Patriots fire Head Coach Jerod Mayo after win against BillsFSIS announces stronger measures to protect the public from Listeria monocytogenesHow Economic Assistance for Farmers Will Be DistributedWhat I'm looking forward to this year by Rep. Dusty JohnsonROUND[S] UP 2024: A Year in ReviewLet's Get to Work by Sen. John ThuneProducers from Mission and Sherman nominated for 2024 S.D. Specialty Crop Producer of the Year; Voting deadline is Jan. 12Higher Social Security payments coming for millions of people from bill that Biden is signingThe NFC One-Seed hangs in the balance tonightJoe Burrow and the Cincinnati Bengals keep their playoff hopes alive by edging the Steelers 19-17NFL Sunday ScheduleSD High School Hoops; How they faredGovs Girls win their first Governor's Cup over BismarckBismarck Boys take back Governor's Cup in win over GovsCat Fight! Timber Lake Panthers sweep Ipswich Tigers in home doubleheaderDRG Sports Broadcasting Schedule (1/4)Today's College & NFL gamesNHL ScoreboardNBA ScoreboardThe dill of a lifetime? In a nation that's enduring its own sour patch, the pickle dominated 2024
×
FILE - U.S. President Calvin Coolidge wears a Native American headdress of the Sioux tribe as he is adopted as Chief Leading Eagle and first white chief of the tribe at the celebration of the 51st anniversary of the settlement of Deadwood, South Dakota, in 1927. Coolidge signed the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924. (AP Photo/File)

100 years ago, US citizenship for Native Americans came without voting rights in swing states

By Jody Heemstra Jun 3, 2024 | 9:57 AM
google-site-verification: google9919194f75dd62c5.html