that surrounds it,” said Devon Ekpenyong, Chief Operations Officer, Natuv Inc.

    “It’s wonderful to see people coming together to celebrate our shared interests while emphasizing safety and the protection of our communities,” said Andrew Zambrowski, Chief of Business Development, Natuv Inc.

    Natuv Inc. extends its heartfelt gratitude to all the participants, volunteers, sponsors, and partners who made Natuv Range Day a resounding success. Without your support, this event would not have been possible.

    For more information about Natuv Range Day and to view event photos and videos, please visit www.natuv.com or follow @natuvinc on your preferred social media platform.

    About Natuv Inc.

    Our mission is to deliver optimization and advancement to federal, tribal, state, and local governments through reliable, quality, and innovative technology, defense and logistics solutions. Natuv Inc. is an FFL-10 and FEL certified vendor. We support law enforcement, federal government and other regulated institutions with effective defensive solutions, arms, ammunition, surveillance technology, protective gear, less lethal armament and training, and combat drone technology, to name a few.

    Source: Natuv Inc.

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  • Dream Catcher Foundation Hosts Online Charity Art Exhibition & Auction Supported by Indigenous Celebrities

    Dream Catcher Foundation Hosts Online Charity Art Exhibition & Auction Supported by Indigenous Celebrities

    Peace Love Art: Indigenous Collective — Supporting Indigenous Contemporary Artists and Causes Throughout the U.S. and Canada

    Press Release


    Oct 31, 2022 09:00 EDT

    Dream Catcher Foundation (https://www.dreamcatcherfdn.org) is hosting the first annual Peace Love Art: Indigenous Collective – an online charity art exhibition and auction from Nov. 1 through 20, 2022. Over 110 contemporary Native American and First Nations artists throughout North America will display and auction 225 works including paintings, drawings, pottery, sculpture, jewelry, beadwork, fashion, and more. The event launches Nov. 1, 2022 at 10 a.m. EST and bidding will be open until Nov. 20, 2022 at 10 p.m. EST. The link to the event is https://PeaceLoveArt.givesmart.com.

    “We are excited to showcase and support Native and Indigenous artists and charities that are on the front line of causes that are important to Indigenous communities,” said professional cyclist and Dream Catcher Foundation co-founder Shayna Powless (Oneida Tribe of Wisconsin). Shayna’s fiancée and co-founder, Buffalo Bills Defensive Lineman Eli Ankou (Ojibwe – Dokis First Nation, Ottawa) added “Our foundation started as a way to impact and inspire Indigenous communities and youth through sports, but over the past year we expanded our platform to support other causes that are critical to Indigenous peoples.”

    Eli and Shayna recruited other well-known Native American and First Nations celebrities and leaders to expand the Dream Catcher Foundation’s platform and reach. The “Dream Catcher Council” was created and includes actress/model Ashley Callingbull (Cree First Nations), actress Alyssa Wapanatâhk (Cree), MLB Pitcher Brandon Bailey (Chickasaw), singer/actor Brooke Simpson (Haliwa-Saponi), musician Cody Coyote (Ojibwe), actor Eugene Brave Rock (Kainai Nation Blackfoot), professional volleyball player Lauren Schad (Cheyenne River Sioux), professional lacrosse player Lyle Thompson (Onondaga Nation), professional basketball player Michael Linklater (Nehiyaw/Cree), pro cyclist Neilson Powless (Cherokee & Oneida), and storyteller Sarain Fox (Anishinaabe from Batchawana First Nation).

    Eugene Brave Rock, best known for his starring role as “The Chief” in Wonder Woman is not only passionate about Indigenous art, but recognizes there are many worthy causes that are critical to Native communities, including his own passion for preserving Indigenous languages through the Oki Language Project. “Native and First Nation artists do such a great job reinforcing and preserving the culture of our various peoples” said Gene. “This event not only helps share the amazing work of talented artists, but the proceeds from any sales are shared equally among the artists and charities, including Dream Catcher Foundation, Oki Language Project, and others.”

    Dream Catcher Foundation (www.dreamcatcherfdn.org) operates under A+C Foundation (Athletes/Artists + Causes), a 501(c)(3) public charity.

    Source: Dream Catcher Foundation

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  • Native Americans in NC and beyond face ‘longstanding inequities.’ New report offers answers

    Native Americans in NC and beyond face ‘longstanding inequities.’ New report offers answers

    North Carolina is home to eight state-recognized Native American tribes and two with federal recognition. South of Charlotte, there’s also the Catawba Indian Reservation, the lands of South Carolina’s only federally recognized tribe.

    North Carolina is home to eight state-recognized Native American tribes and two with federal recognition. South of Charlotte, there’s also the Catawba Indian Reservation, the lands of South Carolina’s only federally recognized tribe.

    When COVID lockdowns stifled the economy in the spring of 2020, shuttering hotels, restaurants and entertainment venues, it hit Native American communities especially hard.

    Unemployment skyrocketed as tourism halted and businesses like casinos and restaurants closed. Tribal revenues plummeted, and some tribes were forced to reduce services they offered to members.

    In North Carolina and beyond, American Indian tribes often rely on industries like gaming and tourism that can be extra-sensitive to an economic downturn. The Charlotte region is home to one such business: Two Kings Casino in Kings Mountain, run by the S.C.-based Catawba Indian Nation.

    Reliance on those kinds of industries affects financial resilience of tribal communities in tough times, and piles on obstacles for a population already facing higher odds of poverty and joblessness. That’s according to a new report from Wells Fargo’s Native American Banking division.

    With a potential recession looming and just ahead of Native American Heritage Month that starts Nov. 1, the report offers ways to build economic resilience in Indian Country so tribal communities can better weather the next crisis.

    “We really wanted to use the (impact of the) pandemic as an opportunity to reflect on what… Native American communities can do to prepare themselves for economic shocks in the future,” Dawson Her Many Horses, head of Native American Banking at Wells Fargo, said in an interview with The Charlotte Observer. He is based in Las Vegas.

    DawsonHeadshot (3-2021).jpg
    Dawon Her Many Horses, head of Native American Banking at Wells Fargo Etti Photography Wells Fargo

    ‘Longstanding inequities’

    Native Americans face lower median income levels and higher rates of poverty and joblessness than other racial groups, including white, Black and Hispanic Americans, according to census data.

    In North Carolina, Native Americans are more likely to live in rural areas. Just over 300,000 people who identify as Native American or Alaska Native reside in the state, according to the 2020 Census. That’s 3% of the population statewide.

    “If you’re looking at a map of where Native Americans are in North Carolina, you see them all around the edges of the state, typically far from the more urban areas,” said Mary Ann Jacobs, chair of the American Indian Studies department at UNC Pembroke.

    Economic challenges and that rural geography combine to shape other inequities, like health disparities, she said.

    DSC_4079.JPG
    North Carolina is home to eight state-recognized and two federally recognized Native American tribes. UNC Pembroke, in Robeson County, began as a school to train American Indian teachers. Will Wright

    In the Wells Fargo report, analysts state that diversifying tribal economies and driving new investment into tribal areas can help address “long standing economic and social inequities” for Native Americans across the country.

    The bank, one of Charlotte’s largest employers, holds $3.9 billion in deposits for tribal governments and tribally owned entities across the country.

    “It’s in our roots as a company,” Her Many Horses said, referring to the bank’s Western origins. “We want to elevate (awareness of) the challenges that exist from a financial perspective.”

    Building awareness

    A persistent lack of data remains one of the most significant obstacles to driving economic development in tribal communities, Her Many Horses said.

    Tribe-owned businesses drive much of the economic activity in Indian Country — a term used by Native Americans and others to describe self-governing Native American communities throughout the U.S.

    Those sovereign governments aren’t required to disclose information the way that other entities are, like state governments or public companies, the report stated.

    “Tribal governments and businesses are the primary economic actors, not entrepreneurs and small businesses like mainstream America,” said Her Many Horses, an enrolled member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe of South Dakota.

    The report also highlights two other obstacles: a gap in broadband access and a fragmented capital landscape — meaning investments in tribal areas often come from many different kinds of financial institutions.

    Wells Fargo proposed a few broad solutions, such as increasing partnerships between governments and private firms to drive more capital to Indian Land, and strengthening inter-tribe coalitions to make joint investments that fuel development

    “We don’t want to just identify issues,” Her Many Horses said. “We want to help.”

    In North Carolina, Jacobs said, a good start would be just increasing awareness of the state’s Native American communities.

    “Most people don’t know that North Carolina has eight state-recognized tribes,” she said. “I think the biggest thing to know is that our state has and continues to have one of the largest populations of Native Americans east of the Mississippi.”

    This story was originally published October 27, 2022 5:40 AM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Hannah Lang covers banking, finance and economic equity for The Charlotte Observer. Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, the Triangle Business Journal and the Greensboro News & Record. She studied business journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and grew up in the same town as her alma mater.

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  • Hallowed Ground: Selkirk Auctioneers to Sell Picture Cave in Missouri

    Hallowed Ground: Selkirk Auctioneers to Sell Picture Cave in Missouri

    Described as “the most important rock art site in North America,” the two-cave system boasts massive panels of over 290 prehistoric glyphs.

    Press Release



    updated: Sep 1, 2021

    In a remote area of rural eastern Missouri, some 50 miles from Saint Louis, where prairies begin to entwine with the Ozark plateau, a mystical plat of land conceals a well-known subterranean world known simply as Picture Cave. On Sept. 14, 2021, Selkirk Auctioneers & Appraisers of St. Louis, Missouri will offer this invaluable piece of history on behalf of its private owners, three generations of a local Missouri family. The caves’ breathtaking iconography rests on land with a natural spring, rolling hills, and wonderful views that only accentuate the magnitude of one of America’s greatest archaeological finds. All 43 encompassing acres of real estate are included in the auction of Picture Cave, which is estimated to sell for $1,000,000-$3,000,000 USD. 

    The current owners have owned and primarily used the land for hunting since 1953. It is of utmost importance to them that any new owners will continuously protect and preserve the caves as they have for decades. Since the discovery of the paintings, it has been determined by scholars that Picture Cave houses the greatest assemblage of American Indian polychrome paintings ever found in America, and the two-cave system, which had once been an extremely important ritual site for early Mississippian culture, is still vital for the ecosystem as home to one of the densest populations of the endangered Indiana gray bat.  

    What sets Picture Cave apart from others is that the dark zone is festooned with the most comprehensive collection of pictographs with significance comparable to that of major ancient cities, Cahokia and Chaco Canyon. Scholarly research regarding the meaning of the paintings has concluded that the images were created from approximately 900-1100 CE. The documentation is richly captured in the illustrated book, Picture Cave: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Mississippian Cosmos by the University of Texas Press (2015).  

    Several field experts, archeologists, Native American tribe members, and artists comprised the Picture Cave Interdisciplinary Project to accomplish a wonderful resource guide to understanding the Cave. These experts include Patty Jo Watson, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis, and Dr. Jan Simek from University of Tennessee, who is continually researching Picture Cave including the geochemical analyses of prehistoric pigment, AMS radio-carbon dating, and spatial order of iconography. Since the research began in 1990, several selfless individuals, Osage members, the landowners, as well as institutional grants and foundational funding, have made it possible to link documented facts with artistic interpretation.  

    For more information on Picture Cave and the September 14th auction, visit selkirkauctions.com, or call 314.696.9041 to speak with Selkirk executive director, Bryan Laughlin, or auctioneer & realtor, Amelia Jeffers. Picture Cave is offered subject to prior sale. Prospective Bidders may submit a pre-auction offer with contracts to be brokered by Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty, St. Louis. 

    Source: Selkirk Auctioneers & Appraisers

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