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In this two-part installment of Immigrant Stories, host Walter Gallacher interviews Tom Casey of KILI Radio on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Like KDNK, KILI is also celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2023.
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In the second part of this two-part episode of Immigrant Stories, host Walter Gallacher continues his conversation with Tom Casey of KILI Radio on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Like KDNK, KILI-FM is also celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2023.
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This week on Everything Under the Sun, reporter Amy Hadden Marsh speaks with Shawnee-Lenape scholar Steven Newcomb about the Doctrine of Discovery.
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The remains of five Native American children who died at a notorious Indian boarding school more than a century ago will be returned to their living relatives.
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The Regional Roundup, a production of the Rocky Mountain Community Radio Coalition. This week’s edition takes includes Carbondale mycophile Hamilton Pevec discussing psychedelic mushrooms, microdosing and more at the recent KAJX/Aspen Psychedelic Resource Center community lecture.
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This week on Express Yourself we hear from Dance Initiative about the upcoming performance from Baye & Asa at The Launchpad, and Deanne Vitrac-Kessler shares updates about the 3rd annual Pow Wow coming to Aspen on the Memorial holiday weekend. Plus, a conversation with staff of The Art Base and Aspen Film about their Roc Doc Film Camp for teens this summer.
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On May 16 Arizona government officials announced they would take action against fake rehab centers that have been targeting Indigenous communities throughout the Rocky Mountain West, including the Navajo Nation.
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The Regional Roundup, a production of the Rocky Mountain Community Radio Coalition. This week’s edition takes an in-depth look at black lung among Navajo coal miners, and we go inside an adorable "senior" prom held at an assisted living home in Delta.
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The tribe is hosting Project Peak, a series of workshops focusing on fashion, healthy food, and outdoor activities.
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A new database reveals that museums and universities across the U.S. still hold the remains of more than 100,000 Native Americans, despite a federal law passed more than 30 years ago to help return their remains to tribes.