ZUNI, NM — The Zuni Youth Enrichment Project announced today that preparations are under way for the 7th Annual Delapna:we Project. Made possible with support from the New Mexico Humanities Council, U ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Summer Camp 2025 group photo. (Photo/Courtesy) ZUNI, N.M. — The Zuni Youth Enrichment Project will host its 18th Annual Summer ...
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – With students in Albuquerque Public Schools representing more than 121 Native American tribes and 100 different dialects, the district has started to teach native languages ...
The 16th Annual Zuni Marketplace will be gracing the galleries of the Museum of Northern Arizona this Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. This market is the second to last of the museum's annual ...
Aric Chopito meticulously interlaces long, colorful streams of thread into an intricate pattern of pinks, blues, yellows and oranges. A professional traditional Zuni weaver for 28 years, he talks with ...
Today's Google Doodle dedicated to the late We:wa, illustrated by Zuni Pueblo artist Mallery Quetawki. (courtesy of the artist) In the US, the month of November is dedicated to honoring the culture ...
The Zuni Youth Enrichment Project provides a model for improving the health of American Indian youth by focusing on their culture and strengths. Beside the dried-up bed of the Zuni River, a bright ...
ZUNI, NM — This month, 170 young athletes will take the field as the Zuni Youth Enrichment Project launches its annual Soccer and Flag Football Leagues. Beginning Monday, Sept. 8 and continuing ...
His name is either Ma A’ se we or OU’ yu ya we, evening star or morning star. At this point, the Zuni tribal members who came to Michigan to collect the artifact—the Ahayuda — cannot say for sure ...
Assigned male at birth, We:wa was a lhamana, a traditional Zuni gender role often referred to as Two-Spirit. Steven Musil is a senior news editor at CNET News. He's been hooked on tech since learning ...
WeWha was a celebrity in the U.S. capital, and loved for their gender-fluid self at home. In Washington, D.C., a visiting celebrity of 1885 was from the Zuni tribe of the southwestern United States.