FROM THE ARCHIVE
FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 2001 A meeting on federal recognition and a potential Nipmuc Nation casino will be held in the Connecticut town of Woodstock on August 29. Town leaders are inviting interested parties to discuss Indian issues. Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who is suing the Department of Interior on federal recognition and trust lands, will attend, as will freshman Congressman Rob Simmons (R-Conn.). The Nipmuc Nation wants to open a casino in the Massachusetts-Connecticut area. No specific location has been announced. The tribe's federal status is on hold at the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Get the Story:
Possible Nipmuc casino raises interest in state's Quiet Corner (The Norwich Bulletin 8/17) Related Stories:
McCaleb to listen 'closely' to recognition experts (8/9)
Nipmuc tribal members battle for control (8/6)
Town receptive to Nipmuc casino (8/1)
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)
Meeting scheduled on Nipmuc casino
Facebook TwitterFRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 2001 A meeting on federal recognition and a potential Nipmuc Nation casino will be held in the Connecticut town of Woodstock on August 29. Town leaders are inviting interested parties to discuss Indian issues. Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who is suing the Department of Interior on federal recognition and trust lands, will attend, as will freshman Congressman Rob Simmons (R-Conn.). The Nipmuc Nation wants to open a casino in the Massachusetts-Connecticut area. No specific location has been announced. The tribe's federal status is on hold at the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Get the Story:
Possible Nipmuc casino raises interest in state's Quiet Corner (The Norwich Bulletin 8/17) Related Stories:
McCaleb to listen 'closely' to recognition experts (8/9)
Nipmuc tribal members battle for control (8/6)
Town receptive to Nipmuc casino (8/1)
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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