Category Archives: Make No Bones Shows

Raven speaks with Rayna Palone Madero Founder of Native Cry.

Native Cry will provide services for Native American youth ages 10-20 in the area of suicide prevention and depression. Services to be provided are: Mental Health

Assessment for suicide and depression, Mental and physical health awareness with counseling and education. NCOA will also provide skill building for positive coping mechanisms.

Native Cry Outreach Alliance will be known for helping troubled children, teens and young adults to make better choices when dealing with depression brought on by traumatic events such as abuse, disease and death. NCOA will also help build a network of peer counselors by holding seminars and workshops relating to suicide prevention and depression that teach detection and healthy coping mechanisms.
http://www.nativecry.org/

Raven speaks with Rayna Palone Madero Founder of Native Cry. March 10th at 5-5:30 pm

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Raven speaks with Rayna Palone Madero Founder of Native Cry

Native Cry will provide services for Native American youth ages 10-20 in the area of suicide prevention and depression. Services to be provided are: Mental Health

Assessment for suicide and depression, Mental and physical health awareness with counseling and education. NCOA will also provide skill building for positive coping mechanisms.

Native Cry Outreach Alliance will be known for helping troubled children, teens and young adults to make better choices when dealing with depression brought on by traumatic events such as abuse, disease and death. NCOA will also help build a network of peer counselors by holding seminars and workshops relating to suicide prevention and depression that teach detection and healthy coping mechanisms.
http://www.nativecry.org/

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Colleen Jollie visit with us on Make No Bones About It, March 17th, 2013, 4pm

Colleen Jollie visit with us on Make No Bones About It, March 17th, 2013, 4pm

Colleen Jollie earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Native American Studies and a Master’s degree in Public Administration, both from The Evergreen State College. She is a descendant of the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Tribe. Ms. Jollie worked to create the Longhouse Education and Cultural Center at Evergreen; she helped found the Potlatch Fund and the Northwest Native American Basketweavers Association. Whether creating a new building or an organization, Colleen gathers people together to bring out ideas and create new realities. She describes this as “getting everyone into one canoe and pulling together toward a common destination.” She was deputy director at the Governor’s Office of Indian Affairs and the Tribal Liaison at the Washington State Department of Transportation.

Sla Hal gathering& history with Marvin Kempf and Mark Johns-Colson. March 10th, 2013 at 4pm

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Sla-hal is tied to the people of this area, pre-Clovis, since time immemorial. The finding of the sla-hal bones with the mastodon bring the past to the present, justifying the oral tradition of the people of the Pacific Northwest. Sla-hal began as a game between the animals and the humans.

Learn more by tuning in to Make No Bones About It.

Robert Satiacum shares about American Indian Lobby Day 2013 on “Make No Bones About It.” March 10th, 2013 5:30pm

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Robert Satiacum is an enrolled member of the Puyallup Tribe of Indians. He is the son of the late Chief Bob Satiacum – widely known for his sacrifices made for sovereignty and fishing rights. Satiacum is immersed his native culture, and diligently practices the traditions of the Sweat Lodge, Native American Church, and the annual Tribal Journeys in his family canoe.

Save the date!

MARCH 13TH, 2013

Nancy Shippentower-Games on “Make No Bones About It.” March 3, 2013 4pm

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Nancy’s parents are Donald & Janet McCloud, we grew up on the banks of the Nisqually River, my father’s parents are Willie Frank & Angeline Tobin, my mother’s are Mamie McCoy & John Renecker – I have 7 siblings, 6 children and 10 grandchildren. I live in Yelm, WA., by my parents home..

Janet is a Tulalip Tribal Member, Don is a Puyallup Tribal member.

Nancy grew up in the fishing wars on both the Nisqually & Puyallup River – we seen, heard and felt the anger of the sportsmen, game agents and the state government.

Nancy graduated from college at Evergreen College under the direction of Mary Hilliare.

Nancy worked at the Puyallup Tribe off and on for over 30 years – I like Natural resources jobs,. Nancy has been on Tribal Council during the Land Claims Settlement.

Signed the Centennial Accord & Puyallup Tribal Land Claims.

Nancy is very vocal when it comes to telling the truth of the fishing rights, or protecting our natural resources.

Nancy said we were very luck our parents took us around d the United States to visit other nations, participate in their ceremonies and learn different traditions and cultures.

Treaty Rights at Risk with Ed Johnstone, on “Make No Bones About It.” Feb 24, 2013 4pm

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Ed Johnstone of the Quinault Indian Nation will share with us what is at risk for him.
To find out more about Treaty Rights at Risk, go to treatyrightsatrisk.org

Kate Elliott on KAOS this coming Sunday at 5pm, Jan.27th


Kate Elliott Bio

Tantoo Cardinal on Make No Bones About It.

Tantoo Cardinal (Metis) this Sunday, 1-13-2013 at 4pm

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Tantoo Cardinal (Metis) is one of the most renowned Indigenous actors in the world.

Throughout her acting career Tantoo has done much to minimize the inaccuracies and stereotypical portrayals of Indigenous people that tend to infect mainstream media, bringing instead genuine warmth and understanding to her very human characters. The confines of acting in someone else’s story have lead Tantoo to take the courageous step of writing her own stories, and she has remembered what it was she wanted to do before acting just “came along”.

We watch and listen as Tantoo reads from a short story she has written. . It is moving, funny and passionate writing, and easily conjures the images, sounds, textures and flow of the story in the mind’s eye of the listener. It is visual storytelling.

http://urbanrez.ca/sim/storytellers-in-motion-11.html