Fringe sale doubles appraised value ; Putting tribe under one roof ; Juveniles to tribal court ; Arlee constituents want foresty reform ; Two tribal members elected to school boards ; Indian law conference at Kicking Horse ; Tales: Coyote fishing...
Many concerned about dwindling reservation game herds; Hundreds attend center opening; Rose Cline is new SUD; Dupuis on tribal bench; Bouchard is new EDA planner; Larry Hall reservation planner; Power line facts disputed; $6,000 in smokes are...
Plastic canals won't help agriculture; Jurisdictional question over gambling - liquor arrests; Indians may again get food stamps; Land - use hearing in Polson; Blood is thicker than talk; Who may accompany members?; CAP now NAP and moved; Projects...
The Old Jocko River Just Ain't What it Used to Be; August Per Capita Will Dry up September Food Stamps; Montana Power Told No Lines in the South Fork; Council to Meet Wednesday Nights; PHS Direct Prescription Results in Better Service; Flathead...
Recreational permit law upheld in Federal Court; No more state income taxes for Indians; Kootenais want their share; Dixom JOM: Bringing Indian involvement; Mist over souther half of Flathead Lake is lifted; ITB wants more government employment;...
Kootenai men appeal game conviction; Commissioners sign Montana Power distribution; Old firecracker fuse goes off as smoke tax case is heard; Christmas tree cutters honor closed areas; Marvin Camel: a Flathead fighter with a future; Rocky Boys give...
Treaty hunt, fish rights to be tested; Flathead irrigation project; People of Tribe to decide on judgment: check with BIA pending polling of the people; St. Ignatius judgement Pow Wow slated; Labor Dept. finds fault in area Indian hiring; Zectran...
Tribal Council, Missoula County agree on land-use planning authority; Tax moratorium bill protested with walk-out; New enrollment, post-n-pole meeting, April 27; The U.S. Census will soon turn 200 years old, Tribes to count noses for Census Bureau...
Tribal headquarters fire damage moves towards $1 million mark; Rumor-squelching time: credit, per capita; St. Ignatius community center policy, schedule; Elk slaughter leads to charges; Artists, take note; late paper - chapter six or seven; Paul...
'Drug Awareness Week' inspires a flurry of local activities; Supreme Court votes for Tribal Court system; New group hopes to help the disabled; Cookbook's on the back burner; Eight enrolled in February; Short-handed staff seeks 'People' items; TRIO...
Tribes respond to two FIIP reports: Interior's FIIP transfer order breaks the law, says Council; Planning begins on Gramm-Rudman cuts; FY-86 Tribal budget summary reoprt as of December 1985; There's got to be a better way, says Council; Indian...
Pre-canvassed primary votes put all five incumbents on December ballot; December per capita: only $250 to be held; Off-Reservation moose hunting now requires a permit; Tribal Council gives green light to plan to get itself out of business;...
United States--Politics and government--20th century
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE August 3, 1 !J l .'!J
THE MINIMUM WAGE LAW
Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I
have received a telegram from Mr.
Joseph Beirne, president of the Communications
Workers of America, expressing
the hope that the .s~nate...