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The Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin: A Bill to Repeal the Act Terminating Federal Supervision

 Digital item
Identifier: CAC_CC_009_2_67_8_0010

Dates

  • July 9, 1970
  • 91st Congress (1969-1971)

Scope and Contents

The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare would support the enactment of H.R. 7421, a bill to repeal the Act terminating Federal supervision over the property and members of the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin as a federally recognized, sovereign Indian tribe, if the bill is amended as suggested. The report of the Department of the Interior describes the bill in depth. In his July 9, 1970, Message to Congress, the President argued strongly against forced termination of Indian Tribes. The President pointed out the importance of maintaining the special relationship between Native Americans and the Federal government and the harmful effects the termination policy had had, and he requested that Congress repeal House Concurrent Resolution 108. Since that Message, the Administration has asked the Congress to enact various bills which would assist in carrying out the President's policy of self-determination for Native Americans. Presently before this Congress are bills H.R. 6374, 6853, 6376, and 6372 designed to facilitate this policy

Extent

2 pages

Creator

unknown

Congress 91st (1969-1971)

Policy Area Indians of North America--Oklahoma; Indians of North America--United States; Community health services--United States

Tribal Affiliation Menominee Indians
  • TypeDeliverableUnit

Repository Details

Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository

Contact:
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