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Laura Tohe was born in 1952 in Fort Defiance, Arizona, of the Sleepy Rock People for the Bitterwater Clan. Tohe was raised on the reservation. She was taught to speak English and Navajo at home and was raised to value her heritage. She is committed to its preservation through her work. She earned a B.A. in Psychology from the University of New Mexico, an M.A. in English from the University of Nebraska, and a Ph.D. at the University of Nebraska. She currently serves as an Assistant Professor of English at Arizona State University. Wordcraft Circle Writer of the Year (Poetry) award, 1999 (for No Parole Today).
Author of Man Spirit, Ted Tomeo-Palmanteer writes fiction and poetry addressing the difficulties faced by Native people in the modern world.
Raised in Arizona, Clifford Trafzer was born to parents of Wyandot Indian and German-English blood. He earned a B.A. and M.A. in history at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, where he also worked as an archivist for Special Collections. He earned a Ph.D. in American History in 1973 with a specialty in American Indian History and the same year became a museum curator for the Arizona Historical Society. Before joining the faculty of the University of California, Riverside in 1991, Trafzer taught at Diné College (Navajo Community College), Washington State University and San Diego State University. Trafzer\'s research focuses on Native American history and culture. His Kit Carson Campaign: The Last Great Navajo War and Yuma: Frontier Crossing of the Far Southwest were published in 1981. His co- authored work, Renegade Tribe: The Palouse Indians and the Invasion of the Inland Pacific Northwest appeared in 1986, winning a Washington Governor\'s Award that year. In 1994 he won the Penn Oakland Award for Earth Song, Sky Spirit. His works include Grandmother, Grandfather, and Old Wolf: Tamánwit Ku Súdat and Traditional Native American Stories From the Columbia Plateau, Death Stalks the Yakama: A Social-Cultural History of Death on the Yakama Indian Reservation, 1888-1964, and Exterminate Them! Clifford Trafzer is Director of American Indian Studies at University of California, Riverside. He received the Wordcraft 1996- 1997 Prose Writer of the Year Award and serves as Series Senior Editor for Michigan State University Press\'s Native American Series.
Haunani-Kay Trask is descended of the Pi'ilani line of Maui and the Kahakumakaliua line of Kaua'i. She is a Hawaiian nationalist, a professor of Hawaiian Studies at the University of Hawai'i, and an author of scholarly and literary works. Her books include political theory, Eros and Power (I986), a collection of essays, From a Native Daughter (I993), and a book of poetry, Light in the Crevice Never Seen, forthcoming from Calyx Books, 1994.
Gail Tremblay has written three books of poetry. The most recent is Indian Singing in 20th Century America from Calyx Books ( Corvallis, Oregon, 1990). She has also been published in Denver Quarterly, Northwest Review, and Calyx, and in numerous anthologies. In addition she is a widely exhibited visual artist.
David Treuer is the son of an Austrian father and Ojibwe mother. He grew up on the Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota. He earned his bachelor's degree in Anthropology at Princeton University in 1992, and his master's at the University of Michigan. After completing his master's degree, he returned home to the Leech Lake Reservation in Minnesota to work on his Ph.D. dissertation in Anthropology. He has also participated in efforts to preserve the Ojibwe language.

Writer Mark Turcotte spent his earliest years on North Dakota's Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation and in the migrant camps of the western United States. Later, he grew up in and around Lansing, Michigan. After leaving school he traveled the country, working and living on the road for nearly fifteen years.

Arriving in Chicago in the spring of 1993 Turcotte rediscovered his love of words and writing and quickly established himself as a unique voice in the city's thriving poetry scene. That summer he was winner of the First Gwendolyn Brooks Open-mic Poetry Award. Soon thereafter he was selected by Ms. Brooks as a Significant Illinois Poet and was named to the Illinois Authors Poster. Since that time he has been the recipient of a Writer's Community Residency from National Writer's Voice and was awarded the 1997 Josephine Gates Kelly Memorial Fellowship from the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers . . .

Glenn Twist, the author of Boston Mountain Tales: Stories from a Cherokee Family,was a citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and a former member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.

Ed Two-Rivers is a talented poet, playwright, and performer. He has published a number of volumes of poetry. His first collection, "A Dozen Cold Ones", was nominated for the Kawanzaa Award. Mr.Two-Rivers has also been committed to attaining justice and equal rights for Native Americans. Over the years he has performed at events that benefited Leonard Peltier, AIDS victims, hunger, homelessness, battered women, world peace, environmental issues, opposition to Proposition 187, as well as at events that took a stand against the death penalty and gang violence. His dedication to these causes brought recognition as a winner of the Iron-Eyes Cody Award for Peace. Mr. Two Rivers is also a produced playwright and the founding Artistic Director of The Red Path Theater Company (Illinois' only Native American theatre company).

-2000. Paula Underwood, M.A. was an author, speaker, trainer and consultant in education, cross-cultural understanding and organizational methodologies. She was the founder and Executive Director of The LearningWay® Center (TLC), through which she offered retreats to people in education, business and health services. Paula first wrote three learning stories, Who Speaks for Wolf, Winter White, Summer Gold, and Many Circles, Many Paths. Who Speaks for Wolf received the Thomas Jefferson Cup Award for quality writing for young people, has since been declared an Environmental Classic, and has been called "The best book I know of on Systems Thinking!" The educational program based on her work has been declared "Exemplary" by the U.S. Department of Education, and the book has been translated into Spanish and Italian . . .

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