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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:49:20 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:50:30 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:51:21 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:59:18 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:18:59 GMT -5
enrollee: a person who is certified by the United States Government as being a Federally recognized Indian member of a Federally Recognized Indian Tribe. Being an enrollee requires being listed on an Indian Tribal Roll drawn up under U.S. Government supervision, either directly by the B.I.A., or through the Indian Tribal Governments operating under the supervision of the Secretary of the Interior under 1934 I.R.A. boilerplate constitutions approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Although by the 1930's, when the I.R.A. "base rolls" were being compiled, some enrollees were included as Indians by virtue of Indian blood quantum calculated in terms of /256th's, some Federal Indian programs require that the enrollee have at least 1/4 Indian blood quantum, which has no relationship to having at least one grandparent who was an Aboriginal Indigenous person. c.f. blood quantum (MD) LINK BELOW- www.maquah.net/We_Have_The_Right_To_Exist/WeHaveTheRight_26Glossary.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:26:41 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:27:18 GMT -5
Embassy MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A Minnesota group is reviving the idea of having an American Indian embassy in Washington, D.C. The Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community, which owns the Mystic Lake Casino, has put up $1 million in challenge grant to buy a building on Massachusetts Avenue, which is known as ''Embassy Row.'' The goal is to raise $12 million to buy the building to house the National Congress of American Indians - the nation's oldest American Indian advocacy (MD) www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096412863
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:29:52 GMT -5
Land, Lineage and Lawsuits by Daune Stinson The Lower Sioux Indian Community was the first in Minnesota to become a Dakota tribal government, and may be the first to bring about its own demise. The community, organized as a tribe in 1936, has seen many changes over the years. One change that couldn’t have been predicted is the potential dismantling of that community, by its own council and community. A lawsuit winding its way through the U.S. Court of Federal Claims put in motion many changes for the Lower Sioux community; some that are not welcomed by everyone in that community or others in Minnesota (MD) www.thecirclenews.org/cover.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:31:59 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:32:28 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:58:37 GMT -5
MD) YOU NEED TO READ THIS I heard from several people talking if you dont already have a attorney then it over, but I found this here ? Well I found the truth People still can JOIN but they need to hurry and get there paper work in and Join Notice to plaintiffs: The deadline for application has been extended to June 23, 2006 Wolfchild et al. v. United States: An exclusive interview with attorney Erick Kaardal on the background, potential outcome, and implications of this high-profile lawsuit link below-- www.native-voice.com/index.cfm
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 17:28:15 GMT -5
In 1829 a Dakota Mdewakanton village was located on the west shore of a lake that would be known as Lake Calhoun in the area that would become Minneapolis. Cloud Man, also known as Man-of-the-Sky (Ma-hpi-ya-wi-ca-sta), was chief of this village, known as Reyataotonwe (Inland Village) or Eatonville (for John H. Eaton). Cloud Man agreed with the Fort Snelling Indian Agent, Lawrence Taliaferro, to have his band learn to farm using the plow. www.mpls.lib.mn.us/history/eh1.asp
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 18:17:51 GMT -5
In his acceptance Lawrence cited that Indian gaming in Minnesota is a $3 billion a year industry that is benefiting only a fraction of the 60,000 people enrolled in one of the 11 tribes. He pointed out that the two wealthiest tribes -- with casinos in or near the Twin Cities area -- earn annual net profits of roughly $600,000,000 yet only recognize about 600 enrolled members "If gaming is ever going to change the economic and social conditions for Indian people as a whole we need to make it a more equitable system, and that starts with making it more accountable," Lawrence said. "Having the audit data available is a big step toward that end." www.press-on.net/award2003.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 18:18:33 GMT -5
also seen on the Minnesota Mdewakanton Dakota Oyate that they just posted it too . I posted it about two weeks or more ago lol . Wolfchild et al. v. United States: An exclusive interview with attorney Erick Kaardal on the background, potential outcome, and implications of this high-profile lawsuit www.native-voice.com/
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 19:20:59 GMT -5
Just a story I found Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers, where he located. My grandmother, Ha-za-ho-ta-win, was a full-blood of the Medawakanton Band of the Sioux Tribe of Indians. My father, Joseph Buisson, born near Montreal, Canada, was connected with the American Fur Company, with headquarters at Mendota, Minnesota, which point was for many years the chief distributing depot of the American Fur Company, from which the Indian trade conducted by that company on the upper Mississippi was directed. I was born December 8, 1842, at Wabasha, Minnesota, then Indian country, and resided thereat until fourteen years of age, when I was sent to school at Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/sd/native/sioux10.txt
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