FROM THE ARCHIVE
Solution to Whiteclay liquor pushed
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2002

The Nebraska Legislature's General Affairs Committee on Monday held a hearing on a bill that creates a buffer zone to limit sales of liquor near the Pine Ridge Reservation.

The zone was first created by executive order in 1882 by President Chester A. Arthur. It was lifted in 1904 by President Theodore Roosevelt when the land was opened to non-Indian settlement.

A bill has been introduced to restore a five-mile buffer, which would kill liquor sales in the Nebraska town of Whiteclay. The town caters largely to a Native clientele from the reservation in South Dakota.

Get the Bill:
LB 1306 (1/23)

Get the Story:
Buffer zone sought at reservation (The Lincoln Journal Star 2/26)

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Bill would prohibit new liquor at Whiteclay (1/24)
Whiteclay liquor store suspended (12/14)
Whiteclay store owner pleads guilty (11/15)
Whiteclay liquor case delayed (11/14)
Whiteclay liquor license denied (10/26)
Leads still come in on Pine Ridge deaths (10/12)
BIA sends investigators to Pine Ridge (10/11)
Whiteclay liquor protested (8/23)
Thompson heads out on reservation tour (8/15)
Whiteclay patrols draw complaints (8/6)
Whiteclay liquor store fined (7/18)
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High schoolers hear Whiteclay talk (6/7)
Peaceful protests expected in Whiteclay (6/6)
Attention being called to Whiteclay (6/4)
Whiteclay protest trial resumes (5/24)
Whiteclay liquor protests planned (5/18)
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Whiteclay establishment fined (4/20)
Whats Going on at Whiteclay? (4/9)
Action on Whiteclay liquor promised (2/13)
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