The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 11, 1975, Page page 7, Image 7

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    thursday, december 1 1, 1975
daily nebraskan
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Photo by Ely Marsh
Reginald Cedarface, acting director of the
Lincoln Indian Center.
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L in co I n Ind ian Cenfer changes
location, leadership, programs
A new location, new leadership and new programs are
changes in recent months at the Lincoln Indian Center.
The center, 243 So. 20th St., provides assistance to
Lincoln's Indian population of 600 to 1,000 persons, ac
cording to Reginald Cedarface, acting director.
The September move from the second floor office at
930 O St. was, in part, to make the center more accessible
to elderly persons, Cedarface said.
Physical changes were needed before the move could be
made. The Metro Peris Luthem Council, which serves as an
advising council to the center, donated the necessary
money for the renovations. Cedarface said that staff mem
bers and community volunteers provided the needed man
power for the work.
Jobs a problem
The biggest problem in Lincoln's Indian community is
unemployment, he said. The Comprehensive Employment
Training Act (CETA), a federally funded program designed
to provide assistance to persons wishing to get their General
Election Diploma (GED) and continue their college educa
tion, trade school or other post secondary education insti
tutions, has an office in the center.
Cedarface said CETA representatives are working with
students between the ages of 18 and 30 at the center and
provide a small stipend to students.
The city provides a full-time counseling and referral staff
to work with alcohol related problems in the Indian com
munity, Cedarface said.
The Indian Center Incorporated, an information referral
based non-profit organization also is located in the center.
Cedarface said that although they are in different offices
within the center, each works with the other in providing a
wide range of assistance to the Indian community.
Former instructor '
Originally from Pine Ridge, S.D., Cedarface replaced
Director Francis Black Elk as acting director Oct. 1. He said
he will know by Dec. 23 whether he will be named perma
nent director of the center. Prior to coming to Lincoln,
Cedarface was an instructor and director of the Indian
Studies Dept. at Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell,
SJJ.
Cedarface described the overall response to the center's
new location by Lincoln's Indian community as good. He
said various community organizations are using the center's
conference room as a meeting place.
Plans for the Lincoln Indian Center include a health pro
gram, for which the county will provide a nurse; a social
services division which would serve in a referral and
counseling capacity; a youth recreation department which
would provide supervised activities for grade school and
teenage youth in the community; and a tutor program that
would use Indian students at UNL.
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