E Coosh EEWA: The way it is Page 4 Spilyay Tymoo February 3, 2016 Letters to the editor Salmon Camp Salmon Camp is hosted of the Columbia River Inter- Tribal Fish Commission Tribal Workforce Develop- ment program. The annual camp focuses on providing tribal members with culturally relevant sci- ence, technology, engineer- ing, and mathematics (STEM) experiences. The goal is to foster an in- terest in natural resources careers, and to close the aca- demic achievement gap for Native American youth. A limited number of in- coming sixth- to eighth-grade students from the four tribes are selected to attend the free camp. Meals, lodging and a stipend are provided after the program is successfully com- pleted. The week long camp is held during the summer in tribal homelands. The four tribes take turns hosting Salmon Camp. The five-day, overnight camp exposes the students to a blend of Western science and traditional ecological and cultural knowledge. Salmon Camp participants: Learn about the science and lifecycle of salmon. Work on salmon restora- tion projects. Explore traditional eco- logical knowledge. Meet tribal professionals working in the sciences Learn from tribal elders and cultural experts. And they gain unique and valuable hands-on experience. Salmon Camp 2016 dates will be announced in March. An application form and the application deadline will also be available in March. For more information, contact Tana Atchley, CRITFC Tribal Workforce Development and Outreach Coordinator, 503-238-0667. tana@critfc.org Museum honors The Museum At Warm Springs will host the Four- teenth Annual Honor Dinner in April. The dinner this year will be at the World Forestry Center in Portland. We are pleased to an- nounce that former Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski will be presented with the Twanat Award. The Lifetime Achieve- ment Award will be presented to Dr. Thomas Creelman and the late Jeanie Thompson Smith. The Twanat Award honors individuals who have worked tirelessly on behalf of Native Americans, and who are an example to all Americans. The Lifetime Achieve- ment Award recognizes the contributions of individuals or groups who support the art and heritage of Oregon’s Na- tive American communities. We hope that you will join us on this special occasion as we thank three extraordinary people for their commitment, support and vision. Please call us if we can answer any questions, 541- 553-3331. Thank you for your support of Museum programs. Debbie Stacona, The Museum At Warm Springs dstacona@museumatwarm springs.org Papalaxsimisha logo contest Papalaxsimisha is a pro- gram for Native American students in grades 6 through 12. The program is designed to encourage and empower students and their families to graduate from high school, and to explore their career and college options. Papalaxsimisha means “to- gether as one.” This an Sahaptin language education program of the Confeder- ated Tribes of Warm Springs. This logo contest is spon- sored by the Let’s Talk Di- versity Coalition, and Oregon State University. To enter: Draw, paint or design a logo representative of the program (you may add a short paragraph explaining your artwork). Submit to 574 SW Fourth St., Madras, 97741; or by email: jaylyn@bestcaretreatment.org The original copy will need to be submitted. More than one entry is allowed. The deadline is March 4 by midnight. The winner will be announced in late March. For more information call me at 541-475-4292. Or at the email above. Jaylyn Suppah Birth Ameriesa Leandra Hicks Arianna Henry and LeRoy Hicks III are pleased to an- nounce the birth of their daughter Ameriesa Leandra Hicks, born on January 6, 2016 Grandparents on the fa- thers side are Buddy and Marla Hicks of Chiloquin and Warm Springs. Grandparents on mother's side Cherilyn Starr of Warm Springs, Anthony Henry of Warm Springs, and James and Beverly Surface of Montana- New Mexico Spilyay Tymoo (Coyote News, Est. 1976) Publisher Emeritus in Memorium: Sid Miller Editor: Dave McMechan Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located at 4174 Highway 3 in Warm Springs. Any written materials submitted to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 489, Warm Springs, OR 97761. Phone: 541-553-2210 or 541-771-7521 E-Mail: david.mcmechan@wstribes.org. Annual Subscription rates: Within U.S.: $20.00 Call to artists Calling all artists for this chance to win $100. The Consortia of Admin- istrators for Native American Rehabilitation, CANAR, is seeking American Indian art- ists to submit their original artwork depicting the 2016 Mid-Year CANAR Confer- ence theme. The theme is ‘United as Warriors: Raising our Voices.’ Over 600,000 working age Natives have a disability. Finding employment is very difficult for this population. The state vocational reha- bilitation agencies cannot meet the special culturally rel- evant needs of our disabled Native people. CANAR works as their voice. Our goal is to raise aware- ness of the struggle our Na- tives with disabilities face, and also to raise awareness of the great work being done throughout the American In- dian Vocational Rehabilitation Services each and every day. The winning artwork will serve as the CANAR Mid- Year Conference logo, and will be placed on the con- ference bags, books, t-shirts and other conference ma- terials. For reproduction pur- poses, there is a five color limit. Any medium will be ac- cepted as long as it can be reproduced on paper and fab- ric. Please submit the original artwork if possible. All sub- missions become the property of CANAR. Submissions will Warm Springs artist Travis Bobb wishing you a Happy Valentine’s Day! be appropriately displayed at the conference and may be submitted to the CANAR si- lent auction. The winning original entry will receive a $100 award. Please send your original entry to: CANAR - Peggy Venable; 107 Tall Pine Drive; Whigham, GA 39897. My email is: cpvenable.mvr4@gmail.com The deadline for submis- sions is February 19. Please include the follow- ing with your submission: Full name, tribal affiliation, mail- ing address, email, phone number, artwork title, de- scription (how does the sub- mission represent the confer- ence theme), and a short bio of the artist. Indian Business Talk Financial success is a team effort By Bruce Engle Loan officer W.S. Credit Enterprise Yoda tells us, “Always pass on what you have learned.” That’s what your Busi- ness Success Team will do for you. Who are they? There are more on the team than you might imagine. Consider: · Your parents – Their job is to help you to get a good start. · Yourself – There comes a time when you are the one. Be prepared! · Bookkeeper – Some- body has to do it. Every day is best. · Accountant – Takes what the bookkeeper does and makes dollars and sense of it. · Banker – Most busi- nesses need one. · Lender – May not be the banker. Start-ups must look elsewhere. · Attorney – To keep you out of trouble with con- tracts and laws. · Investment advisor – Helps you to invest for fu- ture needs, growth, retire- ment, etc. · Mentor – Often pro- vides needed guidance – see all of the above. · Employees – Need a job. Will help you succeed or fail. Choose carefully and supervise. Let’s look a bit deeper at each of the Team. Parents Parents are the first teach- ers: They get first crack at us. They lay the foundation for success in business as well as in life by promoting the concepts of hard work, smart work, and of ‘doing well’. When I was a boy in the mid ‘40s, the old ladies in Chiloquin, when gossiping at the store, would always pref- ace their chat with: “Are they doing well?” “Is he doing well?” Or “Is she doing well?” Doing well was important to them. Financial consider- ations were just a part, an im- portant part, of the “doing- well” questions. Parents lay the important foundations for financial well being. They teach sound money management skills by examples and preachings. That’s a positive approach. A negative/positive might be, “avoid poverty”. Is one motivational or in- spirational approach better than the other? That is a ‘per- sonal’ question. The answer depends upon what turns you on and gets the job done. Some athletes have a fire to win. Some have a similar fire to not lose. As a tennis tournament player, I have been in both situations. I remember being fired up to win a tournament and doing so—occasionally. I also remember, during a match, convincing myself and challenging myself that no way would I accept losing to a certain opponent—and not losing. Motivation can enhance performance, but sometimes the opponent is just better. Then we must go back to work to improve perfor- mance. The results can be most satisfying. Can we all say, “We did it the old fashioned way, we earned it”? Yoda sums it up pretty well with his eight-hundred year wisdom, “Do or don’t do. There is no try.” Okay, how do we help oth- ers to do well? And when? Why “we”? Remember, parents are the first members of the Success Team, and usually the most influential. The rest of us may be on the list or elsewhere. Who knows where and by whom a child will be inspired? We can be good role mod- els or otherwise. As parents, we have the first opportunity to teach and promote smart consumerism and smart save- erism. Yeah, that last one is important and I just made it up—I think. We can talk about and demonstrate control of the urges to buy “wants” until “needs” have been provided for. We should do that for our kids. The important thing to re- alize is that we all live in an economy. We all take part in that economy. We all have wants and needs. “We all” includes people and businesses. People and businesses all have financial needs. Two examples would be saving needs and smart con- sumerism needs. Controlling “want-spend- ing” is a need. “Saving” is a need. One begets the other. A piggy bank can help a child to learn the value of saving and setting goals. There is no “too-young-to- start” limitation on that les- son. Pretty soon, sometimes all too soon, our kids are in school. Many schools have grade-appropriate financial skills course content. Some- times that includes Junior Achievement programs like those taught at the Warm Springs Academy and the Madras High School. Those are fine programs. Whatever the situation, school doesn’t replace home influence, it augments it. The home influence, for good or bad, will usually be the stron- ger and the more lasting. Children learn in different ways. The same goes for adults. Will Rogers, a nation- ally known and loved Chero- kee humorist from the early 1900s, had a routine about learning that went like this; “There are three kinds of men. The one that learns by reading. The few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the elec- tric fence for themselves. Lessons will be learned. We hope the important les- sons will be learned without unnecessary injury. (This article will continue in the next Spilyay.)