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2006 May/June
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ON THE COVER
Few Americans have ever matched the dignity, courage and wisdom
possessed by Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce people of Idaho, as seen in
this image taken in 1877.
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The Makah of the Northwest Coast
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The Olympic Peninsula, on Washington State's northwest corner, is home to Olympic National Park and Cape Alava. Cape Alava was once home to the Ozette (pronounced Ho-sett) or the Ho-Selth, who called themselves Kwih-dich-chuh-ahtx or "people who live by rocks and seagulls." We now call these people the Makah, the name given by a neighboring tribe, the Jamestown S'Klallam, meaning "generous with food."
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1996 Fall
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ON THE COVER
Standing on the site of the forthcoming National Museum of the American
Indian in Washington, D.C. are (left to right) John Colonghi (Aleut),
campaign director, and W. Richard West (Southern Cheyenne), founding
director.
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2003 March/April
By Site Editor
| Published 03/1/2003
| 2003 , Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs , Pima , Diné , Coeur d'Alene , Agua Caliente Cahuilla Indians , Mashantucket Pequot , Tohono O'odham , Choctaw , Pueblo , Makah , Blackfeet , Navajo , US Travel
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ON THE COVER A Photo Safari in Dinetah The
Four Corners Region of the American Southwest is a photographer's
Mecca, as seen in this photo-snapping excursion in Monument Valley led
by noted Navajo artist LeRoy DeJolie. By Hilary Wallace. Photos by
LeRoy DeJolie Navajo.
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