Page 2 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon October 30, 2003 Boys and Girls Club closed for a time The Boys and Girls Club of Warm Springs has been closed for the past several weeks, due to a shortage in funding. The program is expected to be going again within the next few weeks says Gayle Rodgers, director of Warm Springs So cial Services. The Boys and Girls Club of Warm Springs closed when the program was down to its last $5,000 in operating money, ac cording to Rodgers. "We need to secure funding to allow for the proper supervi sion of the activities we're try ing to provide," said Rodgers. "We decided this would be a the future we'll have much better coordination of services. We'll all be on the same team, coor dinating activities for kids." Gayle Rodgers Social Services director good time to close down and re group." When the Warm Springs Boys and Girls Club is again in op eration, the program will be structured in a different way than it had been in the past. There will be a club director paid by the Boys and Girls Club, as was the case earlier with the Warm Springs club. However, when the program begins again in November, the club will be under the Warm Springs Recreation Department directed by Austin Greene. Before, the Boys and Girls Club and the Recreation Depart ment were separate. This was not the most efficient way to operate, said Rodgers. "In the future," he said, "we'll have much better coordination of services. We'll all be on the same team, coordinating activi ties for kids." In the meantime, said Rodgers, securing funding for the Boys and Girls Club of Warm Springs is a priority. At the stan of next year the local club will be receiving $30,000 from the National Boys and Girls Club, "and that will carry us for a while," said Rodgers. But he is also hoping to se cure operating funds through other sources. The Warm Springs Branch of the Boys and Girls Club first started in May of 2000, and is housed in the Community Center. Task force finds B&B fire caused caused by lightning The Central Oregon Arson Task Force cites lightning as the cause of the B&B Com plex fire last summer. According to the report, dry lightning storms pounded the area between August 4-7. "It is not unusual for hold over lightning fires to smol der for days or weeks," the report states, "until fuels and weather conditions are just right and the fires become visible." The Pinhead Butte fire was reported on August 15. The Tan Pony and Brown Horse fires were reported August 18 Smith to receive award Dawn Smith will be traveling in November to Washington, D.C., to receive her 2003 Dis tinguished Principal Award. Smith is the principal of the Warm Springs Elementary School. She was nominated for the Distinguished Principal of the Year award early this year. In May she learned that she had been chosen to receive the award. The Distinguished Principal of the Year awards are admin istered by the National Associa tion of Elementary School Prin cipals, and the U.S. Department of Education. Smith first started working at Warm Springs Elementary School in 1974, She has been a teacher, counselor, vice-principal and now principal. In No vember she will be traveling to Washington, DC, with the other National Distinguished Principals award recipients. Regalia classes at museum Classes in children's Wasco regalia are scheduled for No vember at The Museum at Warm Springs. This is will be a time to learn to make a Wasco outfit for your child. There is no cost for this class. The classes are set for Nov. 10, 11, 12 and 13, from 5 to 8 p.m. in the museum Education Room. Bring a sewing machine, scissors, common pins. Some regalia material will be provided. Call for registration, 553-3331. Title VII committee to meet The Title VII Parent Com mittee will meet at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 10, at the Warm Springs Elementary School library. The public is invited to at tend. Also, the committee is in need of members. For information, call Georgia Sosa at 475-6194. ( Spilyay Tymoo can be reached at 553-3274 V .41- -' of 7 r4 Zjr Dave McMechanSpilyay Carolyn Brunoe, Utilities groundskeeper, clears the area beneath theoot-digger statue in front of the administration building. The landscaping around many tribal department buildings Is kept in fine shape by Brunoe, who enjoys her work and takes pride in seeing a job well-done. In the future she hopes to start a program to help homeless people build their own homes. ' and the Booth and Bear Butte fires were reported August 19. "Vie found the tree that was struck by lightning and caused the Bear Butte Fire," says Cap tain Randy Wight, arson task force coordinator. He goes on to say that the lightning struck one tree and then jumped to an other tree which started the fire. According to the arson task force, investigators found the likely tree that started the Booth Fire, but the fire burned back over the tree and the evidence isn't as clear as the cause of the Bear Butte Fire. See FIRE on page 10 Museum hosting activity day There will be a no-school day activity on Friday, Nov. 7 at the Museum at Warm Springs. The activity-day will include a weaving class with Natalie Kirk. The activities will be from 9 a.m. till 4 p.m., in the museum activity room. There is no cost for this event. Material will be provided. 4-H looking for volunteers The Warm Springs Oregon State University Extension 4-H is seeking adult volunteers to teach, share, train, coach and aducate the youth of Warm Springs. Anyone interested in sharing their knowledge to a youth of the area - beading, cooking or sewing club - can either visit the OSU Extension office, or call, 553-3238 and ask for Arlene or. Minnie- , 4 . . . i Spilyay Tymoo (Coyote News, Est. 1976) Publisher Emeritus: Sid Miller Editor: Dave McMechan Management Successor: Selena T. Boise Reportertrainer: Shannon Keaveny Media Advisor: Bill Rhoades Established In March 1976 Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Confed erated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located in the white house at 1100 Wasco Street. Any written materials submitted 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. (541)553-3539 E-Mail: spilyaytymoowstribes.org Annual Subscription rates: Within U.S.-$15.00 Outside U.S. or 1st Class In the U.S.-S25.00 For questions on advertising rates and policies, please call Bill Rhoades at 553-201 3, or the Spilyay office at 553-3274. Spilyay Tymoo 2003 copyright For the latest information on advertising rates, subsclptlons and (In the future) news from the Spilyay, check us out on the Internet at: http:www.warmsprlngs.comcommunltynews lndex.htm November Fitness Challenge to begin The Warm Springs Recre ation Progtam is accepting en tries for the annual November Fitness Challenge. Any employee of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Bureau of Indian Affairs, High Desert Resort and Casino, Warm Springs Elemen tary, or any other tribal enter prise or organization is eligible. All entries should be complete by Oct. 31 and paid in full by Nov. 10. Team member fees are $5 without shirt; $10 with short sleeve T-shirt; and SI 5 with a sweatshirt. All entrants will compete for the traveling trophy, which is awarded by highest minutes ac cumulated in exercise, and the team with the highest average minutes per team member. All entrants with minutes to be counted toward their teams are to turn them in no later than Dec. 1. Anyone turning timesheets in after this deadline will not have their minutes counted towards their team accumulation. There will be extra bonus minutes awarded to team mem bers who have a health evalua tion during the lunch hour of Nov. 3. This evaluation consists of measuring resting heart rate, blood pressure, weight measure ment, body comp measurement, and glucose reading. These mea surements will be repeated mid month and at the end of No vember. Individuals showing improvements will receive bo nus points. Attendance during scheduled classes and events are also counted for bonus minutes. A calendar of these classes and events will be posted and atten dance tracked. November 3 is the scheduled date for Diabetes Awareness Poker Walk at 12 Noon. For more information con tact the Recreation Department Supervisor, E. Austin Greene, Jr. at 553-3243 or Community Wellness Coordinator Carolyn Harvey at 553-1196 x 4166. Twenty-five years ago this week From the Nor. i edition of Spilyay Tymoo. Kah-Nee-Ta Board appointed by Council Four tribal members and three non-members have ac cepted appointment to the new board of directors for Kah-Nee-Ta Resort. Their first organizational meeting is scheduled for No vember 1 5, at which time they will elect officers and chart a plan of action. Representing the Tribes on the Kah-Nee-Ta board will be Rita Squiemphen, Levi Bobb, Larry Calica, and Zane Jackson. Other board members in clude Basil Miaulis, hotel-motel consultant; Mike I lollern, Presi dent and Genera! Manager of Brooks-Scanlon in Bend; and John Ritchie, accounting vice president and manager of the regional office of Paine, Webber, Jackson and Curtis brokerage firm. The appointments were made by Tribal Council resolution on ( )ctober 17 and letters went out to the appointees October 23. All responded affirmatively. Mill plans major renovation The Board of Directors of Warm Springs Forest Products Industries has approved $5.5 million in capital expenditures for 1979 to be spent on mod ernizing the existing facilities, reported board chairman Paul Sanders. The package of improve ments and replacements pre sented to the board by WSI 'PI manager Ralph DeMoisy Octo ber 23 was a direct result of the study just completed by consult ant Ivd W'illiston, who was hired by the Tribes to evaluate the mill and its operations. But as Sanders pointed out, the board's approval of the modernization plan "was the culmination of years of continu ous study by the board and management in their efforts to maintain the best possible manufacturing facility for effi cient utilization of the Tribes' forest." Solutions sought at emergency meeting Few people take delight in publicly discussing problems of their children, especially when the problem deals with alcohol and drugs. But because of the senseless violence, untimely deaths and tragedies, and other problems confronting todays youth, an emergency meeting was called ( ktober 23 to tackle these prob lems. The public community meet ing, over 100 strong, was called on only six hours notice and was conducted by concerned people (and not any particular depart ment), Several of the people were concerned enough to take time off their jobs to offer their assistance and ideas. It was the general consensus at the meeting that most of the problems fall back to the par ents, "You can't tell your children to unit drinking when you got a bottle in your hand," expounded Larry Arthur. "You can't tell your children to quit smoking when you got a cigarette in your mouth (either)," added the former alcoholic. "We could help by setting examples for our kids," offered Elmer Wolfe, state police officer. Parents admitted to being too lenient with their children and failing to discipline them enough. When a child asks for money it is usually given them, agreed the parents. George Clements explained that times have changed and children today are subject to many things. The children have access to where ever they want to go, he said. Parents should be a little less lenient when their child asks permission to use the car. George commented that the reason some of the older ones can't understand why teens are having all these problems is be cause their transportation was limited when they were growing up.