2013
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Wills Clinic Announced

Beginning December 15, Don Mason, Jr., will be starting a no-cost wills clinic. Any Delaware, needing a simple will, may apply for acceptance to the clinic. Those wishing to apply must meet certain criteria. Applicants must have a Delaware Tribal roll number. Also, wills clinic is open only to those seeking a simple will. Those Delaware with more complex estates likely will not qualify for the clinic. The clinic is intended as a public service for those Delaware with small or minimal estates.
Feel free to contact Don Mason at 918.344.7828
Special Meeting of the Delaware Trust Board, Dec 16

There will be a special meeting of the Delaware Trust Board on Monday, December 16, 2013 at 1:30 PM in the Delaware Community Center, Bartlesville.
AGENDA
Prayer
Roll Call
I. Approve 2014 Budget with changes approved in New Trust Document
Adjourn
Get Your 2014 Delaware Tribe Calendar

The new 2014 Delaware Artwork Calendar is now available. Compiled by Jim Rementer.
Click on the link below to download the file. It can be printed on any size paper; for a wall calendar it is best to use legal-size paper.
Veterans Assistance Twice Monthly

The Disabled American Veterans (DAV), Washington County Chapter 65 will be at the Community Center reception area on the first and third Monday of every month to assist veterans and their spouses with filing for their VA benefits. There will be someone available from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon, and drop-ins are welcome.
Contact information for Disabled American Veterans:
P.O. Box 491, Dewey, OK 74029
Phone (918) 534-3988
Fax: (918) 534-3909
Library to Honor Bacone College Art Professor

Library to honor Bacone College art professor
By JAMES D. WATTS JR. World Scene Writer
Monday, November 25, 2013
Artist and educator Ruthe Blalock Jones, who has influenced several generations of artists through her work at Bacone College, is the 2014 inductee into the Tulsa City-County Library’s American Indian Resource Center’s Circle of Honor.
The induction will take place March 1, 2014, at Hardesty Regional Library’s Connor’s Cove, 8316 E. 93rd St. The event will also mark the start of the library’s month-long American Indian Festival of Words, honoring the achievements and accomplishments of Native Americans.
Jones called the honor “humbling and gratifying,” in large part because of the previous honorees, which include Charles Chibitty, Wilma Mankiller, Neal McCaleb, Bill Mills and Kirke Kickingbird
“As an artist, I believe we are all interested in honoring and preserving the culture and traditions of our families and tribes,” Jones said. “That is what I have tried to do, with help along the way from my parents, relatives and friends, teachers, collectors and others.”
Jones, who is of Shawnee-Delaware-Peoria descent, was born in Claremore, and began studying art with Charles Banks Wilson at age 10. Three years later, one of her works earned an Honorable Mention in the Philbrook Indian Annual, which at the time was one of the nation’s most prestigious art events for American Indian artists.
She attended Bacone College and earned a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from the University of Tulsa in 1972. In 2011, she was appointed Commissioner of the Indian Arts and Crafts Board by Department of the Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar. She is director emeritus and associate professor of Art at Bacone College.
Her work — paintings, drawings and various styles of printmaking — focuses on traditional American Indian ceremonial and social events.
Jones’ paintings have been shown in Japan and Uganda as well as throughout the United States, and her work is part of the permanent collections of such institutions as the Heard Museum, the Museum of the American Indian and the National Museum of Natural History.
The Circle of Honor ceremony recognizes an American Indian for his or her achievements by acknowledging the inductee’s contributions that have enriched others’ lives and by celebrating the inductee’s action in the face of adversity, commitment to the preservation of American Indian culture and legacy for future generations.
It is sponsored by the Maxine and Jack Zarrow Family Foundation, Cherokee Builders Inc., American Indian Resource Center and the Tulsa Library Trust. The award consists of a $5,000 honorarium and a medallion featuring the American Indian Resource Center’s turtle logo.
For more information, call 918-549-7323, or visit tulsalibrary.org/airc
From Tulsa World, November 25, 2013.
Meeting with Cherokee Nation

council meeting with Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskins Jr.