Anishinaabeg Today - White Earth Nation
Transcription
Anishinaabeg Today - White Earth Nation
Anishinaabeg Today A Chronicle of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe Vol. 15, No. 7 White Earth, Minn. [email protected] Wednesday, July 7, 2010 White Earth Election Members elect Durant, Auginaush, Tibbetts By Riham Feshir Detroit Lakes Newspapers As Robert J. Durant sat anxiously in Mahnomen’s Golden Eagle Bingo Hall waiting for the White Earth election results on June 8, he crossed his fingers and prayed for good news. His prayers were answered as he defeated Eugene “Bugger” McArthur in the run for secretary-treasurer with 1,632 votes or 66 percent. McArthur received 807 votes. “It’s been a long journey and an experience like no other,” Durant said. Meanwhile, Irene “Rene” Auginaush celebrated with family and friends after winning yet another term as District I Representative by 296 votes, or 52 percent against Steven (Punky) Clark, who received 267 votes. It was a close call for the District II Committeeman seat. Incumbent Terrence “Terry” Tibbetts Sr., won with 480 votes or 50 percent, while challenger Kenneth M. Coleman Jr. received See Election Page 3 Photos by Gary W. Padrta Photo by Gary W. Padrta PRESORTED STANDARD US POSTAGE PAID Detroit Lakes MN Permit NO 14 Robert J. Durant and his wife, LuAnn react to winning Secretary-Treasurer for the White Earth Nation after the ballots were counted on election day June 8 at the Golden Eagle Bingo Hall. INSIDE THIS EDITION Page 3 - Breakdown of election votes Page 4 - New early warning sirens Postal Customer ECRWSS Page 7 - WE Elder Picnic Page 12 - Inauguration pictures Page 14 - COLS reading contest Page 16 - New Womens Shelter Page 17 - Bud Heislers last day Page 19 - OST is looking for you! Page 32 - WE Pow Wow pictures Top: From left are George “Porgie” Auginaush, Circle of Life School (COLS) Board, Ron Valiant, RTC Executive Director, Andy Martin, representing Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Valerie Gravseth, representing Sen. Al Franken, Lisa McArthur, White Earth Finance, Representative Kent Eken, District IIIRepresentative Gus Bevins, Roy LaVoy, White Earth Builders, Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor, Joan LaVoy, White Earth Education Director, Mitch Vogt, COLS Superintendent, former Secretary-Treasurer Bud Heisler, Sharon Josephson, representing Congressman Collin Peterson, and District II Representative Terry Tibbetts. Bottom: Future students of the new Circle of Life School. Rez community gathers to break ground for new Circle of Life School By Gary W. Padrta Anishinaabeg Today More than 80 students, educators, community members, tribal council and friends of the White Earth Nation helped break ground for a new $16 million Circle of Life School June 9 on the former “Mission” site. “This is the day that we change the face of education in White Earth,” said COLS Superintendent Mitch Vogt as he gathered people together for an official groundbreaking. “We will finally provide our children now and in the future a school building that is conducive to teaching and learning. I know I speak on behalf of the whole Circle of Life School community that we feel very blessed today to have this opportunity to break ground on our new Circle of Life School.” As a former educator, White Earth Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor has been looking forward this historic day. “Today is the most storied day I can think of when we can break ground for an educational institution for our youth. They are our future,” said Vizenor. “The Circle of Life School has never had an adequate building for education. Everyone worked hard for the past See School Page 29 2 Anishinaabeg Today Anishinaabeg Today The Anishinaabeg Today (AT), a publication of the White Earth Nation, is published once a month. Editorials and articles appearing in the AT are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or attitude of the AT staff or the White Earth Nation. The AT reserves the right to reject any advertising or materials submitted for publication. The submission of articles, poetry, artwork and photos is encouraged, however, they are subject to editing for grammar, length, malicious and libelous content. The Editor makes the sole decision of what is published in the AT and will not assume any responsibility for unsolicited material nor will the AT guarantee publication upon submission. AT will not guarantee publication of materials submitted past deadlines posted in the AT. The AT is distributed at no charge to all postal patrons living on White Earth Reservation and by direct mail to White Earth Nation members and subscribers within the United States. The newspaper is free to White Earth Nation members, but costs $12 per year for non-members. To subscribe or advertise, call 218-983-4640 Ext. 5903, email: [email protected], or fax: 218-9833641. Anishinaabeg Today White Earth Tribal Council PO Box 418, White Earth, MN 56591 Member of the Native American Journalist Association and the Minnesota Newspaper Association Tribal Council Wednesday, July 7, 2010 News From Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor Congratulations to newly elected Secretary/Treasurer Robert Durant and congratulations to re-elected District II Representative Terrence “Terry” Tibbetts, and District I Representative Irene “Rene” Auginaush. It is an honor to serve with you. May we continue to move the great White Earth Nation forward with progress and development. Groundbreaking was held for a new $1 million women’s shelter at White Earth. Frannie Franken, wife of Senator Al Franken has requested a visit to the site of the new shelter in July. Groundbreaking also was held for a new $16 million K-12 Circle of Life School. It has taken 10 years to finally get the funding and approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) to construct a new school that is long overdue. Construction will take at least 15 months. In 2000, Circle of Life Principal Mitch Vogt and I traveled to the BIA education hearing in Aberdeen, S.D., to testify and request a new school. Since then, we have had to hold the BIA accountable to keep our name on the list and to provide adequate funds. Our persistent conference calls and trips to the BIA in Albuquerque have paid off. Thank you to Joan LaVoy, Education Director, for all of your hard work in this project. We have much to be thankful for. Recently White Earth Tribe was awarded $108,000 for Year One from the State of Minnesota for Ojibwe Language Revitalization, a project that we will share with the other Ojibwe tribes in Minnesota. We know how vital our language is to preserving our way of life as a people and tribe. There are many to thank: White Earth Planning Department, especially Pam Keezer; White Earth Education Department, especially Joan LaVoy; the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe for endorsing us to take the project; and Lorna LaGue as tribal appointee on the Dakota Ojibwe Language Revitalization task force, Minnesota Indian Affairs Council. I am confident White Earth will do an outstanding job with the language grant and will receive continuing funds from the State. There are other developments to be thankful and proud of, such as a new spiritual and cultural lodge at the White Earth Rediscovery Center on White Earth Lake, a beautiful 260 acre site that the Lutheran Church repatriated back to the tribe in the late 1990s. The White Earth Transit system has been successful and I will be traveling to Washington, D.C., for permanent funding to operate transportation on the White Earth Reservation. The transit hub (Depot) in Detroit Lakes will open. Development takes time and hard work, doesn’t happen overnight. However, we see the fruits of labor and commitment. In the midst of our progress, there have been a small minority of disgruntled, negative people (mostly losers in elections) who don’t want the White Earth Nation to develop and move forward. These people have circulated two petitions for my removal as tribal chairwoman. The petitions have no merit but are intended to distract and cause turmoil. They don’t like the tribal law enforcement department and the tribal court system, they claim these violate the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe (MCT) Constitution in spite of the fact that all MCT bands have their own law enforcement and courts. They circulate false statements and lies, such as Erma enrolls people less than degree blood quantum. It has gotten to a point where I must pursue legal action to stop these malicious lies and the extortion they are using to get unwary people to sign petitions. One even tried to use physical force on me. I filed an assault complaint against the individual. It is a disruption to the work that I do on behalf of the 20,000 members that I serve. Wherever I go, people give their support to me and tell me I am doing a good job, to stay strong. I will stand strong. There is much to do. The possibilities and progress for our tribe are endless and I know how to get it done. Thank you, majority of the great White Earth Nation, for your encouragement and support. News From Distict I - Rep. Irene Auginaush The 12th Annual Rice Lake Memorial Walk was a huge success with more than 250 walkers wearing bright green shirts. There was 200 shirts distributed to the participants this year. It was an awesome sight to see elders in wheelchairs and adults walking with their children. There were babies in strollers and children on bikes as people drove along in 4-wheelers passing out bottles of water. There was family of Gerald “Gondi” Beauchamp from Wisconsin who traveled here to walk in his memory. There was a family from Moorhead who comes every year to walk for Russell Thompson Jr., and Russell Thompson Sr. There were many from Minneapolis walking for family members. It has become a healing and gratifying tradition on Editor Future Issues July 28 August 4 August 25 September 1 September 29 October 6 October 27 November 3 Memorial Day to walk in memory of loved ones who have gone on to the spirit world. The satisfaction of walking for a loved one is therapeutic for many stuck in the grieving process. Many have commented about how on this day they can let the world know that their loved one is not forgotten and is still loved and missed. It is a rewarding feeling to push yourself with stamina and determination to keep walking, it’s like telling yourself, your loved one and the world “I love you and I still miss you.” Many have walked every year since it began 12 years ago. Some families make their own T-shirts with pictures and names of their family members that have passed on. More than 250 walkers patriciated in the 12 Annual Rice Lake Memorial Walk on May 31. It has become a healing and gratifying tradition on Memorial Day to walk in memory of loved ones who have gone on to the spirit world. Deadline and Issue dates subject to change Photo by Al Fox Jr. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 3 Anishinaabeg Today White Earth Election Board releases official General Election numbers P i n e B e a u l i e u B e j o u 52 13 14 12 13 6 8 60 12 15 8 11 B e n d R i c e L a k e M a h n o m e n N a y t a h w a u s h W a u b u n C a l l a w a y 149 60 219 125 50 29 85 23 Secretary-Treasurer Robert J. Durant Eugene Bugger McArthur 109 100 E l b o w P i n e L a k e P o i n t 19 7 59 48 W h i t e E a r t h 213 83 O g e m a 35 12 C a s s L a k e M i n n e a p o i s A b s e n t e e T o t a l P e r c e n t a g e 106 45 111 53 398 191 1632 807 66.91 33.09 21 9 25 32 84 67 297 267 52.58 47.42 38 23 32 8 117 59 480 452 51.5 48.5 District I Rep. Irene “Rene” Auginaush Steven “Punky” Clark 139 73 District II Rep. T. Terry Tibbetts Sr. Kenneth M. Coleman Jr. Election 89 123 170 193 34 46 Candidates who are not continuing to the General Election are responsible for removing their election signs from around the reservation. from Front Page 462 votes, or 49 percent. Durant ran for secretary-treasurer four years ago but didn’t make it to the general election. This time, he said, he put more effort into his campaign. His motivation was “the future of our government and the unknown possibilities that could affect the White Earth Nation,” he said. After running a “clean campaign,” he looks forward to serving on the tribal council with plans to work closely with state and federal governments. referring to numerous negative comments made about her on social networking sites like Facebook. But starting at 7:30 a.m. June 8, she received many good luck phone calls and text messages that made her feel good about the election night, she added. District II Committeeman Tibbetts, wants to bring more attention to the positives that have developed on the reservation in the past four years he’s been on the council. “I’m concerned that there are forces all around us that try to weaken our tribal sovereignty and treaty rights. “There is so much garbage out there,” he said. “It’s dragged down to a level where people are expected to believe anything about you.” “I see our nation as a nation of opportunity and in many aspects an untapped economical market that can bring wealth and prosperity to everyone in the nation,” he added. During the past few years, the White Earth Reservation gained a tribal college, an inexpensive mass transit system, a native public defense system and major infrastructure, Tibbetts said. Newly re-elected Auginaush plans to strengthen housing opportunities for the elderly in her Rice Lake community — she received 139 votes there, while Clark received 73. The voter turnout in his district was high compared to previous years —in Naytahwaush, 707 ballots were cast. With more people moving back to the reservation, it seems more economical to provide affordable elderly housing instead of maintaining older homes, she said. Although she has served on the council for 16 years, she said this year’s campaign was the most difficult of all. “It was a mean campaign,” she said, “That was the highest we’ve had since I’ve been working at the Naytahwaush precinct,” said Oscar Oppegard, who has been a Naytahwaush election official for eight years. In the White Earth precinct, 213 voted for Durant, while 83 voted for McArthur. Absentee ballots accounted for a total of 915 votes out of nearly 4,000 cast in the June 8 election. All articles and photos submitted to the Anishinaabeg Today will be run on a space available basis Photos by Gary W. Padrta Top: District II Rep. Terrence “Terry” Tibbetts and his wife, Carol check the election results June 8 at the Golden Eagle Bingo Hall. Bottom: District I Rep. Irene “Rene” Auginaush shares her victory with her son, James and grandson, Jim as Angie Neeland looks on. 4 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 WE enrollee elected President of the Native American & Indigenous Studies Association Jean “Jeani” O’Brien (White Earth Nation) began her term as President of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association in May. O’Brien grew up in Faribault, Minn., and fondly remembers spending summers with her grandmother, Edna Tonneson, in Mahnomen. She choose to attend Bemidji State University to be near family. Upon completion of her B.A. she attend the University of Chicago for her Ph.D. Today O’Brien is a professor in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota and a former Chair of the Department of American Studies and the Department of American Indian Studies. She is the author of Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachusetts, 1650-1790 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997), First and Lasting: New England Indians In and Beyond the Nineteenth-Century Local Imagination (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010), and numerous articles. O’Brien was one of several scholars who recognized a need for a professional association for scholars who work in the academic field of Native American and Indigenous studies. She served on the Steering Committee, which founded the organization. “We wanted to create a location where people working in Indigenous Studies across a range of institutions, specialties, and nations could come together to learn from each other and exchange our work,” stated O’Brien. In 2007 the group organized a meeting to determine if there was support for the formation of an official association. The meeting was a success and the task of writing a constitution, by-laws and other governing documents were written and adopted in 2008. The Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAISA) was founded in 2008. It is a professional association dedicated to supporting scholars and others who work in the academic field of Native American and Indigenous studies. NAISA hosts the premier scholarly meeting in Native studies. The association has more than 800 members from over a dozen countries and scores of Indigenous nations. Members of the new organization elected O’Brien as president-elect in 2009 and she began her one-year term as president in May 2010. O’Brien is “excited to be in a position to facilitate the work of this association in educating the broader public about the vibrancy and centrality of Indigenous people globally.” EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY the Constituents Service Program will now be operating on the following business hours: By Ed Snetsinger White Earth Emergency Manager 9 a.m. - Noon & 1 - 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday White Earth Emergency Management and Mahnomen County Emergency Management received a grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to install early warning devises throughout the White Earth Reservation. Anything needed before 9 a.m. should be submitted the day prior too, and anything submitted after 4 p.m. will not be processed until the following business morning. The devises will be used to warn the public on severe eeather/tornado, flooding, chemical spills, and civil defense. The sirens will be activated through the White Earth Dispatch and the Mahnomen County Sheriff’s Office. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. Toni Weaver Constituents Services The sirens feature three distinct signals: Wail, Steady, and Fast Wail. The public is encouraged to seek shelter once the sirens have been activated. Sirens were placed in following communities: Rice Lake, Naytahwaush, Elbow Lake, Pine Point, and White Earth. Additionally, sirens were also placed in the cities of Bejou, Mahnomen, Waubun, Ogema, and Callaway. Emergency Management selected the sites within the communities and based the selection on security and centralized location. In light of recent tornados and severe weather, our communities are much more prepared for any hazard that poses a threat. Photo by Gary W. Padrta This siren is located between the old RTC building the WE Community Center. Public Notice Patients of the White Earth Service Unit: On Wednesday, August 4, the Outpatient Clinic will be closed for scheduled patient visits in the afternoon due to staff training being held off-site. The Bin Di Gaan Clinic will continue to provide scheduled patient visits and is available on a first come first serve basis. Thank you for your understanding and patience. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 5 Anishinaabeg Today Rez Briefs By Jill Doerfler [email protected] It was great to be home for the pow-wow, even with the rain and cooler temperatures. It is always good to come together and celebrate our nation. I also enjoyed talking with folks about the constitution and tribal citizenship. Many folks tell me the blood quantum recorded by both the federal government and by the tribe is wrong. They explain the reason it is wrong and wonder how their blood quantum fraction or percentage can be corrected. The BIA has been criticized for not having any standardized way to determine blood quantum. The reason they are unable to create standardization is because blood quantum is not real, there is no way to measure how much Anishinaabe blood someone has. There is no test that can provide these results. This does not mean that we are not Anishinaabe. We are a nation with a rich heritage and dynamic culture that is always growing and adapting. While this cannot be measured that does not mean it is not real or important. Ojibwe scholar Tomas Peacock has written “we acknowledge our responsibility to pass down the story of our people to future generations. We own them that.” We cannot pass down our culture and traditions though blood; it is not that simple. As Peacock states, we have a responsibility to pass things on, to teach others who want to learn. Blood quantum is a flawed system that cannot be corrected so we need to find a new system that works for us in a good way. The system that our ancestors and tribal leaders advocated for during the first half of the twentieth century was lineal descent. They wanted to use family relationships to decide who could become a tribal citizen. They discussed the importance of relationship and of continuance. They were concerned that blood quantum would compromise the vitality of our nation and they were right. Blood quantum has caused division and exclusion. Efforts to correct blood quantum are wasted as the idea of ethnic purity is misguided. Our time is better spent working on a new solution. The ratified White Earth constitution provides us with this solution. Using lineal descent puts the focus on family and relationship, which honors our ancestors and relatives. It also enacts sovereignty and demonstrates that we are a nation, a political body; we are not a just a race or a minority group. Our status as a nation is based on our inherent rights and has been recognized by the U.S. in treaties and other agreements. These political documents are between two nations – not between two races. They are not based on blood quantum. All nations are faced with questions about their culture and citizenship. What makes someone an American? What makes someone a Canadian? What are the differences between these two nations? What makes them distinct political bodies? What are the cultural differences? There are no simple answers but political status and citizenship play a major role in answering the question. It is not American blood that makes someone American; it is much more complicated. Many American Indian scholars have written about what it means to be a tribal citizen. For example, Mohawk scholar Taiaike Alfred argues: “…’Mohawk’ and ‘nationhood’ are inseparable. Both are simply about being. Being is who you are, and a sense of who you are is arrived at through your relationships with other people—your people. So who we are, is tied with what we are: a nation.” Similarly Lumbi scholar David Wilkins has argued, “tribal nations were and should become again sacred bodies of related kinfolk. This is the essence of what it means to be a tribal citizen within a First Nation.” Likewise, we are dealing with the question: What makes someone a White Earth Anishinaabe? There are many possible answers to this question. The answer that the ratified constitution provides is: Family. Family is at the core of who we are as Anishinaabe. It is our families that teach us and care for us; those things cannot be found or measured in blood but they are in our relationships. We can build an everlasting nation by using our families to form the heart of who we are. White Earth Veterans Welcome Riders WE Urban Community Council meetings The White Earth Urban Community Council meetings are held the second Tuesday of every month at 6 p.m. at the White Earth Urban Office in Minneapolis. If there are questions call Bonni Boudreau at 952-594-0403. WE Chemical Dependency Program moves The White Earth Chemical Dependency (Substance Abuse) Program has now relocated to the old RTC Building. We can be reached at 218-983-3286 Ext. 1297 or toll free at 1-800-950-3248 Ext. 1297. MICOE meetings The Minnesota Indian Council of Elders will meet Monday, July 12 at the White Earth ENP site. Lunch is served at 11:30 a.m. with meeting following. Please note change of date due to July 4 holiday. MICOE will hold their August meeting on Monday, Aug. 2 at the Elbow Lake ENP site. Lunch is served at 11:30 a.m. with meeting following. Pine Point Elder’s Picnic The Pine Point Elder's Picnic is scheduled for Wednesday, July 14 at the Pine Point ENP. All Native American Elders, age 55 and older and their spouses, regardless of age or race are invited to attend. Lunch is served at 11:15 a.m. Bingo to follow. The menu will include chicken, potato salad, baked beans, dinner roll, watermelon and ice cream. Rediscovery Center under construction The White Earth Rediscovery Center is under construction and is closed to the public until further notice. We anticipate this could be until 2011. White Earth Elder’s Picnic The White Earth Reservation Annual Elder's Picnic is scheduled for Friday, July 23 at the White Earth Community Center. The ENP sites will be closed on that date. If you need transportation please call Carol Fabre at 218-983-3286 Ext. 1266 by Monday, July 19. Efforts will be made to assist those with transportation needs. Old Naytahwaush Community Center available for events The old Naytahwaush Community Center is available for your family event! Call ahead and reserve the Center now! A $25 returnable deposit is required. To make reservations contact a Naytahwaush Community Council member or MoJo Littlewolf after 4:30 p.m. at 218-261-0922. Diabetes Bingo Diabetes Bingo will be held Friday, July 9 at White Earth and Monday, July 12 at Pine Point. Bingo will begin after the 11:30 a.m. elder nutrition meal. All are welcome. AA meetings held every Tuesday AA open group meetings are available every Tuesday from 6 to 7 p.m. at Biimaadiiziiwiin Senior Apartments in White Earth. For more information call Stan at 218-983-3338, Lew at 218-9833113, or Al at 218-261-0317. Veterans Healing Circle Veterans Healing Circle is a confidential support group led by veterans for vets/active duty/guard, including family members as well, any branch, type of discharge, kind of problem. Meets at the White Earth Veterans Association building, 2540 Hwy 59, Mahnomen. Call Joe Potter (Vietnam) at 218-849-1688 or Mary Skov (Desert Storm) 218-841-4863 for more information. Photo by Sharon Johnson The White Earth Veterans Association welcomed more than 300 motorcycles during the Fifth Annual Ride for the Troops June 10 as they pass through Naytahwaush. The event raised more than $13,000, which will be given to the National Guard and soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. Looking for a job? The White Earth Human Resources Department has a Job Hotline. Call 218-983-3285 and ask for Ext. 1000. It has all the current job openings. 6 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today Domestic deaths, violence effects everyone By Kristi White Earth Dove Program In Minnesota in 2009 at least 12 women were murdered in cases where the suspected, alleged, or convicted perpetrator was a current or former husband, boyfriend, or intimate partner. At least 10 children under the age of 18 were murdered in cases where the suspected, alleged, or convicted perpetrator was the father, mother, or guardian or household/family member of the child, or the perpetrator was the spouse or intimate partner. At least two friends, family members or interveners were murdered in domestic violence-related situations. At least one man was murdered in a case where the suspected, alleged, or convicted perpetrator was a current or former intimate partner. At least eight children were left motherless due to their mothers’ domestic violence murders. At least three additional women were murdered by a family member or an intimate partner of a family member. Stories from the 2009 Minnesota Femicide Report: On June 21, 2009, at 1 a.m. Chad Gulbertson went to the home of Jody lee Morrow 38, of Albert Lea Minn. In violation of an order for protection that Jody had obtained on June 1, he killed her by hitting her in the head with a ball peen hammer. Legal documents show that he had physically abused and threatened to kill her in the past. Gulbertson turned himself in to the police later that morning. The police found Jody lying on the floor in front of her wheelchair. Gulbertson has been charged with one count of second-degree murder while under a restraining order for protection and one count of third-degree murder. Jody is survived by her two sons, ages 10 and 12. On Feb. 24, 2009, Dale M. Nyren shot and killed his wife, Sharon Kathleen Nyren, 67, of Fairhaven Township, Minn., in their home with a .22 caliber revolver. Dale admitted having an argument with Sharon, that he first shot her in the knee and then a few minutes later, he shot her in the head. Dale is charged with second degree murder. Dale Nyren pled guilty to murder charges in August. Sharon is survived by three sons, five grandchildren, a great grandchild, and siblings. Alexander Heikes killed his infant son, Alexander Heikes, 7 weeks old. Formerly of Minneapolis, Alexander killed his infant son by squeezing his abdomen so hard that the infant’s liver and spleen were lacerated and bled into his abdominal cavity. When Heikes woke up several hours later with the baby laying on his chest, the baby was dead. The medical authorities also identified a dozen healing rib fractures from earlier abuse. Heikes has been charged with unintentional second-degree homicide. Baby Alexander is survived by his mother. It is impossible to predict with certainty which batterers will become lethal to their victims. All batterers should be viewed as potentially deadly, though there are well documented indicators of lethality of which everyone should be aware. Included in the factors that have been identified as possible lethality indicators are: separation, extended history of domestic violence or other violence, pregnancy, threats or fantasies of homicide or suicide, access to a firearm, threats to use a weapon, stalking, attempted strangulation, forced sex, extreme jealousy and control of daily activities. Domestic violence and domestic homicide have a devastating effect on every person living in Minnesota. Each of the victims that died in these assaults was someone’s daughter, son, mother, father, sister, brother, family member, intimate partner, friend, neighbor, or co-worker. An abusive relationship that ends in the murder of the victim illustrates the failure of our system and society to respond to the needs of battered women and abused children. Help protect the people you love. For more information on domestic violence and how to get help call the DOVE Program at 1-877830-3683 (DOVE). For more information on the Minnesota Femicide Report visit www.mcbw.org. WE Food Distribution Welcomes USDA Undersecretary Photo by Gary W. Padrta Kevin Concannon, Under Secretary for the Food Nutrition and Consumer Services, USDA, visited the White Earth Food Distribution Program on June 17. Mr. Concannon wanted to see a program in action before he testified about the Food Distribution program on Indian Reservations at a congressional hearing on June 23. Mr. Concannon, as well as District II Representative Terry Tibbetts received a tour of the White Earth Food Distribution warehouse from Dan Teiken. THE DOCTOR’S CORNER What We Know About Childhood Obesity By Dr. Michael Laroque White Earth Health Center Definitions of overweight and obesity The human body is a delicate balance of water, proteins, carbohydrates, fats, vitamins and minerals. When people consume more calories from food than they expend through physical activity, they throw off this balance and cause their bodies to store the excess calories as fat. In extreme cases of fat buildup and weight gain, overweight and obesity result – posing serious threats to physical and mental health. Overweight and obesity is classified according to a measurement called the Body Mass Index (BMI). BMI is defined as a person's weight in kilograms divided by his height in meters squared (kg/m 2). Among adults, a BMI between 25 and 30 signifies overweight, and a BMI greater than 30 signifies obesity. Overweight among youths is diagnosed according to gender and age-specific BMI growth curves. An overweight child is defined as having a BMI at or above the 95th percentile, and a child at risk of becoming overweight has a BMI between the 85th and 95th percentiles. There is no established definition of obesity in children and adolescents. Facts and figures: How fat is our nation? • Almost 2/3 of U.S. adults aged 20-74 years are overweight, including 30 percent who are obese, according to the 1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). In the past three decades, adulthood obesity incidence has increased 100 percent. • Among persons aged 6-19, an estimated 15 percent, or 9 million youths, are overweight. In the past three decades, the numbers have more than tripled for children aged 6-11 (from 4 percent in 1971-74 to 15 percent in 1999-2000) and doubled for adolescents aged 12-19 (from 6 percent to 15 percent). • In addition to the 15 percent of youths who are overweight, data suggest that another 15 percent are at risk of becoming overweight (BMI between the 85 th and 95 th percentiles). Financial implications: Obesity = profound economic burden • In 2000, the costs of obesity in the United States were estimated at $117 billion – $61 million due to direct healthcare costs (i.e. preventive, diagnostic, and treatment services for obesity and related diseases) and $56 million on indirect costs (i.e. wages lost because of illness or disability, and future earnings lost because of premature death). • Among children and adolescents, the annual cost of treating obesity-related diseases has increased more than threefold, from $35 million in 1979-1981, to $127 million in 1997-1999. • According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a 10 percent weight loss could reduce an overweight person's lifetime medical costs by $2,200-$5,300. Trends and disparities in race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and gender Obesity has spread rapidly across race, gender, and class lines, but its prevalence has increased disproportionately among AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, and Native American children. - In contrast to the 12-13 percent of Caucasian youth who are overweight, 24 percent of Mexican-American youth, 20 percent of non-Hispanic African-American children and 24 percent of AfricanAmerican adolescents are overweight. An estimated 38-39 percent of Native American youth are at risk of becoming overweight, according to a 1999 Aberdeen Indian Health Service study. - Prevalence is particularly high among Mexican-American boys (>27 percent of children and teens) and African-American girls (22 percent of children and 27 percent of adolescents). While a lower level of parental income and education increases the risk of being overweight among Caucasian children, higher socioeconomic status does not necessarily protect from overweight and obesity among African-American and Hispanic children. Health consequences: Links between childhood overweight, See Obesity Page 27 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 7 Anishinaabeg Today WHITE EARTH RESERVATION ANNUAL ELDERS PICNIC Friday, July 23 @ White Earth Community Center All Elders 55 years of age or older & spouse are invited 10 a.m. - Wisdom Steps Health Walk 11:30 a.m. - Picnic Lunch (Bingo following lunch) MENU Chicken, Ham, Baked Beans, Potato Salad, Coleslaw, Rolls, Watermelon, Ice Cream, Beverage Sponsored by White Earth Tribal Council, White Earth Elderly Nutrition Program, White Earth Health Education Program For more information call Carol Fabre, White Earth Elderly Nutrition Program at 218- 983-3286, Ext. 1266 Discovering Ojibwe, a multimedia approach to learning about the Ojibwe culture and language, has announced three projects it will be working on during this summer: Discovering The Little Brothers, The Ojibwe Hand Drum, and Ojibwe Place Names. The audio version of the three projects will be broadcast on 91.7 KAXE, Northern Community Radio based in Grand Rapids, Minn., with funding from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund. Video coverage will be used on various educational websites and there are preliminary plans to incorporate the multimedia coverage into Ojibwe language apps for cell phones. Discovering Ojibwe was founded by White Earth member Chelsea Annette and Luke Durand, the author and illustrator respectively of “Discovering The Little Brothers” - the first of a series of childrens books about the Ojibwe language and culture. The audio version of the book was broadcast on 91.7 KAXE during the Morning Show with Scott Hall and Maggie Montgomery on June 23. The next phase of this project is to expand on the 11 Ojibwe teachings in the book and show how they relate to modern life. These 11 fiveminute audio segments are scheduled for broadcast on 91.7 KAXE in early Fall 2010. The second project is a one-hour radio documentary about the Ojibwe Hand Drum. Elders, drummers, and other experts will share their knowledge about the proper way to show respect to a hand drum and what it means for a drum to be an animate object with a spirit. 91.7 KAXE will broadcast the documentary in late Fall 2010. The third project is the start of an on-going plan to collect information about the Ojibwe names of locations in northern Minnesota. The idea is to find out what the Ojibwe name for a town or lake is or was and then discuss with elders and other knowledgeable experts about what the Ojibwe name means and why it was given to that location. Great emphasis will be placed on encouraging all local residents to participate in this project. 10 three-minute audio segments about specific locations will be broadcast on 91.7 KAXE during the Winter of 2010 with more to come as the project develops. Discovering Ojibwe has partnered with DMcD Productions, Inc. of Grand Rapids to handle all the technical aspects of the multimedia production including video, photography, and audio recording. DMcD Productions also serves as the publisher of the Discovering Ojibwe book series. 2010 Berry Camp When: July 29 – August 1 (founded by Kathy Hoagland) (July 29 is arrival day, August 1 is departure day) Where: One mile east of old Strawberry Lake Store on County Road 143 Camping available. Food provided. All ages welcome (children must be accompanied by an adult). Fun for the entire family. Questions? Call Tamie or Juanita at 218-375-2762 8 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 9 Anishinaabeg Today Native Alive Campaign committee members keep busy during summer months By Verna Olson Native Alive Campaign The Native Alive Campaign joined forces with the Diabetes’s Program and DOVE for a very successful 5K walk/run at the White Earth Pow-Wow. All participants received medals for finishing, as well as T-shirts and running packets. Trophies were also awarded to the top three male and female finishers in each of the four age groups. There were over 80 runners and walkers that participated in this year’s event! We are excited about the group of individuals that gather each month to address suicide on the White Earth Indian Reservation. We call this group NAC Pack. NAC Pack members have been working hard in three areas, divided up into the following committees; the process committee, the awareness committee and the volunteer committee. Our Process Committee is working through the details of setting up a toll-free support hotline. This committee is also busy developing each step of the process, from when a call is received, to the response, on through to ensuring that the person with suicide thoughts is safe. Our Awareness Committee held a very successful Taco Sale at the White Earth Community Center on June 24. With the help of many NAC Pack members, community members, and businesses we were able to raise a significant amount of money to help with our upcoming support hotline. This was truly a team effort and a prime example of what we can do when we all come together. Through events like this we will be able to successfully sustain a support hotline on the White Earth Reservation. Our Volunteer Committee continues to recruit volunteers who are willing to participate in the Native Alive Campaign. They are also organizing and planning SafeTALK trainings in the community. SafeTALK is a three-hour training that prepares people to identify persons with thoughts of suicide and connect them to suicide resources in our area. Please be looking for your opportunity to be trained in SafeTALK. NAC Pack continues to invite you to participate in our efforts of reducing suicide activity on the White Earth Indian Reservation. NAC Pack meets the first Wednesday of each month at 8 to 10 a.m. NAC Pack offers a supportive environment while working towards our common goal. Our method of breaking up into working groups/committees is proving to be very beneficial and successful thus far. We are excited to see what is yet to come! Check us out at nativealivecampaign.com Native Alive Campaign Mission Statement: To create a community full of hope within the White Earth Reservation; offering dedicated support and assistance to those in need of strength and encouragement. To empower, support and educate community members with the ultimate goal of reducing suicide and depression and increasing the quality of life for all who live here. Senate Indian Affairs Committee examines need for new diabetes treatment, research (WASHINGTON, D.C.) --- The U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee conducted a hearing June 29 to highlight the growing crisis of diabetes across the nation, particularly in Indian Country, and examine the need for new treatment and research. Nationwide more than 24 million people have diabetes, with another 6 million undiagnosed and close to 50 million borderline diabetic. The prevalence of diabetes in the U.S. has increased more than four-fold over the last 30 years. The burden of this disease is even more severe among Native Americans, where the prevalence is double the national average. In fact, in some tribal communities the prevalence of diabetes has reached 60 percent. “Diabetes has become a nationwide health care crisis, and the crisis has struck particularly hard in our Native American communities,” said Chairman of the Indian Affairs Committee Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND). “The outdated and underfunded health care system on Indian lands hinders the ability of Native Americans with diabetes to get necessary treatment. We need to improve the diabetes prevention and treatment programs in Indian Country.” Dorgan has introduced legislation to reauthorize the Special Diabetes Program, a program that provides research funding for type 1 diabetes, and prevention and education programs for Indian tribes. Funding for this program has led to clinical advancements in delaying the full onset of diabetes and reducing the risk of serious complications to diabetics, such as kidney failure and heart attack. The bill currently has 60 co-sponsors. Tammy Brown, of Waubun, was the winner of a charcoal gas grill drawn at the 11th annual cook-off contest at the Food Distribution Center on May 21. The cook-off contest consisted of five categories for chances to win first, second and third place prizes in each category Main Dishes, Soups & Stews 1st – Cream of wild rice soup – Liz Stinar 2nd – Herb Roast Rub – Lori Guenther 3rd – Wild Rice Soup – Deb Goodwin Desserts 1st – Oatmeal Cake – Toni Fairbanks 2nd – Peanut Butter Bars – Gloria Miller 3rd – Mississippi Mud Pie – Lori Guenther Appetizers 1st – Sauerkraut Balls – Marjorie Strand 2nd – Crab dip – Lori Guenther 3rd – Stuffed mushrooms – Teri Freyholtz Salads 1st – Frozen date salad – Marjorie Strand 2nd – Tequila Berry Salad – Liz Stinar 3rd – Potato salad – Jeri Fjelstad There were 39 entries judged on taste, texture and creativity. Judges were Susie Snetsinger, Colleen Blattenbauer and Steve “Jodo” Goodwin. Breads & Rolls 1st – Frybread pockets – Dawn Londo 2nd – Cinnamon raisin biscuits – Teri Freyholtz 3rd – Marmalade Monkey Bread – Marjorie Strand DOVE Visitation & Safe Exchange “Our doors are now open!” The supervised Visitation and Safe Exchange program is located at the Community Service Center in Naytahwaush Call 1-800-763-8629 Ext. 3290 for an appointment or information All deadlines for the Anishinaabeg Today are strictly enforced! Deadlines are always listed on Page 2 on the lower left page 10 Anishinaabeg Today Council of Elders By Leonard Wells Council of Elders Chairman Summer is officially here at last and the wet spring is only a memory. This years Memorial Day services were well attended in White Earth and Waubun where I was. The American Legion, VFW and the Women’s Auxiliaries and the White Earth Honor Guard provided another moving service, Thank You! P.S. - The weather finally cooperated, with no rain or wind. The tribal elections went off without a hitch. I haven’t heard of any complaints. Now its time for the candidates to take down their campaign signs. We don’t want to look like it’s a never ending election time on the Rez. The White Earth Pow Wow was a little wet June 12 but it got better the next day. There seemed to me less dancers this year, weather and the economy was probably the reason. The new pow wow grounds makes it a lot less muddy on the rainy days. This year Wisdom Steps celebrated our 10th anniversary at the Black Bear Casino. The conference drew about 350 elders from around the state. The first night we had a feast provided by the Fond du Lac Wisdom Step group. Red Lake walleye was on the menu. After the feast we held a pow wow with many of the elders wearing their regalia. The break out sessions was well attended and very informative. I want to thank Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor for attending and the kind words she said about the Wisdom Steps program. It’s nice when our tribal leaders show an interest in our program Next year the White Earth Wisdom Steps group is going to go out and recruit elders 55 years and older to get involved in out preventive health care program. Believe me this program works, early detection has cured my cancer and kidney function problems. More on this next month. May was graduation time for the high schools and tribal collage. You elders out there, if you have any influence on any of our youth to get as much education as they can, please do so. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 WE ECFE/Head Start program offering summer fun The White Earth ECFE program will be offering two fun-weeks for children who will be entering Head Start for the first time. The children need to be age three before Sept. 1, 2010, or four years old if they’ve never been in Head Start. We would like to include the Pine Point area this year. The dates would be July 19-22 and July 26-29 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Transportation is available where feasible. Please fill out the following form and return to the White Earth Head Start by Wednesday, July 14. You can call Carolyn Williams at 218-983-3285 Ext. 1418 if you have any questions. Name of child: ________________________________Date of Birth:___________________________ Parent/guardian: _____________________________________________________________________ Address: ___________________________________________________________________________ Phone number: ______________________________________________________________________ Is your child on an IEP and/or any disability? Yes/No. If yes please comment: ___________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________ Oshkaabewisag Berry Camp opens for business The community is invited to participate in the Oshkaabewisag (servants of the community) Berry Camp on July 9-12. The camp is located just east of County Road 4 on Minnesota Highway 113. Signs will be posted. Camp rules/information - Evening hours are for adults to work on crafts, visit, and relax. Due to liabilities, no persons under 18 years old will be allowed out of the encampment area after hours. - Every day is busy, please be respectful of others trying to rest. - Teenagers staying up late are up to the discretion of those in charge of them. Again please be respectful. - Please refrain from abusive language and disrespectful behavior. No CD players, MP3s, or radios allowed. Please refrain from taking pictures without permission. - Camp is a primitive setting. Showers are available 15 miles away. Porta potties will be provided. Please bring tents, sleeping bags and bug spray. If you don’t have a tent we will plan on having wigwams built to accommodate. Please plan accordingly. - A limited number of rooms will be held for elders or participants physically unable to sleep on the ground. - We want to start saving on disposable items so we are encouraging those that have camping dishes and utensils to bring them. - No drug or alcohol use will be tolerated. Tentative schedule Story telling plant recognition, fish netting, birchbark basket making, berry picking, canoeing, canning, jelly-making and all other activities are defined as breakout sessions! Friday Please check in with staff for special concerns or needs (i.e. diabetes for food sources, handicap accommodations.) 7 p.m. - Light evening meal 8-9 p.m. - Socializing and Sacred Fire. Please no garbage or playing in the fire. Adults are responsible for tending fire. Saturday 7:30 a.m. - Breakfast. Teens please help serve Elders first! This will be a feast meal (will be explained) 9 a.m.- Introduction time for breakouts 9:30 a.m. -noon - Breakout sessions Noon - Meal l - 5 p.m. - Breakout sessions 5:30 p.m. - Evening meal 7-9 p.m. -Evening breakout session 9:30-10 p.m. - Bedtime for the little ones Sunday 7:30 a.m. - Breakfast 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. - Plant recognition and uses Noon - Meal 6 p.m. - Closing feast meal 7-9 p.m. - Evening breakout session 9:30-10 p.m. - Bedtime for the little ones Around the fire... Monday Light breakfast and prepare to travel homePlease help in picking up the camp area. Mission statement: To serve the community by sharing teachings that have been passed on to us. Through these teachings we hope to ensure a future rich on the memories and understandings of the past. We want to thank Kathy Hoagland. Her dream is our motivation. Come celebrate the vision she had for our people, working together, family involvement, and traditional values. Contact information Email [email protected] or call Bill Paulson at 218-850-9690. Donations are welcome Please send to Bill Paulson, PO Box 142, Waubun, MN 56589. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Mii-gii-way-win Advisory Board approves several donations for community needs The Mii-gii-way-win Advisory Board recently approved more than $21,000 in donations for May and June. The following are a sample of the requests they approved. $200 - Grad Bash 2010 - Detroit Lakes $1,000 - JOM Banquet - Mahnomen/Naytahwaush $2,000 - Mahnomen Area Baseball $2,500 - Waubun Summer Rec Program $1,500 - Annual Brain Conference - Mahnomen $250 - First Nations Youth Spirit Runs $500 - Take a Kid Fishing Day - White Earth Lake $500 - IHS Employee Association Wellness Fair $200 - Waubun HS Mock Crash $1,000 - WE Elders Fishing Day - Aug. 19-20 $1,000 - Waubun/Ogema Schools Peacemaker Program $1,000 - Waubun Area Mens Organization Pre- 11 Anishinaabeg Today Festival $500 - North Country Health Services Jingle Dress Healing Ceremonies - Bemidji The Mii-gii-way-win Advisory Board is committed to serving communities, through economic opportunities, that promote the enhancement of the quality life for tribal membership and their families. They work diligently to serve the needs of organizations and charities requesting a donation, through a fair and effective manner in order to ensure the preservation and respect of the Native culture. The board consists of associates from the White Earth Reservation Tribal Council departments and associates from the Shooting Star Casino, Hotel & Event Center. Funding is made possible by the joint effort of the White Earth Reservation Tribal Council and the Shooting Star Casino, Hotel & Event Center. Ojibwa Office Supplies Highway 59, Waubun, MN Phone: (218) 473-2146 Fax: (218) 473-2166 Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Located on Hwy 59, 1/4 mile south of Hwy 113 & 59 junction Single Source Supplier: Over 25,000 items available with FREE next day delivery! Savings TOOBIG to pass up WE ARE NOW DOING EMBROIDERY! - 2 Embroidery Machines Customized jackets, hats, blankets & more! Great for birthdays, anniversaries, baby shower, weddings or advertising your company or event. The possibilities are endless! We have blank jackets on hand or we can order from multiple catalogs and styles. The 3rd Annual Summer Wild Rice Round-Up will be held Aug. 20-22 at the Sandhill Bible Camp located six miles south of Fosston, Minn. Enjoy a scenic tour of Sand Hill Lake on a pontoon boat or walk the scenic beauty of the camp’s 212 acres of woodland and lake shore. Agenda Friday, Aug. 20 3 p.m. - Registration: Meet and greet 6 p.m. - Dinner 8 p.m. - AA speaker: Bridgette S., St. Paul, Minn. 10 p.m. - AA camp fire meeting Saturday, Aug. 21 9 a.m. - Breakfast 10 a.m. - Al-Anon speaker: Vickie S., Mandan, N.D. Noon - Lunch 1:30 p.m. - Open workshop 1:30 p.m. - Recreation options: swimming, volleyball, softball, fishing, horseshoes, canoeing, arts and crafts for kids. 4 p.m.- Al-Anon meeting 6:30 p.m. - Dinner 8 p.m. - AA speaker: Tobias S., Cass Lake, Minn. 10 p.m. - AA camp fire meeting Sunday, Aug. 22 8 a.m. - Breakfast 9:30 a.m. - AA speaker: Bob L., Thief River Falls, The White Earth Land Recovery Project celebrated the completion of a 75 kilowatt Lolland wind turbine on June 11 located on the north side of thier building in Callaway. The wind project is the first mid-scale wind project in the region. It will power the former Callaway Elementary School, and feed power back into the grid. “We are proud of our organization’s accomplishment in bringing green power to the town of Callaway, and look forward to a good working-relationship with Ottertail Power and other utilities,” said Executive Director Winona LaDuke.” The wind turbine, which was originally made in Lolland, Denmark, ran successfully for 20 years in southern California and was re-engineered by a set of experts from Servetech in Colorado, as well as Minn. 11 a.m. - Packing and farewells Items to bring: Bedding, towels, toiletries, coolers, ice, pop, snacks, appropriate clothing for warm days and cool nights. No pets allowed. Pre-registration The cost of the event is $75 per person before Aug. 6, or $85 after Aug. 7. $15 daily rate, $8 for each meal. White Earth Jackers also available! STOP IN AND SEE US TODAY! Phone: (218) 473-2146 / Fax: (218) 473-2166 Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. All handwritten submissions to the Anishinaabeg Today must be legible! Submissions that cannot be read will not be accepted. Lodging information Call 218-435-6100 for RV and camping information or www.sandhillbiblecamp.com Registration Charges $75 before Aug. 6, $85 after This includes lodging and all meals Daily rate: $15 plus $8 for each meal Registartion forms must be recieved by Aug. 6, your canceled check is your receipt. Contact Information Email: [email protected] Wild Rice Round-Up PO Box 203, Mahnomen, MN 56557 www.wildriceroundup.com Fred: 218-935-5007 Rosebud Sioux tribal member Anthony Tibbetts. “This project represents community wind, a way to generate income for local rural communities of northern Minnesota, and save the planet from global climate change,” said LaDuke. The turbine will offset 196 tons of carbon dioxide, which contributes to global climate change. The turbine was erected after numerous wind studies. The Project, as well as the White Earth Band of Ojibwe, hope to erect more wind turbines in the region. 1222 1st Street ~ Waubun Daily Lunch Specials & Hand-Made Pizza’s Bingo on Mondays & Fridays @ 6 p.m. - Be Early! Fridays WAMO Meat Raffle @ 5:30 p.m. Call (218) 473-2700 for Take Out Monday ~ Saturday 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday Night Buffet Barbecue ribs, rotisserie chicken, salad bar and baked potato Adults - $9.95 children under 12 - $5.95 Pappy’s is a Smoke-Free Restaurant 12 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 WE Reservation Tribal Government Inauguration - June 30 Photos by Gary W. Padrta Wednesday, July 7, 2010 13 Anishinaabeg Today Boys from Bagley” Win RL Softball Tourney BUILDING SUPPLIES, INC. Open Monday - Friday: 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. “FREE DELIVERY” Bender book available in paperback Submitted photos The Rice Lake community held their first softball tournament on their new field June 6. There were a total of four teams in the tournament and the top two winners were awarded trophies. Many excited spectators watched the final game for first place, which was played during the rain. First place went to the Boys from Bagley and second went to the Rice Lake Natives. Top: Boys from Bagley. Back row from left are Stephen Stevens, Cole Young, Dustin Van'tHul, Patrick Thompson, Austin Bellefy, Travis Weaver. Front row from left are Nick Neeland, Jess Dukek, Lucas Stevens, Trevor Braaten, and Tyler George. Bottom: Rice Lake Natives. Back row from left are Troy Donavan, Harry Stevens, Ross Beaulieu, James Hvezda, Shane Gray, and James “Fred” Frederick. Front row from left are Jerry Hvezda, Louis Fox, Charles Hvezda, Randy Stevens, and Alex Greene. ME-GWITCH I would like to say ME-GWITCH to all my supporters who got me through another election. I am honored to serve District I again and I will try my best to represent you. Please let me know how I can help your village or individually. If anyone needs to get in contact with me call 218-204-1234. I will be taking some time off in mid July, and also have numerous physical therapy and doctor visits, so if you dont reach me, leave a message. On June 26, I celebrated my 58th birthday and my 14th anniversary of being on the Council. I was sworn in on my birthday the first time. It was a good day and received many wishes and greetings from friends and family. Everyone please have an enjoyable summer and be safe. District I Representative Irene “Rene” Auginaush Chief Bender’s Burden, an award-winning book by Minnesota author Tom Swift, is now available in paperback from Bison Books. The Chicago Sun-Times called Chief Bender's Burden: The Silent Struggle of a Baseball Star a “gem.” The book was featured in the Washington Post and on Salon.com, and received a rare “starred review” from Library Journal. The book won the 2009 Seymour Medal, which honors the best book of baseball history published during the preceding calendar year. “For a Minnesota baseball fan,” writes Nick Coleman in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, “[Chief Bender’s Burden] is must reading.” The book tells the true story of Charles Albert Bender, the first Minnesota-born man inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and the most accomplished American Indian baseball player of all time. Using a trademark delivery, an assortment of pitches that may have included the game’s first slider, and an unflappable demeanor, Bender earned a reputation as baseball’s foremost clutch pitcher while performing in front of boisterous World Series crowds. But the book is about more than baseball, as “Chief” Bender’s storied career unfolded in the face of immeasurable prejudice. Chief Bender’s Burden is also a portrait of greatness of character maintained despite incredible pressure — of how a celebrated man thrived while carrying an untold weight on his shoulders. Don Shelby, speaking on WCCO Radio, described the book as a work of “unbelievable storytelling.” Says the Sun-Times: “A wonderful and impressively thorough new biography... Swift’s mission is to reassert Bender as an important figure in the history of the game, both as a player and a groundbreaking figure. His book does well in both ways.” Swift is an award-winning author and award-winning journalist who lives with his wife in Northfield, Minn. DEA Hotline Report illegal sales of prescription drugs to the DEA hotline at 1-877-RxAbuse (1-877-792-2873) 14 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Circle of Life School Reading Contest It’s now time to prepare for the 2010-2011 School Year by completing the following reading challenge Each 5th - 12th grade student who is registered as a full-time student of Circle of Life School by the 1st day of school (Sept. 7) can earn entries into a drawing to be held at the welcome back school picnic. In addition, one parent, guardian or adult relative who helps the student will also earn drawing tickets. To enter students must complete the following: 1. Read one article from the Anishinaabeg Today (or any other newspaper) that is at least three paragraphs long. Or, read three short articles. 2. Answer the following questions for each of three paragraphs in a long article or for each of three short articles that you read: a. Name the most important who or what in the paragraph. b. Tell the most important thing about the who or what. c. Say the main idea in 10 words or less. 3. Write your name and the name of the adult who helped you at the top of your paper and return it with the article or articles to Circle of Life School. a. Bring all of the articles that you have completed to school the 1st day, b. Drop your articles off at school any time during the summer. c. Mail your articles to the school. Example: b. c. Circle of Life School Attn: Wanda Goodwin, 36274 County Hwy. 21, White Earth, MN 56591 Name:___________________________ Adult Helper:_____________________ Title of Article: ____________________ Responses for each paragraph or short article: Paragraph 1 (title of short article) a. b. c. Paragraph 2 (title of short article) a. b. c. Paragraph 3 (title of short article) a. - You MUST attach one long or three short articles and return to Wanda at COL - COL staff tallies up drawing tickets for each entry: - Student receives one drawing ticket. - Adult helper receives one drawing ticket - Received by Aug. 30, 2010, the adult helper receives an additional drawing ticket. You may complete the above for more than one entry! Canoe Winners Photo by Megan Bakken The 2010 Tribal Canoe Drawing sponsored by the White Earth Natural Resource Department and the Shooting Star Casino was held June 10 at the Shooting Star Casino Event Center. Winners from left are Althea Hutchinson, Sandra St.Clair, John Annette, Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor (drew names), Nathan LaFriniere, and Jim LaFriniere. Not pictured: John Boudreau. Wisdom Steps About 25 White Earth elders attended the 10th annual Wisdom Steps Conference June 15-17 at Black Bear Casino Resort. Top: Lucille Silk, Leonard Wells and Bev Karsten were three of 17 WE elders that received Pendleton blankets for attending all 10 conferences. Left: Olympic great Billy Mills, a guest speaker at the conference gives Helen Butcher a hug. Submitted photos Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today Reach for the Sky Program nearly goes to the edge of outer space with homemade spacecrafts By Stephan Carlson University of Minnesota On June 9, 50 4th-8th grade students from the summer’s “Reach for the Sky” Science and Math Academy on the White Earth Indian Reservation cheered as their home-made spacecrafts went where few have gone before, without space suits and years of training. The students launched science experiments to the edge of outer space (“near-space” - the upper reaches of the atmosphere, above 80,000 feet) with 30 or more experiments that they built to test science theories and to apply hands-on science and math to their world. The on-board cameras documented the view from so high in the atmosphere that the sky was black even in the daytime, and the curve of the Earth was visible. The Reach for the Sky program launched the experimental payloads on two large helium-filled weather balloons early on June 9, from the town of Felton, northeast of Moorhead and 30 miles west of the White Earth Reservation. The two balloons carried eight student-built miniature spacecrafts, with about five science sensors (temperature, pressure, relative humidity, Geiger counter and solar panel’s) plus a camera in each one, as well as tracking radios. The students worked in teams on June 7-8 to build their flying spacecraft laboratories and outfit them with sensors and cameras. The data they collected was sent down by radio to computers on the ground, and downloaded once the payloads were retrieved. The students used the data to present a science fair poster at the end of the summer program’s feast on June 30. In addition, students and adults signed a small card that was a stowaway in each spacecraft for a lifetime memento of the flight. Working with university students from the University of Minnesota’s High Altitude Balloon Team, the White Earth students will be using the data to address questions that they set out to answer earlier in the week when they built their experiments. “What does the landscape look like from that height?” and “Are we really facing global climate change?” and “How does the sun’s radiation change as we go up?” and “How does the temperature change with the changes in atmospheric pressure?” are just some of the questions students will be trying to answer with the data. The balloons have GPS units on them for tracking and were recovered after the flight by the University’s High Altitude Balloon team, directed by Professor James Flaten from the Minnesota Space Grant Consortium. The National Science Foundation funded Reach for the Sky project is in its third year of providing culturally relevant STEM activities for American Indian students on the White Earth Reservation. The multidisciplinary team is lead by Drs Gillian Roehrig and Moore (co-directors of the STEM Education Center) and Dr. Stephan Carlson (Extension) and includes faculty and students from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities College of Education and Human Development, Extension, College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences, and the College of Science and Engineering as well as the University of Minnesota Crookston departments of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Admissions Office, GreenCorps and the University of Minnesota Extension Regional Office. Additional funding was provided by a Ramp up to Readiness grant from the University of Minnesota to provide career and college information to student related to STEM careers associated with the STEM content taught. Photo by Stephan Carlson Fifty 4th-8th grade students from the summers “Reach for the Sky” Science and Math Academy on the White Earth Reservation launched science experiments to the edge of outer space with 30 or more experiments they built to test science theories. The on-board cameras documented the view from so high in the atmosphere that the sky was black in the daytime, and the curve of the Earth was visible. 15 16 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today White Earth Natural Resources staff earn NAFWS national honors Three staff members of the White Earth Natural Resources Department received honors during the 2010 Native American Fish and Wildlife Society (NAFWS) National Conference June 6 at the Black Bear Casino and Resort in Carlton, Minn. White Earth Conservation Chief Alfred Fox Jr., and Conservation Officer Ron Warren received the Patricia Zakovek Memorial Award for Conservation Officer of the Year. White Earth Fisheries staff member Gerald “Jeep” Roberts won the Technician of the Year. “It was a great honor to receive the Patricia Zakovek Memorial Conservation Officer of the Year Award at the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society’s National Conference,” said Fox. “I would like to thank all of the White Earth Conservation Officers for their hard work and dedication to the preservation of our natural resources. Without their assistance, this job wouldn’t be possible.” Fox also wanted to thank his family. “They play a big part in my job. Without their understanding and acceptance of my career choice, none of this would be possible.” Fox also congratulates Warren for receiving the same award for his hard work, and also to Roberts for receiving the Technician of the Year award. “I would also like to thank White Earth Natural Resources Director Mike Swan for nominating the three of us for these prestigious awards,” concluded Fox. Photos by Gary W. Padrta Top: Back row from left are Ralph Goodman, Housing, Dean Bellanger, Housing, Matt Gordon, Gordon Constriction, Fred Fox Sr., Housing Board, Vern Hunter, Hunter-Grobe Archcritics/Planners, and Richard Fox, Housing. Front row from left are Tara Mason, Human Services Director, Ivy Ailport, DOVEProgram, Terry Tibbetts, District II Rep., Bud Heisler, Secretary-Treasurer, Erma J. Vizenor, White Earth Chairwoman, Donna Fairbanks, Housing Board, Loretta Gjerde, DOVE Manager. Bottom: White Earth DOVE staff members from left are Jodie, Tanya, Kristi, Fran, Loretta, Ivy, Sonia and Julie. Womens Shelter A dream becomes a reality for DOVE staff By Gary W. Padrta Anishinaabeg Today Submitted photos Top: From left are White Earth Conservation Officers Al Fox Jr., Ron Warren, Richard Fox, and Sheila LaFriniere. Fox and Warren were named NAFWS Conservation Officers of the Year. Bottom: White Earth Natural Resources Director Mike Swan congratulates Gerald “Jeep” Roberts for winning Technician of the Year. On a cold and windy summer day, the community gathered June 2 to break ground for a new $1.1 million Women’s Shelter. “I want to thank the White Earth Housing Board. This project needed constant persistence and without it we would have fallen off the radar screen,” said White Earth Chairwoman Erma J. Vizenor. “This is a good day!” District II Representative Terry Tibbetts thanked everyone for their “hard work and effort to get this Women’s Shelter up and running. It’s very much needed here on the reservation. Let’s get the ball rolling and take off with it.” Loretta Gjerde, manager of the White Earth DOVE program, knows all to well how important this shelter is to women who need a safety zone. “I want to thank Housing for writing the grant to make this possible. We’ve been working with Housing for a long time and now we are looking forward to getting this shelter going.” The new 9,000 square foot Women’s Shelter facility will be built south of the White Earth Health Center and the M&W store. The facility will include eight living quarters, communal living room and dining room areas along with a full kitchen and seven offices for support and staff. The shelter was designed by HunterGrobe Architects/Planners and is expected to be completed in June 2011. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today B&G Club Members Visit Black Hills 17 WE 142nd Celebration and Pow Wow Submitted photo The Boys and Girls Club of White Earth Reservation Rice Lake Unit would like to say thank you to those who made it possible for us to go on a South Dakota trip June 23. There was a total of 16 youth and five chaperones. We would like to say thank you to White Earth Tribal Council, Rene Auginaush, Rice Lake Community Council, White Earth Transit and our dedicated bus driver, Barry Miller. It was a long 14-hour drive, but it was well worth it. Last but not least the Boys and Girls Club staff, LaRae Stevens, Angela Neeland and especially James Hvezda who did the organization of this trip - thank you! This trip was an opportunity for the kids to see Mount Rushmore and Crazy Horse Monument, we also watched a laser light show on Crazy Horse Mountain, it was spectacular. RTC staff say goodbye to Bud Heisler The White Earth RTCstaff held a goodbye potluck for outgoing SecretaryTreasurer Bud Heisler on June 29 at the RTC building. Top: District II Rep. Terry Tibbetts hands Heisler a fishing rod and tackle box. Right: Heisler and his wife, Dorothy start the food line. Photos by Gary W. Padrta Photos by Gary W. Padrta 18 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 19 Anishinaabeg Today Where are you! Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians is tracking down WE enrollees The following White Earth enrolled members are identified as Whereabouts Unknown at the Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians (OST). These individuals have an Individual Indian Monies (IIM) account at OST. The listing includes those members that do not have a current address and OST has been unable to locate. Individuals that are on the list or know of someone on the list should call 218751-4338, or stop by the OST office in Bemidji, or mail a letter to the address listed below. Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians Minnesota Agency, 522 Minnesota Avenue NW Room 304 Bemidji, MN 56601 Editor’s note: If you have questions on an IIM account please call the OST office. The Anishinaabeg Today doesn’t have additional information besides what’s listed in this newspaper. BROWN/O'NEILL, CARLENE (COLEEN RENE) ACKLEY, CLIFFORD ADAMS, DALE L ADAMS, GENEVA ADAMS, JUNE ADAMS, LAVONNE M ADAMS, NATHAN J ADAMS, WILLIAM L ADAMS ESTATE, SEAN E ADAMS JR, JOSEPH S AJOOTIAN, JOLENE A ALCALA, JAY A ALEXANDER, WAYNE L ALVARADO, LORENZA LOUISE ALVARADO, PETER ALVARES, ARTHUR L ALVAREZ, WILMA A ALVERADO JR, RAMIRO ALVORD, PETER L ALVORD GREEN MCBROOM, KATHRYN AMOROSO, CRAIG AMOROSO, JAMES ANDERSON, BETTY E ANDERSON, CHARLOTTE G ANDERSON, JOHN R ANDERSON, JOSEPHINE A ANDERSON, MARION J ANDREWS, ALFRED N ANDREWS, JULIE S ANDREWS, MICHAEL G ANTELL, TERRY L ANUNDSON, STEVEN ANYWAUSH, STEPHEN D ARENDSEE, LORRAINE ARMSTRONG, DYAN R ARMSTRONG, MANUAL MARTIN ARNESON, DIANE ARTHUR, ALFRED ARTHUR, ALFRED L ARTHUR, RAYMOND F SR ARTISHON, BARTHOLOMEW ARTISHON NEWBERT, EVA (EVANGELINE) ARTISHON PFEFFER, RUTH ARVESON, LINDA R ASHER, LOIS K ASHING, JODY ASPINWALL, MAURICE ATKINSON, KAYE R ATKINSON, LINDA M AUGINAUSH, GERTRUDE AUGINAUSH, SANDRA MARIE AUGINAUSH JR, KENNETH L AUGUSTINE, PAUL AUTMAN, SHIRLEY AXDAHL SR, DUANE A AZZOLINA, ROSALIE SMITH BACH, CAROLYN S BACKS, MARY A BADBOY, DUANE F BADBOY (WILEY), ELIZABETH ISABELLE BAITY ESTATE, CHRISTINE BAKER, BONITA O BALLANGER, KATHERINE R BARKER, JUANITA L BARNES, MICHAEL J BARNES, RACHEL A BARNETT, MICKAEL A BARNETT, SANDRA T BARRELL, FRANCIS C BARRETT, PAMELA J BARTSCH, SHIRLEY J BASSWOOD, SUZANNE J BAUMBAUGH JR, ROBERT R BAUMBAUGH-BROWNLEE, KATHLEEN F BAUMGARTNER, JANICE BAUMGARTNER, RONALD C BEAN, EMILY J BEANE, ARDICE N BEAUCHAMP, GEORGE F BEAUDOIN, SHIRLEY BEAUDREAU, ANDREW BEAUDREAU, AREY M BEAUDREAU, MARIA BEAULIEU, BRENDAN DARRYL ANTONIO BEAULIEU, JILL M BEAULIEU, LARRY L BEAULIEU, MARGARET R BEAULIEU, MYLES E BEAULIEU, PATRICIA C BEAULIEU, RENAE A BEAUPRE, MARGARET SANTWEIR BECKER, GARY W BECKSTROM, DONNA BEDAUSKY, MARY ANN BEDEAU, ORLA BELL, MARSHALL BELLAND, MICHAEL K BELLAND, SCOTT BELLANGER, BEVERLY J BELLANGER, DEREK BELLANGER, FRANK N BELLANGER, GROVER W BELLANGER, JON L BELLANGER, LESLIE J BELLANGER, PETER H BELLANGER, PETER JOSEPH BELLANGER DOHRING, DEBORAH LYNN BELLANGER GARVIE, ESTATE OF ALICE BELLANGER JR, EDWARD R BELLANO, CARRIE BELLECOURT, ALBERT A BELLECOURT, CLYDE H BELLECOURT, JOHN C BELLECOURT, MARK ANTHONY BELLECOURT BROSCHOFSKY, LANA F BELLECOURT COOK, LADONNA SUE BELLECOURT JOHNSON, WENDY MARIE BELLEFEUILLE JR, RAY BEMENT, KEVIN B BEMENT, MERRI C BEMENT, RICHARD A BENDER, MARY A BENDER, MELODY K BENDER, RITA K BENDER, STEVEN C BENSON, BRADLEY A BENTLEY, SANDRA K BENZINGER, MARILYN BERINGER, BRADLEY O BERLOWE, PHYLLIS J BERRY SR, CHARLES F BEVINS, JAMES EDWARD BEVINS, JAMES V BIETH, DELRINE E BIG BEAR, EVERETT BIGBEAR, DENNIS JAMES BIGBEAR, HARLAN D BIGBEAR, KATHERINE M BIGBEAR, WILLIAM BIGBEAR BENJAMIN, SANDRA JO BILLISON, BERNICE BISHOP BISHOP, LOUIS J BISHOP, MARIE M BISHOP, PETER BISSON, MIKE A BISSON, PETE F BJORGE, RITA L BLACKETTER, BRIAN K BLACKETTER, JENNIFER M BLACKETTER, KAREN BLAIR, DANIEL BLAIR, DAVID J BLAIR, GLORIA J BLAIR, JAMES E BLAIR, TERI J BLAIR, TIMOTHY A BLAKLEY, PAMELA K BLANCHARD, BEAULAH LUCILLE BLANCHARD, MARK RANDAL BLANCHARD, RICHARD BLANCHARD JR, KENNETH BLOMQUIST, JILL BLONDIN, CLIFFORD T BLONDIN, GREGORY P BLUE, ELEANE E BLUE, KEVIN J BLUE, MELVIN S BODDEN, MICHAEL J BOGGS, JOHN BOLIN, WILBUR R BONGA, DONALD E BONGA, RAYMOND EDWARD BONGA, RUTH MARIE BONNEVILLE, LEONARD P BOONE, VICTOR W BOOS, SANDRA BORAH, MICHAEL W BOSWELL, BETTY J BOSWELL, CHARLES W BOSWELL, DAVID J BOSWELL, EDITH M BOSWELL, GERALD BOSWELL, JOJO BOSWELL, KATHERINE BOSWELL, LINDA L BOSWELL, LORI R BOSWELL, MAVIS A BOSWELL, MAXINE MARIE BOSWELL, RICHARD R BOSWELL, WILLIAM M BOTOSHE, GEORGE BOTOSHE, LILY BOTOSHE, LORETTA BOWEN, STACIE BOWER, DAVID J BOWER JR, ORVILLE E BOYD, JACQUELINE BOYER, CYNTHIA L BOYNTON JR, ALBERT LONG BRADSHAW, DAVID W BRAHMER, FRANK H BRAMAN JR, HUBERT L BRANDENBURG, CONSTANCE M BRANDONBURG, VON S BRAUNSCHWEIG, CHARLES E BRAZILE, BRANDON KEITH BRECENITCH, ELIZABETH A BREYETTE, SHARON K BRISK JR, ROY BROKER, DONALD BROOKS, SHERYL S BROWN, BRADFORD JAMES BROWN, CARMEN RITA BROWN, CYNTHIA BROWN, DEREK LEE BROWN, DESIRAE M BROWN, EDWARD J BROWN, EST OF HOUSTON CLYDE BROWN, FRANKLIN JAMES BROWN, JAIME D BROWN, JENNIFER L BROWN, MARY K BROWN, MICHELLE LYNN BROWN ESTATE, DOMINIC A BROWN ESTATE, ROBERT P BROWN JR, JULIUS EDWARD BROWN, JR, ROBERT D. BROWN/KELLING, JUDITH BROWNELL, FRANK LEE BROWNELL ROGERS, PATRICIA LYNN BRTEK, RAYMOND BRUCE, LENORA B BRUGUIER, ROBERTA J BRUMOVSKY, PAULA BRUNELLE, MARSHALL S. BRUNELLE, TIMOTHY T. BRUNETTE, ANNIE S BRUNETTE, FLORENCE BRUNETTE, IRVIN BRUNETTE, IVER BRUNETTE, MARCEL B BRUNETTE, RUTH (TURNQUIST) BRUNNER, ALBERT L BRUNNER, DEBORAH J BRUNNER, KENNETH JEROME BRUNNER, MICHELLE FAY BRUSVEN, DELORIS A. BRUSVEN HOYT, SUZAN L. BRUSVEN NELSON, SANDRA L. BRUSVEN, JR, ERNEST A. BRYAN, HARRIET L BUCHOLTZ, DEBRA L BUCKANAGA, SANDRA K BUCKANAGA, STACY BUCKLEY, MARY V BUCKLEY, PATRICK J BUCKLEY, THOMAS R BUDREAU, ELSIE J BUDREAU, HAROLD C BUDREAU, LINDA D BUDROW, CAROL S BUDROW, EPHRIAM BUDROW, JOHN BUDROW, JOSEPH BUDROW, LOUIS BUDROW, MERVIN L BUDROW, MICHAEL L BUDROW, WILLIAM BUEHNER, RUBY BUHL, PAUL A 20 BULAU, ANTHONY R BULAU, ELIZABETH M BULAU, THOMAS N BUNKER, GEORGETTE M BUNKER, MARY A BUNKER, MYRN L BUNKER, RANDY BUNKER, RHONDA F BURCH, LOUIS L BURKE, MICHELLE R BURLESON, DUANE J BURNETTE, BETH BUROLA, EDWARD C BURROWS, MARY E. BUSH, NORMA BUTCHER, KAREN S BUTCHER, LEONARD BUTCHER, RONALD D. CALDWELL, ELIZABETH CAMERON, LYDIA CAMPBELL, FRANCIS J CAMPBELL, FRANK J CANTON, ROSA L CAPPS, STEVEN R CARDINAL, CECEILIA E CARDINAL, JOSEPH L CARLE, MERCEDES CARLSON, CAROL J. CARLSON, GREGORY A CARLSON, MICHAEL ALAN CARLSON, NAOMI J CARRANZA-GARCIA, DAWN P CASEY, WILLIAM T CASSAWAY, KRISTINA K. CHAMPAGNE, LORETTA D CHAMPION II, JAMES H CHANDLER, CHRISTOPHER J CHANDLER, JUDITH A CHARBONEAU, AMANUAL J CHARBONEAU, WILLIAM CHARBONEAU JR, WILLAIM J CHARETTE, BRUCE D CHARETTE, DOUGLAS J CHARETTE, GLEN M CHARMICHAEL, DEANNA CHELSEY, KENNETH WAYNE CHICHESTER, DENNIS G CHRISTIANSON, PHYLLIS N CHRISTIANSON, PHYLLIS N R CHRISTIANSON, RENEE J CHRISTOFFERSON, RENEE BELLECOURT CHRISTOPHERSON, JOANN CLARK, CARMEN CLARK, CONRAD E CLARK, DANETTE JOY CLARK, EILEEN M CLARK, JOSE LUY CLARK, KEITH L CLARK, KEVIN A CLARK, LAVONNE L CLARK, LOUIS V CLARK, PATRICK CLARK, ROBERT E CLARK ROBINSON, ANGELA JO CLAUSEN, ROXANNE CLAUSING, VIOLET R CLEMENT, DARLENE M COCHARANE, MARJORIE COFFEY, RUSSELL W COGGER, DENNIS J COLEMAN, HERBERT COLEMAN, PAUL ALAN COLEMAN, RONALD CHARLES COLLAS, JAMES COLLETT, GARNET L COLOSIMO, NORMAN G COLSRUD, JOSEPH D COLTON, JUDY A COLUMBUS, JILL A COLUMBUS, WILLARD CONAWAY, MICHAEL LLOYD (LENES) CONGER WARREN, MARY ANN CONKLIN, JENNINE F. CONLEY, SARAH Anishinaabeg Today CONNORS, ROCHELLE CONTERAS, ALVINA CONWAY, BARBARA COOK, MARIETTA T COOKMAN, LULU M COOPER, ANNE M CORBETT LAWSON, DOROTHY CORDELIA WEAVER, NELLIE CORLISS, ALICE COULSON, RAYMOND A COUNTRYMAN, KATHLEEN D COVEL, MICHAEL J COX, SHEILA CRAWFORD, SUSAN CROW, JEREMIAH J CROW, MONEKEE L CURTIS, WALTER L CYR, RUTH L DAKOTA, ALAN D DAKOTA, ALISON K DAKOTA, BEVERLY DAKOTA, CHAD EVERETT DAKOTA, DEBRA KAYE DAKOTA, DONALD HOWARD DAKOTA, DONNA MAE DAKOTA, GARY J DAKOTA, JEAN MARIE DALE, CLARENCE W DALE, CLIFFORD DALE, HOLLIE M DALE, VICKI L DANTIN, JAMES T DAVENPORT, MARTIN DAVIS, JAMES DAVIS, JEFFREY D. DAWLEY, JESSIE M DAWSON, DEBRA A DAY, DENNIS S DAY, RALPH DEAN, DONNA J. DECOSTE, DEBRA DEEGAN ESTATE OF, CHARLES A DEEGAN SR, BYRON GEORGE DEMARRE, KIMBERLY L DEMARRIS JR, DONALD DEMERS, BERNICE DENIS SAILOR, RENITA DENNY, PATRICK V DENOMIE, DOROTHY A DERUYTTER, MAGGIE DEYOUNG, SHEILA K. DIAL, MARY K DIAZ, ADELINE G DISE, SHARON M DOJAN, KIMBERLY DONALD, ROY DOOLEY, EDWARD T DOUGHERTY, DIANE M DOUGHERTY, PATRICK J DOWNEY, CHARLOTTE DOWNEY, MONICA DOYLE, ADELINE M DROBNICK, HAZEL B DUFFY, CLYDE DUHANT, TRACY L EARTH, RHONDA J EGGERS, ROBERT H ELLIS, BELLE ELLIS, JOSEPH M ELLIS, VIRGIL L ELLIS, WILLIAM F ENGELKE, CHERYL A ENGLISH, CHARICE I ENGLISH, MICHELLE L ENGLISH, YVONNE R ENGLUND, E ERB, MILES R ERB, STEPHEN ERB, WESLEY SHAWN ERION (HEDMAN), SUZANNE MARIE ERLAUER, MARJORIE A ERNSTER IIII, JOAN BEVERLY ESQUEDA, PAULA MARIE EVANS, THOMAS B EVANS LOUN, INEZ JANE EVERS, THEODORE H FAIRBANKS, ANNIE E FAIRBANKS, BERMAN H FAIRBANKS, BEVERLY A FAIRBANKS, CECELIA J FAIRBANKS, CLARENCE G FAIRBANKS, DAVID FAIRBANKS, DEBRA LYNN FAIRBANKS, DEONAKA LEE FAIRBANKS, JAMES D FAIRBANKS, JUDITH ANN FAIRBANKS, LAUREL ANN FAIRBANKS, LEONARD FAIRBANKS, LYLE A FAIRBANKS, MARILYN G FAIRBANKS, MARY P FAIRBANKS, RICHARD FAIRBANKS, RUSSELL D. FARRELL, DENNIS J FARRELL, RANDY B FARRELL, ROBERT A FARRELL, TIMOTHY J FAUSFEATHER, NICHOLAS FAVORITE, MARY FEE, SYLVIA R FELIX, MARIAN FERGUSON, GLEN FERGUSON, JOAN FERGUSON, RUTH L FINCH, ELAINE M FINEDAY, DOUGLAS JEROME FINEDAY, GEORGE RAMOND FINEDAY, HERBERT DALE FINEDAY, LAURIE ANN FINEDAY, MICHAEL TODD FINEDAY, PATRICIA J FINEDAY, RONALD JAMES FISHER SR, GLEN B FITZGERALD, CHARLES F FITZGERALD, FRANCES P FITZGERALD, KENT W FITZGERALD, ROBERT R FLEMING, JACOB L FLORES, AGNES ANN FLORES, GILBERT FLORES, PEDRO JR FOLSTROM, MARCIA FOLSTROM, MARCY H FOLZ, MELISSA F FONTANILLA, GERI L FOOTE, LIZETTE B FORSBERG, ROBERT V FOSTER, DOREEN R FOX, CAT D FOX, JAMES FOX, JAMES E FOX, JOHN FOX, MALIA K FOX, NORMAN E FOX, RICHARD W FOYE, GERRY JEFFREY FRENCH, GEORGE L FRENCH, ROBERT L. FRESTEDT, GLORIA L FURBER, DOROTHY I GALLO, ELIZABETH GALLUP, BEVERLY GARBOW, CLIFFORD G GARBOW, DANIEL OWEN GARBOW, TINA M GARBOW, TINA MARIE GARCIA, DAVID D GARDEN, WARREN WALLACE GARDNER SCHOENBORN, AGNES GARDEN GARVIE, BARBARA A GARVIE, BARBARA E GARVIE, JOHN R GENSMEN, DEBBIE GERKE, SHANYN GERLACH, PATRICIA L GHEEN, JULIA GIFFEN, LAURIE M GIFFIN, MARIE J Wednesday, July 7, 2010 GILANE, MARIE GILBERTSON, BETTY J GLASGOW, LOIS J GLASS, DEAN E GLASS, JEREMY N GLEASON, DEBBIE A GLOPPEN, ROBERTA M. GOMEZ, MARLENE JOYCE GONZALES, WENDY GONZALEZ, PHILIP GOODBOE, SANDRA L GOODIN, CYNTHIA L GOODMAN, BETTY GOODMAN, CAROLINE GOODMAN, GENEVIEVE GOODMAN, JOE GOODMAN, JOHN L GOODMAN, LAJUANA T GOODMAN, RICK GOODMAN, ROBERT GOODWIN, CATHERINE GOODWIN, FRED GOODWIN, NICOLE A GOODWIN, VERNE S GORDON, DONALD W GORDON, JOHN J GORDON JR, HAROLD R GORR, SCOTT A GORTON, RUSSELL K GRACYALNY, JANET GREEN, M GREENER, RODNEY D. GREENE, SHAWN D GREGORY JOHNSON, TONY GROVE, GOLDIE M GUINN, JOHN J GULBRANDSEN, ANDREA F GUSTOFSON, ARNEY GUYON, ANN M GUYON, GREGORY C GUYON, MARY A (WATKINS) GUYON, RICHARD T HAFNER, MICHAEL HAGEN, DEBRA A HAGEN, SHELLEY E HALL, KIM M HANLON, CAROL HANSEN, SANDRA K HANSON, DARLENE A HANSON, JAMIE HARDMAN, LEONARD HARDMAN, WILLIAM HARDMAN, WILLIAM G HARDY, JANICE HARDY, KARLA K. HARFIELD, DONALD HARFIELD, DWAYNE HARLAND, ROY HART, WILLIAM J HATHAWAY, MARK S HAYNES, BRIAN G HEACOCK ESTATE, MAYFRED E HEAVENRIDGE, PATRICIA HEDICAN, BEVERLY J HEIN, CHARLES HEINKEL, WALTER D HEINONEN, JEANETTE DOREEN HEISLER, DONAVAN V HEISLER, JOLENE L HEISLER, MARY L HELMS, YVONNE ANN HELPS, DONALD E HELPS, HARRY E HENDRIX, WILLIAM T HENRY, CLIFFORD HENRY, ERNIE HENRY, FREDERICK HENRY, HELEN M HENRY, MARY J HENRY, WILSON HENRY AKA COURCHENE, SARAH HERDEGEN ESTATE, RUTH ANN HERMANSON, DORTHY HERNANDEZ, MARY L Wednesday, July 7, 2010 HIGGINS, LORINDA M HILDEBRAN, JESSE J HILDEN, HARRY J HILL, CHERYL D HILL, DAVID D HILL, DUANE R HILL, LYNETTE D HILL, ROBERT D HILL, RONALD J HINES, JACQUELINE A HINTSALA, KENNETH W HOFF, SAMUEL J HOFFMANN, MARY K HOGAN, GARY F HOLLAND, DIANNE M HOLSTEIN, CALVIN A HOLSTEIN, STANLEY L HOLSTINE, MILTON D HOLSTINE (HOLSTEIN), CALVIN A HOLT, PAMELA J. HOLTE, PATRICIA B HOOPES, JUDITH ARIANNE HOPFNER, PATRICK W HOPFNER, RICKY T HOUGH, BEVERLY HOUGH, DEBRA J HOUGH, JENNIFER L HOUGH, SANDRA K HOUGH, TREVIN A HOUGH, TRISH A HOUGH, TRISTAN J HOULE, DONALD A HOULE, MICHAEL J HOWARD, BONNIE J HOWARD, JOHN T HOWARD, REBECCA J HOWARD, SHANNON M HOWARD, STEVEN J HOWE. GEORGIA E HOWELL, MICHAEL J HOWELL, PAUL N HOWG, CYNTHIA L (PERRAULT) HUFF, MATTHEW C HUGHES, SOPHIA V HUMPHREY, DEBORAH HUSS, JEREMY HUSS, SHAWN HUSS, TARI L HUSS-SOLOMON, DARLA JANE HUTSON, RUTH HUTSON, SANDRA L HUTTON, LINDA J ILLI, JOAN B IRON SHIELD, NOREEN SUE ISAIS, EDITH C ISHAM, FRANCIS P ISHAM, ROMMAINE S ISHAM, ROMONA W JACKSON, CYNTHIA JACKSON, DELORES JACKSON, DELORIS V JACKSON, ERNEST A JACKSON, FRANCINE L JACKSON, HARLAN D. JACKSON, ROGER JACOBSON, EUGENE M. JACOBSON, SOPHIA JACOBY, ERNEST JACOBY JR, ROBERT F JAHNKE SAUCK, ROSETTA DARLENE JAMES, JEFFREY J JAMES, JOSEPH B JAMES, SHARON KAY JANOUSEK, DORIS JANOUSK, LINDA JANSSEN, EVERETTE S JEFFREY, TAMMY JENKINS, JENNIFER J JENKINS, MARY L JIMENEZ, CHERYL L JOHNSON, BRIAN S JOHNSON, CYNTHIA JOHNSON, DAVID JOHNSON, DEBORAH A 21 Anishinaabeg Today JOHNSON, DEBORAH T JOHNSON, ELMER JOHNSON, FRANK LEE JOHNSON, HARRY JOHNSON, IRA JOHNSON, JAMES JOHNSON, JAMES L JOHNSON, JESSICA RAE JOHNSON, JULIE A JOHNSON, NORBERT JOHNSON, NORENE JOHNSON, VERNIE W JOHNSON JR, WALTER T JOHNSON KIER, DARLENE JOHNSON ROUSU, DOLORES JOHNSON SARGENT, KATHRYN J JOHNSON SR, JOHN JOHNSON-BEMIS, CECELIA L JONES, ADABELLE L JONES, BRANDY D JONES, EDWARD J JONES, ELIZABETH JONES, GEORGE WILBURN JONES, HAROLD JONES, HOWARD JONES, WALLACE PATRICK JORGENSEN, ROBIN C JORGENSON, STACY JOSLIN, CORRINA L JOSTEN, ADELLE A JOURDAIN FAVORITE, ESTATE OF LOIS N JURINA, RICHARD B JURINA, VERONICA L KAISER, BARBARA KAISER, BARBARA M KASTE, DENISE LOUISE KAWAKAMI, JEANETTE KAY JOHNSON, ENNETTE KEELER, STEVEN KEEN, KAREN KEEZER, ANDREA L KEEZER, HENRY KELLEY, AVA ELIZABETH KELLEY, EILEEN M KENNEDY, MICHAEL P KENNEDY, SEAN O KEOGH, DELORES A KEOUGH, JAMIE KERNS, KIMBERLY S KERNS, SHERRY L KESNER, NALIN E KETTLE, RONALD J. KEUP, EILEEN KIER, GORDON S KIER, JEFFERY A KIER, SHIRLEY ANN KILLIAN, PATRICIA A KIMBERLING, MAGGIE R KING, JAMES R KING, KAREN K KING, MARVIN KINGBIRD, CHERIE K KINSEY, DEBRA KIRKENDOLL, JAMES R KITZEROW, JANICE KLAUDT, JANIS KLAUS, WILLIAM L KLEBA, GLORIA KLEIN, JOSEPH ALLEN KLICKER, RONALD R. KLING, HELEN KLUGOW, DONNIS E KNIGHT, CANDACE RAE BRUNNER KNUDSON, DORIS J KNUTSON, MARILYN MARIE KOERNER, MARY L (KIER) KOMINEK, DOROTHY E KONDOS, ANGELA F KOPAS, DONALD KORTE, MARY K KORTE, MARYN K KOVACHICH, JOHN P KOVACHICH, KRISTI J KOVACK, FLORENCE M KROYER, LINDA L KRUSZYNSKI, CONNIE L KUBITZ, DANA M KUCHYNKA, KURTIS D KUCK, MICHELLE J KUSIAK, GLADYS M LA VOY, JEFFRY J LA VOY, JENIFER L LACHAPELLE, DARRELL F LACHAPELLE, GERALD D LADUKE, BRADLEY D LADUKE, JACOB G LADUKE, WINONA H LAFRINIERE, GRACE M LAJOIE, JAMES L LAMB, WALTER C LANE, KEVIN M LAROQUE, MARLENE LARSEN, JOSEPH D LARSEN, SANDRA M LARSON, AUDREY F LARSON, JANIS U LATRAILLE, BENITA A LAUSCHE, ANTHONY R LAVELLA, FLORENCE E LAVOY, CHRISTOPHER J LAWRENCE, JOSEPH A LAWRENCE, LORETTA LAWSON, ANITA P LAYMON, MARILYN L LEACH, MYRTLE L LEAF, GARRIE RAY LECKMAN, ERNA LEDBETTER, DENIS E LEDBETTER, MARY L LEGO, CANDACE LYNN LEGO, DEANNA J LEGO, JOHN M LEGO, RUSSELL WAYNE LEITH, ALBERT DANA LEITH, CHARMAINE L BLACKWELL LEITH, GARNET F LEITH, WHITNEY G LEITH JR, WILLARD W LEITH BLACKWELL, CHARMAINE LENZ, JENNIFER L LEOSO, KATHRINA R LESLIE, STELLA M LEU, ELLEN M LEWIS, MICHAEL JEROME LIBBY, BILLY IKE LIBBY, JOHN GUS LIBBY JR, HERBERT LIDDELL, MARIE J LIEBES, CECELIA C LIENEMANN, ANN M LINDBERG, GERTRUDE LINDBOE, DORIS M LINDSTROM, DAWN LINN, EILEEN G LITTLE, KATHLEEN S LITTLEWOLF, BARBARA A LITTLEWOLF, GARY J LITTLEWOLF, LIZZIE LITTLEWOLF, REGGIE THOMAS LITTLEWOLF, REGINA C LITTLEWOLF, SALLY LU LITTLEWOLF, SARAH LITTLEWOLF, THEODORE LEE LIVINGOOD, BARBARA LOHNES, ESTATE OF ROSE LONESTAR, JOHN LONESTAR, PAUL LONG, RICHARD W LONG, ROCHELLE M LONG JR, MARVIN G LONG JR, WILLIAM C LOUIS JOANNE LOUISE FISCHER, ELIZABETH LOUZON LEGO, MATHILDA LUNDGREN JR, EDWIN K. LUNDQUIST, DONNA M LUNDQUIST, JEREMY M LUNDQUIST, JOSEPH D LUNDQUIST, JOSHUA J LUNDQUIST, MARVIN E LUNDQUIST, MARVIN EDWARD LYNN, LAVERNE LYONS, DUGGAN L MACFARLANE, LILA MADISON, DWIGHT W MADISON, ROBERT MANLEY, CLAUDEAN M MANYPENNY, KAREN T MARCHAUD, RITA MARKEE, DAVID F MARKEE, ROBERT A MARKEY, SANDRA L MARKS, DIANA D MARSDEN, DENISE MARTELL, APRIL O MARTIN, CECELIA L MARTIN, JENNIE V MARTIN, PHILIP J MARTIN, RENE L MARTIN, RUSSELL M MARTIN, SIDNEY GARDNER MARTIN, WILLIAM G MARTIN, ALLEN SHARRILL DELORIA MARTIN JR, RONALD G MASON, KAREN (SHEBAGEGET) MASON LENARD F MASON, LENARD FRANK MASON, SUE MASON, THOMAS ALVIN MASON, TRACY FRANCINE (SHEBAGAGET) MATH, JOANN SPRY MATTISON, DOROTHY L MATTISON, MARY B MATTISON, RAYMOND J MATTSON, SUSAN M MATURN, RONDEAU MCARTHUR, MARGARET L MCCAMMON, PHYLLIS R MCCARTOR, LINDA MCCASH, TAMMI L MCCLOSKEY, ARTHUR F MCCLOSKEY, JESSE D MCCLOSKEY, MICHAEL A MCCLOSKEY, WILLIAM G MCCRACKEN, RHONDA J MCDONALD, LOUISE L MCDOUGALL, CHRISTOPHER JOSEPH MCDOUGALL, CLINTON C MCDOUGALL, MARLIN R MCDOUGALL, MILDRED C MCGINNIS MASON, NATALIE JUNE MCKENZIE, LOUIS F MCKENZIE, ROBERT MCKINNEY, RICKY B MCLEAN, MARGARET M MCLEAN, NORMA J MCMICKENS, DOROTHY J MCRAE, PATRICIA A MEANS, DAGNEY M MEARS, VIRGINIA M MEDWEOSH, TOM MEEK, DONNA MELLOH, SANDRA J MENGE, THEODORA MERCER, ROBERT W MESABI, ROBERT W MEUCHEL, DONALD MEUCHEL, JAMES MEYER JR, JOSEPH A MEYER-LOPEZ, SHARON G MICHAELS, LUCILLE M MICHLING, FLORENCE J MICKLEWRIGHT, NELLIE M MILLER, DAVID R MILLER, DEREK MILLER, SANDRA L MILLINER, MARY E MITCHELL, BRENDA C MITCHELL, GEORGE MITCHELL, JANE F MITCHELL, JEWEL M MITCHELL, LOIS I 22 MITCHELL, ROBERT W MITSCH, JEFFREY J MITTUN, AGNES T MOLACEK, JOYCE RENEE DAKOTA MOLASH, GEORGIANA M MONETTE, PETER ALEXANDER MONROE, DAWN R MONROE, HENRY J MONROE, MICHAEL L MONTEE HAZEN, KIMBERLY ANN FAIRBANKS MONTGOMERY, DAVID P MONTRAIELLE, PAUL E MOOERS, PATRICIA MOOSE, LARRY J MOOSE, LEROY MORAN, LENORE R MORENO, ANGELA MORENO, ROBERT J MORENO, VICTORIA V MORGAN, APRIL MORGAN, RHONDA MORRISON, BETTY J MORRISON, GEORGE P MORRISON, JAMES A MORRISON, JOHN MORRISON, KENNETH D MORRISON, MICHAEL G MORRISON, SANDRA K MORRISON HANSEN, MURIEL L MORRISON JR, LELAND FRANCIS MORRISON KANE, CHARMAIN J MOULTON, MARY J MOULTON, ROBERT G MOULTON, TERRY A MOUNTAIN STAPLES SORENSON, FREDA KATIE MURPHY, JASON L MURPHY, JOSEPHINE D MURRAY, ALFRED MURRAY, ALLEN W MURRAY, CASSIE L MURRAY, CONSTANCE M MURRAY, ROBERT W MURRAY, RUTH J MURRAY, SHAWN M MURRAY, TRICIA R MURRAY III, FRANK MUTCHLER, AUGUST MYERS, BOBBI J MYERS, CARY V NEAL, NANCY H NEELAND, DORIS J NEELAND, FLOYD L NEELAND, JUANITA L NEELAND, ROSE M NEELAND, SHERYLINE M NEGRON, DONISE M NELSON, LENA NELSON, MYRTLE NELSON, OLIVER NELSON, PATRICIA A NELSON, RICHARD NELSON, STAN NELSON BONGA, ROBERT NELSON JONES, TAMMY S NEVITT, DIANE V NEVITT, DONALD NEWCOMER, EVERETT S NEZ, COURAGE V NICHOLAS, CHRISTINE NICHOLAS, DONALD R NICHOLAS, JENNIE NICHOLAS, ROSALIE P S NICOLLE, ELYDIA H NOHNER, MARY P NORCROSS, KAREN L NORCROSS, MYRON D JR NORCROSS, SHERYL L NORCROSS, VINCENT LEE NORCROSS, WILLIAM BENEDICT NORMAN, JONI NYLUND, JOHN R NYMAN, JOAN L O'BRIEN, JOHNNY J O'BRIEN, LUANN P Anishinaabeg Today O'DONNELL, GENE A O'MALLEY, TERESA A OBRIEN, JAMES L OLIVER, JANE E OLIVER, TERRI OLIVER, WAYNE OLSON, CHERIE LEANNE OLSON, JEREMY KEITH (CHRIST) OLSON, KATIE P OLSON, RUPERT THEODORE OLSON, RUTH S OMER, MELVINA F OPPEGARD, LIZA M OPPEGARD, MARY KATHERINE OPPEGARD, OSCAR ANTILL OPPEGARD SARGENT, GWENDOLYN GAY ORIE, SANDRA DECOTEAU ORNS, SAMUEL J OSTLUND, ROBIN OTT, PHYLLIS OVERSTREET, CHRIS PADILLA, PAULETTE M PARKHURST, AMBER E PARTRIDGE, DAWN E PASKET, DEBORAH PATRICK, CLIFFORD PATRICK, GERTRUDE PAUL, SHANNON RENAE PAUL, SHAWN MCKAY PAUL, STEVEN RAY PAUL, STEWART JAY PAYNE, MARY B PEACOOK, KELLY J PEAKE, ANNA M PEAKE, CECELIA Y PEAKE, DAVID PEAKE, RUTH ROBERTS PEAKE, SETH M PEAKE BASSWOOD, SANDRA L. PEAKE JR, GEORGE F PEARSON, DEB PEARSON, ROBERT G PEMBERTON, GERALD D PEMBERTON, JOEL L PEMBERTON, JUDY LEE PEMBERTON, LADONNA R PEMBERTON, LOUISA DEEGAN PENNY, RONALD JOHN PERRAULT, BRUCE E PERRAULT, MICHAEL J PERRAULT, STEVEN PERSINGER, RAYMOND K PETERS, JOANN M PETERSON, DELORIS (KIER) PETERSON, MARY LOU PETERSON, ROBERTA PHILIPS, ALVINA J PIANO, FLORENCE PLAMONDON, CYNTHIA M PLAMONDON, RICHARD O POOLE, ANTHONY POOLE, ROBERT E PORTER, CECELIA PORTER, JOE PORTER, JOYCE CRITT PORTER, MICHAEL J PORTER, SHIRLEY MAE C POSEY, LISA A POST, ERNESTINE L POTTER, ALVIN POTTER, KELLY A POTTER, THOMAS JOHN PRELLWITZ, MICHAEL E PRENTICE, LOWELL L PRINCE, NORA B PUCKENOGAY, SELAM G PURVIS, WILLIAM L RADEBRESH, SHIRLEY M RADHAKRISHNAN, TRIVA LYNN RADLEY, JAMES D RADUENZ, RICHARD A RANDBERG, EDWARD G RANDBERG, JOSEPHINE M RATHBUN, LAWRENCE REAGAN, LAURA LEE REDCLOUD JR, WILLIAM J REESE, BEATRICE I REESE III, PETER G REID, JANICE L RENVILLE, JANE BUCKANAGA REYNOLDS, ALOYSIUS REYNOLDS, DUANE ASHLEY RICE, GLORIA J RICHARDS, MICHAEL L RICHARDS, ORVILLE L RICHARDSON, FRANK RIECHERT, DARLA M RITT, MARK E RITTS, ROBERT K RITZ, ANITA ROACH, DIANE J. ROBBINS, PATRICK ROBBINS, TIMOTHY ROBERTS, FRANKLIN THOMPSON ROBERTS, GRACE LORRAINE ROBERTS, KEVIN A ROBERTS, SAMUEL HENRY ROBERTSON THUNDER, MARY E ROBIDEAU, EST OF WILLIAM ALEXANDER ROBINSON, KATHERINE J ROBINSON, LORELEI ELIZABETH ROBINSON, PRISCILLA S J ROBINSON, THEA ROCK, AARON K ROCK, CHARLES N ROCK, JUDITH A ROCK, RAYMOND K ROCK, SAMUEL J ROCK, STELLA E. ROCK, SUNSHINE L ROCK, TERRANCE L ROCK JR, SIMON D ROCKENSOCK, ANTHONY M ROGERS, BOBBI JO ROGERS, GEORGE L ROGERS, LOU A RONDEAU, DOLORES E RONDEAU, TIMOTHY RONDEAU ESTATE, CLIFFORD EDWARD ROSS, DAVID P ROSS, DONALD H ROSS, GENE E ROSS, GEORGE M ROSS, JASON C ROSS, STEFANIE A ROSSITER, ANITA L ROY, BAMBI J ROY, BECKY L ROY, BOBBI J ROY, GEORGE ROY, GEORGE L ROY, HAROLD L ROY, LISA ROY, LORELEI JEWEL ROY, MARTIN G ROY, MICHAEL JOSEPH ROY, RANDOLPH L ROY, RICHARD D ROY, ROBERTA ROY, RONALD L ROY, SETH G ROY JR, DONALD CURTIS SAICE, JOHN N SAICE GORDON, CHRISTINE SAICE JR, EDWARD SAIGN, SARA E SAILOR, JASON JERRINE SAILOR, JEREMY N SAILOR, LAWTON DUANE SAILOR, LYNITA LENAE SALLEE, TERRI L SALO, ALBERTA L SANCHEZ, LISA J SANTWIRE, RAYMOND F SARGENT, ALAN C SARGENT, ALVIN W SARGENT, ANGELINE M. SARGENT, ANTHONY W Wednesday, July 7, 2010 SARGENT, AVANELLE SARGENT, BRADLEY A SARGENT, DANIEL SARGENT, DARREN SARGENT, ERVIN JAMES SARGENT, FRANCIS LEE SARGENT, GERALD MANUEL SARGENT, JANELLE R SARGENT, KELLY A SARGENT, LISA A SARGENT, MELVIN J SARGENT, NORBERT W SARGENT, WILLIAM GEORGE SARGENT, PETER LORI SARGENT, SIAS DENISE ELIZABETH SARGENT, SMITH JEAN SAVAGE, DANIEL M SAXON, LOREN T SAXON, MICHAEL T SAXON, PHYLLIS F SAXON, RONALD DUANE SAXON, SANDRA D SAYERS, ALVIN D SAYERS, CALVIN J SAYERS, GERALD L SCHAEFER, VIRGINIA SCHIMANSKI, MARY J SCHLIMGEN, SUSAN SCHMEHL, FREDRIC A SCHMEHL, STEVEN L SCHOENBORN, JAMES E SCHOENBORN, SEVERN SCHOENBORN, SURGENIUS SCHRAM, ROBERT A SCHREIBER, BONIE J SCHULTZ, CYNTHIA C SCHULTZ, DUWAYNE A SCHULTZ, SHARON L SCHWARTZ, JOAN K SCHWARTZ, SUE A SEELYE, DONALD SELVAGGI, BARBARA J SHABAIASH, ANTHONY J SHAMBEAU, DWAYNE E SHARON SCHWINDT, JUDY SHARP, JENNIE (GENEVIEVE) SHAUGABAY, MATTHEW W SHAUGABAY, SARA E SHAUGABOY, DONALD W SHAUGABOY, GERALD S SHAUGOBOY, RICHARD D SHAW, LISA SHEA, TIMOTHY SHEALY, PATRICK L SHEPPARD, DEAN F SHEPPARD III, THOMAS SHERER, BONNIE SHERER, BRUCE E SHERER, DONALD SHERER, DOROTHY SHERER, JODI E SHERER, JOY E SHERER, JULANA E SHERER, TRACY J SHERER JR, BURDETTE J SHINAULT, LOU ANN SHOWERS, EST OF FRANCES ALVINA SIEGLER, WILBY M SILK, GARY SILK, MARIE SILK, MARTIN SILK, TERRI SILK JR, JOHN SIMONS, ERNEST E SKINAWAY, KIMBERLY M SKINAWAY, LEONARD M. SKINAWAY, SHELLY M SKINAWAY, THERESA L SKINWAY, WILLIAM OR OSH KE NOW AY SKYE, ELLEN ADELL SKYWATER, LITTLEFAWN SLAGOWSKI, DIANE SLAGOWSKI, ROGER D SLAGOWSKI JR, BENJAMIN E Wednesday, July 7, 2010 SLATER, ROSALIE D SLOAN, JAMES LAWRENCE SMITH, BENEDICT L SMITH, CAROL N SMITH, CLARA J (JONES) SMITH, DORCYDORCEY DAVID SMITH, GAIL M SMITH, GEORGE S SMITH, GERALDINE Y SMITH, HENRY JOE SMITH, JEAN M SMITH, JOHN A SMITH, JULIAN SMITH, LISA L SMITH, LUCILLE G SMITH, MARY LOUISE SMITH, PAUL A SMITH, PAUL R SMITH, REBECCA J SMITH, RONALD /R SKINAWAY/ SMITH, RONALD R. SMITH, SHARON SMITH JOHNSON, SHARON R SMITH RYAN, LOUISE JEAN SNOW, KENNETH F SOMERS, CLIFFORD P SOMMERVILLE, DEBORAH L SOUTHARD, KEVIN P SOYRING, BERNARD L SOYRING, GARY L SOYRING, PAUL A SOYRING, RICHARD D SOYRING JR, DAVID A SPARKS, ROCHELLE ANN SPIESS, DOUGLAS E SPIESS, ROBERT H SPRY, DALE SPRY, DONALD D SPRY, JOHN SPRY, JOHN M SPRY, NATASHA SPRY, WILLIAM W STABERG, PHYLIS D STAFFORD, EVELYN M STAFFORD, KAREN F STAFFORD, PHYLIS STAFFORD, RICHARD E STAFFORD, SHERYL C STAGER, PHILLIP STAPLES, ALLEN J STAPLES, ALVERA STAPLES, BETTY ANN STAPLES, BONNIE STAPLES, ETHEL STAPLES, EVELYN STAPLES, KAREN STAPLES, MICHAEL STAPLES, RONALD STATELY, EDWARD D STATELY, VIOLET COLEEN STAVICK, PATRICIA STAVNE, URSULA A STAWICKI, PATRICIA D STEPHENS, DEBRA R STEPHENS, PAMELA G STEPHENS, ROCHELLA K STEPHENSON, JANICE STERNS, MAMIE G STEVENS, IDA M STEVENS, JAMES LELAND STEVENS, RONALD G STEVENS, SANDRA M STEVENS, WAYDE E STEVENS MOOSE, CALVIN W STEWART, ANTHONY T STEWART, CATHERINE STITCHE, ROBERT E STONE, BEULAH STONE, DARRICK L STONE, FLORA STONE, KATHERINE H STONE, LESLIE J STONE, LYNETTE STONE CHOSA, SERAPHINE A 23 Anishinaabeg Today STONE FOX, MARCY L STONE JR, EUGENE R STORMS, DIANNA M STROM, GERALDINE E STROMBERG, COREEN L STROMBERG, JULIE A STROMBERG, LARRY D STROMBERG, SHIRLEY A STROMSTAD, ALLEN J STROMSTAD, BENJAMIN O STROMSTAD, MARGARET E STRUSS, EUNICE STURGEON, SAM SUAREZ, SHEILA SULLIVAN, DANIEL T SULLIVAN, IRENE C SULLIVAN, TRACEY SUMMERS, DOUGLAS J SUMNER, JOSEPH G SUNDAHL, MARI CECELIA WILLIAMS SUOBODA, GREGORY R SUTHERLAND, LETA SUTPHIN, MAUREEN J SUTTON, JUNIOR SUVAGIAN, INEZ Y SWAN, EST OF ROBIN NEAL SWAN, JAMES SWAN, JOHN SWAN ESTATE, LAWRENCE J SWAN ESTATE, LOUIS THOMAS SWAN ESTATE, MAYNARD SWAN ESTATE, RICHARD ELLSWORTH SWAN ESTATE, SOPHIA SWANHOULE, KAREN ANN SWAN RICHARDS MATSCHINS, CHARLENE H SWANSON JR, RICHARD D SWANSON JR, RICHARD D SWEET, MARGARET SWENSON, BRIAN R TADLOCK, FLORENCE TAYLOR, EVELYN TAYLOR, GEORGE PETER TAYLOR, GLORIA M TAYLOR, MARY A TAYLOR, MAVIS A TEFFT, GAYLIN L TEFFT ESTATE, MARGARET MORRISON TEICH, KELLY G TEJOHN, ELMER M TENNANT, CHARLES S THOMAS, DANIEL THOMAS, PAMELA J THOMAS, SUSAN R THOMAS JR, RUSSELL V THOMPSON, ANTHONY J THOMPSON, CANDACE F THOMPSON, DANIELLE M THOMPSON, FORREST K THOMPSON, HENRIETTA THOMPSON, JAMIE MARIE THOMPSON, JERALDINE ANN THOMPSON, LELAND WAYNE THOMPSON, LU ANNE THOMPSON, MABLE B THOMPSON, PATRICIA THOMPSON, PERRY W THOMPSON, ROBERT L THOMPSON, ROBIN JACOB THOMPSON, SCOTT THOMPSON, TEX THOMPSON, TIM THOMPSON SR, RONALD W THORNBERG, ALVINA GILGOSCH THREATS, BARBARA J THUNDER, MARY E TIBBETTES, TERRENCE TIBBETTS, JUDITH TIBBETTS, MARVIN TIBBETTS VOGEL, BERNICE TICE, DARRIN A TOLLEFSON, MELVINA J TOMMERVIK, DAVID L TOPINKA, RUDY TOWNSEND, MARGARET NONAAN TRACY, HARLAN D TRAHAN, TODD E TREICHEL, DALE R TREMBLAY, PAMELA R TREUER, MARGARET A. ETVIR TRISCO, PATRICIA L TROMBLY, BARBARA A TURNPIN, JAMES L TURPIN, MARY A TURPIN, MICHAEL J TURPIN, RICHARD K UGRICH, MARY ULLRICH, CARL F UMBEL, JUANITA UNDERBERG, KATHLEEN URAN, GERALD L URAN, RODNEY D URAN, THOMAS J URAN-HODGE, ANN URBAN, JESSE VAJDL, CHARLES E VAJDL, LOUIS J VALDEREZ , LORI L VALLEJO, JOHN G VAN WERT, EST OF LEON MARTIN VAN WERT SWAN BRODEN, BEVERLY S VANBOLHUIS, BEVERLY A VANWERT, DONALD M VANWERT, MELANIE V VASQUEZ, EST OF LORETTA VERONICA VESENARJ, CREAG VEZINA, JASON D VEZINA, LAWRENCE D VEZINA, PAULETTE A VILAS, ROBERT W JR VILLALTA, KAREN A VILLEBRUN, EARL R VILLIER, SHARON R VIOLANTE, BARBARA J VIZENOR, LLOYD A VIZENOR, LORI VIZENOR, LYLE D VIZENOR, PAUL J VIZENOR JR, GERALD J VIZENOR JR, KENNETH W VIZENOR JR, RICHARD P VORNWOLD, LEO WACHIER, VALLORY J WADE, MURIEL S WADENA, DARRELL E WALKER, JAMES A WALLER, MARY E WALTERMAN, ROBERT C WALZ, VIOLET M WAPOOSE, BERNICE WARD, THERESA WARNER, VICTORIA J WARREN, DARREL D WARREN, EDWARD R WARREN, ELIZABETH A WARREN, JOHN E WARREN, PAUL WARREN, WILLIAM V WASHINGTON, JOSEPH WATTERS, HOLLY KAYRAS WAUKAZO, ARNOLD D WAUKAZO, RUTH A WAUKAZO JR, RAYMOND T WAX, THERESA WAYNE JOHNSON, ROBERT WEAVER, BERNICE M WEAVER, BILLIE D WEAVER, BRADLEY J WEAVER, CLIFFORD J L WEAVER, CLYDE J WEAVER, DESIREE E WEAVER, DOUG A WEAVER, GEORGE W WEAVER, KIMBERLY J WEAVER, MATTHEW J WEAVER, MILDRED M WEAVER, SHARON MAE WEAVER, STACEY WEAVER, THELMA JOYCE WEAVER, VERNON JAMES WEAVER PETTIFORD, VERONICA A WEBSTER, DEAN M WEBSTER, JULIUS F WEBSTER, LILLIAN B WECK, PHILLIP R WEISE, JOHN WELTON, FORREST WENDT, MAE D WHEELER, JANET Y WHITCOMB, ALITA K WHITCOMB, DARRELL L WHITE, DOUGLAS C WHITENER, JOSEPH L WICHERN, VICTORIA WILKINS, DARWIN L WILKINS, JAMES R WILKINS, JESSICA R WILKINS, LYNETTE N WILKINS JR, WILBUR J WILLIAMS, DANNY D WILLIAMS, FRANCIS WILLIAMS, GEORGE R WILLIAMS, HERBERT WILLIAMS, JEANELLE I WILLIAMS, JOHN F WILLIAMS, LAMOND D WILLIAMS, PETER H WILLIAMS, PHILLIP S WILLIAMS, RONALD L WILLIAMS, ROSE M WILLIAMS, ROY A WILLIAMS, SHAUN R WILLIAMS, THOMAS WILLIAMS, THOMAS E WILLIAMS, WILLIE C WILLIAMSON, JUDITH A WILLIS, FRANK J WILLIS ARNDT, JOYCE JEAN WIND, ADELINE M WIND, KENNETH W WINDERS ESTATE, SHIRLEY WINSLOW, LISA A WINTER, CINDY WISOCKI, ANTHONY C WISOCKI, STEPHEN R WITHERSPOON, JOSEPH WITTNER, AMBER D R WITTNER, CAROL A WITTNER, KIM D WITTNER, LULU GRACE WITTNER, MARK ROBERT WITTNER, MELODY J WITTNER, MILLESSA ANN RUBIN WITTNER, ROBERT LEO WITTNER, RUTH WITTNER, RUTH VERONICA WITTNERSTEIL, ROSE MARY WOJCIECHOWSKI, MYRTLE F WOLF, COLLETTE S WOLF, MARY A WOLFF, WILLIAM J WOLNEY, CAROLE A. WOLSKI JR, THEODORE H WRIGHT, DEBRA A WRIGHT, DIANE M WRIGHT, EUGENE V WRIGHT, JAMES C WRIGHT, MARIAN WRIGHT, ROBIN WRIGHT ORTEGA, SHELBY WYATT, HOLLY A YAHR, THERESA H YBARRO, LESLIE YORK, LAUREEN L YOUNG, ALTA YOUNG FAIRBANKS, PATRICIA RUTH 24 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 In Memory In Memory of Paul E. Bellcourt January 1906 - June 2007 There is a wonderful legacy of which I wish to tell about a wonderful man that lived so well. His strength lives within us and grows stronger each day, his honor still lingers. Though his life has slipped away I miss the sound of his footsteps and his stern lectures too! I miss hearing him say, “I have had more experience than you.” He fought a good battle then gave up the fight to rest in the arms of Jesus, what a beautiful sight. In our heats his memory will always stay, nothing could ever take his remembrance away. In Memory of Rochelle Stewart June 15, 1979 - July 6, 2001 Give you this one thought to keep. I’m with you still. I’m a thousand winds that blow. I’m the diamonds sparkle, on snow. I’m the sunlight on ripened grain. I’m the gentle autumn rain. When you awaken in the morning hush. I’m the swift, uplifting rush of quiet birds in circled flight. I’m the soft stars that shine at night. Do not think of me as gone. I’m with you still, in each new dawn. Love always, Auntie Nancy Big Bear In Loving Memory of Scott Adams Nov. 15, 1980 - July 4, 2009 It’s been a year since you left us, and still our hearts ache with pain. So sad and sudden, no time for goodbyes. Look down on us from your home in Heaven and know our love for you can never be replaced. Our minds tell us you are without pain now that you have walked on. We know you will always be with us. We miss your presence, your touch. We’ll always remember the smile on your face when you walk through the door. Jackie, Dayton, David Jr., David and Angel Adams, Linda and Bruce Leonhardt Thank You By Michael Meuers At a special meeting of the Red Lake Tribal Council held on April 27, the Council voted unanimously to declare Ojibwe as the official language of the Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians. The resolution declared that many (of America’s) Indigenous languages are in danger (of disappearing) if they are not preserved or promoted, and that the Tribal Council strongly supports the preservation of the Ojibwe language for the benefit of future generations. Red Lake has already begun a multifaceted approach to preserve the language at Red Lake, and has been for years in a variety of ways. This included sponsoring a two-day language summit held just about this time two years ago in June 2008. Other efforts include teachings on line, teaching in the schools and community education, and are exploring other ways...including language immersion Language revitalization is an exciting multidimensional stratagem that is going on throughout Indian Country and in the State of Minnesota. Members of the Tribal Council say they will support initiatives to encourage the state of Minnesota to adopt Ojibwe as an official language of the state. After all the Ojibwe language (and other Indigenous languages) were spoken in Minnesota hundreds if not thousands of years before English was spoken here. It is important to differentiate this type of effort as an official language from say French as an official language of Canada, or the controversy of Spanish speakers in the southwest. Ojibwe and other Indigenous languages are the original languages of the land and not imported tongues as are French, Spanish, or English. The Arthur Family would like to thank the Emanuel Nursing staff in Detroit Lakes for treating Jing so nice. A big thank you to Grace for the laughs and jokes. Thanks to Jing’s friends for helping us though these tough times. Thanks to Rev. Coke Roberts for her spiritual guidance, Melvin Goodman for finishing the ceremony, Shawn Nygaard at David-Donehower Funeral Home, Mike Swan for letting us use the old Pine Point School, and the Ojibwe Singers for their special music at the grave site. Thank you from the Alfed L. “Jing” Arthur Family DOVE 24 Hour Crisis Line 1-877-830-DOVE (3683) Wednesday, July 7, 2010 25 Anishinaabeg Today White Earth Tribal and Community College White Earth Tribal and Community College Position Announcement/Open Until Filled Position Announcement/Open until filled Job Title: Reports to: Status: Dean of Student Services President Fulltime Permanent Summary: Directs and coordinates student programs of college. Responsible for overall direction, coordination, and evaluation of employees as listed in the WETCC Organizational Chart. Qualifications: Masters Degree in related field required; additional experience working in a higher education setting preferred. Must have demonstrated skills and experience in supervision. Current drivers license and insurance required. Individual background check required. Must be willing and able to travel. Salary based on qualifications. Job Title: Reports to: Status: Academic Dean President Fulltime Permanent Summary: Develops academic policies and programs for college. Responsible for overall direction, coordination, and evaluation of employees as listed in the WETCC Organizational Chart. Qualifications: Masters Degree in related field required; additional experience working in a higher education setting preferred. Must have demonstrated skills and experience in supervision. Current drivers license and insurance required. Individual background check required. Must be willing and able to travel. Salary based on qualifications. Complete application materials include: Letter of intent, application, resume, transcripts, and two letters of recommendation. Complete job description and application available at www.wetcc.org or by calling George Bass at 218-935-0417 Ext. 306. Complete application materials include: Letter of intent, application, resume, transcripts, and two letters of recommendation. Complete job description and application available at www.wetcc.org or by calling George Bass at 218-935-0417, Extension 306. * Equal Opportunity Employer with Indian and Veteran preference. * Equal Opportunity Employer with Indian and Veteran preference. Send complete application materials to: White Earth Tribal and Community College George Bass, Finance Assistant 124 S 1st St – PO Box 478 Mahnomen, MN 56557 Email: [email protected] Send complete application materials to: White Earth Tribal and Community College George Bass, Finance Assistant 124 S 1st St – PO Box 478 Mahnomen, MN 56557 Email: [email protected] 26 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Obituaries Alvin D. Staples Alvin D. Staples, 90, of Cass Lake, died June 11 at his home. He was born Oct. 31, 1919, in Mission, Minn., the son of John F. and Sophie (Bellecourt) Staples. He attended various schools. While attending Haskell Institute in Lawrence, Kan., he was drafted into the U.S. Army and served from 1942-1946. He married Emily Thompson June 24, 1947. They raised seven children sharing a relationship of unconditional love, which they showered on their children. He was a heavy equipment operator for the BIA for more than 26 years. He enjoyed fishing, bowling, hunting, ricing and watching the Twins. One of his biggest joys was his grandchildren and holding babies; he helped babysit his great grandchildren right up until his death. He loved his family dinners for the past five years at his house. He is survived by five children: Patrick (Debbie) Staples of New Town, N.D., Judy Harper of Cass Lake, Elizabeth Aitken of Bemidji, Kay (Douglas) Jackson of Bemidji, Becky (Mike) Olson of Eden Prairie, Minn.; 19 grandchildren, 37 great grandchildren, 12 great great grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews He was preceded in death by his wife, daughter Melvena “Heb” Church; son, Alan Gross, grandson, Michael Staples, six brothers and two sisters. Honorary casketbearers were Alan Gross, Kyle Staples and Michael WhiteOwl. Active casketbearers were Eric Jackson, Jeff Harper, Pat A. Staples, Danny Fredrickson, Dan Staples and Darren Harper. Traditional funeral services were June 17 at the Veteran’s Memorial Building in Cass Lake. Interment: Thompson Cemetery in Cass Lake. Arrangements: Cease Family Funeral Home of Bemidji. Messages of condolence may be left at ceasefuneralhome.com. Helen L. Halvorson Helen L. Halvorson, 71, rural Ponsford, died June 21 at her home. Helen Louise Halvorson was born Aug. 26, 1938, in rural Ponsford to Charles and Elizabeth (Taylor) Mayberry. She was raised and educated in Ponsford. Helen was united in marriage to Walter Halvorson Sept. 27, 1954, in Ponsford. They farmed in rural Ponsford and then lived in Sabin, Minn., and Fargo prior to moving to Ice Cracking Lake near Ponsford in 1988. Her special gift was providing daycare for her grandchildren. Helen enjoyed time with her grandchildren and great grandchildren, her flower beds, feeding the birds and chipmunks, country music, watching the boats on Ice Cracking Lake and playing Yahtzee with Walt. Survivors include her husband of 55 years, Walter of rural Ponsford; daughters: Jacki (Jody) Odegaard of Fargo, Vicki (Kim) Lein of Vergas, Minn., Gwendolyn (Curtis) Goodman of Barnesville, Minn., Brenda (Bryan) Fredrickson of Vergas, and a son, John (Faye) Halvorson of Detroit Lakes; 11 grandchildren; 16 great grandchildren; a sister, Geraldine Prenta of Detroit Lakes and brothers: Marvin Mayberry of Woodenville, Wash., Clayton Mayberry in Washington and Robert (Jean) Mayberry of Ham Lake, Minn. Helen was preceded in death by a daughter, Deborah Jo, two grandchildren, LeNae and Jarrod; a brother, Johnny, a sister, Ardith, and her beloved dog, Sable. Memorial services were held June 24 at David-Donehower Funeral Home in Detroit Lakes. Arrangements: David-Donehower Funeral Home in Detroit Lakes. Memories may be shared at www.daviddonehower.com. Martin Alvardo Martin Alvarado, age 61, of East Grand Forks, Minn., died June 23 at Altru Hospital in Grand Forks, N.D. Martin Joseph Alvarado, the son of Ramiro and Elizabeth (Wadena) Alvarado was born on August 18, 1948, in White Earth. As a young boy, he moved around with his family, but spent most of his childhood in the Grand Forks area. Martin attended school in Grand Forks and in Mahnomen, and later worked on area farms. In the 1970s, he began working as a custodian at the Naytahwaush School in Naytahwaush. After an injury, Martin returned to Grand Forks and made that his home. Martin’s passion was collecting old cars and listening to rock-n-roll music. He also enjoyed watching car auctions on the television. Martin is survived by three brothers: Richard of Naytahwaush, Ramiro Jr., of Naytahwaush, and Harold of Mahnomen; seven sisters: Shirley Kier of Mahnomen, Juanita (Alfonso) Aquilera of San Antonio, Texas, Gloria Martinez of Mahnomen, Celestina Derosier of Naytahwaush, Ginny (Merle) Bush of Naytahwaush, Sheila (Lupe) Suarez of Reynolds, N.D., and Lorenza Behnkie of Grand Forks; many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; and grandparents, Joseph and Elizabeth Roy and Martin and Lorenza Alvarado. Funeral services were held June 25 at the St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Naytahwaush. Father Bob Leising, OMI, was the officiant. Pallbearers were Jesse Alvarado, Derrick Alvarado, Pete Alvarado, Ramiro Alvarado III, Rudy Suarez and Pedro Rodriguez. Honorary pallbearers were all of Martin’s nieces and nephews. Interment: St. Anne’s Catholic Cemetery in Naytahwaush. Arrangements: Anderson-Mattson Funeral Home of Mahnomen. Online: andersonmattson.com Buddy Belcourt Buddy Belcourt, age 59, of Bemidji, died May 30 at his home. Bernard “Buddy” Lee Belcourt, the son of Charlie and Hazel (Goodwin) Belcourt, was born Nov. 26, 1950, in Cass Lake. He lived in the Cass Lake area until 1958, at which time he moved with his family to Livermore, Calif. Buddy attended Joint Union High School in Livermore. At the age of 17, he enlisted in the United States Army. Upon his honorable discharge he returned home to California. From 1971 until 1975, Buddy worked at as fire fighter in San Luis Obispo, Calif.. He then moved back to Bemidji. In 1979, Buddy began a career with the Minnesota Department of Transportation working as a Road Maintenance Senior. On Nov. 15, 1980, he was united in marriage to Donna Stevens and they were blessed with three children. Due to his position with MNDOT, they lived throughout the communities of Crookston, East Grand Forks, and Bagley, Minn. Buddy retired in 1993 and moved back to Bemidji in 2007 to make his home. In his younger years, Buddy enjoyed hunting, fishing, and picking blueberries. He always loved to catch a Minnesota Twins ballgame and watch game shows on television. Buddy also spent time playing cards and cherished spending time with his grandchildren. Buddy is survived by a son, Dustin Belcourt of Bagley; a daughter, Brooke Belcourt of Bemidji; three brothers: Gary Belcourt of Bemidji, Richard Belcourt and Ken Belcourt, both of Fosston; and five grandchildren: MaKoons Stevens, Nishimee Stevens, Pryce Belcourt, Precious Belcourt, and Brody Belcourt. He was preceded in death by his parents; one daughter, Tamara; and two grandchildren, Sage Belcourt and Winston Stevens Jr. Funeral services were held June 3 at the Rice Lake Area Fellowship Church with Pastor Tim Brown officiating. Serving as pallbearers were Gary Belcourt, Richard Belcourt, Ken Belcourt, Winston Stevens, Eugene Stevens, and Burton Stevens Jr. Honorary bearers were Dustin Belcourt, Ken Belcourt Jr., Sandra Thompson, Christine Belcourt, and his grandchildren: Makoons, Nishimee, Pryce, Precious, and Brody. Interment: Pine Bend Cemetery in rural Lengby. Arrangements: Anderson~Mattson Funeral Home of Mahnomen & Winger. Online: www.andersonmattson.com David “Earl” Hoagland Sr. David “Earl” Hoagland Sr., age 63, of Naytahwaush, died June 7 at the VA Hospital in Fargo. David Earl Hoagland, the son of Leland and Julia (Littlewolf) Hoagland, was born on Jan. 15, 1947, in Bagley. He grew up in the Rice Lake area and graduated from Bagley High School. He served in the U.S. Navy spending time in Vietnam. After his honorable discharge, he lived in the Twin Cities, before moving to the Naytahwaush area. Earl was united in marriage to Jewell “Kathy” and together they made their life together for 11 years, before her death in 2007. Throughout his life, Earl was self employed and could be found hunting, trapping and creating Native American quilled birch bark crafts. David is survived by four sons: Melvin (Chris) Anderson of San Diego, Robin (Kate) Anderson of Long Beach, Calif., Leonard Anderson of Mahnomen, and David (Loretta) Hoagland Jr., of Naytahwaush; two daughters, Paula Little Wolf and Andrea Anderson, both of Mahnomen; two brothers, Donald Hoagland of Nett Lake, Minn., and Mark Hoagland of Minneapolis; five sisters: Betsy May of Naytahwaush, Wendy Hoagland of Minneapolis, Cheryl Jensen of Nett Lake, Rhonda Hoagland of Nett Lake, and Frances May of Bemidji; 16 grandchildren; and six great grandchildren. He is preceded in death by a brother and a sister. Traditional Native American funeral services was held June 10 at the Naytahwaush Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Sports Complex. The spiritual leader was Mike Dahl and the pallbearers were Joe Hoagland, Victor Berglund, Terry Burnette Jr., Brandon Anderson, Robin Anderson Jr., and Jeff Wark. Honorary pallbearers were Bill Paulson, Terry Burnette Sr., and Lew Murray. Eagle Spirit was the drum group and military honors were provided by the White Earth Veteran’s Association Honor Guard. Interment: Naytahwaush Traditional Cemetery. Arrangements: Anderson-Mattson Funeral Home of Mahnomen. Alfred L. “Jing” Arthur Alfred L. “Jing” Arthur, 71, resident of Detroit Lakes, died June 8 at Emmanuel Nursing Home in Detroit Lakes. Jing was born January 5, 1939, in White Earth, to Raymond and Hazel (Boudreau) Arthur. He was raised and educated in Pine Point. As a young man he moved to Minneapolis. He was united in marriage to Dorothy Lussier. They resided in Minneapolis for 4-5 years until Dorothy passed away in 1970. Jing moved back to the Ponsford area. He later met Isabelle Stewart in Ponsford and together they moved back to Minneapolis where Jing worked as a machinist and also as a welder. Jing was forced to retire at an early age from third degree burns he received after attempting to rescue an individual from a house fire. Following his retirement, he moved to Detroit Lakes in 1995. Jing was known for his great sense of humor, his caring spirit and love for family and friends. He loved strumming his guitar and singing country music. He enjoyed playing his poker at the casino, bingo, cribbage and bowling. He also followed and cheered on his favorite sporting events, watching the Minnesota Vikings, Chicago Bears, Minnesota Twins and WWE Wrestling. Jing will be remembered and missed by his three children: Janet (Charles) Oshkinowe of White Earth, Susie (Jamie Danzeisen) Stewart of Detroit Lakes and Jeff Peterson French. He is also survived by nine grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren and three brothers: Kenneth Arthur of Ponsford, Richard Arthur of Bagley, and Darrell Arthur of Ponsford. He is preceded in death by his parents, wife Dorothy, sisters: Katherine Yanez, Donna Wright, Raymond Arthur Jr., infant brother, David L. Arthur and special friend, Isabelle Stewart. Funeral services for Jing were held June 11 in the Emmanuel Nursing Home Chapel. A graveside service was held June 12 at Breck Memorial Cemetery in Ponsford. Arrangements: David-Donehower Funeral Home of Detroit Lakes. George Neeland George Neeland 55 of Bagley, died on June 30 at his residence at Rice Lake. George was born July 27, 1954, in White Earth to Robert and Sophie Neeland. He grew up in Rice Lake and attended Bagley Schools and lower Colombia College in Washington. George married Martha Gedstad on Aug. 7, 1974, in Sisseton, S.D. George had a deep passion for friends and family, and was very proud of them all. He loved to rice, leech, hunt, camp, and teach his children and grandchildren, nieces, and nephews his special gifts. George’s spirit will be held in all those who had the honor of knowing him and his presence will be felt by those lives he touched. Survivors include his wife, Martha Neeland of Bagley; three sons: Jacob, Joshua (Breanna) and Jared (Angela) Neeland all of Bagley; special niece and nephews: Chi (Ryan) Woods, Nathan and Robert Oliver; sisters: Wanda (Chad) Neeland of Bemidji, Joy Neeland of Brainerd, Terri Musselman of Park Rapids, Penny, Mia, and April Thompson all of Bagley; brothers: Brian (Faye) Neeland of Moorhead, Aron (Cindy) Thompson of Bagley; 15 grandchildren numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents. Funeral services were held on Tuesday, July 6 the Rice Lake Community Center. Arrangements: The Cease Family Funeral Home of Bagley Memories may be shared at www.daviddonehower.com. 27 Anishinaabeg Today Obesity from Page 6 chronic disease, and premature death Excess weight can exert a profound and immediate effect on physical, mental, emotional, and social development: - Compared with normal-weight youths, overweight children and adolescents suffer disproportionately from such chronic conditions as diabetes, asthma, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, atherosclerosis, bone/joint problems, and sleep apnea. - Overweight kids experience intense social stigmatization. Particularly among adolescent Caucasian girls, Hispanic girls, and boys of all races, childhood overweight is associated with lower selfesteem, a tendency to withdraw from others, increased loneliness, sadness, and nervousness, and increased use of alcohol and tobacco. - Severely overweight children are more than 5 times as likely as their healthy counterparts to have a lower health-related quality of life, i.e., their ability to move around, play sports, and perform in school, as well as their levels of fear and sadness, and the quality of their relationships with peers. Overweight youths have an estimated 70-80 percent chance of becoming obese adults. People who suffer the burdens of excess weight during childhood are at continued and elevated risk for chronic diseases and premature death during adulthood. Obesity con- tributes to 4 of the 10 leading causes of death among U.S. adults: coronary heart disease, stroke, Type 2 diabetes, and cancer: Heart disease and stroke account for almost 40 percent of deaths in the U.S., costing the nation an estimated $351 billion in 2003. Obese adults are at ever-increasing risk for hypertension, dyslipidemia, atherosclerosis, coronary heart disease, left ventricular hypertrophy, stroke, and kidney failure. - Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States. Excess weight, poor diet, and physical inactivity greatly increase the chances of developing cancers of the breast, colon, prostate, endometrium (lining of the uterus), cervix, ovary, kidney, gallbladder, and potentially the liver, pancreas, rectum, and esophagus. - Diabetes is a major cause of kidney failure, limb amputation, and acquired blindness. Although Type 2 diabetes is considered an adult disease, doctors have seen a sharp rise in the occurrence of Type 2 in childhood, concurrent with the childhood obesity epidemic. One in every three children born in 2000 will develop Type 2 diabetes if current trends continue. - Obesity is also a significant risk factor for the following diseases: asthma, kidney failure, gallbladder disease, urinary incontinence, and osteoarthritis. What the Figures Mean BMI percentiles show how kids' measurements compare with others the same gender and age. For example, if a child has a BMI in the 60th percentile, 60 percent of the kids of the same gender and age who were measured had a lower BMI. BMI is not perfect. For example, it's very common for kids to gain weight quickly — and see the BMI go up — during puberty. Your doctor can help you figure out whether this weight gain is a normal part of development or whether it's something to be concerned about. Kids can also have a high BMI if they have a large frame or a lot of muscle, not excess fat. And a kid with a small frame may have a normal BMI but too much body fat. Although BMI is not a direct or perfect measure of body fat, kids at or above the 95th percentile are considered obese, a term doctors use to indicate excess body fat, which increases the risk of weight-related health problems. Kids who measure at the 85th to 94th percentiles are considered overweight, because of excess body fat or high lean body mass. A child whose BMI is between the 5th percentile to 85th percentile is in the healthy weight range. A child with a BMI below the 5th percentile is considered underweight. Also, it’s important to look at the BMI numbers as a trend instead of focusing on individual numbers. Any one measurement, taken out of context, can give you the wrong impression of your child's growth. The real value of BMI measurements lies in viewing them as a pattern over time. That allows both doctor and parents to watch a child's growth and determine whether it's normal compared with that of other kids the same age. While BMI is an important indicator of healthy growth and development, if you think your child may be gaining/losing weight too fast, talk to your doctor. Girls Boys 28 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today Congratulations Thank You White Earth enrollee Richard Boswell III was recently promoted to Sergeant in the U.S. Army. He graduated as a Combat Engineer in February 2008 in Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. He served one year tour of duty in Operation Iraqi Freedom from October 2008-09. He is currently stationed in Hawaii. He is the great grandson of Leonard and Francis Thompson Sr., the grandson of Richard Boswell Sr., and Sandra Thompson (Boswell), and the son of Richard Boswell Jr., and Sarah Anton. “Richie, we are so proud of you and very happy you followed your dream. Your antie loves you very much and gonna be happy to see you. Tears come to our eyes when we think how much you have done.” Love ya, Antie you know who! to the voters of District II for re-electing me to a second term! I will continue to serve your needs to the best of my ability and I look forward to representing you throughout the next four years... Terry Tibbetts District II Representative Couple looking for funny Native American stories We were writing our funny family stories down when we came to the conclusion that all Native Americans have their share of funny stories too. We’ve decided to gather as many of those stories as we can for a book. We invite you to participate. For those participants whose stories are chosen for final print, a copy of the book will be sent to them. We love to laugh. It will be fun for us to all laugh together. Submissions may be mailed to: Laughing in Native America 47 Turbat's Creek Road Kennebunkport, Maine 04046 Charles W. LaDue Attorney at Law (White Earth Enrollee) Personal Injury Insurance Call Toll Free 1-866-784-6384 Coon Rapids, MN Or e-mail:[email protected] We are looking forward to hearing from you. Sincerely, Carol A. Lane and Dannel R. Perkins (Penobscot) July 2010 WIC Calendar Monday Tuesday 1 WIC White Earth Health Center 8-4 (218) 983-6232 or 1-800-477-0125 5 12 White Earth Health Center 8-4 19 Gonvick Community Center 10-3 26 8 6 Bagley Elementary School 9:30-3 Holiday Friday Thursday Wednesday White Earth Health Center 8-4 White Earth Health Center 8-4 9 White Earth Health Center 8-4 7 14 13 White Earth Health Center 8-4 White Earth Health Center 8-4 2 15 Naytahwaush Learning Center 9:30-3 Pine Point School 9:30-3 20 Bagley Elementary School 9:30-3 Rice Lake Community Center 9:30-3 21 27 Mahnomen Riverland Apartments 11-5:30 28 Mahnomen Riverland Apartments 9:30-3 22 White Earth Health Center 8-4 29 White Earth Health Center 8-4 16 White Earth Health Center 8-4 23 White Earth Health Center 8-4 30 White Earth Health Center 8-4 MCT Finance Corporation If you are an enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe and are interested in a low interest mortgage, call (218) 335-8582 for an appointment with a loan officer. For more information, download an application, or view homes for sale checkout our website at: www.mnchippewatribe.org or www.mctfc.org For Sale Buick LeSabre, 164K, sharp! Book is $5,700 - will sell for $3,600. Jim Beaupre Used Auto. Call 218-473-2332 or (cell) 218-204-0544. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 In the Matter of the Welfare of the Child of: Geeziss French SUMMONS OF FILING OF PETITION Court File No. CC-10-373,374 SUMMONS OF FILING OF PETITION Court File No. CC-09-697, 698 YOU ARE HEREBY notified that on 17 June 2010 a Motion was filed with the White Earth Tribal Court regarding the legal custodian of the above-named child. You are asked to contact the White Earth Tribal Courtroom located at the RTC in White Earth, Minnesota, telephone number is (218) 983-4648 to receive notification of the hearing date. If you fail to appear for this hearing the Court may find you in default and enter an order. YOU ARE HEREBY notified that on 24 June 2010 a petition was filed with the White Earth Tribal Court regarding the child of the above named parent or legal guardian. A hearing will commence at the date and time to be determined by the Court at the White Earth Tribal Courtroom located at RTC, White Earth, Minnesota. The telephone number is (218) 983-4648. You should contact White Earth Tribal Court Administration to receive notice of the time and date of the next hearing. You are served with this notice because you are a party to this proceeding or you are a person whose presence is important to a determination concerning the protection of your children. If you fail to appear for this hearing the Court may find you in default and enter an order. Dated: 17 June 2010 by: Darlene Rivera Attorney for White Earth Indian Child Welfare In Memory In Memory of Kayla Marie Norcross Dec. 11, 1984 - July 4, 2009 I would never, ever thought you would leave us so soon, I look for you every night when I look into the moon, Knowing where you are at all times, not lost and never far, At night I know you are the brightest, most prettiest star, When you left it felt like I was ready to fall apart, Remembering the love and fun times, I know you will always be in my heart, Deep down inside I feel broke, hurt, empty and very dry, I think of you everyday, sitting here writing this I’m starting to cry, Old songs, certain places and things I do, reminds me of you, This is hard, very hard, sitting here thinking, missing you, We studied, cried, laughed, danced, worked and graduated as friends, My love and feelings I have for you will never end, All things we have done are special, because we did them together, Your heart, your smile, your laugh will stay in my memory forever, You will never be forgotten but always missed and never far apart, You are remembered and always be my high school sweetheart, I remember you Hoop Dancing to an Honor Song sang by me, You will be deeply missed, although we can’t hear, touch or see, And although we can’t see your beautiful face, We know you are in a safe, painless, pretty place, Forever remembered and never forgotten, missed by everyone and me, You are forever missed and cherished as our best friend “Kayla Marie.” Remembered forever “Kayla Marie,” John C. Goodman III In Memory of Charlene Roberta Norcross Oct. 31, 1987 - July 4, 2009 I ask myself everyday, why so early the Creator took you home, So young, precious and not even fully grown, So suddenly, unexpectedly and without notice, But you now live in life’s forever breathtaking promise, With grandma and grandpa wanting you back home to their own town, Waiting for you with a new jingle dress and another princess crown, My question was answered through a very unforgettable dream, I seen you standing in front of the most beautiful stream, There was no sorrow, no fear, no trouble, no death, no pain, I remember seeing you dancing so happy carrying feathers in the rain, And then I woke up crying, and started to wipe my tears, Knowing that you were like my little sister through the years, Even though you still had people to meet and things to do, I’m letting you know that nobody will ever replace you, I will never forget all the fun times, laughing and all those smiles, Your caring love touched everybody and goes for thousands of miles, I’m sorry for not getting a chance to say goodbye, I never will say that because I will see you again when I touch the sky, I promised that you will never leave our thoughts, minds or hearts, Our love we have for you is special and we will never be apart, We miss you dearly and we remember you with our love, Remembering you forever and we will be together again up above... Missing you “Charlene Roberta” John C. Goodman III Keenie’s Korner WHITE EARTH TRIBAL COURT CHILDRENS COURT WHITE EARTH TRIBAL COURT CHILDRENS COURT In the Matter of the Welfare of the Child of: Erica Warren 29 Anishinaabeg Today Here is a real cool drink for young and old alike and it's perfect for summertime. PINEAPPLE SLUSH Pour into a 5 qt. ice cream pail and add: 12 oz. pink lemonade 16 oz. can of frozen orange juice 46 oz. can of pineapple juice 15 oz. applesauce Mix well and put in freezer. Stir every so often to make sure it’s well mixed. Add the above mixture in a glass and add Wal-Mart flavored key lime or tropical flavored water to make it slushy. This is a great refreshing summer drink for all the family to enjoy. USDA “SNAP” Program (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) Colleen Blattenbauer, White Earth Nutrition Education Assistant, 1-218-983-3286 Ext. 1395. Dated: 24 June 2010 by: Darlene Rivera Attorney for White Earth Indian Child Welfare Anniversary Affidavit of Publication WHITE EARTH BAND OF OJIBWE ) WHITE EARTH RESERVATION )ss. STATE OF MINNESOTA ) White Earth Tribal Court In Re the Matter of: Martha Williams, Petitioner, and June 18, 1955 - June 18, 2010 Crystal Warren, Respondent. Orville and Peggy A. Borchardt celebrated their 55th Wedding Anniversary! SUMMONS THE WHITE EARTH BAND OF OJIBWE TO THE ABOVE-NAMED RESPONDENT: An emergency Order for Protection has been issued based on the Affidavit and Petition for Order for Protection in this matter. A hearing has been set for July 19, 2010 at 8:30 am at the White Earth Tribal Court. If you fail to respond to this petition, judgement by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the petition. NOTICE OF RESTRAINING PROVISIONS SERVICE OF THIS SUMMONS MAKES THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS APPLY TO THIS ACTION UNLESS THEY ARE MODIFIED BY THE COURT OR THE PROCEEDING DISMISSED: (1)RESPONDENT SHALL NOT COMMIT ACTS OF DOMESTIC ABUSE AGAINST THE PETITIONER. (2)RESPONDENT MUST NOT HAVE ANY CONTACT WITH PETITIONER WHETHER IN PERSON, WITH OR THROUGH OTHER PERSON, BY TELEPHONE, LETTER OR ANY OTHER WAY IF YOU VIOLATE ANY OF THESE PROVISIONS, YOU WILL BE SUBJECT TO SANCTIONS BY THE COURT. School from Front Page 10 years in order to have this day.” District III Representative Gus Bevins recalled his early childhood attending the former Mission School. “I went to the school here many years ago. I graduated from the 8th grade and then went to Waubun. This is going to be a beautiful building for the kids. But most of all I think our teaching staff is one of the best and I’d put them up against any school in the state.” Overlooking Mission Lake, the new 60,000 squarefoot Circle of Life School will accommodate about 350 students and will feature state of-the-art classrooms. The school is designed by Hunter-Grobe Architects/Planners and overseeing the construction is Roy LaVoy of White Earth Builders. The school is slated to be completed for the 2011-2012 school year. Septic Pumping If you need your septic system pumped call the White Earth Public Works Department at 218-983-3202. Enrolled elder $25, enrolled member $45, non-enrollee $65 30 Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Anishinaabeg Today Classified Ads Taxidermy: Call Dan Clark at Deep Woods Taxidermy at 218-9834196 or his cell at 218-204-0565. Howah Ads Happy 22nd Birthday Happy “1st” Birthday to our Professional tattoos and custom pencil-specializing in memorial portraits and wildlife. For appointments call Jesse Alvarado at 218-2610319 or myspace.com/mahkoonce Derek Goodman Grandson Cass Wanted: Old pocket and wrist watches or parts. Call Duane at 218935-2404. July 24 Childcare: Mother Theresa’s Childcare, located at 37031 County Highway 21, 1/2 mile north of White Earth from the Circle of Life School. Call home: 218-983-4358, cell: 218-234-0960. Stop by or call for an application. For sale: Native American Minnesota hand-harvested wild rice. Cost is $8 a pound. Can ship up to 10 pounds United States Postal Service Priority mail for $10.35. Please call Denise at 218-473-3215 and leave a message. Lawnmower repair & sales: Reasonable rates and fast service for lawnmower repairs or garden tillers. Reconditioned mowers for sale; will also buy mowers. Call Don Vizenor at 218-936-3638. Wanted to buy: Leeches, blood suckers, snapping turtles, and painted turtles. Call Eric at 218-849-7654. For sale: Dancing shawls - many colors - womens and girls. Unique one of a kind. Please call 218-734-2339 for more information. Will ship. Also available - men’s dark grey wool jacket w/black and grey Pendleton yoke, size 2 XLG. Excellent condition. Women’s Pendleton wool jacket w/hood - size XL. Turquoise, red, orange and yellow excellent condition. Chicks for sale - cold hardy heritage, Dominique, Chantecler, Wyandotte. Also Blue Ameraucana from show Quality line. All good winter layers. Royal Palm Turkey poults. Call 218-308-0952. Love, Mom, Dad, Brother and Sister on July 10th We love and miss you! Gramma Mickie & Grampa Jeff P.S. Auntie Dayna loves and misses you too! Happy Birthday to my Happy Birthday Daddy Asia on July 12th A granddaughter is a wonderful thing Love you! Baby Girl Dayna Marie A treasure from above You bring us Special Joy P.S. Your the Best Daddy ever & I love you soo much Love You! Grandma, Grandpa Bray, n Kids Happy “45th” Birthday Happy 2nd Birthday to my husband Jeffrey Layne July 12 I love you honey! Love, Your wife Mickie Everyday of our life Happy 14th Birthday Patrick Porter Peyton Skyler July 18th Love, Mommy, Dad & Hailey Love, Mom, Dad & Tamara Happy Birthday to “My” Uncle Jeff on July 12th. You can reach the AT at 218-983-4640 x5903 Howah Ads are $5 with a picture or $4 without. All payments must be made in advance. Happy “2nd” birthday to our Nephew Peyton “PeyPey” Person Youre the Best Uncle in the whole wide world! on July 22 Love you - Nephew Peyton “Bumpy” Person Nan, Mickie, Uncle Jeff & your big Cousin Dayna My Sassy loves you too! Sassy loves you too! COLOGNE, Germany - White Earth descendant T.J. Oshie (Warroad, Minn./St. Louis Blues/University of North Dakota) recently scored three times in a shootout, including the decisive goal in the seventh round, to lift the U.S. Men's National Team to a 3-2 victory over Italy in the final game for both teams at the 2010 International Ice Hockey Federation World Men’s Championship. “I'm proud of our players,” said U.S. Head Coach Scott Gordon. “After the tough start we had, Love, we did a nice job coming back and winning our final three games.” Team USA won the relegation pool to finish 13th in the 16-team tournament. The U.S. Men's National Team concluded play in the 2010 IIHF World Men's Championship with a record of 2-1-2-1 (W-OTW-OTL-L). Team USA will not know what group it will play in during next year's World Championship until this tournament is concluded and the world rankings are updated. Wednesday, July 7, 2010 Birth Announcements Tamela Schwender and Devin Thompson Kanabec Hospital, Mora, Minn. May 28 Evan David Warren 7 lbs., 8 oz. Jenna Hoban and Jesse Warren St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 6 Edward James Moran Jr. 9 lbs., 4 oz. Tanya Eischens and Ed Moran St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes 31 Anishinaabeg Today June 11 Gage Castillo Wassather 6 lbs., 5 oz. Danielle and Brandin Wassather St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 13 Natalie Leann Leslie 5 lbs., 15 oz. Jessica Holm and Pat Leslie St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 8 Owynn Wyatt Lamb 5 lbs., 15 oz. Janean Hamilton and Jason Lamb St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 8 Cami Rose Bishop 9 lbs., 6 oz. Naome and Vernon Bishop St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 17 Terrance Duane Burnette III 7 lbs., 12 oz. Michelle and Terrance Burnette Jr. St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 8 Olivia Alice Thompson 6 lbs., 6 oz. June 17 Jayden Michael Turner 6 lbs., 1 oz. Praire Gardens 46515 County Highway 26, Detroit Lakes, MN 56501 OPENS July 10th Fresh Organically grown produce Tuesdays thru Sundays 10 am - 5 pm Call 218-573-3873 or 701-388-5480 and leave a message or stop by. Visit Face Book to find out what is ripening! Real Estate Haley Soyring and Timothy Turner Sr. St. Marty’s - Detroit Lakes Counselor Realty of Detroit Lakes June 22 Emily LaRee Abdo 9 lbs., 1 oz. Amy Nelson and Damien Abdo St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 23 Noah Evan Meyer 5 lbs., 7 oz. Lucille Meyer St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes MAHNOMEN HOME: Very livable home on a large treed corner lot, has lots of room, TV room, family room w/fireplace and a living room w/fireplace. Tons of storage space. Large deck and a 10 X 10 garden shed. Does need some updating. Listed by Dick Carr. Call for an appointment. #22-55718 - $124,900. Cell: 218-841-2238. Email: [email protected] June 24 Jack Charles Williams 7 lbs., 9.6 oz. Jackie Vogt and Trey Williams St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes June 25 Cheyanne Kaylene Warren 8 lbs., 6 oz. Melissa Warren St. Mary’s - Detroit Lakes MAHNOMEN HOME: 23340 140TH Ave. Exceptionally well cared for older home, large rooms,high ceiling,hardwood floors,leaded glass wndws in dining room. Seamless steel siding, 40 year shingles installed in 2007,city water,very large private septic system,new curb & gutter and new street. No assessments!!! Large lot,deck and back yard with lots of potential for gardens or shop. Listed by Dick Carr. Call for an appointment. #22-55798 - $64,900. Cell: 218-841-2238. Email: [email protected] MCT Finance Corporation WAUBUN AREA! Nice 2 story home has 2+ bedroom 1 bath. 2 extra rooms without closets, great for office or playroom. 1 stall detached garage on 2 city lots! Price $42,000 AS IS. For more information call Minnesota Chippewa Tribe Finance Corporation 218-335-8582 PO Box 217 Cass Lake, MN 56633 Financing available to qualified buyers Counselor Realty of Detroit Lakes Waubun: Well maintained 3 bedroom and 3 bath rambler in the City of Waubun. Home is move-in ready with new carpet and paint. Lower level is finished with family room and den. Plenty of storage and possible 4th bedroom in basement with egress. Call Eric Lundmark - Counselor Realty at 218 8490383. FOR SALE – with a view of the lake!! Location: 39995 North Elbow Lake Drive (Tribal Trust Property). Built in 1940, 1,192 square feet of living space. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. New roof in July 2009. Some repairs are needed including new cupboards and flooring. This is the perfect place to add your own style! Asking Price: $65,000. Owner financing available, grants available for qualifying customers. If purchased by December 1, 2009 Government tax credits are available. Contact Barb Hoban at Community Development Bank at (218) 983-3241. Rediscovery Center under construction The White Earth Rediscovery Center is under construction and is closed to the public until further notice. You can reach the AT at [email protected] We anticipate this could be summer 2011 32 Anishinaabeg Today Wednesday, July 7, 2010 White Earth 142nd Celebration and Pow Wow ~ June 11-13 Photos by Gary W. Padrta
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