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About Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1985)
j- S pilyay T ymoo I Mommy, don’t hug me! Part II JUNE 7, 1985 Page 7 Story of child sexual abuse continued The follow ing is the second segme:?i o f Frederick Bobb’s M om m y, D o n ’t H ug M e !” Readers learned in the first seg ment that fatherless Angel had a youngish friend, Mr. Sand man, who had taken her in and treated her like an “a n g el,” A ngel’s family had no idea o f what was going through Mr. Sandm an’s mind or what was to transpire in the future. First are the mother’s thoughts. by Frederick Bobb The M o th er.. . They becam e the talk o f the reservation, A n g el a n d her new friend. I was p r o u d to k n o w a m an like the one she was so close to, y o u d o n ’t f i n d too m any m en w ho treat alm ost every girl they see as i f she was his ow n anym ore. Those d a ys seem to be gone. S o m e things ju s t w eren’t m eant to last, I guess. They ran a round a lot. H e hugs her a n d kisses her as i f she were h is ow n fle s h a n d blood. I f w as hard to b e m a d at him , b u t I sw ore the day that m y h u sb a n d d ied th a t m y child ren w o u ld never have to go through that m uchsorrow again. S h e ’d run up to m e every'n o w a n d then, a n d ask (always with th a t ’‘Please, M o m m y? ’’fa c e ) i f I ’d consider m arrying him . I d id n ’t k n o w the guy, a n d tried to explain to her that it m ight be s o m e w h a t r id ic u lo u s f o r a w om en o f m y age to m arry a m an o f his age. S h e ’d sm ack her lips, a n d sit d o w n —p o u tin g — a n d say “G eez! W ho m ade up all these stu p id rules?’^ ^ ^ They were so, s o c lo s e .B u t as I said before, Som e things ju s t w eren’t m eant to last. . . “W hy are we stopping here?” askedA ngel, h erface filled with concern. The c a t had pulled into the d irt drivew ay o f t h e S andm an’s house, and the engine had been shut off. “I ju s t fo rg o t to tak e my vitam jns ag ain ,” S andm an said, getting o u t of thç car.^Y o u can Wait here?” he asked. “ S u re th in g ,” A ngel said , bundled up in the seat o f the ‘84 M ercury M onarch. H er im pres sively insulated jack et giving h er the “T eddy-bear” look: * S andm an ran up to the door, opened it, and entered the house. It sm elled .o f old shoes,, as it always had , an d the heat inside felt trem endous. He knew w hat he was a b o u t to d.o was w rong, but he co u ld n ’t help it. R unn in g into the b ack room , he barely m ade it to the sm all dres&er^which seemed to su p p o r t his bed. O pening the top draw er, he w ithdrew a sm all, c a re m e l-c o lo ré d b o ttle H e grabbed several sm all pills out of it, stuffed them into his m outh, and rah outside to his friend. Inside the house, the small, caram el-çolored bottle. It was cleared m arked : P C P . It was written in sera wling hand writing. They went to the K & D D riv eT n ,an d spent m ost o f the night scream ing at the beast who stalked the young teenag ers w ho were pim ply.out lo o k ing fo r a “good tim e,” D uring the m ovie, S andm an fell asle e p .. N ext Month Angel h a d n ’t seen Sandm an aro u n d fo r quite a while now. W hen she did, it was usually in M adras in a grocery ito te , a, place where her m o th er would n o t allow h e r to leave her side. But even when she d id set him, »she was som ew hat relu ctan t to go w ith him. He d id n ’t seem norm al anym ore. His eyes were deeper, n o t in depth,, b u t in dim ension. He w ouldn’t raise his head and greet her w ith a cheery “ H i!” anym ore. In fact,/ he Seemed n o t to notice her at all:. j J j e ’s outg ro w n you, A ngel,” her m other had told her. “Like all o th e r men his age, h e’s p rq b - ably found a w om an who may m ake him feel asham ed to be around a little girl.” Angel would only reply “W ho made up these dum b rules?,” D ays seemed like weeks, and weeks like m onths. W ithout her friend, she’seemed to be a lost puppy in an e n o rm o u s, city. D epression overcam e her when she spotted out a w ell-intoxir cated m an sitting near a street curb in M adras. It was Mr. S andm an, and he w ouldn’t even raise his head to even lo o k at her anym ore. . o ld e r b r o th e r — im ita te d the sounds o f a ro arin g car as he pushed the M atchbox vehicles aro u n d his sm all body on the fluffly carpeting. Ju d y — A ngel’s older sister, sat w riting in her d iary (a h ab it she had picked up fro m d ear old m other). Jack T rip p er stum bled over a p lan ter—p robably one o f Ja n e t’s— then was banged in the head by Chrissy’s vast incompetance. The gran d fath er clock th at rested neatly in the co rn er o f the room began to toll. “Oh my g o d !” yelled Lily. She stood, and rushed into her room, th ro w in g clo th in g an d o th er “ M om m y” delights aro u n d the room . “I ’d forgotten all about the sem inar I was supposed to attend ton ig h t!” “O h, N o,!” Ju d y called. “Yeah, honey.” , “Jack y asked me to spend the night. I was going to wait until the last m inute to ask you, cause you always say yeah th en .” “I suppose you can, b ut only if Jack y is Jacky, and no t Ja c k .” Life: is h ard on those who fail, Ju d y giggled, and prepared for her night. Life grants those who try, “Bob?” Lily called. Sadness com es to the m an with no goals, “W h at!” yelled an anguished Happiness io those with dreams. voice from an o th er room . B ut dream s d o n ’t com e easy, “I need you to stay home Especially when yo u ’re the dream tonight and w atch over these maker, two. I d o n ’t w ant them hom e all You ca n ’t dream as others do, night alone, and y o u ’re the only When your name {¿ Sandman. . one w ho’ll be here.” “O kay,” said the voice. The m an of the house m ade his: RBK plans. T here was a knock On the Sam e old television shows for the same old people who always door. The havoc continued, the car, seem to w atch them , Angel sat near the foot of the gigantic TV th ro w in g clothes aro u n d the screen, staring dream ily into the room , scribbling even faster in a magic box. Supper^was on the dairy, and a seldom seen person sto v e , fish Iu k a m ean . L ily in the other room . Angel opened hum m ed quietly, stripping the the door. “ H i,” said Sandm an. foots of their outer shells. Angel’s Computers are here to stay Angel stood, lookingdttto the eyes o f her long lost friend. He looked even worse than he had before, his hair m atted with oil, clothes grudged with soil, and face outlined in red. “You w anna go o u U jo r a pizza?” he asked. “M om m y, m om m y!” Angel screamed, running into the back room where her m other con tinued to throw her w ardrobe into the air. “ A ngela, honey. I ’m very busy.” “S andm an asked if I could go out to get a pizza fo r h im ;. .with him !” Lily stopped, raised her head, and thought. “N o .” she whis pered. “ M om m y!” Angel screamed- on the verge of an o th er useless tantrum , | Lily grabbed Angel by the arm , swung her around, and looked her in the face with a cold Indian look. “I ’ve seen th at m an all over the reservation drunk, on drugs, and ‘selling o u t’ as your friends in your age group call it. H e’s unfit to be taking on the respon sibility of a young girl, and shouldn’t he trusted w ith ,h is own daughter the way he is now .” ? Angel stood in her another’s hands, appalled by the sudden flow of words. H er m other’s face co n tin u ed to stare in to A ngel’s fear-filled eyes. Lily raised her head, looked into the doorw ay, and alm ost fa in te d a t th e sight. T h ere, Sandm an stood. He had heard every last w ord ab o u t irrespon sibility, and probably regreted th a t he’d even started /drugs. Lily’s eyes dropped, she loo sened the grip on Angel. D um bfound, Angel stood in her m o th er’s hands not know - C enturies ago m athm atical calculations were perform ed on an instrum ent with rows of beads for counting called the abacus. As technology advanced math- m atical c a lc u latio n s becam e m ore im portant. In .1642 Blaise Pascal, a m athm atical prodigy, made a m ark on history by inventing a mechanical calcula to r th a t proved to be am azing fo r th a t time, having the ability to add, multiply and even divide. The enorm ous cost, huge size and the th reat th a t it m ight take aw ay jo b s hindered its popula rity. Warm Springs Elementary students become familiar with computer keyboard through games. Spilyay Tymoo photo by Shewczyk Instructing students at Warm Springs Elementary, Denver Sens!- baugh explains movements o f the monitor cursor. TZZuTiTZliZ'e ing who w ould break the sud- ' den silence first, N o one did, Sandm an walked out of the tr a ilo r.. | “You get tó your room , and$ d o n ’t you come p u t!” yelled i . Lily, her look even colder now. I Angel ran to her small, pink • ,decorated room . There, she bu ried her head in the satin pillow , Until her m o th er had left. T hen ■ she began to cry. Two hours had passed, eight o ’cloek was on its course. W eb ster had made Angel forget about the m iniature conflict, and had sent her laughing into hysteria ; every so often. Bob entered the room , deco- ; rated w ith chains, a Van H alen T -shirt, and jogging pants. He : stood, w atching W ebster dance ; across thè screen, the replied “Stupid show, how do you watch it?” He went for the door, opened * it, then turned to say *I’m going : out for a while. You had better . n ot get into trouble or I ’ll spank • you like y o u ’ve never been been spanked before. I’m not getting/- into trouble just because òf you.” He stopped to see A ngel’s reac tion. She d id n ’t give him th e lp pleasure o f a m ean look, but - only sat on thè floor, her h ead ? bent back, w atching the cute i y o u th m ake jo y for the world. “H ear m e!” asked Bob. “M m m -H m m .” Angel replied. The d o o r slam m ed, the m an of the house-was gone. Som e tim e during the next tw enty piinutes, W illiam had crept into the bedroom , and ' had fallen asleep. Angel might a s well have been left a t home alone. ? ' . , ■ ■ c ■ - . The door opened, not a knock to be heard. Sandm an slipped 1 into the sm all room,, a glint in ; his eyes as Angel had never seen , before, He was—as Angel could ì tell—drunk again. ■ ; W ith the possibilities of such * a,m achine in mind m any new ideas were form ulated and it? eventually becam e essential to ! create a practical machine for i calculations. T aking a census would take.ten years to complete. The 1880 cerisris proved to be 1 a tu rning point. A contest was held to see who cpuld m ake the f census count the fastest. One 1 contestant com pleted thè count in 55 hours, anothéf finished in ’ 44 hours: Thè winner was t ì e r - 1 m an H ollerith who com pleted [ the census ih 5*4 hours With a ; punch card system. H ollerith later started a tabulating pom- - pany which was eventually called "Ì International Business Machines (IBM ). The invention of the vacuum tu b e to e x p e d ite sw itc h in g allowed the creation o f the first large scale calculator an d in- ; form ation processing com puter. 5 E N IA C , E lectro n ic N u m b er ! Integrator and Calculator, o c c u -1 pied a 15 x 30 foot room and utilized 18,000 tubes, one burn- *i ing out every two seconds. Ideas for storage, use of binary numbers andeventuálly the ti a n - I sistor revolutionized these cal- Í culator com puters. R easonable ; prices, reasonab*ly?sized m a- ’ chines could be developed. s p u y a y r y m o o p H o to b y S H 'J Usedfor centuries the abacus is A lthough transistors made an the first conwuters im pact on the com puter indus try, this invention was oversha- . do’w ed by the creation of the ; micro-chip.: The chip is at th e" heart o f m odern com puters and allows for storage up to one mil lion w ords on a single chip and the existence of pocket size ma chines, The chip is found, now ,, in ; watches, cars, cam eras, locks and alarm systems as well as in office and home computers. Tech nology had advanced a t .light ning speed with the usé of chips, some no larger th an a pin head. The future cannot be planned w ithout the com puter iri.mind. It is being used as a teaching tool, a record keeper, an inter viewer and ad v iso r It is replac ing thè simple typew riter and u n itin g offices., th ro u g h tele communications across the coun try, It will eventually be used extensively in money exchange, electronic iriail, robots, as per sonal identifiers.Althoughsom e_ social ram ifications will result, the com puter in its many forms, is here to stay. fcarm compuier fen;«««« ««* openrtfon. r