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.