jj w, m n n i 1 r'n ""' ii " I I "r r" i 'l'" T" i1'" i ' i i i i 2 February 12, 1998 Warm Springs, Oregon SpilyayTymoo Lincoln's Powwow set for Feb. 1 3-15 1 998 Lincoln's Powwow Queen candidates currently selling tickets The 21st Annual Lincoln's Birthday Powwow is scheduled for February 13-15, 1998, at the Simnasho Longhouse. Lincoln's Powwow is a Self Government & Sovereignty celebration sponsored by Simnasho Longhouse elders and Lincoln's Powwow Committee. Candidates for the senior court queen are Jamie Howard of Toppenish, Washington and Daleena Frank of Warm Springs, Oregon. Running for junior court is Maranda Blueback. Due to death in her family Tiana Tuckta has dropped as a junior court candidate. These girls are currently selling raffle tickets for the powwow for $1.00 each or 6 for $5.00. Friday, February 13, 6:30 p.m. opens with new joiners and rejoiners and a new joining drum with a dedication of a drum. Friday grand entry will be 7:30 p.m. Saturday grand entry at 1 :30 p.m. and Sunday grand entry will be 2:00 p.m. Contest categories are Fancy and Traditional for boys and girls 16 years and under and men and women ages 17-49. The point system will be used in all categories. Specials to be held are: Round bustlechicken dance contest, Honor Special-teen boys and outgoing queen special. Other specials will be announced during powwow. Drummers travel expense money to be issued totals $8,000. There will be a 3-Hand Drum contest. The committee has asked that all local drummers bring your own chairs. Co-MC-Nathan "8-Ball" Jim, West Hills and Ray Whitstone, Onion Lake, SK, Canada. For information contact Anna Clements at 541-553-3290. For vendor information contact Sandra Sampson at 541-553-3556. Jamie Howard Hi, my name is Jamie Howard, my Indian name is Hamsili. I am 16- C J Cm& Daleena Frank Senior Queen candidate Maranda Blueback Hello, my name is Maranda Lcala Blueback. I am running for Junior Court queen for Lincoln's Powwow. My Indian name is Wa'Kis ta. I am of the Wasco-Warm Springs-Yakama tribes. I am 7-years-old and attend the Warm Springs Elementary School and in Ms. Benetts second grade. My parents are Kevin and Leana Trimble Blueback of'Warm Springs, Oregon. My paternal grandparents are Effie and the late Harold Culpus (Joann Casey of Warm Springs and Martin BluebackofPoncaCity, OK). My maternal grandparents are the late Frederick Trimble of Hoopa, California and the late Evangeline Switzlcr Trimble of Warm Springs. I enjoy playing T-ball, horseback riding, swimming at Kah-Nee-Taand dancing at powwows. 4 Maranda Blueback Junior Queen candidate 6o 21st Annual Jo Lincoln s Dirinaay oo Powwow OQ . "O0 .-w " WW.. 'VVA. , "'V'N' ,. oq- t Laovernmeni ana Q0"Z.. ..'1- w - - W- Sovereiantv Celebration February 13, 14,5, 1 998J VV U1 v m n r li I . r w m ai irs - co::: Oil I ll iddi.iu.xuj iui iuuoc , of Ay- vy - ..J - yV v , -or) Jamie Howard Senior Queen Candidate years-old and a junior at Wapato Senior High School. I reside in Wapato, Washington with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Colfax. My parents are Catherine Howard and Elijah Wesley both of Wapato, WA. My late father is James Wolfe, Sr. of Warm Springs, OR. I enjoy playing soccer and fastpitch. I am a silver medalist in soccer in the North American Indigenous Games of 1997. I also enjoy traveling, meeting new people and going to powwows. I would like to thank Ray and Barbara for encouraging me to run and standing by me all the time. Also to my very, very, special mother who also encourages me in everything I do and for selling tickets. Thank you to everyone who helped and supported me. My advise to everyone is set a goal and stay with it. No one can tell you what you can and can't do. And don't mess with drugs and alcohol. Lincoln's Birthday Powwow & Self-Govt.Sovereignty Celebration Raffle ticket items Pendleton blanket Bike $50 Cash Pendleton shawl Hand Drum $50 Cash Pendleton shawl Buckskin vest $25 Cash Pendleton coat Furry blanket Fringe shawl $25 lottery scratch-off $1 00 Cash Pair of pillows Microwave oven $100 Cash Cooler Macrame chair $100 Cash Other items $1.00 each or 6 for $5.00 Census Bureau provides statistics on Valentine's Day, love, marriage Women's wellness conferences set Native women from across the United States and Canada are invited to join together for two upcoming Wellness and Women conference, slated March 8-11 in San Diego and March 30 through April 3 in Port land. The Wellness and Women con ference are presented annually by Health Promotion Programs, a de partment of the University of Okla homa College of Continuing educaT. tion. Co-sponsoring the 1998 con ferences are the Albuquerque Indian Health Service Cancer Control Pro gram, the Portland Area Indian Health Service and the Northwest Portland Indian Health Board. "Connecting Within the Circle" is the theme for the 1998 conference, signifying the long-lasting and meaningful relationships formed by many women during these confer ences in previous years. The south regional conference will take place March 8 to 1 1 at the Town and Country Hotel in San Diego. Keynote speaker for the southern conference is Lori Speck from Alert Bay, B.C. The cultural coordinator at the U'mista Cultural Centre, Speck is committed to getting the commu nity involved in cultural events and ' bringing generations together.' The north regional conference is set for March 30 through April 3 at Doubletree's Hayden Island in Port land. Keynote speaker for the northern conference is Dr. Bea Medicine. An internationally recognized scholar and research anthropologist, Dr.; Medicine has contributed extensively to such areas as Native American Studies and women's studies. She conducts research concerning men tal health, education and alcohol and ' drug use issues among American Indians. In addition, she is president of Warrior Women, Inc., a not-for-profit ethnographic films and archive research organization. Registration fee for the confer- i ence is $190. For more in formation, or to receive a conference brochure, . call Health Promotion Programs at (405) 325, 1790, fax requests to (405) . 325-7126 or write the department at 555 E. Constitution, Norman, OK 73072. During 1995, 2.3 million mar riages and 1.2 million divorces took place in the United States. That meant 6,400 marriages and 3,200 divorces on a typical day. Between 1990 and 1995, the an nual number of marriages dropped by 107,000, while and annual num ber of divorces fell 13,000. Nevada was the nation's marriage and divorce capital, racking up both and highest marriage rate (88.1 mar riages per 1,000 population- and di vorce rate (8.1 divorces pr 1,000 population) of any state in 1995. Hawaii was a distant runner-up in the marriage rate (15.8) while Oklahoma, Wyoming and New Mexico (each at 6.7) tied for second place in divorce rate. Among 18- to 24-year-olds, 24 percent of women and 14 percent of men were married as of 1995. The figures rose to 64 percent and 55 percent for 25- to 34-year-olds, and 74 percent each for 35- to 54-year-olds. For persons 55 and over, the percentage fails to 53 percent for women, but increases to 79 percent for men. The estimated median age at first marriage in 1995 was 24.5 years for women and 26.9 years for men. There were 1 19 unmarried men ages 18 to 34 for every 100 unmar ried women those ages in 1995. At older ages, however, the ratio re verses, to 105 unmarried women for every 1 00 unmarried men among 35 to 54-year-olds and 291 unmarried women for every 1 00 unmarried men among persons 55 and over. In 1995, 13.6 million persons 25 to 34 had never been married, repre senting 33 percent of all persons in this age group, the respective totals dropped to 5.9 million and 14 per cent for those 35 to 44. The chocolate and candy you give or receive probably were made in one of our nation's manufacturing establishments. In 1995, 159 such establishments employing 10,200 people produced chocolate and co coa products. These manufacturers shipped $3.3 billion worth of goods that year. Meanwhile, 762 US estab lishments, employing 53,700 people, manufactured candy and other con fectionery products. They shipped $11.3 billion worth of goods. ' Between January and October 1997, the US imported $250.1 mil lion worth of chocolate from Canada, more than from anywhere else. Like-. wise, the United Kingdom was the leading supplier of non-chocolate candy to the US during the same period, with shipments totaling $75.7 million. There is no shortage of places where you can buy flowers for your valentine: there were 26,400 florists nationwide, employing 23,600 per sons, in 1995. It's possible the flowers you buy this year came form Colombia, our nation's leading supplier of cut flow ers. US imports of cut flowers from Columbia totaled $301.2 million between January and October 1997. Tribal Council Agenda Thursday, February 12 9:30 a.m. Economic Development Program 10:30 a.m. Malheur National Forest 1:30 p.m. Board Appointments Monday through Friday February 16-20 Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians Lincoln City Monday, through Friday February 23-27 Meetings with Secretary of Interior Office and Congressional people in Washington, D.C. NCAI conducts planning session On Monday, January 26, the Na tional Congress of American Indians (NCAI) convened a strategy meeting in Washington, D.C, inviting tribal leaders from across the country to prepare for this year's legislative calendar. More than 275 tribal lead ers and representatives of tribal gov ernments and national Indian orga nizations attended the one-day planning session, which was followed by a day of visits by tribal leaders to Congressional offices on Capitol Hill. Given high priority on the meet ing agenda was the issue of Ameri can Indian tribes' sovereign immu nity, which was challenged last year by Senator Slade Gorton of Wash ington. Gorton is chairman of the Senate Committee on Interior Ap propriations. While a series of bud get riders intended to limit tribal sov ereign rights was defeated in last year's legislative session, there re mains this year a threat to this most basic right of Indian tribes. "It is absolutely critical for a united tribal leadership to pro-actively ad dress the continued threat to tribes' , sovereign immunity and to prepare ourselves for the many other chal lenges of this year's legislative ses sion," NCAI president W. Ron Allen, who also is Chair of the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe, says. "The pres ence of a majority of tribal leaders and Indian people in Washington, D.C. on the day that Congress came back into session for 1998 sends a strong message to Capitol Hill about the tenaciousness of our tribal lead ership to directly address these issues." Spilyay I'nawa Mishk'aau (Spilyay asks "What's up?) As concern parents, what can we do to help keep our kids in school? C:' ) , V. ' f V 1 t'A If' """'" ' " 4 Spilyay lmoo Publisher: Sid Miller Editor: Donna Behrend ReporterPhotographer: Selena T. Boise ReporterPhotographer: Bob Medina ReporterPhotographer: Dan Lawrence Secretary: Tina Aguilar Founded in March 1976 Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located in the basement of the Old Girl's Dorm at 1 1 15 Wasco Street. Any written materials to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 870, Warm Springs, OR 97761 (541)553-1644 or 553-3274 - FAX NO. (54 1 ) 553-3539 Annual Subscription Rates: Within U.S. - $1 5.00 Outside U.S. or I st class in the U.S. - $25.00 Spilyay Tymoo 1998 Dora Goudy: "The magic in gredients in helping our children stay in school, are to love them, support them, listen to them and believe in their dreams while at home or at school. We should not try to dominate their world." 3. Dan Kneale: It starts with the parents, if a parent doesn't view education as important the child won't. t ; i - . J Daisy Ike: "The main thing is, the parents need to be account able first. They need to love and respect their children and teach them to become accountable for themselves." i i Sam Kentura: "Have more parent envolement in the house hold, ask your children questions regarding their studies or school activities. Parents should also offer to help in their children's homework." (1 ) i .A - A tit. Marita Johnson: "We have two options, one is to build and improve what we already have and second is to get the schools and parents involved. Money should not always be the issue towards ourchildren's education." 4. Luther Clements: Parents need to get more involved academically and socially, have an open mind with your children. Don't be quick to discipline but encourage at the same time.