Page 8
May 24, 2007
Spiiyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
Warm Springs students on the honor roll
Births
Renee Garcia Robinson
C laren ce G arcia and
Amanda Renee Robinson are
pleased.to announce the birth
o f th eir daugh ter R en ee
Garcia Robinson, born on
May 11, 2007.
R enee jo in s b ro thers •
Salbado and Rex, and sister
Allegra.
Ulysses Jordan Suppah Jr.
Ulysses Jason Suppah Sr.
and Charlynne Mia Spino are
pleased.to announce the birth
o f their son Ulysses Jordan
Suppah Jr., born omMay 13,
2007. ,*
Ulysses joins sister Niya
rBagley. ;
The father’s parents are
Francis Suppah and Rosa Bill.
T he ulotheFs parents are
Vernon and Nellie Spino.
Trevor James Montgomery
:
T ravis arid Shannon
Montgomery are pleased to
announce the birth o f their
son, Trevor Jam es M ont
gom ery, born on M ay 12,
2007 .
The father’s parents are
Jam es and Sharon M ont
gomery of Powell Butte. The
mother’s parents are James
and/ DeniOe Lee
of
Lebannon, Ore.
Howlak Tichum
, Deanna Charley
Thompson
1944-2007
Deanna Charley Thomp-r
son passed away on May 10,
2007. She was 63.
¡ Mrs. Thompson was born
. on March 25, 1944 at Warm •
Springs to parents. George
C harley and Ada (Moses)/
Spoksoit. ,
She was married oq Au
gust 14,. 1962 to Lel#nd Th
ompson Sr.
Mrs. Thompson was a life
lo n g resid en t o f W arm
Springs. She was a hom e
maker and mother all her life.
She enjoyed gardening and
yard work.
Being with her family was
very important to her.
M rs. Thom psonTs /sur
vived by her husband Lelarid;
children Curtis Thompson,
Selen# Boise, Tony Thomp
son, Leland Thotnpson-Jr.,
and Laneda Thompson, all of
W arm Sp rin gs; b ro thers
M arcus Spoksoit, W ilfred
Sooksoit, and Charley Strom,
all of Warm Springs; sisters
Barbara Poncho and Nancy
Sp o ksoit, both o f W arm
cb 'to ìb kfó
j'oiq ©gam
b prm gs; and, numeroujs
g ran d cIuYcìreh an à great
grandchildren!
MEMORIES IN STONE
Custom Designed & Hand Made
Memorials » Made One At A Tim e
For Over 22 years
PIONEER ROCK
& MONUMENT
"TWO
GOLDENDALE, WA
509-773-4702
201 Crafton Road
TH E DALLES, OR
2037 E 2nd St #6
O n lin e s to r e
Dawnlynn Courtney, Chelsea
Hudson, Kadie Manion.
Grade 12 All-Star Honor
Roll (3.6-3.99 GPA): Jacoba
Grade l l All-Star Honor
Roll (3.6-3.99 GPA): A lexis
Smith.
Anguiano, Kip Culpus, Chance
Squiemphen.
Grade 12 Honor Roll (3.0-
3.59): Amanda Coffee, Jonathan
Culpus, Dakota George, Jansen
Harrington, Alyssia Thompson.
- www.pioneerrock.cont
The Deschutes River Conser
vancy is gaining national recog
nition for its successful work in
Central Oregon. The conser
vancy recendy received two dis
tinguished conservation awards.
Serving on the board o f the
Deschutes River Conservancy
from Warm Springs are Bobby
Brurioe, manager o f the tribal
Natural Resources Branch, and
Jim Manion, director o f Warm
Springs Power Enterprises.
The Deschutes RiverConser-
vancy recendy received the U.S.
D epartm ent o f'th e Interior's
C oop erative ; C o nservatio n
Award in récognition o f its many
achievements in finding sensible
solutions to water management
ch allen ges ip O regon. The
Deschutes River Conservancy
(DRC) was nominated by the
Bureau of Reclamation for its
practical, incentive-based solu
There will be an Applied Sui
cide Intervention Skills Training
session from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
on Thursday and Friday, June
7-8 at the Warm Springs Com
munity Wellness Center.
Applied Suicide Intervention
Training (ASIST), is a,t\yo-^ay
interactive workshop that trains
individuals and community pro
viders in suicide intervention.
Theissue of suicide interven
tion has taken on greater impor
The Warm Springs Outdoor
Market is .located at the Plaza
at Warm Springs, and will begin
in early June and last the entire
summer.
The Warm Springs Outdoor
Market is a cooperative effort
among small local businesses/
and Eagle Tech Systems, which
operates the internet cafe at the
plaza.
Warm Springs, Please ■
support the businesses you
see in the Spiiyay Tymoo
— They give back to the
local community!.
W INTER BOOT
BLOWOUT
Sale lasts through the Sum m er!
r-T .
OFF ALL INSTOCK
WINTER BOOTS
2 j Ó -Q * é $
MENS * WOMEN’S • CHILDREN’S
541 - 475-3385
tions to the Deschutes Basin’s ,
water management challenges
and for its ability to produce,
quantifiable results.
The Secretary of the Interior,
D irk Kempthorne, presented ,
the award to. Tod Heisler, Ex
ecutive Director o f the DRC,
accompanied by Delvis Heath,
C h ief o f the W arm Springs
Tribe, during a Departmental
Convocation on May 9 in Wash
ington, D.C.
The Cooperative Conserva
tion Award recognizes achieve
ments that involve collaborative
activity among a diverse range
of entities that may include fed
eral, state, local and tribal gov
ernments, private for profit and
nonprofit institutions, other non
governmental entities, and indi
viduals.
i In 2006, sev eral DRC
projects demonstrated such col-
tance locally, as the use of meth-
amphetamine use on the reser
vation has increased, said Char
lotte Herkshan, counselor at the
W arm Sp rin gs C om m unity
Counseling Center, who orga
nized the training session.
3® w o
recen t
s u ic id e i,
Herkshan said; were related td
methamphetamine use, she said.
The ASIST program pro
vides training in how to recog
nize and assess the potential risk
Outdoor market begins soon
— NEXT TO BI MART *** IN MADRAS----
WINTPER HOT7Tή
3.59 GPA): A lb ert A dam s,
A tcitty
B egay,
C h an tel
Grade 9 Honor Roll: Marissa
Ahem, Katherine Quaid.
Grade 9 All Star Honor
Roll (3.6-3.99 GPA): Teresa
Grade 10 Ail-Star Honor
Roll
(3.6-3.99
GPA):
Fuentes, Kali Kaltsukis, Kristi
Olney, Marrisa Yaw.
A lejan d rin a A g u ilar, K ara
Katchia.
Grade 10 Honor Roll (3.0-
3.59 GPA): Brandy Herkshan.
3.59 GPA): Leonard American
Horse, Lillitz Henry, Roschena
Sargeant, Jessica Tacza.
Grade 9 Honor Roll (3.0-
laborative activities, such as in
creasing summer flows in the
Middle Deschutes to record lev
els and achieving the 100 cubic-
feet-per-second milestone for
the first time in over 100 years.
In 2006, the DRC also achieved
the Oregon Department of Fish
and W ildlife’s minimum flow
target of 20 cubic feet per sec
ond in Whychus Creek near Sis
ters for the first time in TOO
years.
Known for innovative solu
tions to water management, the
DRC implemented a water con
servation program, water trans
fer program, and a water bank,
all of which have proven to be
valuable tools for irrigation dis
tricts in Central Oregon.
On M ay 31, H eisler w ill
travel to Salem , to receive the
Oregon Water Resources De
partment State Stewardship and
Conservation Award. >
Recognition from the Water
Resources Commission is given
on an annual basis to individual
citizens, groups, businesses or
other partners that embody the
O regon W ater R esources
Department’s mission “to serve
the public by practicing arid
prom oting responsible w ater
m an agem ent” ' . $4? - a n d
for conserving and restorihg
Oregon’s water resources. Re
cipients o f the award demon
strate an outstanding commit
ment to water conservation and
implementation o f water effi
cient operations.
The DRC is a non-profit or
ganization formed in 1996. with
a mission to-restore streamflow
and improve water quality in the
Deschutes Basin.
Training offered in prevention of suicide
4 ^ SHOES
M
Grade 11 Honor Roll (3.0-
Cléments, Charnelle Danzuka,
Rachelle Herkshan, Chrishana
Jo h n so n , V icto ria K atçh ia,
Briana Stacona, Keshia Yaw.
River conservancy receives conservation awards
541-296-4934
Across From "Bis Jim ’s"
Grade 11 — 4.0 Honor Roll:
The following Madras High
School students are on the
school’s honor roll:
www.pellcanssho«s.com
The market will be a setting
the provides an opportunity for
local entrepreneurs to showcase
their diversified talents and
skills.
It wil be a summer themed
event. Whether it is bead work,
clothing, drawings and paintings,
creating arts and crafts, or local
food vending, the market will be
a place for everyone.
For inform ation call Eagle
Tech at 553-1034, or stop by
the internet cafe at the plaza.
o f suicide. This workshop also
equip# the participant with in
tervention skills to keep the per
son safe until the appropriate
level o f ongoing help can be
assessed.
-,r-T hfra:Ét & ^ e for 30 partid-
p^htSj'with 15 people signéa'ìip;
sO far, said Herkshan.
The trainers for the program
are two representatives from the
Oregon Youth Authority, and
two tribal members, M arcella
Hall and Alice Sampson.ü,
Participants who complete
the training will be able to: ,.
Recognize attitudes about
suidde; identify suicide factors j
and estimate risk; intervene with
a person at risk; list resources
available to a person at risk; and
commit'/to help coordinate so
cial support for a person at risk. 1
For information, or to register,
p lease c a ll the C om m unity
Counseling Center at 553-2305. .
Workshop for
market businesses
The Warm Springs Out
door M arket is offering a
workshop for 2007 vendor
businesses.
The workshop will offer
business coaching that will
help vendors maximize their
market sales, attract new and
repeat customers to the local
market, and learn tactics to
extend market visitors’ stay
at the market.
The w orkshop w ill be
from 5:3 0-7 :3 0 p.m . on
Wednesday, M ay 30 at the
Eagle-Tech Technology Cen
ter at the W arm Springs
Plaza.
Cost o f the workshop is .
$10 per person. The work
shop is free if you sign up
for the first day o f the Out
door M arket. T he W arm
Springs O utdoor M arket ^
begins on Saturday, June 2.