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Making Kanuchi Roland Hotel Opens Rodeo Success Cherokee National Treasure Edith Knight shares how to make the traditional dish. CULTURE, 18 The nine-story hotel tower has 120 rooms, many of which are king and queen rooms. NEWS, 2 2 Cherokees bring home prize money and awards from the allIndian competition. PEOPLE, 17 January 2016 • cherokeephoenix.org CHEROKEE PR SRT STD US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO 49 STIGLER, OK 74462 STIGLER PRINTING 187 Years of Cherokee Journalism PHOENIX CN to mail combo hunting, fishing licenses Included will be letters explaining the combination certificates, which are Cherokee Nation- and state-issued. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – A three-year hunting and fishing compact between the Cherokee Nation and state governments is set to begin in January as the tribe prepares to mail nearly 100,000 combination hunting and fishing licenses. The licenses were expected to be mailed to CN citizens in late December, and as the tribe gathers more correct addresses for its citizens, more licenses were expected to be sent out after the first of the year, CN Attorney General Todd Hembree said. “With the hunting and fishing, the implementation is going very well. We will be issuing approximately 95,000 licenses,” Hembree said. Included in the mailing would be a letter explaining the combination hunting and fishing license, which is CN- and state-issued. “The chief wanted to get this done by the first of the year, and we’re getting the vast majority of it done,” Hembree said. CN citizens who do not receive a hunting and fishing license in the first mailing can contact the Cherokee Nation Tax Commission to provide a current mailing address or get more information about signing up to receive a hunting and fishing license. “The more we can get the word out to get that completed, that’s all the better,” he said. CN officials anticipated they would be sending out the licenses in two waves of approximately 75,000, Hembree said. However, he said the figure is actually closer to 95,000 for the first wave. In May, Principal Chief Bill John Baker and Gov. Mary Fallin signed a compact to provide the licenses to CN citizens. The compact allows CN citizens to hunt and fish in all 77 Oklahoma counties. Baker said he was proud the CN was the first tribe to compact with the state in proper recognition of the tribe’s longheld treaty rights to hunt and fish. Hembree said the compact does not waiver the tribe’s sovereignty but solidifies already established hunting and fishing rights given to the CN by treaty, and is a “win-win” for the Nation and the state. He added that the compact is also an alternative to fighting for hunting and fishing rights in court, which would cost hundreds of thousands dollars, if not millions of dollars. The compact states the CN will purchase and issue a minimum of 150,000 compact licenses for its tribal citizens living in Oklahoma between the ages of 16 and 65 at a cost of $2 a piece, which would equal $300,000 annually. Along with the combination hunting and fishing license, one free deer tag and one free turkey tag will go to each CN citizen, as outlined in the compact. Hembree said the tribe’s hunting and fishing laws already mirror the state’s laws, so that was not a big issue during the negotiations. Chavez named Cherokee Phoenix’s interim editor “COMMITMENT TO EDUCATION” Senior Reporter Will Chavez replaces former Executive Editor Bryan Pollard, who tendered his resignation Dec. 4. BY BRITTNEY BENNETT Intern Female Seminary, the oldest institution of higher learning for women west of the Mississippi River. It is also among the oldest buildings on any Oklahoma college campus and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. “The generosity of the Cherokee people and their commitment to higher education have come together in an unprecedented way,” NSU President Steve Turner said. “Seminary Hall has been and will continue to be a symbol of courage, hope and determination. Principal Chief Baker’s leadership continues to have a tremendous impact, not only on NSU, but on the entire state.” To date, the $4 million contribution is the largest single donation to NSU’s five-year fundraising campaign, which seeks to bring in $20.925 million to go towards TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Phoenix Editorial Board named Senior Reporter Will Chavez as interim executive editor effective immediately during its Dec. 8 meeting via conference call. “I appreciate the board’s confidence in me,” Chavez said. “I just want to emphasize that we have a good staff and a good newspaper. I hope to improve a few things and make it an even better product for our citizens.” Will Chavez Chavez earned a mass communications degree in 1993 from Northeastern State University with minors in marketing and psychology. He has worked in the newspaper and public relations field for more than 20 years. He has performed public relations work for the Cherokee Nation and had been a reporter and a photographer for the Cherokee Phoenix for more than two decades. Chavez will serve indefinitely until the Editorial Board Bryan Pollard recommends to Principal Chief Bill John Baker a permanent executive editor. Board Chairman Luke Barteaux said a search would begin in January. “I believe Mr. Chavez will be able to accomplish his duties as interim executive editor while the Editorial Board conducts a search for a permanent executive editor that will meet all of the requirements as set out in the Independent Press Amendment Act of 2009, including that they must be a citizen of See SEMINARY, 2 See EDITOR, 2 Principal Chief Bill John Baker, left, and Northeastern State University President Steve Turner hold a copy of the original blue prints of Seminary Hall located on the NSU campus in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. The copy contains written notes and was gifted to Baker and the CN by NSU. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX CN, CNB donate $4M to NSU’s Seminary Hall The donation will be spread out during the course of four years. BY LENZY KREHBIEL-BURTON Special Correspondent TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation Businesses is making a multi-million dollar gift towards the modernization and maintenance of a Cherokee landmark. On Dec. 2, officials with the Cherokee Nation and CNB announced a $4 million contribution to NSU’s “Preserve our Past, ENSUre Our Future” fundraising campaign. The donation, which comes out of CNB Cultural Tourism department’s budget, will be spread out over the course of four years. It is earmarked for the renovation and restoration of Seminary Hall, which houses classrooms, faculty and administration affiliated with NSU’s College of Liberal Arts and serves about 1,700 students annually. Along with replacing and repairing electrical wiring, floor joists, window sashes and the building’s air systems, some of the funds will also go to establishing a Cherokee museum in the facility. NSU Vice President of University Relations Ben Hardcastle said the university hopes to start working on the project within the next three to five years. “Our compacts and partnerships…have put us in a position to be able to say yes to a project like this so that in seven generations, our descendants can continue to see our tribe’s commitment to education,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. Prior to statehood in 1907, the 126-year-old building was the second site of the Cherokee State TOTA honors sisters who survived Trail of Tears The descendants of Arminda and Irene England, along with Oklahoma Trail of Tears Association, recognize the two Cherokee women. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor VINITA, Okla. – Until recently, the Schrimsher Cemetery, about 6 miles northwest of Vinita, was forgotten and overgrown with trees and grass. Today it has a new fence surrounding and protecting it from cattle, and the trees and tall grass have been cut away. On Nov. 14, the descendants of Arminda and Irene England, who are buried in the cemetery, gathered there with Oklahoma Trail of Tears Association members to honor the two Cherokee women. As children they traveled the Trail of Tears to Indian Territory with the Richard Taylor detachment. The detachment left near Ross’s Landing on the Tennessee River on Sept. 20, 1838, with 1,029 people and arrived near what is now Westville on March 24, 1839. It had 55 deaths and See TOTA, 3 Wesley Harris, of Heber Springs, Arkansas, reads the biography of his great-great-grandmother, Arminda England, during a Nov. 14 ceremony at the Schrimsher Cemetery northwest of Vinita, Oklahoma. England traveled and survived the Trail of Tears with her parents when she was 7. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ, ᎣᎦᎳᎰᎹ. – ᎾᏞᎬᏭ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ Ꮎ Schrimsher ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗᎢ, ᎢᎸᏂᏢᏃ 6 ᎢᏳᏟᎶᏓ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᎤᏕᎵᎬᎢ ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ ᎠᏂᎩᏓ, ᎥᎿᎾᏃ ᎤᏅᎨᏫᏒᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏜᏴᏒᎢ ᎨᏒᎢ ᏕᏡᎬᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎦᏒᎸᏒᎢ. ᎪᎯᏃ ᎢᎦ ᎢᏤᎢ ᎠᏐᏯ ᎠᎴ ᏩᎦ ᎥᏝ ᏱᎬᏂᏴᎭ, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏕᏡᎬᏃ ᏚᏃᏅᎢ ᎤᏜᏴᏒᏃ ᎦᏒᎸᎯ ᎤᏂᎦᎵᏒᎢ. ᎾᎯᏳᏃ ᏅᏓᏕᏆ.14 ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ Ꮎ Arminda ᎠᎴ Irene England ᏂᏓᏳᎾᏓᎴᏅᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏥᏕᎦᏂᏌᎲ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ, ᎤᎾᏓᏟᏌᎲᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏁᎸᎢ ᎣᎦᎳᎰᎹ Trail of Tears Association ᎠᏁᎳ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏓᏂᎸᏉᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᎠᏂᎨᏯ. ᏗᏂᏲᏟᏃ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎠᏁᎸᏃ ᏥᏗᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏔᏅᎢ ᏴᏫᏯᏍᏛᎢ ᏍᎦᏚᎩ ᎤᏂᎷᏤᎢ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ Richard Taylor ᏓᏘᏁᎲᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᎾᏓᏡᎬᎢ ᎤᎾᏂᎩᏒᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎾᎥᎢ ᎫᏫᏍᎫᏫ ᏧᏂᏐᎯᏍᏗᎢ ᏔᏂᏏᎢ ᎡᏉᏂ ᎤᏪᏴᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᏚᎵᏍᏗ. 20, 1838, ᎾᏍᎩ 1,029 ᎢᏳᏂᏨᎢ ᏴᏫ ᎠᏁᎸᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏂᎷᏨᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᎠᏅᏱ 24, 1839 ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎪᎯᏴᎢ ᏥᎩ ᎢᎪᏗᎢ ᎠᏃᏎᎰᎢ. 55 ᎢᏯᏂᎢ ᏚᏂᏲᎱᏒᎢ ᎠᎴ 15 ᎢᏯᏂᎢ ᏚᎾᏕᏅᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏗᏁᎬᎢ. Arminda England ᏂᏓᏳᏓᎴᏅᎢ Wesley Harris, ᎥᎿᎾᏂ Heber Springs, ᏚᏯᏓᏛᎢ, ᎡᎯ ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎯᎸᏍᎩ ᎾᏕᏘ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎤᎪᎲᎢ ᏣᎳᎩ ᏧᎴᎯᏌᏅᎢ ᏗᎦᎴᏴᏔᏅᎢ ᎪᏪᎵ ᎪᏪᎸᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎢᎪᏪᎸᏃ ᏕᎦᏂᏌᎲᎢ ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᏂᏓᏅᏁᎲᎢ See TOTA, 3 2 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 News • dgZEksf Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 EDITOR from front page A hotel clerk works at the front desk of the new hotel at the Cherokee Hotel-Casino Roland on Dec. 10. The ninestory hotel tower has 120 rooms, many of them king and queen rooms. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX CNE opens new hotel at Roland casino The nine-story hotel tower has 120 rooms, many of which are king and queen rooms. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor ROLAND, Okla. – Cherokee Nation Businesses’ newest hotel-casino in eastern Sequoyah County towers above the surrounding community and lights up the sky like a beacon in the night. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held for the hotel portion of the 170,000-squarefoot gaming destination on Dec. 10 with CNB staff, Cherokee Nation leaders, as well as city and state leaders. The nine-story hotel tower has 120 rooms, many of which are king- and queen-sized. CNB officials said they expect the hotel-casino to attract people across the state line from Arkansas, especially people in Fort Smith that has a population of nearly 88,000. Chad McReynolds, Cherokee HotelCasino Roland general manager, said the casino and hotel has “something for everybody.” “We had a hotel that was sufficient, but this is taking everything a step up, and it’s much more of a luxury, resortstyle hotel,” he said. “Guests want to come here and want to spend their entire weekend here. They’ll come in and dine in the buffet, which is really taking off. They might enjoy the live entertainment we have on Friday and Saturday nights, and they’ll also enjoy the games we have over the weekend. They really don’t have to leave the property for anything unless they choose to.” McReynolds said the old casino and hotel could not meet the demand customers had for Las Vegas-style amenities, which is why the CNB board of directors allocated funding for the new hotel and casino. The facilities are situated 4 miles from Fort Smith and next to Interstate-40 and State Hwy 64. “It has an atmosphere that when you walk in the door you realize you’re in an entertainment destination and you’re going to have a good time,” McReynolds said. Roland was the site of the tribe’s first gaming facility, a bingo hall that opened 25 years ago. Principal Chief Bill John Baker said the tribe’s newest destination is a “far cry” from the bingo hall, which was set up in a former sewing factory next to where the $80 million hotel and casino now sit. The bingo hall eventually turned into a casino but lagged behind the tribe’s other casinos in amenities and attractions for customers. It was recently torn down to make room for more parking. “There is no doubt in my mind, no matter where SCAN we go, we are CODE the biggest and TO SEE the best and VIDEO the top of the market,” Baker said before cutting the ribbon. He added that the hotel’s rooms and suites are “what first class really looks like.” He also thanked the casino and hotel’s employees and said their hard work contributes to the funding used to build health clinics and homes for Cherokee people. He also thanked the Tribal Council and CNB board for their efforts to fund and get the casino and hotel built. Dist. 5 Tribal Councilor David Thornton said the new facility is bringing a better quality of life for the Cherokee people working at the casino and hotel. The updated casino added 100 jobs to the 320 jobs that were available at the previous 50,000-square-foot casino. Cherokee leaders broke ground for the new casino and hotel in April 2014. The casino has 850 electronic games, nine table games and four poker tables. There are also two dining options, a grab-and-go café and a Las Vegas-style buffet with 350 seats. “You’re welcome here. Rent a room, play a game, and have fun,” CNB CEO Shawn Slaton said during the ribboncutting the ceremony. Tribes file brief supporting Mississippi Choctaws BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter WASHINGTON – On Dec. 7, arguments were heard for a U.S. Supreme Court case involving a Mississippi Choctaw minor who was sexually assaulted while working at a Dollar General store. Cherokee Nation Attorney General Todd Hembree, who filed an amicus brief along with other tribes, said after the hearing that arguments went well. “We expect it to be a 5-4 decision and it will likely come down to Justice (Anthony) Kennedy,” Hembree said. “There is a need for all Indian tribes to make sure their court systems are well set up and provide ample due process for those being prosecuted.” He added that the Cherokee Nation’s court system is well set up, but come January or February he hopes to further develop the tribe’s civil code. “It can always be improved,” he said. The Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee (Creek), Seminole and Cherokee nations of Oklahoma filed an amicus brief supporting the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians’ case. The civil suit was filed in the Mississippi tribe’s court by the family of the minor. It alleges that the Dollar General’s store manager sexually assaulted the boy several times during work hours. The tribes’ amicus brief states each tribe exercises jurisdictions within Oklahoma’s boundaries. “Each tribe’s constitution establishes a system of independent courts that, in accordance with applicable tribal and federal law, resolves disputes arising in tribal territory involving members and nonmembers. The question presented in this case concerns the scope of those courts’ jurisdiction. Amici thus have an interest in the Court’s resolution of that question,” the brief states. Cherokee Nation Assistant Attorney General John C. Young said the Supreme Court would address whether tribal courts have jurisdiction over civil tort claims against non-Indians who enter into consensual relationships with the tribe and whose conduct causes harm to Indian children on tribal land. “Because tribal courts generally lack criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians, the ability to assert civil jurisdiction over non-Indians represents the sole means for the tribe to protect tribal citizens from harm caused by non- Indians on tribal land,” Young said. “The issue is of the utmost importance to the Cherokee Nation, as it touches upon the tribe’s sovereign right to govern and protect tribal citizens on tribal lands.” He said matters should be resolved exclusively before the tribal court as they are completely inappropriate for the state courts, which generally lack jurisdiction over tribal lands and have limited knowledge or interest in vindicating tribal law. The ability to prosecute nonNative people within tribal court is an “incredibly important tool to have to protect our people,” Young said. According to a National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center release, supporters rallied on Dec. 7 at the Supreme Court building. “Dollar General’s attempt to avoid any accountability for the alleged conduct of its supervisor through this case could have far-reaching and devastating consequences for the ability of Indian tribes to protect their Native women and children,” said Lucy Simpson, NIWRC executive director. Hembree estimated that a decision could be made in two to four months. the Cherokee Nation and that they will adhere to the standards of accepted ethics of journalism as defined by the Society of Professional Journalists and endorsed by the Native American Journalists Association,” Barteaux said. Chavez indicated he would apply when the job officially opens. “I plan to apply when the job opens, and hopefully I can continue as editor and continue the work that we’re going to get started on this week,” he said. “The managers and I have already met and we’re looking at improving a few things and making a few changes to benefit the staff and the newspaper.” Vice Chairwoman Kendra McGeady made the motion to appoint Chavez and board member Maxie Thompson seconded. “Will Chavez has been with the Cherokee Phoenix for I think 18 years and he has institutional and personal knowledge of all the issues pertaining to management of the Phoenix,” said McGeady. “I believe that his presence in the position will minimize the disruption of the day-to-day operations and ensure a smooth transition.” Barteaux echoed McGeady in the decision to appoint Chavez as interim executive editor. “Mr. Chavez has over 20 years of experience in the newspaper and public relations field, and he is the senior reporter for Cherokee Phoenix,” he said. “I believe he has the pulse of the Cherokee Nation and will be able to successfully lead the Cherokee Phoenix during this time of transition.” Chavez replaces former Executive Editor Bryan Pollard, who submitted his resignation Dec. 4. The resignation comes after McGeady made the motion to “remove Bryan Pollard as editor for cause” during the board’s Nov. 20 meeting. Board members declined to comment on the specific allegations made against Pollard, citing it as a personnel issue. Pollard was placed on paid administrative leave on Dec. 7 until his term was officially completed on Dec. 31, a move that the CN Attorney General’s Office called a “routine practice” in cases concerning resignation in upper-level management. Pollard had worked for the Phoenix since 2003. During his tenure as executive editor, he implemented new products such as the website cherokeephoenix.org, a mobile app, a weekly electronic newsletter, a weekly radio show, online videos and the adoption of social media pages. “I appreciate the opportunity the Cherokee Phoenix has provided for me to serve my fellow Cherokees by providing them with a top-notch news outlet,” he said. “We’ve accomplished much in my time as executive editor, and I leave the Phoenix with a strong foundation for continued success. I’m happy to say that I will continue to serve Indian Country in my new role, and I’ll be announcing that soon.” In other news, the Editorial Board again tabled a motion regarding the Cherokee Advocate, a proposed publication that would focus on a single topic such as education, arts, culture, health or travel each quarter. The board also set its next meeting for 10 a.m. on Jan. 5. To listen to the conference call, dial 1-866-210-1669 and enter the code 4331082. SEMINARY from front page improvements in four areas: opportunities for students, strengthening the faculty, new and revitalized facilities and enhancements in athletics. Just the third capitol campaign in NSU’s history, the “Preserve Our Past, ENSUre Our Future” drive has brought in $12.95 million in its first year, including CNB’s contribution. By comparison, NSU’s previous capitol campaign had a total goal of $8 million. On Nov. 20, Principal Chief Baker was announced as one of the campaign’s three co-chairs, along with fellow NSU alumni Dr. Denise Roddy, an optometrist originally from Gore; and Gregg Wadley, the co-founder of the Oklahoma City Chapter of the American Indian Chamber of Commerce. Jeff Dunn, chairman of the Regional University System of Oklahoma, speaks about the $4 million donation made to Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, by the Cherokee Nation. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ TOTA from front page 15 births during the journey. Arminda England descendant Wesley Harris, of Heber Sparings, Arkansas, said he saw a Cherokee Phoenix article several years ago about a grave marking by the Oklahoma TOTA and inquired about getting his greatgreat-grandmother’s grave marked. He said he’s worked with Oklahoma TOTA President Curtis Rohr to get the grave marked. He sent Rohr his genealogy to show how he was related to Arminda, and the association’s genealogist, David Hampton, researched Harris’ genealogy to verify the connection. “Arminda was 7 years old during the Trail of Tears, and they (her family) settled on Honey Creek near Grove,” Harris said. “It’s very humbling to realize what they had to go through – as a 7-year-old girl in the winter time having to go that far. It they hadn’t done it we wouldn’t be here today, and it’s part of my history, and I’m very proud of it. I’ve always been proud of it ever since I was a little fella and my parents would tell us stories about it.” He said the event allowed the two sisters’ descendants to meet at a luncheon before the ceremony. Harris said he met his cousin Carol Wright, of Tulsa, for the first time that day. Wright is the great-great-greatgranddaughter of Irene England, who traveled the Trail of Tears at age 10. Wright said she felt “honored” to be a part of the ceremony to honor her grandmother. Wright credits her husband Phil for providing her with her genealogy and letting her know of her relations. “I find it very interesting to find that these people are important enough to be remembered for what they’ve done because when we went to Schrimsher Cemetery it was this (waist) high in grass. So, it’s nice to know this has made a difference and the cemetery’s being taken care of now,” she said. Harris said the owner of the land where the cemetery sits, and his family, removed fallen trees and saplings and mowed the grass. A wrought iron fence was also placed around the cemetery to keep out cattle. Troy Wayne Poteete, executive director of the National Trail of Tears Association and CN Supreme Court chief justice, said every time the TOTA marks the grave of a Trial of Tears survivor it’s an opportunity for it to tell the larger Cherokee story, which includes the story of the two sisters. “It’s a story of survival, of resilience, of tenacity. That’s what we celebrate. We celebrate that they overcame, that they rebuilt the Cherokee Nation and they handed it off to the next generation – a distinct political entity, a distinct cultural entity, a Cherokee Nation that could hold its own and retain its identity,” Poteete said. “That’s why we do this. TOTA from front page ᎭᏢᎢᏴ ᎤᎾᏣᏪᏐᎸᏍᏛᎢ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎣᎦᎳᎰᎹ TOTA ᎾᏍᎩ ᎬᏩᏂᏍᏕᎵᎠ ᎠᎴ ᎤᎦᏛᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎥᏍᎩ ᏱᎬᏩᏅᏁᏗ ᏱᎩ ᏦᎢ ᏳᎵᏏ ᎦᏂᏌᎲᎢ. ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏌᏊ ᏚᏂᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᎣᎦᎳᎰᎹ TOTA ᏄᎬᏫᏳᏒᎢ Curtis Rohr ᎾᏍᎩ ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᎢᏳᏅᏁᏗᎢ ᎠᏤᎵᏍᏛᎢ. Rohr ᏃᏫᏓᏥᏅᏁᎴᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᏂᎬᏁᎯ ᎪᎱᏍᏗᏃ ᎤᏮᏂ ᎨᏒᎢ Arminda, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏂᎦᏛᏂᏙᎯ ᎤᎾᏓᏡᎬᎢ, David Hampton, ᏃᎤᎦᏛᏂᏙᎸᎢ Harris’ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏬᎯᏳᏙᏗ ᏙᎯᏳᎯᏯᎢ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎤᏮᎾ ᏱᎩ. “Arminda 7 ᎢᏳᏕᏘᏴᏓ ᎨᏒᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏥᏗᎨᎦᏂᎩᏍᏔᏅᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ (ᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᎤᎾᏙᏢᏒ) ᏧᏁᏅᏒᎢ ᎤᏃ,ᏅᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ Honey Creek ᏧᏍᏕᏄᎲᎢ ᎾᎥᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ Harris. “ᎤᏲᎢᏳ ᎠᏓᏅᏓᏗᏍᏗ ᏯᏓᏅᏖᏝ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎤᏂᎦᏛᎴᏒᎢ- ᎾᏍᎩ 7 ᎢᏳᏕᏘᏴᏓ ᎠᎨᏳᏣ ᎥᏍᎩ ᏱᎾ ᎤᏂᎩᏍᏗ ᎪᎳᏃ ᎨᏒᎢ. ᎢᏳᏃ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏱᏄᎾᏛᏁᎸᎾ ᏱᎩ ᎥᏝ ᏱᎬᏁᏙᎠ ᎠᎭᏂ ᎪᎯᏴᏥᎩ, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏂᎤᏍᏗ ᎬᎧᏃᎮᏗ ᎤᏪᏘ ᏦᎦᏓᎴᏅᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎤᎵᏍᎨᏓ ᎠᎩᏰᎸᏐᎢ. ᏥᏧᏣᏃ ᏂᏗᎬᏓᎴᏂᏍᎩ ᎤᎵᏍᎨᏓ ᎾᎩᏰᎸᏐᎢ ᎠᎴ ᏗᎩᎬᏴᎵᎨᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏂᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ.” ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎯᎠ ᏥᏂᎦᎵᏍᏗᎭ ᎠᎵᏍᎪᏟᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᎠᎾᏓᎸᎢ’ ᏂᏓᏳᎾᏓᎴᏅᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏧᎾᏠᎯᏍᏗᎢ ᏧᎾᎵᏍᏓᏰᏗᎢ ᎠᏏ ᏄᎾᎴᏅᏓ ᏓᎾᏠᏍᎬᎢ. Harris ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ Carol Wright ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎤᏮᏂ ᎤᏩᏛᎲᎢ Tulsa ᎡᎯ ᎩᎳ ᎢᎬᏱᏱᎢ ᏓᎾᏓᎪᏩᏘᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᎢᎪᎯ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ. Wright Z Irene England ᏦᎢ ᏳᎵᏏ, ᎾᏍᎩ Ꮓ 10 ᎢᏳᏕᏘᏴᏓ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎤᏪᎵᏕᎢ ᏥᏗᎨᎦᏂᎩᏍᏔᏅᎢ. Wright Ꮓ ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ “ᎠᎵᎮᎵᎬᎢ” ᎾᏍᎩ ᎬᏪᎳᏗᏍᏗ ᏥᎩ ᎠᏂᎸᏉᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎤᎵᏏ. Wright Z ᎠᎵᎮᎵᏤᎰᎢ ᎠᏂᏁᎵ Phil ᎤᏛᏅᏍᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᎧᏃᎮᏢᏍᎩ ᏧᏓᎴᏅᎲᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏃᎯᏎᎲᎢ ᎦᎪ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᏧᏮᎾ. “ᏙᏳᎢ ᎤᏍᏆᏂᎦᏘ ᏥᏰᎸᏍᎪᎢ ᎯᎠ ᎠᏂᏏᏴᏫᎭ ᏄᎾᎵᏍᎨᏗᏴᎢ ᎨᎦᏅᏛᎢ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᏄᎾᏛᏁᎸᎢ ᏂᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗᎭ ᏦᎨᏅᏒᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ Schrimsher ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ (waist) ᏂᎦᏛᎢ ᎦᏄᎸᏒᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩᏅ, ᎣᏌᏂᏳᏃ ᏄᏓᎴᎢ ᏥᏄᎵᏍᏔᎾ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ ᎤᎾᎦᏎᏍᏛᎢ ᎾᏊ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. Harris Z ᎠᏥᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏤᎵᎪᎯ ᏥᎩ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏥᏧᏙᏢᎭ ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ, ᎠᎴ ᎠᏂᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ, ᏚᏂᎲᏒᎢ ᏧᎴᏴᏒᎢ ᏕᏡᎬᎢ ᎠᎴ ᏧᏓᎨᎢ ᏕᏡᎬᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎦᏄᎸᎢ ᎤᏂᎦᎵᏒᎢ. ᏔᎷᎩᏍᎩ ᎤᏐᏯᎸᎢ ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ ᎤᏂᏴᎯᏍᏗᎢ ᏂᎨᏒᎾ ᏩᎦ. Troy Wayne Poteete, ᏄᎬᏫᏳᏌᏕᎩ ᎠᏍᎦᏰᎬᏍᏗ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎢᎬᎾᏕᎾ Trail of Tears Association ᎠᎴ CN ᎤᏔᎾ ᏧᎾᏓᎯᎵᏓᏍᏗ ᏄᎬᏫᏳᏌᏕᎩ ᎦᎧᎿᏩᏛᏍᏗ ᏗᏃᏢᏍᎩ, ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᏂᎪᎯᎸᎢ Ꮎ TOTA ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᏱᏄᏅᏁᎳ ᏥᏛᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏔᏅᎢ ᎤᏪᎳᏛ ᎦᏂᏌᎲᎢ ᎾᏊᏃ ᎠᎵᏍᏚᎢᏍᎪᎢ ᏗᎬᎧᏃᎮᏗ ᎨᏒ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎤᎾᏠᏯᏍᏓ ᎯᎢᎾ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᎠᎾᏓᎸᎢ. “ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎧᏃᎮᏗ ᎨᏒ ᎤᏂᎦᏛᎴᏒᎢ, ᏚᎾᎴᏂᏌᏅᎢ, ᎬᏩᎵᏨᎢ ᎦᏁᏟᏴᏍᏗ. ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏥᎩ ᎢᏗᎸᏉᏗᎭ. ᎢᏗᎸᏉᏗᎭ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏂᏛᎴᏏᏙᎸᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏃᏢᎯᏌᏅᎢ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏥᏚᏂᏁᎳ ᎣᏂ ᎠᏁᎯᎤᎾᏓᎴᎿᎢ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎤᎾᏙᏢᏒᎢ ᎤᎾᏤᏟᏓ, ᎤᏓᎴᎿᎢ ᎢᏳᎾᏛᏁᎵᏓᏍᏗ ᎤᎾᏤᏟᏓ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎤᏩᏌ ᎦᏙᎩ ᎠᎴ ᏂᎬᏩᏍᏙᎢ ᎠᎪᏟᏍᏗᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ Poteete. “ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏂᎤᏰᏟᏗ ᎯᎠ ᏥᏃᏣᏛᏁᎰᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗ ᏦᏤᎭ ᎪᎯᏴᎢ ᏥᎩ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᎣᎦᏅᏓᏗᏍᏗᎢ News • dgZEksf That why we are here today, to commemorate their tenacity, their resilience, their sheer will to carry on as a people.” Irene was born in 1828 in the old CN, probably on the Tusquittee Creek in what is now Clay County, North Carolina, where her family ran a mill. Her father was a white man named David England and her mother was a half-blood Cherokee named Susannah Fields. Arminda was born three years later on Nov. 25, 1831. During the removal, David England supplied a horse team for the detachment. Following the Trail, the family settled on Honey Creek. Later it moved to the Big Cabin Creek area north of what is now Vinita. In 1847, Arminda married William England, son of Susannah Ward and William England, and they had one daughter, Mary Jane. After their separation, Arminda married Isaac Schrimsher and they were the parents of four daughters: Alta Berilla Meek, Arabella Southerland, Saphronia Susan Mayne Rogers Nolen and Ruth Ann Tyler. After the start of the Civil War, Cherokees supporting the Union killed Isaac. “A group of Cherokees who were sympathetic to the north came down and killed her husband and his slave, beat her with his scalp for marrying a white man, took all the cattle and horses, and left her there with the bodies of her dead husband and slave. She had to walk 20 miles to where her father lived, and he came back and buried the husband and the slave,” Harris said. “After that she married Elias Jenkins (in 1867), who is my line and where I’m from.” The Jenkins farmed on Big Cabin Creek and had two children: Ida Josephine Harris and Henry Washington Jenkins. Arminda Jenkins died, probably at her home near Vinita, on Dec. 27, 1879, and was buried in the Schrimsher Cemetery. About 1853, Irene married Edward Lee Schrimsher. After the Civil War the family farmed north of present-day Vinita in the Cooweescoowee District. Irene and Edward were the parents of four children who lived to adulthood: William Schrimsher, Eliza Ann Williamson, Laura Kelly and Margaret Ann Tanner. In addition they had five children who died in childhood. Irene died probably at her home north of Vinita, on Oct. 9, 1882, and was buried in the Schrimsher Cemetery. Bronze TOTA plaques were placed on the women’s graves that read: “In honor of one who endured the forced removal of the Cherokees in 1838-39. The Trail of Tears Association Oklahoma Chapter.” The plaques also include the TOTA and CN seals. “It was such an honor to have the Cherokee Nation and the Trail Of Tears Association recognize two ordinary citizens who endured the forced march. My relatives and I feel this project is important because it keeps alive in people’s minds our history and how so many suffered,” Harris said. ᎦᏁᏟᏴᏍᏗ ᏂᎨᏒᎾ, ᏚᎾᎴᎯᏌᏅᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏄᎾᏟᎬᎬᎢ ᏂᎬᏂᎯᏒᏊ.” Irene Ꮓ 1828 ᎤᏕᏅᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎤᏪᏘ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ, Tusquittee Creek ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎪᎯᏴ ᏥᎩ Clay County , North Carolina, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎠᏂᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᏎᎷ ᎤᏂᏍᏙᏍᏗ ᎤᏃᏢᏒᎢ. ᎤᏙᏓᏃ ᎠᏴᏩᏁᎦ ᎨᏒᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ David England ᏚᏙᎥᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏥᎢ ᎤᎬᎭᏟ-ᎠᏣᎳᎩ ᎨᏒᎢ Susannah Fields ᏚᏙᎥᎢ. Arminda Z ᏦᎢ ᎢᏧᏕᏘᏴᏓ ᎣᏂ ᎤᏕᏅᎢ ᏚᏂᏃᏗ. 25, ᎧᎸᎢ 1831. ᎾᎯᏳᏃ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᏥᏗᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏗᎲᎢ, David England Z ᏐᏈᎵ ᏚᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ ᎤᏂᏣᏘ ᏥᎨᎦᏬᎣᏗᏍᎬᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩ ᏗᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏔᏅᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ Honey Creek ᎤᏂᎷᏨᎢ. ᎤᏩᎬᏗᏗᏒᏃ ᎤᎾᏛᏅᏒᎢ Big Cabion Creek ᏭᏂᎷᏨᎢ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᏗᏜ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ ᎪᏎᏗ ᎪᎯᏴ ᏥᎩ. ᎾᎯᏳᏃ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ 1847, Arminda ᎠᎴ William England ᏕᎨᎦᏨᏍᏔᏅᎢ, Susanna Ward ᎠᎴ William England ᎤᏁᏥ ᎨᏒᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᏅᎩ ᎾᏂᎥᎢ ᎠᏂᎨᏳᏣ: Alta Berilla Meek, Arabella Southerland, Saphronia Susan Mayne Rogers Nolen ᎠᎴ Ruth Ann Tyler. ᎾᎯᏳᏃ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᎦᎾᏩ ᏓᎿᏩ ᏣᎾᏟᎲᎢ, ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᎤᏂᎫᏍᏓᎢ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᎤᏂᏞᎢ Isaac. “ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩᏃ ᎤᎾᏓᏡᎬᎢ ᏚᎾᎵᎬᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᎤᏂᎷᏨᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏂᏞᎢ ᎤᏰᎯ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏥᏅᏏᏓᏍᏗ, ᎤᏍᎫᏓᏁᎦᎸᏅᏃ ᎬᏗ ᎠᏥᎸᏅᏍᏙᏔᏁᎢ ᎠᎨᏯ ᏂᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗᎭ ᎠᏴᏩᏁᎦ ᎤᏯᏅᎲᎢ ᎢᏳᏰᏟᏗ, ᏂᎦᏓᏃ ᏩᎦ ᎠᎴ ᏐᏈᎵ ᏚᏘᎾᏫᏛᎲᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎠᏥᏃᎯᏴᎢ ᎠᎨᏯ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏧᏂᏲᎱᏒᎢ ᏄᎾᏛᏅᎢ ᎤᏰᎯ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏥᏅᏏᏓᏍᏗ. 20 ᎢᏳᏟᎶᏓ ᎢᏳᏓᏅᎯᏓ ᎤᏂᎩᏎᎢ ᎤᏙᏓᏃ ᏤᎲᎢ ᏭᎷᏤᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎤᏙᏓ ᏭᎷᏤᎢ ᏫᏚᏂᏌᏁᎢ ᎠᎨᏯ ᎤᏰᎯ ᎠᎴ ᎤᏅᏏᏓᏍᏗ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ Harris. “ᎣᏂᏃ ᎢᏴᏱ Elisa Jenkins ᏙᎨᎦᏨᏍᏔᏅᎢ (ᎾᎯᏳᎢ 1867 ᏥᎨᏒᎢ), ᎾᏍᎩ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏅᏓᏆᏓᎴᏅᎢ.” ᎾᏍᎩᏍᎩᏂ ᎠᏂ Jenkins ᏗᏂᎶᎩᏍᎩ ᎥᎨᏒᎩ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ Big Cabin Creek ᎠᎴ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᏚᎾᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ: Ida Josephine Harris ᎠᎴ Henry Washington Jenkins. Arminda Jenkins Ꮓ ᎤᏲᎱᏒᎢ, ᏧᏪᏅᏒᎢ ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ, ᎾᎥᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᎥᏍᎩᏱ. 27,1879, ᎠᎴ Schrimsher ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗᎢ ᎤᏂᏂᏌᏅᎢ. ᎾᎥᏃ 1853, Irene Edward Lee Schrimsher ᏕᎨᎦᏨᏍᏔᏅᎢ. ᎤᏴᏢᏃ ᎠᎴ ᎤᎦᏅᏮᎢ ᎤᎾᏟᎶᎿ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᏓᏂᎶᎩᏍᎬᎢ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᏗᏜ ᎠᏂᎩᏓ ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎫᏫᏍᎫᏫ ᏍᎦᏚᎩ. Irene ᎠᎴ Edward ᎤᎾᏓᎬᏴᎵᎨ ᎨᏒᎢ ᏅᎩᏃ ᏚᎾᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ ᏧᎾᏔᎾ ᏳᎾᎵᏍᏛᏅᎢ: William Schrimsher, Eliza Ann Williason, Laura Kelly ᎠᎴ Margret Tanner. ᎯᏍᎩᏃ ᎢᏯᏂᎢ ᏚᎾᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ ᏚᏂᏲᎱᏌ. Irene Ꮓ ᎤᏲᎱᏒᎢ ᏧᏪᏅᏒᎢ ᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᏗᏜ ᎠᏂᎩᏓ ᏙᏧᏓᏝᎥᎢ, ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ, ᏅᏓᏕᏆ.9,1882, ᎠᎴ Schrimsher ᏧᎾᏓᏂᏐᏗ ᎤᏂᏂᏌᏅᎢ. ᎥᏣᏱ TOTA ᏧᏃᏪᎳᏅᎢ ᏂᏚᏅᏁᎸᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᎠᏂᎨᏯ ᏕᎨᏥᏂᏌᎲᎢ: “ᏓᎾᏅᏓᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏥᏗᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏔᏅᎢ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᎤᏂᎦᏛᎴᏒᎢ ᎾᎯᏳᎢ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ 1838-1839. ᎾᏍᎩ Ꮎ Trail of Tears Association Oklahoma Chapter.” ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏧᏃᏪᎳᏅᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏓᏠᏯᏍᏓ Ꮎ TOTA ᎠᎴ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎤᏂᎲᎢ ᎨᎪᎵᏍᏙᏗ. “ᎢᏙᏳᏃ ᎣᏌᏂᏳ ᎨᏒᎢ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎠᎴ the Trail of Tears Association ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᎢᏧᏅᏁᏗᎢ ᎠᏂᏔᎵ ᎤᏓᏤᏟᏓ ᎠᏁᎳ ᏥᏗᎨᏥᎢᎸᏍᏔᏅᎢ. ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᏗᏋᎾ ᎠᎴ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎠᏆᏓᏅᏛᎢ ᎤᎵᏍᎨᏗᏳᏃ ᎯᎠ ᏥᎾᏅᏛᏁᎰᎢ ᏂᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗ ᏣᏁᎰᏭ ᏂᎬᏫᏍᏙᎢ ᏱᏓᏓᏅᏖᏝ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏂᏧᎵᏍᏔᏅᏍᏔᏅᎢ ᎠᎴ ᏯᏂ ᎤᏂᎩᏟᏲᏨᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ Harris. January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 3 Cherokee Nation Tribal Youth Councilors introduce themselves to the Tribal Council during the Dec. 14 meeting in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Council approves wildland, fire management pact BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Tribal Council on Dec. 14 approved a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department of Interior and Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Eastern Oklahoma Region for wildland and fire management. “Basically the (wildland and fire) resolution allows us to continue to receive funding from the BIA and we work with them in protecting our tribal lands,” Willard Mounce, CN Tribal Employment Rights Office administration officer, said. Mounce said as of Dec. 14 the tribe’s Wildland and Fire Management program did not have a firefighter over it, but that the position was expected to open. He said to be eligible for the position one has to pass an endurance test and meet specific BIA requirements. Until the position is filled, he said the BIA would provide a firefighter during the increased fire season. The agreement is approved annually, Mounce said, and funds $65,000 to the tribe. Tribal Councilors also approved a bill allowing the CN to become a Native American Fish and Wildlife Society member. The NAFWS has been in existence since 1983. It assists tribes with establishing fish and wildlife programs, supporting funding for tribal fish and wildlife programs and educating and training Native fish and wildlife biologists, managers, technicians and conservation officers. However, to benefit from the group’s services, the CN must first be a member. “Be it resolved by the Cherokee Nation, that this Council hereby wishes to become a member of the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society and to participate in the services provided by the organization and its staff; and be it further resolved; that this Resolution of Support be submitted to the NAFWS; and be it further resolved; that the Cherokee Nation supports the efforts of the NAFWS to secure funding to maintain the organization and the services that will be provided directly to tribal fish and wildlife programs,” the legislation states. Both resolutions passed unanimously. The Tribal Council also unanimously passed Janie Dibble’s nomination to the Comprehensive Care Agency or PACE board. Also, legislators approved the reappointments Carrie Philpott and Farrell Prater to the Registration Committee, Amon Baker to the Sequoyah High School board of education and Nathan Barnard to the Appeals Board. Councilors also unanimously approved CN citizen Chris Carter to the Cherokee Nation Businesses board of directors. He resigned from the Cherokee Nation Tax Commission effective Dec. 14, upon confirmation to the CNB board. “I am very pleased with the opportunity to share insights from my many years as a businessman for the benefit of all the citizens of the Cherokee Nation,” Carter, a business owner from Vinita, said. 4 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 News • dgZEksf Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 Local, state leaders discuss proposed transmission line The Energy Department will announce a decision in January on whether it will support the 700-plus-mile wind energy line. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor SALLISAW, Okla. – Concerned citizens, Sequoyah County leaders and representatives of Congressman Markwayne Mullin and U.S. Sen. James Lankford met Dec. 2 at the Sequoyah County Courthouse to discuss a proposed wind-energy transmission line that would cross the entire county from west to east if approved by the Department of Energy next month. It’s thought the DOE would announce its decision mid-January on whether it will support the 700-plus-mile high-voltage line’s construction that would start in the Oklahoma panhandle and traverse through Arkansas and part of Tennessee. State Sen. Mark Allen, said he and state Rep. John Bennett oppose the Plains & Eastern Clean Line going through the county they both represent. “It’s a huge negative impact to the state of Oklahoma. It’s about a $40 million dollar negative impact on tax credits. They’re (Clean Line Energy) coming through here saying they’re going to give money to the schools on ad valorem taxes (property taxes), but that depreciates out to zero in 20 years, and this line will be here, if they build it, in perpetuity,” Allen said. “It’s not going to be anything positive for the state. The state won’t get anything out of it.” Clean Line Energy Executive Vice President Mario Hurtado said the line would provide significant benefits to Oklahoma. “The project will result in a direct private investment of over $1 billion in Oklahoma and will enable private investments of over $7 billion in renewable energy projects in the Oklahoma Panhandle region,” he said. “The project will be responsible for bringing more than 4,000 megawatts of new clean energy projects that otherwise would not be built due to a lack of energy infrastructure to deliver those resources to market. These investments will create substantial jobs and income in Oklahoma. The project will create thousands of construction jobs, hundreds of operations and maintenance jobs, and support over a hundred manufacturing jobs in Oklahoma.” He said Clean Line is working directly with Oklahoma companies to source products and services from Oklahoma businesses. For example, Clean Line has an agreement with Pelco Structural in Claremore for the supply of steel monopole transmission towers. Pelco employs more than 100 at its facility. Quoting the DOE’s Final Environmental Impact Statement for the transmission line, Hurtado said, in the first year of operation Clean Line would pay an estimated $13 million in ad valorem taxes to Oklahoma counties where the electric transmission project is located. Sequoyah County landowner Daron Harrison, right, speaks to state Sen. Mark Allen, foreground, Jeff Underwood, northeast Oklahoma field representative for U.S. Sen. James Lankford, center, and other area leaders about his concerns regarding a proposed transmission power line that would cross his property in Akins. A meeting was held Dec. 2 at the county courthouse to discuss the transmission line. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX “In Sequoyah County, that payment would be over $1 million in the first year of operation,” he said. “Ad valorem payments would continue to be made each year for as long as the line is in service and would serve local schools, fire departments, and other community services. Electricity transmission infrastructure is a long-lived asset, providing service for well over 20 years.” Allen said Cleans Line’s proposed project would definitely not benefit the Sequoyah County landowners who stand to lose land to provide access to the line that would transport electricity generated by wind turbines in western Oklahoma for use in the southeastern region of the country. If built, the line would have lattice structure towers 120 to 200 feet tall and would require 150 to 200 foot wide easements from landowners along the route. Hurtado said Clean Line anticipates making over $35 million in payments to Oklahoma landowners for easements, upfront structure payments and other compensation. Allen said he has spoken to Dist. 6 Tribal Councilor Bryan Warner, who told him the Cherokee Nation would oppose the line because it would be built near the marked Trail of Tears route in Sequoyah County, cross the Arkansas riverbed that the CN owns along with the Choctaw and Chickasaw nations and because the transmission line “infringes on property rights” in Sequoyah County. Warner could not attend the Dec. 2 meeting because of a prior obligation. County landowner Daron Harrison said the line would run a few hundred feet from his home and would disrupt his cattle business. He said he’s talked to his neighbors within 3 miles north and south of his property, who told him they have had no contact with Clean Line representatives and had no idea until recently the line would cross their property. At a DOE meeting in Muskogee in February, Hurtado claimed a scoping period in 2012 and 2013 for the transmission line project was widely publicized. The National Environmental Policy Act calls for public scoping periods for major projects to ensure that the environmental consequences of major federal decisions are known and available to the public before decisions are made and actions are undertaken. Harrison said he first received some notice in his mail on Dec. 12, 2014, after the Environmental Impact Study for the project was released, and he was informed that his property could be affected by the project. Jerry Harry, of the Arkansas Citizens Against Clean Line Energy, also attended the meeting and claimed Clean Line has no customers in the southeastern United States or the East Coast for its wind energy, and people in the 11 Arkansas counties where the proposed line would cross oppose the line being built. Hurtado said discussions are ongoing with municipal utilities, cooperatives and investorowned utilities in Arkansas and other states that are evaluating the purchase of low-cost wind across the Plains and Eastern project. “For example, the Tennessee Valley Authority has indicated its strong interest in contracting for wind energy from the project and has supported the continued development of the project. The East Texas Electric Cooperatives have signed an agreement giving them the option of purchasing a portion of the project and utilizing transmission capacity to receive wind energy from western Oklahoma,” he said. Harry said two limited liability companies, Golden Bridge and Downwind, have been established to help Arkansas landowners fight for their rights against Clean Line. Also, 10 of the 11 counties passed resolutions against the transmission line, Harry said, and the county judges passed resolutions opposing the line’s construction. “We intend to fight it. Most of the major (Arkansas) cities have passed resolutions against it,” he said. In November, the Arkansas congressional delegation asked the DOE to slow down the line’s review process. The DOE issued the final environmental impact statement or EIS for the transmission line on Nov. 4, noting its preferred path through Oklahoma and Arkansas and the preferred locations for conversion stations. The delegation and Oklahoma’s attorney general have opposed giving the power of eminent domain in land negotiations to Clean Line Energy. Hurtado said Clean Line’s focus is on voluntary acquisition of easements from landowners. However, he said the subject of eminent domain for the line continues to be brought up by landowners because linear lines or projects like railroad lines need to have the ability to be completed. “If you can’t find a landowner or you can’t clear title or you can’t buy a parcel and you can’t go around it, that’s what condemnation is for – for projects that have been found to be in the public interest,” he said. On Dec. 2, Arkansas’ two Republican senators said they would place a hold on a confirmation vote for a DOE nominee because of concerns over the proposed line. U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton said they would place a hold on the confirmation vote for Victoria Wassmer, who is President Barack Obama’s nominee for the department’s undersecretary for management and performance. A Senate committee advanced Wassmer’s nomination in November. Boozman and Cotton said they haven’t received sufficient responses from the Energy Department regarding their concerns about the project. “People don’t want anything jammed just down their throat. They wanted to be treated fairly and talked to civil. Explain the situation; don’t force it on us,” Betty Ford, caseworker/ field representative for Mullin, said. Harry said if the line were built it would be hard for future generations to reclaim the land. Also, Arkansas is looking at losing thousands of acres of timberland if it is built. “Once it’s done you can’t take it back. You can’t reclaim something like that. You can reclaim a coal mine, but it’s never the same as it was before, and we’ve got to leave a legacy to our children,” Harry said. “The Five Civilized Tribes are keys, and those tribes have got to understand in order to have a legacy, for this country to have a heritage...we need to worry about what is happening to Mother Earth.” Election Commission to dispose of ballot boxes used by AES Commissioners will send the Automated Election Services’ boxes to the Cherokee Nation’s warehouse. BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation Election Commission on Dec. 8 voted to dispose of old ballot boxes owned and used by the tribe’s previous election services provider. EC officials said Automated Election Services, based in New Mexico, owns the unused boxes or they were included in the services that AES provided the tribe’s Election Services Office for more than four years. Election Services Director Connie Parnell said AES President/CEO Terry Rainey has been notified of the boxes. “He was notified twice that they were here for him to come pick them up and no response. There are about 10 of them.” The boxes, although in good condition, are neither big enough nor consistent with the system the EC currently uses, officials said. The EC used AES for the tribe’s 2011 election. The principal chief race that year ended up in court with the tribe’s Supreme Court eventually ordering a new race because no winner could be determined with mathematic certainty. With the Carter Center watching the second election, Bill John Baker, then a Tribal Councilor, won the race over former Principal Chief Chad Smith and was sworn into office on Oct. 19. Since then, the CN and the EC parted ways with AES. The EC ran the tribe’s 2015 election. The commissioners voted to surplus the ballot boxes to the CN Warehouse located on the Tribal Complex. Commissioners also discussed the purchase of an office time clock. “The reason we’re asking for a new time clock is because there were some discrepancies with (EC Administrator) Keeli’s (Duncan) time, and I had gotten some information from the payroll department that had shown that. I think she had lost like 35 hours of leave that shouldn’t have and we couldn’t go back and fix that for her,” Commissioner Teresa Hart said. Commissioner Shawna Calico added that the clock would serve as a backup to what is submitted to payroll. “To be able to keep better track of that,” she said. “Plus, it would help me as the person that signs the timesheets to know what I’m looking for when I review and approve those.” The clock can also double as a timed stamp for when documents are filed with the EC either through voter registration or during election time. Commissioners Martha Calico, Hart and Shawna Calico approved the motion with one abstention by Carolyn Allen. Commissioners also congratulated Shawna Calico for her Nov. 2 reappointment to the commission by Principal Chief Bill John Baker. Her term will expire Oct. 1, 2019. The commission is still one member short of being full. Former Chairman Bill Horton resigned earlier this year after the election cycle. The commission also voted to establish the 2016 meeting schedule, making each EC regular meeting at 4 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month. SCAN CODE TO SEE VIDEO OPINION • Zlsz 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 5 Talking Circles Wanting stomp dance knowledge January 2016 Volume 40, No. 1 The Cherokee Phoenix is published monthly by the Cherokee Nation, PO Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465. Application to mail at Periodicals postage rates is pending at Tahlequah, OK 74464. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Cherokee Phoenix, PO Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465 Will Chavez Interim Executive Editor [email protected] 918-207-3961 Travis Snell Assistant Editor [email protected] 918-453-5358 Mark Dreadfulwater Multimedia Editor [email protected] 918-453-5087 Dena Tucker Administrative Officer [email protected] 918-453-5324 Jami Murphy Reporter [email protected] 918-453-5560 Tesina Jackson Reporter [email protected] 918-453-5000 ext. 6139 Stacie Guthrie Reporter [email protected] 918-453-5000 ext. 5903 My name is John “Randy” Hair, and I’ve been an inmate here in California for the past nine years. I am a native of Cherokee County, Oklahoma, born in Tahlequah and raised in the Hulbert-Lost City area. During my time of incarceration I have been staying up on my Cherokee culture, language and history. I grew up in a Cherokeespeaking home; both my parents were full-blood Cherokee and spoke our language fluently. My father, the late Sam H. Hair, was an Indian doctor in Cherokee medicine and remedies. He was also an interpreter and language educator for the Cherokee Nation during the 1970s. I write all this in regards to your August 2015 issue on Page 12. “Flint Rock Ceremonial Grounds Carry on Tradition.” As a youngster I attended the stomp dance ceremonies in Marble City, only a few times that I remember. Preserving, strengthening ICWA is a priority for Cherokee Nation By Bill john baker Principal Chief As Indian people, we have always known what is best for our children. It is in our children’s best interests for them to remain in the homes of their parents or families and to remain connected to their tribes. The federal Indian Child Welfare Act was passed in 1978 to “protect the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families.” ICWA has three main goals: 1) to keep Indian children safe in their own homes; 2) if they cannot safely remain in their own homes, to be with a family or tribal member; and 3) to allow the children’s tribe to participate in state court cases when children have been removed from their homes. For 37 years, we have used ICWA in state courts to keep our children safe. It is one of the legal tools we use to ensure our families remain intact and our tribal governments remain strong. Recently, here in Oklahoma, an adoption attorney and outspoken critic of ICWA was Media Specialist [email protected] 918-207-3969 Samantha Cochran Advertising Representative [email protected] 918-207-3825 Joy Rollice Secretary [email protected] 918-453-5269 Justin Smith Brittney Bennett Intern [email protected] 918-453-5000 ext. 7258 Editorial Board Luke Barteaux Lauren Jones Kendra McGeady Robert Thompson III Maxie Thompson Cherokee Phoenix P.O. Box 948 Tahlequah, OK 74465 (918) 453-5269 FAX: (918) 207-0049 1-800-256-0671 www.cherokeephoenix.org ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS Within the United States: $10 for one year $18 for two years $26 for three years International: $24 for one year Please contact us at the number above to subscribe. Mail subscriptions and changes of address to the Cherokee Phoenix, P.O. Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465, phone 918-207-4975. Please include the words “Change of Address” or “Subscription” on the envelope. Back Issues may be purchased for $2.50 postage and handling. Please inquire to make sure the issues are in stock by writing to Back Issues, Cherokee Phoenix, P.O. Box 948, Tahlequah, OK 74465; or calling 918-207-4975. Member Copyright 2016: The entire contents of the Cherokee Phoenix are fully protected by copyright unless otherwise noted and may be reproduced if the copyright is noted and credit is given to the Cherokee Phoenix, the writer and the photographer. Requests to reprint should be directed to the editor at the above address. Material provided through membership with Associated Press NewsFinder, identified by (AP), may not be reproduced without permission of the Associated Press. Oklahoma Press Association Native American Journalists Association Editor’s Note: The Cherokee Phoenix is not distributed free of charge to Cherokee Nation citizens anymore. Subscriptions cost $10 for a year, $18 for two years and $26 for three years. However, the tribe’s administration offers citizens free one-year subscriptions under a Citizens Access To Transparency program. For more information, call 918-453-5000 and ask about the CATT program. CHIEF’S PERSPECTIVE Roger Graham Distribution Specialist [email protected] 918-207-4975 I would love to learn more about our stomp dance ceremonies. I wonder if possible you could pass my contact information to Mr. Bird Wolfe in hopes he could teach me about our traditional ceremonies. I would be grateful. Also, does the Cherokee Phoenix deliver its paper to enrolled tribal citizens free of charge? If so I would be interested. John “Randy” Hair Chowchilla, California Subscribe Today! Within the United States: $10 – 1 year $18 – 2 years $26 – 3 years International: $24 – 1 year Contact Justin Smith 918-207-4975 [email protected] arrested on 25 felony counts, including child trafficking, resulting from private adoption cases. It’s sad, but not surprising, to hear that those who make a living offering Indian children up for adoption would stoop to coercive tactics to take children from their families and tribes. The multibillion-dollar adoption industry and adoption attorneys argue ICWA does not consider the best interests of Indian children and that ICWA due diligence makes cases last too long. They argue that the historic wrongs that led to the passage of ICWA have been corrected and the law is no longer needed. However, the real reason they object is much simpler: when ICWA is followed, children remain in their own homes or in the homes of family members, which in turn leads to less money collected by for-profit agencies and attorneys. In 1978, ICWA was designed to stop illegal practices, which unfortunately still remain prevalent in the adoption industry today. ICWA protects the child, the birth parents, the adoptive parents and the child’s tribe. For example, if parents are placing a child for adoption, they have to do so in court before a judge so he or she can make sure they understand the importance and finality of the choice they are making. ICWA also requires proper notice to parents and tribes. These requirements ensure all adoptions are fair and in a child’s best interest. Only those trying to force, rush or illegally procure adoptions would be opposed to such minimum safeguards. There are national groups composed of child welfare professionals who overwhelmingly praise ICWA. Casey Family Programs, the Child Welfare League of America and several other national child welfare organizations, in response to the Goldwater Institute’s attack on ICWA, stated: “ICWA applies the gold standard for child welfare decisions for all children, and unraveling its protections could cause significant harm for Indian children.” These child-centered organizations that deal with both private adoptions and state foster care cases all agree that “ICWA embodies the best practices in child welfare.” This is something that we have known for years. Indian people and tribal governments know what is best for their own children and will continue to protect and defend ICWA from those who see our children as a resource to increase their bottom line. [email protected] 918-453-5618 6 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 News • dgZEksf Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 Hoskin touts hunting, fishing compact at Dist. 10 meeting BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter Members of the Birdtail and Christie family meet with Cherokee Nation Businesses CEO Shawn Slaton, right, in 2014 at the site where the Cherokee Casino South Coffeyville was built. CNB leased land from the family to place the casino in South Coffeyville. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Cherokee families benefit from CNE land leases BY LENZY KREHBIEL-BURTON Special Correspondent GROVE, Okla. – If Cherokee Nation Entertainment opens a second Delaware County casino, a Cherokee family could be getting a larger monthly rent check from CNE. According to paperwork filed with the Delaware County Clerk’s Office, eight descendants of Esther Flute acquired a 2.7acre property near Grove in August 2014 after the family’s restricted allotment land in Sequoyah County was taken via constructive condemnation for Marble City Public Schools. As per federal statute, if restricted Indian land is taken via condemnation proceedings for the public benefit, the money received for the property may be reinvested in another tract as chosen by the allotee with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. Prior to the Birdtail and Christie family gaining the land, the tract was part of a larger 24-acre parcel purchased by Cherokee Nation Businesses in August 2013, records show. CNE operates under the CNB corporate umbrella. In late 2014, CNE posted an RFP on www. cherokeebids.com, seeking architectural firms for services associated with a new 21,500-square-foot casino in Grove. Plans for a potential 10th Cherokee Casino have been discussed at CNB board meetings this year, although no construction timeline or projected cost have been disclosed. CNE already operates the Cherokee Casino & Hotel West Siloam Springs in the southern part of Delaware County. At the CNB board of directors November meeting, CNE Chief Operating Officer Mark Fulton said the tribe’s lease for the Grove property was four to six weeks away from Bureau of Indian Affairs approval. A representative for CNB confirmed that the lease’s status had not changed as of Dec. 15. As of Dec. 16, no BIA approval was listed in the Federal Register. In 2013, the same eight Flute descendants signed a 10-year lease with CNB to allow a casino on the family’s restricted land in South Coffeyville. Under the terms of that lease, the family received a $100,000 one-time signing bonus, plus $30,000 in rent each month and $1 for every carton sold at the property’s smoke shop. The South Coffeyville lease includes an option for one 10-year renewal, which comes with a $200,000 bonus. According to Nowata County records, CNE bought nearly 40 acres for approximately $100,000 in South Coffeyville in 2012. CNE then deeded part of the land to members of the Birdtail and Christie family. The BIA then put that land into restricted status. CNE leased the land from for its South Coffeyville casino. Members of the Birdtail and Christie family did not respond to requests for comment as of publication. In December 2009, CNE entered into a 10year lease with the Shawnee family in order to open Cherokee Casino’s Ramona facility. The lease, which pays the family at least $325,000 in annual fees, runs through 2020, with two additional 10-year renewal options. As per CNB’s 2012 audit, a $600,000 advance payment to the Shawnee family is being amortized over the life of the lease. Under the terms of both the Ramona and South Coffeyville leases, any improvements made on those restricted lands, such as water and sewer lines, automatically become the property of the landowners once the lease expires. With the Ramona lease’s initial term scheduled to expire the same year as the tribe’s gaming compact with the state, the agreement includes a provision that the lease will automatically be terminated if the compact is not renewed. The terms of the pending Grove lease were not available, but according to the deed filed with the Delaware County Clerk’s Office, any improvements made on the property are taxexempt. Carter resigns from CNTC, appointed to CNB board BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – During the Dec. 9 Cherokee Nation Tax Commission meeting, Commissioner Christopher Carter announced that he would be resigning from the CNTC to take a position on the Cherokee Nation Businesses board of directors, if approved to it by the Tribal Council. Carter resigned from the CNTC on Dec. 14, the day the Tribal Council approved him to the CNB board for a three-year term. At the CNTC meeting, Carter said he enjoyed his time serving the commission. “I just wanted to tell you that I have some very good friends here, and I got a lot of good experience. The staff and everything, I don’t have anything but great things to say about you, and I’m very glad to serve by you guys,” he said. “I learned a lot that I didn’t know about the actual tax basics and the taxes of the Cherokee Nation.” Carter said it has been his “honor” to serve, and CNTC Administrator Sharon Swepston said she appreciated his service. “Anytime I need to call you guys you are always available, and I so greatly appreciate that, to be able to call you if nothing else just to get your opinion on something,” Swepston said. “I appreciate you being willing to serve and help us.” Swepston also said Carter had “done a great job” on the commission. “Mr. Carter is a local businessman in Vinita, and he was willing to come in and serve on the Tax Commission,” she said. “He has been fair and honest, and he’s always been willing to listen. I couldn’t have asked for anyone else to be a better commissioner. He has done a great job on the commission, and we hate to see him go, but we do understand. He’ll be missed.” Carter joined the CNTC in 2013. A CN citizen, he owns Shout & Sack, a convenience store and eatery in Vinita. Also, Swepston said the CNTC had seen an approximate 23 percent increase in motor vehicle revenue for fiscal year 2015 when compared to FY 2014. She added that cigarette and tobacco taxes decreased by approximately 19 percent but that retail sales had increased by approximately 3 percent. She also said the alcohol revenue had increased by approximately 6 percent. Swepston also said motor vehicle revenue saw an increase of approximately 13 percent in the month-to-month revenue comparison of October 2014 to October 2015. Retail sales also saw an increase of approximately 17 percent in the month-to-month comparison, and alcohol tax saw an increase of approximately 5 percent in the comparison. “That’s all good news,” Swepston said. Service in Oklahoma for soldier killed in IS fight MULDROW, Okla. (AP) – The first American soldier to die in combat against the Islamic State group in Iraq was remembered Nov. 24 during a service as a man who was passionate about his wife, children, church and making others happy. The service was held at Trinity United Methodist Church in Muldrow for U.S. Army Master Sgt. Joshua Wheeler, 39, a Cherokee Nation citizen who lived in nearby Roland and graduated Muldrow High School in 1994 before joining the Army a year later. “I was so mad at him when he went to the service, but I want to take it back because good Lord, look what he’s done,” Zach Wheeler, his brother, said during the service. “He’s one of the best soldiers in the world.” Joshua Wheeler joined the Army as an infantryman in 1995 and completed his initial training at Fort Benning in Georgia. He had been assigned to the U.S. Army Special Operations Command in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, since 2004. He was killed Oct. 22 when he and dozens of U.S. special operations troops and Iraqi forces raided a compound near the city of Kirkuk, freeing approximately 70 Iraqi prisoners from captivity. JAY, Okla. – On Nov. 24, at Dist. 10 Tribal Councilor Harley Buzzard’s community meeting, Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr. told citizens at the Jay Community Center that CN officials are excited to implement the new hunting and fishing compact with the state. “It will be a win, win for the state and the tribe, bringing in new federal dollars for habitat management only possible through a partnership,” Hoskin Jr. said. “Best of all, it allows (Cherokee) citizens to exercise their hunting and fishing rights statewide with a license at no cost to out citizens.” Principal Chief Bill John Baker and Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin signed the agreement May 29. Under the compact, the CN adopts the “minimum requirements” of federal wildlife management laws, and “official requirements” for hunting and fishing, as established by the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission and the OWC Code. For example, the Nation observes state bag limits and catch-andrelease requirements. The Nation will assume responsibility for issuing “compact licenses,” valid on tribal and state lands, and pays the state $2 for each license. The Nation must issue a minimum of 150,000 licenses a year to Cherokees between ages 16 and 65. All Oklahoma Cherokees within the age bracket receive the license, even if they don’t hunt or fish. They will not be charged, and the licenses include tags for one deer and one turkey. Cherokees who do not hunt or fish can use the licenses to access wilderness areas, such as the J.T. Nickel Family Nature and Wildlife Preserve, at no cost. CN citizens can visit http://bit.ly/1gxxotZ to fill out a hunting and fishing license application. The tribe is expected to issue the licenses on Jan 1. Nearly 150 people attended the Dist. 10 meeting to learn more about what else the Nation has to offer its citizens. Buzzard said he gave an overview of tribal programs such housing, health, rehab, dental, water and sanitation and the Cherokee Nation Foundation. He also gave information regarding the tribe’s Human Services, Education Services, Career Services and Food Distributions. Citizens also had opportunities to receive flu vaccines as well. “We had a few questions from the citizens in regards to hunting, fishing, housing, and water and sanitation. I discussed the benefits that are available to our veterans such as our center in Tahlequah and the tax benefits offered to them at our retail locations,” Buzzard added. “Gave a brief overview of the status of the new health clinic (in Jay) and stated that it would be after the first of the year before opening, also spoke about youth services, housing, and educational opportunities.” Many issues the citizens face in his district deal with health care such as scheduling and same-day appointments as well as contract health, housing repairs and photo identification cards. “I also discussed the importance of gardening and introduced Mark Dunham who oversees our garden, which provides fresh vegetables to our clients at our food distribution center,” Buzzard said. “Pear, apple, peach and cherry trees have been planted, which will eventually complement the vegetables.” The next meeting for citizens of Dist. 10 will be sometime after the New Year. For citizens in Buzzard’s district needing to speak to him, they can call 918-525-2109 or 918-253-8665. During the Dist. 10 meeting held Nov. 24 in Jay, Oklahoma, the two oldest citizens, Ralph Feathers, middle, and Mary Butler, right, are recognized by Tribal Councilor Harley Buzzard and given Cherokee Nation blankets. COURTESY 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ News • dgZEksf January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 7 Vinita-area Cherokee people’s needs being met A Nov. 17 community meeting allows Cherokee Nation citizens to meet their leaders and share their concerns. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor VINITA, Okla. – It’s easier for tribal leaders today to keep in contact with constituents via phone calls, social media and emails, but for Dist. 11 Tribal Councilor Victoria Vazquez nothing is better than seeing them in person. Dist. 11 encompasses Craig County and parts of Mayes and Nowata counties, and Vazquez said she tries to hold meetings to let constituents to meet with her, other tribal leaders and representatives from Cherokee Nation programs and departments that are based in Tahlequah about 70 miles south. “It puts a more personal spin of what my job really is because I talk to individuals at those meetings, and they hear me talk things they don’t see on Facebook,” she said. The meetings help her hear concerns from constituents. She then takes those concerns to the Tribal Council and other tribal representatives who may be able to address them. “So many times after a community meeting I will go home with five or six issues that a citizen has told me about at the meeting and then the next day I call or email people in those (CN) departments,” Vazquez said. During a Nov. 17 meeting at the tribe’s Vinita Health Center, staff from Cherokee Nation Businesses; Election Commission staff, who helped people register to vote; Education Services; Marshal Service; Tax Commission, who provided information about the new hunting and fishing license program; Health Services, who gave free flu shots; Human Services; Child Support Services; Dental Services; and Housing Authority of the Cherokee Nation assisted CN citizens. She said citizens also appreciated seeing their leaders. Principal Chief Bill John Baker, Deputy Chief S. Joe Crittenden, Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr. and Chief of Staff Chuck Hoskin Sr. all attended. The Hoskins are from Vinita and both served as Tribal Councilors and worked to bring more attention to the needs of people in the Vinita area. Hoskin Sr., who served three four-year terms on the council from 1995 to 2007, said he has “witnessed tremendous growth” in the area since his childhood. He said “to be quite honest” during all the years of him growing up in Vinita until he got on the council in 1995, if you asked anyone in the Vinita area if there were CN services available “the answer would Cherokee Nation Chief of Staff and former Tribal Councilor for Craig County Chuck Hoskin Sr. speaks to people attending a Nov. 17 community meeting at the Vinita Health Center. Standing with Hoskin is Dist. 11 Tribal Councilor Victoria Vazquez, right, who now represents Vinita on the Tribal Council. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX be no.” “The only type of services we had was our housing addition out there, Buffington Heights, but as far as service, there wasn’t any,” he said. “Obviously, as you can tell this evening, there’s a lot of Cherokee up here, and I knew that, and the people that live up here, we knew that. So, that was the message, when I was first elected, that people told me to take to Tahlequah, and that’s exactly what I did.” Hoskin Sr. said he was glad to serve with a council that believed tribal services were for everyone no matter where they lived in the CN. “I’m proud to say we started the first Cherokee health care in Vinita in 1996 when we got the mobile clinic up here. It came to Vinita one day a week, and the people showed up. I used those (clinic) numbers to prove Cherokees were here. We just needed to provide services.” He said Principal Chief Bill John Baker, who served on the Tribal Council with him, also We have a very caring and giving administration, and I’m just thankful to be a part of that and because of that I’m able to share much more... Tribal Councilor Victoria Vazquez A band plays during the Nov. 30 community meeting in Webbers Falls, Oklahoma. Dist. 5 Tribal Councilor David Thornton hosted the meeting for his constituents. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Thornton holds his first Webbers Falls community meeting Tribal Councilor David Thornton says constituents want more information regarding hunting and fishing licenses. BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter WEBBERS FALLS, Okla. – Dist. 5 Tribal Councilor David Thornton hosted his first Webbers Falls community meeting on Nov. 30 bringing out about 200 people. The event, which included dinner and information on tribal services, also contained information shared by Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr. and Principal Chief Bill John Baker. “I truly believe I have put together the absolute best team in every area to propel this Nation forward. We’ve put people in places that have a heart for the Cherokee people and the Cherokee Nation, and that is our true success as this administration,” Baker said. Thornton said this was the first time he’d had a meeting in this area and he didn’t quite know what to expect in Webbers Falls. advocated for services for people in Vinita. “As more services began to come up here, more and more people began to come out and take advantage of them and use them,” he said. He said the town eventually received a walk-in clinic and finally a 92,000-square-foot health center in 2012, which was justified by the number of people in the Vinita area who needed and utilized CN services. Leon Dick, 81, of Vinita, who is Shawnee and Delaware and a CN citizen, said he comes to the community meetings to “find out what’s going on,” to fellowship and for “the eats.” He also gets to see family and friends in one place, he said. He said he grew up in nearby White Oak and takes part in the Shawnee stomp dances there, reading the Shawnee prayer before the dances. He said he appreciates the Vinita Health Center because he only has to drive 4 miles to receive medical care and no longer has to “I know that they’ve never had anything like this over here. And you can see with the turnout that we’ve got it’s wonderful. There’s a lot of information here and going around,” Thornton said. He said most tribal departments were represented, and each included information from which Cherokee Nation citizens could benefit. “If these Cherokees want to ask them a question all they got to do is go over to the table and talk to them. Plus they have forms that they hand out, just a little bit of everything,” he said. Thornton said he gets about two calls per day on the new hunting and fishing compact. It’s a big draw for his district, he added. “They wanted to know if they had to be here to get one and I told them no,” he said. “Email me. Text me. Message me, and I’ll get your name, address and phone number, and I’ll have them send you an application.” Thornton has served as Tribal Councilor for about 16 years. He has two more years left in his term. Thornton said he plans to have another meeting in the spring and if any citizen in his district needs information on his assistance they should call 918-458-7991 or email david-thornton.org. drive to the Claremore Indian Hospital nearly 40 miles away or the tribe’s Nowata clinic about 29 miles away. “At Claremore you’ve got to wait all day and sit around there all day. Here you get taken right in,” he said. Vazquez said Vinita has long been a center for Cherokees who built their homes and businesses there. Cherokee attorney Elias C. Boudinot established the Craig County seat in Vinita in 1871. “It was a center for Cherokees. They built the buildings and lived here, and we had chiefs come from here, streets are named after Cherokees,” she said. More attention is being brought to that history, she said, because the tribe now has more money to give to the Eastern Trails Museum in Vinita, which stores and displays the area’s history, and to buy artifacts and art to showcase the history of Vinita and Craig County in the Vinita Health Center. “We have a very caring and giving administration, and I’m just thankful to be a part of that and because of that I’m able to share much more locally than I have been in the past,” Vazquez said. 8 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Community • nv 0nck Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 Pine Lodge Resort lights up Grand Lake area BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor KETCHUM, Okla. – A hidden gem near the Grand Lake of the Cherokees is the Pine Lodge Resort. Co-owned by Cherokee Nation citizen June Box, it is lit up during the holiday season with thousands of Christmas lights for the resort’s annual “Winter Wonderland Christmas Light Tour.” The 12th annual event boasts nearly half a million lights and is open for tours through Jan. 1. The “old fashion” display features lighted antique vehicles, a nativity scene and a host of characters. Admission is free and visitors may drive through the light displays. “They really enjoy it, the little ones, so that’s who we do it for, for the kids,” June said. Her husband Art said a popular piece in the light show is a blowup RV with Santa Claus coming out of it. The display includes a clothesline with Santa’s underwear hanging on it. “The kids get a kick out of that. We have a lot of different characters the children will have a good time looking at,” he said. “Every year we add some new stuff to it, and now I think we’re up to somewhere around 460,000 lights in the whole show. It’s a community thing for us. It’s kind of a payback for us to the community. A lot of times people will donate lights to us, so it’s quite a show, and it’s free. The kids will really enjoy it.” He said he and his wife are grateful to have “a great staff ” that puts up the lights and decorations. He said the staff starts the project the third week of October to be ready to turn the lights on Thanksgiving night. The lights stay on from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. seven nights a week. Pine Lodge Resort has 41 rental units that include 10 SCAN log cabins CODE TO SEE and three large homes VIDEO The Pine Lodge Resort on the Grand Lake of the Cherokees near Ketchum, Oklahoma, is hosting its 12th annual “Winter Wonderland Christmas Light Tour” through Jan. 1. The light display features nearly half a million lights, lighted antique vehicles, a nativity scene and a host of characters. PHOTOS BY WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX near the water on Grand Lake. June said all the cabins have hot tubs and fireplaces and can be rented on a nightly or weekly basis. “We’re next to a marina so it’s (resort) very popular for people who come with their boats,” June said. “We are open year round so there are always honeymoons, anniversaries or birthdays someone is celebrating.” Pine Lodge Resort is located 2.5 miles east of Ketchum off of Hwy 85. Ten minutes away from Art and June Box, owners of the Pine Lodge Resort the lodge is golfing, a One of the more popular stops along the “Winter on the Grand Lake of the Cherokees, stand next swim beach, spas, hiking, Wonderland Christmas Light Tour” at the Pine Lodge Resort to the resort’s clubhouse on Dec. 10 in Ketchum, wave runner rentals and in Ketchum, Oklahoma, is the blowup RV with Santa Claus. Oklahoma. the South Grand Lake Regional Airport with staff. The resort is also close to casual special occasions. Lodge Resort website at www. free shuttles to and from the airport and fine dining. Groups may reserve For more information, call pinelodgeresort.com. You can also provided by the Pine Lodge Resort the resort’s clubhouse for dinners or 918-782-1400 or visit the Pine find the resort on Facebook. Inaugural ‘Will’s Country Christmas’ fun for all ages BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter OOLOGAH, Okla. – The Will Rogers Memorial Museum has found a new way to give people a look into the life of Rogers, or “The Cherokee Kid,” by showing them how his early life was spent with family during the Christmas season. The museum’s “Will’s Country Christmas” took place Dec. 11 at the Will Rogers Birthplace Ranch in Oologah. Bart Taylor, Will Rogers Memorial Museum assistant curator of education, said the event took place to celebrate everything from Rogers “being a little kid, to Christmas time that Will Rogers held so dearly with his family.” “Those things were very big with him and his family,” he said. “We wanted to do something were we take a little bit of 1890s and take a little bit of this and that and add it to this event.” Those in attendance were able to enjoy everything from hot chocolate, beans and cornbread, music from a brass trio and carolers to ornament making, a lantern tour of the house Rogers grew up in and a hayride that consisted of “Cowboy Christmas” scenes. Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus were also at the ranch taking photos with families. Taylor said putting on the event was a “team effort.” “We couldn’t have done it without all our volunteers. We call our volunteers ‘ropers’ because of Will Rogers. Our ropers are crucial to having any sort of event like this. We could not do it without them,” he said. “Basically, Santa Claus is Adam Hunter, right, and his wife Stephanie, along with children Vance, sitting, and Cade, standing, get ready to take a photo with Santa Claus, Mrs. Claus and an elf at the “Will’s Country Christmas” on Dec. 11 at the Will Rogers Birthplace Ranch in Oologah, Oklahoma. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX a docent. The ladies making the ornaments are docents. The gift shop people are docents. The food people are docents.” The “Cowboy Christmas” hayride let attendees visit three scenes between a sheriff, his men and outlaws. The hayride was interactive, which gave families a chance to interact with the “good” and “bad” guys. “We got the Tri-State Gun (fighters and re-enactors) crew out here. They’re a group of re-enactors and they came out to pretty much put on a little show,” said Taylor. “When you’re on the hayride they’ll be talking to you kind of like a Branson (Missouri) show.” During the ride, the outlaws stopped those passing through and asked for their money. Then, one of the outlaws boarded the hayride and those on the ride could either cover for him or inform the authorities on the next stop of the ride. At the final stop, it showed the outlaws and authorities coming together for Christmas. Taylor said he and his co- workers wanted an event that was inexpensive for families, so they came up with the idea of “Will’s Country Christmas.” “We wanted to make something out here because we think it could be a cheaper option,” he said. “This is kind of in the middle of a lot of spots so we figured let’s have something out here.” He said this event also acts as an educational tool. “We want to show the working ranch. You can come out here and be around cattle. You can be around longhorn cattle, which Clem and Will Rogers raised here,” he said. “That’s part of the legacy we preserve, animals here for people to come look at, to touch, to feed.” Taylor said eventually they would like to make the contents on the ranch period direct. “We’re trying to get to a perioddirect form of education,” he said. “Things inside the house right now aren’t period direct, and we want to get to that level so when you come in you’re doing the actual lantern tours and you’re seeing things that Will would have seen when he walked into his house in the early morning.” Stephanie Hunter, who attended with her family, volunteered at the event. She works at the Will Rogers Memorial Museum and wanted to bring her family to the event. “I’m doing the volunteering and doing the caroling up there, so we’re taking a little break and my family came out here to support Will Rogers and the events,” she said. Her husband Adam said he and their sons Vance Hunter, 4, and Cade Hunter, 2, visited the vendors, went on the lantern tour and met Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus. “They liked it. They like all the old stuff. It’s very different to them,” he said. Taylor said he thinks the event came together “pretty well.” “It might not be heavily attended, but I think we’ve started with a great foundation for years to come. That way people can get in here. We can get blacksmiths and make this into a big, you know, possibly weeklong event,” he said. “You’re experiencing education, history and Christmas all in the same event.” 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ Community • nv 0nck Community Meetings Jan. 4 Belfonte, 6:30 p.m. Sallie Sevenstar 918-427-4237 Eucha Indian Fellowship Eucha Community Building, 8 p.m. Marble City Community Organization MCCO Building, 7 p.m. Lost City Community Organization, 6 p.m. Native American Association of Ketchum 280 East Gregory, Ketchum, 6:30 p.m. Jan. 5 Tulsa Cherokee Community Organization 6 p.m., George Hoos 918-402-4667 [email protected] Muldrow Cherokee Community Organization MCCO Building, 6 p.m. Pat Swaim 918-427-5440 Vian Peace Center, 604 W. Schley, 5:30 p.m. Jan. 7 Greasy Fellowship Community Organization Greasy Community Building, 7 p.m. Washington County Cherokee Association 300 E. Angus Ave., Dewey, 7 p.m. Ann Sheldon 918-333-5632 Jan. 9 Mt. Hood Cherokee Satellite Community Wilshire United Methodist Church 3917 NE Shaver St., Portland, Oregon 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Jan. 10 Rogers County Cherokee Association, 2 p.m. Beverly Cowan [email protected] Jan. 11 Marble City Pantry, 7 p.m. Clifton Pettit 918-775-5975 Brent Community Association 461914 Hwy. 141, Gans, 6 p.m. 918-774-0655, [email protected] Jan. 12 No-We-Ta Cherokee Community Cherokee Nation Nutrition Site 6:30 p.m., Carol Sonenberg 918-273-5536 Victory Cherokee Organization 1025 N. 12th St. Collinsville, 7 p.m. Ed Phillips 918-371-6688 [email protected] Jan. 14 Lyons Switch, 7 p.m. Karen Fourkiller 918-696-2354 Native American Fellowship Inc. 215 Oklahoma St., South Coffeyville 6:00 p.m., Bill Davis 913-563-9329 Okay Senior Citizens, Inc. Okay Senior Building, 3701 E. 75th Street 7 p.m. Adair County Resource Center 110 S. 2nd St., Stilwell, 6:30 p.m. Stilwell Public Library Friends Society 5 N. 6th St., Stilwell, 5 p.m. Jan. 18 Neighborhood Association of Chewey Chewy Community Building, 7 p.m. Jan. 19 Central Oklahoma Cherokee Alliance Oklahoma City, BancFirst Community Room 4500 W. Memorial Road, 6 p.m. Franklin Muskrat Jr. 405-842-6417 Oak Hill/Piney, 7 p.m. Dude Feather 918-235-2811 Rocky Mountain Cherokee Community Organization, 7 p.m. Vicki McLemore 918-696-4965 Fairfield Community Organization, Inc. 6:30 p.m., Jeff Simpson 918-605-0839 Jan. 25 Christie, 7 p.m., Shelia Rector 918-778-3423 Jan. 26 Fairfield, 7 p.m., Jeff Simpson 918-696-7959 Dry Creek, 7 p.m. Shawna Ballou 918-457-5023 Jan. 28 Tri-County (W.E.B.) Association J.R.’s Country Auction, 6 p.m. Orchard Road Community Outreach(Stilwell) Turning Point Office, 6 p.m. Community Calendar Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays Marble City Nutrition Center 711 N. Main Marble City, Okla. 918-775-2158 The Marble City Nutrition Center serves hot meals at the Marble City Community Center at 11:30 a.m. First Friday of every month Concho Community Building Concho, Okla. 405-422-7622 Tahlequah, Okla. 918-456-7787 Monthly meetings are at 6 p.m. Second Tuesday of each month Cherokee Artists Association at 202 E. 5th Street, Tahlequah, Okla. 918-458-0008 www.cherokeeartistsassociation.org The CAA meets at 6 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month. Every Friday of each month Will Rogers Memorial Museum Claremore, Okla. 918-341-0719 Dance at Tahlequah Senior Citizens Center 230 E. 1st St. in Tahlequah, Okla. For seniors 50 and over, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is $2.50, includes pot luck dinner Fourth Thursday of each month Every Tuesday of each month American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Oklahoma – Eastern Chapter monthly luncheon at Bacone College Muskogee, Okla. 918-230-3759 The lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. at Benjamin Wacoche Hall. Please RSVP one week ahead of time. Second Saturday of each month Cherokee Basket Weavers Association at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation Dance at Hat Box Dance Hall 540 S. 4th St. in Muskogee, Okla. For seniors 50 and over, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is $2.50, includes pot luck dinner Year Round To have an event or meeting listed, fax information to 918-458-6136 attention: Community Calendar. The deadline for submissions is the 10th of each month. January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX In Memoriam James P. Foster Stilwell, OK Born 11/2/1956 – Death 8/23/2015 Worked for Schwan’s/welder 9 10 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Services • nnrpH Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 CN Angel Project provides Christmas gifts BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – On Nov. 24, the Cherokee Nation kicked off the season of giving with its 2015 Angel Project event to help provide Christmas gifts to Cherokee children in need. To begin the giving, CPR, a Tribal Employment Rights Office-certified and Cherokee-owned roofing business, donated 250 bicycles to the help fill the wants of children who were a part of the Angle Project. “Giving back is something my mother raised me to do and my employees love helping give back also,” CPR President Robert Brown said. “I remember one year when my mother was unable to buy me a Christmas gift and she received help from a local store owner, who helped her in providing me that one toy under the Christmas tree.” Rachel Fore, CN Indian Child Welfare administrative operations manager, said the donation of bikes would cover a “large amount” of what children are requesting for their respective Christmas gifts. “That’s a fabulous donation that we haven’t ever had before, so it kind of changed the way we had to do things on the application side,” she said. “We pretty swiftly decided that we would just pull all the angels that have requested bikes and then we would utilize the funds that we receive to fill in the needs for those children.” Fore said she became emotional when she saw all 250 bike on various trailers parked outside the W.W. Keeler Tribal Complex. “I teared up because as you take application after application there are so many needs out there and very little wants really from our Cherokee children that are on the Angel Project, and so to see that someone would identify a very, very big want that a lot of kids wouldn’t even dream to ask for, that’s really impactful, and it’s a great way that Cherokees are helping Cherokees,” she said. Fore said there were nearly 2,000 children who are a part of the project. She added that she expects to see around 100 emergency applicants in the coming weeks. “As we get closer people will say, ‘I didn’t know that I was going to have this expense’ or ‘my husband lost his job last week.’ So we will take in those children and provide for them as well,” she said. “Last year, we provided for 2,016 children so we are going to maintain open and available to operate up to that this year.” Fore said in some cases not all children on the tree are picked, but she said with the help of donated funds they will not go without. People surround the Cherokee Nation Angel Project Tree on Nov. 24 at the W.W. Keeler Tribal Complex in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. There are nearly 2,000 Cherokee children in the tribe’s 14-county jurisdiction who are apart of the project this year. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX “Typically, it is the case that we have to shop for anywhere from 200 to 400 that aren’t selected off of a tree,” she said. “We utilize our donated funds to do that. We focus on their needs first then at least get them one want for the year.” Fore said this is her first year to fully be immersed in the CN Angel Project, and that is has been a “humbling” experience. “You think, ‘what is it going to be like to take these applications?’ and then you look into the eyes of these mothers and fathers that just want to be able to provide for their kids at Christmas,” she said. “I didn’t probably realize that it would impact me so much.” She said is also impacts her family and how they partake in Christmas. “It also impacts me in my own personal life because I look at my kids and think I probably over buy for Christmas most years for my own children,” she said. “So, given a little perspective through the Angel Project we’re looking at that differently in our own family this year. What we can maybe pare back on and provide to those that wouldn’t receive half of what I might buy for my own kids.” The Angel Project is available to CN citizens living within the tribe’s 14-county jurisdiction, meet income guidelines and have children who are between 0 to 16 years old. Fore said all donations need to be returned unwrapped to Cherokee First inside the Tribal Complex by Dec. 9. “You can come adopt an angel right up until then,” she said. According to a CN press release, tax-free monetary donations to help buy gifts can be made to the CN at http://bit.ly/1OxObLR. For more information, call Fore at 918-4586919. ᏓᎵᏆ, ᎣᎦᎳᎰᎹ. – ᎾᎯᏳᏃ ᏅᏓᏕᏆ. 24, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎤᎾᎴᏅᎲᎩ ᎯᎠ ᏓᏓᏁᏟᏴᏍᎬᎢ 2015 ᏗᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ ᎤᎾᎵᏍᏕᎸᎯᏓᏍᏗᎢ ᏓᏂᏍᏓᏲᎯᎲᎢ ᏗᏓᏁᏗ ᏧᏂᏁᏗᎢ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏂᏂᎬᎬᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎤᎾᎴᏅᎯᏓᏍᏗᎢ ᏧᏂᏁᏗᎢ, CPR, ᎠᏂᏍᏓᏢᎢ ᏧᏂᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᎯ ᏧᏂᏍᏓᏩᏛᏍᏗ – ᎠᎵᏍᎪᏟᏗᏍᎩ ᎠᎴ ᏣᎳᎩᎤᏅᏏ ᎤᎾᏤᎵᎢ ᏗᏂᎵᏦᏛᏍᎩ ᏧᏂᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᎯ, ᏚᎾᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ 250 ᏱᎦᎢ ᎳᎵ ᏗᎦᏆᏘ ᏗᎩᎸᏙᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏓᏂᏍᏕᎵᏍᎬᎢ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎨᎪᏪᎸᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏗᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎤᎾᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗᎢ. “ ᎪᎱᏍᏗᏃ ᎠᏓᏁᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᎩᏥᏃ ᎠᏇᏲᏅᎢ ᎢᏯᏛᏁᏗᎢ ᎠᎴ ᏗᎦᏥᎾᏝᎢ ᎠᏂᏉᏗᎭ,” CPR ᏄᎬᏫᏳᏒᎢ Robert Brown ᎢᏳᏪᏓ. “ᎡᏘᏴᏃ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ ᏫᎦᏅᏓᏗᎠ ᎠᎩᏥ ᎤᏄᎸᏅᎢ ᎨᏒᎢ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎠᎩᏁᏗᎢ, ᎠᎴ ᎠᏓᎾᏅᎢ ᏧᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᎯ ᎠᏆᏍᏕᎸᎲᎢ ᏌᏊ ᏗᏁᏟᏙᏗ ᎠᎩᏁᎸᎢ. ᎯᎠᏃ ᏥᏂᎦᎵᏍᏗᎭ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎠᎴ ᎤᎾᏓᎬᏴᎵᎨᎢ ᏛᏍᏕᎵᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏰᎵᎢ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎬᏩᏂᎩᏍᏗ ᏓᏂᏍᏓᏲᎯᎲᎢ ᏑᎾᎴᎢ.” Rachel Fore, ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ CN program helps citizens get back on feet BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – To help Cherokee Nation citizens recently released from prison get back on their feet, the Career Services’ Coming Home Re-entry program assists those individuals re-enter society. It helps those who have been released from prison within the past six months with immediate needs such as food, clothing, finding a place to live, if needed, and finding employment. “What we do is when they get out they come to our office. We’re able to assist them with $250 for clothes immediately so they can find a job or we can help them find a job,” Daryl Legg, Coming Home Re-entry director, said. The program started in 2013 with a $20,000 charitable donation for homeless incarcerated Cherokees. Since then the Tribal Council has resubmitted that budget to help the program continue. The program’s budget has even increased to more than $93,000, Legg said. “It’s the immediate needs. These folks don’t have a driver’s license. They don’t have anything but maybe a $45 check when they leave,” he said. “Then they have probation fees. They have fines they have to start paying. They have possible attorney fees they have to start paying, so whatever we can do to help balance out the playing field and to give them a fair shake, that’s what we try to do.” Legg said the first three years, the program helped 95 Cherokees who were released from prison and 85 have succeeded in not returning to prison. “We believe in Career Services that a man or a woman need to be working because it does a lot for your social development, your selfesteem,” he said. “An idle mind is the devil’s playground. If people aren’t doing anything to keep themselves occupied they’re going to find something to do, whether it’s right or wrong. They’re going to find something to do so we try to keep them busy.” Legg said the main focus is to stabilize those who need help. After they’re stabilized they can take advantage of other Career Services programs such as GED classes, building trades, day training program and vocational training and rehabilitation. “I’m probably one of the very first products of the re-entry program because I was in prison three times myself, and after I got out the third time in 2001 I went back to college. Vocational rehabilitation assisted me with going to school. Vocational rehabilitation recruited me to come to work here at the Cherokee Nation, and three years later, here I am,” Legg said. “I was over the vocational programs, and now I’m over economic development and re-entry. We’re blessed that we belong to a tribe that forgives. Everybody has the ability to change.” Legg said while in prison people have to go through several programs to be job-ready when they leave. CN citizen Shelley Watson became a certified office administrative assistant while in prison, which has helped her with her current job in the tribe’s day training program. Watson said the program helped her get clothes, a job interview, food, a driver’s license, a Social Security card and a place to live. “It’s just a really good place to get into especially getting out of prison because I was homeless,” she said. “I didn’t have anywhere to go, I didn’t have family to help me or anything, and I was not willing to go back to prison.” Watson, who was recently released from prison for assault and battery by abuse, said the program has made her feel like she is important, something she hadn’t felt in a long time. “The Cherokee Nation, through this reintegration program, has helped me tremendously,” she said. “I couldn’t even say thank you enough for the help that they have given me. I was very troubled and on drugs so bad that I couldn’t even tell you which way I was going. I am a violent offender and a felon and they still helped me. To have an organization help you when you get out, it just made me feel like I was a million bucks, that I was a somebody instead of a nobody because when you first get out that’s how you feel. They just made me feel like I was the best I could be, and I haven’t felt like that in a long time.” The Coming Home Re-entry program also accepts gently used furniture, clothes and other household items and appliances. These items go to CN citizens participating in the program. For more information, call Mary Dunlap at 918-453-5386 or Daryl Legg at 918-207-3832. ᎠᏂᏴᏫᏯ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ Ꮧ Ꮒ Ꮝ Ꮥ Ꮅ Ꮝ Ꭹ Ꮔ Ꭼ Ꮻ Ᏻ Ꮢ Ꭲ Ꮒ Ꮪ Ꮝ Ꮧ Ꮧ Ꮢ Ꭲ Ꮔ Ꭼ Ꮻ Ᏻ Ꮜ Ꮥ Ꭹ , SCAN ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ CODE ᏔᎵ ᏗᎦᏆᏘ ᏗᎩᎸᏙᏗ TO SEE Ꮷ Ꮎ ᎵᏍ Ꭺ Ꮯ ᏔᏅᎢ ᎤᏂᎪᏗ ᏗᎬᏩᏂᎩᏍᏗ VIDEO “ ᎤᏓᏍᏈᏍᏙᏒᎢ” ᎨᏎᏍᏗ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎠᏂᏔᏲᎯᎲᎢ ᏓᏂᏍᏓᏲᎯᎲᎢ. “ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎤᎸᏈᏍᏗ ᎤᎾᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ ᎥᏝ ᎢᎸᎯᏳ ᎥᏍᎩᏳᎵᏍᏓᏂᏙᎸᎢ ᏱᎩ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃᏅ ᎤᏓᏁᏟᏴᏒᎢ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎢᏯᏛᏁᏗᎢ ᏗᎧᎵᏏᏐᏗᎢ ᏗᎪᏪᎵ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. “ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎩᎳᏫᏴᎢ ᏙᎫᎪᏔᏅᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ Ꮎ ᏗᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏧᏂᏔᏲᏢᎢ ᏔᎵ ᏗᎦᏆᏘ ᏗᎩᎸᏙᏗ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏗᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ ᏥᎩ ᏱᏓᏅᏗ ᎥᏍᎩᎾᏅ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᏧᏂᏔᏲᏢᎢ ᏱᏓᏂᎲᏏ.” Fore Z ᎢᏳᏪᏓ ᏂᎦᏛᏃ 250 ᏔᎵ ᏗᎦᏆᏗ ᏗᎩᎸᏙᏗ ᏚᎪᎭ ᎤᎵᎮᎵᏨᎢ ᏚᏂᏠᏛᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏙᏱᏗᏢᎢ W.W. Keeler Tribal Complex. “ᏓᏆᏠᏍᏔᏅᎢ ᏂᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏱᏗᏣᏁᏏ ᏗᎧᎵᏏᏐᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᎾᏓᏍᏈᏍᏙᏒᎢ ᎠᏁᎭ ᎤᏂᏂᎬᎬᎢ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎠᎦᏲᏝ ᎤᏂᏂᎬᎦ ᏗᎦᏤᎵᎢ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏕᎪᏪᎸᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏗᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ, ᎠᎴ ᎬᎪᏩᏛᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎩᎶ ᎬᏬᏟᏍᏗ ᏙᎯᏳᎯᏯ ᎤᏚᏟᏛᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᏂᎪᏗ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏗᎬᏩᏂᏘᏲᏍᏗ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏙᏳᎢ ᏗᎦᏙᎵᏍᏗ, ᎠᎴ ᎢᎦᎨᏃ ᎣᏍᏓ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᏓᎾᎵᏍᏕᎵᏍᎬᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. Fore Ꮓ ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ 2,000 ᎾᎥᎢ ᏄᏂᏨᎢ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎠᏂ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ ᎠᏁᎳ. ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢᏃ ᏓᎬᏖᏃᎲᎢ ᏧᎪᏩᏛᏗᎢ ᏢᏃ 100 ᎢᏳᏂᏨᎢ ᎤᎾᏚᏟᏗ ᏳᎾᏛᏂ ᏧᏂᎧᎵᏏᏌᏅᎢ ᎯᎠ ᏥᏛᏟᏱᎳ. “ᎾᎥᏂᎨᏍᏗᏃ ᎠᏟᎠᎵᏎᏍᏗ ᎠᏂᏏᏴᏫ ᏂᏛᏂᏪᏏ, ᎥᏝ ᏱᏥᎦᏔᎮᎢ ᎥᏍᎩ ᏱᎦᎢ ᏧᎵᎬᏩᎶᏗᎢ ᎠᎴᏱᎩ ᎣᏍᏗᏁᎳ ᏧᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᏗᎢ ᎤᏲᎱᏎᎸᎢ ᏥᏛᏟᎠᎵᏒᎢ. ᎠᎴᎾᏍᏊ ᎥᏍᎩᎾᎾ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᏱᏙᏥᏯᎾ ᎠᎴ ᏱᏙᏥᏍᏕᎳ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. “ᎡᏘᏴᏃ ᏥᎨᏒᎢ, 2,016 ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᏙᏥᏍᏕᎸᎲᎢ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏂᎬᏩᏍᏕᏍᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏛᏅᎢᏍᏕᏍᏗ ᏦᎩᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᏗᎢ ᎯᎠ ᏧᏕᏘᏴᏌᏘ.” Fore Z ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᏳᏓᎵᎭᎢ ᎥᏝ ᏂᎦᏓ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎨᎪᏪᎸᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎢᏡᎬᎢ ᏱᎨᎦᏑᏰᏐᎢ, ᎠᏎᏃ ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᎾᎵᏍᏕᎸᏗ ᏥᏂᎦᎵᏍᏓ ᎥᏝᏃ ᏳᏂᏂᎬᎨᏍᏗ. “ᏳᏓᎵᎭᏃ, ᏥᏂᎦᎵᏍᏗᎭ ᎣᏣᏓᎾᎾᏁᏍᎪᎢ 200 ᎠᎴ 400 ᏦᏥᏍᏕᎸᎡᏗᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᎢᏡᎬᎢ ᎨᎪᏪᎸᎢ ᎨᎦᏑᏰᏓ ᏂᎨᏒᎾ ᏱᎩ, “ᎤᎾᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᏃ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎣᏨᏗᏍᎪᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏦᏥᏍᏕᎸᎡᏗᎢ. ᎾᏍᎩ ᎣᏣᎦᏎᏍᏗᏍᎪᎢ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ ᎤᏂᏂᎬᎬᎢ ᎢᎬᏱᏱᎢ ᎡᎵᏊᏃ ᏌᏊᏊ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ ᎤᏂᏔᏲᏢᎢ ᎠᏂᎩᎰᎢ ᎯᎠ ᏧᏕᏘᏴᏌᏗ.” Fore Z ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᎯᎠᏃ ᏧᏕᏘᏴᏌᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎢᏃᏱᏱᎢ ᎤᎵᏍᏕᎸᏗ ᏂᎦᎵᏍᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᏗᎸᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ, ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎣᏍᏓ “ᎠᎩᏰᎸᏅᎢ” ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎠᏆᏕᎶᎰᏒᏅᎢ. “ᏁᎵᏍᎬᏃ, ᎦᏙᏍᎩᏂ ᏄᏍᏕᏍᏗ ᏗᎦᏁᏍᏗᎢ ᎯᎠ ᏗᎧᎵᏏᏐᏗ?’ ᎠᎴ ᏗᎪᏩᏛᏗ ᎤᎾᏓᏥᎢ ᎠᎴ ᎤᎾᏓᏙᏓ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏧᎾᏚᎵᎠ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᏰᎵᎢ ᏗᎬᏩᏂᏁᏗ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᏚᏂᎧᎲᎢ ᏓᏂᏍᏓᏲᎯᎲᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. “ᎠᏴᏃ ᎥᏝ ᏱᎨᎵᏍᎨᎢ ᎥᏍᎩ ᏱᎦ ᏂᏓᏥᏰᎸᏂᏒᎢ.” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎠᎴᎾᏍᎩᏊ ᎤᏠᏱ ᏄᏁᎵᏒᎢ ᎠᏂᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᏄᏍᏛᎢ ᎾᏅᏛᏁᎲᎢ ᏓᏂᏍᏓᏲᎯᎲᎢ. “ᎾᏍᎩᏂᏃᏅ ᎤᏠᏱ ᎾᏊᎵᏍᏓᏁᎰᎢ ᎠᏋᏌ ᎨᎥᎢ ᏂᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗᎭ ᎢᎦᏥᎦᏙᏍᏗᎰᎢ ᎠᏆᏌ ᏓᏆᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ ᎠᎴ ᏱᎾᏇᎵᏏ ᏍᏈᏯ ᎢᎦᏥᏁᎰᎢ ᎠᏋᏌ ᏓᏆᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. “ᏍᏗᏃ ᎬᏕᎶᎰᎯᏍᏗ ᏛᎧᏂᏍᎬᎢ ᏗᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ ᎠᏯᏃ ᏄᏓᎴᎢ ᎣᏥᎪᏩᏛᏗ ᎣᏥᏏᏓᏁᎸᎢ ᏃᎦᏛᏅ ᎯᎠ ᏧᏕᏘᏴᏌᏗ. ᎡᎵᏊᏃ ᎾᏊ ᎥᏝ ᎥᏍᎩ ᏱᎦ ᏱᏂᎦᎬᏛᎦ ᎠᎴ ᏱᏂᎦᏥᏛᏂᏏ ᎾᏍᎩ Ꮎ ᎪᎱᏍᏗ ᎬᏩᏂᎩᏍᏗ ᎠᏰᏟᏴ ᎠᏋᏏ ᏓᏆᏓᏘᎿᎥᎢ ᎤᏂᎩᏍᏗ ᏱᎦᏥᎥᏏ.” ᎾᏍᎩᏃ Ꮎ ᎦᎧᎿᏩᏗᏙᎯ ᎠᏓᏁᎳᏁᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏛᏅᎢᏍᏓ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ᎠᏁᎳ 14ᏍᎦᏚᎩ ᎢᎬᎾᏕᎾ ᎠᏁᎯ ᎤᏅᏙᏗ, ᏱᎦᏃ ᎠᏃᏢᏍᎬᎢ ᏚᏂᎸᏫᏍᏓᏁᎲᎢ ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᎢᏳᏅᏁᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎾᏍᏊ 0 ᎠᎴᏱᎩ 16 ᎢᏧᎾᏕᏘᏴᏓ ᏗᏂᏲᏟ ᏱᏚᏂᎧᎭ. Fore Z ᎢᎧᏃᎮᏍᎬᎢ ᏂᎦᏓᏃ ᎤᎾᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ ᏗᎦᏇᏅᏓ ᏂᎨᏒᎾ ᏧᏂᏲᎯᏍᏗ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎢᎬᏱᏱᎢ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ Tribal Complex ᎤᏓᎷᎸᏊ ᎥᏍᎩᏱ. 9. “ᎤᏓᎷᎸᏃ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏴᎯᏁᎦ ᎠᏏᏴᏫ ᏚᏙᎥᎢ,’ ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ. CN ᎬᏂᎨᏒᎢ ᎢᏳᏅᏁᎸᎢ, taxfree monetary ᎠᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏅᎢ ᎠᎵᏍᏕᎵᏍᎩ ᏗᏓᏁᏗ ᏗᏩᎯᏍᏗᎢ ᏱᏣᎵᏍᎪᏟᏔᏂ ᎥᎿᎾᏂ CN at http://bit.ly/10xobLR. ᎤᎪᏗᏃ ᎠᏕᎶᎰᎯᏍᏗᎢ ᏲᏚᎵᎠ,ᏩᏟᏃᎮᏗᏃ Fore 918-458-6919. Seed bank to open Feb. 1 BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation’s seed bank, which houses heirloom crop and native plant seeds, will open to Cherokee Nation citizens on February 1. Seed bank officials said that 2015 was a difficult growing season, but the tribe’s Heirloom Garden and Native Plant Site seed bank has been restocked and would offer a large inventory of seeds to tribal citizens. “The seed bank program allows us to preserve seeds that are unique and important to the Cherokee people. These seeds are otherwise considered rare and are hard to find. The seed bank allows Cherokee families to grow healthy foods with no genetic modification as our ancestors have done for centuries,” Feather Smith Trevino, CN cultural biologist, said. The seeds available in the bank are rare cultivars and generally not commercially available, officials said, and the plants represent centuries of Cherokee cultural and agricultural history. The program offers heirloom crop and native plant seeds. To receive seeds, email a request to [email protected] and include a photo or scan of one’s CN citizenship (blue) card with the request. Include proof of age for any request for native tobacco because recipients must be 18 or older. Also, include the mailing address where the seeds are to be sent. Seed recipients are limited to two varieties with only one variety of corn and gourds due to hybridization issues. Be sure to include one or two alternates in case one’s first choice is no longer available. For questions email seedbank@cherokee. org or call 918-453-5336. 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ Health • aBk 0sr January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 11 Chili cook-off promotes breast cancer awareness Sam Hider Health Center employees host the second annual event at the Jay Community Center. A screenshot of the Indian Health Service’s website that deals with summer externships. IHS.GOV IHS currently accepting externship applications BY TRAVIS SNELL Assistant Editor WASHINGTON – Applications for the Indian Health Service’s 2016 summer externships are now being accepted and will be accepted until Jan. 15. According to www.ihs.gov, the IHS offers scholarship recipients, as well as other health profession students, the opportunity to participate in a hands-on instructive experience that will complement the knowledge and skills developed in school. “This experience will help to enhance preprofessional training, while also familiarizing yourself with Native communities that are of interest to you when you begin your health professions career,” the website states. Externs are employed for 30 to 120 workdays per calendar year during nonacademic periods, the site states. It also states that externs receive a salary based on experience and years of academic training that is comparable to industry standards. “IHS will waive your salary if the externship fulfills a required academic field placement or an internship, in which case it will instead pay all required tuition, fees and regular monthly stipend for scholarship students only,” the site states. For travel, externs must a Request for Extern Travel Reimbursement (IHS-856-18) form to request reimbursement for one round trip to the externship site before travel is planned. “IHS authorizes travel reimbursement based on federal regulations for travel and transportation allowances,” the website states. “If a travel advance is required, contact your Area Scholarship Coordinator and the IHS Area office, Service Unit or health clinic where you are assigned. Do not, under any circumstances, travel without authorized travel orders.” Externs are also responsible for finding their own housing, according to the website. “Your Area Scholarship Coordinator or the local site can provide that information to you. You are eligible to receive a minimal allowance for transportation of goods, but IHS must provide advanced authorization on your travel orders,” the website states. “Please stay in touch with your Area Scholarship Coordinator and Extern Coordinator to verify all of your arrangements before traveling to the externship site.” To apply, applicants must be United States citizens, enrolled in an eligible health profession degree program and in good academic standing with a 2.0 grade point average or above. According to the website, funding for the IHS Extern Program is limited and selections are based on the needs of the Indian health program. The priority listing of those eligible for the program are: • Health professions scholarship recipients, • Health professions students (nonrecipients) who are American Indian or Alaska Native, • Non-American Indian/Alaska Native health professions students (non-recipients), and • Preparatory or pre-graduate scholarship recipients. An applicant for a summer 2016 externship must provide a current transcript and an OF306 at the time of application to be referred to a hiring official. They must also submit the application at h t t p s : / / w w w. u s a j o b s . g o v / G e t J o b / ViewDetails/420539600. For more information, visit http://www.ihs. gov/scholarship/ihsexternprogram/ fresh ground beef. “It’s not store-bought beef. It’s butcher shop ground beef,” she said. “The ground beef, I think, was what did it.” Strader said it was also important for her to promote breast cancer awareness because of two family members being diagnosed with the disease. BY STACIE GUTHRIE “I have an aunt who has had breast cancer Reporter and a cousin who has had breast cancer. My JAY, Okla. – Competitors and those wanting family, the females are fanatical about getting to enjoy hot bowls of chili attended the mammograms,” she said. “I think anyway second annual Chili Cook-off recently at the people can learn about breast cancer and Jay Community Center, in which Cherokee women’s health issues, the better they are.” Strader said women should get Nation Sam Hider Health Center employees mammograms at a younger age because her raised money for breast cancer awareness. Janell Brixy, Women’s Health Cancer case cousin learned of her breast cancer in her manager, said the clinic hosts the cook- early 40s. “I think they kind of changed when you off in October because it is Breast Cancer should get your first mammogram, and Awareness Month. “October is Breast Cancer Awareness I really think women should be younger Month, and typically Oklahoma weather it’s because my cousin was in her early 40s when she was first nice and cool and fally diagnosed with breast (fall-like). And what’s cancer and had bilateral better in the fall than We do this chili breast removed by the a good bowl of chili?” cook-off to help raise time she was in her late Brixy said. 40s,” she said. “My aunt It cost $10 to register funds to purchase was older. She was in a competition chili and educational material her 60s. If it wasn’t for a $6 got you a bowl of mammogram they would chili, crackers, dessert for women in the not have known that and drink. Those funds community regarding they had breast cancer. were to be used to buy Mammograms have educational material breast cancer. saved two of my family about breast cancer. – Janell Brixy, members lives.” “We do this chili cookoff to help raise funds to Sam Hider Health Center On Oct. 20, the American Cancer purchase educational Women’s Health Cancer Society issued guidelines material for women case manager r e c o m m e n d i n g in the community women receive yearly regarding breast cancer,” Brixy said. “We’re trying to get more people mammograms at 45 and until they turn in through the clinic get educated so that 55. From there, it suggests women receive hopefully we can help as many women as we a mammogram every other year as long as their physicians deem them healthy. The possibly can.” Brixy said it is important to spread breast previous guidelines recommended women cancer awareness “because breast cancer is begin yearly mammograms starting at 40. According to the ACS, the new guidelines the third-leading cause of (cancer) death in are for women considered average risk for Native American women.” “If we can get them educated, get them breast cancer. Women considered to be hightested, get the mammograms done and save risk for breast cancer either because of family lives, that’s our whole goal,” she said. “We’re history, a breast condition or another reason a matriarchal society. We’ve got to take care need to begin screening at a younger age of our women, our mothers, our daughters, and screened more often. The ACS suggests our children. That’s why it’s so important to women speak with their medical providers to see what are the best routes to take. get women in.” As for the chili cook-off, Brixy said SHHC Susie Strader and Tressa Scroggins said they participated in the cook-off not only public health nursing supervisor Vicki for the cause but because in 2014 their chili Madha won first place and licensed practical placed first. Strader said the key is using nurse Lana Husong took second. CN nurses administer influenza vaccines The vaccines this year will protect against two strands of Type A flu viruses and one strand of the Type B flu virus. Chili Cook-Off participant Tressa Scroggins stirs her and her friend Susie Strader’s chili at the second annual Chili Cook-Off at the Community Center in Jay, Oklahoma. Cherokee Nation Sam Hider Health Center employees hosted the event recently to raise money for breast cancer awareness. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX BY BRITTNEY BENNETT Intern TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Cherokee Nation nurses administered free influenza vaccinations to CN citizens and employees recently inside the Tribal Council Chambers at the W.W. Keeler Tribal Complex. Patricia Hawk, CN Public Health Nurse administrator, said the event reflected a mission of “prevention,” and that the vaccines this year will protect against two strands of Type A flu viruses and one strand of the Type B flu virus. “The vaccine introduces the dead virus into your body and it starts building up the antibodies and everything else that your body can pull together so that when the live one comes on board it’s already armored and ready to go,” Hawk said. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, symptoms of the flu start one to four days after the virus enters the body and include cough, sore throat, fever, headaches, fatigue, muscle or body aches and a runny or stuffy nose. The CDC cautions that adults and children with the flu can infect others one day before symptoms develop and up to five to seven days after becoming sick. “Please, please get your flu shot,” Hawk said. “It’s so very important. It’s going to keep not only you but everyone else around you healthy because you’re not going to spread it to them.” CN citizen Beverly Lawellin said she got vaccinated not only to protect herself from getting the flu, but to protect others. “I started taking care of my ex-husband who is a cancer patient, and it was necessary that I take a flu shot (while) taking care of him when he was doing his chemotherapy and radiation,” she said. “I didn’t need to A Cherokee Nation nurse administers an influenza vaccination at the Tribal Council Chambers inside the W.W. Keeler Tribal Complex in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. The vaccinations were available to CN citizens and employees at no cost. BRITTNEY BENNETT/CHEROKEE PHOENIX bring anything home to him with his immune system being so low, and now I’m kind of afraid to quit taking (the flu vaccine) because I might get the flu.” Lawellin encouraged those who are scared of the flu but uneasy about getting vaccinated to have the same mentality of looking out for others. “You could still be a carrier and give it to somebody else,” she said. “It could be an elderly person that doesn’t need the flu. You don’t know what’s wrong with the people passing you. You don’t know what they’re going through and their health issues. It’s an overall good thing for everybody.” Officials said they had 360 vaccines to administer. CN nurses were also set to administer flu shots at Claremore Indian Hospital and W.W. Hastings Hospital in Tahlequah. Officials said among the Claremore, Tribal Complex and Hastings sites, they could administer about 3,000 vaccinations. An adult consent form or a pediatric consent form must be filled out prior to receiving the vaccine. For more information, call Hawk at 918453-5000, ext. 5844 or Debbie Hood at 918453-5000, ext. 5841. For more information on this year’s flu strains and vaccines, visit http://www.cdc.gov/ flu/about/season/flu-season-2015-2016.htm. CHEROKEEPHOENIX.ORG 12 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Education • #n[]Qsd Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 McAlister teaching vocal class at Bacone College Cherokee Nation citizen Barbara McAlister has an eight-week class in Muskogee, Oklahoma. BY STACIE GUTHRIE Reporter MUSKOGEE, Okla. – Bacone College’s Vocal Class, which began this semester, provides students with a chance to strengthen their singing skills and hone their abilities under the tutelage of adjunct professor and Cherokee Nation citizen Barbara McAlister. “I originally wanted to teach oneon-one voice. Then it turned out that it would be a voice class,” she said. “This is the first semester of the voice class, and I have three people. I think they’re doing very well and I’m enjoying it.” McAlister, a mezzo soprano opera star, said she hopes to teach her students to sing songs in various languages, and eventually help them develop “the voice.” “I hope to teach a song in German, French, Italian, the Cherokee (language) and just familiarize each student with the technique of singing. Even if somebody can’t sing very well, you can still develop the voice to a point that they will enjoy preforming in choirs,” she said. McAlister said the class is just the beginning of learning about the voice. “You’re just scratching the surface in a voice class like this. To sing well can require years of study,” she said. “It’s really a lifelong study, any instrument is, and the voice is a instrument.” Bacone College adjunct professor and Cherokee Nation citizen Barbara McAlister helps Thomas Carment improve his singing voice during the college’s newly added vocal class. The vocal class is an eight-week class that began Oct. 26 at the Muskogee, Oklahoma, college. STACIE GUTHRIE/CHEROKEE PHOENIX This is the first semester of the voice class, and I have three people. I think they’re doing very well and I’m enjoying it. – Barbara McAlister, Cherokee Nation citizen McAlister said in years past, Bacone was “famous” for it’s musical programs and that she wanted to restore that aspect. “We want to develop more music. Bacone was very famous for its music in years past. They have now, praise and worship choir. They have gospel choir already,” she said. “In the old days, the (19)30s, 40s, 50s, they had a choir that was even on the Ed Sullivan Show. The choir toured the United States, and I would love to see that happen again.” McAlister said she believes most people enjoy singing, so it’s great to help them be able to sing well. “I think most people enjoy singing, don’t they? When I go to church on Sunday morning everyone gets up and sings,” she said. “If you really get involved then it’s just an incredible study. It’s a great discipline. I think the fact is that most people love to sing, and if they do it well it’s even more fun.” Sophomore Alani Sherer, of Horton, Kansas, said she decided to enroll in McAlister’s class because she has always been interested in music. “I met Barbara when I worked at a church here in town and took some lessons from her last spring and found out that she was teaching this class here, so I decided to enroll,” she said. Sherer said while growing up she was always apart of a choir, so she had an easy time taking to the class. She added that it’s a little different than being apart of a choir “because there’s not as many people.” She said so far she has enjoyed going to the class and would recommend it to others interested in learning more about their voices. “I would say it’s a lot of fun,” Sherer said. “Barbara really is good at encouraging and just helping you when you’re struggling.” Thomas Carment, of Muskogee, said he enrolled because he wanted to sing better so he could join his church choir. “I have some issues SCAN with singing, and CODE Barbara McAlister’s TO SEE an excellent teacher, VIDEO and she can get me further down the road than I could stumbling on my own,” he said. Carment said after attending four of the eight classes he is becoming aware of what he should do while singing. “She (McAlister) says I’m doing better,” he said. “I picked up a couple of good clues like projecting. My voice does better when I push the air through my vocal chords than when I don’t. We’ve reviewed octaves and we do voice lessons, voice exercises and I think that’s terrific. It’s just exactly what I needed. I needed some coaching, and I’ll probably continue to need coaching for a long time.” The vocal class started on Oct. 26 and is projected to conclude on Dec. 14. The class is held every week on Monday from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. in the Lucy Peters Room on campus. To take the class, students must enroll at Bacone College. I have some issues with singing, and Barbara McAlister’s an excellent teacher, and she can get me further down the road than I could stumbling on my own. – Thomas Carment, Vocal student Legal magazine names Leeds ‘Leader in Diversity’ Cherokee Nation citizen Stacy Leeds is one of 20 professors chosen who have gone beyond the norm to further diversity efforts in legal education. BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – The National Jurist, a magazine dedicated to being the voice of legal education, recently named Cherokee Nation citizen Stacey Leeds, the University of Arkansas School of Law dean, as a Leader in Diversity. Leeds, who also chairs the Cherokee Nation Gaming Commission, said everything she’s accomplished she attributes to a great family and strong community support network. “I come from a long line of good people that worked very, very hard but were often not the beneficiaries of opportunities, particularly educational opportunities,” Leeds stated in an email. “They had to quit school (or not pursue higher education) for economic and/ or social reasons that had nothing to do with their drive or their intellect. I have been so very fortunate to have the opportunities that they did not. That reality is the source of profoundly powerful motivation.” Leeds said Cherokees are naturally grounded people and humor is one attribute that they use to reach out to one another to keep each other grounded. “That’s a trait that will allow many of our youth to be good leaders in any setting – they need to know that they don’t need to change themselves in order to succeed in any setting,” she added. “They can lead in a Cherokee way – and be leaders that people can relate to on a very deeply personal level. There’s a cultural reason our recent elected leaders are known to us as Wilma, Joe, Chad and Bill John, rather than principal chiefs Mankiller, Byrd, Smith and Baker. It’s not disrespectful. It’s a subtle message to our kids that they can be whatever they want to be if they are willing to work hard – job titles are one thing, people are much more interesting.” In the magazine’s fall issue there were 20 professors chosen from nearly 100 nominations who have gone beyond the norm to further diversity efforts in legal education, according to an Arkansas University release. Leeds said her suggestions on diversity include starting early in talking to students about their futures and to never underestimate the impact one can make on another. “Pipeline programs that target undergraduate and high school students are great – but if I had the resources, we’d target junior high. Planting seeds early is critical,” she said. “Never underestimate the impact you may have on someone – positive and negative. Even unintended negative messages can cripple someone’s spirit. Understand how powerful words can be if you are a teacher, coach, family member or community member. In contrast, a isolated positive speech can be transformative at the right time.” She added that she is always mindful of the students the university recruits. “I am likely the only lawyer, law professor or dean they have ever met, but I am them and they are me,” Leeds said. According to the university’s release, the magazine is among the nation’s leading news sources in legal education. ‘The National Jurist’ reaches an estimated 100,000 law students, and ‘preLaw’ is read by more than 45,000 prospective law students. Professors and law school administrators receive both publications. Charles Robinson, vice chancellor for diversity and community and interim vice provost for student affairs, said the university is “fortunate to have her as part of the Razorback family.” According to the release, Leeds’ profile states she is the nation’s only American Indian dean of a law school and one of a handful of American Indian law professors. I come from a long line of good people that worked very, very hard but were often not the beneficiaries of opportunities, particularly educational opportunities. – Stacy Leeds, Cherokee Nation citizen An Oklahoma State University representative speaks with students about what opportunities and programs are available to them when preparing for college during the Cherokee Nation’s Education Services College and Career Night on Dec. 3 in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. TESINA JACKSON/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Education Services hosts College and Career Night BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation’s Education Services hosted a College and Career Night on Dec. 3 in which more than 200 students spoke with representatives from several colleges while also learning about services available and scholarship opportunities the tribe offers. “It was the first Education Services event to try to bring in all of our scholarship recipients to get a better working relationship with all of the institutions and also bringing in students who are interested in going to school,” Dr. Neil Morton, Education Services advisor, said. Several presentations were also given regarding opportunities available such as the Gates Millennium Scholarship, how to apply for Free Application for Federal Student Aid, Cherokee Nation Foundation scholarships and services, Indian Capital Technology Center programs, CN Career Services and CN College Housing programs. Morton said the event was to provide students with more of an awareness of available sources and to emphasize that they shouldn’t depend on only one source. For CN citizen and Oolagah High School senior Madyson Driver having more than one source and seeing what scholarships are available is what prompted her to attend. “To also get different advice on what to do and what applications to fill out,” she said. Driver said she plans to attend Northeastern Stat University to study speech pathology to become a pediatric speech therapist. She said she decided on that career while participating in the tribe’s Career Services summer SCAN day work program at CODE the Summit Physical TO SEE Therapy offices in VIDEO Claremore. Representatives from NSU, University of Arkansas, University of Oklahoma, Rogers State University, University of Central Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University, Connors State College, Bacone College and Carl Albert State College were also in attendance for students to speak with. Jay Falkner, Carl Albert State College associate vice president of enrollment management, said one reason his college attended the event was because of the great partnership that has developed over a long time working with Cherokee students. Carl Albert State College’s main campus is in Poteau, but has a Sallisaw branch, too. “A lot of our Cherokee students attend the Sallisaw campus, so we’re really excited about upcoming opportunities to work with the Cherokee Nation,” Falkner said. Falkner said events such as the college fair help students because now students focus more on how they’re going to finance their education and what employment opportunities will be available after college. “So it’s not so much about student life anymore as it is about opportunities in career advancement when they’re done, so a lot of the questions now that we deal with are related to financing your education and career options,” he said. For more information on available scholarships and opportunities, call the College Resource Center at 918-453-5465 or email [email protected]. 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ Education • #n[]Qsd January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 13 OSU student says Cherokee traditions propel her BY JACY BRADFORD Oklahoma State University STILLWATER, Okla. – Amber Suena Anderson’s full name means “golden beyond tomorrow,” and the Cherokee Nation citizen takes this meaning to heart. “I’ve always felt like with my name, I have a responsibility to take care of those in the generations to come,” Anderson said. It is a philosophy she has refined and solidified during her five years as a biochemistry and molecular biology student in Oklahoma State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources. The senior from Warr Acres said two things have impacted her the most as a student at OSU – undergraduate research and involvement with Native American communities. She said the two of these combined have transformed her into the individual she is. Anderson said she is thankful to have found a way to weave her culture into her passion for science. It is a traditional Cherokee belief to keep seven generations, both ahead of you and behind you, in mind for everything you do. She said this belief has encouraged her to serve as a mentor for other Native American students at OSU through roles such as Miss American Indian OSU and Native American Student Association president. Her platform as the 2012-13 Miss American Indian OSU was to challenge more Native American students to become involved in research. “I try to encourage Native American students, especially in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields, to know not only what their potential is, but also the importance of them becoming involved in research and extracurricular activities that will allow them to achieve things they never imaged they could before,” Anderson said. Her interest in Native American health sparked as a child because her dad works in the public health field. Anderson, however, said her passion for research did not fully develop until her arrival at OSU. As a Freshman Research Scholar, she was placed in Patricia Canaan’s research lab, and after her first semester, she was hooked. Canaan, associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, said Anderson’s enthusiasm is contagious. “Amber is an excellent role model and ambassador for Native Americans and she has always represented the OSU Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology well throughout her multiple events and occasions,” Canaan said. “We are excited to see how she succeeds in her future pursuits in public health.” Numerous internships and summer research programs landed Anderson at places such as Harvard Medical School in Boston and Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. But an experience closer to home last summer at the Oklahoma City Area Inter-Tribal Health Board confirmed her career path. “In this position, I was treated as a young professional in the field as opposed to an intern,” Anderson said. “I had the opportunity to help create a prescription drug abuse fact sheet that was distributed throughout the state, so in a sense, I felt like I was making an impact to many tribal communities and generations.” During this internship, Anderson became involved in a research project about perceptions of Native Americans. The study, sponsored by the Oklahoma Area Tribal Epidemiology Center and AARP, included a Tribal Community Survey to better understand the beliefs of American Indians/ Alaska Natives living in Oklahoma. Anderson said the assessment provided information on the challenges and priorities in life, monthly expenses and consumerrelated issues. “This research is unique because although there has been a lot of Native American research in the past, there has hardly ever been a focus on the perceptions of Native Americans,” Anderson said. “Stepping into the community and being submerged in the culture opened up great opportunities for gathering usable information.” The national conference is a gathering of nearly 4,000 students and professionals, and includes more than 1,000 poster presentations. Anderson has qualified to attend the conference since 2012. Her final conference as a student, however, will always be the most memorable because she received an outstanding poster presentation award. “This award is the highlight of my research career because I have poured so much of my heart into my research,” Anderson said. “It was very rewarding to earn an award the last year I was able to go and to represent my university and academic college on a national platform.” She said her love for the topic felt like more of a conversation with the judges and participants instead of a formal poster presentation. “If you’re passionate about something, it is very easy and fun to talk about it,” Anderson said. “You long to share your knowledge with others.” John Gustafson, biochemistry and molecular biology department head, said having diverse leaders will be essential for the next generation of students, and he is confident Anderson will fulfill this responsibility. Cherokee Nation citizen Amber Suena Anderson says her passion for science draws heavily on her Cherokee heritage. TODD JOHNSON/ OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY I try to encourage Native American students, especially in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields, to know not only what their potential is... – Amber Suena Anderson, Cherokee Nation citizen Anderson presented this research at the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science National Conference in Los Angeles this past summer. SACNAS was founded more than 40 years ago by career academics and research scientists committed to unifying their voice and offering guidance to Hispanics, Chicanos and Native Americans in the STEM fields. “The diversity in science including women is very scarce, and we must work toward decreasing this lack,” he said. “How can we continue enhancing additional students that represent diversity if we do not have these people as role models? This is what makes Amber so unique. She is that role model.” Following graduation this May, Anderson will attend North Dakota State University to pursue a master’s degree in public health with an option in American Indian public health. She hopes to then continue her educational journey to earn a doctorate, while continuing to study infectious diseases. “With these degrees, I will work to improve the health of the Cherokee Nation and other tribal members by focusing on disease prevention and educational programs,” Anderson said. “Someday I hope to have my own research lab focusing on just that.” 14 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Money • a[w Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 CNE’s Grove casino awaiting BIA lease approval BY LENZY KREHBIEL-BURTON Special Correspondent CATOOSA, Okla. – Plans are moving forward slowly to open a second Cherokee Casino in Delaware County, Cherokee Nation Entertainment officials said. Speaking at the Nov. 20 Cherokee Nation Businesses board of directors meeting, CNE Chief Operating Officer Mark Fulton said the lease agreement with the Bureau of Indian Affairs for a proposed casino in Grove could be reached within the next four to six weeks. BIA officials did not respond to calls to independently verify the approval timeline. Also, as of Nov. 25, no BIA approval was shown on the Federal Register’s website, www.federalregister. gov. In late 2014, CNE posted an request for proposal on www. cherokeebids.com, seeking architectural firms for services associated with a new 21,500-square-foot casino in Grove. The Grand Lake community already has one casino in the area, as the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe operates a hotel-casino just northeast of Grove along State Highway 10. Fulton’s announcement comes as work wraps up on CNE’s expansion project in Roland. As of Nov. 20, the first six floors of the property’s hotel are open. Work on the seventh floor is complete, save for one key addition. “We don’t have any drapes yet for those rooms,” Fulton said. “And, well, there are some folks who just don’t need to be seen like that.” The hotel’s eighth and ninth floors are scheduled to be available to the public in mid-December, officials said. They said construction on the facility’s parking garage is also slated to finish by mid-December. The funding for the projects is thanks in part due to CNB experiencing multi-million dollar year-over-year growth. Although end-of-the-fiscal year numbers were still missing for a handful of departments, as of Nov. 20 the meeting, early projections show CNB generated $930 million in top-line revenue in FY 2015, up 7 percent from its projected goal. Among the areas experiencing revenue growth in FY 2015 were CNB’s diversified holdings in technology and security and defense contracting, with the latter more than doubling its revenue from FY 2014. That growth is continuing into FY 2016 as well, with the diversified businesses on pace to secure $100 million in contracts during the first quarter alone. By comparison, the group landed $35 million worth of contracts during the first quarter of FY 2015. Among the contracts fueling that growth is a $15 million multi-year contract with the Department of Homeland Security. Starting Dec. 1, the group will be assessing physical and cyber threats for embassies and other international federal facilities. “This is a high-end contract,” Steven Bilby, president of CNB’s diversified businesses, said. “This is a new entry into a new area for us.” The number of jobs created by the new contract was not readily available, although Bilby reiterated on Nov. 20 that the program and its support staff would be based out of northeastern Oklahoma. CNHS to provide services to Army National Guard BY STAFF REPORTS TULSA, Okla. – A Cherokee Nation Businesses entity was recently awarded contracts spanning one to five years, totaling more than $24 million, to provide medical and dental case management services to the Army National Guard soldiers. Cherokee Nation Healthcare Services’ case management personnel work with doctors on bases providing clinical tracking and oversight of all aspects of soldier medical, dental and behavioral health challenges. CNHS employees compile information and help with the referral process when needed. In addition to managing soldier care, the company provides insightful health statistics to commanders and to the Army surgeon general in each state under contract. The Army National Guard is receiving assistance from CNHS in Alabama, California, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, New Hampshire, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota and Wyoming. CNHS staff includes clinical social workers, registered nurses and medical administrative clerks. Since 2009, the company has been serving government clients with medical supplies and a wide range of services, including financial recovery, patient appointing, recruiting, credentialing and placement of clinical, administrative and housekeeping personnel for numerous federal agencies and commercial clients. Founder and owner of HarChem Water Services Doug Harvell describes a water-testing kit used by his staff to test water for treatment. The 32-year-old company is located in Muldrow, Oklahoma. HarChem Water Services works to provide quality water HarChem Water Services works with industries and municipalities to test and treat water. BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor MULDROW, Okla. – For more than 30 years, HarChem Water Services has treated water for area customers, as well as customers in six states. HarChem works with industries, municipalities and the Cherokee Nation to test and treat water. It’s located in the Muldrow Industrial Park in eastern Sequoyah County but provides trainings for the Claremore Indian Hospital and W.W. Hastings Indian Hospital so that their respective staffs can treat and maintain water in the hospitals. Doug Harvell, the CN citizen who founded and owns HarChem, said the 32-year-old company has a contract to treat and evaluate the treatment of the closed water systems in all of the CN’s health clinics. “Once a quarter we go to each clinic. If they need chemicals, we add it. If we test it, that’s (done) a minimum of once a quarter. If they’re having issues or they’re losing chemicals, which would indicate a loss of water, then we try to help them find out where the loss is,” he said. “We’ve been fortunate to have the opportunity to treat most of those installations.” Harvell said water has to be treated with chemicals because it will always do one of two things: “eat up pipes” or “lay down scale” on pipes. HarChem sells scale inhibitors and corrosion inhibitors and products to inhibit biological growth that most water systems face, he said. “We’re kind of unique in that typically water treatment companies retain customers for three to five years. We’ve got some we’ve been treating since 1990. So we’re pretty fortunate to retain business, and you do that with good people,” he said. Neel, Harvell & Associates in Sallisaw is another corporation Harvell owns. He reviews the engineering projects planned in that office. Water plants, wastewater plants, waterline extensions, waste waterline extensions and landfills for waste are designed for municipalities and government entities in the office. “We’ve done several projects with the tribe (Cherokee Nation) over in the Peggs area and Oaks area. One was a design for a waterline that ran out to a rural water district when Oaks had some emergency issues one or two years ago,” Harvell said. He said his son-in-law, Scott Neel, oversees the engineering and planning aspects of the company and deals a lot with CN projects. The company recently worked with the CN on engineering projects in Marble City, Cherry Tree, Hulbert and Vian. Harvell said both corporations are certified through the CN Tribal Employment Rights Office, which means they can submit bids for CN projects that fall under their expertise. “We’re licensed engineers in five states – Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee,” he said. Harvell, who has a math degree from Northeastern State University and a chemical engineering degree from the University of Arkansas, said it is difficult to find engineering students and he tries to encourage students to study engineering. “I emphasize to engineering students to always be thinking in terms of how you can start your own company. Instead of looking for a job, look to create yourself a job and you’ll create jobs for other people,” he said. “When I started out in this business I was just going to try to pay my bills, and things worked out really good for us in that there’s about 14 people that make a living out of our business.” Harvell said he looks to hire other Cherokees and Native people and is proud to have Cherokee workers on his staff. “We do have an interest in Indians and Cherokees that have technical interests,” he said. Harvell and his family have come a long way from the time he used to mix chemicals to treat water in the back of his pickup truck to having two companies with plans for a possible expansion with the acquisition of a Tennessee company. “When I started this company in 1983, I started it here in Muldrow. It’s pretty interesting we brought a technical company back home with us and proved you can make a living doing what you read in your (engineering) books. We’re pretty fortunate to have grown,” he said. Founder and owner of HarChem Water Services Doug Harvell stands in front of a container used to blend chemicals to treat water at his business in the Muldrow Industrial Park in eastern Sequoyah County. PHOTOS BY WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ Money • a[w January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 15 CNGC approves regulations to ensure due process BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter Principal Chief Bill John Baker speaks at the Cherokee Nation’s eighth annual Tribal Employee Rights Office Awards banquet on Nov. 19 in Catoosa, Oklahoma. COURTESY CN honors TERO-certified businesses BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter CATOOSA, Okla. – Cherokee Nation officials honored 10 Tribal Employment Rights Office-certified businesses at its eighth annual TERO Awards banquet on Nov. 19 at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. According to CN Communications, hundreds of Native business owners attended the banquet. One of those business owners was Delbert Davis, who owns Davis Excavation. His company received the Community Leadership Award. “It’s a great honor to be recognized for just helping,” Davis, who has owned his business for the past 16 years, said. Other certified Indian-owned businesses that were recognized were: • Meeks Lithographing Company, of Tulsa, with the Customer Service Award, • James R. Childers Architect, of Fort Smith, Arkansas, with the Consulting Firm of the Year, • Green Country Steel, of Salina, with the Construction Company of the Year, • Danny’s Muffler & Tire, of Tahlequah, with the Retail Business of the Year, • Harris Contractors, of Fort Gibson, with the Woman Owned Business of the Year, • Ogden’s Heat & Air, of Stilwell, with the Small Business of the Year, • Ground Zero Construction, of Colcord, with the Large Business of the Year, • CPR, of Tulsa, with the Pioneer Award, and • Strong Builders LLC, of Rose, with the Chief ’s Award. James R. Childers Architect representative Breck Childers said the tribe’s TERO program has helped his company and others grow. “TERO’s help has meant everything to our company. I know there have been times when we might not have been awarded the project without the Indian preference,” Childers said. “We’ve been TERO-certified for about 18 years, and the help from the TERO program has just helped our company grow.” In 2015, TERO vendors earned more than $71.1 million in CN contracts, according to CN Communications. “Through our TERO efforts, we are putting more Cherokees and other tribal citizens to work every day, and I am proud to say we are making progressive strides to do even more in northeast Oklahoma,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. “American Indian small businesses and entrepreneurs are the engine of our local economies and one of the Cherokee Nation’s greatest assets. Across the United States, small businesses are responsible for 75 percent of the net new jobs created, and that is true here locally as more and more Indian-owned businesses are thriving and contributing to our nation and state’s economies.” The CN established its TERO in 1983. It negotiates for job vacancies with contractors doing business with the tribe and refers qualified Native American workers to fill vacancies, CN Communications said. It added that TERO also maintains a list of more than 800 Indian-owned businesses and offers preference to the Indian-owned vendors who bid on Cherokee Nation contracts. For more information, visit www.cherokeetero.com. CNGC approves licensing application revision BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Nation Gaming Commission approved at its Nov. 12 meeting, a revised licensing regulation clarifying the language vendor applications regarding the release of documents and information. “This is the one where, based on some vendor opposition, the (CN) Attorney General’s Office had indicated we should take the release language out because we would be covered under the general sovereign immunity clause of the tribe anyway, so there’s no need to have them consent to that one way or the other,” CNGC Chairwoman Stacy Leeds said. In the applications, vendors authorize any and all information requested by the CNGC “for the commission to determine the vendor’s suitability to obtain and maintain an individual license for employment and/or continued employment in Indian gaming.” Previously, applications stated “the releasor does herby release, forgive and forever discharge Cherokee Nation, the CNGC, its individual commissioners and the CNGC staff from any and all claims or causes of action, damages, losses and expenses.” “Essentially what we’re looking at with this is a removal of the release of all claims-type language,” Jamie Hummingbird, CNGC director, said. “The releases that we had up to this point were releases that we had obtained from NIGC (National Indian Gaming Commission) back in the late (19)90s, something that’s used by the rest of the tribes.” SCAN CODE TO SEE VIDEO The CNGC has also implemented online gaming applications for key employees and primary management officials that were to be launched in December at the West Siloam Springs Cherokee Hotel & Casino. “We’ve tested it out. Everything has been ran through,” Hummingbird said. “We have the badge printer set up at each of the major locations that we have staff, and we are ready to proceed with that. We are excited about moving toward the online applications. I think it will provide a much smoother, much cleaner process for all of us to follow. It also will take care of some of the concerns, I think, that was voiced by CNE (Cherokee Nation Entertainment) in the past about their activities involved with our licensing process.” Commissioners also reviewed the process of an external audit update being performed by Donald Williams from BKD, CPA’s & Advisors out of Tulsa. “The audit is just getting started and it’s my understanding we’ll be here on a monthly basis to keep you (CNGC) informed as we go through that process,” Williams said. “The actual audit fieldwork started this week. We’ll be in the field from now until January.” Williams said they planned to have the audit’s draft reports by Dec. 31. CATOOSA, Okla. – At its Dec. 10 meeting, the Cherokee Nation Gaming Commission approved two regulations to ensure patrons are afforded due process in seeking resolutions against Cherokee Nation gaming facilities. The commission passed the promotional activity prize claim rule to ensure that patrons are afforded due process in seeking resolution to a dispute arising in connection with a promotional activity offered by a Cherokee casino. It stems from another dispute regulation the CNGC recently approved to cover Class II gaming disputes without being designated as a Class II process. That regulation could apply to both Class SCAN II and Class III games. The proposed CODE regulation for Class III games would TO SEE also cover disputes involving card/ VIDEO table games. This regulation mirrors the procedure outlined in the tribe’s gaming compact with the state. “It was commented that it really belonged on its own and we agreed with that,” Jamie Hummingbird, CNGC director, said. “We took the elements that were pertaining to promotional activities out of the price claim regulation and put it in its own.” According to the new regulation, a patron may initiate a claim for the event for which payment is being sought by filing a written prize claim notice with either casino personnel or the CNGC. It also states that a “management official receiving the claim shall investigate information available to render a decision” and the CNGC shall be informed of that decision. If the claim is not resolved within 72 hours the CNGC will inform the State Compliance Agency. If a patron wants to appeal the decision, the appeal would go to the CN District Court to coincide with the tribe’s gaming compact. The other passed regulation was created to ensure that patrons are afforded due process in seeking resolution of a tort claim for personal injury or property damage arising out of incidents occurring at the gaming facility. “The tort claim regulation is based on the compact provisions regarding such claims and incorporates, not just the gaming machine compact as I call it, but also the off-track wagering compact because both compacts have tort claims procedures in those and the tort claim regulation takes those into account,” Hummingbird said. According to the regulation, a patron may initiate a tort claim for the event for which payment is being sought by filing a written tort claim notice with either the CNGC or with the enterprise, or “entity conducting gaming operations on behalf of or as authorized by the Cherokee Nation.” It states that all notices of tort claims must be filed within one year of the date of the alleged occurrence. It also states that a judicial proceeding for any tort claim may be filed only if the claimant has followed all procedures required, including the delivery of a valid and timely written tort claim to the enterprise or CNGC, the enterprise has denied the tort claim and the claimant has filed the judicial proceeding no later than 180 days after denial of the claim by the enterprise. Any claim or award or judgment rendered thereon may not exceed the limit of liability. To view the regulations, go to http://www.cherokee.org/ News/PublicNotices.aspx. The next commission meeting is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. on Jan. 8 in the CNGC building at 200 N. Water St. CNB receives Earl Sneed Business in the Arts Award BY STAFF REPORTS OKLAHOMA CITY – The 2015 Governor’s Arts Awards Selection Committee, which recognizes businesses and corporations for exhibiting outstanding support of the arts, has named Cherokee Nation Businesses as a recipient of this year’s Earl Sneed Business in the Arts Award. The tribe and its businesses purchased more than 700 pieces of art in 2015. According to CNB Communications, during the past year, CNB has placed more than $1.7 million into the state’s economy through its procurement of art. The tribe’s business arm serves an important role in preserving, promoting and supporting Cherokee culture and art, as well as continually supporting the arts throughout Oklahoma since 2007. In accordance with tribal law, the Cherokee Nation and CNB use new construction and renovation projects to fund the procurement, preservation and exhibition of cultural artifacts and artwork. The law calls for those funds to be used for any form of art deemed historical, cultural or traditional, including crafts, paintings, beadwork, sculptures and landscaping. 16 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 People • xW Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 Cherokee soldier retires after 32-plus years of military service BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor From left to right in the front row are Supreme Court Justice Angela Jones, Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr., Tribal Council Speaker Joe Byrd, Tribal Youth Councilors Julie Thornton, Abigail Shepherd, Jori Cowley, Laurel Reynolds, Camerin James, Treyton Morris, Destiny Matthews. From left to right in the back row are Education Services Program Liaison Lisa Trice-Turtle, Education Services Executive Director Ron Etheridge, Government Relations Executive Director Kim Teehee, Tribal Councilor Keith Austin, Tribal Youth Councilors Austin Jones, Jackson Wells, Taylor Armbrister, Bradley Fields, Sarah Pilcher, Chelbie Turtle, Sunday Plumb, Principal Chief Bill John Baker and Junior Miss Cherokee Madison Whitekiller. Not pictured were Tribal Youth councilors Amy Hembree, Emily Messimore and Sky Wildcat. COURTESY Tribal Youth Council sworn into office BY STAFF REPORTS TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – On Nov. 21, the 2015-16 Cherokee Nation Tribal Youth Councilors were sworn into office to begin serving and potentially help shape future tribal policy. “It’s going to be a good opportunity to get involved and make a difference and build relationships within the tribe,” Laurel Reynolds, a Claremore High School sophomore, said. The 17-member Council learns the CN Constitution and bylaws and identifies issues affecting Cherokee youths to pass on to the Tribal Council and administration. The leadership program started in 1989 and has 184 alumni. Students meet monthly and serve as tribal ambassadors. “The best days of the Cherokee Nation are in front of us and we need leaders in every field imaginable from doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, administrators and business people. Leadership starts with young people like you, who are willing to serve,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. “The Tribal Youth Council is an opportunity for young Cherokees from all over the 14-county tribal jurisdiction to gain exposure to our tribal government, get to know the elected officials and have a voice in the discussions that will impact the Cherokee Nation today and in the future.” The 2015-16 Tribal Youth Council members are Taylor Armbrister, of Kansas; Jori Cowley, of Vinita; Bradley Fields, of Locust Grove; Amy Hembree, of Tahlequah; Camerin James, of Fort Gibson; Austin Jones, of Hulbert; Destiny Matthews, of Watts; Emily Messimore, of Claremore; Treyton Morris, of Salina; Sarah Pilcher, of Westville; Sunday Plumb, of Tahlequah; Laurel Reynolds, of Claremore; Abigail Shepherd, of Ochelata; Julie Thornton, of Gore; Chelbie Turtle of Tahlequah; Jackson Wells, of Tahlequah; and Sky Wildcat, of Tahlequah. Potter receives Indian College Student of the Year award BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter AKINS, Okla. – Breanna Potter, a 21-yearold Cherokee Nation citizen from Sequoyah County, was recently awarded the Indian College Student of the Year award from the Oklahoma Council for Indian Education. Potter is a senior at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah pursuing a degree in special education mild/moderate disabilities. She said her passion in life is Native youth and Breanna Potter believes that education will change the world. “To me, this honor stands as proof to other Indian students that they are capable of obtaining an education and accomplishing what they desire to,” she said. “It represents all the hard work that others have poured into me as a young woman. As someone who desires to make a difference for Native youth in education, I hope to use this award to help motivate other youth in my community to pursue their education.” She said she has raised $80,000 in cash and in-kind grants and serves as a youth ambassador for President Obama’s Generation Indigenous. She is the former president of the Cherokee Promise Scholars at NSU and was a part of the program for the past 3-1/2 years. She has also volunteered and served as a leader for the Cherokee Promise Scholar Program and the National Native Youth Network in Washington, D.C. She also spends time volunteering for the Native American Student Association and American Indian Science and Engineering Society. She has also received accolades from the Rho Theta Sigma honor society. Potter said she works to “blend traditional culture into her lessons and is fully dedicated to changing the lives of special needs students.” Potter is the program director for the Brushy Youth Dream Team and the youth activities coordinator for the Brushy Cherokee Action Association. She was a recipient of the “Dreamstarter” grant earlier this year and was among the first the first class of American Indian youths to receive the grant. The grant is designed to bring to life the dreams of American Indian youths under the age of 30. She said in her “Dreamstarter” application she explained that her “dream” or project was for her community group, the Brushy Cherokee Action Association. The grant was for $10,000. To read more on that story visit the http://www.cherokeephoenix. org/Article/index/9528. STUTTGART, Germany – Cherokee Nation citizen and Lt. Col. Brian W. Wright, a U.S. Army Special Forces officer, will retire after Lt. Col. Brian W. 32 years and 9 Wright months of service on Dec. 1. Lt. Col. Wright is a 1991 graduate of Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, as well as his great-grandmother who attended the Cherokee Female Seminary prior to what is known as NSU today. Wright served in the U.S. Army Special Forces as a Green Beret. The Special Forces symbol is the crossed arrows, which was derived from Native American Indian Scouts who served the U.S. Army in the 19th century and passed on this legacy to the modern Special Forces. Their motto “De Opresso Liber” means, “to free the oppressed” in Latin. Wright, 51, said he believes serving his country came natural because his father, Ged Wright, is a retired brigade general who served with the Oklahoma Air National Guard. “I think service was kind of a natural thing for me. It was kind of natural for myself, my brother, my sister. All of us ended up joining the National Guard. I took a little different route,” Brian said. “The infantry was really a way for me to go because it’s very outdoorsy. You’re outdoors and you’re having fun, and I love the outdoors. It was a natural fit.” Brian’s military career began as an enlisted airman radio communication repair specialist in the Oklahoma Air National Guard in 1983. After two years, he transferred to the Army National Guard. And after three years reached the rank of sergeant. In 1986, he was selected and attended the U.S. Army Officer Candidate School in Fort Benning, Georgia, becoming an infantry officer with the 1-279th Infantry OANG. He spent the next six years in the OANG as an infantry officer commanding several platoons and a rifle company. He then transferred to the Alabama National Guard, where he served the next two years as a Special Forces officer. He was selected to serve on active duty in 1994 and spent the next 21 years serving in various leadership positions around the world as an active duty U.S. Army Special Forces officer, serving in South America, Central America, Mexico, Europe, Southwest Asia and Africa. His active duty assignments include detachment commander, A Company, 1st Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Fort Bragg, North Carolina; detachment commander, C Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Panama City; instructor Mexican Military The Wright family has a long history of military service. Ged Wright, left, is a retired brigade general who served with the Oklahoma National Guard. Brent Wright is a colonel and is serving as the deputy chief of staff for the Oklahoma Air National Guard and is also commander of the 138th Support Group in Tulsa. Lt. Col. Brian Wright, right, served more than 32 years in the Army and retired as a Green Beret. And Janna Wright formerly served as a captain in the Oklahoma Air National Guard Aero Med Squadron. COURTESY Academy, Mexico City; detachment commander, B Company, The Training Battalion, Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (Airborne), Fort Benning; G3 Staff, Headquarters, 7th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colorado; Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force Arabian Peninsula Iraq liaison officer to the Multi-National Division Baghdad; company commander, A Company, 3rd Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Fort Carson; strategic planner Special Operations Command Europe (Airborne), Stuttgart; strategic planner Special Operations Command South (Airborne), Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida; and strategic planner U.S. Africa Command, Kelley Barracks, Stuttgart. Lt. Col. Wright is the only known member of the Special Forces Regiment and CN citizen who has commanded five Special Forces Operational Detachment “Alphas” as a regular commissioned officer. He has served at the highest levels in the Department of Defense and has more than eight years of service in Joint Staff Organizations. He said he would “miss the troops” the most and miss serving with them after leaving the Army. “The NCOs (non-commissioned officers), the junior officers, they are really the heart of our country. They are the young people that serve, that volunteer. The old guys like me, we like to stick around, but it’s the young blood that continues to come in and volunteer and do what they do,” he said. Brian was born outside Vance Air Force Base in Enid, Oklahoma. Along with his father, his brother Brent is a colonel and is serving as the deputy chief of staff for the Oklahoma Air National Guard and is also commander of the 138th Support Group in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and his sister Janna formerly served as a captain in the Oklahoma Air National Guard Aero Med Squadron. “In my family everybody served. My grandfather served in World War II and got four or five battle stars in the Pacific,” Wright said. Friends and family gathered on the Kelley Barracks in Stuttgart on Nov. 30 to celebrate his military career and transition into civilian life. His wife of 20 years, Monica, from Lima, Peru, was expected to attend along with his son, Brian, 19, and his daughter Michelle, 22. Law graduate named assistant district attorney BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor TULSA, Okla. – After recently passing the Oklahoma Bar exam and being sworn in to the Oklahoma Bar Association at the state Capitol, Zachary Stuart has been hired as an assistant district attorney with Tulsa County. The 26-year-old Cherokee Nation citizen graduated from the University of Oklahoma Law School in May and passed the bar exam on his first attempt. He was sworn in to the OBA on Sept. 22. The Tulsa resident has worked at the Richards & Conner Law Firm, but his last day at the firm was expected to be Oct. 30. He was expected to begin working in the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office in November. He said he would handle juvenile and misdemeanor cases but wants to eventually work on white-collar crimes and human-trafficking cases. Before attending OU Law School, he received his undergraduate degrees in business and international finance at OU and served with AmeriCorps in Tulsa. AmeriCorps is a civil society program supported by the U.S. government, foundations, corporations and other donors engaging adults in intensive community service work with the goal of “helping others and meeting critical needs in the community.” He was the first student from OU Law School selected for an internship program with the U.S. State Department and spent a semester with the department in its International Claims and Investment Disputes area. “I think just getting that public service experience and to find out what was going on in the world was great. It was a really good time and really interesting,” he said. Stuart said he’s thankful for the CN scholarship that helped pay for his undergraduate courses and three years of law school. He also used the GI Bill through a program that allows students to use higher education benefits provided to their parents. His mother Dixie Stuart, also a CN citizen, is a commander in the U.S. Public Health Service. “Right before I entered law school, that summer Zachary Stuart is when they made it to where members of the United States Public Health Service could actually transfer their GI Bill benefits to their dependents,” he said. “Both of my parents were really supportive. I’m just grateful for all their help and support, and of course the support of the Cherokee Nation.” He said law school was “expensive” and the scholarship helped him a lot. “We, he was blessed to have the extra help from the Cherokee Nation,” Dixie said. “I’m just so proud of him. I just would like citizens to know that the scholarship program really is doing a lot to develop great Cherokee professionals.” People • xW 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 17 2 Cherokees see success at Indian National Finals Rodeo BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor VINITA, Okla. – Two Craig County-based Cherokee Nation citizens recently competed and won their respective categories at the 41st Indian National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. Kayla Greenwalt, 14, of Big Cabin, won the World Junior Barrel Racing Championship at the 2015 INFR held Nov. 8-12. She finished with a total average time of 48.081 seconds after three rounds and won a saddle, belt buckle and $2,388 dollars during the three-day competition. Her mother, Angie Greenwalt, said Kayla never won a round but had good enough times in each round to have the best overall time to win the title. “That was basically her goal, just to get a little bit faster every time, and then it just kind of surprised her that she had won it,” Angie said. Kayla said she competed against 32 other girls from throughout the country and Canada, but she said it was “like a normal barrel run” for her, and she wasn’t fazed by all the competition, which included some former INFR barrel racing champions. She said she rode and practiced every day and exercised her horse before traveling to the INFR. She added that one has to have “the right horse” and a certain style of riding during competition. Barrel racing is a timed event in which competitors race toward and circle three barrels in a cloverleaf pattern. Kayla’s fastest time for one run during the INFR was 15.908 seconds. This year marked her second time competing at the INFR and her first championship. She said she wants to continue competing in barrel racing and often competes in area barrel Kayla Greenwalt, 14, of Big Cabin, Oklahoma, won the World Junior Barrel Racing Championship at the 2015 Indian National Finals Rodeo held Nov. 8-12 in Las Vegas. She brought home a saddle, belt buckle, and $2,388 dollars during the three-day barrel racing competition. COURTESY Tie-down calf roping champion and Cherokee Nation citizen Dillon Sherrick of Welch, Oklahoma, dismounts his horse to take down a calf he roped at the Indian National Finals Rodeo held in November in Las Vegas. During the timed tie-down calf roping event a competitor ropes a calf around the neck from his horse, dismounts, flanks the calf, throws it down and ties any of the calf’s three legs together. COURTESY racing events. Kayla said she would use some of her prize money for rodeo entry fees and credits her mother and father Bill Greenwalt for helping her become a successful barrel racer. Dillon Sherrick, 20, of Welch, won the Tie Down Calf Roping World Championship at the INFR. In this timed event, a competitor ropes a calf around the neck from a horse, dismounts, flanks the calf, throws it down and ties any of the calf ’s three legs together. “I placed second in the first round. I was second in the second round, and then I went sixth in the third round, and that set me up to be in the lead in the average. I went to the short round and tied one in 11.073 (seconds),” he said. After roping and tying four calves, his total average was 39.71 seconds, which won him the title. Along with the title, he received a belt buckle, saddle, jacket and prize money. He also received an exemption into the semifinal round of “The American” qualifier in February in Fort Worth, Texas. The finals for “The American” rodeo will be in March at Arlington, Texas. “The American” is the biggest one-day rodeo of the year in which winners share $2 million in prize money. Sherrick said he practices tie down calf roping in an arena at his house. He has been roping calves since he was about 8 years old and started competing at rodeos at 9. He recently won the Oklahoma-Missouri Series calf-roping championship and has been “winning here and there.” He said winning tie down calf roping championships is currently the way he makes a living. “My family has got a ranch, so I work for them too, but I’m kind of seeing where this (rodeos) takes me right now,” he said. He also attends Northeastern Oklahoma A&M College in Miami and is on the university’s rodeo team. In November he was 11th in the nation in tie down calf roping and is working to make it to the college rodeo finals in June. He is studying agriculture business. He said he wants to attempt to make a living on the professional rodeo circuit after college and then follow his family into ranching. “I played sports all through high school, and I like the athletic ability it (tie-down calf roping) takes, and you get to travel and see a lot of cool places while you’re doing it and meet a lot of new people. It’s just something I fell in love with,” he said. ‘Maud’s Line’ first novel by Verble BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter LEXINGTON, Ky. – Cherokee Nation citizen Margaret Verble recently had her first book, “Maud’s Line,” published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. The book is set in eastern Oklahoma, near Fort Gibson in Muskogee County, where Verble’s family is from. “My whole family, other than my mother, was sitting down that whole section line (near Fort Gibson) and in Muskogee,” she said. After her family moved from Oklahoma, she grew up near Nashville, Tennessee, went to college there and received two degrees, as well as a doctorate in the education field. She now lives in Lexington, running a business. Verble said she always enjoyed writing and during the years had several academic articles published. She started writing fiction about 20 years ago. “(I wrote) Just sort of in my basement simply just because I had a deep urge to do it. And I started doing it every day, and I’ve been doing it every day since. I was just compelled to do it,” she said. “Maud’s Line” takes place during the late 1920s and features an 18-year-old female character named Maud, who lives with her father and brother on their original Cherokee allotment land. For years, Verble tried to get another book she had written to get published with no luck. It was set in the same area of the country, but was a more Native American-oriented book. “I have a real deep passion for that book and tried to get it published for years, but I really got some good advice. If you want to sell a book in New York you have to write it about a single character, particularly a first novel,” she said. “Well you know, that sort of goes against the whole Indian grain. So I had to pick a time period in the tribal history where it was really the low point and where there was a real denigration of the tribe.” She said many people in the late 1920s had to fend for themselves. “So that particular historical period then would be a good time to create a character who is a strong character, who is out fending for herself even though she is nestled down there in her family. She has a real individual consciousness as opposed to more of a tribal consciousness,” Verble said of Maud. Verble began writing “Maud’s Line” in 2012. “I wrote it very quickly, unusually quickly. I wrote it in about 14 months. Of course I was writing about things I was extremely familiar with,” she said. “Maud is fictional. Booker is fictional. But a lot Cherokee Nation citizen Nathan Stanley, shown here with the San Jose SaberCats, signed with the Arena Football League’s LA KISS on Nov. 9 in Los Angeles. SAN JOSE SABERCATS Stanley signs with LA KISS football team BY STAFF REPORTS Maud’s Line of those characters, Maud’s aunts and uncles, you know those are my grandparents, my great aunts and uncles. People I’ve known all my life.” Although the writing was done quickly, she aid it took time to get it published. “You know you go through all sorts of editing processes after you finish it, and it takes a long time, particularly with this book. It’s with a major publisher. Takes a long time to get a book out,” she said. With regards to selling a book that is based on Native American descent, Verble said it’s a difficult task in New York. “It’s hard to sell Indians in New York, and I hate to say that, but it’s the truth.” Many people who write about Natives must decide, she said, whether they will write a book about “Indians” or one about “people as people who happen also to be Indians.” “And that’s a real distinction. I chose to write about people who are people. You know, being Indian is not right at the top of their minds. You don’t go around every day thinking ‘I’m a Cherokee Indian,’” Verble said. “I think if you want to write a novel that you can get a really good publisher on that you really have to write about people who are people and have people problems and they may happen to be Indians.” Amazon and retailers such as Wal-Mart and Target carry the book. For more information, visit http://www.margaretverble.com. LOS ANGELES – The LA KISS have been assigned quarterback Nathan Stanley, who was most recently on the San Jose SaberCats when they won the 2015 Arena Bowl Championship. The third-year quarterback looks to bring his championship pedigree to the LA KISS for the upcoming 2016 season. “We are very excited to have a player of Nate Stanley’s caliber join the LA KISS,” said Omarr Smith, KISS head coach, said. “Over the last two seasons, Nate has proven to be one of the top up-and-coming signal callers in this league. I have seen Nate mature on and off the field over the last two seasons and I am looking forward to watching Nate compete at the quarterback position. I think big things are in the future for Nate and the LA KISS.” Stanley, a 6-foot, 4-inch, 225-pound quarterback from Southeastern Louisiana University, is entering his third year in the AFL. Stanley’s career started in 2014 when he threw for 2,436 yards and 50 touchdowns as a rookie for the San Jose SaberCats. The following season Stanley was a backup quarterback for the SaberCats, but he still put up impressive numbers throwing for 723 yards and 20 touchdowns in 9 games. In Week 7, Stanley was named “Russell Athlete Offensive Player of the Week”, when he threw for 242 yards and 7 touchdowns in a victory over the Las Vegas Outlaws. “We are very happy to have Nate a part the LA KISS family,” said Joe Windham, CEO of the LA KISS. “We know he will fit in our organization nicely since he has been with Omarr the last two seasons so there should be no learning curve.” Stanley is originally from Tahlequah, Oklahoma, where he played high school football at Sequoyah High School. From there he went to the University of Mississippi before transferring to Southeastern Louisiana University. In 2013, the Baltimore Ravens signed him as an undrafted free agent. Stanley initially joined the San Jose SaberCats as a backup quarterback. Stanley became the starter, however, when original starter Russ Michna was declared out with concussion-like symptoms. On Oct. 13, 2014, Stanley was signed to the practice roster of the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League. The Stampeders released him on Nov. 6, 2014. Stanley returned to the San Jose SaberCats in 2015, where he again served as backup. An injury forced Stanley to once again become the team’s starter. In his second season, Stanley threw a total of 20 touchdown passes (and no interceptions) while winning every game in which he started. For more information about the LA KISS, visit lakissfootball.com. 18 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Culture • i=nrplcsd Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016 Cherokee Treasure excels at making kanuchi BY ROGER J GRAHAM Media Specialist STILWELL, Okla. – Since she began making it for her family as a young girl, 1992 Cherokee National Treasure Edith Knight has become an expert at making kanuchi, which is a traditional Cherokee meal made from hickory nuts. Knight received her National Treasure honor for making tear dresses. As for being an expert kanuchi maker, she said, “After I make it I never have any left.” Knight also said there are good and bad years for hickory nuts. This year, the hickory trees surrounding her home did not produce at all. So she had to gather nuts from a friend whom she knew had Mockernut hickory trees. “My mother made it for many years, and I learned to make it just like she did,” Knight said at her Adair County home. “You see there’s different kinds of hickory nuts. I like to use the Mockernut hickory because it has a larger nut-meat and it has a better flavor.” According to www.cherokee.org, hickory nuts are gathered in the fall and allowed to dry for a few weeks before the kanuchi making begins. “Begin by cracking, then shelling the hickory nuts by shaking the pieces through a loosely woven basket, or picking them out by hand,” the website states. “Traditionally, a section of log or a tree stump was hollowed out into a bowl-like shape. The shelled hickory nuts are placed in the hollowed log bowl and pounded with a long heavy stick until they are of a consistency that can be formed into a ball that will hold its shape. Kanuchi balls are usually about 3 inches in diameter and must be stored in a cold place. Today kanuchi is usually preserved by freezing.” In today’s world, kanuchi is considered a delicacy although it is believed to have been used as a filler when food was scarce. “I believe sometimes in SCAN the long past CODE kanuchi might TO SEE have been all VIDEO they had to eat. It was one of the few foods they could store because of it coming from the hull,” Knight said. Knight said kanuchi is sometimes made with corn or hominy and seasoned with salt, although her family has always preferred to mix the hickory solution with rice and add sugar. She said today most people don’t use the traditional “kanon” or hollowed out log to contain the crushed nuts. “The idea is to keep hammering until the nut meat rises to the top and the oils begin to make it stick together. That’s how you make a kanuchi bowl.” During the kanuchi-making process, Knight said she advises to start cooking the rice early and to always sift and boil the slurry twice before proceeding. She said that gets rid of all the bacteria. “Remember we pick these (hickory nuts) up off the ground.” Portions of the kanuchi ball can be saved and refrozen, depending on the number of those eating. Once the kanuchi-slurry is mixed with the rice and the proper amount of sugar is added, Edith hands the bowl of kanuchi to her husband Owen, who’s served as her kanuchi tester for almost six decades. After tasting the finished product, Owen said, “It’s good. I think you did real good.” ᏍᏗᎵᏪᎵ, ᎣᎦᎵᎰᎹ. – ᎾᏍᎩ ᎤᎴᏅᎲ ᎪᏢᏍᎬ ᎦᎾᏥ ᎾᎿ ᎠᏂᏏᏓᏁᎸ ᎠᎨᏳᏣ ᏥᎨᏒ ᎤᎴᏅᎮᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏐᏁᎳᏚ ᎢᏍᎪᎯᏧᏈ ᏐᏁᎳᏍᎪ ᏔᎵ ᎤᏕᏘᏴᏌᏗᏒᎢ ᎤᎩᏒ ᏣᎳᎩ ᎬᎾᏕᎾ ᎠᏁᎯ ᎠᏃᏢᏅᏍᎩ ᎨᏥᎸᏉᏔᏅ ᎠᎨᎳᏕ Edith Knight ᎠᏏᎾᏍᏗ ᎪᏢᏍᎩ ᎦᎾᏥ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ ᎠᏂᎩᏍᎪ ᎠᏂᏣᎳᎩ ᏐᎯ ᎪᏢᏔᏅᎢ. Knight ᎤᏁᏒ ᎾᎿ ᎬᎾᏕᎾ ᎠᏁᎯ ᎠᏃᏢᏅᏍᎩ ᎨᏥᎸᏉᏔᏅ ᏥᎨᏥᏁᎰᎢ ᎾᎿ ᏐᏌᏃᎢ ᏗᎪᏢᏍᎩ. ᏃᎴᏍᏊ ᎠᏏᎾᏍᏗ ᎦᎾᏥ ᎤᏬᏢᏗᎢ, ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ, “ᏯᏉᏢᏂᏃ Ꮭ ᏯᏓᏁᎯᏯᏍᎪ.” Knight ᎠᏗᏍᎬ ᎣᏍᏓ ᎠᎴ Ꮭ ᎣᏍᏓ ᏕᎦᎶᏍᎪ ᏓᏕᏘᏱᏍᎪ ᎤᎾᏕᏗ ᏐᎯ. ᎯᎠ ᏧᏕᏘᏴᏌᏗ, ᎾᏍᎩ ᏐᏗ ᏕᏡᎬ ᏧᏪᏅᏒ ᎬᏩᏕᏯᏛ Ꮭ ᏯᎾᏓᏛᎦ ᏐᎢ. ᏃᏊ ᏧᏭᏖᏍᏗ ᏂᎦᎵᏍᏗ ᎤᎾᎵ ᏧᏪᏅᏒ ᎾᎥ ᎾᎿ ᎠᏁᎲ ᏐᎯ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ ᏐᎢ ᏕᏡᎬᎢ. “ᎠᏯ ᎠᎩᏥ ᏧᏕᏘᏱᎶᏓ ᎤᏬᏢᎾ, ᎠᎴ ᎠᏆᏕᎶᏆᎥ ᎠᏉᏢᏗ ᎤᏠᏯ ᏄᏛᏁᎸᎢ ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ,” Knight ᎠᏗᏍᎬ ᏧᏪᏅᏒ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏓᏫᏍᎦᎵ ᏍᎦᏚᎩ ᎤᏪᏅᏒᎢ. “ᏣᏅᏔᏛ ᏧᏓᎴᏅᏓ ᎨᏒ ᏐᎯ ᏕᏡᎬᎢ. ᎠᎩᎸᏉᏓ ᏗᏮᏙᏗ ᎾᏍᎩ ᏐᎯ ᎢᏳᎾᏍᏗ ᏅᏗᎦᎵᏍᏙᏗ ᏚᎾᏔᎾ ᎠᎴ ᏓᏤᏟ ᏗᏅᏢᏗᎢ.” ᏚᎾᏙᎵᏤᎲ ᎾᎿ www.cherokee. org, ᏐᎯ ᏓᏄᏖᏍᎪ ᎤᎳᎪᎲᏍᏗ ᎠᎴ ᏗᎧᏲᏙᏗ ᏯᏛᎾ ᎢᎸᏍᎩ ᏳᎾᏙᏓᏆᏍᏗ ᎩᎳ ᎠᏃᏢᏍᎪ ᎦᎾᏥ. “ᎠᎾᎴᏂᏍᎪ ᏓᏅᏍᏆᎶᏍᎬ ᏐᎯ ᏃᎴ ᎠᏂᎴᏍᎪ ᏐᎯ ᎤᏩᏙᏛᎢ ᎠᏅᎫᏍᏗᏍᎪ ᎠᎬᏘᏓ ᎠᏅᏗᏍᎪ, ᎠᎴ ᏧᏃᏰᎾ ᏓᏅᏗᏍᎪ ᎠᏂᎴᏍᎪ ᎤᏩᏙᏅᎢ ᏐᎯ,” ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏗᏍᎬ website. “ᎢᏳᎾᏛᏗ ᎨᏒ, ᎠᏍᏆᎵᏓ ᎠᏓ ᎠᏂᏔᎴᏍᎪ ᎠᏰᏟ ᎾᎿ ᏖᎵᏙ ᎤᏠᏯ. ᎾᏍᎩ ᏐᎢ ᎤᏩᏙᏅ ᎾᎿ ᏓᏂᏢᏍᎪ ᎠᏔᎴᏒ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏂᏍᏙᏍᎪᎢ ᎾᎿ ᎦᏅᎯᏓ ᎠᏓ ᎠᏂᏍᏙᏍᎪ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎪᎢᎭ ᏱᏄᎵᏍᏔᎾ ᏗᎦᏌᏊᎸ ᏂᏓᏅᏁᎰ ᏧᏂᏍᏆᏂᎪᏙᏗ. ᎦᎾᏥ ᎨᏒ ᎠᏎ ᏦᎢᎭ ᎢᏏᏔᏗᏍᏗ ᏗᎦᏐᏆᎸ ᎨᏐ ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏓᏂᏍᏆᏂᎪᏗᏍᎪ ᎤᏁᏌᏴᏢᎢ. ᎪᎯ ᎢᎦ ᏥᎩ ᎦᎾᏥ ᎦᏁᏍᏓᎳᏗᏍᏗᏍᎩ ᎠᏂᏍᏆᏂᎪᏗᏍᎪᎢ.” ᎾᏍᎩ ᎪᎯ ᏥᎩ, ᎦᎾᏥ ᎤᏂᎸᏉᏓ ᎤᏃᎯᏳᏐ ᎪᎯᎦ ᏥᎨᏒ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᎾᏗᏔᏍᎦ ᎠᎵᏍᏓᏴᏗ ᏄᏂᎲᎾ ᏱᎩ. “ᎠᏉᎯᏳᏐ ᎢᏴᏓᎭ ᎪᎯᎩ ᏥᎨᏒ ᎾᏍᎩᏊ ᎢᎦ ᎤᏂᎮ ᎤᏂᎩᏍᏗ. ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏌᏊ ᎠᎵᏍᏓᏴᏗ ᎤᏂᎮ ᎬᏩᏂᏍᏆᎪᏙᏗ ᎾᎿ ᎤᏬᎭᏄᎵ ᎨᏎ,” ᎠᏗᏍᎬ Knight. Knight ᎠᏗᏍᎬ ᎢᏴᏓᎭ ᏎᎷ ᎠᎴ ᎦᏃᎮᎾ ᎠᎾᏑᏴᏍᎪᎢ ᎠᎹᏅ, ᎾᏍᎩᎾ ᎤᏅᏌ ᎠᏂᏏᏓᏁᎸ ᎤᎪᏙ ᎤᏂᎸᏉᏙ ᏗᎵᏆ ᎠᎴ ᎧᎵᏎᏥ ᎤᎾᏑᏴᏗᎢ. ᎠᏗᏍᎬᎢ ᎪᎯ ᏥᎩ Ꮭ ᎧᏃᏂ ᏯᏅᏗᏍᎪ ᎠᏂᏍᏙᏍᎬ ᏐᎯ ᏧᏅᏍᏆᎸᏗ. “ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎾᎾᏛᏁᎲ ᎠᏅᏗᏍᎬ ᎧᏃᏂ ᎤᎪᏗ ᎾᎿ ᎪᎢ ᎦᎾᏄᎪᎬ ᎡᎵᏊ ᏗᎦᏐᏆᎸ ᎢᏗᎦᎬᏗ ᎨᏒᎢ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᏄᏱᎸᏛᎢ ᎧᏃᎾ ᏓᏅᏗᏍᎬᎢ.” ᎾᏍᎩ ᎠᏃᏢᏍᎬ ᎦᎾᏥ, ᎠᏗᏍᎬ Knight ᎢᎬᏱ ᎬᏂᏍᏙᏗ ᏗᎵᏆ ᎠᎴ ᎬᎫᏍᏙᏗ ᎠᎹ ᎠᎵᏢᏙᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎬᎫᏍᏙᏗ. ᏂᎦᏓ ᎬᎫᏍᏙᏗ ᎤᏲᎢ ᎨᏒᎢ. “ᎠᏅᏓᏗ ᏐᎢ ᎦᏙ ᏗᎫᏖᏍᏗ ᎨᏐᎢ.” ᎢᎦᏓ ᎦᎾᏥ ᎠᎵᏏᏅᏙᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎢᎬᏁᏍᏓᎳᏗᏍᏙᏗ, ᎠᏓᏅᏖᏗ ᏯᏂᎢ ᏛᎾᎵᏍᏓᏴᏂᏒ. Edith ᎠᏁᎭ ᎠᏂᏁᎳ ᎠᏟᏍᏛ ᎦᎾᏥ, ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎠᏁᎶᏗᏍᎩ ᎨᏐᎢ ᎾᏍᎩ ᎪᎯᎦ ᎬᏩᎴᏅᏓ. ᎾᏍᎩᏃ ᎤᏂᎬ ᎠᏍᏆᏙᏛ ᎦᎾᏥ, Owen ᎠᏗᏍᎬ, “ᎢᎦ ᎣᏍᏓ, ᎢᎦ ᎣᏍᏓ ᎾᏛᎦ.” Cherokee Nation citizen and National Treasure Edith Knight crushes hickory nuts in a “kanon” or hollowed out log with an “alstostodi,” the traditional way to make kanuchi. Recipient of the Cherokee National Treasure award for tear dress making in 1992, she is also an expert at making kanuchi, a traditional Cherokee delicacy made from hickory nuts. PHOTOS BY ROGER J GRAHAM/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Cherokee Nation citizen Edith Knight gives her husband Owen a bowl of kanuchi she made. She said she made the kanuchi this year from Mockernut hickory nuts. CN publishes redlettered Cherokee New Testament BY TESINA JACKSON Reporter Cherokee National Treasure Noel Grayson discusses the process he uses to make bows from bois d’arc wood. Grayson said he will wait up to four years before cutting the wood and uses moon phases to determine the best cutting time during winter. BRITTNEY BENNETT/CHEROKEE PHOENIX Grayson shares Cherokee tools, weapons knowledge BY BRITTNEY BENNETT Intern TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Flakes, bows and war clubs were just a few of the tools and weapons that Cherokee National Treasure Noel Grayson recently discussed during a Cultural Enrichment Series presentation sponsored by the Cherokee Nation’s Community and Cultural Outreach. Grayson, a Cherokee National Treasure for flint knapping and bow making since 1998, has been teaching for 28 years and is a supervisor in the Cherokee Heritage Center’s Diligwa Village in Park Hill. He demonstrated how to create a “flake,” or a small, sharp piece of stone chipped from a larger stone. Flakes have multiple uses in Cherokee culture, including cutting material and taking down small game after being shaped into spear points and arrowheads. Grayson recommended using obsidian or flint stones to create flakes and demonstrated the process using “percussion techniques,” or striking stone with force using a blunt object. The first technique involved utilizing a “hammer stone,” or a rounded stone, to strike a flake off an area of the stone’s surface measuring less than 90 degrees. After striking the flake, Grayson demonstrated one of its uses by cutting a piece of leather with minimal effort. He also cut multiple flakes using a technique involving bone from the base of a deer antler and emphasized hitting the stone at an angle to make flaking easier. “The base of an antler where it attaches to the head is good and solid, but the best part of the antler is actually the bone that the antler grows on,” he said. “If you got the right angle, you don’t have to hit it hard. I give it three tries. If it doesn’t come off in three tries, something’s wrong. I’ll adjust the angle.” Grayson’s presentation included how to make bows, which he said he has been doing since he was a child. “It’s just a toy I never gave up,” he said. “Me and my brothers used to make bows and we would shoot arrows at each other all the time.” Grayson said he uses bois d’arc wood for his bows and cuts the wood during winter using moon phases to determine which time is best. “The moon controls tides, so it controls sap,” he said. “When there’s no moon, that sap will be low. You want to cut that tree in the dark of the moon. Now generally, myself, I let my wood season about for four years before I ever make a bow out of it, before I even think about making anything.” Grayson said the person who makes the bow determines the size and strength of it, while aged wood creates a hard and fast shooting bow. “I’m going to get past all the bark,” he said. “I’m going to get down to the sapwood, because you have bark, a white layer of sapwood then you have that hard wood in the middle. I’m going to split it in half or quarter it. You get any smaller than that and it will warp on you a little bit. It’s a reaction. Take all the bark and sapwood off of it and seal the ends of it.” Grayson said he’s used bear fat to seal his bows, but also recommended using bacon grease or vegetable oil. The presentation concluded with a brief discussion on war clubs, which Grayson said were largely made from tree roots and featured a heavy balled head that occasionally contained a spike of bone or metal. He said the war club was one of many weapons used in the hand-to-hand combat style of the Cherokee people. This type of combat meant that young men had to train in games of stickball before handling items such as the war club. “Now, if I remember right, that’s actually what stickball sticks represent, the use of war clubs,” he said. “(Stickball) is called a-ne-jo-di, the little brother of warfare. We didn’t send our young men out into warfare without being prepared for it. We let them play a-ne-jo-di. A-ne-jo-di teaches a young man how to watch out for himself on the field of battle and the sticks represented war clubs.” Grayson also emphasized teaching children to carry on the knowledge of Cherokee tools and weapons. “Little kids are just like sponges,” he said. “I always tell everybody, ‘if you have the time, if you’re sitting there and a little kid comes up to you and asks you what you’re doing and how you do it, take the time to show them.’” TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – After nearly three years of work by the Cherokee Nation’s translation department, the tribe recently published its first redlettered New Testament in the Cherokee language and gave copies to several local Cherokee pastors. The New Testament was originally translated and published by the American Bible Society in 1860. The tribe’s most recent version shows the words of Jesus Christ in red letters, the first Cherokee New Testament to do so. “The New Testament is one of the most popular and most enduring pieces of published text in syllabary,” Roy Boney, Cherokee Language Program manager, said. “While others have published versions of the 1860 American Bible Society translation, the Cherokee Language Program believed it was important for our translators to review and revise the Bible so it read as accurately as possible in Cherokee, compared to the English version.” Boney said the new version is the first Cherokee New Testament that the CN has published, and it was done so with a larger, cleaner font so it would be easier to read. It also fixes errors and misspellings. “The edition from the American Bible Society had some misspellings and other minor errors in it that many Cherokee speakers have noted over the last 140-plus years,” Boney said in a 2014 Cherokee Phoenix article. Jeff Edwards, CN language technologist, typed and uploaded the syllabary New Testament, and translator specialist Durbin Feeling and his brother, Russell, who served as the primary editors, added the red lettering with input from the rest of the translation department. “We’re both ministers and we got him on board,” Durbin said of his brother. “He started from the back and I started in the front and we met in the middle.” Durbin said he and Russell used an English New Testament to match up the red lettering. Edwards said it was important that the New Testament was proofread by Cherokees and published by Cherokees because when it was printed in the 1800s, some syllabary characters used in typeset were incorrect because they resembled another character. “So that’s why we wanted these guys to proof it so it would be as accurate as it could be,” he said. Copies of the CN-published red-letter New Testament are available for purchase in the tribe’s gift shops for $45. Visit www.cherokeegiftshop.com to purchase a copy. A previously printed Cherokee New Testament, left, did not include the red lettering of Jesus’ words. The new version, right, now features the red lettering with a larger, cleaner font so it would be easier to read. TESINA JACKSON/CHEROKEE PHOENIX 2016 Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ Culture • i=nrplcsd January 2016 • CHEROKEE PHOENIX 19 CN obtained sovereignty through ‘Marshall Trilogy’ BY WILL CHAVEZ Interim Executive Editor TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Between 1823-32, the U.S. Supreme Court redefined the status of Indian tribes through opinions referred to as the “Marshall Trilogy,” named after their primary author Chief Justice John Marshall. Two cases, Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831) and Worcester v. Georgia (1832), specifically addressed the CN’s legal status. The third case, Johnson v. McIntosh (1823), dealt with land speculators buying land from Indian tribes in Illinois and Indiana and questioned what kind of title those speculators held on the land because they had no right to buy land from tribes. The legal principles established in the “Marshall Trilogy” provide the basis for interpreting federal Indian law and tribal sovereignty. CN Assistant Attorney General Courtney Jordan provided details about the three cases in her Nov. 30 presentation “What is an Indian Tribe?” as part of the CN History and Preservation group’s Lunch & Learn Lecture Series. Jordan spoke about what it means for the federal government to recognize a tribe, how the CN came to get that recognition and its history because it has been involved with the sovereignty issue since the legal status of tribes has been an issue. “So why do we define tribes? Originally we defined tribes because the government needed to know whom it would enter into treaty relations with, and it needed to know the political entities it needed to negotiate those treaties with. Later, through federal legislation, Indians who are members of tribes could make claims against the federal government for various reasons, and if you were a tribe you were also protected by certain rights,” Jordan said. “Lastly, recognition as a tribe is important because it determines whether an individual is eligible for federal benefits.” Jordan said the tribal definition of a tribe is different than the federal Assistant Attorney General Courtney Jordan speaks about how the Cherokee Nation obtained its status as a sovereign nation through three court cases in the early 1800s during a Nov. 30 presentation in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. WILL CHAVEZ/CHEROKEE PHOENIX definition. A group of Native people can define themselves as a tribe based on “similar cultural, linguistic, kinship or clan ties or a land base.’ The government’s definition is based on whether or not it shares a “government-to-government relationship” with that group. “The designation of being recognized is more than just an adjective. Congress has said that recognized is more than just an adjective. It’s a legal form of art, a formal political act. It permanently established a governmentto-government relationship between the United States and the recognized tribe as a domestic, dependent nation and imposes on the government a fiduciary trust relationship to the tribe and its members,” Jordan said. Cherokee Nation v. Georgia originated in 1802 when the U.S. and Georgia entered into a treaty that required the U.S. to remove Native people from Georgia in exchange for land from Georgia that is now Alabama and Mississippi. “Georgia didn’t care where the tribes went. They just wanted them gone,” Jordan said. In 1803, after the Louisiana Purchase, which included lands west of the Mississippi River, some Cherokee neighbors such as the Muscogee (Creeks) agreed to move west to Indian Territory, but the Cherokee said they would stay in Georgia, Jordan said. “They tried to push removal off as long as they could. Georgia didn’t respond very well to this. They weren’t happy. Every year they would go to Washington and encourage the United States to have the Cherokees removed,” she said. Even though the Cherokee government made strides to emulate the white government and culture, the Georgia government and people were relentless in wanting Cherokee lands and property. Jordan said the CN’s efforts to assimilate only hastened the Georgian’s drive to remove the Cherokee. Georgia, using the Jackson v. McIntosh decision, began stating Great Britain discovered Georgia and when the U.S. declared its independence from Great Britain in 1776, it was Georgia who declared its independence not the U.S. “So then Georgia is a successor and interest to the British crown and therefore, under the Doctrine of Discovery, held title to those lands as the discovering sovereign. So they crafted this legal argument based on that concept that they were the landlord and the Cherokees were the tenant,” Jordan said. Georgia then informed the CN it was subject to Georgia laws as of June 1830 and Cherokee laws were no longer valid in the state. In response, the CN went to the U.S. Supreme Court in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia and argued that because the CN was “a foreign nation” the Supreme Court had original jurisdiction to hear the case. The CN lost the case. Two justices agreed that the tribe was a foreign nation similar to France or Great Britain while two other justices agreed the CN was a state. Two other justices were of the opinion that the CN was a foreign state. The foreign state opinion was ultimately adopted and is the law today, Jordan said. Following the ruling, Marshall came up with the legal terms for tribes used today. “He came up with the legal terms we know today as ‘domestic dependent nation,’ and then he also went further to describe the relationship between the United States and Indian tribes is that of a ward to its guardian,” she said. “After that the Supreme Court said we don’t have the jurisdiction to hear the issue of whether or not Georgia can enforce its laws within the Cherokee Nation.” Marshall also stated the court could hear the issue with a proper party and case in front of them. For Worcester v. Georgia, heard a year later, the CN was not a party, but its legal status was at stake because the issue was whether Georgia could enforce its laws within the CN. The tribe won this case with a majority opinion that stated the federal government has the exclusive authority to regulate with Indian nations. “So Georgia can’t do business with the tribes unless they have the authority from the federal government. They (court) also say Georgia’s laws have no force in the Cherokee Nation because it’s a distinct community with a self-government having territorial boundaries,” Jordan said. “This is an extraordinary decision. The Cherokee Nation’s response is that of celebration. Unfortunately, this is also the case where (President) Andrew Jackson said, ‘John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.’” The Cherokee government and people fought for their rights for nearly six more years until they were removed from their lands in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee and North Carolina in the spring of 1838 under Jackson’s 1830 Indian Removal Act. Jordan said 183 years later the CN “possesses an absolute power of self-government” that has not been relinquished under treaty, extinguished by Congress or restricted by a federal court. Thanks to the “Marshall Trilogy,” the tribe has the power to form its government and make and enforce laws, both civil and criminal, but its authority to enforce criminal laws is limited when dealing with non-Natives. The CN also has the authority to tax, establish and determine tribal citizenship, as well as license and regulate activities within its jurisdiction. Adult choir sings to preserve Cherokee language The Cherokee Adult Choir does not require members to be fluent in Cherokee although about 10 of them are. BY JAMI MURPHY Reporter TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – The Cherokee Adult Choir – a choir made up of all ages, races, genders and religious denominations – practices twice a month for performances that include family events, tribal events and funerals. Cherokee Nation citizen Faye Morrison has directed the choir for about 15 years. She said it is a nondenominational choir that allows anyone from any tribe to become a choir member. “There’s about 27 of us that are in the choir right now. The majority of them are Cherokee. We have a few Creek that want to sing with us and that is wonderful,” Morrison said. “We just allow anybody who wants to come and sing the Cherokee hymns and learn with us. It’s just kind of a fun thing and we believe that it helps preserve the language.” Morrison said she is not a fluent Cherokee speaker, but the choir does have about 10 speakers. “But I’ve learned a little bit by singing. I know what a few words are and I’m learning a few phrases. I do think it helps the Cherokee language, a little bit,” she said. “We’re not teaching it, but we do teach the songs in the Cherokee language.” Morrison said one doesn’t have to understand Cherokee to enjoy the choir’s singing. “You don’t have to be able to speak or understand the words we’re saying. When we sing ‘Amazing Grace,’ you know what we’re singing even though we’re singing it in our language,” she said. “I went to a little church close to my home when I was little. My grandmother was fullblood Cherokee, and so she would take us down there. Everybody knew how to sing ‘Amazing Grace’ and ‘At the Cross’ and I just wanted to get back into that in my later life when I had time to learn to sing the songs. I can sing in English, but I’m learning to sing in Cherokee.” Sally Williams, choir treasurer who joined around 2004, said much of the reasoning for its The Cherokee Adult Choir practices hymns and well-known Christmas carols, many of which are in the Cherokee language. JAMI MURPHY/CHEROKEE PHOENIX existence is to help preserve the culture. She said the choir would perform just about anywhere that it’s invited as a way to promote and preserve the Cherokee culture. “We just want them (the songs) to continue. We don’t want to lose them so that those coming up can learn them too,” she said. “There’s a number of us that aren’t speakers, but several are fluent too, and this way they can kind of teach us to make sure we’re doing it right.” Williams said she was not raised in the Cherokee culture, but wanted to learn as much about it and the language as she could. “I didn’t really have much of a connection with my Cherokee heritage except through my mother,” she said. “When I came back to Tahlequah it was because my mother had passed away and just wanted to continue it. A lot of it’s for her and myself of course.” Ed Jumper, a fluent Cherokee speaker, said he was given a talent to sing by God. “It’s not for the people that I do it, but if they get uplifted from the songs we sing then I feel I’ve done my part with the choir,” Jumper said. The choir has SCAN CODE performed in several TO SEE VIDEO states, as well as many local events. Recently, the choir was invited by the United Methodist Church to perform at the General Conference of the United Methodist Churches in Portland, Oregon, in May. Between now and then, the choir will host fundraisers and events to help pay for expenses. “It’s quite a trip for us. It’s quite and honor for us to be able to go and sing for that group of people,” Morrison said. “During the past year the individual conferences around the world had been focusing on repentance to the Native Americans for the tragedies imposed on them during early settlement days.” The choir plans to have one fundraiser per month. For more information or to donate, call 918207-5067. “Call me anytime if you got any questions or you want to help us, and we love to come to events and sing if we can work it in our schedule,” Morrison said. 20 CHEROKEE PHOENIX • January 2016 Culture • i=nrplcsd Ewf #>hAmh • uZkt/ 2016