Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Howlak Tichum Clarice L. Tewee, Xaxastani, ‘Resie’ ~ 1966-2015 Clarice L. Tewee, Xaxastani, “Resie” passed away on January 7, 2015, at the age of 48. She was born January 31, 1966 in Redmond. Resie attended Yerington Elementary, Yerington, Nev.; Warm Springs El- ementary; Yerington High School, Madras High School, and Chemawa In- dian School, where she played basketball. Resie also played bas- ketball with Colleen Smith. Their team was named Nuk-Shai’s. The things that kept her days busy were beadworking, fishing, picking huckleberries and gathering roots, camping, and spending time with family and friends. Camp crew was her fa- vorite job. She liked to travel and to meet new friends. Resie was preceded in death by brothers Dale, 1982, Edgar, 1976, Desmond, 1988, and Ber- nard, 1993; sisters Laverne, 1960, Monica, 1962; father Howard, 1989, all of War m Springs; grandfather Chester Smith Sr. of Yerington, grandmother Alice Smith, of Ft. Bidwell, Calif.; step grandmother Sophina Smith of Yerington, aunt Emily Waheneka and grand- mother Florence Meanus, aunt Loretta Tewee, all of Warm Springs; grandfather Johnnie Tewee; Annie Ander- son Tewee, grandmother, great grandmother Addie Cushingway. She is survived by her companion Liandro “Nano” Briseno, Harvey and Florene Scott, parents; children Trent, Jovan Heath, Roselynn Jim; brother Jay Scott, sisters Hester Scott-Taylor, all of Warm Springs; Andrea Karen Tewee of Washington, aunts Eleanor, Debra, Myra, Evaline, Rosa, Carolyn, Anna Smith; uncles Chester Smith Jr., and Ronald B. Smith of Yerington, Nev.; nieces Kayla M. Taylor of Lexington, Ken- tucky, Reyna Arce of Madras; numerous rela- tives in Nixon, Reno, Shurz, Las Vegas, Nev., and Warm Springs. The favorite things she admired were her color, maroon, for animals, pen- guins; and flowers, the white rose. Our family would like to thank the following: Cooks, Amelia Colwash family, Charlotte Herkshan family; give- away, Marci Holliday; bell ringer Fred Wallulatum, all the drummers; speak- ers Antone Fuentes and atwai Russell Billey. Pall- bearers Bubby Holliday, Chico Holliday, Darrin Tewee, Freddie Holliday, Aaron James, and Jay Scott. Honorary pallbear- ers Har vey Scott, Eleanor Smith and fam- ily, Caroline Kenton and family, Myra Smith and family, Debbie Keats and family, Shirley Tufti and family, Karen and Annie Tewee and family, Melanie Colwash and family, and Lela Tewee. Resie’s family, Harvey and Florene Scott, Jay, Hester Trent, Kayla Tay- lor and Reyna. Community Counseling Calendar Prevention There is a battle of two wolves inside us all. One is evil: it is anger, jealousy, greed, re- sentment, lies, inferiority and ego. The other is good: it is joy, peace, love, hope, humility, kind- ness, empathy and truth. The wolf that wins? The one you feed. - Cherokee proverb Mondays 4-6 p.m. - Soaring Butter- flies/Warrior Spirit for third- grade and up at the Commu- nity Counseling Center (this class will continue through the summer). 12 noon - AA Meeting (self- supporting) 3-4:30 p.m. - Men’s Sup- port Group (no mens group June 23). 5:30 p.m. - Relapse and Anger Resolution Wednesdays 8:30 a.m. - Morning Af- tercare (June 17 and 24). 3-4:30 p.m. - Anger Man- agement Group. 5:30-7 p.m. - Positive In- dian Parenting. 7 p.m. - AA Meeting (self- supporting). Mondays 2-4 p.m. - Adult Soaring Butterflies & Warrior Spirit 4-5 p.m. - Incentive store open, downstairs in Sallie’s office. 5:30-7 p.m. - Aftercare Thursdays 12 noon - AA Meeting (self-supporting). 2-4 p.m. - Alcohol Educa- tion. 4-5 p.m. - Incentive store open, downstairs in Sallie’s office. 6 p.m. - NA Meeting at Shaker Church (self-supporting) Tuesdays 10-12 p.m. - Positive In- dian Parenting Saturdays 10 a.m. - AA Meeting (self- supporting) Groups & Meetings Upcoming Community Events June 11 - 2-4 p.m. - Ques- tion, Persuade and Refer Sui- cide Prevention Training at WSCCC. June 12 - Movie in the Lawn (contact Andy) June 15-19 - Nine Tribes Prevention Camp for Soar- ing Butterflies & Warrior Spirit high-school aged class. July 1-2 - Native Aspira- tions Youth Work Program Prevention Classes July 6 - 10 - a.m.-3 p.m. - Wrap Around Training for Native Aspirations Coalition Training July 8-9 - ASIST Suicide Prevention Workshop July 10 - Marijuana edu- cation training. For more information call Community Counseling at 553-3205. June 10, 2015 Estate planning free to members Adam Mentzer is in Warm Springs this summer, helping tribal members with drafting wills, powers of attorney, and other estate planning services. This service is free to mem- bers. Adam is a law school stu- dent at Willamette University College of Law. His Warm Springs office this summer is at the Com- munity Action Team building on campus, at 1136 Paiute Ave. Office hours are from 8 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday through Wednesday. To make an appointment, call 541-553-3148. The estate planning service is a program of the Institute for Indian Estate Planning and Probate at Seattle Uni- versity School of Law. The institute has sponsored the program for the past few years in Warm Springs. Dur- ing that time, many tribal members have used the ser- vice. Adam is working with a supervising attorney to pro- vide the estate planning ser- vices to tribal members. He can take appointments and meet with members until Au- gust 7. Importance of planning Having a will is recom- mended for anyone over 18. This is especially recom- mended for people who have ownership interest in land: If you die without a will, the American Indian Probate Reform Act will determine who will receive your trust land. Services available this sum- mer include writing a new will, or changing an existing one. The new or changed will would be drafted so as to comply with tribal, state and federal law. You need a will if: · You are over 18; · You have, or may ac- quire, trust land, non-trust land, or personal property; · You have children or step-children under 18; · You want to leave prop- erty to someone who is not in your immediate, blood family; · You want to leave income from an interest to a non-In- dian spouse. · You want to stop further fractionation of your land If you die without a will, the American Indian Pro- bate Reform Act will deter- mine who will receive your trust land, but with a will you have many more options. Resolution of Tribal Council Eel harvest at Willamette Whereas the Treaty with the Tribes and Bands of Middle Oregon on June 25, 1855 secured to the Confed- erated Tribes of War m Springs Reservation of Or- egon the right to take fish at all usual and accustomed sta- tions in common with citizens of the United States, and Willamette Falls of the Willamette River at Oregon City is one such treaty-re- ser ved “usual and accus- tomed” fishing station; and, Whereas, for not less than time immemorial War m Springs tribal members have harvested eels, also known as lamprey, at Willamette Falls, and at other “usual and ac- customed” fishing stations to use for ceremonial, subsis- tence and other purposes; and, Whereas it is important as an exercise of sovereignty and to meet the conservation needs for the resource that the Tribes actively manage the eel fishery at Willamette Falls; and, Whereas section II J. of the 2008-2017 U.S. v. Oregon Management Agreement, ex- ecuted on May 9, 2008 by the Warm Springs Tribal Council Chairman, and on May 20, 2008 by the director of the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, which is an Or- der of the Federal District Court of Oregon in case Civil No. 68-513-KI, requires a process that includes discus- sions between the state of Oregon and Warm Springs and other party tribes each year to establish lamprey take (harvest) levels at Willamette Falls each year; and, Whereas those take- or harvest-levels of lamprey at Willamette Falls are managed by and through regulations establishing the time, place and manner of lamprey har- vest; and, Whereas the state of Or- egon did not enter into the process as required by the 2008-2017 U.S . v. Or egon Management Agreement to work with Warm Springs and other party tribes to set the annual take regulations, and unilaterally declared what the 2014 Willamette Falls take regulations would be in a let- ter dated May 27, 2014, and moreover said letter is repre- sented as a “permit” issued by Oregon for lamprey har- vest at Willamette Falls; and, Whereas the Tribe’s lam- prey harvest at Willamette Falls is pursuant to its June 25, 1855 Treaty with the United States, and no license, permit or authorization of any type by the state of Or- egon is necessary for the Tribe’s harvest of lamprey at Willamette Falls, and there- fore, the Tribe does not ac- knowledge or accept the pur- ported permit offered by the state of Oregon; and, Whereas notwithstanding the state of Oregon’s failure to abide by the process re- quired by the Management Agreement, and the Tribe’s rejection of the offered state of Oregon “permit,” the Tribe desires to maintain a status quo with respect to Willamette Falls lamprey take regulations to provide for a conser vative harvest, and also to facilitate the resolu- tion of lamprey harvest issues at Willamette Falls at a man- ager-to-manager level in the appropriate U.S. v. Oregon pro- cess rather than through liti- gation, the Tribe will regulate its Treaty lamprey harvest as it has in prior years; now, therefore, Be it resolved by the Twenty-Sixth Tribal Council pursuant to Article V, section 1(l) and (u) of the Constitu- tion and By-Laws and pursu- ant to Warm Springs Tribal Code section 340.300 that the 2015 eel fishery regula- tions hereby approved, adopted and enacted by the Tribal Council of the Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs Reservation of Or- egon: 1. Tribal members wishing to take eels for ceremonial and subsistence purposes must carry tribal enrollment cards to fish under claim of treaty rights. Enrollment cards must be in possession while fishing. 2. Harvest is allowed from June 1 through July 31. 3. Harvest is limited to the east side of Willamette Falls by hand or with hand pow- ered tools. (The open area is noted on a map attached to the resolution). 4. Harvest is open on Fri- day, Saturday, Sunday and Monday of each week. 5. Fishing hours are sun- rise to sunset. 6. This is a subsistence fishery as defined by Tribal Code 340.100. 7. The Branch of Natural Resources personnel shall monitor and enforce the fish- ery with regard to Warm Springs members participat- ing in the 2015 eel season at Willamette Falls. 8. Harvesters will allow Warm Springs BNR person- nel to creel lamprey catch. 9. BNR will offer creel data collected to ODFW at the end of the harvest sea- son. Community Listening There is a Community Listening session that the Partners in Oregon on Diversity and Disability are conducting at the Rodriguez Annex on Monday, June 15. They want to learn from diverse ethnic populations about how they view disability. The Monday session is from 6-7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served at 5 o’clock. Please RSVP Carolyn Harvey at 475- 4292, or email her at: Carolynh@bestcaretreat ment. org