When Candy met the Mad Lads

RAPID CITY— Think back to when you were fourteen years old. We all have common experiences. Like being asked up on stage to replace the singer who has a sore throat, and singing a couple of Beatles songs so well the band asks you to join the band. Okay, so

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

EPA Ignores tribal consulation

HOT SPRINGS – After tribal members and other residents roundly rejected the U.S. EPA’s proposed draft permits to provide Black Hills water to a foreign uranium mine project promoter, the agency has revised the wording for a new comment period, it announced Aug. 26. Members of the public will have

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

Police captain discusses children lost to the system

PIERRE – Like many indigenous nations in the United States, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe has been losing children to the state for generations. Captain Joseph Brings Plenty of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Law Enforcement has been with the department for several years and has witnessed the removal of

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

Uranium mine water permits spur call for help

RAPID CITY – The Western Mining Action Network is circulating a call that asks for help from tribal members and clean energy advocates to delay EPA water permit hearings over the proposed Dewey-Burdock Project, which aims to leach radioactive uranium from aquifers in the unceded treaty territory of the Black

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

Bamboozled by State jurisdiction

RAPID CITY— Every tribe has one treasure it must protect from plunder, a treasure that dwarves all other treasures combined— tribal sovereignty. People often wonder why sovereignty is so important— what sovereignty actually matters when the federal government can apply plenary power and run roughshod over it, whenever they are

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

Prayer circle welcomes students back to campus

RAPID CITY – For the last couple of semesters, students and staff at Western Dakota Tech have been gathering for a prayer circle to begin the semester. This relatively new tradition of burning sage and doing a traditional prayer for the beginning of the new academic year has united the

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Shared by Native Sun News Today September 12, 2019

Changing the Indian narrative in classrooms

WASHINGTON – The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian is looking to change the narrative about American Indians in classrooms, transforming how teachers are teaching history to achieve a more inclusive, accurate and complete education. As part of its national education initiative, Native Knowledge 360 Degrees (NK360°), the National Museum of

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Shared by Native Sun News Today August 29, 2019