PAGE 2 June 14, 1991 Warm Springs, Oregon Spilyay Tymoo State legislators support Duro reversal ' ' " : i . ,? .r , V- - V' : 1 ' , , ' n - V- j " , - - Nv . , - . - . - ...!. iisjA., :k - y '. '-rvV-'-'-'-rv.?' '.V: ";'. -r:- " -1 " ... 77 ...., 11 1. P . j - . v-' ; - , . , , . - -. WW - Construction Underway Work on the new Early Childhood Education Center has been going on for about a month and has dramatically changed the landscape near the Agency Longhouse. It was learned recently that the ECE will receive approximately $200,000 In Oregon state lottery funds, up about $50,000 due to increased lottery ticket sales. On June 4. 1991, a majority of Oregon'i legislators sent Senator Daniel Inouye a letter of support for legislation to overturn the 1990 Duro v. Rcina U.S. Supreme Court Division. The Duro decision held that tribal governments did not have criminal jurisdiction over non member Indians. The result in the Indian Country has been confu sion and anger. In effect, Duro has created a class of people whose conduct would go unregulated on the Indian reservations of Amer ica. The disastrous effect of Duro has been temporarily avoided by a bill passed by the Congress which returns jurisdiction to the tribes only until November of 1991. New legislation currently before the Congress would make that change permanent. The letter from the Oregon legislators was in support of that permanent change. Seventy-six of the 90 legislators from Oregon's House and Senate signed the letter which was drafted by Representative Bev Clarno (R Bend) at the request of Warm Springs Vice-Chair Delbcrt Frank and other Oregon tribal leaders. Representative Clarno proved herself to be a serious friend of Indian issues by the vigor with which she responded to the plea for help. In the space of only seven working days, Clarno and her staff wrote the letter and obtained all of the signatures. It was an extraordi nary effort which has earned our local legislator the respect and ad miration of Oregon's Indian communities. With support from a few states, and a number of national law enforcement it is hoped that a per manent "fix" for Duro will soon take place with passage of the effective legislation. That possibility has been strong ly enhanced by the committed sup port given this national Indian issue by Representative Clarno and her fellow Oregon legislatures. Register for Head Start The Warm Springs Head Start program is currently registering children for the 1991-1992 school year. This registration is for all children living on the Warm Springs reservation who will turn 3 on or before September I, 1991. For children who were in cither Head Start or Tribal Preschool during the 1990-1991 school year; this involves updating your child's current files. For incoming 3-ycar-olds and 4-year-olds who were not previously in one of these pro grams; a registration packet must be filled out. If the child has not had a physical examination, this PTliecrl"9?.r?,".1 Local hospital offers senior citizen health fair The 10 public hearings on the Draft Lower Deschutes River Management Plan and Environ mental Impact Statement that were scheduled at Pendleton, The Dalles, Portland, Medford, Eugene, Sa lem, Madras, Warm Springs, Bend and Maupin during June have been postponed. The draft plan was completed on schedule on May 17; however, a mistake by the Portland Post Office and a private mailing service has caused a 3-4 week delay in the delivery of the documents. As a result, there would not have been enough time for you to review the plan and offer comments at the hearings if they were held in June. The hearings will be rescheduled for sometime later in the summer and the public comment period will be extended into October. We will notify you as soon as new open house hearing dates and locations are finalized. Closure Continued from page 1 A midmorning health fair has been planned especially for seniors on June 19. Numerous health screens, demonstrations and talks will be offered between 9 a.m. and noon at Mountain View Hospital and Nursing Home in Madras. This years health fair is entitled "The Health Puzzle - Fitting the Pieces Together." Services and tests to be offered include blood sugar checks, total cholesterol counts and at home colorectal cancer test kit distribu tion. Oral cancer screening, visual dental exams, hearing testing and hearing aid cleaning and adjust ment will also be available. Several informative talks will be given throughout the fair. Topics slated to be addressed include safe ty concerns for seniors, managing your medication, gentle message and chairobic exercises for seniors. All AARP membersand mature adults 53 years of age and older are invited. Admission to the health fair is $5 per person. Mountain View Hospital is located at the corner of 1 2th and A Streets. Con venient parking is available in the lots off of "A" Street. Dial-A-Ride service for those living in outlying areas may be arranged by calling Jean Fifield at 475-6494. For more information about the health fair, call Mountain View Hospital Dis trict Wellness Coordinator Eva Montee at 475-3882. must also be done. To schedule an appointment for registering your child or to update their files, call 553-324 1 or come into the Head Start offfice in the community center. Registration will continue through the end of July. Fair contest on To encourage maximum com munity awareness of this year's fair, the Fair Board will sponsor a contest for all Jefferson County businesses. The business with the best over all decorations and employee attire in keeping with the theme "Coun try Carousel," will receive six (6) season passes to the fair. Judging will bedonebythe 1991 Queen's Court on July 24, 199I. Decisions of the judges are final. If you would like to enter, please call the Fair Board Office no later nan July 1 7, 1 99 1. 475-3327. See you at the fair. Fight, win at the same time Fight fire-related injuries and get a chance to win a 1991 4x4 at the same time with the Fire Fight- of ceremonial and subsistence fish; now therefore BE IT RESOLVED, By the Tri bal Council of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Res ervtion of Oregon that pursuant to the Tribal Council's authority under the Treaty of 1855 and the Warm Springs Tribal Code 340.310(2) to regulate off reservation treaty fish ing the following is hereby adopted for the fall fishery in the year 1991 only: CLOSED SEASON: The Sherars Falls Indian net and hook and line fisheries will be closed from Sher ars Falls to the upper railroad tres tle, from 6:00 p.m. June IS, 1991 to 6:00 a.m. October 1, 1991. The entire Deschutes River will be closed to the harvest of fallsummer chinook salmon by Indian fisher men from 6:00 p.m. June 15, 1991 to 6:00 a.m. October 1, 1991. BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That this resolution will be imme diately rescinded should scientific evidence indicate the escapement level will be adequately met with out further restrictions. Summer math, career classes offered Be careful when you burn debris In late spring, toward the end of backyard burning season, grass, brush, and wooded areas may start to dry out. With drying conditions the increased chance of escaped fires also rises. Keep this in mind as you burn debris, and take these precautions to keep your fire under control: Make sure your burn pile is sur rounded by bare dirt or green grass for at least 10 to 15 feet in every direction. Have a garden hose that is long enough to reach the burn pile and a little beyond it to wet down sur rounding grass that may catch fire. Do not leave the fire until it is completely out. If high winds persist do not start to burn. If high winds start to blow after you have started to burn, stop burning and cool down burning material enough to keep any fire from escaping. Vet coordinator to visit W.S. A Native American veterans coordinator of the U.S. Depart ment of Veteran Affairs will be in Warm Springs during Pi-Ume-Sha, June 2 1 -23. He will have a stand set up on the powwow grounds for anyone who is in need of assistance. The local Central Oregon Com munity College Adult Learning Center is offering the following classes this summer. Contact the office at 553-1428 for further information. How to Get a Decent Job Tired of looking for that right job? Unsure about your career future? Want some help? Now, you can discover how to find the kind of job you really want! This excit ing two-day seminar will help you design an individual plan of action to find employment. Learn how to find good jobs and how to get them.! Workshop presenter, John War ren, has helped people all across Oregon to find decent jobs. John is a full-time teacher at Chemeketa Community College and has been an employment planning specialist for many years. When: June 24 and 25 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. with a one-hour lunch break. Where: COCC Center in the Old Boy's Dorm Cost: Free tuition; $6 materials fee. To register, stop by the COCC office. Call 553-1428 for more information. Registration begins now. Enrollment is limited, so hurry! Math Mania Yes, it's true, Math 60, 65 and 95 mania is coming to the Old Boy's Dorm this summer. Now, even you can learn the quadratic equation and amaze your friends and rela tives. So hurry, get some dark framed glasses, learn algebra and become art-v official summer math nerd! Instructor is Geoff Bury. Registration began June 3. Classes are every Monday and Tuesday from 9:30 to 11:10 a.m. from June 18 to August 6 at the Adult Learning Center. Cost is $96 plus books (approximately $30). These will be lecture type classes and enrollment is limited. This is a four-credit class. Babies are "real people 33 From the day they are born, they learn all kinds of things like; "eat ing and sleeping," listening and looking," "wiggling and moving." Ihey learn from everyone a round them-from their parents and grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters and brothers. You can encourage their learn ing through a special Infant Follow Along Program, sponsored by the Head Start and Early Intervention Program of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Parents who enroll their infants in this Infant Follow Along Pro gram (IFAP) receive a brief ques tionnaire every lour (4) months until their baby is three (3) years old. The questionnaires alert parents of the skill their children will be learning at that age and tell profes sional people and parents of poten tial learning problems. Parents involved in the Infant Follow Along Program will work with professional development specialists and learn how to teach their infants new ways to learn. If you're interested in the Infant Follow Along Program, contact: Julie Mitchell, Jane Kirkpatrick, or Jewell Minnick at Department of Education, (503) 553-3241. ers Fight Burns Raffle "91, spon sored by Smith's Home Furnish ings. Warm Springs Fire and Safety, in cooperation with the Oregon Fire Service and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers locals 123 and 659, are organizing the raffle to raise $75,000 for the Oregon Burn Center in Portland. The Oregon Burn Center, located at Emanuel Hospital and Health Center, is the only facility of its kind between Tacoma, Washing ton and Chico, California. People with severe burns from throughout the region are cared for by the spe cialized staff and equipment avail able only at the Center. Members of the Fire Service and the IBEW throughout Oregon are selling $1 raffle tickets this summer to pur chase the equipment, provide con tinuing training for nurses and send burn injured children to special camp. The Grand Prize, a 1991 Ford Explorer, is loaded with extras and has a retail value of $20,000. The second prize is a drift boat and trailer with many options donated by South Santiam Drifters. Tickets will be sold for four months, form June 1 to September 30. They will be available at public events such as county fairs and at local fire stations, and IBEW offi ces throughout the state. The win ning ticket will be drawn at the Oregon Burn Center during National Fire Prevention Week in October. It's time to celebrate Treaty Days in Warm Springs Continued from page 1 those selling crafts. Food vendors will not be allowed to sell wild game animals (venison, elk, etc.) and microwaves will not be permit ted for use on the grounds. There will be a sanitation inspection done for those vendors providing food, everyone handling food must have taken food handlers course and have a permit card. The sanitation inspector will have a list of those who completed the course. All non-tribal members must have a seller's permit before being eligible to set up a booth. For more information please contact one of the following peo ple: Art Mitchell at (503) 553-1 735; Nathan "8-Ball" Jim at 553-1403; Louise K. Jackson at 553-1304; or Cassie Katchia (vendor informa tion only) at 553-3217. There are four candidates seek ing the Miss Pi-Ume-Sha title for 1991 . The girls running for the title include Phoebe Suppah, Arlissa Rhoan, Madeline Jim and Zena Badraod. The girls will be selling raffle tickets until the powwow. The winner will then be crowned Friday, June 21, 1991 by 1990 Pi-Ume-Sha Queen Elizabeth Hisa take. Below is information on the candidates and the photos of three of the candidates. A photo of Zena Badroad was not available at press time. Candidate Phoebe Elaine Sup pah is 20 years of age and is of Warm Springs and Wasco descent. Her parents are Melinda Polk and Frankie Suppah of Warm Springs. She attended Madras High School from 1984-1987, and then gradu ated from Lincoln High School in Portland, Oregon in 1988. She then attended Haskell Indian Jr. College. Her hobbies and special interests include beadwork, cross country, running, fancy dancing and jingle dancing. Suppah's rea son for seeking the title of Miss Pi-Ume-Sha is to be recoenized, Spilyay Tymoo Staff Members MANAGING EDITOR SID MILLER ASSISTANT EDITOR DONNA BEHREND PHOTO SPECIALISTWRITER MARSHA SHEWCZYK REPORTERPHOTOGRAPHER . . SAPHRONIA COOCHISE TYPESETTERRECEPTIONIST SELENA THOMPSON FOUNDED IN MARCH, 1976 Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located in the base ment of the Old Girls Dorm at 1 1 1 5 Wasco Street. Any written materials to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 870, Warm Springs, OR 97761 PHONE: (503) 553-1644 or (503) 553-3274 FAX No. 553-3539 Annual Subscription Rates: Within the U.S. $9.00 Outside the U.S. $15.00 . ? . f I f Phoebe Suppah build self-esteem, keep occupied, and practice for other such titles as Miss Warm Springs. Her future plans are to go to a four-year col lege to get a political science degree in business management. She feels she would like to "help the tribe be recognized as a sovereign nation with a strong political voice to help the nation become the healthiest reservation by the year 2000." Arlissa Rhoan is 15 years old, and is of the Warm Springs des cent. Her legal guardians are Lyle Sr. and Arlita Rhoan. Her parents are Lyle Rhoan, Jr. and Bonnie Petersen of Siletz, Oregon. She will be a sophomore at Madras High School next fall and has attended school in Warm Springs and Mad ras all of her life. Her hobbies and special interests include Indian dancing, traveling to different pow wows, school, learning how to beadwork, sports and horse riding. Rhoan feels her reason for seeking the title is to represent her family, the Confederated Tribes and Pi-Ume-Sha at different powwows she will attend throughout the Uni ted States and Canada. Her future plans include graduating from high school then take a couple of years off to travel around the States and Canada then come home and pre pare for college. And after com pleting college she w ould like to get a job and possibly start a family. Madeline Rosalia Jim is 14 years old and is the daughter of Barbara and Bruce Jim. Sr. She will be a sophomore at Madras High School next year. Her hobbies in clude riding horses, beadwork, Indian dancing, basketball, soft ball, tennis, and volleyball. She also likes to read, prepare tradi tional foods and go commercial fishing w ith her father. She is seek ing the title of Miss Pi-Ume-Sha because she enjoys meeting people and traveling to dance at powwows all over. She feels she will represent the title to the best of her ability. She enjoys running for different pow wow queens "just like the old days, it's for fun and enjoyment, partici pating and being active in tradi tional ways." She is interested in learning about people and customs of the community from elders and other tribes. Zena Joy Badroad is 14 years of age and is a freshman at a Van couver, Washington high school. She is of Warm Springs, Nez Perce and Spokane descent. "I'm really honored to be a queen candidate because 1 didn't think the committee would pick some one off the reservation," said Zena recently. Zena's hobbies include attend ing powwows and playing basketball. ...... jsefc' 7 - t v Madeline Jim Arlissa Rhoan