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Yaqui
» Yo Soy Indio (I Am Indian)
By Site Editor | Published 01/1/2008 | Political Issues , January/February , Yaqui
We explore the sometimes difficult but culturally rich personal and social territory found in the mixing of Spanish and Indian people in the Americas, with a focus on the United States/Mexico borderlands. By Ruben Hernandez (Yaqui/Latino). Illustrated with works by various artists.
» Flutes & Flutemakers
By Site Editor | Published 11/1/2006 | November/December , Comanche , Yaqui , Blackfeet , Cherokee
Like eating and praying, conveying feeling through music is an essential human activity. The first instrument, no doubt, was the voice. Soon percussive and simple wind and stringed instruments echoed and mingled with the music of the elements: the wind in the trees, the sounds of water, and the deeper songs of rocks and the earth itself...
» 2006 November/December
ON THE COVER
Musician and flutemaker Bryan Akipa (Sisseton-Wahpeton Sioux) seen here holding a five-hole, old-style Dakota flute he created around 1984 from eastern aromatic red cedar he gathered from the Badlands of South Dakota. Photo by Don Doll, J.S.
» 2005 January/February

 ON THE COVER
This spectacular dancer, Susan Armijo (Mexica), a member of the Aztec-styled dance and music troupe America Indigena, led by flautist Xavier Quijas Yxayotl, enthralled audiences last March at the Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market and will return for this year’s event.

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» Rez Biz: Growing Native Economies
 Despite the recent relative economic success of casino gambling on some Indian reservations throughout America, Indian Country and Native individuals generally remain low on the nation\'s economic ladder...
» 2002 January/February

 ON THE COVER
Three-year-old Ariana Selina and eight-year-old Philana Selina of the Hopi Tewa Senom Dancers, here seen sprinkled with corn pollen, have charmed guests at the annual Heard Museum Fair in Phoenix. Join us in a preview of this year's 44th fair in March, one of the premier gatherings of Native artists in the world.

Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.

» 1993 Winter
By Site Editor | Published 01/1/1993 | 1993 , Yaqui , Sioux , Nez Perce , Hopi
ON THE COVER
Forty cedar dugout canoes representing 20 tribes participated in the centennial celebration of Washington’s statehood. Mandi Jones stands in the bow of the Port Gamble S’Klallam canoe as it arrives in Seattle. Photo by Alan Berner.



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