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Portland, Oregon
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More than 300 art lovers and appetites are expected from 5 to 10
p.m. Saturday, May 15, at Portland's Governor Hotel, 611 S.W. 10th
Ave, for the fourth annual Wy-Kan-Ush-Pum Gala, a fundraiser for
the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission's Spirit of the
Salmon Fund.
The event, co-chaired by Oregon former First Lady Sharon Kitzhaber
and Norm Thompson chairman, CEO and president John Emrick, features
a wild-salmon feast along with silent and live auctions of more
than 60 original works from top Northwest Indian artists.
"Wy-Kan-Ush-Pum," from the Sahaptin language common to
many Columbia Basin Indian tribes, means "salmon people."
Tribal culture has long revered salmon's importance for food, religion
and livelihood. Though dams and other challenges have decimated
once-robust runs, Indian fishers and scientists are working to restore
the salmon's place in the Columbia River Basin. Gala proceeds benefit
the Commission's salmon-restoration projects.
Visit www.critfc.org to preview the gala's art-auction items online.
Tickets, $50 per person or $500 per 10-person table, are available
at (503) 238-3555.
CRITFC will cap the evening with its 2004 Spirit of the Salmon Awards,
honoring the following 11 recipients for tireless work in salmon
restoration:
- Antone Minthorn, board of trustees chairman
of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation:
Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing lifelong commitment and
significant contributions to promoting partnerships, fostering
understanding and providing bold leadership in efforts to restore
and protect Columbia River salmon.
- Dr. Gleyn Bledsoe, professor of biological
systems engineering, Washington State University: Education Award,
honoring significant contributions to widespread public education
on salmon and the role it plays in the lives of all Pacific Northwest
creatures.
- Leo Bowman, Benton County (Wash.) Commissioner:
Public Partnership Award, recognizing a local government that
has taken a significant community leadership role in supporting
salmon restoration.
- Idaho Rivers United, a Boise-based conservation
organization nearing its 15th year: Private Partnership Award,
celebrating a business that has developed rich partnerships in
pursuit of salmon restoration.
- Ecotrust, an organization dedicated to promoting
conservation-based development: Conservation Advocacy Award, honoring
an advocacy organization that has best focused its resources in
behalf of salmon.
- Karan M. Matta, volunteer extraordinaire and
an administrative services employee at Gas Transmission Northwest:
Volunteer Award, honoring a person who embodies the volunteer
spirit so necessary to restore salmon.
- Billy Frank Jr., chairman of the Northwest
Indian Fisheries Commission: Leadership Award, recognizing an
individual who, like the salmon, relies on instincts to make progress
in recovering the species, while brushing past obstacles that
would bar the way of one less bold.
- Charles "Pete" Hayes, Nez Perce Tribe;
Levi George, Confederated Tribes and Bands of
the Yakama Nation; Eugene Greene Sr., Confederated
Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon; Sam
Kash Kash, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian
Reservation: Hall of Fame Award, honoring past or present commissioners
of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission who have demonstrated
overwhelming commitment to putting fish back in the rivers and
protecting the watersheds where fish live.
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About CRITFC
The Portland-based Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission is
the technical support and coordinating agency for fishery management
policies of the Columbia River Basin's four treaty tribes: the Confederated
Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the Confederated Tribes
of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon, the Confederated Tribes
and Bands of the Yakama Nation and the Nez Perce Tribe.
CRITFC, formed in 1977, employs biologists, other scientists, public
information specialists, policy analysts and administrators who work
in fisheries research and analyses, advocacy, planning and coordination,
harvest control and law enforcement. |