Artment of Parks and Recreation
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
2017 CURE Annual Report
2017 ANNUAL REPORT CURE’s mission is to protect and restore resilient rural landscapes by harnessing the power of citizens who care about them. We do this because we believe that robust human communities can only be sustained by healthy ecosystems, and robust natural environments can only be regained through vigorous stewardship. www.cureriver.org 2 | MILESTONES AND GOING FOR BOLD Passing CURE’s twenty-fifth year presents an obvious opportunity to tout our accomplishments, reflect on past challenges, and plan ahead to a hopeful future. That’s an easy assignment. CURE has a rich and colorful history. Over the years we’ve done many good things together as a grassroots member-based organization, and in the process, we have built the CURE community. On occasion, we’ve stumbled and recovered. From time to time, we’ve done battle with Goliath, and sometimes we’ve won. We’re always charting the course ahead while remaining grounded in place and practice. We honor our roots. We know our history. And we strive to demonstrate democracy as a model of organizational governance. With another year behind us, we’re paying our bills and employing a competent staff of organizers and nonprofit professionals. We’re reaching more people and growing support for the work. And every so often we pause to assess what impact we’re having in the communities we serve. Last year and in the months leading up to this report we had an awakening of sorts. We heard from our members and our organizational partners and funders their growing concern that the core progressive values underpinning our collective work were under siege and our hard-fought policy wins were at risk of being reversed. -
Women Walk to Heal the River by Bill Kingsbury
Women Walk to Heal the River By Bill Kingsbury The Mississippi River is huge. Its pollution problems can seem too overwhelming to try to fix, but a group of Native American women has an idea they hope will inspire citizens and policy makers to take action to improve the health of the river. On March 1, Sharon Day, Josephine Mandamin and others will begin a walking journey from the headwaters of the Mississippi that will take them along the river’s course to the Gulf of Mexico. Their intent is to “educate people, raise awareness and, most importantly, offer asema (tobacco) to the water spirits and to the earth, let them know we are thinking about them, praying for them, trying to change our relationship to the river,” Day says. The Mississippi River Water Walk 2013 will be the 10th in 11 years the Ojibwe women have led. The women’s idea for the walk is based on traditional roles in their Ojibwe culture. “Among the Ojibwe people, ceremonies are held in a lodge, and the lodge is owned equally by men and women,” Day says. It’s the men’s job to take care of the fire, and the women’s job to take care of the water. Since the beginning of time, we’ve been bringing the water to ceremonies.” “1998 was the first time we took that [water] work out of the lodge, out of the home, and put it in a geopolitical context,” Day says. “That was at Camp Coldwater.” Day and others were “very involved for 2½ years with an effort to shift the reroute of Minnesota Highway 55 away from Coldwater Spring, an ancient water source that surfaces near the meeting of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers and Minnehaha Creek, and whose grounds have served as a gathering place for Native Americans for thousands of years. -
Changing the Universe Through Women's Stories
Minnesota Women’s Press, July 2013 1 Changing the Universe through Women’s Stories Wome n on the go 2,000 miles, issue 2 women, 1 canoe Eve Ensler: Congo, cancer and the earth Mississippi River walkers We’re aware, now stop the violence Buy local: The true cost of Kelly povo Kelly megastores JULY 2013 Vol. 29, Issue 7 www.womenspress.com 2 Minnesota Women’s Press, July 2013 Minnesota Women’s Press, July 2013 3 Changing the Universe through Women’s Stories 10 Women on the go issue contactus 651-646-3968 email: [email protected] www.womenspress.com send a letter to the editor [email protected] subscribe [email protected] 16 advertise [email protected] suggest a story idea [email protected] enter your online calendar listing at www.womenspress.com, click on Calendar, then “add event” Join book activities [email protected] readersWrite mWPstaFF 25 Publishers/editors youSaID .................................................5 Kathy Magnuson, Norma Smith olson Features Letters from MWP readers contributors yourtHouGHtS ..................................5 thinkaboutit ....................................6 Jenny breen, tami briggs, tami Mohamed MWP readers on having no fear Lose the Lads’ Mags ... and more brown, Claudia Lerma Casa, Linda Frey, yourStoRY......................................... 12 WomenGoINGPlacesFEatuRE .....8 Emily a. King, Laurie McGinnis, Rachel “Don’t exchange girls for cows” Duboios Nethercut, Mary Jo o’Hara, Walking prayer for the Mississippi yourStoRY......................................... 12 Laurie olmon, Nancy b. olsen, Sharon ProFILE ................................................10 We’re aware, now stop the violence Sander-Palmer, Danielle Sosin 2,000 miles, 2 women and 1 canoe cover artist Kelly Povo yourStoRY......................................... 15 WomenGoINGPlacesFEatuRE ....16 design Norma Smith olson Read a book to a dog — it works! Eve Ensler connects body and earth advertising sales Michele Holzwarth, yourStoRY........................................ -
The River Is the Classroom by Linda Buturian
ISSUE TEN : SPRING 2018 The cover image is of The East Bank of the Minneapolis campus of the University of Minnesota and the Mississippi River from the Washington Avenue Bridge. Image courtesy of Patrick Nunnally. Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCom- mercial 4.0 International License. This means each author holds the copyright to her or his work, and grants all users the rights to: share (copy and/or redistribute the material in any medium or format) or adapt (remix, transform, and/or build upon the material) the article, as long as the original author and source is cited, and the use is for noncommercial purposes. Open Rivers: Rethinking Water, Place & Community is produced by the University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing and the University of Minnesota Institute for Advanced Study. Editors Editorial Board Editor: Jay Bell, Soil, Water, and Climate, University of Patrick Nunnally, Institute for Advanced Study, Minnesota University of Minnesota Tom Fisher, Metropolitan Design Center, Administrative Editor: University of Minnesota Phyllis Mauch Messenger, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Minnesota Lewis E. Gilbert, Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota Assistant Editor: Laurie Moberg, Doctoral Candidate, Mark Gorman, Policy Analyst, Washington, D.C. Anthropology, University of Minnesota Jennifer Gunn, History of Medicine, University of Media and Production Manager: Minnesota Joanne Richardson, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Minnesota Katherine -
July/August 2021 | 3 Tapestry Why Do You Connect with Nature?
MINNESOTA WOMEN’S PRESS The Elements womenspress.com | July & August 2021 | Issue 37-7 & 8 MINNESOTA WOMEN’S PRESSPOWERFUL. EVERYDAY. WOMEN. “I allowed myself to believe that in another hundred years, there will be others standing at this same brink of beauty, grateful for all that remains PHOTO SARAH WHITING SARAH PHOTO wild and wholesome and free.” — Terry Tempest Williams What’s inside? Editor’s Letter 3 Mother Trees Tapestry 4–6 Rebeka Ndosi (l) and Signe Harriday, Page 24 Why Do You Connect With Nature? Online Learning 10 Contact Us MWP team Intergenerational Conversation BookShelf 11–13 651-646-3968 Publisher/Editor: Mikki Morrissette The Wisdom of Nature Submit a story: [email protected] Managing Editor: Sarah Whiting Fire 14–15 Subscribe: womenspress.com/subscribe Business Strategy Director: Shelle Eddy Building Wildfire Resiliency Advertise: [email protected] Digital Development: Mikki Morrissette Water 16–18 Donate: womenspress.com/donate Photography/Design: Sarah Whiting Storying the Mississippi Find a copy: womenspress.com/find-a-copy Associate Editor: Lydia Moran GoSeeDo 19 Minnesota Women’s Press has been sharing the Advertising Sales: Shelle Eddy, Ashley Findlay, Pride Festival, Minnesota Orchestra stories of women since 1985, as one of the longest Ryann Swimmer continuously published feminist platforms in the Art of Living 20–22 Financial Operations: Fariba Sanikhatam country. It is distributed free at 500+ locations. Circle of Grandmothers Our mission: Authentic community-based journalism This month’s writers: Trinity Ek, Gloria Erickson, Air 26–27 Sarah Gruidl, Ashley McFarland, Paula Neeley, that amplifies and inspires the stories, action steps, Powered by the Wind Kristy Ornelas, Erica Rivera, Aurora Vautrin, Ella and leadership of powerful, everyday women (cis and Wagner, Anna Waugh trans), nonbinary people, and trans men. -
Master Content ITL 2201
IN THE LIFE’S SHOW CONTENT LIST 001 (Jun. ’92)- PILOT - HOST Kate Clinton OPENING - Run Time-0:20 MUSIC - New York City Gay Men's Chorus - Run Time-4:03 INTRO - Kate Clinton - Run Time-5:47 MOCK COMMERCIAL - "The Stonewall Collection" - Run Time-1:00 MUSIC - Casselberry & DuPree - 4:37 DANCE - Amy Pivar and Scott Willingham - Run Time-5:00 GAY FILM PANEL DISCUSSION - Su Friedrich (filmmaker and director), Hilton Als (screenwriter), Todd Haynes (director), Martha Gever (Director of the Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers); clips of lesbians and gays in film, Spence Halpern (producer and "Out in Film" member), Ellen Carton (GLAAD), Harvey Fierstein (actor), Urvashi Vaid (NGLTF), Daryl Chin (critic and playwright), Marlon Riggs (director), B. Ruby Rich (critic), Pratibha Parmar (director) - Run Time-18:12 Celebrity ID: Debbie Harry THEATER SPOTLIGHT - Five Lesbian Brothers - Run Time-4:36 MUSIC - John Kelly (sings) - Run Time-4:18 PSA - ACT-UP - Run Time-0:22 MUSIC - Lavender Light Gospel Choir - Run Time-4:55 OUTRO, MUSIC, AND CREDITS - Lavender Light Gospel Choir - Run Time-2:29 ITL 200 SERIES RUNDOWN (1st Season) 201 (Oct. ’92)-IN THE LIFE PREMIERE-HOST Kate Clinton INTRO - Kate Clinton - Run Time-2:42 MOCK COMMERCIAL - " Schmitts Gay" from Saturday Night Live - Run Time-1:23 SINGERS - “The Flirtations” - Run Time-4:07 Celebrity ID: Dick Sargent POLITICS - David Mixner (Clinton Campaign Senior Advisor) - Run Time-2:14 PSA - Anti-Violence Campaign - Run Time-0:30 TRIBUTE - To Vito Russo (clips from "Our Time") - Run Time-3:38 -
Data Speaks for Justice
National Congress of American Indians 2015 Mid Year Conference St. Paul, Minnesota Afternoon Breakout V June 30, 2015 1:30 – 4:00 pm Data Speaks for Justice Description: One of the central functions of the NCAI Policy Research Center is to support tribes in leveraging data to advance the work of sovereignty. The panelists featured in this session will cross a broad range of subjects—sharing trends in health research, financial giving to Indian Country, the classification of tribal identity in datasets, and access to economic capital in ways that will equip communities to tell their own stories and pursue justice for tribal citizens. Policy Applications: Information shared at this session will be used to inform policy development on health outcomes, data collection, and meaningful investments. Co-Facilitators: Councilman Joe Garcia, Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo Community (invited) Heather Curley, Navajo Nation PRESENTATIONS: Data for Sovereignty: Counting and Classifying Tribal Identity Desi Rodriguez Lonebear is a member of the Northern Cheyenne Nation from Montana, U.S.A She holds a Bachelors Degree with Honours and Masters Degree in Sociology from Stanford University. Desi is pursuing a Dual PhD in Demography at the University of Waikato in New Zealand and Sociology at the University of Arizona. Her research focus is indigenous demography examining the interface of identity, enumeration, official statistics, and data sovereignty for indigenous peoples. Data to Advance Economic Access and Justice for Tribes Richard M. Todd is a Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis with responsibilities in Community Development and monetary policy and serves as an advisor the Bank’s Center for Indian Country Development. -
Knowing the Mississippi by Sandra B
ISSN 2471-190X ISSUE ONE : FALL 2015 The cover image is of spring flooding at the Bohemian Flats in 1897. Image Courtesy of the Hennepin County Library. Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCom- mercial 4.0 International License. This means each author holds the copyright to her or his work, and grants all users the rights to: share (copy and/or redistribute the material in any medium or format) or adapt (remix, transform, and/or build upon the material) the article, as long as the original author and source is cited, and the use is for noncommercial purposes. Open Rivers: Rethinking the Mississippi is produced by the University of Minnesota Libraries Pub- lishing and the University of Minnesota Institute for Advanced Study. Editors Editorial Board Editor: Jay Bell, Soil, Water, and Climate, University of Patrick Nunnally, Institute for Advanced Study, Minnesota University of Minnesota Jennifer Gunn, Institute for Advanced Study, Administrative Editor: University of Minnesota Phyllis Mauch Messenger, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Minnesota Katherine Hayes, Anthropology, University of Minnesota Associate Editor: Nenette Luarca-Shoaf, 2014-15 Sawyer Seminar Charlotte Melin, German, Scandinavian, and Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Minnesota Dutch, University of Minnesota Assistant Editor: David Pellow, Environmental Studies, University Laurie Moberg, 2015 Sawyer Seminar Graduate of California, Santa Barbara Fellow, University of Minnesota Laura Salveson, Mill City Museum, -
Uprooted: the 1950S Plan to Erase Indian Country APM Reports Transcript
Uprooted: The 1950s Plan To Erase Indian Country APM Reports Transcript Billboard Max Nesterak: In the 1950s, the U.S. Government came up with a plan to solve what it called the “Indian Problem.” Mel Bickel: The only real solution for the Navajo is to cease to be a Navajo. Clovia Malatre: Assimilation. Take the Indian off the reservation. Make him a white person. Nesterak: By moving Native Americans to cities. Dorene Day: She said we’re going to move, and we’re going to make a better life. Donald Fixico: Ideally if you relocated an entire reservation then there would be no need for tribal government, there would be no need for Indian clinic. Sam Strong: You know that was the federal government's attempt at eliminating us. Nesterak: It didn’t work. Sandy King: It seems to me like the more you want to take something from someone the tighter they hold on. Nesterak: But it left wounds. Day: Nobody is going to heal us but ourselves. Nesterak: This hour, “Uprooted: the 1950’s plan to erase Indian Country” … from Minnesota Public Radio and APM Reports. First this news. “Uprooted” Transcript from APM Reports 1 of 30 Part 1 Max Nesterak: Early in the summer of 2018 a handful of tents appears on a strip of grass in Minneapolis. On one side is a concrete sound barrier. On the other side a sidewalk, a guardrail, and then an eight-lane highway. It’s not a nice place to walk, much less live. But over the next couple months, a lot more people move in.. -
HIV Prevention in Native American Communities
HIV Pre ve n't i on in Native American C omm unities OFFICE OF MIHORSTY HEALTH Resource Center . Ca'i Toll-free , 1^0044-1-6472 Compiled by Andrea Green Rush Design by Brian Blanchard Design, San Francisco for the National Native American AIDS Prevention Center 35 I 5 Grand Avenue, Suite I 00 Oakland CA 946 I 0 Supported by grant number H62/CCH 903 122 from the Center for Disease Control (CDC). Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the CDC. NNAAPC 1992 mnj-piib&i I I I V Prevention in Native A. m er i ca n C o m m unities OFFICE OF MINORITY HEALTH Resource Center Cal! Toll-Free 1-800444-6472 A Manual for Native American Health and Human Service Providers PK'face 0 nee long ago, two boys went hunting with bows and arrows. They hunted a long time but didn’t find a squirrel or deer to kill and eat so they shot a black bird. They made a fire with sticks and cooked the bird so that they could eat. When the bird was cooked, the two boys sat down on the ground to eat. Before they could eat, a woman came to them. “I’m very hungry,” she said. The boys offered their food to the woman and she ate it with relish. The boys were still hungry, but now they had nothing to eat. They didn’t tell the woman how hungry they were. The woman thanked the boys and said, “Because you know how to share, I’m going to give you a surprise.” She told the boys to go home and to come back tomorrow. -
REMAP-Twin-Cities-2018-Program
ARTS IN A CHANGING AMERICA ARTS IN A CHANGING AMERICA REMAP: Twin Cities Arts in a Changing America (ArtChangeUS), based at the California Institute of the Arts, is a 5 year national project that fills an urgent need to understand and engage, from an arts perspective, the dramatic demographic transformation of America and address pressing questions about the future: What is the meaning, in cultural terms, of the demographic shift? What is not on the institutional arts sector’s radar? How do we learn from different models of arts practice and organizing? ArtChangeUS will be exploring these questions through curated performances, discussions, and workshops, catalyzing new collaborative possibilities and bringing unheard voices and fresh thinking to both arts and cross-sector tables. www.artsinachangingamerica.org @ArtChangeUS #REMAPTwinCities #ArtChangeUS REMAP: TWIN CITIES CORE PARTNERS Ananya Dance Theatre is the leading creator of Contemporary Indian Dance in the global arts and social justice movement. Invoking the work and dreams of women of color, we radically reframe the ground on which we dance, inspiring our audiences through visual and emotional engagement. http://www.ananyadancetheatre.org/ @AnanyaDance Pangea World Theater builds bridges across multiple cultures and creates sacred and intersectional spaces. We create authentic spaces for real conversations across race, class and gender. Through a nuanced exploration of privilege, our own and others, we craft ensemble-based processes with a global perspective. Through art, theater and creative organizing we strive for a just world where people treat each other with honor and respect. We believe that artists are seers giving voice and language to the world we envision. -
Cultural Community Benefits Institute Memorandum of Understanding October 2019
Cultural Community Benefits Institute Memorandum of Understanding October 2019 Arts in a Changing America (ArtChangeUS) commits to equity within our own organizational structure as evidenced by our racially, generationally, and gender diverse leadership and collaborators and is reflected in our planning process and programmatic structure. To learn more about ArtChangeUS and our actions towards equity, please click here. Mission: Arts in a Changing America (ArtChangeUS) is a five-year national initiative based out of the California Institute of the Arts. Our mission is to reframe the national arts conversation by embracing the cultural assets of demographic change. ArtChangeUS has created an innovative network of artists, idea producers, and organizations that serves as an urgently needed catalyst to bring unheard leadership voices to the forefront of arts production, community change, and social justice. Founded: 2015 Director: Roberta Uno Operating budget: $683,187 Region: USA Description: 5 -year national cultural-organizing initiative URL: http://www.artsinachangingamerica.org/ Organization Inclusivity Staff size/composition: 3 full-time and 2 part-time staff; 1 Asian American woman, 1 mixed-race African American woman, 1 African Caribbean woman, 1 Latinx woman, 1 Native Hawaiian/White mix man. 6 languages spoken. 5 paid CalArts graduate student fellows; 3 additional languages spoken. Board size/composition: 35 national Core Partners; 1 Alaska Native woman, 4 AAPI Women (Bengali, Native Hawaiian, Pilipinx, Tamil), 3 African American women, 1 Lakota woman, 6 Latinx women (Afro-Peruvian, Chicana, Cuban, Mexican, Nuyorican), 4 White American women, 1 White Trans/Gender-Nonconforming person, 5 AAPI men (Bengali, Chinese, Lebanese, Pilipinx, Native Hawaiian), 2 African American men, 1 Choctaw man, 2 Latinx men (Guatemalan, USA/Puerto Rico), 5 White American men The Project Arts in Changing America is organizing the Cultural Community Benefits Institute, in the Twin Cities, Mni Sóta Maḳo ce (Minnesota) from October 11-13, 2019.