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IN A DINE CREATION STORY, the people were given a choice of two yellow powders. They chose the yellow dust of corn pollen, and were instructed to leave the other yellow Continue reading →
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Photographs and text by Jason Benjamin Smith
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IF YOU WATCHED television at any point in the seventies, you saw him: America’s most famous Indian. Star of perhaps the best-known public service announcement ever, he was a black-braided, buckskinned, Continue reading →
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by Henry Chappell
ON AN OVERCAST SEPTEMBER AFTERNOON, 133 years after a way of life ended at Tule Canyon in the Texas Panhandle, a small delegation from Texas Tech University met with Comanche elders Continue reading →
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AWOMAN STANDS AT THE OPENING of a descending staircase. Her eyes — her red-streaked eyes — see inside me as she puts her arm through mine. We kiss each other on Continue reading →