"Cherokee Nation Principal Chief
Chad Smith pins the Cherokee Warriors medal on Orvel Baldridge,
who was honored for his military service during the Tribal
Council meeting on Monday."
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TAHLEQUAH, OK - The Cherokee Nation Tribal Council approved an
act requiring truth in advertising for Native American art during their
monthly meeting held at the tribal complex in Tahlequah.
The act requires anyone selling Native American art in the Cherokee
Nation to be a citizen or a member of a federally recognized Native
American tribe.
“This Act has been a long time in coming,” said Tribal Council Member
Cara Cowan-Watts, representing Rogers County. “For far too long,
non-Native Americans or others claiming to be members of non-recognized
tribes have sold art as true Native American art. This Act will help to
stop some of these sales. Anyone buying Native American art in the
Cherokee Nation can be better assured that the piece was created by a
true Native American.”
The Council also passed an Indian housing plan which will help the tribe
create attainable Cherokee communities. Parts of the plan include land
acquisitions for the tribe and for housing needs throughout the
14-county jurisdictional boundary of the Cherokee Nation.
In other business, the Council passed a resolution honoring the
accomplishments of Mary Ross, a 100-year-old Cherokee citizen who became
one of the first female Native American engineers. Ross worked for the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and assisted with
the first lunar moon landing in 1969.
The next regularly scheduled Council meeting will be on Monday, February
11 at 6 p.m. in the Tribal Council Chambers at the Cherokee Nation
complex south of Tahlequah.