OR. COLL. K 75 .568 v. 20 no . 1 1 May 2b, """"" I May 25, 1995 VoI.20No.ll S 350 r Spilyay tymoo ' ' I ; n i k Coyote News In Brief Tom to be featured in national magazine Nine-year-old tribal member artist Preston Tomwill appear in the next issue of "Indian Artist". Arthur has fond memories of past Featured senior citizen Taylor Arthur recalls his past and questions his future. Art show opens The works of tribal members artists are featured in second annual show at The Museum. General Assistance Program defined Statistics show that those who receive General Assistance really don't want to be where they are and are willing to work to get off public assistance. Fish tagging a success The Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery successfully complete their annual tagging program recently. One tagger offers her "Musings". School's almost out Warm Springs Elementary, along with all other District schools, will soon be empty as the last day of school nears. Tom works hard for name in team roping Sixteen-year-old Justin Tom has worked since a very young age to become the best in his chosen sport. 6 Pi-Ume-sha Run set The annual Pi-Ume-Sha Run is set for June 24. A registration form is available for those interested in the 1 0K and two-mile runs. 7 Sugars defined OSU Extension offers the lastest information on the various kinds of sugars currently on the market. Deadline for the next Spilyay Tymoo Is Friday, June 2, 1995 Spilyay Tymoo ( Coyote News) General Council Meeting Ibesday, June 13 Agency Longhouse 6 p.m. Dinner 7 p.m. Meeting Agenda: Kah-Nee-Ta Annual Report Oregon Symphony sets local performance As part of its annual Meyer Me morial TrustNational Endowment for the Arts Regional Touring Pro gram, the Oregon Symphony will visit Warm Springs Sunday, June 4, for a performance at the Community Center at 10 a.m. The concert is part of the Symphony's third annual re gional tour, which also features stops in La Grande, John Day and Bend during the end of May and the first of June. The performance will be spon sored locally by Kah-Nee-Ta Resort, Warm Springs Forest Products, Warm Springs Power Enterprise, the Tribe's Secretary Treasurer's office and Public Relation's office. The Oregon Symphony will present a light classicaleducation concert led by Oregon Symphony Resident Con ductor Murry Sidlin. One of fhe largest arts organiza tions in the Pacific Northwest, the Oregon Symphony is an institution of national repute. The oldest major orchestra in the West, it has been ranked "first class" by Gramophone magazine and "a virtuoso ensemble" by the Washington Post. Early historical records indicate that Portland's first symphonic con cert took place at Oro Fino Hall, June 1 5, 1 866. Just 2 1 years after the city ' s founding and a little less than 11 years after representatives of the Wasco and Warm Springs Tribes signed the Treaty of 1855. It was not until 1886 that the Port land Symphony Society was founded. The first orchestra in the West, and one of only six major orchestras es tablished in America before 1900. W. H. Kinross conducted the initial concert at the Marquam Grand Theater on October 30th of that year. By 1899 the Symphony was giving an annual concert series, and in 1902 embarked on its first tour, to Eugene and Corvallis, for its first world premiere performance. Continued on page 2 District 509-J to sponsor lunch program Jefferson County School District 509-J announced recently the spon sorship of the Summer Food Service Program for Children. Meals will be made available at no charge to at tending children 18 years old and younger. All meals are available without regard to race, color, national origin, age, sex or handicap. Any person who believe that he or she has been discriminated against should write immediately to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Meals will be provided at the Warm Springs Community Center at 200 Hollywood Blvd. Warm Springs. Lunch will be served between 1 1 :45 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. June 26 through August 11. Annual Cake Walk and Art Fair held at Warm Springs Elementary I i 1 Faces were cut and pasted and The cake walk attracted many F 7777 ' 1,1 " ' f . 1 ft J ' ' ' A, ' . t I " ' r ' 'itj " - ; '"U ' ' ',.' ' i Z" , ' , , ' t ' ' . . ' Snake River experiment not representative of typical conditions During the week of May 7, Na tional Marine Fisheries Service re searchers, accompanied by consult ants hired by the Direct Service In dustries, discovered that 71 juvenile salmon held in net pens below Ice Harbor Dam in the Snake River had died, apparently from exposure to high concentrations of dissolved gas. The group which was to serve as controls were also dead as a result of the net pen in which they were held breaking free from its anchor. One net pen held the fish within one meter of the surface of the river. All juve nile salmon died. High mortality in shallow pens is not unexpected. An other pen allowed the fish to occupy water as deep as four meters below the surface. Eighty-five percent of the juvenile salmon died. High mortality in deep cages is unusual. The Columbia River Alliance immediately sent out a new release stating that this experiment proved spilling water through the spill gates at dams is harmful to juvenile fish. When the experiment was re peated, 61 percent of the juveniles held in the surface pens died. Mor tality in the deep cage, however, was only 1 .4 percent. Whether by accident or design, the net pens that have caused all the commotion are located in the region of highest total dissolved gas con centration to be found in the Snake P.O. Box 870 Warm Springs, OR 97761 Address Correction Requested 3 I ... ? -v. v . .i JLZzrJ drawn by students at Warm Springs Geometric kids from school. These happy River below Ice Harbor Dam. The net pen location is not representative of the river conditions found typi cally below the dam. Transect data are available from the Army Corps of Engineers. The juvenile salmon held in the cages are subyearling fall chinook. They are not representative of the juvenile salmon in the river right now, which are yearling spring chinook and steelhead. Of salmo nids, juvenile fall chinook are the most susceptible to gas bubble trauma. The juvenile salmon used in the experiment were trucked in from Bonneville Hatchery. Of all forms of transportation, juvenile salmon find being trucked the most stressful. Four days does not represent a typical period of time that outmigrating salmon are in this reach of the Snake River. Under current flow conditions, juvenile salmon passing Ice Harbor Dam are typi cally out of the Snake within 1 6 hours, and often in considerable less time. Holding them in net pens for four days may have some relevance to resident fish in this reach of the Snake, but it has none to juvenile salmon. The Fish Passage Center exam ined 587 juveniles at McNary Dam during the week of May 14. It found one fish with external symptoms of gas bubble trauma, and that was of P Elementary. shapes were used in these pieces of faces were sculpted from clay. the mildest sort. The National Biological Service has sampled 160 juvenile salmon recently at McNary Dam. None were found with symptoms of gas bubble trauma. Of the total 747 sampled, about one-tenth of one percent showed any symptoms of GBT. At all monitoring stations on the Columbia and Snake rivers, 4,369 fish have been examined. Nine have been found with GBT symptoms, about two-tenths of one percent. Again, all symptoms were of the mildest sort. Juvenile fall chinook held for four days in the net pens less than one meter deep in gas concentrations about 1 20 percent are not representa tive of the fish in the river. A I tiL-J Pi mill im i ; ;r'.5i-J t. : .i-8i pi 3 jJ VTi 1 .if. 1 1 1 , -LLX; fe,1 r Warm Springs VAP receives sizeable State grant for shelter The Warm Springs Victim Assis tance Program (VAP) was recently awarded a $90,000 grant from the State of Oregon under the Edward Byrne Memorial Grant. The VAP and Victim Assistance Board coop eratively submitted a grant applica tion for monies to begin building a shelter in Warm Springs for victims of crime. U.S. Postage Bulk Rate Permit No. 2 Warm Springs, OR 97761 Alii A art. The Warm Springs Elementary School held their annual Art Fair and Cake Walk May 18, 1995. The Cake Walk and lemonade and cookie sales earned $372.00 and will be used for art special art supplies. v - hydroacoustic study done last year found that about 85 percent were found in water deeper than the deep est cage used in the Ice Harbor Dam experiment. Gas concentration de creases as depth increases. No method of fish passage is without risk. Studies have shown that spill results in the mortality rate of zero to three percent. Collection and bypass system mortalities range be tween two and 20 percent, depend ing on the system. Fish kills such as the one at McNary Dam last summer in which up to 100,000 juvenile salmon died, are not uncommon. Transportation, the method promoted by the CRA, has simply failed. As more salmon have been put on barges as juveniles, fewer have returned as adults. Fifty grant applications were awarded throughout the State, and four of those awarded will be high lighted by the Governor's office; the Warm Springs program will be one of those four. The Governor held a press conference Tuesday, May 23 with Warm Springs representatives and the other three award recipients to discuss the VAP program and how the grant monies will be used. 1