Monday, January 6, 2003
Featured Story
Bush plans 'half-baked' accounting of trust
The Bush administration isn't planning to account for the land, mineral and other trust assets owned by more than 500,000 American Indians, according to the sworn testimony of a senior trust official....
Featured Story
Tribes moving to oppose Swimmer nomination
Tribal and Indian leaders voiced outrage last week upon learning that former assistant secretary Ross Swimmer has been nominated to oversee the trust fund accounts that he once tried to transfer to a private bank....
Giago: Complaints about gaming are true
"The two-part series in Time magazine investigating Indian gaming set off a lot of denial and angst in Indian country....
Yellow Bird: Looking past stereotypes
"[A]s many times as we are told how poor, disease-ridden and in need of rehabilitation we are, there are just as many that remind us there is a world beyond what outsiders see and read about in the newspapers....
Navajo Nation signs gaming compact
The Navajo Nation signed a gaming agreement with the state of Arizona on Friday....
Means pardoned by outgoing Janklow
American Indian Movement activist and actor Russell Means was pardoned last week by outgoing South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow (R)....
Omaha reservation boundary in dispute
A dispute over the boundaries of the Omaha Reservation in Nebraska is contributing to tensions among Indians and non-Indians....
N.M. Pueblos inaugurate new leaders
New leaders of several Pueblo tribes in New Mexico are being officially sworn in today....
Indians take top posts in N.M. government
Native Americans are a big part of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson's Cabinet....
Tribal members sue to stop loan payment
Members of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe of South Dakota are suing the Department of Interior to oppose a $31.8 million loan tribal leaders have taken out....
Catawba chairman target of ouster
Gilbert Blue, the recognized chief of the Catawba Nation of South Carolina, is being opposed by a group of tribal members who voted over the weekend to remove him from office....
Cherokee history told on the street
The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is wrapping up work on tribal history project....
Neb. tribes form gaming coalition
Nebraska's four federally recognized tribes have form the Coalition of Four Nations to push for expanded gaming....
Goshute leaders accused of retaliation
Leaders of the Skull Valley Goshute Tribe of Utah are accused of retaliating against tribal members who oppose plans to store up to 44,000 tons of nuclear waste on tribal land....
Editorial: McCaleb 'chewed up and spit out'
Whoever replaces Neal McCaleb as head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs will also be "chewed up and spit out" unless given the freedom to reform the troubled agency, The Sioux Falls Argus Leader says in an editorial....
Swimmer nominated to take over OST
President Bush on Friday announced his intention to nominate Ross Swimmer as Special Trustee for American Indians....
Editorial: Swimmer pick a sign of 'arrogance'
The appointment of Ross Swimmer to an Indian trust post is a sign of the Department of Interior's "uncaring arrogance," The Sioux Falls Argus Leader says in an editorial....
Cody set to report to federal prison
Radmilla Cody, a former Miss Navajo Nation, is reporting to a federal prison today to serve 21 months for her role in a drug smuggling ring....
GRAMMY nominations to be announced
The nominations for the 45th annual GRAMMY awards will be announced from New York City tomorrow....
Power to close tribal casinos is upheld
The nation's top Indian gaming regulator has the power to close tribal casinos that don't follow the law, a federal appeals court ruled last week....
Court affirms Native Hawaiian ruling
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last week upheld a ruling that allows non-Natives to oversee trust programs designed to benefit Native Hawaiians....
Tribes to continue task force efforts
Tribal leaders will meet in Washington, D.C., this week to continue efforts to reform the Indian trust despite a lack of commitment from the Bush administration....
Indian students get a helping hand
The Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation of Arizona and a local public school have created a club for young tribal members....
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