Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, November 18, 2020, Page 8, Image 8

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    Page 8
Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
‘Large enough to
serve you... Small
enough to care’
866-299-0644
November 18, 2020
Youth football camp at Academy
Youth football camp is
coming up at the Warm
Springs football field on
December 8-10. The
camp is for youth ages
kindergarten through
eighth grades, male or
female.
The camp will be
hosted by the Madras
High School football
coaches and the high
school players. The camp
will include fundamental
skills, and basic knowl-
edge of the game, as well as
fun games. The goal is to
build a passion and love for
the game throughout our
great community.
The cost is $25 per kid,
$40 for two in the same fam-
ily; third kid is free. All covid
guidelines will be followed
including wearing a mask
and social distancing. All par-
ticipants will be screened
daily. Parents are not al-
lowed to stay at the venue
during the camp times. The
camp will be streamed
online via the MHS foot-
ball Facebook page.
The Warm Springs
camp time will be from
3:30 to 5 p.m.
The camp will also be
at the Madras High
School football field
November 10-12, and
17-19.
For information con-
tact Coach Taylor at
503-312-9680. Or email:
ktaylor@509j.net
Future of Dakota Access pipeline uncertain
2019
GMC
Sierra -
20,197
miles -
2018
Volkswagen
Golf -
11,669
miles -
$43,995
$30,995
#47496A
#23735A
2018
Jeep
Grand
Cherokee
- 58,815
miles -
2017
Ford
Escape
- 47,069
miles -
$32,995
#88300A
The result of the recent
U.S. Presidential election
could create more head-
aches for the Dakota Access
Pipeline’s owners.
The owners are already
battling legal challenges, try-
ing to keep the main conduit
running, and flowing oil out
of North Dakota.
Former President Barack
Obama blocked a permit
that would have allowed con-
struction under South
Dakota’s Lake Oahe, a criti-
cal water source for the
Standing Rock Sioux tribe.
The line was finished in
2017 after President Trump,
upon taking office, approved
a final permit allowing con-
struction under the lake to be
completed.
In July, a U.S. district court
judge threw out that permit,
and ordered the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to con-
duct a new environmental
review that is expected to
take months.
Next year President-Elect
Biden could bring in new
Army Corps leadership.
That could increase the
chances that the line would
be shut. For now, the Corps
has allowed DAPL to oper-
ate on federal land without
a permit.
$16,995
#55692A
Forgotten story of only Native U.S. vice president
2016
Buick
Cascada
- 11,828
miles -
2016
Jeep
Wrangler
- 13,534
miles -
$22,995
$40,995
#87219A
#28477A
2016
Nissan
Frontier
- 47,906
miles -
2015
Chevy
Silverado
- 152,704
miles -
$17,995
$23,995
#73188W
#C0132A
2014
Chrysler
T&C -
151,754
miles -
2014
Nissan
Altima -
42,411
miles -
$9,995
$13,995
#40318A
#24986A
2013
Nissan
Altima -
121,385
miles -
2012
Nissan
Altima -
105,956
miles -
$10,995
$8,995
#P2049
#27591A
Charles Curtis, a mem-
ber of the Kaw Nation who
grew up in Kansas, became
Herber t Hoover’s vice
president in the 1928 presi-
dential election—the first
and only Native American
to hold the nation’s second-
highest office.
His tenure was marked
with controversy that grew
over the years because of
his support for legislation to
force Native people to as-
similate into mainstream
American society and leave
traditional ways behind—
views he would later credit
to his maternal grand-
mother.
“The feeling in those
days was, if you were going
to be successful, you had to
be an assimilationist,” said
Dakota Sioux historian
Jeanne Eder Rhodes. “Push-
ing for Indians to join white
society took the battles
from the prairie and plains
to the courts.”
During his years in the U.S.
House, Curtis, a Republican,
served on the Committee on
Indian Affairs, where he
drafted the “Curtis Act” in
1898. This act overturned
treaty rights, allotted tribal
land to individuals without
obtaining permission from
the tribes, abolished tribal
courts and gave the Secre-
tary of the Interior the
power to lease out mineral
rights on tribal lands.