American History - Chilocco School These occupants are Kiowa and comanche Indian children D01 Roll ID - Format FICHECoverage native amer. 5. Carter, Catholic school for indians at Ardmore http://www.electricscotland.com/history/america/donna/chilocco_school.htm
Extractions: by Donna Flood Click here to find contacts to get further information This is the month of January 1881. A wagon train is rumbling slowly across the plains of Oklahoma. For four long weeks it has held to its course which runs to the northeast. Closer examination reveals the occupants are weary and travel worn and more than a little frightened as they realize the journey is drawing to a close. These occupants are Kiowa and Comanche Indian children who are on their way to Chilocco, the newly established Government boarding school. Their irresponsible, carefree days are done and they are among the first group which is to receive an education at government expense. On May 17, 1882, the United States congress passed a bill, known as the Indian Appropriation Act, whereby a sum of money was to be appropriated for the building of a school for Indian youth. The secretary of the Interior then authorized the construction of a building which would be adequate to care for 150 children. That same year James M. Haworth, Superintendent of Indian Education, was sent to investigate the possibility and advisability of such a plan. The first tract of land which he took under consideration was located near where Ponca City now stands. This land was rejected, however, as it was found to be unsuitable. The site which was eventually selected consisted of 1191.06 acres which bordered on the Kansas state line. Haworth then made his report to Washington and upon receiving orders soon had men at work on the project.
KO Lund 3.5 0.5 15155EN The comanche indians (native Peo Bill 3.7 0.5 16383EN The Wampanoagindians (native Pe Bill Food Our History (African amer Kibibi Mack http://www.baldwin-county-schools.com/ar/ko2.htm
Untitled Martin Mooney 6.2 1.0 13350EN The comanche (native american Pe 3.9 0.5 10063EN TheCrow indians Leigh Wood 6.4 6.1 6.0 13353EN Daily Customs (native Latin amer http://www.d91.k12.id.us/linden/Media Center/ARListByTitle.htm
BSES Web Site Color of My Words The comanche indians (native Peo Come a Dragon Never Sleeps TheIroquois indians (native Peo Is Little Gold Star A Spanish amer Little House http://www.barnettshoals.org/ForParents/QuizzesByTitle.htm
Www.chisd.com/permenter/TestInfo%20by%20book%20level.txt West Tana Reiff 2.2 1.0 9231EN Selected from Contemporary amer Writers' Voice ChickenChicken RL Stine 3.1 3.0 15155EN The comanche indians (native Peo Bill http://www.chisd.com/permenter/TestInfo by book level.txt
Www.tumwater.k12.wa.us/acceleratedreader/mts%5Cmts_ar_title.txt Black, Blue Gray African amer Haskins, Jim Kevin 3.3 0.5 16360 Chumash indians(native Peoples) Lund B. 4.4 1.0 15155 comanche indians (Bridgestone), Lund http://www.tumwater.k12.wa.us/acceleratedreader/mts\mts_ar_title.txt
Title List Laiken 5.0 2.0 18466EN Black, Blue Gray African amer Jim Haskins Holiday Histories)Mir Tamim Ansary 2.9 0.5 15155EN The comanche indians (native Peo Bill http://www.sdhc.k12.fl.us/~schwarzkopf.elementary/titlelist.htm
Extractions: Accelerated Reader Test List Report A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q q Kelly Doudna 1.0 0.5 30644EN The Quarreling Book Charlotte Zolotow 4.0 0.5 17335EN A Quarter from the Tooth Fairy Caren Holtzman 2.4 0.5 10584EN The Quarter Horse Gail Stewart 5.1 0.5 24614EN Quarter Horses Gentle/Perry, 5.1 0.5 12532EN Queen Isabella I Corinn Codye 5.2 0.5 133EN Queenie Peavy Robert Burch 5.6 5.0 682EN Quentin Corn Mary Stolz 4.8 4.0 5437EN The Quest for Queenie Brian Ball 4.1 1.0 1456EN Quick and Slow Animals Barbara J. Behm 2.0 0.5 16853EN Quick, Quack, Quick! Marsha Arnold 1.5 0.5 18406EN The Quilt Story Johnston/DePaola, 2.6 0.5 18644EN R S T U V W X Marks the Spot Les Martin 3.6 3.0 40511EN Xx Kelly Doudna 0.6 0.5 8550EN Y Z
Bahai News - Wisdom Of The People 2; Stephen M. Sachs, A Transformational native amer. The comanche Indian Tribe (LawtonOK comanche Tribal Office A History of the indians of the United States http://www.uga.edu/bahai/News/110101-3.html
Extractions: Potential and Pitfalls in Efforts by the Comanches to Recreate Traditional Ways of Building Consensus Typical of many tribes in the United States, the Comanches felt themselves divided and often paralyzed in deciding major issues, partly because of the clash in values between their traditional culture and the premises of their contemporary government processes (which are based for the most part upon modern European-American understandings). In order to overcome the problems caused by that cultural dissonance, the Comanche community, with the assistance of Americans for Indian Opportunity (AIO) and Oklahomans for Indian Opportunity (OIO), decided to utilize a collaborative process for tribal decision making they called TIMS, or Tribal Issues Management System.2 In several cases where it has been used, TIMS, by providing a method of broadly inclusive decision making, has made contributions toward overcoming gridlock in tribal decision making.3 If implemented with appropriate support and sustained over an appropriate period of time, it offers a promising model to other tribes. TRADITIONAL VS. CONTEMPORARY TRIBAL GOVERNANCE
Native American Chart ceremonies) one of the most complex native religions Northwest Coastal indians suchas the Tlingit Sioux (10,000), Blackfeet (15,000), comanche (7,000), and http://www.mce.k12tn.net/indians/navigation/native_american_chart.htm
Extractions: Weapons Art Famous Native Americans Cherokee Southeast domed houses deerskin, rabbit fur decorated with porcupine quills ... Algonquian and Great Lake Tribes such as Ojibway (35,000), Delaware (8,000), Powhatan (9,000) Massachuset (13,600), and Cree (17,000) Northeast wigwams wore little clothing except in winter - made from animal skins hunters ... Squanto (1585?-1622) Patuxet I roquois Tribes such as Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora (Total 5,000) Northeast long house mostly buckskin (skin of deer) hunters planters gatherers traders ... Seminoles (A division of the Creek - Creek Population 12,000) Southeast chickee clothing made from plant fibers planters ... basketry
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE native AMERICAN CULTURE Coharie. comanche. Costanoan. Coushatta native tribe or nation; it is a language family, like "romance" or "indoeuoropean". There are no "Algonquian indians". http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm
Extractions: NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE Mitakuye oyasin! We are all related! It isn't too late. We still have time to recreate and change the value system of the present. We must! Survival will depend on it. Our Earth is our original mother. She is in deep labor now. There will be a new birth soon! The old value system will suffer and die. It cannot survive as our mother earth strains under the pressure put on her. She will not let man kill her. The First Nation's Peoples had a value system. There were only four commandments from the Great Spirits: 1.Respect Mother Earth
Clayton Library Finding Aids RESERVATIONS APACHE, KIOWA, comanche; WICHITA RESERVATION ARAPAHO RESERVATIONINDIANS, OKLAHOMA TERRITORY 07 ID 7RA 248 Format FILM Coverage native amer. http://www.hpl.lib.tx.us/clayton/clmca18.html
Extractions: Last Updated: 03/19/2003 OHIO Allen LIMA LIMA CITY DIRECTORY, 1926-1934 Cabinet: C73 Drawer: D09 Roll: 0408416 ID: Format: FILM Coverage: DIRECTORY-CITY Total: Dates: 1926-1934 Note: YEARS MISSING: 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1933. OHIO Ashland ASHLAND ASHLAND CITY DIRECTORY, 1917-1935 Cabinet: C73 Drawer: D09 Roll: 0407647 ID: Format: FILM Coverage: DIRECTORY-CITY Total: Dates: 1917-1935 Note: INCLUDES HAYESVILLE, JEROMEVILLE, LOUDONVILLE, NANKIN, NOVA, PERRYSVILLE, POLK, RUGGLES, SAVANNAH, SULLIVAN. YEARS MISSING: 1918, 1920, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1933, 1934. OHIO Ashtabula ASHTABULA ASHTABULA CITY DIRECTORY, 1929-1934 Cabinet: C73 Drawer: D09 Roll: 0407615 ID: Format: FILM Coverage: DIRECTORY-CITY Total: Dates: 1929-1934 Note: INCLUDES GENEVA. YEARS MISSING: 1930, 1932, 1933. OHIO BELMONT PROBATE COURT, WILL RECORD, VOLUME K-L, 1863-1872 AND 1872-1879 Cabinet: C83 Drawer: D06 Roll: ROLL #88693 ID: 88693 Format: FILM Coverage: PROBATE Total: 01 Dates: 1863-1879 Note: BOTH BOOKS INDEXED AT BEGINNING OF EACH BOOK. OHIO BELMONT PROBATE COURT, WILL RECORD, VOLUME H-I, 1845-1856 AND 1856-1863 Cabinet: C83 Drawer: D06 Roll: ROLL #32 ID: 32 Format: FILM Coverage: PROBATE Total: 01 Dates: MAY 1845-1863 Note: BOTH BOOKS INDEXED AT BEGINNING OF EACH BOOK. TYPE OF RECORDS CONTAINED: WILLS, PROBATE ENTRIES, AND EVIDENCE. HANDWRITTEN COPY.
Extractions: Text: DINAP BULLETIN NO. 98-20 TO: ALL INDIAN AND NATIVE AMERICAN GRANTEES SUBJECT: National Indian and Native American Employment and Training Conference, May 24-28, 1999, Sioux Falls, South Dakota Purpose This bulletin provides the final list of grantees eligible for travel and per diem reimbursement for one staff person to attend the Sioux Falls national TAT conference. References None. Background As in past years, the Department of Labor has reserved a percentage of the PY 98 program funds to assist small grantees with travel and per diem costs to attend the National Indian and Native American Employment and Training Conference in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Information a. Each grantee should make their airline and hotel arrangements through Ms. Charlene Keller with the California Indian Manpower Consortium (CIMC). To save money, all reservations will be handled through a single travel agent retained by CIMC. Tickets will be mailed to the grantee staff designated to attend. Any travel arrangements not authorized by DINAP and made through CIMC will not be reimbursed . This is necessary in order to keep expenses within the fixed amount of resources available to support small grantee travel. b. Reimbursement will cover local transportation expenses (POV mileage, parking, taxis, etc.), lodging expenses, meals, and incidental expenses. Airfare and conference registration fees will be paid for one staff person only per grantee on the attached list. Should a grantee named on the attached list send more than one person to the Sioux Falls conference, the grantee will be responsible for all expenses except for those of the one person whose arrangements were made through CIMC.
Internet Modern History Sourcebook: American Independence Apache, Cheyenne, and Arapaho; 1867 Kiowa, comanche, and Apache Between The UnitedStates and native Americans At Manners and Customs of the indians (of New http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/modsbook12.html
Extractions: Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ... Pop Culture See Main Page for a guide to all contents of all sections. Contents The Establishment of the American State Commentators on America Native Americans Slavery American Independence WEB See the Avalon Project - American 18th Century Documents [At Yale] WEB See the American Revolution Site for Documents and Essays WEB The American Revolution [At H-Net] WEB Documents Relating to American Foreign Policy -Pre-1898 [At Mt. Holyoke] WEB The Revolutionary Generation in America [Course at Brooklyn College] Mid-18th Century Politics Penn's Plan for a Union , 1697 [At American Revolution] Robert Beverley: On Bacon's Rebellion , 1704 [At American Revolution] The North Carolina Biennal Act , 1715 [At American Revolution] Governor Gabriel Johnston: Request to repeal the Biennal act , 18 October 1736 (translated) [At American Revolution] Disposition of the North Carolina Biennal Act , 1737 (translated) Massachusetts House of Representatives: On the Governor's Salary , 11 September 1728 (translated) [At American Revolution] Governor Burnet of Massachusetts: On the Governor's Salary , 17 September 1728 (translated) [At American Revolution]
LOTS OF LINKS AND ADD YOUR'S TO PAGE 4 the comanche People A site honoring the comanche People with of Natick - Home ofthe Praying indians IndianDictionary al intra's native American Indian Web http://pie2.tripod.com/my_links4.html
Sioux Links Product 017 native american Art - amer(100) - 7 Great Britain, is a unique nativeamerican art of the finest authentic art from North american indians .. http://saint-johns-brunswick.pvt.k12.me.us/student/projects/Indians/sioux.htm
Extractions: Home ... Local Sioux American Indian Culture Research Center Research Center and Museum on Northern Plains native american s (Dakota / Lakote sioux ) located at Blue Cloud Abbey in northeast South Dakot...... http://www.bluecloud.org/dakota.html, k BIG BEAR Home Page, native american , Indian, Natives, Teepee, Indians, Homeland, Sauk Fox, Sac and Fox, Lakota, BIG BEAR BIG BEARS HOMEPAGE native american LINKS Chickasaw Nation Red Ink Native Peoples Magazine Wounded Knee Massacre Great sioux Nation Native Stories Mohican Page Mohawk Nation Lakota Wowapi Oti Kin The Hopi Way Nez Perce Home Page Pawhuska........ http://www.goto.com/d/search-redirect;$sessionid$5Y2Z5MQACADZFQFIEFAAPUQ?xargs=00u3hs9yoahSumGpxqaqgGlCBE0yPzUzOTMkuLU4pBYoGJfhnFmWU5OUCpsbaBgZAhycrLzEguT0wbBbECRMk5LS8xrz%2B20DM4tL87QrEvsyRVLDE7tTcTKIEopnCbubmjsaWBq7mbpYG5mTOJhcRNEEaqaEaA%2BmoilgA4tjs%3D target=_top, k sioux Nations - You have come to where the past has risen up to meet you. So that you will not soon forget those that have walked this land before you and did not destroy the land, but rather loved and cared for it.......
Oberlin College Conservatory Library 13. Chants native Am. Church of N. America. 770.1 T41 So6. Songs and Dances ofthe Flathead indians. FE 4445. Flute Songs of the Kiowa and comanche. IH 2512. http://www.oberlin.edu/~rknight/LPcollection/Lists/6a.Nativeam.html
Native Americans Tribes describing, in detail, all aspects of each native American tribe's Texas IndiansIndex Page. The comanche leaders often wore fine European clothes, with many http://schools.sisd.net/mom/native.amer.html
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Extractions: Have fun browsing the various catalogs and choosing the items and colors you want. The symbol indicates traditional and contemporary southwest products. If you are looking for something not shown, please send inquiries to the email address listed below. Custom items or referrals can be made. Prices and inventory are subject to change without notice. Running Strong Magnet/Wall - Amer Indian Veteran , Indians Do It The , Custer Was Sioux'd, Custer Arrow Shirts, It's An Indian Thing, One Word (Heritage), Proud Amer Indian, Proud To Be Apache, Proud To B Cherokee, Proud To B Cheyenne, Proud To Be Choctaw, Proud T B Comanche, Proud To Be Kiowa, Proud To Be Lakota, Proud Muskogee Cre, Proud To Be Tsalagi, Think You Can Trust , Walk In Balance - $3
Homepage Regs Title 25 indians . native American Federal Websites. OIBA OFFICERS Arvo Q.Mikkanen, OIBA President (Kiowa/comanche) US Attorney's Office 210 Park Ave http://oiba.homestead.com/homepage.html
Extractions: National Indian Justice Center Natl. Congress of American Indians National Am. Ind. Tribal Ct. Judges Association National Indian Gaming Association Natl. Indian Child Welfare Assn. NativeWeb Indian Legal News U.S. Code, Title Code of Fed. Regs Oklahoma Indian Times - Online oibanet@hotmail.com Treaties Native American Federal Websites Indian Law Research Links