Your Guide to KC: Star sports columnist Vahe Gregorian is changing uniforms this spring and summer, acting as a tour guide of sorts to some well-known and hidden gems of Kansas City. Send your ideas ...
As the Kansas City Chiefs prepare to compete in Sunday's Super Bowl, a group of Native Americans is renewing their call for the team to drop its name, mascot and fan-driven "tomahawk chop" ritual.
It is a well-known image: A stoic Native American man in ceremonial garb with a feathered headdress. A chief. That portrait of strength and courage has been memorialized in films and statues, as well ...
Journalist Vincent Schilling is speaking out against the Kansas City Chiefs’ use of Native American mascots and imagery. On Twitter, Schilling, a Native American writer, explains why he thinks the ...
(AP) - Rhonda LeValdo is exhausted, but she’s refusing to slow down. For the fourth time in five years, her hometown team and the focus of her decadeslong activism against the use of Native American ...
In 1924, Congress passed the Indian Citizenship Act, also known as the Snyder Act, which turned all noncitizen Indians born ...
The franchise refers to the Kansas City metropolitan area as "Chiefs Kingdom." A cheerleader rides a horse named "Warpaint" through pregame festivities and around the field when Kansas City scores.