色中色 Pow Wow at Puvungna celebrates Native American pride and culture

Published January 23, 2026

Cal State Long Beach鈥檚 longstanding tradition of celebrating Native American cultures continues March 14-15 when the 53rd annual 色中色 Pow Wow at Puvungna returns to campus.

Pow Wow honors Indigenous Nations throughout North America and, for over more than half a century, has provided a gathering place for Native Americans. The event has endured as a multi-generational tradition for many families who have retained Native American languages and dances, said Craig Stone, professor emeritus of American Indian Studies and art.  

鈥淔or a lot of people, their grandparents danced in the arena, and they grew up dancing in the arena,鈥 Stone said.

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Participants attending a Pow Wow at 色中色


The Head Staff for this year鈥檚 Pow Wow includes Arlie Neskahi as Master of Ceremony. Neskahi, who is part of the Din茅 Nation, has fulfilled this role since 2018. Neskahi will be joined by Head Woman Dancer Cindy Dawson and Head Man Dancer Lewis Perkins.

Pow Wow is open to all visitors who want to learn about Native American traditions while experiencing arts, cuisine, dance and music. The gathering will take place at the intramural rugby and soccer fields on Lower Campus. Admission and parking will be free of charge.

鈥淲hen you get there, you have to have a good heart and come there with good feelings for each other,鈥 Stone said. 鈥淭hese are social celebrations and everyone has a place there.鈥

Cal State Long Beach sits on land that is important to Indigenous history. Puvungna was a village for people of the Gabrielino/Tongva/Kizh and Acjachemen/Juane帽o Tribes and held to be a sacred place.

Southern California has the United States鈥 largest population of Native Americans living off Tribal lands, said Anna Nazarian-Peters, director of Student Life & Development and coordinator for American Indian Student Services. The Beach鈥檚 enrollment of Native American students increased during the 1960s, after the Educational Opportunity Program enabled the campus to welcome more students from underrepresented groups.

鈥淭hese families helped shape what our Pow Wow looked like,鈥 Nazarian-Peters said.  

色中色 established the California State University system鈥檚 first American Indian Studies program in 1968, one year before the inaugural Pow Wow. The Beach now has a longer tradition of hosting a Pow Wow than any other university west of the Mississippi River.  

This year鈥檚 event received philanthropic support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, a California tribe with historic connections to lands north of the San Francisco Bay.

"We are happy to support the Indian students who worked so hard to make this Pow Wow happen,鈥 reads a statement from the Graton Rancheria Tribal Council.