Babaamaajimowinan (Telling of news in different places)

Articles from the September 10, 2020 edition


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  • Looking Back to August 2011 - Red Lake DNR Take a Kid Fishing Event - P8

    Michael Barrett, RLNN|Sep 10, 2020

    Looking Back to August 2011 - Red Lake DNR Take a Kid Fishing Event...

  • Looking Back to September 2011 - Red Lake Junior High Football against Kellhier-Northome - P11

    Michael Barrett, RLNN|Sep 10, 2020

    Looking Back to September 2011 - Red Lake Junior High Football against Kellhier-Northome...

  • Looking Back to 2011 - Ponemah Labor Day Pow Wow - Monday Session - P45

    Michael Barrett, RLNN|Sep 10, 2020

    Looking Back to 2011 - Ponemah Labor Day Pow Wow - Monday Session...

  • CCHF Sends HCQ Data Request to Minnesota Board of Pharmacy

    Sep 10, 2020

    ST. PAUL, Minn. — Citizens’ Council for Health Freedom (CCHF) sent an official data practices request on September 4, 2020, to the Minnesota Board of Pharmacy for any and all communications it has sent to Minnesota pharmacies notifying them of Governor Walz’s Executive Order 20-84, which lifts the ban on dispensing hydroxychloroquine to COVID-19 patients. “Our organization has heard that patients are still unable to get access to hydroxychloroquine even though Governor Walz lifted the prohibition on the dispensing of the medication,” said Twil...

  • Computer glitches disrupt classes as schools return online

    Sep 10, 2020

    HOUSTON (AP) — Students across the U.S. ran into computer glitches Tuesday as they began the school year with online instruction at home because of the coronavirus, adding to the list of problems that have thrust many a harried parent into the role of teacher’s aide and tech support person. The online learning platform Blackboard, which provides technology for 70 of the nation’s 100 biggest districts and serves more than 20 million U.S. students from kindergarten through 12th grade, reported that websites for one of its learning products were...

  • Greenbook 2020 Now Available

    Sep 10, 2020

    St. Paul, MN: The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) has released the 2020 edition of its Greenbook publication, featuring Agricultural Growth, Research, and Innovation (AGRI) Sustainable Agriculture Demonstration Grant (SustAg) projects from the last three years. Projects explore sustainable agriculture practices and systems that could make farming more profitable, resource efficient, and personally satisfying. The program has granted more than $4.3 million to Minnesota farmers over its 30-year history. “The projects presented here a...

  • GTL Establishes New Baseline of Free Weekly Communication for All Incarcerated Individuals

    Sep 10, 2020

    Falls Church, Virginia – September 9, 2020 – GTL, a trusted partner that connects those affected by incarceration with the resources and support necessary to achieve success, today announced that free weekly communication options are now being offered to county customers that contract phone or tablet services with GTL. GTL instituted weekly free calls and messages at state Department of Corrections (DOC) facilities at the beginning of August 2020. “We want to ensure that every individual that uses a GTL solution to communicate with their loved...

  • Retired Episcopal Priest Explores the Book of Revelations and Argues the Fast-Approaching End of Western Civilization

    Sep 10, 2020

    PHOENIX – In this year alone, our world is facing a global pandemic and the political climate is arguably more divisive than ever before. All of this chaos can beg the question: Is this the end of life here on planet Earth? In his recently published book, “Conundrums of the End: Fate, Destiny, and Apocalypse,” Albert Krueger argues that we are living at the end of Western civilization. Krueger grew up with a very scientific, analytic mindset, but found his faith at the University of Arizona after working with various faculty in the philo...

  • Indian Country small businesses face strong headwinds in COVID-19 recovery

    Sep 10, 2020

    The COVID-19 pandemic has led to economic and health hardships throughout Indian Country, affecting the many small businesses that are the backbone of tribal economies. To understand how these businesses are experiencing the pandemic, the Center for Indian Country Development (CICD) at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis partnered with the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development (NCAIED) in mid-July 2020 to survey private sector businesses in Indian Country, receiving complete responses from 400 business owners.1...

  • More Choctaws have died of COVID than those who died of the disease in Hawaii. Or Alaska. Or Wyoming.

    Sep 10, 2020

    The coronavirus pandemic has hit the Mississippi Choctaw Band of Indians harder than any major city in the nation — and 10 times harder than the rest of Mississippi. Of the 10,000 Choctaws served by the tribe, one in 10 — 1,092 — have tested positive for COVID-19. “That’s worse than what we’re seeing in New York City or anywhere else in the U.S.,” said the 42-year-old Chief Cyrus Ben, who has battled the disease himself, suffering fever and chills. https://www.mississippicir.org/news/more-choctaws-have-died-of-covid-than-tho...

  • Iroquois Nationals lacrosse team to compete in 2022 World Games after initial exclusion

    Sep 10, 2020

    The Iroquois Nationals, which represent the Haudenosaunee Confederacy in international field lacrosse, will be among eight men's lacrosse teams competing in the 2022 World Games after they were originally excluded. "We're very pleased that we will be competing," said Leo Nolan, executive director of the organization that oversees the team and its development group. "Without us, it would have been a very different kind of tournament." https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/iroquois-nationals-lacrosse-world-games-1.5717395...