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Earlier this year, the Osage Agency was on a list of Bureau of Indian Affairs buildings to shutter. Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear told Osage News that a new lease is in the works and that it will remain open.
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Federal offices crucial to Indigenous success — Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Indian Education, Department of the Interior and others— are undergoing layoffs. The Trump administration’s decision to empty those seats will trickle down into Indigenous communities in Oklahoma.
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In the wildfire that raged south of Pawhuska on Oct. 29, the cabin of the famous reclusive Osage was one of three structures destroyed.
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Someone vandalized the Million Dollar Elm, a symbolic tree located on the Osage Nation campus. The act left many in the community asking, 'why?'
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A 2017 tornado damaged the theater built by Alex Tall Chief to honor the community and his two ballerina daughters. Now, in the wake of a story that aired on NPR, it's getting a new roof.
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Join Osage News and KOSU for a bus tour featuring historic cultural sites in Pawhuska and Fairfax.
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Join the Osage News and KOSU's Allison Herrera on Oct. 22 for “Examining In Trust” at Wakon Iron Hall in Pawhuska from 4-7 p.m.
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Osage Wind LLC was back in federal court to revisit some of the same issues argued before the 10th Circuit six years ago. Osage Minerals Council and the U.S. government contend the company continues to trespass and should be liable. Osage Wind says tearing down all 84 wind turbines would be too costly.
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Killers of the Flower Moon, the nonfiction book by David Grann about the Osage murders, has been made into a movie by director Martin Scorsese. Over the weekend, it made its Oklahoma debut for some Osage citizens.
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Martin Scorsese's highly anticipated film Killers of the Flower Moon will be screened at the Cannes Film Festival on May 20. Audiences are getting some more sneak peeks at the look of the film.