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| July/August |
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Santa Fe Indian Market
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The 2002 Santa Fe Indian Market officially opens Saturday, August 17, but the buzz starts long before. After more than 80 years, the excitement that comes with Indian Market still flows strong. Some 1,200 of the top Native American artists in the country assemble here, bringing pieces they've created especially for this show, the biggest market of its kind anywhere. Santa Fe's Plaza fills with 600 booths.
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Lloyd Kiva New
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Lloyd Kiva New’s artistic vision and pragmatic approach set the course for many renowned cultural institutions, including the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, the Heard Museum of Phoenix, the Plains Indian Museum of the Buffalo Bill Historic Center in Cody, Wyoming, and the soon-to-be-opened National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.
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The Pueblo Revolt of 1680
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Organized exploration by the Spanish Crown northward from Mexico into the well-established culture of the Pueblo Indians, in what is now New Mexico, began in A.D. 1540. Life with their Spanish neighbors began with mutual suspicion, but also with the civil exchange of food, medicine and other goods. But by 1680, the Pueblo people had decided to revolt against the abusive policies of the Spanish
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2002 July/August Film & Video
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Brothers in Arms: Windtalkers Freedom is not free. The sacrifices made by countless soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines secured our freedom in the United States. Many of these warriors were Native Americans who fought and died in America’s wars. Windtalkers reveals these truths in an awe-inspiring movie whose story should have been told decades ago.
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