Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_S - Shuswap Indians Native Americans

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-91 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         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

81. Search Geographic Images By Country Result Set
and dress, Costume, Jewelry native American girl location information Alberta TopicsIndians of North location information Sawmill at shuswap Lake, British
http://image.lib.depaul.edu/GIC/SearchByCountryResults.asp?FIPS='CA'

82. Native American Culture - Organizations
native American Support Group of New York City the development needs of AmericanIndians and operates shuswap Nation Tribal Council (SNTC) SNTC was formed in
http://www.ewebtribe.com/NACulture/orgs.htm
Organizations Adopt-A-Native-Elder Program
This page describes the vision for this Program, illustrated by a wonderful logo. They are a non-profit organization whose focus is on "supporting the Elders who desire to remain on the Land, living in the traditional ways of the Dine'." American Indian Cultural Support
This organization is "dedicated to preserving our various Nations sovereignty, legal rights, lands, and cultures." AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT
The 1968 Minneapolis Aim Patrol, created to address issues of police brutality, now protects treaty rights and preserves traditional Native Spirituality and culture. ATNI - Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians
This non profit organization, founded in 1953, representing 43 Northwest tribal governments, is composed of the people it is meant to serve the Indian peoples. Center for American Indian Research and Education
"The mission of CAIRE is to improve the status of Native people by promoting, developing, and evaluating culturally appropriate health, education, and social programs for American Indians and Alaska Natives nationally." Children/Families Sponsoring Program
The Sun Eagles administer this program from their home on the Mattaponi Indian Reservation as a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Charity. "With our Children's sponsoring program there are still many children that need sponsors. We hope the next one will be

83. Native American Directory Of Vital Records At The Records Room
In 1995, more of the nation's native American indians, Eskimos and
http://www.daddezio.com/records/room/indian.html
Vital Records Search and Information Directory for the United States Topics
Vital Records

Military Records

Native Americans

Birth Certificates
...
Miscellaneous

Helpful Resources
- Adoption Puzzle

- First Name Basis

- StateGenSites

- Family Tree Climbers
... - Olive Tree Genealogy Vital Records
Native American Directory
Welcome to the Native American vital records room. Finding vital records for Indian tribes is a difficult challenge, many vital records were lost as the tribes got pushed westward onto reservations. We've cataloged addresses, plus online and offline vital records for each North American tribal unit. Enter the Native American Directory Or pick a tribe: Abenaki Accohannock Alabama-coushatta Algonquian Apache Apalachee Arapaho Arikara Assiniboine Athabaskan Bannock Blackfeet Caddo Calusa Cayuse Cherokee Cheyenne Chickahominy Chickasaw Chicora Chilcotin Chilula Chippewa Chitimacha Choctaw Chumash Coharie Comanche Cowichan Cowlitz Cree Creek Crow Delaware Dene Dogrib Edisto Esselen Flathead Goshute Gros Ventre Gwitch'in Haida Haliwa Hidatsa Ho Chunk Hohokam Hopi Houma Hualapai Hupa Huron Illinois Innu Inuit Inupiaq Iowa Iroquois Kalispel Kansa Karuk Kaw Kickapoo Kiowa Klallam Klamath Kootenai Kutchin Kwakiutl Lenape Lumbee Mahican Maidu Makah Mandan Mattaponi Maya Melungeon Meherrin Menominee Metis Miami Micmac Mingo Missouri Miwok Mohawk Mohegan Mohican Monacan Montauketts Nansemond Nanticoke Narragansett Naskapi Natchez Navajo Nisga'a Nooksack Nootka Ohlone Ojibwe Omaha Onondaga Osage Oto Ottawa Paiute Palouse Pamunkey Paugussett Pawnee Penobscot Peoria Pequot Pima Piscataway Pokanoket Pomo Potawatomi

84. Nativepeoples
Nez Perce, Okinagan, Pend D'oreilles, Sarsi, Shoshone, shuswap, Spokan, Thompson Kutchin,Metis, Montagnais, Naskapi, Slavey Miscellaneous Web native Web Site
http://cadystruecolorsherstory.homestead.com/Nativepeoples.html
Native American Times Whispering Wind The Old Ways HOME ... Panthers Lodge
Other South East Tribes
Ais,Alibamu,Apalachee.Biloxi,Calusa,Catawba,Cheraw,Chitimacha,Cusabo,Guale,Hitchiti, Houma,Kaskinampo,Koasati,Koroa,Kusso-Natchez,Lower Creeks,Quapaw,Santee,Taensa,Taino,Tekesta,Timucua,Tunica,Upper Creeks, Waccamaw,Wateree,Yamasi,Yazoo,Yuchi
North East Tribes Abnaki,Angonquin,Assiniboin,Cayauga, Chippewa, Delaware, Eastern Cree, Eastern Dakota (Santee Dakota, Teton Dakota, Yankton Dakota), Eno, Fox, Honiasont, Huron, Iroquois,Malecite, Massachuset,Mattaponi, Menominee, Micmac, Mohawk, Mohican,Monacan, Moneton, Montagnais, Montauk,Mosopelea, Nanticoke, Narragansett, Nottoway,Oneida, Onondaga, Ottawa, Paleoindian, Pamlico, Pamunkey, PassamaQuoddy, Pennacook, Penobscot, Peguot, Pocomtuc, Potawatomi, Powhatan, Saponi, Seneca, Susquehanna, Tobacco Nation, Tuscarora, Tutelo, Waccamaw, Wampanoag, Winnebago.
California Tribes
Achomawi, Atsugewi, Cahuilla, Chemehuevi, Chumashan, Cocopas, Costanoan, Diegueno, Gabrieleno, Hupa, Kato, Kern River, Laguna, Luiseno, Maidu Mechoopda, Mattole, Miwok, Pomo, Salinan, Serrano, Shasta, Taino, Taos Pueblo, Walaki, Wappo, Wintun, Yani, Yokuts, Yuki.
Plains Tribes Arapaho, Arikara, Blackfeet, Blood, Caddo, Cheyenne, Coahuilteco, Comanche, Crow, Gros Ventre, Hidasta, Illinois, Iowa, Kanza, Karankawa, Kichai, Kickapoo, Kiowa,Lakata Sioux, Lipan Apache, Mandan, Miami, Missouri, Omaha, Osage, Oto, Paducah Apache, Pawnee, Piegan, Ponca, Quapaw, Rosebud Sioux, Shawnee, Sicangu Lakota, Sutaio, Tawakoni, Tonkawa, Western Kree, Wichita

85. Adult List
a site ceremonially sacred to the shuswap people since white man is once again explainingIndians to other From the viewpoint of native peoples, protection of
http://www.kstrom.net/isk/books/adult/ad536.html
Adult Reading Level
NATIVE AMERICANS IN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE, John C. Stott, Oryx Press, 4041 North Central Indian School Road, Phoenix, AZ 85012; 800-279-4663. 1995 paperback, 239 pages, indexes. $24.95. 0-89774-782-8 The author, a professor of children's literature at University of Toronto, has written a book that is aimed at teachers from elementary picture-book-age readers through junior high school. His audience is non-Native teachers at schools Canadian and U.S. whose populations are entirely or mainly non-Native. Short reviews summarize themes and content of several hundred children's books, U.S. and Canadian are grouped at the end of each thematically-organized chapter. All but a handful of the books discussed are either works of fairly recent contemporary fiction or legends a few adult collections but mostly those retold as children's stories. The overwhelming majority of the books discussed and reviewed are by non-Native authors. At the end of Stott's book is a long appendix setting out a program for incorporating Native stories into the Language Arts program. Stott gives no attention to Indian history or current affairs (because he says that's social studies). Similarly, the efforts of authors like Abenaki Joseph Bruchac (who writes an enthusiastic foreward to the book) to relate "nature stories and legends" to a kind of science instruction that is more holistic and presents a world view in which human beings are one part of a web of existence, are treated as if they were just more stories for the language arts program. In science, though, the stories are part of a proposed alternative to a powerful way western science and technology of knowing, altering, and being in the world.

86. NativeWeb Resources: Resource & Informational Sites
as the Lake Division of the shuswap Tribe within the stereotyped portrayal of NativeAmericans in their indians of California Tad Beckman, US - Southwest, 428.
http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/nations_web_sites_information/resource_inform

Home
Login Contact Us Resources for Indigenous Cultures around the World Resources Community Services About Us
Resource Center
  • Internet Links
  • Nations Index
  • Geographic Region Index
  • Search the Site ...
  • Top 5 Percent Hosted Resources
  • Hosted Pages
  • NativeLaw News
  • NativeTech Site Information
  • Get your FREE EMAIL @NativeWeb.Net!
  • Community
  • About Us
  • Hosting Information ...
    Resource Database

    Resources: 186 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    A Southern California Native American Site Chumash US - Southwest
    Our site is part of an on going project to inform the public, academia, and students on the Natives of Southern California. With recent developement of gaming, the public has been presented with information that was either misinformed or baised. The site covers all the recognized and unrecognized tribes and bands in southern California.
    More sites on www.csusm.edu
    Aboriginal Digital Collections
    This pilot program is a unique opportunity for Aboriginal Canadians to preserve, celebrate and communicate their heritage, languages and contemporary life by developing and accessing materials over the Information Highway.
    More sites on www.schoolnet.ca
  • 87. Indigenous Nations Of North America
    Coola) Okanagan Nation Secwepemc Nation (shuswap) Sekani Nation Hull, Quebec The VirginiaNative American Cultural First People The Early indians of Virginia
    http://www.indians.org/welker/nations1.htm
    Indigenous Nations of North America
    Native Languages of Canada Native Languages of the U.S. Native Languages - Native Book Center Indigenous Nations - Addresses ... List of federally recognized tribes
    NATIVE CIRCLE
    Ahtena (Athapaskans) of Alaska
    Alabama-Coushatta (Alibamu, Koasati)
    Alabama-Coushatta Reservation of Texas
    Coushatta Tribe of Lousiana
    Algonquin Nations
    Elder William Commanda
    Abenaki
    Maine, Vermont, New York
    Odanak - Quebec, Canada Algonquin bands of Quebec Mohican/Mahican (Stockbridge-Munsee) Virginia Algonquins (Tidewater area) Apache Athapaskan Apache Tribe of Oklahoma (formerly known as Kiowa-Apache) Fort Sill Apache Tribe of Oklahoma (Chiricahua, Warm Springs) Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation of New Mexico Mescalero Apache Reservation of New Mexico (Chiricahua, Lipan, Mescalero) San Carlos Apache Reservation of Arizona Tonto Apache Indians of Arizona White Mountain Apache Tribe of Arizona (White Mountain, Cibecue)

    88. A Time Before Deception
    westerns movies about Cowboys and indians - will recall of broad issues, such asNative communication and on his field research with the shuswap people of
    http://www.muslimedia.com/archives/book98/deceptbk.htm
    Honesty, integrity hallmarks of Native Indian communication discourse
    A TIME BEFORE DECEPTION: TRUTH IN COMMUNICATION, CULTURE, AND ETHICS. By Thomas W. Cooper. Clear Light Publishers, Santa Fe, New Mexico, US. 1998. pp. 244. Pbk. US$14.95. By J A Progler Anyone who has watched old American westerns - movies about Cowboys and Indians - will recall the popular phrase uttered by many an Indian, 'pale face speak with forked tongue.' Along with several other Indianisms, this one entered into American popular culture to such a degree that it lost its original rhetorical strength. But what this phrase meant, besides connoting that the White man was like a snake, was that white people 'spoke out of both sides of their mouth.' To put it simply, White people were double-dealing liars. The abysmal record of broken treaties and land swindling deals alone illustrates the pithy wisdom of this Native observation. But there are other dimensions to the popular aphorism: it also speaks to Native worldviews, traditional forms of expression and communication, and the sacred ecology of indigenous peoples. Thomas W. Cooper, Professor of Mass Communication and former assistant to the late Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan, researched communication and ethics among Native American peoples for his aptly titled latest work, A Time Before Deception. Cooper lived among several Native nations in Canada and the US, gaining access to their sacred spaces and sense of trust.

    89. Links To American Indian Web Ring And Langauge Sites By Phil Konstantin
    Languages imovies to show some Plains indians signs Co 1 through 5 in many differentnative languages Ojibwe shuswap Words by Janice DickBilly Secwepemc is
    http://americanindian.net/links6.html
    Links to American Indian Web Ring and Langauge Sites by Phil Konstantin - Page 6
    Click here to find out about getting paid to surf the net!
    About My Book
    Below is a picture of the cover of my book
    "This Day in North American Indian History"

    IT IS NOW AVAIABLE.

    Click on the cover to order a copy
    ...
    in the USA.

    or
    In the U.K.
    or In Germany or In France or In Canada
    Looking for a good book, usually at a discount?
    Purchasing a book through this link helps support my site. Click on the appropriate line below:
    American Indian History Books
    American Indian Biography Books

    American Indian Studies Books

    American Indian Literature Books
    ... Click here for Computer Equipment
    If you find a link which no longer works properly, or you wish to suggest a site for inclusion in this list, please let me know.
    Web Ring Sites dedicated to Indigenous Peoples
    A Web Ring is a group of different sites which are all linked together
  • Native American Ring
  • White Buffalo Web Ring
  • The Hawk's Nest
  • The Tsalagi Ring ...
  • CARIBBEAN AMERINDIAN WEBRING
  • Language Sites
  • The Abenaki Language
    a discussion of the language and some translations
  • Ne-Do-Ba: Common Abenaki Words
    "The words in these lists have been collected from many sources, some are Western Abenaki and some are Eastern Abenaki"
  • 90. NativeWeb Home
    Shawnee. Shinnecock. Shoshone. Shuar. shuswap. Siksika. Siletz. Sioux. South Asia
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources.php?type=1

    91. Aboriginal First Nations Native American Culture History Spirituality Traditions
    Turtle Island native NetworkCanada's Aboriginal news and information network. A well managed intersection for Aboriginal Peoples on the Information Highway.
    http://www.turtleisland.org/culture/culture.htm
    SPOTLIGHT on Traditional and
    Contemporary CULTURE
    >It's ALL about Culture Pow Wows Sacred sites Aboriginal Place Names Medicine Wheel Iroquois Creation Story Various Creation Stories Culturual Survival Indigenous Voices Indigenous Knowledge Seventh Generation Sacred Texts One explanation of smudging an audio file Spirituality Native American Church Traditional Teachings of the Medicine Wheel Sacred Land Film Project Protecting Knowledge Archives Languages Gatherings Food Sports Canoes Music Elders Teachings Museums Books Theatre Media Communities Organizations Discussions Resources Businesses FUN - Entertainment Flags RODEO Research Healing Families Success Media Culture News More News Nuxalk

    Museums, Galleries and Cultural Places Click on the names below Woodland Cultural Centre Aboriginal Training Program in Museum Practices Virtual Keeping House Virtual Museum of Inuit Art Alutiiq Museum Inuit Gallery Iroquois Museum Mitchell Museum of the American Indian London Museum of Archaeology Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Cultural Center First Peoples Hall U'mista Cultural Centre Umista Cultural Centre Secwepemc Museum Nokomis Gallery Two Feathers Gallery National Museum of the American Indian UBC Museum of Anthropology XÁ:YTEM Museum Heard Museum Grand Ronde Center Eiteljorg Museum Curtis Gallery Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Shared Visions Gallery Arctic Circle Museum of Art The Du Quah Gallery Aboriginal Art Gallery Saskatchewan Museum of Indian Arts and Culture Institute of American Indian Arts Museum California Indian Museum Poeh Center Pueblo Grande Museum

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-91 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

    free hit counter