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    "Recent data show that American Indian and Alaska Native households had a medium income of $32,000, while nearly 25% of American Indians and Alaska Natives were below the poverty line."
    — US Census Bureau Radio Zone

    Alaska Native/American Indian

    GIFTS LEFT BEHIND

    See Heritage Center Website

    10:30 – 4:30 Arts and Crafts Activities: Hall of Cultures
    10:30 – 4:30 Heritage Gifts Open: Heritage Gifts Shop
    10:30 – 4:30 Language and History Game (High School & Families): Info Desk Lobby
    10:00 – 1:00 Atlatl Presentations: Open Throw: See Info Desk
    10:30 – 12:25 Tlingit Language Class: Shirley Kendall: Hall of Cultures
    10:30 – 11:25 Tsimshian Dance Class: Theo Bayou: Gathering Place
    10:30 – 11:00 DVD: Stories Given, Stories Shared & Living from the Land and Sea: Theatre
    11:00 – 4:00 Family Fun Activities: Slate Spear Tips Grinding, Petroglyph Clay Tiles & Archeology Board Game: Hall of Cultures
    11:00 – 1:00 Native Art Class: Alutiiq Beaded Headdress: June Pardue: Hall of Cultures
    11:00 – 11:55 Presentation: Spiritual Geography of Raven: Steve J. Langdon: Theatre
    11:30 – 11:55 Dance Performance: Alaska Native Heritage Center Dance Group: Gathering Place
    12:00 – 12:55 St. Lawrence Island Yupik Dance Class: Yaari Kingeekuk: Gathering Place
    12:00 – 12:25 DVD: History of the Iòupiat: 1961 The Duck-In: Theatre
    12:30 – 2:25 Dena’ina Language Class: Donita Peter: Hall of Cultures
    12:25 – 1:25 Presentation: Hole-in-the-Wall: Steve J. Langdon: Theatre
    1:00 – 1:25 Storytelling: Marge Andrews: Gathering Place
    1:00 – 2:00 Atlatl Presentation & Demonstration: Richard VanderHoek: Competition to Follow: See Info Desk
    1:30 – 2:25 Tsimshian Dance Class: Theo Bayou: Gathering Place
    1:30 – 2:15 Village Site Tour: Living from the Land and the Sea: Crossroads
    2:00 – 4:00 Native Art Class: Inupiaq Mittens: Willy Topkok: Hall of Cultures
    1:30 – 2:25 Presentation: BIA ANCSA, 14(h) 1: Rita Miraglia: Theatre
    2:30 – 4:25 Inupiaq Language Class (Kotzebue Area): Caroline Boskofsky: Hall of Cultures
    2:30 – 2:55 Dance Performance: Alaska Native Heritage Center Dance Group: Gathering Place
    2:30 – 3:00 Video: Siulipta Paitaat, Our Ancestors’ Heritage: Theatre
    3:00 – 3:55 DVD: Eskimo and the Whale: Theatre
    3:00 – 3:25 Storytelling: Quentin Simeon: Gathering Place
    3:00 – 3:45 Village Site Tour: Living from the Land and the Sea: Crossroads
    3:30 – 3:55 Dance Performance: Alaska Native Heritage Center Dance Group: Gathering Place
    3:30 – 4:25 Siberian Yupik Dance Class: Yaari Kingeekuk: Gathering Place


    Alaska Native Heritage Center

    Aleut Story Rebroadcast on KAKM 9PM Monday Nov 28 2005

    KAKM Channel 7 Anchorage is reshowing "The Aleut Story" Monday Nov 28 at 9 pm it is an excellent program.

    Aleut Story - Alaska Premier Screening

    From isolated internment camps in Southeast Alaska to Congress and the White House, this is the incredible untold story of Aleut Americans. Narrated by EMMY® winner Martin Sheen. Aleut Story nominated for Best Documentary Feature at American Indian Film Festival 30th Annual AIFF to be held Nov. 5-12 in San Francisco Alaska Premier Screening Monday, Nov. 7 Bear Tooth Theatre 5:30 PM and 8:15 PM.

    Aleut Story

    From isolated internment camps in Southeast Alaska to Congress and the White House, this is the incredible untold story of Aleut Americans. Narrated by EMMY® winner Martin Sheen.

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
    CAROLYN K. ROBINSON
    Executive Producer
    (907) 248-4829
    carolyn@sprocketheads.com

    Aleut Story nominated for Best Documentary Feature at American Indian Film Festival 30th Annual AIFF to be held Nov. 5-12 in San Francisco

    Alaska Premier Screening Monday, Nov. 7 Bear Tooth Theatre 5:30 PM and 8:15 PM.

    Alaska Public Broadcasting Premiere Tuesday, Nov. 22, 9:00 PM KAKM Anchorage, KYUK Bethel, KUAC Fairbanks and KTOO, Juneau ANCHORAGE

    Aleut Story, a new documentary feature film from Anchorage-based SprocketHeads, LLC, has been nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 30th annual American Indian Film Festival. The film, commissioned by the Aleutian Pribilof Heritage Group, Inc., will be screened Monday, Nov. 7th at the Galaxy Theater in San Francisco. AIFF is the world s oldest and most recognized international film exposition dedicated to Native American cinema. AIFF is presented by the American Indian Film Institute; among the institute s founding members is the late actor Will Sampson (One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest). More than 5,000 people are expected to attend this year s festival. Aleut Story also will be screened for the public at the Bear Tooth Theatre in Anchorage on Monday, Nov. 7th as part of the Alaska Native and American Indian Heritage Month celebration. Aleut Story is a richly textured film resonating with all the elements of a great human drama war, suffering, sacrifice, faith, self-discovery and renewal. Produced for public television, Aleut Story will make its broadcast premier next month in Alaska and on stations nationwide. Narrated by EMMY® winner Martin Sheen, the film features compelling interviews with Aleut internment survivors, rare archival footage, commentary by leading historians and key national figures including U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens and U.S. Rep. Don Young. Aleut Story also includes the voice talent of actor John O Hurley (Seinfeld, Dancing with the Stars) and Native flute and vocals by GRAMMY® winner Mary Youngblood, who is part Aleut. Aleut Story nominated for Best Documentary Feature Page

    Native Technology and Art

    An internet resource for indigenous ethno-technology focusing on the arts of Eastern Woodland Indian Peoples, providing historical & contemporary background with instructional how-to's & references. ...revising use of the term "primitive" with respect to Native American Technology and Art

    2000 Census Counts for Alaska Natives

    2000 Census Counts for Alaska Natives

    Native American Spirituality

    "The culture, values and traditions of native people amount to more than crafts and carvings. Their respect for the wisdom of their elders, their concept of family responsibilities extending beyond the nuclear family to embrace a whole village, their respect for the environment, their willingness to share - all of these values persist within their own culture even though they have been under unremitting pressure to abandon them." Mr. Justice Thomas Berger, Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry, (aka the Berger Inquiry).

    Lawsuit filed aginst Christian School with high native enrollment.

    ADN.COM is reporting that Group files lawsuit over Christian college funding

    By MARY PEMBERTON, Associated Press Writer

    Published: April 26th, 2005
    Last Modified: April 26th, 2005 at 06:00 PM

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A group advocating for the separation of church and state filed a lawsuit against the federal Department of Education over taxpayer money going to Alaska Christian College.

    The Freedom From Religion Foundation says that the relatively new, unaccredited school in Soldotna has only 37 students but has received more than $1 million in federal money in the past two years.

    The college is affiliated with the Evangelical Covenant Church of Alaska. More than 90 percent of its student body is either Alaska Native or American Indian.

    Tlingit National Anthem, Alaska Natives and Native Americans online

    A site covering a varitey of topics on Alaska Natives and American Indians including : Anthems, Flags | Maps, Nations | Art | Celebrities | Culture, Dance, Storytelling | Clothing, Dress, Fashion | Genealogy | History | Languages, Writers | Media | Music, Radio | Native Recipes | Pictures | Travel, Tourism | Alaska Natives Online | Alaska Native and American Indian Issues

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