![]() When leaving campus, enter the freeway at Bluemound Road (to I-41/I-894 south and I-41 north) or 84th Street (to I-94 east and west).ĭIRECTIONS TO WLC'S OUTDOOR ATHLETIC COMPLEX Left on 84th Street to Wisconsin Avenue. Left on Wisconsin Avenue to Center for Arts and Performance and Parking Center on the left. From the West: Take I-94 east to 84th Street exit (306). ![]() Right on 84th Street to Wisconsin Avenue. Left on Wisconsin Avenue to Parking Center and Center for Arts and Performance on the left. From the East: Take I-94 west to 84th Street exit (306).Right on Wisconsin Avenue to Center for Arts and Performance and Parking Center on the right. From the South: Take I-894 north to Bluemound Road exit.Left on Bluemound Road to 95th Street (first intersection past freeway ramps). From the North: Take I-41 south to Bluemound Road exit (39).To Parking Center (8701 West Wisconsin Avenue) and Center for Arts and Performance (8815 West Wisconsin Avenue) Left on Bluemound Road to main campus entrance on the right. From the West: Take I-94 east to 84th Street exit (306).From the East: Take I-94 west to 84th Street exit (306).Right on Bluemound Road to main campus entrance on the left. From the South: Take I-894 north to Bluemound Road exit.Left on Bluemound Road to main campus entrance on the left. ![]() To Main Campus Entrance/Front Circle (8800 West Bluemound Road) The total award is $119,357 and is administered through the School of Nursing.Note that 89th Street is a one-way street from north to south (from Wisconsin Avenue to Bluemound Road). Other community partners include The Humble Horse and the Great Lakes Intertribal Council, Mole Lake Tribe, Grey Raven Ranch, and the Ojibwe Horse Society, which is the international “mother” organization of Ojibwe horses that deals with record keeping and global community communication on Ojibwe horse caretakers and enthusiasts, Darcy Whitecrow, an Indigenous author and founder of the Grey Raven Ranch. Emily Loerzel/Mino-naadamaage-kwe (recent PhD graduate of UW-Seattle and The Humble Horse operations manager and founder). Jeneile Luebke/Noojimo’iwekwe and Brian McInnes/Waabishki-makwa (Associate Professor, Civil Society, and Community Studies, UW-Madison School of Human Ecology), and co-I Dr. The investigative team includes an all Anishinaabe team including PIs Dr. The primary goals of the project are to develop an Indigenous-informed equine-related research protocol that: (1) uncovers the Lac La Croix pony’s deep historical and cultural significance to First Nations peoples (2) restores relations with the spiritual history of the Lac La Croix Indigenous Ponies through reclaiming Ojibwe language storytelling traditions and (3) creates product materials to educate communities and students about the importance of traditional Ojibwe horse society, and people’s relationship to them, and emphasis of land-based healing and resiliency building. Baldwin grants are funded through generous gifts to the UW-Madison from Ira and Ineva Reilly Baldwin. Jeneile Luebke, PhD, RN and Brian McInnes (School of Human Ecology) were awarded a Reilly-Baldwin Wisconsin Idea Endowment grant to support the project, Anishina be-Mishtadimoons Inawendiwin – Restoring and Awakening the Cultural and Ecological Context.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |