ACT Human Rights Film Festival celebrates the power of film to awaken, connect and transform
The annual festival returns with unforgettable, thought-provoking films and appearances by filmmakers.
The annual festival returns with unforgettable, thought-provoking films and appearances by filmmakers.
The mural, titled "State S(t)eal," is part of the Department of Art & Art History’s Mural Initiative and Engaged Art Walk program.
Colorado State University’s Native American Cultural Center is hosting a month-long schedule of programs and events focused on Indigenous history, culture and food for Native American Heritage Month.
A member of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, Traci Morris was one of five experts invited to testify at the congressional subcommittee hearing.
The ACT Human Rights Film Festival concludes its 2019 year-round programming on Dec. 5 with "A Collection of Indigenous Short Films from Sundance Film Festival."
Former CSU football star Eric Tippeconnic is hoping to inspire conversation about modern-day Native Americans though his art.
When Irene Vernon was a baby, her mother looked out the kitchen window at her husband and sons working in the field and said to herself that she didn’t want her family to spend the rest of their lives doing that.
On Nov. 1, 2015, the first bison to walk upon the short-grass prairie of Northern Colorado in decades returned to Soapstone Prairie. For local Native Americans, the return was a momentous and emotional occasion.
CSU students Kiloaulani Ka'awa-Gonzales, Arielle Quintana and Katelynne Johnson have been named 2016 Udall Scholars.