journal #5026 from sdc 9.14

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Journal #5026 from sdc 9.14.21 Crazy Horse Indian Boarding Schools' Traumatic Legacy, And The Fight To Get Native Ancestors Back River of Darkness New Archive in Which to Get Lost for a Few Hours (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) Dormant for years, mining oversight committee is getting resurrected Girls basketball team circa 1951-53. "Vaquero-ettes Hawthorne’s only dentist wants to retire, underscoring state’s rural health shortage Hawthorne’s only dentist wants to retire, underscoring state’s rural health shortage Always With Love - Expected Death First Americans Museum Opens September 18 GrantStation Local paleontologist talks Nevada's first dinosaur unveiling, backyard bones update WRRC 2021 Seeking Nominations for Historical Poster Series Annual Conference Video and Presentations Now Available Crazy Horse lived free and died fighting for freedom. This is why we were labeled Oyate Watogla - wild people, a name we wear proudly to this day. In battle he preferred the inyan kapemni - stone club, to kill an enemy he would ride up arms distance and strike with the inyan kapemni. The mila hanska - long knives and other enemies feared him.

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Page 1: Journal #5026 from sdc 9.14

Journal #5026 from sdc 9.14.21 Crazy Horse Indian Boarding Schools' Traumatic Legacy, And The Fight To Get Native Ancestors Back River of Darkness New Archive in Which to Get Lost for a Few Hours (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) Dormant for years, mining oversight committee is getting resurrected Girls basketball team circa 1951-53. "Vaquero-ettesHawthorne’s only dentist wants to retire, underscoring state’s rural health shortage Hawthorne’s only dentist wants to retire, underscoring state’s rural health shortage Always With Love - Expected Death First Americans Museum Opens September 18 GrantStation Local paleontologist talks Nevada's first dinosaur unveiling, backyard bones update WRRC 2021 Seeking Nominations for Historical Poster Series Annual Conference Video and Presentations Now Available

Crazy Horse lived free and died fighting for freedom. This is why we were labeled Oyate Watogla - wild people, a name we wear proudly to this day.

In battle he preferred the inyan kapemni - stone club, to kill an enemy he would ride up arms distance and strike with the inyan kapemni. The mila hanska - long knives and other enemies feared him.

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Indian Boarding Schools' Traumatic Legacy, And The Fight To Get Native Ancestors BackAugust 28, 20216:00 AM ETHeard on Weekend Edition SaturdaySAM YELLOWHORSE KESLERTwitter~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ delanceyplace.com: Today’s selection -- from River of Darkness by Buddy Levy. Francisco Pizzaro conquered the Incas. His half-brother Gonzalo Pizarro almost perished in his own pursuit of fame and wealth. He survived, in part, by the gruesome practice of slicing slabs off the horses' sides as the animals clomped along; eating the meat and then dressing the horses' wounds with mud and river clay:   "Gonzalo Pizarro, meanwhile, continued his death march up the Aguarico. The expeditionary corps of friends and countrymen, comrades in arms, men with wives and families back in Quito or the Indies or the mother country, courageous Spaniards who had dreamed of encomiendas of their own, working mines, crates filled with gold borne to their loved ones in treasure-laden ships -- these men were now barely and jaundiced and skeletal, many simply dropped dead in their tracks. When they had marched proudly and gallantly out of Quito more than a year ago, they had had more than two thousand strong and snarling war hounds at their heels; by now they had eaten all but two, Gonzalo Pizarro's own personal dog and the one brought along by the original campmaster, Antonio de Ribera.

"The rains had drenched the men and reduced what clothes they had left to tattered rags that hung from their bodies like torn bandages. Many of the men were so weakened by famine that they could walk for only a few minutes at a time before slumping again to the forest floor, some-times crawling along on their hands and knees like wounded animals. During the interminable nights they could hear the padding footfalls of tapirs and capybaras and agoutis and deer feeding in the forest, but these animals could only be slain by skilled and patient hunters trained to stalk them. The Spaniards were reduced to fantasizing about eating them as they starved. "Only a few horses now remained alive, and these poor animals were subjected to a most gruesome survival tactic. The men had begun slicing slabs off the horses' sides as the animals clomped along; they would eat the meat and then dress the horses' wounds with mud and river clay, packing it on thick to stanch the flow of blood. Later, when hunger overtook them, the men would remove the mud and clay plasters, letting the blood flow again and draining the thick red liquid into their helmets, to boil and then season with herbs and peppers, making a ghastly blood soup.

"Gonzalo Pizarro was himself barely hanging on. He would write of this anguished march, which included wading through leech-filled swamps and creeks for miles, in water and mud that was sometimes knee-deep, often armpit-deep:

All the remaining horses, more than eighty in number, were finally eaten; and in this uninhabited stretch were found many rivers and creeks of considerable size ... and there were many days when there were built in the course of advancing two leagues [about five miles] twelve, thirteen, fifteen and even more bridges to take the expeditionary force across.

Publisher: Bantam. 2011. Pages 98-99 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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If you think I am had too much fun with tandfonline.com you are correct; but wait til you see this one one! sdc PS. The serious note of this exercise is to underscore how many digital collections now exist and that one must be creative with search terms. Indian and Tribe often get you to places around the world.

National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine US National Library of Medicine - National Institutes of Health Items: 1 to 20 of 207913 using search term “Native American” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/?term=Native+American

Sharing Wisdom, Sharing Hope: Strategies Used by Native American Cancer Survivors to Restore Quality of Life Tiana D. Bastian, Linda Burhansstipanov JCO Glob Oncol. 2020; 6: JGO.19.00215. Published online 2020 Jan 13. doi: 10.1200/JGO.19.00215 PMCID: PMC6998019. ArticlePubReaderPDF–564KCite Select item 7296748

Exchange of medicinal plant information in California missions Joe Rayl McBride, Rita Yolanda Cavero, Anna Liisa Cheshire, María Isabel Calvo, Deborah Lea McBride J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2020; 16: 35. Published online 2020 Jun 15. doi: 10.1186/s13002-020-00388-y PMCID: PMC7296748. ArticlePubReaderPDF–1.0MCite Select item 7039995

Diversity of HLA Class I and Class II blocks and conserved extended haplotypes in Lacandon Mayans Rodrigo Barquera, Joaquin Zuniga, José Flores-Rivera, Teresa Corona, Bridget S. Penman, Diana Iraíz Hernández-Zaragoza, Manuel Soler, Letisia Jonapá-Gómez, Kalyan C. Mallempati, Petra Yescas, Adriana Ochoa-Morales, Konstantinos Barsakis, José Artemio Aguilar-Vázquez, Maricela García-Lechuga, Michael Mindrinos, María Yunis, Luis Jiménez-Alvarez, Lourdes Mena-Hernández, Esteban Ortega, Alfredo Cruz-Lagunas, Víctor Hugo Tovar-Méndez, Julio Granados, Marcelo Fernández-Viña, Edmond Yunis Sci Rep. 2020; 10: 3248. Published online 2020 Feb 24. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-58897-5 PMCID: PMC7039995. ArticlePubReaderPDF–3.4MCite Select item 6048481

Evolutionary genomic dynamics of Peruvians before, during, and after the Inca Empire Daniel N. Harris, Wei Song, Amol C. Shetty, Kelly S. Levano, Omar Cáceres, Carlos Padilla, Víctor Borda, David Tarazona, Omar Trujillo, Cesar Sanchez, Michael D. Kessler, Marco Galarza, Silvia Capristano, Harrison Montejo, Pedro O. Flores-Villanueva, Eduardo Tarazona-Santos, Timothy D. O’Connor, Heinner Guio Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jul 10; 115(28): E6526–E6535. Published online 2018 Jun 26. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1720798115 PMCID: PMC6048481. ArticlePubReaderPDF–1.9M. Cite Select item 6756731

Native American admixture recapitulates population-specific migration and settlement of the continental United States I. King Jordan, Lavanya Rishishwar, Andrew B. Conle PLoS Genet. 2019 Sep; 15(9):

e1008225. Published online 2019 Sep 23. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008225 PMCID: PMC6756731 ArticlePubReaderPDF–2.6MCite Select item 4437975 Sociocultural Influences on Gambling and Alcohol Use Among Native Americans in the United States

David A. Patterson, John W. Welte, Grace M. Barnes, Marie-Cecile O. Tidwell, Paul Spicer J Gambl Stud. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 Dec 1.

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Published in final edited form as: J Gambl Stud. 2015 Dec; 31(4): 1387–1404. doi: 10.1007/s10899-014-9512-z PMCID: PMC4437975 ArticlePubReaderPDF–224KCite Select item 7426416

Native American ancestry significantly contributes to neuromyelitis optica susceptibility in the admixed Mexican population Sandra Romero-Hidalgo, José Flores-Rivera, Verónica Rivas-Alonso, Rodrigo Barquera, María Teresa Villarreal-Molina, Bárbara Antuna-Puente, Luis Rodrigo Macias-Kauffer, Marisela Villalobos-Comparán, Jair Ortiz-Maldonado, Neng Yu, Tatiana V. Lebedeva, Sharon M. Alosco, Juan Daniel García-Rodríguez, Carolina González-Torres, Sandra Rosas-Madrigal, Graciela Ordoñez, Jorge Luis Guerrero-Camacho, Irene Treviño-Frenk, Monica Escamilla-Tilch, Maricela García-Lechuga, Víctor Hugo Tovar-Méndez, Hanna Pacheco-Ubaldo, Victor Acuña-Alonzo, Maria-Cátira Bortolini, Carla Gallo, Gabriel Bedoya, Francisco Rothhammer, Rolando González-Jose, Andrés Ruiz-Linares, Samuel Canizales-Quinteros, Edmond Yunis, Julio Granados, Teresa Corona Sci Rep. 2020; 10: 13706. Published online 2020 Aug 13. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-69224-3 PMCID: PMC7426416. ArticlePubReaderPDF–2.0MCite Select item 3544405

A Comparison of Quality of Life Between Native and Non-Native Cancer Survivors: Native and Non-Native Cancer Survivors’ QOL Linda Burhansstipanov, Mark Dignan, Katherine L. Jones, Linda U. Krebs, Paula Marchionda, Judith Salmon Kaur J Cancer Educ. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 Jan 14. Published in final edited form as: J Cancer Educ. 2012 Apr; 27(Suppl 1): S106–S113. doi: 10.1007/s13187-012-0318-3 PMCID: PMC3544405. ArticlePubReaderPDF–58KCite Select item 3941118

Blood Politics, Ethnic Identity, and Racial Misclassification among American Indians and Alaska Natives Emily A. Haozous, Carolyn J. Strickland, Janelle F. Palacios, Teshia G. Arambula Solomon J Environ Public Health. 2014; 2014: 321604. Published online 2014 Feb 10. doi: 10.1155/2014/321604 PMCID: PMC3941118 ArticlePubReaderPDF–564KCite Select item 3623769

Continent-Wide Decoupling of Y-Chromosomal Genetic Variation from Language and Geography in Native South Americans Lutz Roewer, Michael Nothnagel, Leonor Gusmão, Veronica Gomes, Miguel González, Daniel Corach, Andrea Sala, Evguenia Alechine, Teresinha Palha, Ney Santos, Andrea Ribeiro-dos-Santos, Maria Geppert, Sascha Willuweit, Marion Nagy, Sarah Zweynert, Miriam Baeta, Carolina Núñez, Begoña Martínez-Jarreta, Fabricio González-Andrade, Elizeu Fagundes de Carvalho, Dayse Aparecida da Silva, Juan José Builes, Daniel Turbón, Ana Maria Lopez Parra, Eduardo Arroyo-Pardo, Ulises Toscanini, Lisbeth Borjas, Claudia Barletta, Elizabeth Ewart, Sidney Santos, Michael Krawczak PLoS Genet. 2013 Apr; 9(4): e1003460. Published online 2013 Apr 11. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003460 PMCID: PMC3623769 ArticlePubReaderPDF–1.6MCite Select item 3544403

A Comparison of Two Native American Navigator Formats: Face-to-Face and Telephone Mark B. Dignan, Linda Burhansstipanov, Judy Hariton, Lisa Harjo, Jerri Rattler, Rose Lee, Mondi Mason Cancer Control. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 Jan 14. Published in final edited form as: Cancer Control. 2005 Nov; 12(Suppl 2): 28–33. doi: 10.1177/1073274805012004S05 PMCID: PMC3544403 ArticlePubReaderPDF–734KCite Select item 6756188

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Reconstructed Lost Native American Populations from Eastern Brazil Are Shaped by Differential Jê/Tupi Ancestry Alex Mas-Sandoval, Lara R Arauna, Mateus H Gouveia, Mauricio L Barreto, Bernardo L Horta, Maria Fernanda Lima-Costa, Alexandre C Pereira, Francisco M Salzano, Tábita Hünemeier, Eduardo Tarazona-Santos, Maria Cátira Bortolini, David Comas Genome Biol Evol. 2019 Sep; 11(9): 2593–2604. Published online 2019 Jul 22. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evz161 PMCID: PMC6756188 ArticlePubReaderPDF–4.4MCite Select item 6345020

Analysis of the human Y-chromosome haplogroup Q characterizes ancient population movements in Eurasia and the Americas Viola Grugni, Alessandro Raveane, Linda Ongaro, Vincenza Battaglia, Beniamino Trombetta, Giulia Colombo, Marco Rosario Capodiferro, Anna Olivieri, Alessandro Achilli, Ugo A. Perego, Jorge Motta, Maribel Tribaldos, Scott R. Woodward, Luca Ferretti, Fulvio Cruciani, Antonio Torroni, Ornella Semino BMC Biol. 2019; 17: 3. Published online 2019 Jan 24. doi: 10.1186/s12915-018-0622-4 PMCID: PMC6345020. ArticlePubReaderPDF–3.4MCite Select item 3544394

Native Cancer Navigation: The State of the Science Valerie Eschiti, Linda Burhansstipanov, Shinobu Watanabe-Galloway Clin J Oncol Nurs. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 Jan 14. Published in final edited form as: Clin J Oncol Nurs. 2012 Feb; 16(1): 73–89. doi: 10.1188/12.CJON.73-82 PMCID: PMC3544394 ArticlePubReaderPDF–1.2MCite Select item 3738746

The Relevance of Cultural Activities in Ethnic Identity Among California Native American Youth Kurt Schweigman, Claradina Soto, Serena Wright, Jennifer Unger J Psychoactive Drugs. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 Aug 8. Published in final edited form as: J Psychoactive Drugs. 2011 Oct-Dec; 43(4): 343–348. doi: 10.1080/02791072.2011.629155 PMCID: PMC3738746 ArticlePubReaderPDF–286KCite Select item 4035862

Disparities in Cancer Mortality and Incidence Among American Indians and Alaska Natives in the United States Mary C. White, David K. Espey, Judith Swan, Charles L. Wiggins, Christie Eheman, Judith S. Kaur Am J Public Health. 2014 Jun; 104(Suppl 3): S377–S387. Published online 2014 Jun. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2013.301673 PMCID: PMC4035862 ArticlePubReaderPDF–613KCite Select item 7365470

Fine-scale genomic analyses of admixed individuals reveal unrecognized genetic ancestry components in Argentina Pierre Luisi, Angelina García, Juan Manuel Berros, Josefina M. B. Motti, Darío A. Demarchi, Emma Alfaro, Eliana Aquilano, Carina Argüelles, Sergio Avena, Graciela Bailliet, Julieta Beltramo, Claudio M. Bravi, Mariela Cuello, Cristina Dejean, José Edgardo Dipierri, Laura S. Jurado Medina, José Luis Lanata, Marina Muzzio, María Laura Parolin, Maia Pauro, Paula B. Paz Sepúlveda, Daniela Rodríguez Golpe, María Rita Santos, Marisol Schwab, Natalia Silvero, Jeremias Zubrzycki, Virginia Ramallo, Hernán Dopazo PLoS One. 2020; 15(7): e0233808. Published online 2020 Jul 16. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0233808 PMCID: PMC7365470 ArticlePubReaderPDF–3.4MCite Select item 2661488

Trends in Perinatal and Infant Health Disparities Between Rural American Indians and Alaska Natives and Rural Whites

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Laura-Mae Baldwin, David C. Grossman, Elise Murowchick, Eric H. Larson, Walter B. Hollow, Jonathan R. Sugarman, William L. Freeman, L. Gary Hart Am J Public Health. 2009 Apr; 99(4): 638–646. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2007.119735 PMCID: PMC2661488 ArticlePubReaderPDF–531KCite Select item 3544409

Preliminary Lessons Learned from the “Native Navigators and the Cancer Continuum” (NNACC) Linda Burhansstipanov, Linda U. Krebs, Shinobu Watanabe-Galloway, Daniel G. Petereit, Noel L. Pingatore, Valerie Eschiti J Cancer Educ. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2013 Jan 14. Published in final edited form as: J Cancer Educ. 2012 Apr; 27(Suppl 1): S57–S65. doi: 10.1007/s13187-012-0316-5 PMCID: PMC3544409 ArticlePubReaderPDF–1.1MCite Select item 7549225

Perceptions of food environments and nutrition among residents of the Flathead Indian Reservation Carmen Byker Shanks, Selena Ahmed, Virgil Dupuis, Bailey Houghtaling, Mary Ann Running Crane, Mike Tryon, Mike Pierre BMC Public Health. 2020; 20: 1536. Published online 2020 Oct 12. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09584-7 PMCID: PMC7549225 ArticlePubReaderPDF–653KCite ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Darren Hicks Thought this was too cool to see my Grandma Gladys as well as the other Grandmother's back in the day!! Really great picture.

Virginia Johnson is at Fernley High School (old original building & gym) --location was corner U.S. 95A and Main St. Girls basketball team circa 1951-53. “Vaquero-ettes Top row left to rt: Glorene Shaw, June Tuesen, Carolyn Swysgood, Virginia Lee, Dorothy Mauwee and Gladys Frazier. Bottom: Left to rt: Regina Olsen, Judy Mauwee, Eleanor French and Adeline Lowery.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Hawthorne’s only dentist wants to retire, underscoring state’s rural health shortage Sep 07, 2021 12:17 pm. Read more »

Dormant for years, mining oversight committee is getting resurrected Gov. Steve Sisolak announced in a press release Tuesday that “progress has been made toward completing appointments” to the Mining Oversight and Accountability Commission. Read on »

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Always With LoveExpected Death ~ When someone dies, the first thing to do is nothing. Don't run out and call the nurse. Don't pick up the phone. Take a deep breath and be present to the magnitude of the moment.

There's a grace to being at the bedside of someone you love as they make their transition out of this world. At the moment they take their last breath, there's an incredible sacredness in the space. The veil between the worlds opens.We're so unprepared and untrained in how to deal with death that sometimes a kind of panic response kicks in. "They're dead!" We knew they were going to die, so their being dead is not a surprise. It's not a problem to be solved. It's very sad, but it's not cause to panic.

If anything, their death is cause to take a deep breath, to stop, and be really present to what's happening. If you're at home, maybe put on the kettle and make a cup of tea.

Sit at the bedside and just be present to the experience in the room. What's happening for you? What might be happening for them? What other presences are here that might be supporting them on their way? Tune into all the beauty and magic.

Pausing gives your soul a chance to adjust, because no matter how prepared we are, a death is still a shock. If we kick right into "do" mode, and call 911, or call the hospice, we never get a chance to absorb the enormity of the event.

Give yourself five minutes or 10 minutes, or 15 minutes just to be. You'll never get that time back again if you don't take it now.

After that, do the smallest thing you can. Call the one person who needs to be called. Engage whatever systems need to be engaged, but engage them at the very most minimal level. Move really, really, really, slowly, because this is a period where it's easy for body and soul to get separated.

Our bodies can gallop forwards, but sometimes our souls haven't caught up. If you have an opportunity to be quiet and be present, take it. Accept and acclimatize and adjust to what's happening. Then, as the train starts rolling, and all the things that happen after a death kick in, you'll be better prepared.

You won't get a chance to catch your breath later on. You need to do it now.

Being present in the moments after death is an incredible gift to yourself, it's a gift to the people you're with, and it's a gift to the person who's just died. They're just a hair's breath away. They're just starting their new journey in the world without a body. If you keep a calm space around their body, and in the room, they're launched in a more beautiful way. It's a service to both sides of the veil.

Credit for the beautiful words ~ Sarah Kerr, Ritual Healing Practitioner and Death Doula , Death doula.Beautiful art by Columbus Community Deathcare #alwayswithlove #dying #death

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OKCTalk.com After 2 decades of planning and construction, the stunning First Americans Museum opens Sept. 18th. For more than two dozen photos and more info, follow this li… See More

National Register to Vote Day is September 28.

On June 2, 1924, in exchange for the right to tax Native people, the U.S. government unilaterally extended U.S. citizenship to Native Americans by passing the Indian Citizenship Act. Despite this change in citizenship status many states were able to find other reasons to deny Native peoples the vote — residing on a reservation, tribal enrollment, taxation, and incompetency were all used as reasons for denying Native citizens in some states the right to vote. This is not ancient history. To this day, Native people are forced to continue to litigate for their right to vote, as states and counties continue erecting hurdles to prevent Native voters from participating in U.S. electons. We continue to fight in partnership with Native people, organizations, and tribes to secure voting rights for all. Voting rights are human rights, and we ask that you join us in our mission to help Native people receive fair representation and voice. Native American Rights Fund

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GrantStation

The Connie Burwell White and William W. White FoundationThe Connie Burwell White and William W. White Foundation supports nonprofit organizations in the Denver, CO, metropolitan area. The Foundation's areas of interest include education, arts

National Opportunities Opportunities throughout the U.S. Support for Contemporary Art Curators in the U.S. The Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation has recently announced two new grant opportunities for contemporary art curators within the United States. Efforts to Safeguard Freedom Funded The Herb Block Foundation is committed to defending the basic freedoms guaranteed all Americans, combating all forms of discrimination and prejudice, and improving the conditions of the poor and underprivileged. Grants Promote Education, Music, and Community Organizing The Sparkplug Foundation primarily provides grants to start-up nonprofit organizations or new projects of established nonprofits that are addressing the fields of music, education, and community organizing. Youth Outdoor Field Trips Supported The Every Kid Outdoors Transportation Grants Program supports the transportation and activity needs of nonprofit organizations and schools across the U.S. that are connecting elementary school-aged youth to public lands.

Regional Opportunities Opportunities for specific geographic areas Funds to Ensure Healthy Grasslands in the Southern Great Plains The Southern Plains Grassland Program is dedicated to conserving and restoring grasslands and wildlife species in the Southern Great Plains, defined as eastern Colorado, Kansas, southern Nebraska, northeastern New Mexico, Oklahoma, and the Texas Panhandle. Grants Strengthen Autism Programs in New England and Florida The mission of the Doug Flutie, Jr. Foundation for Autism is to help people and families affected by autism live life to the fullest. Support for Oregon Organizations Working for Social Justice The mission of Seeding Justice (formerly MRG Foundation) is to inspire people to work together for justice and mobilize resources for Oregon communities as they build collective power to change the world. Companion Animal Welfare Efforts in Colorado Funded The Animal Assistance Foundation is dedicated to providing leadership in improving animal welfare in the state of Colorado.

Federal Opportunities Opportunities from the U.S. government Support Available to Strengthen the Economy Through STEM Projects The STEM Talent Challenge program supports organizations that are creating and implementing STEM talent development strategies that complement their region's innovation economy. Efforts to Improve Museums Funded The Museums for America program supports museums of all sizes and disciplines to undertake projects that strengthen their ability to serve their public.

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and culture, and human welfare. Learn more about the funding guidelines and application process.

The Pilcrow Foundation: Children's Book ProjectThe Pilcrow Foundation's Children’s Book Project supports libraries located in rural areas within the United States that have a limited operating budget and an active children’s department. Through the program, a library's local sponsors can contribute funds, which the Foundation matches on a 2-to-1 ratio in new children's books. Learn more about the funding guidelines and application process.

Global Change AwardThe Global Change Award, an initiative of the H&M Foundation, aims to find game-changing innovations that can help turn the fashion industry into a planet positive one. The Award seeks early stage innovations that can help create a future for sustainable style and restored earth systems, including ideas that can change the way fashion is seen, worn, and made. Learn moreabout the Award guidelines and application process.

NATIVE HEALTH's Indigenous Kindergarten Math Scholars

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Local paleontologist talks Nevada's first dinosaur unveiling, backyard bones updateLAS VEGAS (FOX5) -- Paleontologists at the Nevada Science Center, located in downtown Henderson, are getting ready to unveil Nevada's first dinosaur species.Read in FOX5 Vegas: https://apple.news/A_a0n1w5PSSKpjU20SFOBCw

Each class is about 15 minutes and can be viewed any time day, night, or weekend since it is online on the NATIVE HEALTH Facebook page.

This program has been generously funded by the Virginia G Piper Charitable Trust. For more information please contact Lanasha at (602) 279-5262, x 3109 or email.

Tribal Nations Maps now features a brand new poster section on our website: NOTABLE NATIVE AMERICANS In the coming months , we will be bringing to light the lives and accomplishments of hundreds of Native Americans who have lived in relative obscurity or who deserve more recognition. This series will highlight people from all walks of life in their Native communities- from social activists to writers, to Chiefs , diplomats and athletes. If you would like to nominate a historical figure or a living person for this series, please reply to this email. To see the Notable Native posters we have so far, please click on the link below: Notable Native Americans (tribalnationsmaps.com)

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You owe it to yourself to watch this if nothing for the inspiration of the presenters. sdc

WRRC 2021 Annual Conference Videos and Presentations Now Available and Rodney Blaine Lewis Scholars Award Page is Now Active

  Thank you for registering for the WRRC 2021 Annual conference, Tribal Water Resilience in a Changing Environment! We are deeply appreciative of all who contributed to this meaningful dialogue. Here are just two of the positive comments we received about the conference: “I’ve never attended, either physically or virtually, such a well-organized well-presented meaningful seminar. I’ll be digesting its various contents for months…I have never had such an academically and emotionally mind-expanding experience.” “I just wanted to send a note to tell you how much I appreciated the WRRC conference. It was wonderful rich content and went off without a hitch. I found portions of it to be very moving and other parts were technically interesting, just a great combo.”

The videos and presentations, where permission was granted, are posted and freely available on our website. Watch the full program for each day or visit the agenda to view individual speakers and panels.

Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Agenda