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Event: |
Sacagawea/Sacajawea and the Lewis & Clark Expedition: American Indian Perspectives |
Date: |
November 12, 2003 |
Time: |
7:00 – 9:00 p.m. |
Place: |
Smith Center for Undergraduate Education (CUE)
Room 203
Washington State University
Pullman, Washington |

Participants:
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Sally McBeth, Moderator
University of Northern Colorado
Currently a professor at the University of Northern Colorado, Sally McBeth received her M.A. and Ph.D. in anthropology from Washington State University. McBeth is the author of Ethnic Identity and the Boarding School Experience and Essie’s Story and has contributed essays to numerous journals, edited collections, and encyclopedias. |
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Amy Mossett
Mandan/Hidatsa, Three Affiliated Tribes of North Dakota
Mossett is the tribal liaison for the National Council of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial, through which she is coordinating meaningful and appropriate tribal involvement from all tribes along the Lewis and Clark trail. She is also a national consultant, spokesperson, and advisor on the life and legends of Sacagawea.
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Reba Teran
Eastern Shoshone Tribe, Wind River Reservation, Wyoming
Reba Teran earned her M.S. in instructional technology from Utah State University. Teran is the cultural director for the Eastern Shoshone Tribe. She is currently developing multimedia cultural materials and an audio dictionary of the tribal language. |
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Roderick Ariwite
Lemhi Shoshone, Idaho
Roderick Ariwite is a teacher currently working for the Bureau of Land Management. He has two master's degrees, in education administration and environmental science, and is a second-year doctoral candidate at Idaho State University/University of New Mexico. He is executive director of the Fort Lemhi Indian Community, president of Lemhi Environmental & Engineering, and chief executive officer of Pueblo of Laguna.
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