696 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [2TH. ANN. 24 
Collected by the writer in 1903. The following description was 
given: The game of tsi-koi ti-kwa-wai, or ring ti-kwa-wai, is played 
by women and Kayemashi at the Rain dance. They start in the 
Fig. 912. 
Fig. 913. 
Fig. 915. 
Fig. 912. Kicking billets used in clan races; length, 4} inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico; 
cat. no. 4994, Brooklyn Institute Museum 
Fig. 913. Kicking stone; length, 3! inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico; cat. no. 3056. Brook- 
lyn Institute Museum. 
Fig. 914. Tossing ring for race game; diameter, 3 inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico: cat. 
no, 3064, Brooklyn Institute Museum, 
Fic. 915. Tossing rod for race game; length, 274 inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico: cat. 
no. 3064, Brooklyn Institute Museum. 
middle plaza and run some three hundred or four hundred yards in 
asmall circuit down to the Middle of the Earth and back to the plaza. 
The clowns use a regular kicking stick, only one, and the women use 
