Posted inApril 28, 2003: Indian Power

Mary Colter discovered

Mary Colter, like other female artists of the Southwest, was inspired by the region’s vivid landscapes and indigenous cultures. But unlike Georgia O’Keeffe or Terry Tempest Williams, Colter remained largely unknown to the public and her peers during her lifetime. Following her death in 1958, she sank further into obscurity — until recently. Arnold Berke’s […]

Posted inApril 28, 2003: Indian Power

Roadkill 101

“Don’t touch that!” is what most kids hear when they investigate dead animals. But in Hayden, Colo., elementary school teachers are encouraging students – armed with maps and global positioning systems – to go in search of roadkill. Second- and fourth-grade students at Hayden Valley Elementary School have produced a map of roadkill patterns along […]

Posted inApril 28, 2003: Indian Power

The pueblos’ roller-coaster rise to power

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Indian Power.” 1200-1500 Various tribes establish villages, which the Spanish will call “pueblos,” along the Rio Grande. Some evidence suggests they are descendants of the Anasazi, whose settled and sophisticated civilization in places like Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde collapsed around 1300. 1598 Conquistador […]

Posted inApril 28, 2003: Indian Power

Dear Friends

Scratch the metamorphosis bit The notes from readers continue to roll in regarding our plans to redesign High Country News. We’ll spare you the details, but it’s great to get some thoughts from the outside world, since we’ve been staring at our work for so long that we’re all a bit cross-eyed. We received this […]

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