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Fast rollout of virus vaccine trials reveals tribal distrust | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source

Felicia Fonseca This undated photo provided by Arvena Peshlakai shows Arvena Peshlakai opening the gate to her sheep corral at her home in Crystal, New Mexico. She and her husband Melvin volunteered to participate in coronavirus vaccine trials on the Navajo Nation. As coronavirus vaccines were being developed around the world, few Native American tribes signed up to participate. The reasons range from unethical practices of the past to the quick nature of the studies amid the pandemic. Native researchers say without participation from tribal communities, tribes won t know which vaccine might best be suited for their citizens. (Courtesy Arvena Peshlakai via AP).

Year in Review: Top 2020 Arizona stories

Rebekah L. Sanders, Arizona Republic Published 11:43 pm UTC Dec. 30, 2020 Show caption Hide caption Joel Hernandez Valdez, the 100th patient to recover from COVID-19 at Banner Baywood Medical Center, is discharged on June 5, 2020. Sean Logan/The Republic There s no doubt 2020 was memorable. The collective experience of a pandemic, presidential election and historic protests will long leave an imprint on our lives. Then again, so many big stories dominated the headlines, it s easy to forget everything that happened. Here are the top news events in Arizona as compiled by The Arizona Republic staff to remind us of all that we ve been through and equip us for all that lies ahead.

Pfizer CEO: Vaccine a ray of hope for Navajo Nation

Copyright © 2020 Albuquerque Journal Nine months after the first COVID-19 cases surfaced on the Navajo Nation, residents have begun to be vaccinated for the disease. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said the vaccines that have been distributed in Navajo clinics and across many countries offer a “ray of hope.” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla speaks about COVID-19 vaccine development during a Navajo Nation video update Thursday. “All of us at Pfizer are very much aware that the Navajo Nation, and other Native American and Indigenous people were hit particularly hard by this pandemic,” Bourla said during a video update Thursday. ...................... As of Thursday, more than 21,800 people on the reservation have tested positive for COVID-19 and 762 people have died from the virus.

Red, White, and Black: The US Army in the West 1866-1891

Red, White, and Black: The US Army in the West 1866-1891 Indian scouts on Geronimo’s trail in Mexico during the mid-1880s included Yavapai Rowdy (front row, far left), who later received the Medal of Honor, and the White Mountain Apache leader Alchesay (back row far left). Sam Bowman, an African American Spanish-speaking interpreter stands in the same row with Alchesay at the opposite end of the line. – Courtesy of John Langellier   After four years of fighting, the Civil War ended. The victorious Union Army soon disbanded, leaving behind a small force of regulars to such diverse duties as guarding the Eastern Seaboard, serving as an occupation force in the South during Reconstruction, and returning to its numerous functions in the West. The work in the West often proved frustrating, especially because after Lee’s surrender the authorized strength of the U.S. Army shrank to 54,302 officers and men, while the salary of a private was decreased three dollars per month, which

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