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Education Department Fires 1,300 Workers, Gutting Its Staff; Ukraine Targets Moscow With Large-Scale Drone Attack; Survey: Almost 60% of CA Black women report discrimination at work; MO advocate urges healing over punishment for traumatized juveniles; TN nonprofits plan ahead for end of Summer EBT food program.

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White House downplays stock market plunge, calling it "transitionary." House Republicans pass a stopgap funding bill, and the Department of Education is the latest agency to see mass layoffs.

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As the reach of ICE expands, advocates for immigrant communities provide safety advice, experts say rural America needs more protections against elder abuse, and the urban-rural divide canvas gets a makeover from a multi-state arts project.

Ute Tribe's Ancient Traditions Live On

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Monday, November 25, 2013   

FORT DUCHESNE, Utah - November is Native American Heritage Month, and that rich ancestry and culture is definitely alive in Utah. The Ute Indian Tribe continues ancient customs and traditions on its Uintah and Ouray reservation near Fort Duchesne.

Tribal spokesman Robert Colorow said the Utes hold sun dances in the summer, and the bear dance celebrates the coming of spring.

"It's over 100 years old," Colorow explained. "It's a traditional dance that the Ute people have danced throughout the - I'd say - throughout the millennium."

The Utes' 4.5 million-acre reservation is the nation's second largest.

Colorow said the tribe maintains its language and culture, but is very modern in business.

"We operate our tribal government and oversee approximately 1.3 million acres of trust land. The Utes also operate several businesses, including a supermarket, gas stations, bowling alley, tribal feed lot, Uintah River Tribal Enterprises and water systems," he explained.

The tribe also earns revenue from energy development on its lands, Colorow added.





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