Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, March 01, 2017, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
March 1, 2017
Close game
at Cottage
Grove
Intertribalz
win tourney
by Jayson Smith , Spilyay Tymoo
COTTAGE GROVE — Kaliyah
Iverson scored 16 points and had
three assists for Madras, but the
White Buffalo girls lost 50-48 to
Cottage Grove in a Class 4A play-
in game on Saturday.
The White Buffaloes led 34-28
at halftime, but were held to 14
points in the second half. “We got
some looks, but they wouldn’t fall,”
coach Zack Lillebo said.
Lynden Harry had 13 points,
eight rebounds and five assists.
Vanessa Culps scored 10 points,
and Jiana Smith Francis added four
points and four rebounds for Ma-
dras.
Cottage Grove has big girls: 6’3,
6’2, and 6’1. Madras played great,
coming up short when time expired.
Last season the team advanced
to the quarter finals, where they fell
short against Cascade, something
they had hoped to surpass this year.
“Our girls are competitors,” said
Lillebo, adding that he fully expects
to be in the playoff mix next sea-
son.
Overall the Buffs had a great
season, finishing 14-6 overall. I’m
proud of all of you MHS White
Buffaloes for the hard work this
year.
Jayson Smith/Spilyay
We have no seniors on the
team. So we’re not finished, and
I’m looking forward to next year.
Height was a factor in the game: The Cottage Grove Lions has
girls 6’3, 6’2 and 6’1.
Zone 6
fishing open
Zone 6 platfor m and
hook and line fishing will be
opening for subsistence use
for salmon, steelhead, shad,
walleye, catfish, bass, carp
and yellow perch.
These fish may be sold or
kept for subsistence use. Le-
gal-size sturgeon are between
43 and 54 inches fork length
in The Dalles and John Day
pools, between 38 and 54
inches fork length in the
Bonneville Pool, and may be
kept for subsistence use.
The season is now open
through 6 p.m. on Tuesday,
March 21.
The open area is all of
Zone 6. Allowed gear is
hoop nets, dip nets and hook
and line. Dam closed areas
applicable to platform gear
are in effect. The Spring
Creek Hatchery sanctuary is
not necessary this time of
year.
In addition, the Zone 6
commercial sturgeon gillnet
fishery will be opening, and
platform and hook and line
caught sturgeon may be sold
during those periods.
Free spay, neuter
clinic on Sunday
The monthly free spay and
neuter clinic for dogs in Warm
Springs is on Sunday, March 5.
Dogs can be dropped off start-
ing at 7:30 a.m., first come-first
served, at the Community Build-
ing in Greeley Heights.
The Humane Society will also
be available to take dogs that
need to be adopted from 8:30-
10 a.m.
The spay-neuter procedures
are performed in the sterile en-
vironment of the mobile clinic,
with the dogs staying in standard
pet carrying crates during pre-
and post-surgery.
Volunteers are needed for
cleaning, sweeping and mopping,
cleaning instruments, wrapping
and sterilizing surgical packs, help-
ing lift and transport the dogs, etc.
For more information call 541-
617-1010. Or go to:
Bendsnip.org
Madras High School
senior Shae Yeahquo Jr.
shoots a 3 against the
Sisters Outlaws.
This was a play-in game
for Madras, but the
Outlaws came out on
top, 46-39. The Madras
boys finished the season
10-13 overall, and 4-7 in
league play.
Earlier in the week,
before the Sisters game,
the boys won at Crook
County, 80-49.
Jayson Smith/Spilyay
Share your memories of Hood to Coast relay
The Hood to Coast relay has
seen many Warm Springs partici-
pants over the years.
An upcoming book—Hood To
Coast Memories, An Oral History of
the Mother of All Relays—will share
some memories by those who
have taken part.
The stories come from partici-
pants, volunteers, spectators, or-
ganizers, celebrities, journalists and
others.
The book will capture the char-
acter, appeal and personality of
the relay race. The authors are
Marc B. Spiegel and Art Garner.
The inaugural Hood To Coast
Relay took place in 1982, featur-
ing eight Oregon-based teams of
10 runners.
They covered a distance of
150 miles in 30 five-mile legs.
Last year, in the thirty-fifth run-
ning of the race, more than
12,000 people from all 50 states
and about 35 different countries
competed on 1,050 teams in the
now 199-mile event.
Each team has 12 runners and
the legs vary in distance from just
under four miles to almost eight
miles.
“Over the years, we’ve
watched with amazement at the
tremendous growth of Hood To
Coast, from a grassroots event to
one with participants from
throughout the U.S. and around
the world,” says founder and or-
ganizer Bob Foote.
“From talking to participants,
volunteers, spectators and others
every year, I know there’s an in-
credible sense of camaraderie
among those involved in the
event. They have many special ex-
periences and lasting memories of
the relay. We’re working together
with the authors to compile and
preserve those personal remem-
brances from the past 35 years.”
The authors are seeking memo-
ries that highlight everything from
running the relay to preparing for
the event to volunteering. Also
of interest: stories revealing ev-
erything from annual Hood to
Coast traditions to family mem-
bers teaming up to weddings (and
proposals) to the origin of team
There will be a FAFSA workshop
on Monday, March 6 at the Technol-
ogy Center on the COCC Redmond
Campus at 3:30 p.m. Students can get
help in applying for financial aid. Re-
member, if you are applying for a tribal
scholarship, completing the FAFSA is
a requirement. The tribal scholarship
application deadline is July 1. If you
have questions, contact Carroll Dick
at the Warm Springs Higher Educa-
tion office, 541-553-3311.
names—and everything in between.
Individuals can submit their per-
sonal memories through the book’s
website:
hoodtocoastmemories.com.
This is the second book for
Garner and Spiegel. Their first
book was the Amazon best-
seller Indy 500 Memories, An Oral
History of ‘The Greatest Spectacle in
Racing.’
Garner also penned Black Noon,
The Year They Stopped the Indy 500,
which won the Motor Press Guild’s
2014 Book of the Year award and
was a finalist for the 2015 ESPN/
PEN award for literary sports writ-
ing.
Spiegel has participated in Hood
to Coast three times. This year the
Hood To Coast Relay will take place
on August 25-26.
For more information Marc B.
Spiegel can be reached at 414-559-
7700. Or email:
marcbspiegel@gmail.com
Call Art Garner at 310-874-
0074. Email:
artpgarner@gmail.com
Intertribalz of War m
springs won the Twenty-
Third Annual North End
Express All Indian Men’s 6
ft-Under Tournament.
Runners-up were the Hit
Squad of Warm Springs.
Third-place went to the Little
Giants of Celilo, and fourth-
place, Bad Company of
Chiloquin.
Recreation and the tribes
hosted the tournament, Feb.
24-25, at the community cen-
ter gym.
MVP was Jacoby Howe
of Intertribalz. The Mister
Hustle award went to
Gustavo Miller of Bad
Company.
Named to the All-Tour-
ney team were:
Jose Alvarez of the Tygh
Valley Studs. Joe Anderson
of the REZidentials. Westlee
Witcraft of Bad Company.
Evan Gallagher of Bad
Company.
Jansen
Harrington of the Hit Squad.
Bryson Spino of the Hit
Squad.
Alex
Sampson
of
Intertribalz. Lawrence L.J.
Fiander of Intertribalz.
J’Von Smith of the Little
Giants. Xavier Gregg of the
Little Giants.
Also competing in the
tourney were the War m
Springs Tribesman, and the
Flying Fry Breads of Warm
Springs.
Cougars
tourney
coming up
The Twenty-Third An-
nual Warm Springs Cougar’s
Youth Tournament—All In-
dian High School Boys and
Girls Tournament (plus 2
non-Native girls)—is coming
up in early April.
The entry fee is due by
March 24. Call Austin
Greene, tournament direc-
tor, for details: 541-553-
3243 (w) or 541-553-1953
(h). The mailing address is
PO Box 42, Warm Springs,
97761. The tourney is com-
ing up the weekend of April
7-9. Awards in both divi-
sions are:
Championship softshell
jackets, runner-up hoodies,
third-place crew neck sweat-
ers, fourth-place t-shirts, and
coaches t-shirts (eight per
division). Also: MVP, All-
Tourney, High Scorer, Top
Rebounder, and Beyond the
Arc Most 3s.
Klamath
tourney to mark
64th anniversary
The Sixty-Fourth Annual Kla-
math All Indian Invitational Basket-
ball Tournament is coming up
March 17-19.
This is the oldest Indian basket-
ball tournament in the nation. The
tourney will be in the Chiloquin big
gym. Doors open Friday, March 17.
For more information call Louie
Miller at 541-281-2901. Or call Ed
Case at 541-891-9382.
The Buffalo Skywalkers Rookie League will play
its last games of the season on Monday, March 6.
The Blazers play the Spurs at 4:30. Thunder vs. Lak-
ers is at 5:15, and the Warriors and Bulls play at 6.