Spilyay Tymoo Coyote News, est. 1976 September 26, 2018 - Vol. 43, No. 20 September – Wanaq’i ~ Fall - Tiyam PO Box 489 Warm Springs, OR 97761 ECR WSS Postal Patron U.S. Postage PRSRT STD Warm Springs, OR 97761 Experiencing the Treaty of 1855 F or the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs—in relation to the United States and all other sover- eign governments—the Treaty of 1855 is the foundation document. The treaty is seen all around us: In the reservation itself, and with gathering, fishing and hunting rights on the Ceded Lands. The binding legal aspects of the document are vital to this day, in- voked in many tribal actions, both governmentally and by individual members. While vital and alive, the Treaty has an historical ele- ment, also endlessly fascinating: Who signed the Treaty, and how? Where? And under what circumstances?... You can judge for yourself at the Museum at Warm Springs, as the tribes and museum this fall host the Treaty Conference (see page 5). Six pages of the original Treaty will be on display at the Museum at Warm Springs from October 2 through November 3. This is the first of several exhibitions and public programs happening as the museum celebrates its Twenty- Fifth Anniversary. For some broad historical con- text: In 1855 the President of the United States was Franklin Pierce, known for his inability to address slavery, leaving that to Abraham Lincoln. Meanwhile an issue in the Pa- cific Northwest was the growing wave of non-Indian settlers, bring- ing devastating illness, and land dis- putes. In the language of the day, the question for the U.S. govern- ment was, “How to deal with the Indian problem?” See TREATY on 5 Photographic image (right) of the first signing page of the Treaty of 1855. Courtesy: National Archives, Washington, D.C (NAID 299798). Museum board names new executive director T he Museum at Warm Springs Board of Directors has appointed Elizabeth Woody as executive di- rector. Ms. Woody will succeed Carol Leone, who has ably served the museum since 2002, and is retiring at the end of November. Ms. Woody will begin her post on December 1. She has a long history with the Museum at Warm Springs, starting in 1993. In that year Ms. Woody was one of the Warm Springs tribal citi- zens who accompanied a team of tribal museum professionals to Santa Fe, New Mexico. In Santa Fe they met with re- nowned Chiricahua Apache artist, the late Allan Houser. This was still during the planning phase of the museum, which would open the following year. Most recently, Ms. Woody has been serving as a project manager for the Museum at War m Springs Twenty-Fifth Anniver- sary events, fundraising and as a development consultant. Ms. Woody is a member of the Confederated Tribes of War m Springs. She is of Yakama Nation descent, ‘born for’ the Tódích’íinii (Bitter Wa- ter clan) of the Navajo Nation. Elizabeth Woody See MUSEUM on 7 Native theme movies featured at film festival T he iconic film Smoke Signals was the first feature written, directed, co-produced and acted by Ameri- can Indians. Smoke Signals—with a visit from the actor Adam Beach—will be among the eight movies featured in October at the BendFilm screen- ing at the Madras High School Per- forming Arts Center. And along with Smoke Signals several of the films at the Per- forming Arts Center festival cel- ebrate the Native American expe- rience and culture. “Smoke Signals was a groundbreaking film when it pre- miered at the Sundance Film Fes- tival 20 years ago,” said Todd Looby, director of BendFilm. “And the timeless story still resonates strongly with independent film fans across the world. “We look forward to hosting Adam Beach, and hearing him re- flect on how the film has impacted his life and influenced his illustri- ous career.” Mr. Beach will join audiences live for a question and answer dis- cussion about the film, his acting career, and founding the Adam Beach Film Institute to mentor young Native American filmmak- ers. The 2018 BendFilm festival at the Madras Performing Arts Cen- ter will be October 11-14. Here are summaries of the feature films coming up at the center: The Blessing , directed by Hunter Robert Baker, Jordan Fein. A Central Oregon premiere. The actor Adam Beach (left) will be at the film festival. The story: A Navajo coal miner raising his secretive daughter on his own struggles with his part in the irreversible destruction of their sa- cred mountain. Dawnland , directed by Adam Mazo, Ben Pender- Cudlip. An Oregon premiere. A story of stolen children and cultural survival: Inside the first truth and reconciliation commission for Native Ameri- cans. Dirt McComber: Last of the Mohicans , directed by Joanne Storkan and Ryan White. West Coast premiere. The story: In Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, rough-and- tumble Dirt McComber struggles to support his large modern family as the last mem- ber of his community to main- tain a traditional Mohawk live- lihood. Tribal Council this week is sched- uled to post the proposed 2019 tribal budget. Council was sched- uled to meet this Wednesday, Sep- tember 26 on the matter. The district meetings would fol- low in October, concluding with a General Council meeting. The budget mailing to the mem- bership will go out soon. Tribal Management and Finance earlier this month presented a bal- anced budget proposal to Tribal Council. Branches, departments and enterprises gave their presentations, finishing up earlier this week. Another item on the Tribal Council agenda this week was a meeting with the Kah-Nee-Ta Board of Directors, regarding a future course for the resort. For now there is only security and main- tenance crews at Kah-Nee-Ta, though partnership-investor propos- als may still be weighed in the fu- ture. A meeting with the 509-J school district superintendent, and a casino equity agreement were also on this week’s Council agenda. See BENDFILM on 7 Celebration at SkiBowl Miss Warm Springs 2018 Thyreicia Simtustus (left) arrives on horseback at SkiBowl West, where the Confederated Tribes and SkiBowl hosted the Eighth Annual Tribal Celebration Day, last weekend. The day included tribal dance performances. Sue Matters photos/KWSO Council posting budget proposal Agency main water break disrupts service Last week a 14-inch water main broke in the Agency service area. Residences and offices experi- enced low pressure, and then no pressure for a couple of days. Some tribal buildings on the cam- pus were affected, as was the Com- munity Center, in addition to the residences. Temporary restroom facilities were used by some offices, as the Utilities crew worked to repair the break. By last Friday the situation was resolved. “Thank you to the Public Utili- ties staff for your work in repair- ing the broken water main line,” said Alyssa Macy, chief operations of- ficer.