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KAMLOOPS, B.C. — As people in the United States spent time this past weekend to remember those who gave their lives for their country while serving in the U.S. military, First Nations people and Native Americans across Indian Country paid tribute to the loss of 215 children,  whose remains were recently discovered at the site of a former residential school near the town of Kamloops, British Colombia.

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Native News Online would like you to taka their survey to learn how Indigenous people like you are getting their news, how they are getting their healthcare, and how they are responding to the coronavirus (Covid-19) outbreak. To take the survey, click the link to the survey below. 

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Every week, Native News Online brings you the latest Indian Country news and moves from Washington, D.C.

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WASHINGTON — Last July the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the McGirt v. Oklahoma that a significant swath of eastern Oklahoma remains American Indian land for certain legal purposes. 

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WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation received on Friday an initial $1.8 billion from the U.S. Treasury through the American Rescue Plan Act that was authorized by Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden. It is part of the historic $31.2 allocated to Indian Country in the American Rescue Plan to assist tribal governments and organizations with costs associated with the Covid-19 pandemic.

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WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — Even with the number of Covid-19 cases on the decline on the Navajo Nation, President Jonathan Nez wants Navajo citizens to take all precautions this Memorial Day weekend to keep the number of new cases low.

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s first fiscal year budget was submitted to Congress on Friday. The Biden-Harris administration's budget totals $6 trillion.

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This Day in History. On this day in history, May 28, 1888, Jim Thorpe was born near present-day Prague, Okla. in a one room cabin. Thorpe was Sac, Fox and Potawatomi. He was the great-great-grandson of the legendary Indian warrior, Chief Black Hawk.

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 This Day in History. WASHINGTON — On this day in 1830, 191 years ago, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act.