NPR Segment Profiles Ojibwe.net

NPR has “For Rare Languages, Social Media Provide New Hope” here.

An excerpt:

The creators and contributors of Ojibwe.net — a website that seeks to preserve Anishinaabemowin, an endangered Native American language from Michigan — use Facebook in a similar manner.

Ojibwe.net contributor Margaret Noodin is an assistant professor of English and American Indian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The language has 8,000-10,000 speakers, she says. But most of the native speakers are over 70 years old, placing the language under threat.

“That’s the most dangerous thing. There are very few young kids that are growing up in a fluent environment,” Noodin says.

News Profile of Tribal Marriage Equality Initiatives

Here is “These Native-American Tribes Are Pioneering Marriage Equality:The Puyallup Tribe is the latest to join a growing list of Native-American tribes legalizing same-sex marriage, many in states that have banned it.”

LTBB Chief Judge Allie Maldonado Selected for Women in the Law Honor

Here is Michigan Lawyer’s Weekly’s “MiLW’s 2014 Women in the Law honorees announced.”

News profile of History of VAWA and Alaska Natives

Al Jazeera has “Proponents fight for change so Alaska Natives covered by VAWA: Complicated history excludes Alaska Native women from Violence Against Women Act.”

Don Wright Obituary in Fairbanks Daily News-Miner

Here.

Don Wright Obituary in WaPo

The Washington Post has “Alaska Native land-claims leader dies.”

ICT Op/Ed on Hobby Lobby

Winter King published “Could the Hobby Lobby Ruling Have Saved the San Francisco Peaks?”

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2014/07/15/could-hobby-lobby-ruling-have-saved-san-francisco-peaks

Federal Judge will no Longer Use Washington Football Team’s Nickname

From WSJ, here.

The opinion is here.

News Article on Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Membership Disenrollments

Here is “Tribal court hears argument to dismiss reopened disenrollment cases.”

Press Release on “Spirit Lake Child Welfare Improvement Project”

Here is “Tribal, National, and State Leaders Convene to Develop Strategy for Improving Spirit Lake Child Protection — Director of Bureau of Indian Affairs, representatives from North Dakota’s elected leaders, and others join Spirit Lake Chairman in new initiative to improve child welfare services.”