Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon April 16, 2016 FFA student excels at variety of skills Community notes... The Diabetes Prevention Program will start a series of Diabetes Prevention Lifestyle Balance classes in May. These are for anyone 18 or older who has been diag- nosed with pre-diabetes. Screenings can be done at the Diabetes Prevention Pro- gram office at 1142 Warm Springs Street on campus. The deadline to get signed up is May 10. For more informa- tion, contact Joy Ramirez at 541-553-5513. I n his first year with the Future Far mers of America, Wessley Beymer earned three proficiency awards, the most of any freshman in FFA at Madras High School. The awards were in the catego- ries of forage production, forestry, and beef production. Wessley earned the forage profi- ciency certification for a crested wheatgrass and mixed seed planting project at his grandmother Pinkey Beymer’s ranch. The forestry proficiency certifi- cation was for operating a log loader during a Natural Resources hazard- ous fuels reduction project at HeHe. And the beef production profi- ciency is for work that Wessley does with his herd of cattle. He started raising cattle with 4-H, and has sold his steer at the county fair. The money he earns from these sales are going toward his college fund. As a high school freshman, Wessley has not yet decided on plans for after college. “I might have a ranch,” he says, but there is plenty of time to think about it. Wessley’s parents are Waylon and Tiffany Beymer, owners of Chilkat Logging and Excavation. Wessley’s young er brother Shain, in the seventh grade, is also raising livestock on the family’s 120-acre Sidwalter ranch. Shain is in the new Discovery FFA pro- gram, through the Jefferson County Middle School. Around spring break this year, Chilkat helped to sponsor an FFA trip to Indian Ag Council at Oregon State. At the high school the FFA program has about 25 to 30 stu- dents. And about 10 of the stu- dents, including Wessley are from Warm Springs. Page 5 The Twenty-Sixth Annual Honor Seniors Day will be held May 13 at Agency Longhouse. If you want to volunteer to help out in some way, contact the Senior Pro- gram at 553-3313. The Twenty-First Annual Na-Ha-Shnee Native Ameri- can Health Science Institute is a 13-day summer program designed to encourage Native students to pursue health sci- ence degrees and health-re- lated careers. It’s open to students cur- rently in ninth, tenth or elev- enth grades. Applications are available online: Google WSU Native American Health Sci- ences to find it. The deadline is coming up on April 25. COCC has open house next Tuesday COCC's Admissions and Records Department will host an Open House on April 19, highlight- ing certificate and degree programs, college resources and facilities. The event will be at the Bend campus in the Coats Campus Cen- ter from 4 to 7 p.m. Prospective students and their families will be Wessley with three Certificates of Proficiency. able to mingle with faculty, admis- sions staff and academic advisors as well as enter to win COCC tu- ition scholarships. Visitors will also have an opportunity to tour the Science Center, Health Careers Center, Cascade Culinary Center, Automotive Garage and the Resi- dence Hall. Admission is free. 341 SW Sixth St. Redmond 541-923-8071 Wessley giving a vaccination to a calf at the family ranch. Tuesday - Saturday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Courtesy Tiffany Beymer. 15% OFF product purchases Letter to editor Fisheries legacy Historically, the legendary “Bridge of the Gods” area was the ancestral homeland of the Wasco Tribes. The traditional fishery was enormous and one of the greatest fishing sites on the Columbia River, where millions of salmon migrated annually, including to the Oxbow Springs tributary. The area is where many Wascopam families caught their subsistence salmon for the year, but in 1938 the great ancient Wasco fishery was inundated by the back- waters of the Bonneville dam, which was catastrophic. Entire fishing villages were en- gulfed by the slack water pools. Only memories remain of the once great fishery and the millions of salmon that migrated and provided the first salmon and the way of life that the Wascopam depended on since time immemorial. This historic area is too impor- tant to ignore any longer. The chil- dren and future generations must know where they came from. CTWS needs to pay tribute to our own legacy, which provided a way of life and the brightest salmon for countless generations. It needs to be commemorated annually. A “Bridge of the Gods” powwow could generate revenue to vendors, etc., at Warm Springs or Cascade Locks. Awe-Na. Respectfully, Anthony Littleleaf Complimentary brow wax with any hair service - ($15 value) To redeem: bring in the coupon, mention this ad, or show your tribal ID. Veterans Welcome Home Day Parade The friendliest store in town! In the Meat Department - Bone-in beef spare ribs - $1.48 a pound - Regularly $2.79 a pound At the Bakery - French bread - .99 cents each - regularly $1.99 Photos courtesy Susan Guerin Veterans from around the region arrived in Warm Springs for the Inaugural Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Parade, hosted by the Eugene Greene Sr. American Legion Post and Auxiliary Unit 48. Grocery - Western Family 6 Equals 24 Mega Rolls bath tissue - $3.99 - regularly $8.99 Produce - Navel oranges - .39 cents a pound - regularly .89 cents a pound Central Oregon veterans motorcycle group. Grocery Coupon - at the Service Deli - $3 off rotisserie chicken