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 9/2/2010 6:09:31 PM CDT P.O. Box 948 Tahlequah, OK 74465 (918) 453-5000 / Contact Us 
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Cherokee Nation’s newest Miss Cherokee, 19-year-old Brooke Hudson of Claremore, gives her cultural presentation during the Miss Cherokee Leadership Competition. For her presentation Hudson demonstrated how to make traditional Cherokee puckered-toe moccasins.
Claremore Woman Named Miss Cherokee
September 02, 2010
The Cherokee Nation has named Brooke Hudson of Claremore as Miss Cherokee 2010-11. Hudson received the title during the recent Miss Cherokee Leadership Competition held in Tahlequah. She will officially be crowned Saturday, Sept. 4, during the tribe’s State of the Nation ceremony happening on the courthouse square as part of the 58th Cherokee National Holiday.
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Raven Gann serves the ball at the Sequoyah Schools’ volleyball tournament.
Sequoyah Volleyball Team to Play in Orlando, Florida
August 31, 2010
The Sequoyah Schools’ varsity and junior varsity volleyball teams are packing their bags this week to play in the KSA Classic volleyball tournament in Orlando, Fla. “I’m excited to see the level of competition that other states are going to bring,” said Skye Norwood, senior volleyball player and team captain. “I expect it to be a higher level that what we usually see.”
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Sequoyah Schools Makes Adequate Yearly Progress Once Again
August 27, 2010
Cherokee Nation’s Sequoyah Schools recently received notification that they have once again made “adequate yearly progress” according to the benchmarks measured by the No Child Left Behind Act. All public schools and some private schools are evaluated annually to determine recognition. This is the fourth year in a row that Sequoyah has achieved this honor.
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Word List
English
Thorn
Cherokee
Tsutsayosdi
Phonetic
Tsu tsa yo s di
Cultural Tidbits

dgcYsd
(Cherokee Marbles)

Cherokee Marbles is a game of skill, still played in the form of tournaments. Also a skill is the art of making the marbles themselves.

The marble game dates back to approximately 800 a.d., and is a complex game of skill and strategy played by adults on a five-hole outdoor course.

Until the early part of the 20th century, players used marbles chipped from stone, smoothed into round marbles about the size of billiard balls. Today, there are still some traditional marble makers, but most tournaments utilize billiard balls for play.

The game is played on a field approximately 100 feet long, where there are five holes about two inches in diameter, 10 to 12 yards apart, forming an L-shape. Any number of players may play, but each team must have an equal number.

Each player uses one marble and must keep track of its location as well as the opposing players marbles. The players toss the marbles at the holes with the object of advancing by landing in each hole in sequence and returning to the starting point. Players must toss their marbles and knock the opposing players’ out of the way in a prescribed manner. The first team to complete the course is the winner.


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