Page 2 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Tribal Day at Meadows Saturday T he Warm Springs Ski and Snowboard Day at Mt. Hood Meadows is com- ing up on Saturday, April 9. To participate, please sign up and have completed pa- perwork turned in to KWSO no later than 9 a.m. this Friday morning, April 8. You can find the forms outside by the front door of the Media Center, or come inside. There is a Group Consent form that every- one must complete. There is a medical release form that must be completed with insurance information included, for any minors who will be participating without an adult going on the trip with the youth. Please sign up only if you are certain you will be able to attend. KWSO needs the names and ages of partici- pants who are interested in going. This includes adult or guardian names for any mi- nors, and a working phone number. Will each person be snowboarding or skiing? On Courtesy Meadows Meadows, now also a tribal partner at the Kah-Nee-Ta Village re- development project, will host the tribes this Saturday, April 9. the consent form, you need to fill in, for each person, height, weight, shoe size, ex- perience level, plus date of birth and contact informa- tion for the day of the trip. Will you want to ride the bus or drive yourself to Meadows. As mentioned, all participants, whether riding the bus or driving up as a family, must have all paper- work turned in no later than 9 a.m. this Friday, April 8. The bus will depart the Warm Springs Community Center parking lot at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 9. Families who drive them- selves to Mt. Hood Mead- ows should plan on meet- ing the group at the desig- nated location. Face masks are required on the bus as a covid safety measure. The bus will leave Mt. Hood Meadows for the re- turn trip to Warm Springs at 3:15 p.m. on Saturday. The bus should return to the community center by 4:30 p.m. The transportation, rent- als, lessons, lift tickets and lunch are provided by Mt. Hood Meadows. New exhibit opens at the museum A new exhibit—Sav- ages and Princesses: The Per- sistence of Native American S t e r e o t y p e s —opens this week at the Museum at Warm Springs. The show will run through late May. Savages and Princesses examines the ongoing prevelance of Native American stereotypes. “Whether using humor, subtlety or irony, the telling is always fiercly honest and dead-on,” the museum re- view says. “Images and styles are created from traditional, contemporary and mass culture forms.” The review continues: Items from Savages and Princesses. “The exhibition embraces Native American’s power to replace stereotypical images that permeate the current pop culture landscape.” The show explores com- mon stereotypes about Na- tive peoples that are false- hoods, followed by the truths behind them. “The artists use the un- expected—humor, emotion or shock—to encourage viewers to question and challenge stereotypes, even unspoken, unacknowledged ones.” The exhibit at the museum is made possible through ExhibitsUSA, a national di- vision of Mid-America Arts and Alliances, and the Na- tional Endowment for the Arts. The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Coming up on the Council agenda in April (from page 1) Tuesday, April 5 - Enter- prise updates 9 a.m.: Power & Water Enterprise update with Jim Manion. 9:30: Timber LLC up- date with Michele Stacona. 10: Indian Head Casino update with Jeff Carstensen. 10:30: War m Springs Ventures update with Jim Souers. 11: High Lookee Lodge update with acting director Lonnie Parsons. 1:30 p.m.: Composite up- date with Jacob Coochise. 2: Housing update with Danielle Wood. 2:30: Telecom update with Tim York. 3: Credit enterprise up- date with Lori Fuentes. 3:30: Museum at Warm Springs update with Liz Woody. 4: WSCDO update with Valerie Switzler and Deanie Smith. Wednesday, April 6 - Committee updates 9 a.m.: Water Board up- date. 10: Culture and Heritage Committee update. 10:30: Education Com- mittee update. 11: Fish and Wildlife - On Reservation Committee up- date. 11:30: Fish and Wildlife – Off Reservation Commit- tee update. 1:30 p.m.: Health and Welfare Committee update. 2: Land Use Committee update. 2:30: Range and Ag Com- mittee update. 3: Timber Committee up- date. 3:30: Early Childhood Education update with Valerie Switzler and Deanie Smith. Monday, April 11 9 a.m.: Water treatment plant update with Barry, Chico and Ellen. 11: Covid-19 update with the Response Team. 1:30 p.m.: Akana update. 2:30: Tribal member con- cerns. Tuesday and Wednes- day, April 12-13: Open agenda. Monday, April 18 9 a.m.: Secretary-Trea- surer update with Glendon Smith. 9:30: May agenda, review minutes. 10: Draft resolutions. 11: Covid update with the Team. 1:30 p.m.: Legislative up- date calls. 2:30: Enrollments with Lucille Suppach-Samson, Vi- tal Stats. 3: Water treatment plant update with Barry, Chico and Ellen. Tuesday and Wednes- day, April 19 and 20: Open agendas. Monday, April 25 9 a.m.: Water treatment plant update. 11: Covid-19 update with the Team. Tuesday and Wednes- day, April 26-27: Open agendas. Draft resolutions and or- dinances, including attach- ments or exhibits, are due by the first Friday of each month by 5 p.m. Email gsmith@wstribes.org April 6, 2022 From the Election Board On behalf of the Election and Counting Boards, we would like to acknowledge the follow- ing people and depart- ments that helped in the March 30, 2022 Tribal Council election. They are as follows: Michael Collins, Brenda Bremner, Greta White Elk, Denys White, Dorothy ‘Dot’ Thurby from Emergency Man- agement and her staff, Olivia Wallulatum and Lucille from Vital Stats, Carol Sahme and her staff from Recreation, Sonja Bryant and Dawn Smith from Finance, Sue Matters and KWSO, Captain Moody from Three Warriors Market and Scott Spaulding, Fire and Safety Chief. This election was a team effort with every- one pitching in, often times making last minute commitments. The voter turnout was excellent, and we all made sure that every vote that was cast and ballots received were included in the final tally. Congratulations to the newly elected Tribal Council members, and much appreciation to the Twenty-Eighth Tribal Council. All of the members of the Election Board wanted to publicly thank you all. As the Chair of the Election Board, rest as- sured this election’s in- tegrity was intact with highest of standards of professionalism and eth- ics. Floyd Calica, Chairman, the Election Board. Community notes... Monday, April 11 will be late-start Monday for 509-J students. That means bus pick-up and school start times are 90 minutes later than usual. Senior Lunch this Wednesday, April 6 is for delivery or pick-up at the Greeley Heights Commu- nity Building. On the menu is fried smelt with lemon wedges, rice, peas and carrots, and canned fruit. Senior Lunch on Fri- day is for delivery or pick up at the Greeley Heights Community Building. On the menu is spaghetti, Greek salad, garlic bread and fresh fruit. Senior Lunch on Monday, April 11 is for delivery or pick up at the Greeley Heights Com- munity Building. On the menu is: ground turkey and sweet potato skillet, wild rice and canned fruit. The Warm Springs Na- tion Little League player registration is open for all divisions. Register online at wsnll.org Or call 541-340-1794; or 541-325-3856 to reg- ister. 4/11 Today in MHS Sports: Varsity Softball has a home game at 4:30