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For some reason, one of the hardest things for a human to do is to eat right. Whether that is because we have limited access to resources in all areas or if it is because we simply have too much access to unhealthy food, there are many reasons that eating healthy is a challenge.Sure, we can eat just about anything and it will sustain us. We will manage to move from one moment to the next and be able to call ourselves healthy. But is it really healthy to subsist on a diet of processed foods and sugary drinks? Just because we are alive does not mean that we are healthy. And the older we get, the more our bad habits begin to catch up with us.
A collection of short stories and modern art. "Everything is fucked forever" fits somewhere between Harmony Korine's "A crack up at the race riots" and "The Bible".
Forty women over 200 years dedicated to Northwest native life as culture bearers, scholars, and more, along with aspects of gender roles and expressions.
Fieldwork Notebook #13, missing for a hundred years, is rejoined with another, both heavily annotated, to document Lushootseed native artifacts and supporting ethnography by the first academic scholar working in Puget Sound.
Five sets of Native Northwest Place Names over 100 years show pitfalls and pleasures of documention efforts among native speakers, scholars, and inept amateurs.
Chinook matrons share cultural traditions with Dr Verne Ry, who adds details from historical records. Appendices feature the 1846 Northwest summary by John Scouler, MD, and 1906 elder depositions and testimonies at Bay Center.
Classic works, with corrections, on the 1870 Ghost Dances, prelude to those of 1890, by Leslie Spier, Verne Ray, Anna Gayton Spier, Thomas Waterman, especially for Columbia Plateau, Klamath Basin, Central California, and Puget Sound.
Presents an overview of the Native people of Puget Sound, who speak a Coast Salishan language called Lushootseed. This book features the grand ritual known as the Shamanic Odyssey in which cooperating shamans journeyed together to the land of the dead to recover some kind of vitality stolen from the living.
Deconstructs earthen mounds and myths in examining their importance in contemporary Native communities. Drawing on ethnographic and archaeological studies, Jay Miller explores the wide-ranging themes and variations of mounds, from those built thousands of years ago to contemporary mounds, focusing on Native southeastern and Oklahoma towns.
One of the keys to success in football is having solid, well-rounded attacking skills. In today's game all 10 outfield players on the field, not just the strikers, need to be proficient in attacking play. This is a guide for teaching the necessary skills and tactics needed to outscore the opposition.
The Tsimshians are a Northwest Coast Native people known for their dazzling works of art and rich array of traditions. This book presents a picture of the Tsimshian cultural universe, and argues that one of the reasons for its continuing vitality, is that its people are sensitive to different and creative ways of capturing and embodying light.
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