Weather

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Waiting on a Win

Shot2_5



Story by Mary Hudetz|Slideshow by Mary Hudetz, Elena Russell and Leona Hugs
CrowNews.Net


When the Little Bighorn College Rams step onto their home court Thursday for a game against Dawson Community College of Glendive, they will have claimed four victories so far this season. They'll also have more than two months of their roughly four-month-long schedule behind them.



Claiming that fifth win -- no matter how the team's wins and losses compare come late February --  would prove significant for LBHC, which got its basketball program started just last year under the direction of head coach Gordon Real Bird.



The fifth win, should it happen, would tip the team's victory tally
to a new school record. Last year's mens team won four games. This
year's team has six scheduled conference games left between now and when their National Junior College Athletic Association season ends Feb. 26.


The Rams will enter their game against Glendive coming off a pair of losses
at home against Salish Kootenai College and Bismarck State, a team that
edged the Rams by just three points to win 133-130 in double overtime.


The list of remaining NJCAA opponents includes some tough teams and
bigger schools like Sheridan College, which beat the Rams in November.
But team members, like second-year player Isaiah Stewart are holding
out hope.


"It was a fun experience last year, even though we only had four
wins," Stewart said. "It was a new program and the elders were telling
me, 'It's OK you guys are just learning.' Hopefully this year we'll get
more wins then we got last year.


Click here or on the image above to hear Stewart talk about
his path to joining the Rams, and his hopes for the team.


Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Meal, Music and Meeting: Hymns Project Plans Potluck

CrowNews.Net


The Crow Hymns Project will hold a meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 22, at the Crow Agency Elementary School. The evening will include song, a potluck and planning for the project's upcoming elders dinner, which is set to happen in March. All are welcome. The project also holds regular meetings on the second Tuesday of each month.



Friday, January 11, 2008

College Students and Staff Await Bigger, Better Library


Larry Kindness, construction liaison and building inspector for Little Big Horn College, discusses building plans for the school's new library.



Story by Brett Thomas-DeJongh|Photos by Tyler Wilson
CrowNews.Net



Children sit around the fireplace, listening to a storyteller weave a tale. A college student—ready to start work on a term paper—searches rows of book shelves. On the periphery, a couple of teens update Myspace pages. Little Big Horn College administrators take care of business on the second floor, and below them the college archives hold the history of the Apsaalooke, the region and more.   



This is the vision librarian Tim Bernardis has for the $7 million library center that is being built a stone’s throw from the school’s administration building.





“Hopefully, everyone will find something here,” he said.


At 25,000-square-feet, the new building is double the size of the
current library, granting Bernardis room to expand the book collection
and add computers. Plans for more comfortable furniture and office
upgrades for the staff are in the works too, he said.


Little Big Horn College's students also are looking forward to the new
digs. Lakisha Flores, a LBHC freshman, said she anticipates
seeing more fiction on the shelves. 


“I know we're college students and we need to do research," Flores
said, "but the library we have now doesn't have books you can read on
your own time." 


C0ea_2Leslie Smith, president of LBHC's student government, said the
increased number of computer workstations will solve a shortage she's
noticed at the current library.


The building will be completed in March, said Shane Ridley of Fisher
Construction, a Billings-based company that began construction in late
2006. Though the foundation was finished that December, the ground
froze and they couldn't backhoe, he said. 


Larry Kindness, LBHC's construction liaison and building inspector,
acknowledged the weather delays but said that some setbacks are to be
expected in a large project — and the weather wasn't the only roadblock for the new library.


Had the
college not received $3 million from a special tribal budget bill,
Kindness said construction might have been halted indefinitely. 


“We wouldn't have been able to finish or furnish the building,”
Kindness said. “We would've had to get creative, and we're creative
already.” 


With Bernardis, Kindness has spent weeks brainstorming ways to make the college’s building a community center, too.40b3


Bernardis envisions creating photo exhibits of Crow families by researching the tribal archives to trace family trees. “We would start with an old photo,” he said.


Digitizing the tribal archive is a priority, he said, because
putting the archive's content online provides a way to both preserve
and share content with other museums.


He is working to gain access to the digital archives at the Buffalo
Bill Historical Center’s Plains Indian Museum in Cody, Wyo., where the
one-of-a-kind Paul Dyck collection will be housed. 


The Cody museum acquired The Paul Dyck Collection of Plains Indian
artifacts and art work in September, a fact not lost on Bernardis.   


“Initially, [the Paul Dyck Foundation] wanted to give the collection
to the Crow tribe,” he said. “Somehow it slipped through our fingers.”


The collection will not go up for several more years, as the museum
catalogs and restores the items, according to the Historical Center's
Web site.


If the library eventually gains digital access to the collection's
bear claw necklaces, war shirts and other beaded items, then Bernardis
and other staff members could display them on flat screen televisions
mounted to a wall in the new building, Kindness said. 


“I don't think any other college in the country will have that,” Bernardis said.


Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Friday, January 4, 2008

Native Nativity

L_636ed9b7692ac5735662416e7989cd6b

CrowNews.Net


A manger scene staged at Crow Agency's Apsaalooke Center during the tribe's annual senior citizens dinner featured a baby Jesus, played by four-month-old Lucia Real Bird. Lucia was wrapped in a cradle board made by her grandmother Birdie Real Bird. The wise men and Joseph donned head dresses and buckskin suits for the occasion. Mother Mary wore an elk tooth dress and the shepherds were cloaked in wool, Hudson Bay coats. Heywood Big Day III, pictured fourth from the left and playing Joseph, contributed this photo.



We at CrowNews.Net hope your holidays were as bright as the stars we saw in the Big Sky on Christmas night.