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Show -- 1 TIm nindifi Jemrapr Ufa BslUtk HEADSTART PROGRAM Last Mandan Indian Dies At Age 1 08 Full-Bloo- ded Ute Indian Tribe Fort Duchesne, Utah JOB OPPORTUNITY Funeral services were held January .9 for the last member of the Mandan Indian Tribe, Mrs. Matie Grin-nelwho lived to be 108 years old. Mrs. Grinnell died January 6 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Rose Fournier, in Twin Buttes. North Dakota. Living through more than a century of d l, Jerry Jenki Sonia Cock Four Ute Students To Tour New Zealand With Exchange Program Four Ute high school students will leave this week for a y tour of New Zealand as part of the Utah Student Cultural Exchange (USCE) program, according to Forrest Cuch, Tribal education coordinator. Jerry Jenks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Jenks of Indian Bench, Pauline LaRose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rex LaRose of Fort Duchesne, Robert Colorow of My ton, son of Hewitt Colorow and Melba Appawora and Sonia Cuch, daughter of Bertha Cuch of Lapoint and the late Russell Cuch, are scheduled to leave Salt Lake City today, arrive in New Zealand Feb. 1 and return home Feb. 21. Sonia and Jerry, juniors at Union High School, Pauline, a senior at the Roosevelt school, and Robert a senior at Intermountain Indian School, were selected to participate in the program on the basis of scholastic achievement, participation in activities and recommendations from high school personnel. Plans for the formation of USCE began last summer when an official of the Maori Tribe of New Zealand visited a niece Mrs. Hinauri Tribole in Bountiful, Utah, according to Bruce Perry, Director of the Utah Division of Indian Affairs. The visitor expressed an interest in having American minority students visit New Zealand on an alternate basis with Maori .students traveling to the United States. 21-da- . extra-curricul- ar to a USCE brochure, act cooperatively as American ambassadors, representing Americas strength as coming from its composition of different cultural groups. Postmaster Named At Fort Duchesne Hazel Brough, at the post office in Fort Duchesne since August was appointed postmaster here earlier this month. Mrs. Brough received her officer-in-char- ge appointment under the Postmaster Selection Program of the United States Postal System. Mrs. Brough succeeds Leo Walker who retired in office after 15 years of service. The new postmaster has been a part-tim- e postal clerk for 10 years. Cooks' Corner Chiligefti Casserole lb. ground beef ' 2 tbsp. fat 1 large onion, chopped 1 tsp. salt 2 tsp. chili powder 2 cups cooked beans (pinto, cups raw spaghetti 3 cups tomato juice 1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce 2 tsp. s?lt A tsp. pr 1 Vi In 1968 at the age of 101 she took part the Poor Peoples March on Washington. She tended a large garden every summer and prided herself on having the cleanest garden around Twin Buttes. She was very interested in the young and found the Vietnam War upsetting. She said that she prayed every day for peace in the world. Her daughter said that she remained alert and in good health during her last year. Mrs. Grinnell had her own theory on her longevity. I still use Indian medicine. That's why I'm over 100 years kidney, red, etc.) . Method: Brown the ground beef in the fat. Add the onion, salt, and chili powder and cook until the onion is tender. Place the meat mixture in a 2 quart casserole. Put the beans on top of the meat mixture and arrange the spaghetti over this. Combine the tomato juice, Worcestershire sauce, salt and pepper and pour over the casserole. Bake at 350F for 1 hour. Serves 6-- 8. This recipe, and all others featured in Cook's Corner, are provided by Nellie Johnson, Emergency Food and Medical Services Coordinator. Position & Title: Assistant Teacher (Full time) Branch: Head Start Location: Lapoint Center Opening Date: January 22, 1975 Closing Date: February 7, 1975 -- Job Description Assistant teacher to a teacher in a class of up to 18 students for one half-dasession per day for five days per week. y Qualifications in She had a great appreciation for her Indian heritage. She knew the religious ceremonies, dances and legends and was, as she asserted, the only one who knew how to prepare the corn balls and d meat used in tribal ceremonies. She acknowledged that education was very important for the young, but added that her people should make more use of what they had been taught by tradition. Mrs. Grinnell, herself, had only four years of schooling. Shu had to drop out when her father became ill and she was needed to help with the work at home. A few years before her death she jokingly remarked that if she had gone 12 years she would have been in the White House. She was almost certainly the last person to receive approval for a Civil War Widows pension. She received hers in 1971 when friends and Bureau of Indian Affairs officials urged her to submit an sun-drie- The purpose of USCE is to help resolve ethnic difficulties and promote local, national, and world unity. The 17 minority students from throughout Utah who will be participating in this pilot project for future exchange programs will, 1 Vi tremendous changes for her people and her land, Mrs. Grinnell retained to the end an amazing vitality, charm and spirit. old." according 30, 197S application. Born at village on the Fort Berthold Reservation one year after the Civil War, Mrs. Grinnell was married twice. Her first husband, John Nagel, died in 1904. He was a German immigrant fanner who had served with the Third Regiment of the Missouri Volunteer Cavalry from 1861 to 1864. Her marriage to Charles Grinnell in 1907 ended in divorce in 1935. She is survived by four children, all from her first marriage, 40 grandchildren, 28 great grandchildren, and five great, great grandchildren. Three children from her second marriage are now deceased. Three years ago an article about Mrs. Grinnell was published in North Dakota Horizons." 'The author wrote of her that she had the face of nobility, regal, shadowed with the timeless despair of the reservations, but calm and stoic in burdens. quiet acceptance of Clara Perank Vies For CEU Royalty Clara Perank, daughter of Mrs. Amos Perank, Myton, is one of the contestants vying for the title of Miss CEU at College of Eastern Utah in Price. Miss Perank is a freshman at CEU and is being sponsored in the pageant by the CEU Science Club. The Pageant has been scheduled for Feb. 4 at CEUs Geary Theatre and will feature a visit from Miss Utah, Jill Lynn Smith. The CEU Pageant has 15 contestants and is a preliminary of the Miss Utah contest. The annual affair is sponsored on campus by the Associated Women Students at CEU. Desire a teacher with training and or Head Start experience in pre-scho-ol Programs. Physical examination re- quired. Consideration will be made without factors such as regard to any non-mer- it race, color, religion, sex, politics, physical handicaps, personal favoritism and age. Salary $347.00 per month with High School Diploma. All applications will be considered. For further information, please phone 353-439- 4. All applications are to be returned to Jason Cuch, Head Start Director, Ute Indian Tribe, Box 70, Ft. Duchesne, Utah 84026. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Indian Affairs 25 CFR Part 221 UINTAH INDIAN IRRIGATION UTAH PROJECT, Basic Water Charges Pursuant to the authority vested in the Secretary of the Interior for issuance of irrigation operation and maintenance orders fixing per acre assessments against lands included in Projects, delegated to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs by 230 DM 1 and rodclegatcd to the Area Directors by 10 J3IAM 3.1, notice is hereby given Indian-Irriga-tio- n that It is promised to modify S 221.77 Haste water vharuet, of Title 25. Code of Peilcrnl Ueaulatlnns, (leallng with irrigii? liun operation and maintenance assessments against lands of llic Uintah Indian Irrigation Project, Utah, by increasing the annual basic assessment rate . for the calendar year 1975 and subsequent years, unless changed by further order, from $4 to $5.49 per acre per annum. where not otherwise established by ronlrnct. The revised section will read as g 22 .77 1 Italic water rliargm. Pursuant to the provisions of the Acts of June 21. 1900 (34 Stat. 375), and Mnrch 7. 1928 (45 Stat. 210, 25 U.S.C. 387) , the reimbursable costs expended In the operation and maintenance of the Uintah Indian Irrigation Project, Utah, arc apportioned on a pcr-acbasis against the Irrigable lands of all units of the project, and for the calendar ycur 1975 and each succeeding year unless changed by further order, there shall be collected for each acre of Irrigable land to which water can be delivered from the constructed works, a uniform basic charge of $5.49 per acre per annum, where not otherwise established by contract. It Is the policy of the Department of the Interior whenever practicable to afford the public an opportunity to participate in the rule making process. Ac- -, cordingly, interested persons may submit written comments, suggestions, or objections with respect to the proposed revision to John Artichokcr, Area Director, Phoenix Area Office, Post Office Box 7007, Phoenix, Arizona 85011, on or before January 17, 1975. Jonw Axnciioxxn, Area Director. ro - I TO Doo.74-293- 67 Filed am |