Posts Tagged ‘Winnebago Indian Reservation’


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Duane H. Mackey (Opsahl-Kostel Funeral Home)

Duane H. Mackey (Opsahl-Kostel Funeral Home)

Duane H. Mackey (Waktaya Naji – Stands on Guard), 71, of Vermillion, S.D., died last Thursday in Lincoln, Neb., according to this obituary from the Rapid City Journal.

He was an enrolled member of the Santee Sioux Tribe of Nebraska and was honored in Who’s Who Among the Sioux.

Mackey held master’s and doctoral degrees in educational psychology from the University of South Dakota, and in 1974 was named the first director of Indian Education for the Sioux City Community School District.

He also served as director of career development for Native American students, and assistant professor of education, at the University of South Dakota.

In the 1990s, he worked as an educational psychologist for the Indian Health Service, and as an assistant with the Alcohol and Drug Studies Department at USD. And, he was regional coordinator of Native American Programs for the Prairielands Addiction Technology Transfer Center.

He wrote widely on Indian education, Native American parenting, mental health and alcoholism, and helped develop wellness centers on the Omaha and Winnebago reservations. He received several awards over the years for his work.

He collaborated on the film “Nagi Kicopi: Calling Back the Spirit,” which was nominated for an award at the 2001 Annual American Indian Film Festival.

He was an elder in the Wasa Wakpe Community, which is the Vermillion Native community.

Services are as follows:

    A prayer service will be at 7 p.m. CDT Wednesday, March 17, at Opsahl-Kostel Funeral Home & Crematory in Yankton. The service will be conducted by the Rev. Steve Miller and the Oyate Drum will be present. Duane’s body will be returned to the Santee Sioux Reservation for internment. Prayer services will be at 7 p.m. Thursday, March 18, and Friday, March 19, at Oyate Oyanke Community Center in Santee, Neb.

    Services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 20, at Oyate Oyanke Community Center.

    Father David Hussey, Dr. Wayne Evans, and Mr. Gene Thin Elk, with be co-officiants. The Maza Kute Drum Burial will be present. Burial will follow at L’Eau Qui Court in Niobrara.

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Gwen Florio

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Native actors go beyond Westerns to … werewolves?
Well, werewolves, in the case of Taylor Lautner, who stars in “New Moon,” the just-released second movie in the teen hit “Twilight” series. Lautner says he recently discovered Potawatomi and Ottawa roots; what’s more important, according to this opinion piece in the Wichita Eagle-Beacon, is that director Chris Weitz insisted on using actors of Native descent for the “Wolf Pack.” Spencer is Lakota (Sioux), Meraz is Purepecha (Tarasco), Gordon is Hualapai and Pelletier is Cree-Metis. The piece is by Rod Pocowatchit is from the Pawnee, Comanche and Shawnee tribes.

Indians back on Alcatraz Island after 40 years

Four decades after Indian people occupied Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay – in part to call attention to the woeful treatment of the nation’s tribes – they were back. Yesterday, according to this San Francisco Chronicle story, some of the initial occupiers, as well as others, returned with the government’s blessing. Now, says Howard Levitt, chief of education for the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, “the occupation is considered to be a milestone in the self-determination and civil rights movements. We honor that.”

“Fried bread, sweat lodges and Nintendo Wii”
That headline in the Sioux City Journal grabbed us. What the heck was it all about? Turns out to be this story about students at the Augustine Indian Mission School on the Winnebago Indian Reservation south of in Sioux City, Iowa. They were talking about how they’d celebrate Thanksgiving.

Tribes see loss of oil, natural gas royaltiess
Here’s a worrisome Bloomberg News story that says: “plunging oil and natural gas prices and a drop in revenue from lease sales cut the money sent by the United States to tribes, states and the Treasury Department by more than half in fiscal 2009. “Lower energy prices drove down royalties and sapped industry demand for leases,” it says.

McK'la Gonzalez

McK'la Gonzalez


Flathead Reservation resident is barrel racing champ
McK’la Gonzalez, a 15-year-old barrel racer from Elmo on the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana, took first place in National Barrel Horse Association Montana State Championships, youth category, in Great Falls last month, the Char-Koosta News reports here. Her aunt, Bernadine Tenas, says Gonzalez has been barrel racing since she was seven and has three championships buckles. She now qualifies for the World NBHA championships.

Gwen Florio

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