From the Arizona Daily Sun:
Coconino National Forest Supervisor Nora Rasure has approved snowmaking with reclaimed wastewater at Arizona Snowbowl, setting the stage for a legal showdown with 13 American Indian tribes that hold the San Francisco Peaks sacred. The proposal gives the owners of Arizona Snowbowl permission to make snow on any part of the ski area’s 777 acres of Forest Service land, which accounts for about 1 percent of the San Francisco Peaks area. Flagstaff’s City Council has approved up to 1.5 million gallons of reclaimed wastewater per day to be pumped to the ski area. The artificial snow will be spread on an estimated 200 acres. …
“This is appalling to Arizona tribes,” said George Hardeen, spokesman for Navajo Nation president Joe Shirley. “It’s as great an affront as can be visited upon the native people short of termination.” Hopi Chairman Wayne Taylor Jr. said in a statement he was “deeply disappointed.”
The attack at dawn lasted about three hours before American troops chased Villa’s forces into Mexico. The town was burned and 17 Americans, mostly private citizens, were killed. About 100 of Villa’s troops were reportedly killed. The arms dealer was absent from Columbus that morning. He had a dental appointment in El Paso.
[Chief Justice] Taney’s “Opinion of the Court” stated that Negroes were not citizens of the United States and had no right to bring suit in a federal court. In addition, Dred Scott had not become a free man as a result of his residence at Fort Snelling because the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional; Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in the federal territories. Furthermore, Dred Scott did not become free based on his residence at Fort Armstrong (Rock Island), because his status, upon return to Missouri, depended upon Missouri law as determined in Scott v. Emerson. Because Dred Scott was not free under either the provisions of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 or the 1820 Missouri Compromise, he was still a slave, not a citizen with the right to bring suit in the federal court system. According to Taney’s opinion, African Americans were “beings of an inferior order so far inferior, that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect.”… Taney returned the case to the circuit court with instructions to dismiss it for want of jurisdiction.
