The premiere of a Rocky Mountain PBS work-in-progress documentary, which includes in the film members of the University of Northern Colorado’s Native American Student Services (NASS), will be 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, in the Panorama Room of the University Center, intersection of 10th Avenue and 20th Street. To RSVP to attend the screening, open to the public free of charge, contact Pat Dlug at (970) 351-1909 or pat.dlug@unco.edu by Nov. 9, or RSVP online at http://www.rmpbs.org/uncscreening. Free parking will be available in lots north and south of the University Center. Before the screening, the public is also invited to the annual “Thanksgiving is Everyday” dinner, 5-6:30 p.m. at the Kohl House, 924 20th Street. NASS director Solomon Little Owl, along with students and staff from the cultural center, were interviewed for the hour-long documentary titled “Urban Rez.” The film explores the history and modern-day effects of 1950s policies that encouraged American Indians to leave their homelands to relocate to urban areas across the country, including Denver. A film crew also followed NASS on its annual buffalo hunt on the Crow Indian Reservation in Montana. Rocky Mountain PBS director Lisa D. Olken is scheduled to attend the screening