Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon April 27, 2016 Academy looks to partner with NASA program Show case event possible in June An outreach program at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, encourages under- represented youth to pursue education and careers in sci- ence, technology, engineer- ing and math. The program reaches out to students in rural areas, Native American students, and others who are under- represented in the fields. The Warm Springs k-8 Academy, and other partners met this week with a NASA team that explained benefits the program has to offer. The goal, said Juan-Carlos Chavez, is to provide the school with the kind of pro- gram that best fits the school’s existing curriculum. Chavez is the associate director of the Washington NASA Space Grant Consortium. Another goal of the pro- gram, he said, is to provide resources to meet the STEM (Science, Technology, Engi- neering and Math) education needs of the particular school. The program begins in the middle school grades, then follows the students though high school, college, and on to a career. Performing Arts Center to host film, poet in May the Madras Performing Arts Center on May 6 will feature the film A Place to Stand, followed by an ap- pearance and question-and- answer period with Jimmy Santiago Baca. A Place to Stand is the authorized story of Jimmy Santiago Baca's transforma- tion from an illiterate convict to an award-winning poet and novelist. The film follows Baca's path though abandonment, drug-dealing, and a DEA bust gone awry, ultimately leading to a 5-year narcotics sentence at Arizona State Prison, one of the most violent prisons in the country. Baca survived prison by exploring deep within himself, discovering poetry at his soul's core. Jimmy's best-selling mem- oir has been called “elegant and gripping” (Los Angeles Times), and “an astonishing narrative that affirms the tri- umph of the human spirit” (Arizona Daily Star). The Friday, May 6 show- ing begins at 7 p.m. Admis- sion is $10 at the door. Counseling begins Survivors of Suicide Talking Circle Warm Springs Com- munity Counseling is be- ginning a Survivors of Suicide Talking Circle. The first meeting will be on Monday, May 2, and every Monday there- after (except on May 30) through June 27. The meetings will be from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at the Counseling Center. If you have lost some- one to suicide, or may have attempted, you are not alone. The Counsel- ing Center invites you to attend the SOS - Survi- vors of Suicide support group. For more informa- tion contact Annie Kalama or Kelly Anthony at the center, 541-553- 3205. Report details crisis of suicide in Indian Country Indian Country has seen a dramatic increase in suicide rates in the last 15 years, according to data released last week. The suicide rate among American Indians and Alaska Natives has always been abnormally high. But a study from the National Center for Health Statistics shows how acute the crisis has become since 1999. According to the re- port, the suicide rate among American Indian and Alaska Native women that year was 4.6 per 100,000 people. In 2014, it jumped to 8.7 per 100,000 people. That represented an 89 percent increase, the largest increase among all racial and ethnic groups in the United States. American Indian and Alaska Native men re- main afflicted at even higher rates, the report said. In 2014, their sui- cide rate was 27.4 per 100,000, up from 19.8 in 1999. That represented a rate increase of 38 per- cent in those years. Despite the alarming rates, the center warns that the problem may be even worse than the data indicates. “Deaths for the American Indian or Alaska Native population may be underreported by 30 percent,” the report stated. That would be the highest underreported rate among all racial and ethnic groups. Overall, the suicide rate in the nation was 13.0 per 100,000 people in 2014. That's an in- crease of 24 percent from the rate of 10.5 per 100,000 in 1999. Tribes across the na- tion have declared emer- gencies in response to suicides, particularly among youth. The Yurok Tribe in northern California saw seven young people in one community take their lives during a recent 18- month period. The Oglala Sioux Tribe of South Dakota made headlines last year after disclosing that at least 20 young people committed suicide in the span of 11 months. More than 250 at- tempts were reported during that same time. Meeting with Chavez this week were academy principal Ken Parshall, middle school science teacher Paul Harris, and Warm Springs Ventures business development and marketing manager Aurolyn Stwyer. Representatives from SOAR, the group encourag- ing unmanned aerial systems development in Oregon, were also on hand; along with Jon Waterhouse, Indigenous People’s Scholar with the Insti- tute for Environmental Health. Mr. Chavez gave an over- view of the resources that the Washington NASA Space Grant Consortium has to of- fer. They have materials and experts that can help the school generate more inter- est among the students in STEM education. The best way to get the program off the ground, he said, is for the group to host a show case event for the middle school grades at the academy. The show case gives the students a chance to have hands-on experience in the field of rocketry. This can begin with an archery station, then a station where the stu- dents can build their own rockets. And the event in- volves the experts launching a demonstration rocket for the students. The event has proven popular, and successful in generating student interest in these fields of science. Prin- cipal Parshall and the NASA team agreed that a tentative target date for a show case event at the middle school would be June 9, at the end of the school year. There may be other ben- efits to the partnership. The NASA program could help with the grant process for projects involving the tribes’ UAS program, said Aurolyn Stwyer. Page 9 Community notes... The Diabetes Preven- tion Program will start a series of Diabetes Pre- vention Lifestyle Bal- ance classes in May. These are for anyone 18 or older who has been diagnosed with pre-dia- betes. Screenings can be done at the Diabetes Pre- vention Program office at 1142 War m Springs Street on campus. The deadline to get signed up is May 10. For more in- formation, contact Joy Ramirez at 541-553- 5513. The Twenty-Sixth An- nual Honor Seniors Day will be held May 13 at Agency Longhouse. If you want to volunteer to help out in some way, con- tact the Senior Program at 553-3313. The Twenty-First An- nual Na-Ha-Shnee Na- tive American Health Science Institute is a 13- day summer program de- signed to encourage Na- tive students to pursue health science degrees and health-related careers. It’s open to students currently in ninth, tenth or eleventh grades. Applica- tions are available online: Google WSU Native American Health Sciences to find it. The deadline is coming up on April 25. The American Red Cross will have a blood drive at the United Meth- odist Church in Madras on Wednesday, May 18 from noon to 5. To schedule an appointment call 1-800-RED CROSS or online at: redcrossblood.org Zoo’s first condor chick making it big in Calif. Kun-Wak-Shun made first nest found in Pinnacles National Park this year S he Oregon Zoo Jonsson Center for Wildlife Conser- vation joined the effort to save California condors in 2003. Since that time, the cen- ter has raised and prepped for release more than 40 wild-bound condors. The center’s first chick, hatched in 2004, was namd Kun-Wak-Shun. This is Wasco for Thunder and Lightning. In 2004, the zoo had asked Wasco Chief Nelson Wallulatum to name the bird. The request was in rec- ognition of the cultural sig- nificance that the condor, or Thunderbird, holds in tradi- tional Wasco culture. At a ceremony at the zoo, atwai Chief Wallulatum gave the bird the name Kun-Wak- Shun. This year—12 years after hatching—Kun-Wak-Shun is the host of the first condor nest spotted in Central Cali- fornia this spring. During the last week of February, Kun-Wak-Shun, also known as No. 340, went momentarily missing. “He fell off our radar, which is how we know when a condor has gone into a cave to nest,” said wildlife biologist Alacia Welch, who leads the Condor Recovery Program Crew in California’s Pinnacles Na- tional Park. Some condors released in Pinnacles are outfitted with solar-powered GPS wing tags that allow the crew to track their whereabouts, and Kun-Wak-Shun is one of them. Since noticing his signal drop and tracking down his nest in the park’s majestic Guest services op- erator: full time and part-time positions avail- able - Contact Naomi Tule Grill attendant - part-time - Contact Jordan Caldera, Heather Cody 541- 460-7777 Ext. 7725. Cage cashier - full time - Wyval Rosamilia 541-460-7777 Ext. 7737 Host / Cashier - Two part-time positions - Contact Esten. Security officer - full time - Tim Kerr 541-460- 7777 Ext. 7749 Tule Grill cook - part time - Kip Culpus or Heather Cody at 541-460-7777 Ext. 7725. Table games dealer - full time - Jami Deming 541-460-7777 Ext. 7724 Photo courtesy of the U.S. National Park Service. Kun-Wak-Shun, hatched in 2004, displays enormous wingspan in this ‘camera trap’ photo taken at California’s Pinnacles National Park in 2014. The bird has been treated for lead-poisoning 12 times since his 2005 wild release. He and his mate, condor No. 236 (seen in background at right), were among the first wild condor pairs to nest this spring, and could soon be raising a chick. Lewis and Clark saw the large birds as they traveled along the Colum- bia River, and condors were a common motif for the designs of Oregon’s Wasco people... rock formations, the crew has now confirmed two other eggs nestled in caves and crevices in Central California. Biologists with Ventana Wild- life Society found another five nests along the Big Sur coast. Though he is a prolific fa- ther and considered Pin- nacles’ most dominant male, Kun-Wak-Shun has led a tax- ing life since leaving the Jonsson Center about a de- cade ago. As with nearly every free- flying condor, he’s been treated for lead poisoning multiple times—12 to be ex- act. He also lost his first mate, No. 444, to the starva- tion-inducing effects of lead. But Kun-Wak-Shun has grit. Following his treatments, Jobs at Indian Head Casino Indian Head Casino human resources has advertised the following positions: he paired with another female condor—San Diego Zoo- hatched female No. 236, who was released in 2002 at Big Sur, about a 40-mile flight from Pinnacles. The duo has been bonded now for two years. Breeding programs like the Jonsson Center’s are largely to thank for success stories like Kun-Wak-Shun. The influx of zoo-bred birds has pushed the number of free-flying condors to more than 10 times what it was in 1987, when conserva- tionists caught up the last 22 wild condors in a last-ditch ef- fort to save the species. “For the first time since the recovery program started, we have more condors flying in the wild than we do in cap- tivity,” said Kelly Sorenson, executive director of the Ventana Wildlife Society in Central California. “But that doesn’t mean we don’t need the help of zoos any more.” Lead poisoning remains the leading cause of death in free-flying condors, according to Sorenson—specifically, lead-based ammunition. Although lead has been widely eliminated from paint, gasoline and water pipes, it remains the metal of choice for ammunition manufactur- ers. Like eagles and other scavengers, condors can in- gest the toxin when they eat the remains of an animal that’s been shot with lead ammunition. “Anyone who shoots an animal with lead ammunition can accidentally poison scav- enging animals,” said Leland Brown, non-lead hunting edu- cation coordinator at the Or- egon Zoo. “Shown the unin- tended consequences of us- ing lead, many have started to switch to non-lead ammu- nition.” As with all species’ captive breeding and release efforts, the goal is for California con- dors to become a self-sustain- ing population that someday re-inhabits its full historical range—a range that included Oregon. Lewis and Clark saw the large birds as they traveled along the Columbia River, and condors were a common motif for the designs of Oregon’s Wasco people, who lived along the Columbia be- tween The Dalles and Cas- cade Locks. “We would like to see Cali- fornia condors return to the full extent of their historical range,” said Dr. David Shepherdson, Oregon Zoo deputy conservation director. “But until the problem of lead poisoning is resolved, condors will never fully re- cover in the wild.” Welch says she expects to see No. 340 and No. 236’s new chick pop from the egg later this week or this week- end. The Oregon Zoo’s condor recovery efforts take place at the Jonsson Center for Wild- life Conservation, located in rural Clackamas County on Metro-owned open land. The remoteness of the facility minimizes the exposure of young condors to people, in- creasing the chances for cap- tive-hatched birds to survive and breed in the wild. Shy 541-460-7777 Ext. 7734. 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