Through eash of these options, Indian students would be able to participate in one of the fastest growing and most urgently needed professions. In this way, PERMA benefits everyone. "We see this as a win-win situation," said Estela Romo of the U.S. Department of Energy at a planning meeting held last year at D-Q University. "Educational opportunity is improved, jobs are created and we need the trained personnel."
The PERMA Network is only a beginning, since the problems created by a century of ecological ignorance cannot be expected to disappear overnight. PERMA project assistant Diane Ralston said, "We're beginning at a very basic level here. The difficulty is that it may take decades to clean up every toxic waste site in the country. The need for waste management can only grow. The colleges are at the ground floor of a major effort." What is most promising perhaps is the depth of the Department of Energy's commitment to working with the tribal colleges.
As the tribal colleges seek to expand their resource base, PERMA can serve as an active role model of how joint efforts can be conducted with agencies, industry, and large state universities. We in AIHEC should aggressively pursue such partnerships throughout 1992, and beyond. These partnerships are essential to the search for a solution to the impending environment crisis, and they depend in large part on the commitment by various government agencies, including the Department of Energy, to involve native Americans in those solutions. As Alan Stack of Tribal Peoples says, "Indian life-ways are part and parcel of the fabric of America, not separate from it. The fate of the American Indian and the fate of the American nation are one and the same.
Through eash of these options, Indian students would be able to participate in one of the fastest growing and most urgently needed professions. In this way, PERMA benefits everyone. "We see this as a win-win situation," said Estela Romo of the U.S. Department of Energy at a planning meeting held last year at D-Q University. "Educational opportunity is improved, jobs are created and we need the trained personnel."
The PERMA Network is only a beginning, since the problems created by a century of ecological ignorance cannot be expected to disappear overnight. PERMA project assistant Diane Ralston said, "We're beginning at a very basic level here. The difficulty is that it may take decades to clean up every toxic waste site in the country. The need for waste management can only grow. The colleges are at the ground floor of a major effort." What is most promising perhaps is the depth of the Department of Energy's commitment to working with the tribal colleges.
As the tribal colleges seek to expand their resource base, PERMA can serve as an active role model of how joint efforts can be conducted with agencies, industry, and large state universities. We in AIHEC should aggressively pursue such partnerships throughout 1992, and beyond. These partnerships are essential to the search for a solution to the impending environment crisis, and they depend in large part on the commitment by various government agencies, including the Department of Energy, to involve native Americans in those solutions. As Alan Stack of Tribal Peoples says, "Indian life-ways are part and parcel of the fabric of America, not separate from it. The fate of the American Indian and the fate of the American nation are one and the same.
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Through eash of these options, Indian students would be able to participate in one of the fastest growing and most urgently needed professions. In this way, PERMA benefits everyone. " We see this as a win-win situation," said Estela Romo of the U.S. Department of Energy at a planning meeting held last year at D-Q University. " Educational opportunity is improved, jobs are created and we need the trained personnel."
The PERMA Network is only a beginning, since the problems created by a century of ecological ignorance cannot be expected to disappear overnight. PERMA project assistant Diane Ralston said, "We're beginning at a very basic level here. The difficulty is that it may take decades to clean up every toxic waste site in the country. The need for waste management can only grow. The colleges are at the ground floor of a major effort." What is most promising perhaps is the depth of the Department of Energy's commitment to working with the tribal colleges.
As the tribal colleges seek to expand their resource base, PERMA can serve as an active role model of how joint efforts can be conducted with agencies, industry,และมหาวิทยาลัยของรัฐขนาดใหญ่ เรา aihec ควรเลยเถิดคดีพันธมิตรดังกล่าวตลอดปีและเกิน พันธมิตรเหล่านี้มีความจำเป็นเพื่อค้นหาวิธีการแก้วิกฤตการด้านสิ่งแวดล้อมและพวกเขาขึ้นอยู่กับส่วนใหญ่ในความมุ่งมั่นโดยหน่วยงานราชการต่างๆ รวมทั้งกรมพลังงาน , ชาวอเมริกันพื้นเมืองที่เกี่ยวข้องในการแก้ไขปัญหาเหล่านั้น
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