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11 TSCHS J. [i] (2021-2022)

handle is hein.journals/tschsj11 and id is 1 raw text is: Messy e fro  th  le President
By Thomas S. Leatherbury
This issue chronicles
some of the significant
legal cases and
important individuals
from the Native
American community in
Texas and beyond.
Read more...
Executive Director's Page
By Sharon Sandie
The examination of
history is rarely a static
retelling of events; it's a
dialogue. This issue of
the Journal is a dialogue
as well. Read more...  s
Fellows Column
By David J. Beck
We are nearing
completion of the fourth
book in the Taming
Texas judicial civics and
history series, which will
be entitled Taming Texas:

Women in the Law.
Read more...

Who Was Texas' First Native American
Lawyer? The Answer is Compnlicated
By Hon.John G. Browning
Answering the question
of who was Texas'
first Native American
attorney is a difficult

Thmas        and uncertain task,
Leatherbury  owing at least in part
to recordkeeping
governing the legal
profession in Texas.
Read more...

W. A. Price, a
strong contender
for the title

The [oahuiltecan Ouest for Ancestors'
Bones: Why Texas Needs a Slate Native
American Graves Protection and

haron Sandle  Repatriation Act
By Milo Colton and Alysia Cordova
Texas is the state with
the fourth largest Indian
population, but it has
only 3 small federally
recognized tribes-none
of which inhabited
Texas at the time of     coahuilteca
DavidJ. Beck  Europeans arrival.        Territory
Read more...

Editor-in-Chiefs Column
By Hon. John G. Browning
It is estimated that
hundreds of thousands
of Native Americans
attended the more
than 350 government-
funded and church-run
boarding schools that  John G. Browning
operated during the late 19th and early
20th centuries. Read more...

Their Dav in Court: The Rule of Law

and the War on the Plains
By Hon. Ken Wise
The Plains Indians
wouldn't give up the
only way of life they
knew, and the United
States wouldn't tolerate
what it viewed as
lawlessness on the
frontier. Read more...

Texas' First Native American
Federal Judge: Ada E. Brown
By Hon.john G. Browning
Judge Brown is one
of only three Native
American federal
judges out of the 890
authorized federal
judgeships in the United
States. Read more...  Judge Ada Brown
The'Foruotten Federal courts
of Indian _Country
By Hon.John G. Browning
The evolving relationship between the
United States and sovereign Native
American nations bore witness to the
creation of a number of specialized
Indian courts within the federal court
system. Read more...
History of the Native American Law
SPrtion of the Statp Bmr of Texas

On January 21, 1994,
the State Bar Board of
n    Directors approved the
creation of the American
Indian Law Section, now
known as the Native
American Law Section.
Read more...

Big Tree as a
young chief

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