Sara Lee Scholarship for Women Attending Tribal Colleges in MI and WI

From the press release:

/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Sara Lee Foundation is proud to continue the Sara Lee Foundation Tribal College Scholarship Program for Women through a partnership with the American Indian College Fund (the Fund).  This scholarship program will continue to provide financial assistance to American Indian women attending tribal colleges located in Michigan and Wisconsin. Selected recipients must also be primary residents of one of the following states: California, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, or Wisconsin.

Since 2001, the Sara Lee Foundation has consistently supported the Fund, benefiting countless Native women and aiding them in their journey towards a more hopeful, prosperous future.

“We are excited to continue our support of American Indian women and their pursuit of a higher education,” said Judy E. Schaefer, Director of the Sara Lee Foundation. “We are proud of the scholarship program that we have developed with the American Indian College Fund and the positive effects it continues to have on the students, their families, and their futures.”

Congratulations to Our Fellow

Alicia Ivory, the ILPC Fellow for 2009-2010, just passed the New York Bar.

Congratulations!!

Subscribing to TT via Email

We’ve added a new feature to TurtleTalk–subscription to the blog via email.  Once you sign up, you will receive the text of the entire post.   This is slightly different than what our readers receive when they sign up to follow us on Twitter (@ILPCTurtleTalk).  Warning: our regular readers are aware that multiple posts go up on TT every day.  A subscription will send an email every time a new post goes up.

While I would love to be able to just sign everyone up who is interested, the site recognizes that I am already signed up for this subscription and doesn’t allow me to add others.  All our readers need to do is click “Sign Me Up” over on the right hand side of the blog where it reads “Email Subscription.”  If you are not a WordPress.com subscriber, just enter an email address and then click “Sign Me Up.”

Let us know if you have any trouble with this process.  Another easy avenue for reading TurtleTalk is an RSS subscription.  Sign up for Google Reader or equivalent program, click “add a subscription”  and add the TurtleTalk address.  There is also the option to click on “Entries RSS” on the right hand side of the blog under “Meta.”

And yes, this post was edited after I received my first email alert.  If you read or received that post, remember what I wrote about our level of IT support:  “TurtleTalk is run in house at the Indigenous Law and Policy Center with exactly as much technical support as you might expect of a Center made up of lawyers, professors and recent law school grads (note the lack of IT professionals on that list).”

Thanks for reading!

John Echohawk on The Nation’s List of Potential Supreme Court Nominees

From The Nation, which lists 8 potential nominees in their slide show:

Slide Show: Who Will Be Obama’s Next Supreme Court Nominee?
Justice John Paul Stevens, nearing 90, confirmed recently that he will retire from the Supreme Court this summer. He “concluded that it would be in the best interests of the Court to have my successor appointed and confirmed well in advance of the commencement of the Court’s next term,” he told the New York Times. Stevens’s retirement will give President Obama his second opportunity to name a Supreme Court justice, but will not shift the ideological balance on the court. The following possible nominees are some of The Nation‘s top choices for a replacement.

John Echohawk, a legendary lawyer who has run the Native American Rights Fund for more than thirty years, would bring a perspective to the court that has been overlooked for 230 years.

And for our Michigan readers, Gov. Jennifer Granholm made the list as well.

And Rep. Bart Stupak Too (Retire)

From the Washington Post’s Fix Column:

Bart Stupak to retire

Updated, 10:38 am
Michigan Democratic Rep. Bart Stupak will not seek reelection this fall, a decision that comes hard on his front-and-center (and controversial) role in the recent passage of President Barack Obama‘s health-care legislation.

Stupak confirmed his decision to the Associated Press and is expected to formalize it at a news conference at 12:30 p.m. Eastern time in Marquette, Mich.

Stupak made the decision to retire while attending the Butler-Michigan State game at the Final Four. A series of prominent Democratic leaders made pleas for him to reconsider – including President Obama who called Stupak on Wednesday – but his mind was made up.

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Sherman Alexie wins PEN/Faulkner award

From the Guardian:

Sherman Alexie wins PEN/Faulkner prize

Alison Flood

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Sherman Alexie takes the $15,000 PEN/Faulkner prize for fiction, beating Lorrie Moore and Barbara Kingsolver with War Dances, a short story collection described by judge Al Young as a ‘rollicking, bittersweet gem’

Sherman Alexie.Sherman Alexie’s War Dances: about ‘all the hearbreaking ways we don’t live now’ Photograph: Ulf Andersen/Getty Images Europe

Native American poet and author Sherman Alexie has beaten writers including Lorrie Moore and Barbara Kingsolver to win the PEN/Faulkner award for fiction.

Alexie won the $15,000 award for War Dances, a collection of short stories about ordinary people on the brink of change, interspersed with poems. From the story of a famous author whose father is dying a “natural Indian death” from alcohol and diabetes, to the tale of a young boy writing for his local newspaper’s obituaries pages, judge Al Young — California’s poet laureate — called it a “rollicking, bittersweet gem of a book”.

“War Dances taps every vein and nerve, every tissue, every issue that quickens the current blood-pulse: parenthood, divorce, broken links, sex, gender and racial conflict, substance abuse, medical neglect, 9/11, Official Narrative vs What Really Happened, settler religion vs native spirituality; marketing, shopping, and war, war, war,” said Young. “All the heartbreaking ways we don’t live now — this is the caring, eye-opening beauty of [War Dances].”

Almost 350 novels and short story collections were considered for this year’s PEN/Faulkner award, America’s largest peer-juried prize. Established with money donated by William Faulkner from his Nobel prize winnings, former winners include EL Doctorow, John Updike, Philip Roth and Ann Patchett. The four finalists — Kingsolver, Moore, Lorraine M López and Colson Whitehead — all receive $5,000.

Alexie, author of four novels, three previous short story collections and many books of poetry, has previously won a National Book Award for young people’s literature and the Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas lifetime achievement award.

Composer Wayne Horvitz presents oratorio of “Heartsong of Charging Elk”

From WSU Today (Washington State University):

Composer Wayne Horvitz to present oratorio

Monday, Mar. 8, 2010

Photo by Daniel Sheehan
PULLMAN – Composer Wayne Horvitz will present his oratorio “Heartsong of Charging Elk” at 7 p.m. Saturday, March 27 in the Kimbrough Music Building, Room 101.
Horvitz’s oratorio for four voices and 10 chamber instruments is based on James Welch’s novel, “The Heartsong of Charging Elk” (New York: Doubleday, 2000). Welch (1940–2003) was one of the best-known Native American writers of his time.
Inspired by historical events, “Heartsong of Charging Elk” tells the story of an Oglala Sioux who was hospitalized for broken ribs and influenza in Marseilles, France, in 1889 while touring with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. When the show moved on, Charging Elk, now recovered from his illness and injuries, was left stranded in the French city, speaking neither French nor English.
“Using that historical predicament for his springboard,” Horvitz has written, “James Welch conjures a poetic narrative of Charging Elk’s displaced existence following his abandonment.”

News Coverage of Laura Spurr’s Memorial Service

From the Battle Creek Enquirer (follow the link for pictures):

Funeral is a celebration of Laura Spurr’s life
Trace ChristensonThe Enquirer • February 28, 2010

Amid eagle feathers and flowers, mourners celebrated the life Saturday of Laura Spurr.

Speaker after speaker described Spurr, the chairperson of the Tribal Council of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi, as determined and blunt but fair and always trying to help members of the tribe.

“She demanded respect for her people but was unassuming in going about that,” said Frank Ettawageshik, former Chairman of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians. “Laura went out and changed the world and she came home and changed the world.”

Spurr, 64, died Feb. 19 after suffering a heart attack while attending a conference in California.

She had been active in tribal leadership since 1999 and served as council chair from 2000 to 2001 and from 2003 until her death. She was a driving force in the 10-year-long process of approval and construction by the tribe of FireKeepers Casino in Emmett Township.

Continue reading

Asian Carp Coverage from the UK

From the Guardian:

‘Terminator’ carp threatens Great Lakes

Environmentalists say Asian carp, an invasive species of food-guzzling fish, could cause an ecological disaster if it enters Lake Michigan

Ed Pilkington, Chicago

guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 23 February 2010 18.36 GMT

Two Asian carp are displayed on Capitol Hill in Washington
Asian carp, an invasive aquatic species threatening the Great Lakes. Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

The fight looks utterly unequal. In the red corner: the combined might of North America, including the US and Canadian governments, the US army, the governors of eight American states, two Senate c­ommittees and the supreme court. In the blue corner: one fish.

The way things are looking, the fish is winning.

At stake is the health of the Great Lakes, the world’s largest body of fresh water. Environmentalists warn of ecological disaster, courtesy of Asian carp, an invasive species of food-guzzling fish that is within miles of entering Lake Michigan.

If they do, they would have the ­potential to spread throughout the lakes, wreaking havoc to their ecosystem and with it the $7bn (£4.7bn) fishing and recreation industries on which millions of jobs depend. “This is an intense threat, and people are just waking up to how big the danger is,” said David Ullrich of the Great Lakes and St Lawrence Cities Initiative, which represents 70 waterfront cities in the US and Canada with a joint population of 13 million.

Continue reading

Profile of Audrey Atkinson

From the Petoskey News-Review:

Audrey Atkinson: Weaving a community

Posted: Monday, February 22, 2010 · Updated: Monday, February 22, 2010, 8:24 am
By Marci Singer News-Review Staff Writer

Audrey Atkinson highlights areas of a dye experiment at North Central Michigan College in Petoskey. Atkinson is a weaver and dyer at Cross Village Rug Works and is working on her certificate of arts degree at the college. “We’ve developed between 200-300 colors at Rug Works,” she said. “We can match just about anything brought to us in terms of color.”
Photo: MARCI SINGER/NEWS-REVIEW

CROSS VILLAGE — It’s hard not to feel optimistic after speaking to Audrey Atkinson.

With sincere eyes and a warm smile, the 56-year-old Cross Village Rug Works weaver and dyer is focused on making choices and taking actions to create positive change — not just for herself but wherever she is involved.

“We really need to build community in our lives and focus on creating a positive outcome in everything we do,” Atkinson said. “We need to intend to make something of each day.”

The Harbor Springs mother and grandmother said one of the things she prays for daily is the will to do the work that is placed before her.

“Some days are not as good as others and life hands you all types of things,” she said. “I pray that I’m willing to do what needs to be done. We are really very powerful people when we make those choices for ourselves and how we expend our energy.”

While Atkinson has practiced professionally as a massage therapist and has also worked in tribal government for 27 years, she said weaving is truly her career. The Native American traditional weaver initially become involved with Rug Works a year ago, after having heard about it through classes at North Central Michigan College in Petoskey. She said the organization now “consumes” her life “in a good way.”

“It was a great experience working for the tribes all those years but I got to a point in my life where I wanted something for me,” she said. “I had always wanted to go back to school to study art. Last year I thought, ‘I’m 55 and if I’m going to do this I need to take it seriously.’ So, I became a full-time starving artist, student.”

With both agricultural and educational components, Rug Works offers an apprenticeship program, of which Atkinson is a part, to unemployed or underemployed members of the community. The organization has also partnered with North Central Michigan College to offer a certificate of art degree, something Atkinson couldn’t be more excited about.

“The certificate really gives more validity to what we are doing with a formal educational component,” she said. “Students not only learn an art and craft that they can do wherever they are, different forms of the art can still be creating things and generating income through those means.”

One of the added benefits of her affiliation with the organization has been developing new relationships with people of all ages.

“I learn something from everybody. It’s interesting to have these kinds of relationships at this point in my life,” she said.

While she’s most proud of her family, Atkinson is also proud of something else — not being afraid to try something new.

“I like to try new things because I see myself gaining so much. I don’t know if proud is the right word but good is — that is my attitude about life now,” she said.

Looking forward, Atkinson is excited not just to help build the Cross Village Rug Works organization, but also about building a community by helping people who didn’t have jobs or the skill set to get a job in Northern Michigan.

“People really need to come and see what we are doing because they will be surprised at the quality of work both creatively and artistically,” she said. “This organization is really important to the community — a community where there’s very little economic base — by employing people in a part of the state that is very economically challenged. We are making beautiful things that will not only last a lifetime but will support members of our community. We are growing something together and it’s really wonderful.”

For more information about Cross Village Rug Works, visit www.crossvillagerugworks.com or call (231) 526-7849.

Marci Singer439-9348 – msinger@petoskeynews.com