Word: tribalized
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...oglers. In Bangladesh, ladies take the surf in full sari. Muslim beach etiquette aside, Cox's Bazar has all the potential of a serene seaside getaway: take a rickshaw around the dusty lanes and absorb the Burmese influences on Bengali culture. Local cigars and handloom products of the Rakhyne tribal families are good buys, as are multicolored sarongs and handwoven scarves. Hotel Sayeman is a pleasant, clean place to stay ($4 to $22 for a double) and serves good breakfasts and dinners. For reservations call (880-341) 3900. Besides typical Bangladeshi fare of curry cooked in mustard...
...while foraging for food in Gregg Bourland's garbage. Bourland was minding his own business - a video store in Eagle Butte, S.D. - when he found the guy. "Why do people drink like that?" Bourland asked himself, but he knew the reasons: unemployment and despair. Bourland went to the tribal chairman to ask what he was doing about all of the above. Answer: nothing. "He was interested in government handouts, not development," says Bourland. Later that year, 1990, Bourland, whose Native American name is Eagles Watch Over Him, ran for tribal chairman. "I wanted to make a statement," he says...
...with a message of tribal self-sufficiency that made the pugnacious Eagles Watch Over Him, then 33, the youngest chairman in the tribe's history. Under his management, unemployment dropped from 75% to 25%, and welfare roles were cut from 500 families to 150. What is remarkable is that Bourland, now 44, did it without opening a single casino...
...while foraging for food in Gregg Bourland's garbage. Bourland was minding his own business--a video store in Eagle Butte, S.D.--when he found the guy. "Why do people drink like that?" Bourland asked himself, but he knew the reasons: unemployment and despair. Bourland went to the tribal chairman to ask what he was doing about all of the above. Answer: nothing. "He was interested in government handouts, not development," says Bourland. Later that year, 1990, Bourland, whose Native American name is Eagles Watch Over Him, ran for tribal chairman. "I wanted to make a statement," he says...
...with a message of tribal self-sufficiency that made the pugnacious Eagles Watch Over Him, then 33, the youngest chairman in the tribe's history. Under his management, unemployment dropped from 75% to 25%, and welfare roles were cut from 500 families to 150. What is remarkable is that Bourland, now 44, did it without opening a single casino...