And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

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Message-Id: <v04011701b30ee6b6c15d@[128.253.55.17]>
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 10:44:13 -0500
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From: Native Americas Journal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NATIVE PREP SCHOOL TO GRADUATE FIRST SENIOR CLASS

The following article is provided by Native Americas, published by the
Akwe:kon Press at Cornell University. For more information on how to stay
informed of emerging trends that impact Native peoples throughout the
hemisphere visit our website at http://nativeamericas.aip.cornell.edu. 

NATIVE PREP SCHOOL TO GRADUATE FIRST SENIOR CLASS 
Bruce E. Johansen/Native Americas 

New Mexico's Native American Preparatory School, which educates gifted
Native American students on the model of prestigious Eastern institutions,
will graduate its first senior class in June, 1999 during a ceremony that
the school's major benefactor did not live to see. 

Richard Ettinger, son of a founder of Prentice-Hall publishing, himself a
co-founder of Wadsworth Publishing Co., was fundamentally changed about
1970 as he read Dee Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee." After reading
the book, Ettinger made the establishment of educational programs for
gifted Native Americans the main focus of his substantial philanthropic
life. Ettinger first financed scholarships, then began a summer-enrichment
program during the 1980s. This program enrolled 300 students a year in a
three-week enrichment program by 1991. 

With personal assets, Ettinger purchased the school's 1,600-acre campus, a
former corporate retreat in the Pecos River Valley 30 miles northeast of
Santa Fe. Ettinger died of lymphoma in April 1996. 

Native American Prep is one attempt to raise low graduation rates among
Native students in the United States, where only 3 per cent of Indian
students who enroll in four-year colleges finish their degree programs. 

The first class of 50 students, enrolled in 1995, got off to a rocky start
with a near-riot shortly after classes opened. The disturbance seemed to
have several causes: Some of the students didn't understand others'
cultures; there were misunderstandings between students and some of the
non-Native teachers; and some of the students were rebelling against the
idea of doing homework, having attended schools where none was assigned.
The problems were corrected quickly as more Native staff and faculty were
added.  

Ettinger family trusts still fund most of "NAPS'" expenses. All of the 74
students (from 32 different Native nations) attend on full or partial
scholarships. The minimum required payment (which applies to two-thirds of
the students) is $900 a year, which accounts for the estimated cost of a
student's food, less than 5 per cent of the estimated $25,000 required to
teach and house one student for a year. If a family cannot pay the $900, it
may be waived. More than 90 per cent of the school's tuition expenses are
subsidized by scholarships. 

With a minimal endowment, how does NAPS raise the scholarship money? The
school's creative answers to this question regularly fill the society pages
of Santa Fe's daily newspaper, the New Mexican. 

Artistic Santa Fe was set buzzing one day by the news that noted glass
artist Dale Chihuly, founder of Seattle's Pilchuck Glass School, was
donating a major work to be sold at auction to support the school. Chihuly
also has donated book royalties. Wes Studi has been host to some of the
school's auctions. 


Auctions sometimes include the serving of Native cuisine: spiced buffalo
tongue on acorn cakes, juniper-braised venison shanks with roasted root
vegetables and wild possum, grape dumplings with maple or honey cream, as
well as smoked salmon on wild rice and bannock bread with sage butter.  

During June of 1998, Edison Eskeets, who is Navajo and the school's dean of
students, provided the school with his version of a fund-raising jog: 208
miles, start to finish, from Flagstaff, Ariz., to Gallup, N.M., including
assent of a 12,000-foot mountain that is sacred to the Navajos. Every
dollar raised at such events is matched 200 per cent by donations from the
Ettinger family's foundations. 

The school provides a traditional prep-school curriculum in which
traditional Anglo subjects have been integrated with Native American
history and culture. The Iroquois Confederacy's political system is studied
in history, for example. In shop, students may study traditional forms of
silversmithing. According to one of its mission statements, NAPS  "strives
to blend the best features of Native American and Western education in ways
that enhance the potential of each student." 

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          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
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