Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, August 15, 2018, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
August 15, 2018
Schools hosting
soccer clinic
Warm Springs youth ages 5-12
years are invited to a soccer clinic
on Saturday, August 25 from 4-
6:30 p.m. at the Community Cen-
ter soccer fields.
The clinic is hosted by Recreation,
with players from the Madras and
South Albany high schools.
Learn soccer skills from these
outstanding high school athletes. And
there will be a barbecue following
the clinic. Elsewhere in youth sports:
The Madras High School boys
and girls soccer teams have matches
at Redmond on Thursday, August
23. MHS junior varsity volleyball
has matches at 11:15 and 12:30 p.m.
on Thursday, August 23 at Culver
High School.
Wings at
Academy
The Wings Invitational Youth
Track Meet saw a great turnout
of young student-athletes at the
Warm Springs Academy.
The youth competed in age
divisions, boys and girls. Events
were the 50-meter, 100-meter,
400-meter, the long jump and
high jump, softball throw and t-
ball throw, plus the 400-meter
relay.
All participants received the
Wings Invitational t-shirt and
water bottles.
Fairs, rodeos
coming up
The Wasco County Fair and
Rodeo is coming up August 23-26
at Hunt Park in Tyghe Valley.
Paulina Rodeo
The Sixty-Ninth Annual Paulina
Amateur Rodeo is coming up on
Saturday and Sunday, September 1
and 2, starting at 12:30 p.m. each
day.
There will be $200 added for the
following events: bull riding, saddle
bronc riding, bareback riding, ranch
bronc riding, calf roping, breakaway
roping (women only), and women’s
barrel racing.
$40 entry fee; buckles awarded:
Men’s All Around Buckle, must be
entered in two of the following:
bareback, saddle bronc, bull riding,
Movie Night
Jayson Smith photos/Spilyay
Golf scramble for B&G Club
The Boys & Girls Club of
War m Springs 4-person g olf
scramble is coming up this week-
end at the Kah-Nee-Ta Resort and
Spa golf course.
This is a chance to win golf
packages and equipment. All pro-
ceeds help the Boys & Girls Club;
donations are tax deductible.
The scramble will be this Sat-
urday, August 18. Entry is $75 per
person; or $300 for a foursome.
This includes green fees, cart, gift
bag and lunch.
For information contact Janell
Smith at 541-325-1472. For in-
formation on the Warm Springs
Boys & Girls Club, contact June
Smith, club director, 541-553-
2323. Or email:
jsmith@bgcsc.org
River notes...
treatment sites in many other states.
At least some of these sites have
been contaminated with the most
dangerous type of dioxin. TCDD,
an impurity found in the Vietnam-
era defoliant Agent Orange, is about
2500 times more carcinogenic than
hexavalent chromium, the highly
toxic compound made infamous by
the movie Erin Brockovich, ac-
cording to the EPA.
Dioxin at The Dalles
The Columbia River Inter-
Tribal Fish Commission and its
four member tribes are calling on
the Oregon Department of Envi-
ronmental Quality to launch a
“comprehensive investigation” into
dioxin contamination at a Union
Pacific-owned Superfund site in
The Dalles.
CRITFC spokesman Chuck
Hudson says DEQ should renew
its dioxin investigation at the site,
even though three decades have
passed since the search ended.
“We strongly urge DEQ to con-
duct further investigation,” Mr.
Hudson said. “Given the broad
area, both on land and river bot-
tom, known to be impacted by the
decades of contamination a com-
prehensive investigation is
needed.”
The public has reason to be con-
cerned about the extent of dioxin
contamination at the site: Wide-
spread dioxin contamination has
been found at similar railroad tie
Drugs and fish
Potent drugs found in West
Coast sewage threaten chinook
salmon, a study reveals.
An expert in environmental con-
taminants who has linked flushes
of treated sewage into Washington
state estuaries to higher juvenile
chinook salmon death rates sus-
pects human drugs found in fish
put them at risk.
James Meador of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric admin-
istration said he believes pharma-
ceuticals found in the contaminated
water—such as amphetamines and
antidepressants—are in part to
blame.
Warm Springs Prevention
will host the Family Movie
Night this Thursday, August
16.
The movie starts at 9:13
p.m. on the lawn in front of
the Warm Springs Behavioral
Health Center.