SJMN: CHEROKEES ELECTING NEW CHIEF TO SUCCEED MANKILLER Cherokees Electing New Chief To Succeed Mankiller TAHLEQUAH, Okla. (AP) -- Members of the Cherokee Nation voted Saturday on a new chief to succeed the popular Wilma Mankiller, who is stepping down after a decade as head of the nation's second-largest tribe. Mankiller, who led the tribe through unprecedented growth, announced last year she would not seek re-election. Deputy Chief John Ketcher also declined to run. Mankiller endorsed George Watie Bearpaw, the former tribal operations director. Tribal Councilman Joe Byrd and former Cherokee prosecutor Chad Smith also were considered front-runners in the field of nine candidates. Among the other candidates were a trucking company owner, a retired school administrator and a TV satellite engineer from Las Vegas, Harry ``Use Your Noodle'' Tootle. Also on the ballot were candidates for deputy chief and the 15-member tribal council. Polls were to close at 7 p.m., although returns were not expected until late at night because ballots had to be driven to election headquarters in Tahlequah, more than two hours away from some of the 35 precincts in the 14-county area that makes up the Cherokee Nation. Of the tribe's nearly 170,000 members, a little more than 30,000 registered to vote. The tribe mailed out about 6,500 absentee ballots across the country. If no one gets more than 50 percent of the vote, a runoff would be scheduled for July 29. The new chief will be inaugurated Aug. 14. The Navajo tribe, the nation's largest, has 230,000 members. ------ The new chief will take over the Cherokee Nation at a time when the tribe is facing severe Congressional budget cuts. Mankiller has warned the cuts will affect education, job training and health services. Mankiller was elected deputy chief in 1983. She became the tribe's first female chief two years later and became one of the nation's leading speakers on Indian sovereignty and health care, meeting presidents and testifying before Congress. Mankiller, 49, plans to teach at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., in the fall. ``I just recognized it was time to move on,'' she said. ``It was time for the Cherokee Nation to have a change.'' AP-WS-06-17-95 1737EDT This material is copyrighted and may not be republished without permission of the originating newspaper or wire service. NewsHound is a service of the San Jose Mercury News. For more information call 1-800-818-NEWS.