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         Shuswap Indians Native Americans:     more detail
  1. Brotherhood to Nationhood: George Manuel and the Making of the Modern Indian Movement by Peter McFarlane, 1993-09
  2. A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau: Traditional Stl'Atl'Imx Resource Use
  3. Maybe Tomorrow by Joan Weir, 2003-07
  4. Resistance and Renewal: Surviving the Indian Residential School by Celia Haig-Brown, 2002-07-01
  5. Glass Tepee by Garry Gottfriedson, 2002-10-10
  6. Wartime Images, Peacetime Wounds: The Media and the Gustafsen Lake Standoff by Sandra Lambertus, 2004-01-18
  7. Victims of Benevolence: The Dark Legacy of the Williams Lake Residential School by Elizabeth Furniss, 2002-07-01
  8. Skin Like Mine (Poetry By Individual Poets) by Garry Gottfriedson, 2010-04-15

21. Native American Criminal Justice Resources
Secwepemc shuswap Nation. Selected American Indian Artifacts Getty ArtsEdNet. SpokaneTribe of indians. Teaching Young Children about native americans.
http://arapaho.nsuok.edu/~dreveskr/nacjr.html-ssi
NATIVE AMERICAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES
GOVERNMENT 1839 Cherokee Constitution 1975 Constitution Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma Agua Caliente Tribal Home Page Alaska Native Government ... Witness List for the Joint Oversight Hearing on the Problem of Criminal Gang Activity within Indian Country
GENERAL
Aboriginal America, American History, Vol. I by Jacob Abbott, 1860
Aboriginal Links Aboriginal Studies: WWW Virtual Library Aboriginal Youth Network ... Yavapai-Apache Nation
For Additional Resources: For Information on International Criminal Justice and Criminal Justice in selected countries go to my Comparative Criminal Justice Resources Page. For Information on Criminal Justice History go to my Criminal Justice History Resources Page. For Information on Planning, Research and Research Methods, Statistics, Selected Information and Statistics Sources, Writing and Writing Assistance, Studing and Learning, and Methods for Searching the Net go to my Page. For information on Victims, Victimology, Page.
Last Modified on
Monday, April 03, 2000 16:58:28

22. Publications - Gary B. Palmer
the Territory of the Southern shuswap indians of British Alliance and Revenge in shuswapIndian War Eden White Attitudes Toward native americans, Seabury Press
http://www.nevada.edu/~gbp/pubs-gbp.html
Publications of Gary B. Palmer
Books and Edited Collections
Toward a Theory of Cultural Linguistics . Austin: University of Texas Press. (Jacket and Table of Contents) Reviews (Error List). In pr. Cognitive Linguistics and Non-Indo-European Languages . Gene Casad and Gary B. Palmer (Eds.). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. In pr. (Cliff Goddard and Penny Lee, co-editors), Talking about Thinking across Languages. Special Issue. Cognitive Linguistics 14/2,3. Languages of Sentiment: Cultural Constructions of Emotional Substrates . Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Co-edited with Debra J. Occhi. (Table of Contents)
Articles in Refereed Journals
In pr. "Introduction" In Gary B. Palmer, Cliff Goddard and Penny Lee (Eds.), Talking about Thinking across Languages. Special Issue. Cognitive Linguistics 14/2,3. In pr. "Talking about thinking in Tagalog." In Palmer, Goddard and Lee. In pr. "The grammar of Snchitsu'umshtsn (Coeur d'Alene) plant names." Journal of Ethnobiology In pr. "Cultural Linguistics and Shona Noun Classifiers" Alternations 2001. Indian Pioneers: The settlement of

23. NATIVE-L (August 1995): Re: Armed Standoff In British Columbia (Canada)
To native americans AMERICANINDIANL@cornell.edu Subject Indigenous of sovereignunceded sacred shuswap territory THE REQUEST OF THE MOHEGAN indians TO WHICH
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9508/0161.html
Re: armed standoff in British Columbia (Canada)
William E. Day tatanka@ecst.csuchico.edu
Fri, 1 Sep 1995 22:33:15 -0700
AMERICANINDIAN-L@cornell.edu
Subject: Indigenous Traditionals Armed Uprising in British Columbia (fwd)
Date: Tue, 29 Aug 1995 07:49:51 -0700 (PDT)
From: timr@efn.ORG (Tim Richardson)
Subject: Indigenous Traditionalist Armed Uprising in British Columbia (fwd)
A Canadian Waco?
Forwarded message
Date: Mon, 28 Aug 1995 18:42:40 -0400
andyrose@netcom.com

Subject: Indigenous Traditionalist Armed Uprising in British Columbia Urgent and Important Subject: TWO DAY DEADLINE FOR INVASION AFN CHIEF OVIDE MERCREDI, RCMP ANNOUNCE IMPENDING INVASION OF SACRED SHUSWAP SUNDANCE GROUNDS AT GUSTAFSON LAKE August 25, 1995 The world is watching the brutal racist reality of Canadian colonialism as the RCMP yesterday rejected Shuswap Sundance Defenders' terms for a The world is watching the brutal racist reality of Canadian colonialism as the RCMP yesterday rejected Shuswap Sundance Defenders' terms for a peaceful resolution of the Gustafson Lake rebellion in support of indigenous sovereignty and land rights.

24. NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE - PAGE 2
Seneca Shasta Shawnee Shinnecock Shoalwater Shoshone shuswap, Siksika Siletz ofNew Jersey Wampanoag and Powhatan native americans The Powhatan indians.
http://www.greatdreams.com/nativeb.htm
updated 11-13-02 PLEASE REFRESH YOUR PAGE TO GET THE LATEST VERSION OF THIS PAGE
PLEASE BE PATIENT WHILE THIS PAGE LOADS IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR INFORMATION ON A PARTICULAR TRIBE
AND YOU DON'T SEE IT HERE,
E-MAIL Dee777@aol.com AND I WILL ADD IT TO THE DATABASE THIS PAGE HAS BEEN DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS
TO FACILITATE FASTER LOADING A THRU N - PAGE 1
O THRU Z - PAGE 2 THESE ARE THE TRIBES YOU WILL FIND BELOW Occaneechi
Oglala
Ohlone
Ojibwe
Okanogan
Omaha Oneida Onondaga Osage Ottawa Pai Yuman Paiute Pala Papago Passamaquoddy Patuxet Patwin Pawnee Pembina Band Pennicook Penobscot Peoria Pequot Pima-Maricopa Piman Pitt River Pocomoke Pomo Ponca Portage Band Potawatomi Powhatan Pueblo Puyallup Quapaw Quechua Quinault Ramapough Rankokus Raramuri River Yuman Sac Fox Sahnish Salish Samish Santo Domingo Saskatchewan Sauk/Fox Secwepemc Seminole Seneca Shasta Shawnee Shinnecock Shoalwater Shoshone Shuswap Siksika Siletz Sioux Sisseton Wahpeton Six Nations S'Klallam Snohomish Skokomish Snoqualmie Spokane Stillaguamish Suquamish Susquehannah Swinomish Taino Taos Pueblo Tekesta/Taino Tillamook Tlingit Tohono O'odham (Papago) Tolowa Tonkawa Tonto Apache Tongva Tuchone Tunica-Biloxi Umatilla Unami Ute Yakwal Yana Yaqui Waccamaw Wailiki Wakash Walla Walla Walpi Pueblo Walpole Wampanoag Warm Springs Wasco Washoe Wea Wichita Willams Winnebago Wiinnemucca Wintu Woodland Wyandot Yagua Yakama Yavapai Yokuts Yosemite Yuki Yuma Yunsai Yurok Zuni
Top A B C ... X O OCCANEECHI Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation Occaneechi Archaeology Occaneech History WAGANAKISING ODAWA OGLALA Oglala Sioux Oglala Reservation Many Hawks' Oglala Lakota Sioux OGLALA SIOUX TRIBE of the Pine Ridge Reservation of South Dakota The Oglala Sioux Oglala Sioux History OHLONE

25. LINKS - National Aboriginal Document Database
kmaq Education Act (Can); Secwepemc (shuswap) Land, Resource West Coast EnvironmentalLaw; native americans and the Union of New Brunswick indians (Fredrickton), m
http://www.landclaimsdocs.com/links.htm
Click on Selected Category WebSites Email General Websites Nations Government Treaties Law E-MAIL CLAIMS RESEARCH UNITS Abramson, Ralph

26. The First White Contact
missionary penetration of the Okanagan and shuswap began. to some of the illnesses;native North americans there were somewhere about 22 indians composed of men
http://www.sjs.sd83.bc.ca/museum/thepast/ethnic/firstwhitecontact.htm
The Past Businesses
Churches

Communities

Community Services
...
The First People

The First White Contact
The Creation of Reserves

Native fishing

Japanese

Finnish
... Museum page The First White Contact The first white contact was with fur traders. The native people who lived in the area of present day Enderby were not on the main Northwest Company's (and later Hudson's Bay Company's) line of communication in the interior. Fort Okanagan at the conflux of the Okanogan and Columbia Rivers was the first outpost in the interior followed by Fort Kamloops in 1821. These forts were connected by a trail that went through Grande Prairie (Westwold) and down the west side of Okanagan Lake. We have no evidence that the 300 Splats'in people along the river valley near present-day Enderby were directly trading with the Hudson's Bay Company. It seems very likely that they traded with other bands of Shuswap, who in turn, traded with the Europeans at Fort Kamloops. The attitude toward the fur traders' goods by the Shuswap was probably very similar to the Okanagan: "Far from being exploited like children by the lure of a 'few beads and trinkets,' it seems more likely that the Okanagans welcomed the opportunity to obtain the new technology which would help them better feed and clothe their families and would give them the means to defend their peaceful way of life from their war-like neighbours." The other initial white contact came from the missionaries.

27. Native American Deerskin Dressing At The Time Of Contact: Page 4
is no evidence that stoneage indians allowed their is still practiced in Canadaby native americans on moose FREEZE/THAW The shuswap declare that skins are
http://www.braintan.com/articles/brainbones4.html
previous Jump to page next Native American Deerskin Dressing: Page 4 STRUCTURE OPENERS
Never heard of this step, huh? This is the really exciting stuff! Fresh hides are structurally bound up by the "ground substance", a.k.a. mucopolysaccharides ( many sweet mucus?). This is something you need to deal with with every hide you tan! Until recently, most modern wet-scrapers had to brain and rebrain deerskins until they got soft. This can be very annoying. It is necessary because the fibers are coated with "many sweet mucus" that inhibit brain penetration. In living tissue these mucoids prevent penetration by whatever weird stuff you immerse your skin in. Stone-age Indians as well as ancient and modern old world tanners had ways of dealing with this, and did so conciously with each and every hide, and so should you! The bottom line is that if you can neutralize the ground substance, you can get complete brain penetration in one simple dunk in the brain solution. "...powerful control (is) exerted by the ground substance over the passage of ions through skin. The mucopolysaccharides in ground substance ...bind water so firmly that few other types of ions can normally reach the fibres. ...Tannage of pelt with the ground substance still present, e.g. the tanning of raw skin, tends to be slow, uneven and uncertain."

28. Coyote Press: MISSION
native americans at Mission Santa Cruz, 17911834 Interpreting the Archaeological Studieson shuswap. Centennial Mission to the indians of Western Nevada and
http://www.coyotepress.com/cgi-bin/cyp455/scan/mp=keywords/se=MISSION/st=sql/ml=
Quick Search
Home
Search About Us Contact Us ...
Site Map

Coyote Press
P.O. Box 3377
Salinas, CA 93912
Fax:831 / 422-4913
85 matches found for MISSION
A Cheap and Concise Dictionary of the Ojibway and English Languages, Part I: English-Ojibway.
Journal of California Anthropology, Vol. 3, No. 1. Journal of California Anthropology, Vol. 3, No. 2. Journal of California Anthropology, Vol. 5, No. 2. ... Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology, Vol. 7: Papers Presented at the 27th Annual Meeting. Allen, Rebecca. Native Americans at Mission Santa Cruz, 1791-1834: Interpreting the Archaeological Record. Bahr, Diana Meyers. From Mission to Metropolis: Cupeno Indian Women in Los Angeles. Sonoma Mission: An Historical and Archaeological Study of Primary Constructions, 1823-1913. Cook, Sherburne F. Population Trends Among the California Mission Indians. Cook, Sherburne F. The Indian versus the Spanish Mission. Costello, Julia G. Santa Ines Mission Excavations: 1986-1988. Culleton, James. Indians and Pioneers of Old Monterey. Engelhardt, Zephyrin. Mission San Carlos Borromeo (Carmelo): The Father of the Missions.

29. Indigenous Links.
shuswap, see Secwepemc nation. Tlingit and Haida indians tribes of Alaska. TlingitNational Anthem. African native americans we are still here a photo exhibit.
http://www.samefolket.se/aldre_nummer/linkse.htm
Not intended to be a complete source of links.

30. Information Om Urfolk På Internet.
Även kända som shuswap. United tribe of Shawnee indianerna. National Congressof American indians. National Environmental Coalition Of native americans.
http://www.samefolket.se/aldre_nummer/links.html

31. NativeWeb Resources: US Tribal Pages (BIA Recognized)
all the various groups of native americans in the These two distinct native Americannations are united Secwepemc Nation/shuswap indians, Secwepemc, Canada, 545.
http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/us_tribal_websites/us_tribal_pages_bia_recogn

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  • Hosting Information ... US Tribal Websites US Tribal Pages (BIA Recognized)
    Listings here are restricted to US Government "recognized" tribes. NativeWeb realizes that there is great controversy about who is "recognized" and who is not. We take no political position in this matter other than to designate official US recognition. Web sites with specific information about recognized tribal governments, reservations, and contacts. The BIA maintains a list of U.S. Federally Recognized Nations See also the 1992 BIA criteria for acknowledgement as as Indian tribe Resources: 131 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    Arapaho Business Council Arapaho US - Northwest
    The Wind River Reservation is home to the Northern Arapaho. The reservation covers 2,268,008 acres. There are 5,953 Arapaho tribal members. The tribal headquarters of the reservation is in Fort Washakie, Wyoming. The total labor force of the Wind River Indian Reservation is 1,702. The per capita income is $4,340. Almost 63% of the residents have a high school diploma and over 6% have a Bachelor's Degree of higher.
    More sites on tlc.wtp.net
  • 32. Collection Of Native American Links
    Seattle, Chief of the Suquamish indians wrote to shuswap Nation Neskonlith IndianReservation, Canada -Chief Voice - A group of native americans hosts this
    http://ccym.20m.com/natam.html
    Cheap Web Site Hosting
    Collection of Native American Links

    33. Elementary Social Studies Bibliography: Media Index
    Ways of Life Series We Are the shuswap West Coast My Family, Your Family native americanseries indians of the Northwest native americans People of the
    http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/curr_inst/iru/bibs/ess/media.html
    Media Index
    16 mm Films
    Audiocassettes
    Atlases
    CD-ROM
    Charts
    Games
    Kits
    Maps Periodical
    Pictures
    Posters
    Print-Fiction Print-Non-Fiction Slides Software Videos 16 mm Films Fiddlers of James Bay Fields of Endless Day First Winter The Good News Is Water Northern Games School in the Bush Teach Me to Dance A Visit From Captain Cook Audiocassettes Keepers of the Animals: Native Stories... Keepers of the Night: Native Stories... Atlases The Canadian Atlas of Aboriginal Settlement The Living Atlas: All About Maps The Macmillan School Atlas. 3rd ed. Nelson Canadian Atlas Nelson Intermediate Atlas The Nystrom Canadian Desk Atlas Picture It: Maps, Graphs, Charts, Time Lines,... CD-ROM Canada's Capital: The Story of Ottawa Charts Ways of Seeing Games Emotions: A Life Skills Program for Kids The World Shufflebook Kits Canada at the Polls: Election Simulation Kit Canada. Rev. ed. Canadian Families A Capital for All Canadians Discover Together: A Disability Awareness... Econ and Me Enrico's Project Folk Rhymes: Kids to Kids The Golden Dragon Mathematics From Many Cultures 1 Mathematics From Many Cultures 2 Mathematics From Many Cultures 3 Our Wonderful World Our World: Part I - Families and Schools Our World: Part II - Neighbourhoods...

    34. Tales Of The North American Indians, Preface, Table Of Contents, Introduction
    THE ANT AND THE GRASSHOPPER (shuswap) 260. is least among the California Indiansof any great attractions as a characteristic product of our native americans.
    http://www.sacred-texts.com/nam/tnai/tnai00.htm
    Sacred Texts Native American Index Next
    TALES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS
    SELECTED AND ANNOTATED
    BY
    STITH THOMPSON
    Indiana University Press
    Bloomington
    Scanned at sacred-texts.com, 1998 and April 2001 TO MY PARENTS
    JOHN WARDEN THOMPSON
    ELIZA McCLASKEY THOMPSON
    PREFACE
    DURING the past century the untiring labors of a score or two of field workers have gathered from the North American Indians by far the most extensive body of tales representative of any primitive people. These tales are available in government reports, folk-lore journals, and publications of learned societies. Unfortunately, the libraries in which more than a small portion of them can be examined are few, and even in the largest libraries the very wealth of material serves but to confuse the general reader who seeks without undue expenditure of time to acquaint himself with American Indian tales. The unit of arrangement of the volume is thus the talenot the tribe or the culture area. That each area has characteristics peculiar to itself the editor shows in the Introduction, but for the purpose of this volume the tale-type has been chosen as the most logical basis for classification. Only the first chapter, that on mythological tales, follows a geographical order. It is hoped that the geographical arrangement of the notes will give adequate recognition to the significance of tribe and culture area. In his choice of the texts of the tales the editor has striven to use a full, well-told example of each tale. With the following exceptions, he has given the texts as they appear in the original collections. (1) In stories about a single hero, the spelling of his name has been standardized. (2) Certain Indian names have been changed in spelling in order to be more easily pronounced by the general reader. Occasionally an Indian word has been omitted entirely when it did not add to the meaning of the story. (3) In several places irrelevant episodes have been omitted. These changes are always indicated.

    35. Native Americans -  American Indians, The First People Of America
    native AMERICAN NATIONS Last update January 20, 2003. Maintained by Lisa Mitten INFORMATION ON INDIVIDUAL native NATIONS
    http://www.nativeamericans.com/
    Tribes find common ground in sorrow By Martin Kasindorf, USA TODAY TUBA CITY, Ariz. On the desert mesas east of the Grand Canyon, Hopis and Navajos have been quarreling for centuries over land, grazing rights and water. Now, war and loss have eased the tensions, at least for a while. Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, one of the few American Indian women in the military, was found dead during the rescue of an American POW in Iraq. By Rudy Gutierrez, El Paso Times The Native American tribes united in anxiety when Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, 23, was reported missing in an ambush in Iraq on March 23. When word came over the weekend that she had been killed in action and her body found, shock stirred Hopi and Navajo alike. (Related stories: Fallen comrades Remembered soldiers Lori Piestewa, daughter of a Hopi man and a Hispanic woman, was the first woman to die in the line of duty in

    36. WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources
    Library American indians. Index of native American Cultural of Mohican indians Spokane Tribe of indians (Official) Suquamish Association The Secwepemc Nation (shuswap). The
    http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html
    WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
    Index of Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet
    F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
    This document must be read before sending any email!
    Search this site
    3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
    Try one of these programs! Mac users, my choice is Spamfire, from Matterform Media VIRUS ALERT - Save 50% on McAfee.com VirusScan Online!
    Save $25 on McAfee Internet Essentials
    Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations. Please learn how you can support this site.
    Multi-Cultural Sites
    A Line In The Sand , issues of cultural property and cultural sensitivity Assembly of First Nations Center For World Indigenous Studies
    Fourth World Documentation Project:
    Indigenous Peoples' Information for the Online Community
    ... American Indian Art and Ethnographica Magazine
    Tribe/Nation Sites
    United States
    Iroquois Confederacy [Including Canada]
    Haudenosaunee Lacrosse: An Iroquois Tradition Mohawk Council of Kahnawake ... St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Environment Division

    37. Native American Directory
    shuswap Nation Chief Arthur M. Manuel and the Chief Seattle, Chief of the SuquamishIndians wrote to Tribal Voice - A group of native americans hosts this
    http://www.powerplace.com/atpost/nativeam.html

    Home
    Shopping Santa Fe Suggest a Link ...

    38. ESRI Conservation Program Resources: General Conservation
    n. native PEOPLES OF THE SOUTHWEST University of Arizona Map Site . n. nativeWeb. n. Secwepemc People (shuswap Nation) . n. Seneca Nation of indians, NY e98 . n.
    http://www.conservationgis.org/links/native0.html
    ESRI Conservation Program Resources:
    Native/First Nations Index
    Conservation . Bibliography . The Earth . Home . Search
    (ECP and CTSP grantees and other sites of interest for conservation geograpy, mapping and GIS
    Aboriginal Mapping Network n Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians e96 n Alaska Sea Otter Commission, Ak, e98 n The Algonquins of Barriere Lake, Canada e97 n n Arctic Slope Native Association, Ltd., Ak c98 c99 n Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, Odana WI e95 n Berkeley/Borneo Project, Berkeley CA e95 n Blackfeet Indian Nation n Cahuilla Bird singers and dancers n California Indian Basketweavers Association CA e97 n Cherokee Nation, Talequah OK e94 n Chippewa Cree Tribe, Box Elder MT e95 n Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, WA e95 n Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, Pablo MT e95 n Confederated Tribes of Umatilla Indian Reservation, Pendleton OR e95 n Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, OR e93

    39. ESRI Conservation Program Resources: General Conservation
    Information Program, Abenaki's USA Project, shuswap Nation GIS to provide basic informationabout a native American group Pala Band of Mission indians, CA, e98
    http://www.conservationgis.org/links/native4.html
    ESRI Conservation Program Resources:
    Native/First Nations Page 4
    Jump To Page: Jump to Papers
    (ECP and CTSP grantees, reports, and other sites of interest for conservation geograpy, mapping and GIS . Grantees are coded by program and year of grant at the end of their name/state, i.e. e91 means ECP grant in 1991. c=cstp, cm=ctsp-mac, cs=ctsp-software)
    Native Americans at Princeton . (email naap@phoenix.princeton.edu) "Native Americans at Princeton is a student organization/support group for students comprised of Native Hawaiian, American Indian, and Native Alaskan members. Currently, American Indians and Native Hawaiians constitute 0.5 percent of the Princeton student body." . Don't miss their excellent . Native American Links Page (750 Burbank St., Broomfield, Colorado 80020 (303) 466-1725 Fax: (303) 466-5414 ) "The Society has evolved into a dynamic organization that represents professional biologists, natural resource managers, technicians, and conservation law enforcement officers. The Society strives to be responsive to the emerging needs of political and technical decision-makers. In addition, the Society shares educational, legislative, bio-technical, economic, legal, fiscal, and enforcement programs to help form a progressive agenda of tribal management pursuits." NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN RESOURCES (by Paula Giese, 515 West 25th Street Minneapolis, Minnesota, US 55405 tel:612/872-2352 mailto:pgiese@gold.tc.umn.edu) . "This site was created in 1995 by Paula Giese and is maintained by her. Courtesy of the Fond du lac Tribal Community College, it has a server home to run on, which I otherwise could not afford....Its purpose is to provide cultural and educational material from many tribal backgrounds for Indian educators, students at all age levels and schools. Webmistress is responsive to needs for developing such material expressed by Indian educators." see:

    40. Contact Information - Denis Poustka, Photographer, Vancouver BC
    native americans. Among them, as illustrated below, is a set of 10 Blank Note cards,with envelopes portraying North American indians in their traditional
    http://www3.telus.net/poustkaphoto/collectiblenative.html
    Native Americans Throughout my career, I have created over 100 different postcards and greeting cards for tourism and commercial based industries. Among them, as illustrated below, is a set of 10 Blank Note cards, with envelopes portraying North American Indians in their traditional regalia. Price: $20.00 (US)/set plus $3.50 (US) for postage and handling. The images are also available in calendar format for direct retail. The minimum order is 100 calendars. A total of 3,500 calendars are required for the minimum print run. All orders must be placed by the end of February. If you are interested in the next print run, please contact me by email at denis_poustka@telus.net for wholesale pricing. Yakama
    Sahaptin/Wasco

    Tahltan

    Musgamagw-Tsawataineuk
    ... denis_poustka@telus.net : tel 604.572.5550 web site design: www.tangerinedesign.com

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