Check Out New Website (events)


Native Nation Events
Check out our new website!!!
www.nativenationevents.org
Native Nation Events has a fresh new look
New and exciting things on its way, 
make sure to stay tuned!

Coming this Fall...

http://nativenationevents.org/conference/second-annual-national-native-american-8a-conference-government-contracting-small-business-development/
Find out more about sponsor and exhibiting benefits

Contact our Sales Team to find out more information about sponsoring at our events
Register now with our Early Bird Discount Rates

Look for our Online Registration Forms on our Conference Page or contact us we can register you right over the phone 
                                            Contact Us:

Phone: (201) 857-5333

Fax:     (201) 857-5332

Native Nation Events 38 e ridgewood ave #223, ridgewood, nj 07450 (201) 857-5333

Tuition Waiver (education)

On a morning this April that threatened rain, Davonne Teri John lined up with more than 400 other Fort Lewis College seniors to accept her baccalaureate degree.

Bright blue and red beads of her powwow regalia peeked through her graduation gown, and a silver and turquoise stone bracelet gleamed on her wrist.

As a member of the Navajo tribe, John is one of hundreds of Native American students at the college who qualified for free tuition because of a century-old promise made by the state of Colorado.

Full story @: http://bit.ly/TuitionWaiver

Prop 29 (politics)

VOX POPULI: PROP. 29 WILL BENEFIT AAPI COMMUNITY

By DR. PAUL Y. SONG

As an Asian American oncologist who lost his own father to cancer, I have been concerned with the overall increasing incidence of cancer in our community. Asian Americans are the only ethnic group for whom cancer is the leading cause of death.

On June 5, Asian American and Pacific Islanders will have an opportunity to stop this killer in our community.

At a time when the United States Congress has begun to drastically reduce National Institute of Health funding for all healthcare research, Prop. 29 will raise badly needed money to fill this gap while also helping to discourage people from smoking, which is still a leading cause of cancer.

Approximately 15,000-20,000 Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders will die every year because of tobacco related illnesses.

Hey Day Books (arts)


JUNE 2012 Newsletter

Spring gains and losses

I've been trying to think of a time when I didn't start out a newsletter with tales of how busy we've beenand I guess it just doesn't exist. In the past month, Heyday launched New California Writing 2012 with events in both Los Angeles and San Francisco (details and videos on both below), staged a major exhibition in conjunction with the David Brower Centennial, and released several books to rave reviews from Publishers Weekly, The New York Times, Kirkus Reviews, and the San Francisco Chronicle. Oh, and there was also a photo exhibit at the Umbrage Gallery in Brooklyn, a pilgrimage to Manzanar, and the LA Times Festival of Books (details and pictures of all three below)!

To keep up with all the activity, check out our new "Heyday in the News" section at the foot of this newsletter, which features info on reviews, awards, events, author activity, and the usual general Heyday celebration and mayhem.

As blessed as we've been these past few months, we also experienced the loss of two dear Heyday friends. Ernest "Chick" Callenbach, author of the environmental classic Ecotopia and the beloved true children's book Humphrey the Wayward Whale, died on April 16, and former West Coast Live producer Kathi Kamen Goldmark, who was also the founder and member of the "all-author rock band" the Rock Bottom Remainders, died on May 24. Both Chick and Kathi will be greatly missed.


Natalie Mulford
Marketing and Publicity Director

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New California Writing 2012 launches at Libros Schmibros and the California Historical Society

In the past few months, Heyday has stretched its arms down the length of the state and across the country as we celebrate our Spring 2012 releases. In late April, we roadtripped down to Los Angeles for the southern launch of our annual anthology's second edition, New California Writing 2012, which was graciously hosted by David Kipen and Colleen Jaurretche at the Boyle Heights lending library Libros Schmibros. We we were treated to tacos in Mariachi Plaza and then lulled by the warm night air as we listened to contributors share from the book. Eric Puchner told of his failed (but tanned) California dream in "Schemes of My Father," Stef Willen made us shiver with her Marin ghost story featuring an ectoplasmic Catherine Keener, and Sean Bernard read his short story "Torturers" on Microsoft Word's (bizarre and alluring) "auto summarize" function. See videos of all the readings here.

Malcolm at Libros SchmibrosIn San Francisco on May 16, the new bookstore Ten Lions opened its doors at the California Historical Society for a sold-out, standing-room-only event emceed by ZYZZYVA editor Oscar Villalon. Literary fans snaked up CHS's grand staircase and feasted on dim sum from the Mission District's Big Lantern. If you missed the event, see Steven Chiem's three-part video of the evening's ten readings on our Facebook page, featuring appearances by Maxine Hong Kingston, Camille Dungy, J. Tony Serra, and Angie Chau.

About the book:
The pieces in this second installment in Heyday's annual literary anthology capture the demons and dreams of California. Edited by Heyday's acquisitions and editorial director, Gayle Wattawa, and with a foreword by former National Endowment of the Arts director of literature David Kipen, the varied cultural, emotional, and environmental landscapes of the state are evoked in New California Writing 2012 with grit and grace. Among the forty-three contributors are Francesca Lia Block, T. C. Boyle, Caitlin Flanagan, Jon Carroll, and Michael Pollan.

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The "Vanishing Valley": A Kaleidoscope of Faces and Stories Featured in The New York Times Sunday Review

Valley of Shadows and DreamsKen and Melanie Light's book Valley of Shadows and Dreams has been dusting up the country from east to west, with art openings in New York and Berkeley, and events from Salinas's Steinbeck Festival to the Arte Amricas in Fresno. Some of Ken's photographs were recently acquired by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and a solo show will open at the Oakland Museum of California late this July. Check out the recent Sunday Review spread in The New York Times, as well as reviews in the San Francisco Chronicle and Publishers Weekly. See our Events section for more information on upcoming appearances.

About the book:
Ken and Melanie Light have embarked on a photographic and literary exploration of a region known for its agricultural plenty. By courageously exposing the way landowners, lobbyists, and the government have betrayed the land and those who work on it, the Lights have created an important book—important not just to those who live in the Central Valley but to the nation that depends upon this region for its food.

In Valley of Shadows and Dreams we see richly fertile land transformed into neighborhoods full of empty tract homes that no local workers can afford. We are confronted head-on with the devastating results of foreclosure. We stand in the Community Center food line in Mendota. We also slip magically onto a midnight dance floor with migrant workers in Tulare, and we sail out across the San Joaquin River on a rope swing. With artistic mastery, intelligence, and passion, the Lights thrust us into a damaged and contradictory world.

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The Wildness Within launches at the Brower Center

The Wildness WithinWe're so excited that Kenneth Brower's book has finally arrived! There has been a flurry of activity around its publication, including the May 17 launch of an exhibit at the David Brower Center on the large-format exhibition books Brower helped champion. On hand for an artist talk were author Kenneth Brower and nature photographer Bill Curtisinger, who is best known for capturing deep sea life.

If you missed the exhibit opening, or if you want to see it again, join us on June 14 for a book signing and reading of The Wildness Within at the David Brower Center. Event details are below. Bill Curtsinger and accompanying artist Joseph Holmes's stunning show (featuring seals, icescapes, and arctic diving) will be up until August 31.

Lastly, if we were lucky enough to have you as a Kickstarter donor for this book, watch your snail mail for any contributor benefits you may have qualified for. And if you haven't yet seen Ken Brower's inspiring video, you can watch it here and then grab a copy of The Wildness Within.

About the book: David Brower defined the twentieth-century environmental movement: protecting treasured landscapes from the Grand Canyon to Bodega Bay, serving as the first executive director of the Sierra Club, and helping to win passage of the transformative Wilderness Act in 1964. For the hundredth anniversary of Brower's birth, his son Kenneth Brower has brought together nineteen environmental leaders whose lives and careers were transformed by David Brower. The result is The Wildness Within, in which a repertory company of path-forgers reveal their deepest values and most moving experiences.

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Save the date: July 28, News from Native California event

Linda YamaneThis year, Heyday celebrates the twenty-fifth anniversary of its magazine, News from Native California. Join us on July 28 from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. at the Oakland Museum of California for a commemorative event that will include the unveiling of Oholone scholar and artist Linda Yamane's Ohlone Basket Project. Ms. Yamane's basket took three years to make and is the first of its kind to be created in more than 250 years. This event is organized in conjunction with the Oakland Museum of California.

To watch a video and learn more about the Ohlone Basket Project, click here.

For more information about the July 28 unveiling, click here.

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Children of Manzanar Editor Attends Annual Pilgrimage

Since 1969, former internees, their families, friends, and a growing number of young people join in an annual pilgrimage to Manzanar National Historic Site, where they gather at the cemetery to remember and honor the lessons of the internment experience. Begun in the civil rights era, these pilgrimages grew as younger Japanese Americans spoke out about the internment of their relatives during World War II, shattering their elders' silence and shame about the camps.

This year marks the seventieth anniversary of Executive Order 9066, which authorized the U.S. Army to undertake the rapid removal of more than 100,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans from the West Coast. This year, approximately 1,200 people came to Manzanar on April 28 for the 43rd Annual Manzanar Pilgrimage. Children of Manzanar editor Heather C. Lindquist was on hand to reflect with former internees on this bleak chapter in American history, when Japanese bloodlines overshadowed American birthrights.

Below are photos of Lindquist with photographer and former Poston internee Stone Ishimaru; and the Ceremony at the Manzanar cemetery.
Heather and StoneCemetery

About the book:
Children of Manzanar, edited by Heather C. Lindquist and copublished with the Manzanar History Association, chronicles the experiences of the nearly 4,000 children and young adults held at Manzanar War Relocation Center in the California desert during WWII. Their faces and stories are captured in quotes and accompanied by photos from both official and unofficial photographers, including Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, and Toyo Miyatake.

See Terry Hong's discussion and review of the book on the Smithsonian's Book Dragon blog.

Information on the Manzanar Pilgrimage courtesy of Alisa Lynch, National Park Service.For further details or to plan a visit, see http://www.nps.gov/manz/planyourvisit/pilgrimage.htm

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Summer Events

Saturday, June 2, at 4:30 p.m.
Join photographer Ken Light, author Melanie Light, and special guest Hugo Morales for a reception, conversation, and book signing to celebrate the publication of Valley of Shadows and Dreams. Patrick Contreras and Steve One will appear as special musical guests. This event is presented by the American Friends Service Committee Pan Valley Institute, Heyday, and Arte Amricas.
Art Americas, 1630 Van Ness Ave., Fresno, CA
Free and open to the public; for more information click here or download the event flyer.

Thursday, June 14, at 6:00 p.m.
Ken Brower, author of The Wildness Within, will discuss and sign copies of his book. The exhibit "Thinking like a River: Art, Advocacy, and the Legacy of David Brower" will be on display.
The David Brower Center, 2150 Allston Way, Berkeley, CA
Free and open to the public, RSVP to contact@browercenter.org or (510) 809-0900, ext. 116; for more information click here.

Thursday, June 21, at 11:00 a.m.
Revealing Mr. Maugham, a documentary film by Michael House and copresented by Heyday, will screen at the Frameline36 Film Festival. About the film: "Who was W. Somerset Maugham? His hugely successful books and plays were adapted into major Hollywood movies, including Of Human Bondage and The Razor's Edge; he was the highest paid author of the 1930s. Despite this level of notoriety, the average reader knows little about this fascinating man and his passionate relationship with Gerald Haxton, a native of San Francisco. Filmmaker Michael House's illuminating documentary explores the professional and private complexities of this literary giant, who very publicly left his wife for the man of his dreams."
Castro Theatre, 429 Castro St., San Francisco, CA
For tickets and more information, click here.

Saturday, June 23, at 2:00 p.m.
Adam David Miller, author of Ticket to Exile, will participate in the poetry reading "Strength in Diversity: The Poetry of Ecology" with Kim Shuck, author of Smuggling Cherokee. The program is hosted by the Ecology Center's Kirk Lumpkin, a poet, performer, and the Special Events and Promotions Coordinator of the Berkeley Farmers' Markets. He will be joined by two other Ecology Center poets, Jahan Khalighi, a former member of the Eugene Slam Poetry Team, and Nakia "Precious Gift" Dillard. The program rounds out with a young poet from Youth Speaks, organizer of the Youth Poetry Slam. A book signing will follow.
Berkeley Public Library, 3rd floor Community Meeting Room, 2090 Kittredge St., Berkeley, CA
Free and open to the public (limited seating, so arrive early); for more information call (510) 981-6150.

Friday, July 6, at 6:30 p.m.
Fred Setterberg, author of Lunch Bucket Paradise, will discuss and sign copies of his book at the Steinbeck Center's "Meet the Author" Series.
National Steinbeck Center, 1 Main St., Salinas, CA
Free and open to the public; for more information click here.

Wednesday, July 11, through Saturday, July 14
Carlos E. Corts, author of Rose Hill, will give workshops and sign copies of his book at the Summer Institute for Intercultural Communication.
Intercultural Communication Institute, 8835 SW Canyon Ln, Portland, OR
Registration required; for more information click here.

Friday, July 20, at 6:30 p.m.
David Gilligan, author of Rise of the Ranges of Light, will give a presentation on "Landscapes and Change in the Mountains of California" and sign copies of his book.
Spellbinder Books, 124 S. Main St., Bishop, CA
Free and open to the public; for more information click here.

Thursday, July 19, at 7:30 p.m.
Adam David Miller, author of Ticket to Exile, will read from and sign copies of his book. This event is sponsored by Poetry Flash and the Marin Poetry Center.
Moe's Books, 2476 Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, CA
Free and open to the public; for more information contact editor@poetryflash.org.

Sunday, August 19, at 10:00 p.m.
Gary Young, author of No Other Life and Pleasure, will lead "The Sentence as Poetic Form" writing workshop as part of the 16th Annual Tuolumne Meadows Poetry Festival.
Parsons Memorial Lodge, Yosemite National Park, El Portal, CA
Free and open to the public; for more information click here.

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Heyday in the News

Smithsonian.com features the political posters of Lincoln's Cushing's All of Us or None

Lunch Bucket Paradise author Fred Setterberg was shortlisted for the William Saroyan Prize

Rose Hill author Carlos E. Corts was on Mixed Race Radio

Andrew Lam ( East Eats West and Perfume Dreams) was featured in the Los Angeles Review of Books

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Is She? (politics/cultural appropriation)

WASHINGTON – The campaign of U.S. Senator Scott Brown, Republican of Massachusetts, has done something that Elizabeth Warren, his main Democratic challenger for his seat in Congress, has failed to do for the past month as a major controversy has swirled over her self-reported Cherokee ancestry: it responded to inquiries from the American Indian press.

Read more:
http://bit.ly/IsSheIndian

NCAI Education Newsletter (education)

NCAI Education Newsletter
May 30, 2012
Edition 18

Table of Contents

·         Other News and Commentary
·         Trends, Data, and Reports

Applications for the Tribal-State Education Partnership (STEP) Pilot Program Now Open

The Department of Education is currently soliciting applications for the State-Tribal Education Partnership (STEP) pilot. Under the pilot, the Department will award $1.97 million in competitive grants to Tribal Education Agencies (TEAs) to increase their role in the education of American Indian and Alaska Native students. Funding for the pilot program comes from the fiscal year 2012 appropriation, under the Indian Education National Activities authority.

Specifically, the purposes of these grants are to:
a)      Promote increased collaboration between TEAs and state educational agencies (SEAs) in the administration of certain state-administered formula grant programs; and
b)      Build the capacity of TEAs to conduct certain state-level administrative functions under those programs for eligible schools located on reservations.

The pilot will fund the implementation of collaborative agreements between TEAs and state educational agencies (SEAs). Under these agreements, SEAs will transfer to TEAs some state-level functions related to the administration of certain Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) programs for eligible schools located on reservations. The Department of Education will not grant formula funds to TEAs as a part of this pilot program.

Deadline for Notice of Intent to Apply: June 12, 2012
Dates of Pre-Application Meetings: June 1, 2012, and June 5, 2012
Deadline for Transmittal of Applications: July 13, 2012

For more detailed information and how to apply, please see the following resources:
·         Federal Register Announcement
·         Press Release
·         Grant Information

Department of Education Contact:
Joyce Silverthorne, Director, Office of Indian Education
(202) 401-0767 or joyce.silverthorne@ed.gov

Department of Education Announces 2012 Race to the Top, District Level Competition

Last week, the Department of Education released its proposed criteria for the 2012 Race to the Top District (RTT-D) competition. The $400 million competition invites school districts to create plans for individualized classroom instruction aimed at closing achievement gaps and preparing each student for college and careers. The focus is to move beyond one-size-fits-all models of schooling and to personalize instruction to meet students' individual needs and interests. Districts can apply on their own or in consortia, and together they must serve at least 2,500 students, with 40 percent or more qualifying for free or reduced price lunch.

Though the Department of Education has waived rulemaking for this new program, it is gathering input via an online form:http://www.ed.gov/comment/reply/12250#comment-form. Comments are due by next Friday, June 8, 2012, at 5:00 p.m. Eastern.

Please see detailed information about the competition here (http://www.ed.gov/race-top/district-competition) and here (http://www.ed.gov/sites/default/files/rttd-executive-summary.pdf).

NCAI is still reviewing the proposed criteria, but at this point we have two major concerns. First, the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) is not eligible for the competition; and second, districts are not required to consult with tribes when drafting their applications. We will distribute our comments outlining these concerns via this newsletter before the deadline so others can draw from them for their own comments.

Eight More States Receive No Child Left Behind Waivers

Yesterday, the Department of Education announced that it has approved No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waivers for eight additional states. This round of waiver approvals brings the total number of states with waivers to 19. Eighteen additional applications are still under review.

Newly Announced Waivers: Connecticut, Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Rhode Island.

States Previously Granted Waivers: Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Tennessee.

For more information, see the Department of Education’s press release here and waiver applications and related documents here.

Let's Move! in Indian Country Anniversary Celebration To Be Webcast (June 1)

Over the past year, Let’s Move! in Indian Country has worked with stakeholders across the country to help connect communities, schools, and tribal leader to resources, funding, trainings and programs that will help improve the health of the Indian Country’s next generation

In order to recognize this progress and the great work of leaders across Indian Country, the White House will host a panel discussion with individuals whose work has helped build a healthier future for American Indian and Alaska Native youth.

On Friday, June 1, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. EDT, several of these leaders will share their stories on how they have inspired youth in their own communities to live healthier lifestyles and how they have left a lasting footprint on the road to towards building a healthier future for all Native people. The panel discussion will include athletes, tribal leaders, program directors, healthcare professionals and others who will share their stories and provide insight on how their efforts can be expanded to communities across Indian Country. The discussion will be streamed online at www.WhiteHouse.gov/live

Webinar: Improving Educational Outcomes for American Indian Children (June 13)

The Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) project, "Improving Educational Outcomes for American Indian Children," provides services to American Indian children, ages prenatal to 3 years, and their families. Its goal is to improve educational outcomes for children from birth through 3 years and is supported by evidence from prior evaluations with various populations. This free webinar on Wednesday, June 13, at 2:00 p.m. EDT will describe the project and its impact on American Indian children.

Opening Remarks:
·         Robert Mahaffey, Communications Director, Rural School and Community Trust
·         Arthur Mallory, Parents as Teachers Board Member and former Missouri Commissioner of Education

Presenters:
·         Marsha Gebhardt, Parents as Teachers, BabyFACE Project Director
·         Judy Pfannenstiel, Senior Research Associate, Research and Training Associates, Inc.

Other News and Commentary

·         Mitt Romney Releases Education Agenda: Presidential candidate Mitt Romney recently released his education agenda. School choice and charter schools are among his top priorities.

·         New Mexico Translates Special Education Rights Into Navajo: Last week, the New Mexico state education department released a Navajo translation of a notice of rights for special education students.

·         Secretary Duncan at Navajo Technical College: Secretary of Education Arne Duncan visited Navajo Technical College in Crownpoint, New Mexico, to deliver a commencement address to 2012 graduates.

Trends, Data, and Reports

·         The Condition of Education 2012 (National Center for Education Statistics): The Condition of Education 2012 summarizes important developments and trends in education using the latest available data. The report presents 49 indicators on the status and condition of education, in addition to a closer look at high schools in the United States over the past twenty years. The indicators represent a consensus of professional judgment on the most significant national measures of the condition and progress of education for which accurate data are available. The 2012 print edition includes indicators in three main areas: (1) participation in education; (2) elementary and secondary education and outcomes; and (3) postsecondary education and outcomes.

·         2010 Census Coverage Measurement (US Census Bureau): The Census Bureau has released the results of its Census Coverage Measurement (CCM), which measures the quality of the decennial census. There appears to be a rise in the undercount on reservations from 2000 (4.88 percent undercount, statistically significantly different than zero). There was a 12.22 net undercount for American Indians and Alaska Natives on reservations in 1990. However, the CCM estimates an overcount for American Indians and Alaska Natives off reservations.

·         The Importance of Being in School: A Report on Absenteeism in the Nation's Public Schools (Everyone Graduates Center at John Hopkins University): Chronic absenteeism in American schools is a largely unnoticed and unmeasured problem affecting the educational outcomes of millions of students and undermining critical school improvement efforts, according to this new report. The report found only a handful of states measure and report on chronic absenteeism, which the report defines as missing at least 10 percent of school days in a given year, or about 18 days. It estimates that 10 to 15 percent of students nationwide are chronically absent. That adds up to 5 million to 7.5 million students who miss enough school to be at severe risk of dropping out or failing to graduate from high school.

·         Resource Document on Restraint and Seclusion (Department of Education): This document outlines principles for educators, parents, and stakeholders to consider when developing or refining policies and procedures to support positive behavioral interventions and avoid the use of restraint and seclusion. The goal of this resource document is to help ensure that schools are safe and healthy environments where all students can learn, develop, and participate in instructional programs that promote high levels of academic achievement. 

·         Raising the Bar from Ready by 21 to Credentialed by 26: Highlights from Community and State Efforts (The Forum for Youth Investment): The brief from the Forum for Youth Investment looks at two initiatives focused on increasing postsecondary success by aligning the work of stakeholders and helping different sectors work together. One, the Credentialed by 26 Community Challenge, helped leaders in four selected communities jump-start local conversations and identify strategies to improve postsecondary success. The second initiative, the Credential by 26 Policy Roundtables, consisted of policy surveys and structured discussions to help leaders in three states identify low-cost policy solutions for increasing supports for low-income college students. The brief includes summaries of the discussions and a sample of policy changes that can improve success.

·         What Teacher Preparation Programs Teach About K-12 Assessment (National Council on Teacher Quality): This report provides information on the preparation provided to teacher candidates from teacher training programs so that they can fully use assessment data to improve classroom instruction. The purpose of the report is to encourage teacher preparation programs, along with the federal and state agencies supporting and overseeing these programs, to focus more on the importance of future teachers' knowledge and skills in the increasingly critical area of assessment.

Karuk Councilman Honored For "Moving" In Indian Country (health)

LMIC

Let’s Move! in Indian Country: Celebrating One Year of Progress

Tomorrow, June 1, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. EDT, the White House will host a panel discussion of leaders who have contributed to the progress of the First Lady’s Let’s Move! in Indian Country initiative and whose work can be expanded across Indian Country.  The discussion will be streamed online at www.WhiteHouse.gov/live.  As a key component of the First Lady’s Let’s Move! initiative, Let’s Move! in Indian Country focuses on four pillars that are essential to building a healthy future for American Indian and Alaska Native youth:
  • Creating a Healthy start on Life,
  • Creating Healthy Learning Communities,
  • Fostering Healthy, Comprehensive Food Systems Policies, and
  • Increasing Opportunities for Physical Activity

The featured panelists have demonstrated success in one or more of these pillars and are here to share their stories.  They will be joined by the Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives and Assistant White House Chef Sam Kass, Acting Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Del Laverdure, and White House Senior Policy Advisor for Native American Affairs Jodi Gillette. Following the discussion, two of our panelists, professional basketball players Ben Strong and Tahnee Robinson, will lead a group of Native American youth through a basketball clinic.  The full agenda will include the following panelists:

 Alvina Begay (Navajo) – Distance Runner and Olympic Hopeful
After a successful collegiate running career Alvina has finished in the top 10 in six U.S. road Championships, represented the U.S. internationally and finished 10th in the ING New York City Marathon. Alvina recently qualified for the Olympic Trials in the 10,000 meters.

Jack Burns – Nike N7
Jack is a member of the N7 Fund Board of Directors.  Along with Sam McCracken, the General Manager of N7, he was one of many who helped develop the N7 program to bring sport and all of its benefits to Native American and Aboriginal communities in the U.S. and Canada.

Carl Butterfield (Red Cliff) – AmeriCorps Vista Garden Operations
Carl is an AmeriCorps VISTA leader for the Mino Bi Ma De Se Win (Return to the Good Life) Farm. The garden project works to ensure sustainability by encouraging tribal members to play an active role in the development, management, and production of a local food source.

Lise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain) – BIE Circle of Nations Wahpeton Indian Boarding School
Gardening is a family tradition for Lise, who serves as the school health officer at Circle of Nations School in North Dakota.  She works to encourage healthy choices through the school’s “Green & Growing” local sustainable food project.  She is also an accomplished author having written award-winning books for young readers, including her acclaimed work, Sacagawea.

Sheena Kanott (Eastern Band of Cherokee) – Cherokee Choices
Cherokee Choices is a diabetes prevention program that confronts the factors which put Cherokee people at higher risk for diabetes.  The program provides social support to increase physical activity and promote well-being to reduce the risk for obesity and diabetes.

Clifton Kenon Jr. – Rosebud Indian Health Service Hospital
As the Maternal Child Health consultant for the Aberdeen Area of the Indian Health Service (IHS), Clifton has worked to implement the ‘Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding.’  This initiative will lead to the full accreditation for the first IHS hospital (Rosebud) in July of 2012.

Leatrice Lewis (Zuni) – Zuni Youth Enrichment Project
Leatrice is a co-founder of the Zuni Wellness Center and worked as the Program Manager for fifteen years.  Today, she continues her work in tribal wellness and serves as a wellness consultant to Indian tribes and other indigenous groups.

Ted Mala (Inupiat Eskimo) – Southcentral Foundation
Dr. Mala isan Alaska Native physician who comes from a family of traditional healers in Buckland, Alaska.  Now as a director of Southcentral Foundation, he bridges traditional Native healing practices with Western medicine providing physical, mental and emotional healing. 

Crispen McAllister (Karuk) – Karuk Tribal Council and Distance Runner
Since his retirement from the US Navy after deployment to Iraq, Crispen has been focused on improving the health and well-being of his community. He recently participated in a 230 mile run across the Karuk Ancestral territory to inspire Native Americans to make healthy choices.

Bruce Pecore (Menominee) – Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin
Bruce helped introduce the Badges for Baseball program to the Menominee Tribe.  Recently, he carried out an initiative to bring a grocery store to the reservation by opening the Keshena Save-A Lot which sells fresh produce and provides healthier dietary options to the Menominee people.

Tahnee Robinson (Northern Cheyenne) – Professional Basketball Player
After an outstanding college basketball career at the University of Nevada Reno, Tahnee became the first American Indian woman drafted by the WNBA.  She has since played professional basketball in Israel and is contracted to play her next season in Bulgaria. 

Valerie Segrest (Muckleshoot) – Muckleshoot Food Sovereignty Project
Valerie serves on the Muckleshoot Food Sovereignty Project and as a nutrition educator for the Northwest Indian College’s Traditional Plants Program.  She co-authored the book Feeding the People, Feeding the Spirit: Revitalizing Northwest Coastal Indian Food Culture.

Ben Strong, Professional Basketball Player
In college Ben was named the NCAA Division III National Basketball Player of the Year.  He has played professionally in the Netherlands, Israel and last year with the Iowa Energy of the NBA Development League.  For eight years he has run Big Ben's Basketball Camp in Red Lake, Minnesota and hopes that his next endeavor will be playing professionally in the NBA.

Please join these outstanding leaders along with Senior Officials in the Obama Administration tomorrow, June 1, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. EDT online at www.WhiteHouse.gov/live.