PAGE 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969 (5 IT I interior image aBeite bv sociological factors d 0 ;;vo cl r P ...... V i. f CP 4 Jjuby and Dwight Bear Shirt, their pregnant mother, and five other family members live in one half of a converted government barracks. The barracks is on pilings, with no indoor plumbing or by Susie Jenkins Nebraskan Staff Writer On the isolated, impoverished Indian reservations a major result of the life "situation is immense social disorganization. This absence of community is mirrored on the Pine Ridge and Omaha-Winnebago reservations in the prevalence of alcoholism, educational problems, suicide attempts and weak family structure. Surveys and research concerning the life of the Indians on Pine Ridge have been compiled by the Pine Ridge Mental Health Program, revealing that this prevalence is not "just the Indians." Dr. Carl Mindell, former director of the Pine Ridge Community Mental Health program, writes in the Pine Ridge Research Bulletin: "This way of behaving in the world is not characteristic of Indianness, but of any people who have lived in similar circumstances i.e., city ghetto or Appalachia." The resuK, according to the research done by the Health Service, is the development and perpetuation of a negative ethnic image, among all Indian residents, especially among the younger Indians. "The younger Indian kids scare the hell out of me, said Dave Allen, VISTA volunteer in the Pine Ridge border town of Gordon, Neb. "They are already defeated. They don't rebel, they regress. The imperialist culture has defined the Indian role, and this causes emotional problems," he said. Allen voiced an opinion similar to those of whites and Indians working with social problems on the reservation. Dr. Robert Schefsky treats reservation residents at the Winnebago hospital in Northeast Nebraska. "Indian teenagers are in a shell," Schefsky said. ' "They see what is going on around them. They see Tarpaper shacks typify reservation housing Fire disasters strike frequently by Jolin Dvorak Nebraskan Staff W?riter "These tarpaper shacks are unfit to live in, especially in the winter. It seems like the little children are con stantly getting sick. We make daily trips to the hospital with kids from all over town. Worse than that, the shacks catch fire easily. One of them burned dcwn recently. No one knew it until the walls fell in, out three children were in it." Clement Mitchell and Lawrence Cook, two members of the Omaha Tribal Council spoke sadly about the housing situation in their hometown of Macy. An unincorporated settlement of 203, Macy lies at the bottom of a valley only a few miles from the Missouri River and about 30 miles south of Sioux City. A MODERN, GREEN waiter tower stands guard over the village but it hardly exemplifies the conditions sur rounding it. "I don't see how children can come out of some of those homes," said the director of the local Head Start center. Dirt roads, car bodies and tiny unpalnted bunga lows seem to compose most of east and south Macy. Other houses are construc ted of slats covered with tarpaper. ' Some ot our nomes, Mitchell said, have tanks of propane for fuels. Tele phones are raire. More than a few Junk yards dot the tiny town. In places, car bodies are stacked right up to the exterior walls of the homes. AND, ON A RISE IN the east part of town, on what would be a prime comer lot in Lincoln or Omaha, lies the snow cov ered, Charred remains of of the shack where three children lost their lives recently. Miss Bernice Tegler, who has operated a Prot estant mission In Winne bago for years, described one home. "Many homes are like tills, she began. There are five children and five adults living in two rooms. Sometimes there is an attic or part of an upstairs, but even so, there Is Just no room to move around." The situation Is not 100 per cent bleak, however. The north part of Macy Is like another world. About 25 brightly decorated new homes have been built and rented to families. The two story, frame dwellings would not look out of place in the Meadowlane or Belmont areas of Lincoln. The new homes, according to Cook, were built by a private firm under the auspicies of the Federal govern ment. The homes are rented to Indians for varying sums. "THE MORE YOU MAKE in salary, the more rent you pay," Cook continued. The government has promised more units, he added. At present only about 20 of the new homes have been built; it is only a dent in the problem." Besides the dilapidated houses in Macy, there are a few stores, a gasoline station, a 50 year old school building, and several churches. The bright spot of the town is a not-yet-finished red brick Tribal Council Building, housing a gym and many offices. "We are very proud of the new building," Cook said. "We paid for it entirely out of tribal funds." Ten miles up highway 73 lies Winnebago, a larger town, population 632. The situation there is different. Housing is far better, and the town offers a business district, a high school, several churches, two missions and a larger federal housing development MISS BERNICE TEGLER, who operates one of the missions, said that the federal housing is indeed desirable, but units rent for $65 to $100. Is that ap propriate rent for low income families? she asked. The housing projects are well kept up, simply because they are expected monthly, she said. The Indians don't have much pride in their homes, contrary to whites, she continued. Many homes have just the bare necessities, no rugs, little furniture. Lack of telephones, running water, and indoor plumbing is not unique. Out west on the Pine Ridge Reservations, housing Is also in bad shape. A complicated study has been made of the situation, so in many cases exact figures and percentages are available. For Instance, only 40 per cent of the Indian homes have running water. About 60 per cent of the households have electricity. SEVERAL FEDERAL PROGRAMS are In operation to try and remedy the situation. Operation Turnkey is a low cost housing project operated through the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Money from the project can be used to fix, rent, or buy homes. Marge Loffredo, VISTA worker from New Jersey, said, "This started four years ago. The Indians just keep filling out forms and nothing ever happens." Perhaps living conditions could be Improved, if the reservation had more of an economy. "We're trying to bring some Industry to the reserva tion. We don't have a spot developed yet, but we are competing with 16,000 other communities in '.he United States. Now, the only industry we have in Winnebago Is a dog food plant which processes dead animals. It's strictly a day by day operation, however. If they have gome work, they hire someone for a day." THE SPEAKER WAS Sterling Snake, treasurer of the Winnebago Tribal Council. "We are negotiating for a government loan to develop an industrial park In Winnebago," ho reported, There has been little progress. The reservation would not be a bad place for a company to locate, he continued. Land and a working force is available and a firm can take advantage of many tax breaks by building on the reservation proper. "We need opportunities," Snake stressed, Win nebago's only Industry has never employed more thai) ten people at a time, and then for only a short period." Walthill, Neb., a town of 844 about five miles south of Winnebago, boasts the only real industry on the reservation. A plant makes hydraulic cylinders and thus far has been quite successful. Like federal housing. It is only a dent in the problem. BEFORE THE ADVENT of the Office of Economic Opportunity, unemployment was a drastic problem, Snake said. In the past few years, unemployment has been curtailed. But not completely. G. R. Branchaud, the Indian agent, agreed. "We are trying to make a stuay . . . sending social workers right Into the homes and find out why a man who has a job decides to quit. We really don't know." The Indian Agency has a many faceted employ ment assistance plan, but much of the assistance goes to help Indians get off-the-reservation jobs. The Bureau has moved many Indians off the reser vation, Snake said. How ever many come back soon er or later. "I don't want to move off, I want to see jobs, here on the reserva tion." he said. "I USED TO THINK that industry was the an- swer," said. Dr Robert Chaefsky, an MD at the hospital in Winnebago. "No industry has been forthcoming, but the next best thing happened some time ago." A manufacturing plant in Sioux City which needed workers decided to transport the Indians both to and from Sioux City by bus. "I thought that was the answer," Chaefsky said. "But you can count the Indians on the fingers of one hand who are taking advantage of the situation." On the Pine Ridge Reservation, Industry is a little more prevalent although unemployment Is a big problem. A mocassin factory employes 102 people, 41 in the factory and the rest outside as lacers. The building is owned by the tribe which rents to the company. "WE PAY THE MINIMUM wage and up," said Mort Tiensvold, plant superintendent. "About 95 per cent of the workers are Indians, and they are excellent workers." It seems, however, that the government Is the real economy. Indians so depend on the government for jobs that an economic disaster would prevail if the govern ment abandoned the reservation. Unemployment figures run around the 30 per cent mark, depending on age grouping. More than 55 per cent of the young people 16 to 19 are unemployed. More than 45 per cent of the people between 55 and 59 are also unemployed. Many Indians are employed at one time of the year, but spend several seasons out of work. Nearly 30 per cent of the Pine Ridge Indians work at seasonal employment. Potato and other crop harvesting are popular. Tiensvold said, "To me, jobs that have sound economic bases have to be the solution, if there Is a solution. We have stop-gap measures, but they are not stable, viable and economically sound." "IT'S NOT SAFE on the streets of Macy after dark. There are drunks and gangs. My uncle was beaten to death last year by a gang of people, right on the street. We don't have a sheriff. The nearest law enforce ment officers are nearly 20 miles away." Cook continued, "We are governed by two laws. Tills Is a state reservation, so we have both county law and a state deputy." It's not working out, he said. A county sheriff and Continued on puge 7 5" ",w,hiiiiiimi tui it i - . I" J.imiimimwiiuuiMar to.. . m iT f 1 . f s . '. V'. ArTin. alcoholism In the family: they see their mother going to bed with their uncle. "People who have gone outside the reservation to work have come back broken, so they think it is useless to try," he said. RESEARCHERS AT PINE RIDGE have defined a "terrific" inferiority complex among Indians, especially Indian teens. Dr. Eileen Maynard, anthropologist with the Community Health Service, directed an intensive survey of Pine Ridge residents, the first of any kind at any reservation. Dr. Maynard conducted a survey among both Sioux and surrounding white high school students, compar.ng attitudes toward Indian problems. One of the major important differences she discovered was a divergence in opinions concerning the reason Indians have greater problems than whites. Seven per cent of the Indian students believed that prejudice of whites was a major reason for greater problems of Indians, while 56 per cent of white students made this the major reason for the Indian's situation. Indian students named lack of education, drinking, and poverty as the three main causes for their failure to conquer their problems. Even statements blaming the social or economic environment were amended by phrases of self-blame Dr. Maynard wrote In her report. ' The most negative statement was "Indians have greater problems because they're real stupid." One Indian girl stated that Indians have more of a chance for success because "If he wants to go on to school, the Indian has everything paid for him." "Indian adults sometimes characterize Indians as lazy and drunken," Dr. Maynard said. "The Indian child hears these statements, and may then observe this behavior and even though these traits are manifested by a small minority of Indians, it will reinforce the negative image of his ethnic group." ONE MAJOR CONTRIBUTION to the negative image Is the reservation educational system, according to sources from both Pine Ridge and Winnebago. The principal of Winnebago school, Robert Wormsley, discussed the problems of education on the Winnebago and Macy reservations. "I am the first full time principal here," Wormsley said. "I am In my first year. The previous principal couldn't stomach the situation. Wormsley said that dropouts and truancy were major problems in his school. "Once a boy didn't come to school for a few days," he related. "We sent the bus driver out to look for him. His parents had copped out or something, anyway they were drunk or in jail. "The kid was hiding in an old unused house. Nobody cared for him, but now he is staying with his aunt and is falling in line." Clement Mitchell, an Omaha Indian and membr'r of the tribal council, maintained that the Bureau ot Indian Affairs (BIA) had promisd a better school on his reservation. "They haven't done it,". Mitchell said. "Our school goes up to the eighth grade, and it is falling apart. "I'm scared to send my kids to the school. There are big cracks opening, since it was built in 1919," he said. Sterling Snake of the Winnebago reservation agreed that schooling is not up to adequate levels on Nebraska reservations. "We should have a vocational-technical school . ui) here," Snake said. "They (the BIA) haven't let thu Indians use their own initiative. They are just a bunch of brainy guys with programs." AT PINE RIDGE, Dr. Maynard noted several needs to stimulate learning motivation. They wre: Decrease the emphasis in Indian schooling on helping the Indian student go into the mainstream. "This philosophy so often seems to lack positive concrete meanings and tends to the negative direction mainly to dcemphaslze Indianness." More research is needed on the relation of the parental Involvement and power in the educational system. Install orientation programs for eighth graders going to the boarding high schools (sometimes 100 mllci from the students home) since the dropout peak occuis between the eighth and ninth grades. Escape from the realities of the reservation is a constant contributor to the social disorganization. Suicide attempts are mi;ch more prevalent than the national average. Of tho number of recorded attempts at Pine Ridge, 96 per cent were under age 40, and 36 per cent were under age 19. The suicide rate at Pine Ridge Is more than twice that reported In the city of Los Angeles for the same for Indians on the reservation. Dr. Schefsky said th period. ALCOHOL IS A very frequent escape mechanism for Indians on the reservation. Dr. Schefsky said that at Winnebago is the number one problem. "People drink occasionally, soclaly or heavily." he said. "For some people it is a disease. But for theso people it is a way of life." Of special interest Is the per cent of juvenile of fenders aged 15 to 17. Of this group, 32 per cent of the boys and 23 per cent of the girls were booked on drinking charges. "Being Indian is an extremely Important sourco of satisfaction." Dr. Maynard said. "It Is now up to the government agencies and the Indians themselves to recapture the pride of the Oglalas to Its former degree and utilize Indian Identity as a positive force for advancement. She noted that local groups needed more autonomy In the political and economic structures, preferably not connected with the government. r 0- I Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA) live on the Pine Kidge reservation, teach residents basic community practices.