FROM THE ARCHIVE
Town receptive to Nipmuc casino
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2001 Although no specific proposal has been made, the leader of the Connecticut town of Plainfield said he'd consider hosting a casino if the Nipmuc Nation made an offer. In a radio interview, First Selectman Paul Sweet said the town should keep an open mind about a casino. He will be stepping down from his position later this year. The tribe, based in Massachusetts, has reportedly considered the town for the site of a potential casino. The tribe's federal recognition status is on hold pending review by Assistant Secretary Neal McCaleb. On Monday, he declined to acknowledge the Muwekma Tribe of California. Get the Story:
Sweet: Casino may go in Plainfield (The Norwich Bulletin 8/1) Related Stories:
Muwekma Tribe denied recognition (7/31)
McCaleb decision sure to draw scrutiny (7/31)
Meeting to address Indian issues (7/27)
BIA pushed to provide 'answers' on recognition (7/26)
Nipmuc recognition focus of meeting (7/26)
Long journey for Nipmuc Nation (7/23)
Nipmuc Nation makes gaming agreement (7/10)
Report: Nipmuc Nation to announce casino (7/9)
Towns plan to challenge Nipmuc recognition (7/6)
States open to possible Nipmuc casino (6/25)
McCaleb endorses BIA on recognition (6/14)
Battle brewing over Nipmuc casino (6/8)
Tribe said eyeing private property (6/7)
Opposition to alleged casino mounts (6/7)
Alleged casino plan criticized (6/6)
Ex-Nipmuc leader criticizes actions (6/5)
Alleged tribal leader says casino in works (6/4)
BIA has small goal for big problem (5/22)
Nipmuc Nation still waiting (4/17)
Last-minute BIA decisions scrutinized (3/26)
Nipmuc Nation granted recognition (1/22)
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You are enjoying stories from the Indianz.Com Archive, a collection dating back to 2000. Some outgoing links may no longer work due to age.
All stories are available for publishing via Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)