News from Cherokee Nation
Copyright © 2004 CNO
TULSA, OKLAHOMA - Twenty Sequoyah High School (SHS) students were recently inducted into the Oklahoma Indian Student Honor Society (OISHS) at a banquet held at the Sheraton Hotel in Tulsa.Inductees were Bryan Allen, Travis Boswell, Kellie Brown, Zach Goodrich, Diana Onco, Kellen Quinton, Todd Crow, Julie Hensley, Kasper Holmes, Deena Nez, Bonita Carey, Sonny Hawk, Amanda Little, Nathaniel Barnoskie, Kryste Benge, Robert Conrad, Angela Hummingbird, Wes Nofire, Derrick Stanley, and Jayme Steeley.
The Oklahoma Council for Indian Education selects students for membership based on their outstanding academic achievements. Students must have a 3.9 grade point average, exhibit exceptional character, and participate in community service and cultural activities. The Oklahoma Council for Indian Education is an advocacy group whose purpose is to promote and enhance education and culture for American Indian students in the state of Oklahoma and to create awareness within the state of the significance of its American Indian citizens.
“It is quite an honor to be inducted into the OISHS,” stated Kim Livingston, OISHS sponsor at SHS. “These students are very dedicated and have outstanding accomplishments to accent their academic excellence.”
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P.O. Box 520, Tahlequah, OK 74465
Sequoyah High School Alumni
Sequoyah High School, an Indian boarding school, originated
in 1871, when the Cherokee National Council passed an act
setting up an orphan asylum to take care
Sequoyah High School's approximate 300 enrollment represents
42 tribes and 14 different states. Students are eligible to
attend if they are members of federally recognized Indian
tribes or one-fourth blood |
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Related Path(s) and contact information:
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Sequoyah High School Services
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Cherokee Nation, Oklahoma
Mike Miller, Cherokee Nation |