Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, September 14, 1995, Page 8, Image 8

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    8 September 14, 1995
Warm Springs, Oregon
SpilyayTymoo
Job openings-
Job openings as of September 1 1 ,
arc listed below. To apply for a job
contact Human Resources at 553
3262. To ask about job details call
the contact person listed.
Substitute Teacher Aides; Early
Childhood Ctr.; Sue Matters
Youth workercook PT; CPS;
Linda Thompson
Switchboardreceptionist; Mail
& Reception; Patches 553-3333
ForesterSilviculturist (2 posi
tions); Forestry ; William Ray Jr. 553
2416 Women & Children Services
Manager; Public Safety GM office;
Anita Jackson
Correction officer (female);
Police Dept.; Mariam Tias
Deputy ClerkCriminal; Court
Admin.; Birncy Greenc-Boisc 553
3278 Housing Director; Housing; Ed
Manion
Committee Secretary; Admin.
Svc. Ctr.; Lynn Davis
Accepting applications for fu
ture hire; WS Gaming; Sandy
Rolcne
Parking lot attendant; WS
Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Poker Dealers; WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolcne
Cage Manager; WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolene
Accounting clerk; WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolene
Count team (2); WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolene
Keno writer (2); WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolene
Shift Supervisor (table games);
WS Gaming; Sandy Rolene
Table Games dealers (13 posi
tions); WS Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Food & Beverage server; WS
Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Slots Keyperson; WS Gaming;
Sandy Rolcne
Administration receptionop
erator; WS Gaming; ;Sandy Rolene
Gift Shop Manager; WS Gam
ing; Sandy Rolcne
Gift Shop clerk (2 FT; 1 PT);
WS Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Shuttle driver (4 positions Pt on
weekends); WS Gaming; Sandy
Rolcne
Janitorial (3 positions for pm &
graveyard) (2 positions for am);
WS Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Maintenance (2 positions forpm
shift); WS Gaming; Sandy Rolcne
Security (3 positions); WS
Museum activities-Continued from page 5
Springs Culture Resources
Projects, along with Steve Allcly, a
flint knapper extraordinaire from
Sisters will demonstrate their skills.
Scott Byram, a University of Or
egon Museum of Anthropology as
sistant archaeologist and AOA presi
dent, will have a display about ar
chaeology projects within Central
Oregon.
For more information contact
Jeanne Thomas at 553-3331.
Writers ' Workshop resumes Septem
ber 30
Writer's Workshops will again be
held at The Museum At Warm
Springs starting Saturday, Septem
ber 30, 1995 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
and continuing monthly thereafter.
Learn how to write creatively and
faster through techniques taught by
award winning playwright Silvia
Gonzalez of Powell Butte and Con
federated Tribes of Warm Springs
member Carol Wewa.
There is no registration or tuition
fee and for more information contact
Jeanne Thomas at 553-3331 or Wewa
at 553-3424.
Cedar Root Basket Making Class
A Cedar Root Basket Making class
will be held at The Museum starting
October 3, 1 995 and ending Novem
ber 14, 1995.
Confederated Tribes of Warm
Springs tribal member Antoinette
Queahpama will instruct the class
that will meet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
October 3, 10, 14, 24, along with
November 7 and 14, 1995. Field trips
to gather cedar roots are scheduled
October 7 and 14, 1995 departing
The Museum at 8 a.m.
The cost for the class is $60 and is
limited to 1 0 people with a minimum
of 8 participants. The fee can be paid
in advance to The Museum At Warm
Springs and the registration deadline
is September 25, 1995.
For more information contact
Thomas at 553-3331.
Gaming; Sandy Rolene
Cashier ( 2 positions); WS
Gaming; Sandy Rolene
Sales Representative; KTWINS;
John Stoltz
PT Announcer Temp.;
KTWINS; John Stoltz
Cooks; Kahneeta; Scottie Miller
Night Janitor Supervisor;
Kahneeta; Scottie Miller
Night Janitor; Kahneeta; Scottie
Miller
Cooks & others applications
accepted; The Indian Trail; Vivian
MacyLeroy Smith, Jr. 553-1206
Sewing machine operator; WS
clothing; Melissa Tanewasha 553
3210 Beadwork to purchase; WS
Clothing; Melissa Tanewasha
Aplology extended
Greetings public,
I would like to take this opportu
nity to express myself. I'm sorry and
regretful for my actions and fool
ishness on June 23, 1995.
Thanks for the time and space in
your paper.
Sincerely,
Emil S. Johnson
Happy Anniversary
Aunt Charlotte &
Uncle Raymond Shike, Sr.
Love, Rosa
i tie :" 4 '
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' in i . r .."- i. n i - ii rtfKiiii iiAn li,
Tires for sale
Used tires for sale, 1 5 and 1 6 inch.
For more information contact Vehicle
Pool at 553-3308.
Troop 59 attend summer camp at Camp Baldwin August 13-19
Geo-Qulz
Identify this geographical location and receive a years subscription and a Spilyay Tymoo mug. Call with
your answer after Monday, September 18,1 :00 p.m.
Raffle tickets for sale. . .
Walsey seeks Jr. Queen title
Desba Walsey is a Junior Queen
candidate for the Mid-Columbia
River Powwow to be held October
27-29 at Celilo Oregon.
She said, "I am running for Junior
Queen for Mid-Columbia River
Powwow, and I would like your
support in my effort and you can do
so by buying a raffle ticket from me."
She is an enrolled Navajo and of
Yakama, Warm Springs, Paiute and
Shoshone-Bannock descent. She is
the daughter of Virgilena Walsey.
Her grandparents are Richard Walsey
and Anita Totus Walsey. Her Great
Grandparents are the late Watson
andTillie Totus, the late Virgil Hunt,
Sr. and Dorothy Lucas and the late
James Walsey and Gladys Polk
Walsey.
Supporters can buy raffle tickets
from the following: Cece Walsey
Begay (503) 296-8816; Anita T.
Walsey (509) 854-1116; Mona Jim
at Health & Wellness Center, or
Walsey of Warm Springs.
f
v.
A week of camping, swimming,
horses, archery, rifle shooting and
fun was waiting for twelve Warm
Springs Boy Scouts and three adults
August 13-19, 1995 when Troop 59
went to Camp Baldwin for summer
camp.
Camp Baldwin, located in the
forest between Dufur and Mt. Hood,
is a full program Boy Scout Summer
Camp. In addition to the waterfront,
rifle and archery ranges, campcraft,
and nature area programs that regular
Boy Scout summer camps have,
Camp Baldwin also has a horse corral,
rock climbing and other high
adventure hiking and mountain bike
programs for the campers. There were
about 250 campers from eighteen
other scout troops at Camp Baldwin
with Troop 59.
The first day at camp included an
orientation, swim test, camp wide
dinner and campfire program. Troop
59' s campsite was Mustang Ridge,
one of the closest campsites to the
horse corral.
The scouts were responsible for
cooking all but four of their meals at
Mustang Ridge. Martie Markgraf,
mother of Mark Smith, spent the first
three days at summer camp with
Troop 59, said that she had fun
watching the scouts cook for
themselves and work as a team.
During the week at camp the scouts
worked on various advancement
Desba Walsey
Museum offers activities
Happy Birthday
"Tamiesha"
My Baby Girl!!
From Your 'Ta-Cha"
Basket Necklace Making
class
A workshop on the art of bark
basket necklace making is being
offered at The High Desert Museum
on Saturday, September 30 from
10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Led by local basketmaker Donna
Sakamoto Crispin, participants will
learn basic twining, weaving and
plaiting techniques using cedar and
juniper bark to make a bark basket
necklace. A slide presentation on the
role of cedar in the Northwest is
included.
The fee for "Cedar Bark Basket
Necklace," which includes all
materials, is $34 for members and
$39 for nonmembers. Pre-registration
is required. To register, mail a check
to The High Desert Museum by
Friday, September 22.
Women and quilts
presentation
The High Desert Museum is
hosting a film and discussion by
Elizabeth Hoffman, a specialist in
thecultural history of textiles, at 3:00
p.m., Saturday, October 7.
The presentation, called "Hearts
and Hands: A Social History of
Nineteenth Century Women and
Quilts," will focus on the role of
quilts in the lives of women in the
nineteenth century, and the historical
record they offer. The presentation is
made possible in part by the Oregon
Council on Humanities.
The fee for "Hearts and Hands" is
$3 for members and nonmembers.
Pre-registration is required. To
register, mail a check to The High
Desert Museum by Friday,
September 29.
The address is 59800 S. Highway
97, Bend, OR 97702, or call (503)
382-4754.
Healthy Nations
from
page 5
family. Don't let it do the same to
yours.
Reprinted from the Oregonian,
submitted by Ina Wainanwit.
Stress reducers
1 . Get up fifteen minutes earlier in
the morning the inevitable morning
mishaps will be less stressful.
2. Prepare for the morning the
evening before. Set the breakfast
table, make lunches, put out the
clothes you plan to wear, etc.
3. Pollyanna-Power! For every
one thing that goes wrong, there are
probably 10 or 50 or 100 blessings.
Count them!
4. Get enough sleep. If necessary
set an alarm clock to remind you to
Want to subscribe to Spilyay Tymoo?
Send subscription to:
Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 870, Warm Springs, OR 97761
Name
Address
City
State
Subscription rates: $9.00 per year in the U.S.
$15.00 per year outside the U.S.
All members of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs will receive the Spilyay Tymoo at
no cost Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs.
1
I
skills for the ranks of Tenderfoot,
Second Class and First Class.
Rifle Shooting was the most
popular merit badge for the Warm
Springs scouts. Lee Hellon, John
Kalama, William Spino, and Charles
Stwyer passed Rifle Shooting merit
badge after they demonstrated that
they knew the proper safety rules
involving firearms, rifle terminology
and could shoot a qualifying score at
the range. In addition to the merit
badge, John Kalama and Charles
Stwyer earned the NRA Pro
marksman certificate for qualifying
with a .22 rifle at fifty feet, and Lee
Hellon and William Spino earned the
more challenging NRA Marksman
First Class certificate.
Joe Thompson earned the
Horsemanship Merit Badge by
demonstrating his knowledge of
horsemanship, which included
proficiency in riding.
Lewis and Lee Hellon passed
Canoeing Merit Badge and Joe
Thompson passed Rowing Merit
Badge. These aquatic merit badges
required passing a swimming test,
learning the vocabulary and safety
rules, how to paddle a canoe or row a
boat, and swamping the canoe or
rowboat.
J. P. DeBiaso and James Spencer
passed Archery Merit Badge by
knowing archery safety rules and
terminology, shooting a qualifying
' score at the range, and making
bowstring and an arrow. Spencer got
a special accuracy award for his
archery shooting.
On the second night at camp the
Troop went on an overnight
horseback ride. After the hour and a
half to two hour ride many of the
riders were happy to be off the horses.
The stars that night seemed just a
little brighter after feeding the horses
and sitting around the campfire. The
next morning's ride back after the
pancake breakfast was a little easier.
The Troop 59 would like to thank
the following organizations for
sponsoring the Troop's summer
camp: The Warm Springs Seniors'
Program, the Tribal Police
Department, the Tribal Sanitarian's
Program, Indian Head Gaming,
Warm Springs Forest Product
Industries, the National Order of the
Arrow, the Karnopp, Petersen Law
Firm, and Kah-Nee-Ta Resort.
Troop 59 would also like to thank
Mr. Bill Haugen, who is an Assistant
Scoutmaster in Portland, and donated
a week of his vacation time, to camp
with Troop 59. The Boy Scouts
required two adult leaders to be with
Legal notice
Warm Springs Confederated Tribes
Plaintiff
vs.
Jorge Cerrero
Defendant
Case No. CV 262-95
To Jorge Cevrero
You are hereby notified that a default judgment
was entered against you after your failure to appear
on at the 9:00 a.m. August 29, 199S, Civil
Proceeding in the above cited case.
It is hereby ordered and adjudged that the
defendant is permanently excluded from the Warm
Springs Indian Reservation. Compliance with this
exclusion order may be enforced by the contempt
power of the Tribal Court in accordance with
Chapter 200 of the Warm Springs Tribal Code. The
Court may impose jail, fine or both for contempt of
court, in additioi to violations of Warm Springs
Tribal Code Chapter 300. the Tribal Exclusioa
Code, if the defendant is found on the Reservation
ia violation of the Exclusion Order.
This Exclusion Order shall be published ia the
Spilyay Tymoo and shall be mailed to the
defendant's last known address. Proff of service
that a copy of this order was mailed to the defendant
and published ia the above mentioned newspaper
by the court cleric shall be filed with the court
Ordered this 29th day of August, 1 99S.
WaHer Langnne. Ill
Judge, Warm Springs Tribal Jadge
each troop at camp for safety and
supervisor purposes, and Haugen's
assistance was much appreciated.
Any boys living on or near the
reservation, ages 1 1 to 1 7, who would
like to join Troop 59 are welcome.
Troop 59 has been active in Warm
Springs since the 1940's, and the
troop is sponsored by the Warm
Springs Public Safety Branch. The
Troop's next weekend camping trip
will be at Lake Billy Chinook, during
the Saturday, September 23rd Clean
up Day.
SeX abUSe WOrkshop-continued from page 2
specializing in the evaluation and
treatment of juvenile and adult sexual
offenders and victims. Group,
individual, and family therapy.
Expert witness testimony,
consultation services, professional
training. Services also provided for
delinquent or antisocial behavioral
problems. Forensic parole
evaluations. Instructor, Rocky
Mountain College, Billings,
Montana. SociologyPsychology
Department.
Also Dr. Fred Saporito, PhD, who
is a therapist in private practice in
Bend, Oregon, who has worked
extensively with sexual offenders for
16 years. Dr. Saporito was
instrumental in starting the Adult Sex
Offender Program 4 1 -B at the Oregon
State Hospital in 1979. Dr. Saporito
has provided numerous trainings
nationally and is a recognized expert
in the field of sexual abuse and
assault. Dr. Saporito is the clinical
consultant to J Bar J Youth Services.
For information contact Patricia
Chappelle, 1032 West Main Street,
Medford, Oregon 97501, (503) 779
2393. For accommodations: Kah-Nee-Ta
Resort, P.O. Box K, Warm
Springs, Oregon; 503-553-1112 or
800-554-4SUN, FAX 503-553-1 07 1 .
Single $74.00, double $79.
Howlak Tichum
LeRoy Allen, Sr.
Forty-six year old LeRoy Allen,
Sr. of Warm Springs died
September 1, 1995 as a result of a
car accident in Warm Springs.
He was born June 30, 1949 in
Warm Springs to John and Cordillia
(Tom) Allen.
LeRoy was a lifetime resident
of Warm Springs, Oregon. He was
employed as a janitor for the
Confederated Tribes of Warm
Springs at the time of his death. He
enjoyed fishing, hunting and any
outdoor activities. He was an
enrolled member of Grande Ronde.
He served in the United States
Army from July 1966 to March
1968. October 24, 1969 he married
Linda Scott in Warm Springs.
He is survived by his wife Linda
of Warm Springs , son LeRoy
Allen, Jr. of Warm Springs, son
Reynolds Allen of Alaska and
daughter, Jesslyn Allen of Warm
Springs. He is survived by brothers
John Allen, Stanford and Timothy
Kneeland all of Warm Springs. He
is also survived by sisters Pauline
and Patricia Allen, Deborah Scott
all of Warm Springs, Cheryl
Kennedy and Cecile Kneeland both
of Dallas, Oregon. He has seven
grandchildren.
The dressing ceremony was held
Monday, September 4, at 3 p.m. at
Bel-Air Colonial Chapel. Overnight
services followed at the Agency
Longhouse. Johnny Allen and
Chubby Robinson officiated. The
burial was held Tuesday, September
5, at 8 a.m. at Seekseequa Cemetery
in Warm Springs.
Joseph "Joey" Ortiz
Thirty-three-year-old, Joseph
Abella "Joey" Ortiz, Jr. of Warm
Springs died September 2, 1995 in
Culver, Oregon as a result of a
single vehicle accident.
Joey was born August 5, 1 962 in
Toppenish, Washington to Joseph
and Joyceline (Sutterlee) Ortiz.
He attended elementary and Jr.
High School at Wapato,
Washington. He also attended
Madras High School and graduated
from Davis High School in Yakima,
Washington. Following high school
he attended Mt. Hood Community
College before moving to
Pendleton. He took a job at the
ColumbiaCourt Club in Hermiston,
Oregon where he was Fitness
Director for three years, as well as,
a member of the Pendleton Dart
League. For the past few years he
has lived in Warm Springs where
he served as Wellness Coordinator
for the Confederated Tribes of
Warm Springs. He focused on
fitness in all areas, weight training,
diet and nutrition and making fitness
fun. he was instrumental in
introducing circuit training,
boxersize and Karatacize. He was
also certified by the American
Council on Exercise and was a
certified fitness trainer. Joe will be
remembered as a person who always
met you with a great big smile and
open arms. He enjoyed meeting
new people. Most of al he loved a
good challenge, be it running,
swimming, boxing, diving, weight
training, darts, dancing, art, life
guarding, bartending, working as a
security guard or a bouncer. He
was an enrolled member of the
Confederated Tribes of Warm
Springs.
He is survived by his son Bryan
Ortiz of California, sister Lydia
Sutterlee Crane of Pendleton,
Oregon, brothers; Guy Gregg of
Toppenish, Washington, Bo Gene
Ortiz of Warm Springs, Oregon
and Michael Joseph Ortiz of Mesa,
Arizona, numerous nieces,
nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins,
grandmother Alice Florendo of
Warm Springs. He was preceded
in death by his grandparents, Jesus
and Carman Ortiz and "Smiley"
Joe Sutterlict and his parents.
Dressing ceremonies were held
Tuesday, September 5 at 2 p.m. at
Wapato Longhouse, overnight
services followed. Washat services
were held at 6:00 a.m., September
6 at the Longhouse and Mass of
Christian Burial was celebrated at
8 a.m. at St. Peter's Catholic
Church in Wapato. Joey was buried
at Reservation Memorial Park
Cemetery in Wapato, Washington.