Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon April 12, 2017 Page 7 N8V Thunder Cougar tourney champions N8V Thunder won the championship of the Twenty-Third Annual Warm Springs Cougars All Indian Boy’s High School Basketball Tournament. N8V Thunder, from Yakama, won a close final game—68-66—against Chiloquin. Who’s Next of Warm Springs took third, and the Burns All Stars were fourth. The Most Valuable Player award went to Nathan Buck of the N8V Thunder. The tournament, help April 8-9, was hosted by the Warm Springs Recreation Department. The Mr. Hustle award went to Dakota Ceja of Burns. Top rebounder was Jager Hogan of Chiloquin. High Scorer was Damean Frank of Who’s Next. And the Beyond the Arc award went to Isiah Holmes of Chiloquin. The All Tourney team: Jason Axtell of N8V Thunder. Shae Yeahquo of Chiloquin. Byron Patt of Who’s Next. Kanim Smith III of the Burns All Stars. Trevor Smith of N8V. Tr ue Gibbons of Chiloquin. Damean Frank of Who’s Next. Dakota Ceja of the Burns All Stars. Antonio Beltaran of the NAYA Warriors, Portland. And Kahne Herkshan of the Medicine Society, Warm Springs. Coaches awards went to Satch Miller of War m Springs Recreation; Gary Westley of the NAYA War- riors; Harry Hisatake, Medicine Society; Clayton Buck, N8V Thunder; Tristan Smith, Who’s Next; Andrew Beers, Burns; and Romaine Miller, Chiloquin. Canoe Family plans journey The N’chi Wanapum Canoe Family has meetings every other Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the Greeley Heights community center. The next meeting is this Wednesday, April 12; fol- lowed by April 26, May 10 and 24, and June 7 and 21. The family is planning the next canoe journey, making gifts and regalia, and jamming. The family invites all to attend. For more information contact Ervana Little Eagle or Colleen Johnson. Casino hosting Relay for Life golf Indian Head Casino is hosting the Relay for Life 4- person golf scramble tour- nament in May. Prizes in- clude a $1,000 Bandon Dunes golf experience, Nike gear, golf equipment, gift cards and more. The tournament is set for Saturday, May 20 at the Kah- Nee-Ta golf course. Entry fee is $60 for an individual, Fisheries disaster in Calif. Jayson Smith photos/Spilyay N8V Thunder (left) won the tourney championship. Diversity Coalition plans training The Let’s Talk Diversity Coalition announced the schedule for their next four- part series of cultural aware- ness training. In July part 1 will cover ‘Building Cultural Awareness.’ Part 2, in September, will be ‘Creating a Welcoming Envi- ronment.’ The third part of the train- ing will be in November, and will focus on ‘Experiencing Poverty and Its Effect on Health.’ Part 4 in December will be on ‘Going Deeper: Pov- erty and Its Effect on Health.’ The Let’s Talk Diversity Coalition is an Oregon Health Authority office of Equity and Inclusion-Re- gional Equity Coalition. To learn more, including how to register for the train- ing sessions visit: letstalkdiversity.net $240 for a team of four. This covers the green fees, cart, breakfast sandwich, lunch and a goodie bag. Special events: $20 for KPs, long putt and long drive, $10 for mulligans, $10 four- foot putting string (one per team). For information call Janell Smith at Indian Head Casino, 541-325-1472. California tribes and fish- ermen arew calling on Gov. Jerry Brown to declare a fisheries disaster because of the dismal forecast for this year’s salmon season. “There are a lot of tears, and a lot of questions about how am I going to feed my family,” said Yurok Tribe General Counsel Amy Cordalis “People are in dis- tress.” These statements came exactly a year after top state, federal and tribal officials gathered at the mouth of the Klamath River to sign a re- newed agreement to remove four dams from the river. The agreement seeks to improve water quality for fish and downstream com- munities such as the Yurok, Karuk and Hoopa Valley tribes. Tribes and other organi- zations see dam removal and changes to the federal government’s management of the river as being key so- lutions to the underlying causes of this year’s low salmon return. Last month, the Pacific Fishery Management Coun- cil—which recommends fishery management mea- sures to federal regulators— forecast the lowest return of spawning Chinook salmon to the Klamath River on record at about 12,000 fish. The council began meet- ing last week to finalize its recommendations, all of which include a full closure of commercial and sport fishing in Klamath Manage- ment Zone, which runs from the Oregon-California border to Humboldt Bay’s south jetty. Salmon fisherman fur- ther south also expect ma- jor reductions in their har- vest. Tribal fishery scientists such as Michael Belchik of the Yurok Tribe said the low return of spawners is the result of several severe years of drought conditions and river management prac- tices, which caused the wa- ters to warm and become hot beds for toxic algae and deadly parasites.