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April 08, 2005
Seneca-Cayuga Tribe to pay taxes on acquired land (04/08)
Tragedy at Red Lake: New search delays school reopening (04/08)
GAO calls for better state data in ICWA cases (04/08)
Crow woman's mission is to dispel stereotypes (04/08)
BIA establishes partnership to tackle teen suicide (04/08)
A new Boys & Girls Club opens on the Navajo Nation (04/08)
Family protests exclusion from Mashantucket Tribe (04/08)
Harjo: Characteristics of the non-Indian Indians (04/08)
Hydro company accused of paying off First Nation (04/08)
Public meeting set on changes at Devils Tower (04/08)
Non-recognized tribes battle for state housing funds (04/08)
Army Corps pledges to help tribe facing water crisis (04/08)
Editorial: Money needed to help tribe with water crisis (04/08)
Arizona tribe busy with expansion of economy (04/08)
Opinion: Native leader has stellar record (04/08)
Native leader's hate crimes trial comes to an end (04/08)
Corruption probe in shooting of Seminole lawyer (04/08)
Native students awarded Udall scholarships (04/08)
Sport fishermen upset over Makah Nation catch (04/08)
Scientists oppose McCain bill to change NAGPRA (04/08)
Isolated tribe in Paraguay loses bid for reservation (04/08)
Salon: Abramoff sold DeLay to desperate tribes (04/08)
Assessment: The Abramoff/DeLay scandal (04/08)
Opinion: When ripping off Indians is acceptable (04/08)

April 07, 2005
Tragedy at Red Lake: School to reopen next week (04/07)
Professor says California ignoring Indian children (04/07)
Drunk Student: Chief Illiniwek is not offensive to Natives (04/07)
Supreme Court to weigh appeal of trust lawsuit (04/07)
Oklahoma tribe files claim to island in Ohio (04/07)
Bill to clean up mines near reservation advances (04/07)
Judge won't let Peltier see government papers (04/07)
Editorial: Economic development a solution (04/07)
Supreme Court called less sympathetic to Indians (04/07)
Court to hear dispute over Yakama Nation utility fee (04/07)
Campbell to give update on Indian energy legislation (04/07)
Program aims to keep Native students in school (04/07)
Torres Martinez Band launches $1.5M wetlands project (04/07)
Ousted Soboba Band council member regains seat (04/07)
Man who was banished as teen in trouble with law again (04/07)
Native woman who had heart surgery at age 2 dies (04/07)
Native man a suspect in slaughter of bald eagles (04/07)
Lake dispute draws Natives on both sides of border (04/07)
Editorial: Denounce Ahenakew but don't charge him (04/07)
Native leader offers diabetes defense for hate crime (04/07)
Utah appeals ruling on Goshute nuclear waste dump (04/07)
GOP rallies to DeLay's defense amid new reports (04/07)
Commentary: Tribal flags at the Montana Capitol (04/07)

April 06, 2005
IRS cites problems with use of tribal gaming revenues (04/06)
BIA backs bill to delay off-reservation casino (04/06)
Blackfeet criticize BIA, feds on law enforcement (04/06)
BIA cop reconsiders plea for domestic violence (04/06)
Buyers line up for failed Si Tanka University campus (04/06)
Editorial: Cuts in BIA budget 'unacceptable' (04/06)
First Nation in Saskatchewan elects first woman chief (04/06)
Native leader's hate crimes trial a raucous affair (04/06)
Fallout from Supreme Court ruling on Oneida Nation (04/06)
Oneida Nation cracks top 10 list of state lobbyists (04/06)
Navajo students tested in annual Knowledge Bowl (04/06)
Pueblo woman calls passing of pope 'a big shock' (04/06)
World Bank president visits Pine Ridge Reservation (04/06)
Sag Chip members target anti-Abramoff leaders (04/06)
Nevada tribe plans Wal-Mart, other development (04/06)
Judge rejects tribe's call for halt on new drilling (04/06)
Shinnecock Nation lays claim to bones of 60-foot whale (04/06)
Sho-Bans raise 56 objections to Nez Perce water deal (04/06)
Tribe fights habitat for endangered species (04/06)
Bill to share taxes with Tulalip Tribes dies again (04/06)
Ethics panel tells Coburn to give up medical practice (04/06)
Abramoff helped secure funding for 3rd DeLay trip (04/06)

April 05, 2005
Viejas teacher, student killed in separate car crashes (04/05)
Teacher: Native youth in losing battle against many ills (04/05)
Tragedy at Red Lake: Another arrest reported (04/05)
NIGC delays rules for Class II casino machines (04/05)
Montana Indian Education Association conference (04/05)
Churchill's lawyer blasts probe into Indian heritage (04/05)
OU students kick off American Indian Heritage Month (04/05)
California tribe's water bottling plant sees opposition (04/05)
Day proposed in honor of Ponca Chief Standing Bear (04/05)
Tribe to consider fate of failed Si Tanka University (04/05)
Tim Giago: It's time for wealthy tribes to think Indian (04/05)
Students at tribal college develop powwow play (04/05)
Maine public schools must teach about tribes (04/05)
Nevada tribe celebrates plentiful runs of fish (04/05)
Editorial: Troubled tribal college gets another chance (04/05)
Musqueam Band signs treaty framework after 12 years (04/05)
Snoqualmie Tribe wins ruling on sacred waterfalls (04/05)
Bill now includes landless, unrecognized tribes (04/05)
Native leader on trial for anti-Semitic remarks (04/05)
New York Times: Indian children being left behind (04/05)

April 04, 2005
Tragedy at Red Lake: Investigation of shootings widens (04/04)
Pope John Paul recalled for support of Native rights (04/04)
Tuberculosis outbreak reported in Alaska region (04/04)
Native teen faces long wait for bone marrow donor (04/04)
Tulalip Tribes tax sharing bill faces crucial vote (04/04)
Giuliani criticizes Churchill for 9-11 essay (04/04)
Young Navajo rapper breaks into hip-hop world (04/04)
Column: McCain should delay change to NAGPRA (04/04)
Indian smokeshops being forced to go offline (04/04)
Oregon tribe pays tribute to late chief James Lott (04/04)
Indian teen felt special bond with Pope John Paul II (04/04)
California tribe wants land for water bottling plant (04/04)
SIPI spent $100K on golf facilities despite deficit (04/04)
Mark Trahant: Latest numbers on economy scare me (04/04)
Professor: Not the first tragedy in Indian education (04/04)
Opinion: A year from now, let us say we did something (04/04)
Column: Red Lake a place of triumph not just tragedy (04/04)
Appeals court to hear dispute over 'Redskins' names (04/04)
Yellow Bird: Messages of life during time of sorrow (04/04)
Burns says Michigan delegation backed school funds (04/04)
Opinion: Some serious advice to the media 'jackals' (04/04)
Sho-Bans to fight Nez Perce settlement in court (04/04)
More headlines...
Tim Giago: Why did the Native Americans convert to foreign religions?

The invading Christians labeled the indigenous people as heathens. They set out with a vengeance to cleanse the land of these heathens.


Chuck Hoskin: Calling on all Cherokees to be counted in 2020 Census

It’s hard to believe 10 years have already passed, but this month, U.S. Census postcards will show up in mailboxes across Cherokee Nation and the United States.


Native Sun News Today: New basketball tournament draws top talent

The first annual Native American Elite Middle and High School Basketball Nationals is taking place in Las Vegas, Nevada.


Oglala Sioux Tribe votes on legalizing marijuana and alcohol

Citizens of the Oglala Sioux Tribe are weighing two big issues this week.


City in North Dakota shuts down sweat lodge used by urban Indian community

The largest city in North Dakota has shut down a community-run sweat lodge due to concerns about health and safety.


Sault Ste. Marie Tribe wins major victory in homelands litigation

The Trump administration's disjointed tribal homelands policy continues to crumble amid scrutiny in the courts and in Indian Country.


'Come celebrate with us': Taos Pueblo commemorates return of sacred land

On September 19, Taos Pueblo will commemorate the fifty-year anniversary of the return of sacred Blue Lake to the tribe.


Indian Country Today: Some say go while others say no after COVID-19 disruption

Tribes, organizations and enterprises in Indian Country are trying to conduct business and mitigate fears about the coronavirus.


NIGA keeps close watch on coronavirus ahead of annual convention

The National Indian Gaming Association is getting ready for another successful tradeshow.


Ericca Hovie: When dating turns violent

It was sophomore year of high school when I first noticed him and I knew he was different.


Gabe Galanda: Facebook's violence against Indigenous women problem

Our laws and legal processes, as they relate to Facebook and its Big Tech brethren, are inadequate and unethical.


Native Sun News Today: Eric True Blood, Oglala Warrior

Eric True Blood, Oglala Lakota from Sheridan, Wyoming, does not consider himself a hero.


Cronkite News: Ski resort on sacred land moves forward with major expansion

The U.S. Forest Service approved a $60 million expansion of a privately-owned ski resort in the sacred San Francisco Peaks.


Elizabeth Cook-Lynn: There is no room for Indians here

Are your reading habits diverse and open to all ideas? Or do you, like many of us, just read from the sources that agree with us?


Indian Health Service nominee in limbo amid another high-profile crisis

The Indian Health Service remains without a permanent leader as the coronavirus emerges as the latest crisis for the agency.


Umatilla Tribes reopen casino after addressing coronavirus

The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation reopened their gaming facility after addressing fears connected to the coronavirus in Oregon.


Native Sun News Today: Alcohol sales at Oglala Sioux casinos up for vote

Voters of the Oglala Sioux Tribe are being asked to approve the sale of alcohol at gaming establishments on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.


Charmaine White Face: What stereotyping does

If you take out the words "tribal" and "Indian" all you have left are patients fighting a federal agency for health care.


Clara Caufield: Leroy Whiteman makes his journey to the Next Camp

Traditionally, uncles played the role of disciplinarians, teachers and advisors in Northern Cheyenne society, a role Leroy Whiteman took very seriously.


Cronkite News: Navajo Nation transitions to a new energy reality

"Right now, throughout the world, we’re not taking care of our lands," Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez said.


Tribes head to Capitol Hill for 'historic' hearing on taxation issues

A hearing on tax issues in Indian Country features all four tribal citizens who serve in Congress for the first time in history.


Lawmakers look at Trump's Indian Country budget request

President Trump is proposing cuts to the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Bureau of Indian Education.


Indian Country Today: A 'human rights catastrophe' at Cayuga Nation

A Cayuga leader's decision to tear down 12 properties with the assistance of newly-sworn in tribal police officers has sparked a series of protests and altercation in New York.


Homeland Secrets: Shootings by Homeland Security agents get little scrutiny

Federal law enforcement shootings have escaped heightened scrutiny even though most of the victims have been black, Hispanic or Native American,


Tim Giago: Charles Trimble's passing leaves a big hole in the world of Native journalism

When Charles Trimble first showed up at the boarding school on the Pine Ridge Reservation, he was dropped off by his mother.


Senate Committee on Indian Affairs takes up Indian energy and tribal wildlife bills

Tribal energy development and tribal wildlife management are on the agenda for the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs.


Indian Country Today: Warnings for tribes as coronavirus spreads

"Tribes are not prepared for the coronavirus," one health expert told ICT.


Running Strong for American Indian Youth announces 'Dreamstarters'

Olympic gold medalist Billy Mills announced the sixth class of Indian youth to receive $10,000 grants for projects that help them bring their dreams to life.


Doug George-Kanentiio: Why Canada's reconciliation plans have failed

Go to the hell you tried to create for us on this earth.


Albert Bender: Boom for whom? The 'zombie idea' of a booming Trump economy

This economy is terrible, for millions, as usual. The U.S. public must not be hoodwinked by fraudulent numbers.


Native Sun News Today: Women water protectors blast man camps

The subjects of the 'Warrior Women' film are speaking out against the dangers of the Keystone XL Pipeline.


Ivan Star Comes Out: A glimpse of life on the Pine Ridge Reservation

What do our non-Lakota neighbors know about life here on the Pine Ridge?


Cronkite News: Tohono O'odham Nation leader decries border wall construcation

Two Arizonans -- one of them a tribal leader -- brought two very different ideas about the border wall to a hearing in the nation's capital.


The Conversation: How Wet'suwet'en butterflies offer lessons in resilience and resistance

The world is beginning to better understand that the core of extractive industries are tied to deep political and economic conflicts related to the settler-colonial present and a shared colonial history.


Montana Free Press: The push is on for recreational marijuana

According to an analysis by multistate marijuana provider Verilife, the place with the largest number of dispensaries in the country per 50,000 residents is in Montana.


Tribes at odds with governor over expansion of gaming in Connecticut

The Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation and the Mohegan Tribe want to expand gaming in Connecticut but the governor is backing rival legislation that could undermine their rights.


Democratic presidential race sees shakeup amid questions about one candidate's 'Native' ancestry

The Democratic presidential race got a major jolt over the weekend as one candidate continues to face questions about Indian ancestry claims.


House Committee on Ways and Means schedules first ever hearing on tribal taxation

The Democratic-led House Committee on Ways and Means will be taking up tribal taxation issues for the first time at a hearing in the nation's capital.


Tim Giago: Learning a trade at the boarding school

Everybody who came to the Holy Rosary Mission Boarding School on the Pine Ridge Reservation worked.


Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Youth Summit builds leadership

At Cherokee Nation, we focus on empowering the next generation of leaders at every level.


Rep. Tom Cole: Socialism is not the American way

The Democratic Party’s tightening embrace of socialist proposals and politicians is real cause for alarm, especially in a country whose very foundation is liberty.


Rep. Markwayne Mullin: Career and technical education helps build the American dream

We all have our own idea of what our American Dream looks like and having a job helps us accomplish that goal.


Native Sun News Today: Native warrior damaged in body but not in spirit

Eric True Blood, Oglala Lakota from Sheridan, Wyoming, does not consider himself a hero.


Elizabeth Cook-Lynn: The Lakota Food Summit gives hope to our people

The Lakota Food Summit drew hundreds of us to talk about how to eat, how to cook, how to pay attention to the environment and how to engage in plantings and harvesting of foods that sustained our ancestors for centuries.


Cronkite News: Sacred sites desecrated to make way for Trump's border wall

An emotional Tohono O'odham Nation chairman said blasting sacred sites to build a border wall has "forever damaged our people."


YES! Magazine: Project promotes sustainability on Pine Ridge Reservation

Building sustainable communities is the antidote to fear of a changing climate.


Umatilla Tribes shut down casino and takes precautions as coronavirus hits Indian Country

A casino employee tested 'presumptive positive' for the coronavirus, prompting the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation into action.


Oklahoma governor won't let Indian ancestry doubts derail gaming dispute

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt (R) is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation but the tribe once tried to remove his ancestors from their rolls.


Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe loses appeal in homelands case

The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe isn't giving up despite a negative ruling from a federal appeals court.


'He was punished for sexual harassment': #MeToo allegations at NCAI resurface in court

The National Congress of American Indians drove another nail into the coffin of its senior-most attorney following his ouster from the organization.


Native Sun News Today: Trump seeks major changes in environmental reviews

Indigenous leaders were among the many who raised their voices at one of only two hearings on a Trump administration proposal to roll back environmental policy.


Trail in honor of Ponca Chief Standing Bear takes big step forward

Efforts to memorialize the 550-mile path that the Ponca people were forced to walk in the late 1800s are getting a major boost.


Witness list for hearing on Trump administration destroying sacred sites for border wall

The House Subcommittee for Indigenous Peoples of the United States will be discussing the Trump administration's destruction of sacred sites at a hearing in Washington, D.C.


Supreme Court schedules hearing in lone Indian Country case

Indian Country remains united as the nation's highest court prepares to hear the only tribal law case on the docket.


Tribal Citizens: Progress for Democrats and Indian Country

Legendary Native activist Frank LaMere had a journal with three words on the cover: 'Make things happen.'


Native Sun News Today: Lakota Tech enrolls first class of students

A new high school is opening on the Pine Ridge Reservation in the fall of 2020.


Elizabeth Cook-Lynn: Sending a clearer message about hate crime

Motives are often deliberately obscured by the non-Indian community that cannot bear to look at its own history concerning Indian-White hostility.


Cronkite News: Copper mine opposed by tribes suffers another setback in court

A federal judge has overturned environmental permits for the Rosemont Copper Mine, a controversial project opposed by tribes in Arizona.


'We’ve got to pay attention': Omaha Tribe declares emergency amid health and safety crisis

The Omaha Tribe of declared a state of emergency following weeks of tragedy in the community.


Tim Giago: Learning life's lessons on a sugar beet farm

We saw other Lakota families working in the beet fields in the summer of 1949.


Doug George-Kanentiio: The myth of band councils as First Nations

Let us begin by acknowledging the fact that band councils are not First Nations while beginning the process of restoring our peoples to true national status.


Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation heirloom seeds bound for global seed vault

The Cherokee Nation is the first tribe in the U.S. to receive an invitation to deposit its traditional seeds in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway.


Brian Lightfoot Brown: Carcieri 'fix' still in limbo more than a decade later

Ever since Europeans began venturing to and settling in the New World, the ultimate removal of the Indigenous peoples was to be the plan.


Native Sun News Today: Oglala Sioux Tribe reaffirms stance against pipeline donations

The Oglala Sioux Tribe doesn't accept donations from oil companies but that didn't stop one district from cashing a $50,000 Keystone XL Pipeline check.


Ivan Star Comes Out: Forced assimilation has successfully weakened Lakota people

Ten years attending an on-reservation parochial residential school shaped the rest of my life.


Rosalyn LaPier: How a Native American coming-of-age ritual is making a comeback

The Ojibwe people are revitalizing the 'berry fast,' a coming-of-age ritual for girls.


Cronkite News: Gearing up for the 2020 census

"We have met one-on-one with all of the tribal nations in the state of Arizona," an official from the U.S. Census Bureau said.


The Revelator: Trump administration rolls back water quality standards

States with fewer local protections and resources will suffer the most — as will their people and wildlife.


Native Sun News Today: Making Montana Proud poster project

An Indian Education for All project in Montana features successful and inspirational Native role models.


Native Sun News Today Editorial: A moron unleashed

Native Americans have always been pushed aside and now the rest of America can get a taste of how that feels.


Cronkite News: Trump continues rush to build border wall

The Trump administration took another step toward expediting a border wall, waiving federal contracting regulations to fast track construction in four states.


'This really signifies the need in the community': Native firm expands counseling services

A Native woman-owned counseling firm with offices in three tribal communities is expanding its reach.