Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon November 21, 2018 For all physical therapy needs Page 5 On the Tribal Council agenda The following are items on the Tribal Council agenda for the rest of November. Monday, November 26 9 a.m.: December agenda, review minutes. 10: a.m. Enrollments with Lucille Suppach-Samson of Vital Stats. 11: BIA Regional director meeting with Brian Mercier. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative update calls. 2:30: Secretary-Treasurer and Chief Operations Officer updates with Michelle Stacona and Alyssa Macy. 3: Budgets 2019 (if neces- sary) with Alfred Estimo and Dennis Johnson. 4: Draft resolutions with Michele. Monday, November 26: Tribal-State public safewtey meeting. Tuesday, November 27: 2018 annual government-to- government meeting with the state of Oregon and the nine tribes. Thursday, November 29 Fish and Wildlife Service meeting. Items for further consid- eration: The 2020 Census. Oregon wolves. T r i b a l Court. Early Childhood Edu- cation update. Landfill update. D.McMechan/Spilyay Clinic staff includes director Natalie Kiefer, Taylor and Dain Gilbert, and Alicia Oberholzer. T he War m Springs Holistic Health clinic offers complete physi- cal therapy services. Physical rehabilitation, greater mobility and pain relief are primary goals. For pain relief there is an acupuncturist on hand two days a week. Clients at the clinic, a part of tribal Managed Care, are mainly seen by referral from a primary care provider. “We see everything for head to toe, and people of all ages,” said Dain Gilbert, physical therapist at the clinic. After a medical procedure or accident, for example, a person might need therapy to return to normal physical movement. This is the service of the Warm Springs Holistic Health Clinic. Dain and wife Taylor are the most recent physical therapists to join the clinic. The staff also in- cludes director Natalie Kiefer, Ali- cia Oberholzer, Dr. Eric Mallory (acupuncturist), and patient relations technician Sonja Bryant. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert, Ms. Oberholzer and Ms. Kiefer are physical therapists, and Doctors of Physical Therapy. Staff members also specialize in particular areas of physical therapy, for instance Orthopedics. Their jobs involve much listen- ing, as the client explains his or her situation and how the person wants to improve. “We are an excited and dedicated group,” Dain says. “We are here for the community, advo- cating for health.” The clinic is located by the court- house. Managed Care developed this service to save tribal members from having to drive to Madras for physical therapy. You can reach them at 514-777-2663. High Desert exhibit will feature renowned Native artist T he work of Native Ameri- can artist Rick Bartow will be on display beginning in Janu- ary 2019 at the High Desert Museum. The exhibit—Rick Bartow: Things You Cannot Explain— will be an extensive retrospec- tive of the nearly four decades of the artist’s work, an explo- ration of his extraordinary life and complex identity. His work connects the physical and spiritual worlds, and explores the passage be- tween the past and present. Mr. Bartow learned from an early age to honor and em- brace his father’s ancestry as a member of the Mad River Band of Wiyot Indians in Cali- fornia, as well as his mother who is European. Bartow would often spend Sunday morning at church and Courtesy High Desert Museum Example of the artist’s work. afternoons at Native ceremonies. He was born in Newport, and had close ties to the Siletz com- munity. He traveled extensively during his lifetime but always re- turned to his coastal home- stead. It was here be became one of the Northwest’s best- known artists. The Warm Springs Indian Night Out at the Warm Springs Community Center is coming up on Monday, December 17. All are welcome Correction regarding vets’ list U.S. military veteran Norman Nathan should have been on the list of Confed- erated Tribes of War m Springs veterans. The Spilyay apologizes for this mistake.