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Growing Native Artisits
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Not content sitting on its laurels as the preeminent school for Native American arts, the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe develops new programs, facilities and personnel. By Gregory Pleshaw.
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Taking Back Our History: Valerian Three Irons
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Most graduate students earn master’s degrees by attending classes for two or three years and then writing a big research paper. Valerian Three Irons is not most graduate students. Oh, sure, he’s had to go to class, and he has to write a thesis. But his specially-designed degree program has also required that he spend time in the First World and the Third World, traveling to New York for meetings, London for classes and research and to the slums of Jamaica to fulfill the service requirement for his degree.
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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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2004 November/December
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ON THE COVER
Ron His Horse Is Thunder (Hunkpapa Lakota), the great great grandson of
Sitting Bull, is filling a major position in today’s battlelines
involving the future of Native culture and life as president of Sitting
Bull College in Fort Yates, N.D. on the Standing Rock Resevation.
Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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