SpilyayTymoo PACE 2 February 7, 1992 Warm Springs, Oregon "FireBusters" program aims at safety Warm Springs Fire and Safety is one of many agencies working wilh the school districts throughout the state of Oregon to provide fire safety training for young pcoplc.Childrcn are encouraged to participate in "FircBustrrS", a program that teaches children about lire safety and pro vides them wilh an opportunity to win prizes for their participation. A worksheet witn five important safety topics on it was sent home with every kindergarten through fifth grade student at Warm Springs El ementary. Each night during the week of February 3 through 7, Channel 21 in Bend and KATU News, and KWSO radio broadcasted the answers to the fire safety topic questions. 1 !crc arc the answers to the questions. KIDS AND FIRE 1. Children who play wilh fire often hurt themselves and their families. 2. If you sec someone playing with fire, tell a grown-up. 3. A friend would not ask you to play with fire. EMERGENCY PREPARED NESS 1. Keep emergency information by your phone and memorize your address. 2. To get help in an emergency, know how to dial your emergency number or 9-1-1. 3. Your address must be clearly seen from the street. HOT LIQUIDS SCALD 1. C is for cold and H is for hot 2. It's too hot to touch if you see steam. 3. Put cool water on a burn and tell a grown-up. Early Childhood parent group relates The next Nutrition Workshop will focus on "lunch" and will be held Tuesday 218 at 6:30 p.m. in the Community Center social hall & kitchen. Learn about quick & easy, well balanced lunches that kids will eat. Lillian January, IHS Nutrition ist, will be on hand to answer ques tions like: "St . A Lamanite Generation Aztec dancer luiwm n Hf hjt:fc 1 Ij.-'1- All $M sponsored by the Cultural and Heritage committee, the Community Center, Tribal Council, and the JO'f and Education committees, was coordinated by curriculum developer Art McLonvute. Spilyay Tymoo Staff Members MANAGING EDITOR nnNNBEHREND ASSISTANT EDITOR -DONN A BEHREND punTO SPECIALIST MARSHA SHEWCZYK 52roRTCIWHOTOGRAPHER-5APHRONIAKATCHIA WKERECffTIONIST SELENA THOMPSON FOUNDED IN MARCH, 1976 SDllva v Tvmoo is published bi-weekly by the Confederated Tribes ofwarm Spring f. Our offices are located in the basement of the oS H at 1115 Wasco Street. Any wrrtten materials to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: SDllvay Tymoo, P.O. Box 870, Warm Springs, OR 97761 H 7 ' PHONE: (503) 553-1644 or (503) 553-3274 FAX NO. 553-3539 Annual Subscription Rates: Within U.S. - $9 00 Outside U.S. -$15.00 FAMILY FIRE SURVIVAL 1. Plan and practice two ways out before you hear the smoke detector. 2. When you hear your smoke detector, yell fire, crawl low and go outside, 3. Once you arc out of the house, stay out. OUTDOOR FIRE SAFETY 1. Only grown-ups should light and control outdoor fires. 2. Uncontrolled fires can become forest fires. 3. Keep things that could burn away from the outside of your home. Students who complete the worksheet and return it to school will be entered in a local drawing for FireBusters sweatshirts and one grand prize of a bicycle donated by Kah-Ncc-Ta Resort. This bicycle was purchased form Madras Coasl-to-Coast store at below dealer cost. Also the students will be eligible for the statewide drawing for a trip for four Rotary Club sponsors fun activities The Jefferson County Rotary Club is celebrating Washingtons' 260th birthday at Kah-Ncc-Ta Resort Sat urday. February 22, 1 992. There will be a silent auction to benefit Jefferson County Senior Center furnishings. Also a chance to win a trip for two ihc Las Vegas. There will be special room rates at Kah-Nce-Ta. $40. per room no tax, call 1-800-831-0100. At 10:00 a.m. will be the golf scramble, 6:00 p.m. is social hour dinncrdancc,at7:30p.m.isthcbuffct dinner and live music al 9:00 p.m. The Dinner Dance at 6:00 p.m. is $30.00 ocr ocrson. $60 ocr couple. Attendance is limited so contact your It fast food better than no food? Is it alright for kids lo drink diet soda? and so on.... The next Parent Club Meeting will be Thursday 220 al 6:30 p.m. in the Early Intervention Room (down the hall from the Head Start office) in the Community Center. On the Agenda: the Parent Club Cookbook, spring i was one oj many young peuyie thmuoh rlnnrp The. nresentation. among children tn Disneyland. We sincerely hope that parenu will take a few minutes each night during FircBusicrs week lo go over the worksheets with their children. In the past two years, there has been a dramatic reduction of children in volved in fireplay.. This is due to a great involvement from the parents correctly dealing with the subjects mentioned in these topics. Fire and Safety personnel are proud to serve the community of Warm Springs. They hope commu nity members will find the FireBusters scries interesting and informative. With the many source of getting the topics delivered, we encourage parenu to motivate their children to complete the worksheet This program is well worth the lime and effort. Any questions can be directed to Bob Sjolund at Fire and Safety, 553 1634. friendly Rotary Club member soon to purchase tickets. This is one gala event you don't want to miss. The First Annual Rotary Cherry Tree Open is a four person team scramble at the Kah-Ncc-Ta Resort Golf Club, February 22. 10:00 a.m. Entry fee is $25. per person $100 per team which includes unlimited golf all day. Please respond by February 10 to reserve your position. If you have any questions or need a registration form please call Bob Williams at 475-2215 or Bob McConncll at 475- 6167 or Gerry Gcrkc at 475-73 1 1 news, plans for future activities, raffle mfflc. new fundraisine ideas, riding toys update and more! Hope you can make it we look forward to your input and participation. Anyone wanting to contribute a recipe for the Parent Club Cookbook can drop it off at the Head Start office. Your name will appear wilh your recipe. Parent Club "Made in Warm Snrina" raffle tickets arc now avail able. You can get yours from program ECE Center progress slow; move set back to April The ECE Center uodate: The new center is running about a month be hind schedule. Originally the plan was to move Day Care and Head S tartDay Care in over Spring Break. The delay will result in an April move instead. Day Care and Head StartDay Care will close down for the one week it will take to move & parentsguardians will need to make' other arrangements for child care. Day Care and Head StartDay Care will be open over spring break. The Head Start & Tribal Preschool pro grams will move at the end of the school year in June. No programs will expand until September 1992. A goal of the new ECE Center is to serve 100 of all 4 year olds, providing them with a preschool experience to make a successful transition into Warm Springs El ementary. If your child or any child you know of will be 4 years old on or wfnr Spntp.mher 1. 1992 and isn't already in Head Start, Head Start Number of AIDS cases on the rise in Indian Country; limited help available . . . ... -L- L 1 .U: .....Uiinn nra n VAinft ml. icflliltPl incident. C (The followine article was sub mitted by Spilyay reader Melinda Phillips Miller of Salem, Oregon. The article is from the Village Voice of New York City and concerns AIDS among native Americans.) by Joyce Lombardi The first thing Willie Bettelyoun did when he found out he was HIV positive was run down one of the long nameless roads on the Rosebud Lakota Reservation.waving his arms after a Jesuit priest. But the priest, like the medicine men, hospital staff, tribal leaders and most of Willie's neighbors, wasn't prepared to deal with the fact that AIDS had hit Indian country. It has. Although just over 300 cases have been recorded among Native Americans, a new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Indian Health Services due out this year shows that the disease is spread ing like brushfire in Native commu nities. Between 1989 and 1990, the number of Native Americans with AIDS increased a startling 23 percent That's far higher than any other group 10 times the rate seen among whites, double the rate among blacks and Latinos. This sudden jump, says CDC epi demiologist George Conway, may reflect the time it's taken for the epidemic to reach remote rural areas. Or it may be due to a catch-up in underreporting: At least two govern ment surveys have found that urban health centers frequently misclassify Native Americans as Hispanic, Asian or simply Other. But whether the rise is due to geography or statistics, it's clear that the problem is real and growing. And that shouldn't surprise anyone. Most reservations share with inner cities a Seniors enjoy school, will miss academics, social aspects .... ! I I- tin mM . I I Jarrod Sampson Seventeen year old Native American Senior at Madras High School, Jarrod Sampson of Warm Springs is the son of Rosalind Sampson and Jerry Sampson of Warm Springs. His grandmother is Margaret Charley also of Warm Springs. He has one brother, Gerald age 19 and one sister, Krisiina age 2 1 . Sampson is of the Warm Springs, Yakima, Umatilla, and Colvillc de scent. His hobbies include collecting pennies and participating in sports. Cross country and wrestling are the two sports he has been involved with throughout high school. His favorite is wrestling because he likes to challenge iL Other favorites include his teachers, who are Vincc Powell in advanced biology and Steven Rankin who teaches civics. Special awards he has received include honor roll, sports awards which he lettered in, and attendance awards. His outlook of the past school verir were fun. he will miss high school when he's gone. His feelings parents or stop by the Head Start orncc. Chances are i eacn ana proceeds will go to the new play ground and riding toys fund. All items being raffled off are handmade and include a Queen size log cabin quilt, a crocheted yarn bag, Indian doll broochcs.an 18x36x24"CcdarChcst, baby blanket, yarn bag, baby headbands, lovers knot quilt, beaded keychain, cloth bag and more. The drawing will be May 1, 1992. Day Care or Tribal Preschool or isn 't already on a waiting list - Please contact S ue Matters in the Head S tart Office. Ext. 3561. Grades improve- Continued.from page 1 standards for teachers wouldimprove it Although a majority or the students (85 percent) say more rigorous aca demic standards for students would improve their quality of education, a surprising 77 percent say they would not work any harder if a national achievement test were put in place. Data courtesy of Who's Who Among American High School Stu dents. 721 N. McKinley Rd., Lake 'orest. il mm. , Don'tforget your Valentine February 14 hnrrowina combination of high-risk factors: soaring rates of sexually transmitted diseases (on some reser vations, three times the rate for whites); widespread substance abuse (Native American teenagers have the nation's highestreportrate); endemic sexual violence (which undermines safer-sex campaigns); severe pov erty (which encourages all of the above); and, not least, limited access to health care and preventive treat ments. Yet transmission patterns differ somewhat from those seen in inner city populations. Women represent 14 percent of casesthree times the rate among whites, though compa rable to other communities of color. But IV-drug use accounts for just 18 percent, less that half the rate seen among blacks and Latinos. More than half of AIDS cases among Native Americans are attributed to gay male sex. The crisis has been compounded by failures on every level, from the AIDS bureaucracy in Washington down to tribal leaders. Indian Health Service, the federal agency respon sible for health care for the 1.2 mil lion people who live in Native com munities, didn't even have an AIDS policy until 1987, and received no money slated for the disease until 1989. IHS then received just over $1 million less than $1 per person. Emmett Chase, National AIDS Coordinator for the IHS, says that many reservation hospitals will go broke if faced wilh more than five AIDS patients at one time. Experi mental therapies, scarce in many ru ral areas, are not to be found. There are no clinical trials targeting Native Americans, and data on disease pro gression and response to therapies in about this being his last year in high school, is he is not prepares to icavc them behind, but he knows ihe day is soon to come. He will miss the teachers and sports activities the most about high school. Sampsons' career choices are teaching and legal assistance, but he is undecided about a college choice. He leaves (he remaining lower classmen with his comments, "Change scomc fasuchallcnge them, don't give up!" In five to ten years from now he sees himself on his own cither working or still attending school. Cara Shadley Eighteen year old, Cara Shadley of Warm Springs is the daughter of Jane Jackson from Klamath Falls, and Ronald Shadley of Lakcvicw, Oregon. She lives in Warm Springs with her uncle and aunt, Romainc and Sandy Miller. Her grandparents are Raymond an Laura Grabncr of Redmond, Oregon. Her brothers are Daryl Shadley age 16, Ron Shadley age 14, both of Klamath Falls, Racficld Jackson age 23, and Crosby Jackson age 1 9. Her sisters are Trina Shadley age 22, Tonya Shadley age 20 and Savanali Shadley age 4. Her tribal affiliation is Klamath. Her special interest include tennis which she has participated in throughout h igh school . Her favorite teacher is Matt Henry who teaches J LJ IHS pharmacy notes policy changes The Warm Springs Pharmacy has been listening to your comments. As a result, we have changed two poli cies. Many of you who see a doctor after 4:00 p.m. have to wait too long to get your prescriptions filled. The problem is that working people needing refills or over-the-counter medications at noon cannot get them because the pharmacy is closed. They must come after 4:00 p.m. and wait ' in line with those of you who have seen the doctor. This obviously makes everybody wait far too long. In order to better serve you, the following changes in the pharmacy will begin on Monday, February 10, 1992. 1) The pharmacy will be open to serve you during the noon hour. Please use this service. this population are not being col- lectcu The Constitution places Indian nations on par with the U.S. govern ment, yet federal money for AIDS care is channeled through state health departments, and Native Americans are seldom high on their lists, if on their lists at all. State officials, mean while, point the finger back at Washington: Jackson Osborn of the South Dakota health departmentsays that even if the state wanted to funds AIDS services on all its reservations, a congressional spending freeze has tied its hands. Some church groups have tried to make up for the funding gap, and though the strings binding Native groups to religious benefactors have loosened in recent years, church policy can create problems too. On Rosebud, for example, the AIDS Resource Team, an advocacy group founded by Willie Bettelyoun, ap proached the Jesuits to fund an edu cational campaign on the reservation's radio station. All was well until ihe priests heard on of the radio spots, and decreed, "No condoms on Catholic airwaves." (After a few charged meetings with the bishop, the team recently did get a tenuous go-ahead.) Native American AIDS advocates have also met resistance from the very people they're trying to serve. They say they must constantly struggle to overcome the perception that AIDS is a while gay man's dis ease and to make it easier for those infected to come forward without fear. Three years ago, after the local IHS hospital leaked Bettelyoun's status. Tribal Council members fired him from his job at the council. "Willie's case is by no means an civics. Special awards she has re ceived include an nonor rou awoiu and a letter in tennis when she was attending school in Redmond. Her outlook of the past school years she feels have been, "alright, Redmond was hard but Madras is pretty easy." She is glad that this is her final year of high school, although she will miss her friends ihe most. She chooses teaching for her career choice. Her college choice is Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls. She would like to comment to the remaining classmen,"work hard, graduate but still have fun." In five to ten years she sees herself going to school. Seventeen year old Native American, Mike Hoaglin lives wilh Myrtle and Carl Markgraf of Madras. His grandparents are Richard and Gcrmaine Antone of Lakcport, California. He has three brothers, Don age 23, Dave age 22. and R ichard age 21. Hoaglin is of ihe Yuki and Little Lake, descent. He enjoys wrestling, because of the one on one competition and it teaches discipline. His favorite classes arc economics wilh Matt Henry and civics with Walt Ponsford. Special achievements in clude being a four year varsity Icticrman in wrestling and receiving an academic grade point average improvement award. Hoaglin will miss seeing his friends evcrvday when he leaves Madras mgn acnooi. J5J Mike Hoaglin 2 No new reaucsts for prescrip tions refills or over-the-counter medications (mylanta, tylcnol, cold medications) can be taken after 4:00 p.m. This allows us to work just on the prescriptions for you who have just seen the doctor that afternoon. Also, let us share a few friendly reminders with you: 1) The new policy does not affect those of you who come after 4:00 p.m. to pick up previously requested prescription refills. We will gladly give these to you until 5:00 p.m. 2) Please use the refill hotline (553-1 195 ext. 25) forrefill requests. By calling one day ahead of time, your request becomes a priority for us. If you wait until the day that you run out of medicine before calling us, you may wait for some time if we are having a busy day. 3) Children must be 14 years old before they are allowed to pick up medication without an adult present. 4) We prefer to personally visit wilh you when you pick a prescrip tion refill or over the counter medi cation. It is okay for your represen tative to pick up these items if you are unable to be here. Please under stand however, you must still see the doctor regularly to continue getting refills. isolated incident." complains Cha ron Asetoyerof the Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center. Bettelyoun eventually won a court settlement from the hospital and has brought a case against the council. Advocates have won other battles: They recently persuaded IHS to make prophylactics available free, no questions asked, in local pharmacies. "When the nearest condom is 50 miles away," Asetoyer says, "safer sex is not always an option." But these advocates say they can't hold their breath waiting for help from the outside, that Natives have long had to rely on their own. Says AIDS Resource Team member Lorelei DeCora: "Indians think ahead seven generations. We have to." For further information concerning AIDS contact the IHS Clinic in Warm Springs at 553-1196 or Community Counseling at 553-3205 I 4 v.