96-11-04 Two American Indian Experts to Speak AMERICAN INDIAN PROFESSOR, COMPANY PRESIDENT TO VISIT COLUMBUS -- Duane Champagne, director of the American Indian Studies Center and associate professor of sociology at the University California at Los Angeles, and Karen Radney Buller, president and chief executive officer of National Indian Telecommunications Institute (NITI) of Santa Fe, N.M., will speak at The Ohio State University on Nov. 14 about their work in a program titled "American Histories: Native Nations." The free, public event will be held in the River Den of the Drake Union, 1849 Cannon Drive, with Champagne speaking at 1 p.m., and Buller at 3 p.m. A reception will follow. Their appearances are co-hosted by two Ohio State units -- Native American Student Programs in the Office of Student Life, and American Indian Initiatives in the Office of Minority Affairs. The event is an opportunity for the community to share the unique perspectives of two outstanding American Indian leaders in the academic and business arenas, said Marti Chaatsmith, coordinator of Native American Student Programs. Champagne will discuss the interdisciplinary nature of American Indian studies, how the studies contribute to learning about the place of Indians in U.S. law and history, and the government policy toward Indians. Butler will discuss the impact of telecommunications applications in American Indian schools, colleges and businesses. Duane Champagne Champagne, a member of the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Band, received his doctorate from Harvard University. He is the author of more than 40 scholarly articles about American Indian issues. Most of his writings focus on social, cultural and political change in American Indian societies as they adapted to European political, cultural and economic incorporation. He has published in both the sociology and American Indian fields, including the books The Native American Almanac, American Indian Societies: Strategies and Conditions of Political and Cultural Survival, and Social Order and Political Change: Constitutional Governments Among the Cherokee, the Choctaw, the Chickasaw, and the Creek. Karen Radney Buller Buller, a member of the Comanche nation, is an expert in electronic networking, math and science curriculum development, and school funding equalization and how these issues relate to Native American communities. She is an advocate for children's issues. She has a master's degree in child and developmental psychology from the University of Nebraska, and has completed coursework for a doctorate in social psychology, also at Nebraska. Through Buller's leadership, the National Indian Telecommunications Institute provides Internet connections and training to Indian communities, with support of the National Science Foundation and corporate sponsors. The goal is to use advanced technology to serve American Indians and Alaska natives in education, economic development, language and cultural preservation, tribal policy issues and self determination. Current projects include developing culturally relevant curricula through the Internet or training for teachers of American Indian students at all grade levels. NITI also offers instruction on use of the World Wide Web and how to design web pages. # Contact: Marti Chaatsmith, Native American Student Programs, (614) 292-7521. [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Tue, 5 Nov 1996 08:38:34 -0500] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.