From Saturday, November 25 2006 - 10:00am To Sunday, November 26 2006 - 5:00pm Each week
Drum Contest, Competition Dancing, Native Foods, Open Gourd Dancing, Arts & Crafts Vendors, All Drums and Dancers Welcome El Dorado County Fairgrounds Free Admission
For more information contact: For Pow Wow or Vendor Info: (530) 647-0423
A jury has found a former history teacher guilty of 11 counts of annoying or molesting a child and one count of sexual battery, according to Sacramento District Attorney Jan Scully.
Rescuers have encountered unfavorable weather, high water and difficult terrain in their search for a missing hiker in the Iceland Lake area of Emigrant Wilderness.
A federal judge has scolded Califonia officials for failing to provide the billions of dollars a court-appointed receiver says is needed to upgrade the state's prison health care system.
Supporters of Proposition 2 say animals raised for food in California will be treated more humanely, while opponents claim it will shut down the state's egg industry.
AP - Federal prosecutors moved Monday to delay indefinitely the sentencing of convicted fundraiser Antoin "Tony" Rezko, sending their strongest hint yet that he is ready to spill his political secrets.
AP - A bus driver with a string of motor vehicle offenses and a history of substance abuse was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence Monday, hours after his casino-bound charter bus ran into a ditch, killing eight people.
AP - The number of Americans whose electricity or gas has been shut off for nonpayment of their bills is up sharply in many parts of the country as people struggle to cope with higher prices and a shaky economy.
AP - The federal government will designate "critical habitat" for polar bears off Alaska's coast, a decision that could add restrictions to future offshore petroleum exploration or drilling.
AP - The man accused of leading the notorious Serial Shooter attacks two years ago watched with excitement as news reports logged his alleged killings and fear spread through neighborhoods across the Phoenix area, a prosecutor said Monday.
AP - The words "bride" and "groom" will reappear on all marriage license applications issued in California starting next month, state health officials said.
AP - Mayor Michael Bloomberg's crusade to change term limits law so he can run again gets its first official test this week with a bill in the City Council, where it will compete with legislation intended to stop him.
AP - An unemployed man with an advanced finance degree who was despondent over his own financial problems shot and killed his wife, three children, mother-in-law and then himself in an upscale home in a gated community, police said Monday.
AP - A sheriff's deputy accused of killing his ex-girlfriend in Kentucky taunted state police in an e-mail exchange Monday, threatening a county jailer and telling police he was going to "make them earn their money" in their search for him.
AP - The man accused of murdering 3-year-old Erica Green kicked her in the head but didn't mean to kill her, his attorney told a jury Monday in the case of a victim the city mourned for four years only knowing her as "Precious Doe."
AP - Georgia's top court ruled in favor of a transgender politician who was slapped with a lawsuit by two political opponents who claimed she misled voters by running as a woman.
AP - The Rev. Al Sharpton says he convened civil rights leaders after the Sean Bell police-shooting acquittals to come up with a way for all New Yorkers to express their outrage.