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         Iroquois Indians Native Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Joseph Brant, 1743-1807, Man of Two Worlds (An Iroquois Book) by Isabel Kelsay, 1986-08
  2. Longhouse (Native American Homes) by Cynthia Breslin Beres, 2000-09
  3. Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire: The Albany Congress of 1754 by Timothy J. Shannon, 2000-01
  4. An Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615-1649 (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by Elizabeth Tooker, 1991-05
  5. To Die Game: The Story of the Lowry Band, Indian Guerrillas of Reconstruction (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by William McKee Evans, 1995-12
  6. The Iroquois Eagle Dance: An Offshoot of the Calumet Dance (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by William N. Fenton, 1991-12
  7. Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations (Massinahigan Series: Brief Accounts of Early Native America, 2) by David Cusick, 2004-05-30
  8. Naked Bear Folktales of Iroquois
  9. The Renewed, The Destroyed, And The Remade: The Three Thought Worlds Of The Iroquois And The Huron, 1609-1650 by Roger M. Carpenter, 2004-12-30
  10. Boy Who Lived With Bears and Other Iroquois Stories by Joseph Bruchac, 1995-09
  11. The Sun's Daughter by Pat Sherman, 2005-03-28
  12. Basic Call To Consciousness
  13. Dreamways of the Iroquois: Honoring the Secret Wishes of the Soul by Robert Moss, 2004-12-16
  14. The Iroquois (Digging Up Native American History) by Connie R. Miller, 2003-09

81. Sasquatch And Native Americans
She was a member of AIM, the American Indian Movement, during the 70s. I think her paper gives a good basic survey of native American thought on the
http://www.ncf.carleton.ca/~bz050/HomePage.bfna.html
Credit: Henry Franzoni I met Gayle Highpine, a Kootenai Indian, at a monthly meeting of the Western Bigfoot Society. She had published the following paper in a very early Track Record, and gave me permission to reprint it here on the conference. Gayle has traveled extensively among the various reservations and enclaves of North American Indians for the last 30 years. She was a member of A.I.M., the American Indian Movement, during the '70s. A female Indian who was always interested in the old ways, she was and is very interested in learning more about Sasquatch, and she has listened attentively to many medicine men's Sasquatch stories as she traveled from reservation to reservation. I think her paper gives a good basic survey of Native American thought on the subject, and I find her obervation of the apparent division between "Flesh and Blood", thinkers and "Spiritual/Mystical" thinkers highly enlightening. P.S. The Kootenai tribe's home basically is southeast British Columbia. Attitudes Toward Bigfoot in Many North American Cultures
By Gayle Highpine "But, special being as he is, I have never heard anyone from a Northwestern tribe suggest that Bigfoot is anything other than a physical being, living in the same physical dimensions as humans and other animals. He eats, he sleeps, he poops, he cares for his family members. However, among many Indians elsewhere in North America... as widely separated at the Hopi, the Sioux, the Iroquois, and the Northern Athabascan Bigfoot is seen more as a sort of supernatural or spirit being, whose appearance to humans is always meant to convey some kind of message."

82. EDSITEment - Lesson Plan
The US government was modeled on the iroquois nations. Countering Prejudiceagainst American indians and Alaska Natives through Antibias Curriculum and
http://edsitement.neh.gov/view_lesson_plan.asp?id=347

83. Native American Clashes With European Settlers
A major factor in the treaty disputes was native americans concept of land. The Treaty of Paris in 1763 ended the French and Indian War and gave
http://www.wvculture.org/history/indland.html
Home Arts Historic Preservation Museums ... Where We Are Entire Site Arts Goldenseal Historic Preservation Museums
Comments or Questions about our site? E-Mail our Webmaster
Native American Clashes with European Settlers
Emergence of Tribes
As the Confederacy fought smaller tribes for control of western Virginia, European colonists set their own designs on the Ohio Valley. In 1607, English colonists landed at Jamestown, Virginia. Based on various explorations, the British and French laid claim to the territory comprising present-day West Virginia and Native Americans were forced west. Many of the tribes were destroyed by constant warfare and catastrophic diseases. At the same time, trade with the Europeans proved a strong attraction, enabling the Indians to acquire valuable new products, such as guns, steel hatchets, cloth, and kettles. The fur trade in particular made many tribes powerful and more aggressive. The Indian nations successfully played one European power against another. For instance, the British formed an alliance with the Iroquois Confederacy to cut the French out of the lucrative fur trade. However, the Six Nations also negotiated treaties and traded with the French. Treaties
As part of their negotiations, the British secured three treaties which opened the western Virginia frontier to European settlement: Treaty of Albany (1722) and Treaty of Lancaster (1744) with the Six Nations and Treaty of Logstown (1752) with the Delaware and Shawnee. At Lancaster, Virginia negotiators convinced the Six Nations to surrender their land to the "setting sun," which the Confederacy interpreted as the crest of the Alleghenies and the British interpreted as all of western Virginia. Following the Treaty of Lancaster and the end of King George's War (1748) between England and France, Virginia pioneers pushed west of the Alleghenies.

84. REL Links: Native American
Encyclopedia Mythica native American mythology Old Indian Legends Myths Legends for Amer. Nations of the iroquois Confederacy
http://www.mc.maricopa.edu/dept/d34/rel/links-native.html
General Native American Powwow Myths/Legends Nations of the Southwest The Anasazi The Apache Peoples Hohokam/O'odham Hopi Peoples Navajo Nation (Dineh) Nations of the California Area Nations of Hawaii
  • Nations of the Northeast Algonquin Peoples (Midwest) Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy
  • 85. American Indian Tribes
    Information about various nations and groups of American indians. Oneida.See iroquois Confederacy Onondaga. See iroquois Confederacy
    http://www.infoplease.com/spot/aihmnations1.html
    var zflag_nid="162"; var zflag_cid="57/1"; var zflag_sid="53"; var zflag_width="728"; var zflag_height="90"; var zflag_sz="14"; in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
    Daily Almanac for
    Sep 22, 2005

    86. American Indian Webquest
    They need to teach their classes about American indians. They need to includeinformation about http//www.fcps.k12.va.us/FairhillES/webquest/native.htm
    http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/DeerParkES/kids/whiting/American Indian template.htm
    American Indian Webquest A WebQuest for 2nd Grade (Social Studies) Designed by Betsy Whiting
    Introduction
    Task Process ... Credits
    Introduction
    The second grade teachers needs your help! They need to teach their classes about American Indians. They need to include information about food, clothing and shelter. It will be your quest to create a Kidpix slide show that teaches kids about American Indians.
    The Task You will explore resources to learn about Woodland Indians, Plains Indians and Pueblo Indians. You will use this information to create a slide show that will teach second graders how these Indians used resources from their environment to provide food, shelter and clothing.
    The Process Follow these steps to complete your quest:
  • You and your computer lab partner will research Indians from each of the three regions. You may use books in the classroom or any of the following weblinks: Eastern Woodland Indians Iroquois Dress Iroquois Housing Plains Indians ... Indian Clothing When you have found out how the Indians got their food and what they ate, you will print the
  • 87. Native American Studies
    iroquois Indian Museum Joanne Shenandoah s official website American Indian Alaska native (AIAN) data and links This is a US Census Bureau website
    http://exlibris.colgate.edu/gateway/nativeamericanstudies.htm

    Ask a librarian

    var MenuLinkedBy='AllWebMenus [2]', awmBN='518'; awmAltUrl='';
    Native American Studies: Resources selected by the Colgate Libraries
    Libraries Online catalog First Nations Materials in Special Collections Periodical Indexes and Abstracts Colgate's Native American Studies Program ... Research Guides for courses Quick Index to this web page: Art Education History Literature ... Library Research Guides Museums News Playing Indian Southern hemisphere ... Statistics
    GENERAL MEGA INDEXES NativeWeb Resources for Indigenous Cultures around the World
    Comprehensive site for Native American issues. Many good links to the indigenous cultures of Central and South America, and the Caribbean.
    World Wide Web Virtual Library : Indigenous Studies Fourth World Documentation Program
    Produced by the Center for World Indigenous Studies, this online library of texts "records and preserves our people's struggle to regain their rightful place in the international community. Included are Tribal and Inter-Tribal resolutions and papers, treaties, United Nations documents and much more.
    Native American Sites
    Very well constructed award winning site maintained by a mixed-blood Mohawk urban Indian, and a librarian at the Univ. of Pittsburgh. Provides "access to the home pages of individual Native Americans and Nations, and to other sites that provide solid information about American Indians".

    88. MSN Encarta - Related Items - Native Americans Of North America
    native americans of Middle and South America native americans of North America use of the term “Indian” for native americans World War II
    http://ca.encarta.msn.com/related_761570777_28/pictures_related_to_Native_Americ
    var fSendSelectEvents = true; var fSendExpandCollapseEvents = true; var fCallDisplayUAText = false; Web Search: Encarta

    89. Native American Authors: Joseph Bruchac
    He is the author of more than thirty books of poetry, native American folktales American literature20th century iroquois IndiansLiterary collections
    http://www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/A22
    the Internet Public Library
    Native American Authors Project
    Joseph Bruchac , 1942-
    Abenaki
    Joseph Bruchac was born in 1942, in Saratoga Springs, NY. He obtained his Ph.D at the Union Graduate School in 1975. He is the author of more than thirty books of poetry, Native American folktales and legends. He is a member of the Poetry Society of America (PEN).
    Awards and Honors
    New York State Arts Council grant, 1972
    American Book Award before Columbus Foundation, 1984.
    Wordcraft Circle Writer of the Year (Prose - Autobiography) award, 1998 (for Bowman's Store
    Wordcraft Circle Storyteller of the Year (Traditional Native Stories) award, 1998.
    Online resources by or about Joseph Bruchac:
    Authors Online Biography: Joseph Bruchac
    Author: Scholastic Inc.
    Type: authorbio
    Description: Scholastic's site about Bruchac includes a biography, booklist, and interview transcript.
    URL: http://teacher.scholastic.com/authorsandbooks/authors/bruchac/bio.htm A Chat With Joseph Bruchac
    Author: A.Word.A.Day
    Type: authorbio Description: Transcript of a Jan 10, 2001 online chat with Bruchac on the topic of "Poetry: The heartbeat knows no borders."

    90. Native American Authors: Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve
    native American Prose Award, University of Nebraska Press, 1992 A FirstAmericans book. iroquois IndiansJuvenile literature. Audience Youth
    http://www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/A118
    the Internet Public Library
    Native American Authors Project
    Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve (Virginia Driving Hawk) , 1933-
    Lakota
    Sioux

    Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve was born and raised on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. She was the daughter of an Episcopal priest and a Lakota Sioux mother. Sneve received her B.S. and M.Ed. in 1954 and 1969, respectively, from South Dakota State University. She has taught English in public school of South Dakota, and at the Flandreau Indian School in Flandreau. Her career also includes editor at the Brevet Press in Sioux Fall, S.D. Sneve is a member of the board of directors, Native American consortium, Corporation for Public Broadcasting ; member of the Rosebud Sioux tribe; member of board of directors of United Sioux Tribes Cultural Arts; and Historiographer of the Episcopal Church of South Dakota.
    Awards and Honors
    National Humanities Medalist, 2000
    Human Rights Award, South Dakota State Counselors Association, 1996
    Author-Illustrator Human and Civil Rights Award, 1996
    Spirit of Crazy Horse Award, 1996

    91. Native American Criminal Justice Resources
    Discussion of the iroquois Constitution Federally Recognized American Indian United States Department of Justice American Indian Alaska native
    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
    Maintained by Charles L. Dreveskracht

    92. Index Of Native American Language Resources On The Internet
    Handbook of North American indians, Vol.17 (Languages), pp.440482. Subscribe toNative Peoples Magazine American Indian Art Magazine
    http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAlanguage.html
    WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
    F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
    This document must be read before sending any email!
    Search this site
    Read the blog by a Navajo physician living in New Orleans. Help victims of Hurricane Katrina. Donate to the Red Cross. The iTunes shop updated again. Finally, some Jim Pepper Stop by The Literacy Site each day and click to donate a book to a childcare center for low income children.
    General Language Resources
    Alaska Native Languages Map
    AudioForum.com , offering audio tapes for learning many Native American languages
    Endangered Language Fund
    Everson Index of sites with information on standardization of computer support for languages
    Everson Typography
    Finding Our Talk , a 48 min. Documentary in Cree with English, French and Inuktitut versions.
    Foundation for Endangered Languages
    H-AmIndian Indigenous Languages Links
    I Love Languages
    Indigenous Language Institute ...
    Language Magazine , language teaching and learning.
    Less Commonly Taught Languages Project
    Linguistic Classification of American Indians
    Living Languages of the World
    MIT Indigenous Language Initiative ...
    Stabilizing Indigenous Languages , Gina Cantoni, Editor (Full text of this publication)
    Teaching Indigenous Languages
    Terralingua
    Unicode Organization
    Universal Declaration of Linguistic Rights
    United States
    Iroquois Confederacy
      Egads , Extensible Grammar and Dictionary Systems

    93. Native American Influence
    Home Circa 1804 Heritage native American Influence As if the other indianswere looked upon by them merely as animals. According to the present
    http://www.nps.gov/jeff/LewisClark2/Circa1804/Heritage/NativeAmericans/NativeAme
    Native
    American
    Influence Home Circa 1804 Heritage The Illiniwek In the 1600's the territory of the Illini Confederacy, a tribal group composed of twelve or thirteen allied tribes, covered areas that are now part of four states, including the region where St. Louis was founded in 1764. By the early 1800's, when treaties with the United States ultimately moved them away from their homeland, their population had dwindled to less than 200 people. Who were the Illiniwek people, and what brought about their swift decline?
    The Illiniwek were hunters and gatherers, farmers, warriors, and traders. In the Algonkin tongue ilini means "man" and iw means "is". "When one speaks the word 'Illinois,'" said the explorer Jacques Marquette, "it is as if one said in their language, 'the men',... As if the other [Indians] were looked upon by them merely as animals." According to the present day Peoria Indian tribe of Oklahoma, Illinois means "tribe of superior men". The Illini dialect was similar to that of the Miami, and closely related to the Chippewa (Ojibway), Potawatomi, and Kickapoo. By the 1600's, the Illiniwek Confederation probably consisted of the Kaskaskia, Peoria, Cahokia, Tamaroa, Michigamea, Moingwena, Tapouaro or Tapouro, Coiracoentanon or Korakoenitanon, Espemnka, Chinkoa or Chinko, Cepoussa or Chepoussa, Maroa, and Omouahoas. In this loosely-knit confederacy, the tribal council, with a formally appointed chief, was the governing body. Each tribe had a totem, similar in function to a European coat-of-arms. Before 1600 the Illiniwek Confederacy had a Grand Chief and one or more totems to signify the entire group of tribes.

    94. Native American - Indian Nations
    iroquois Indian Museum iroquois Language Social Songs lots of RealAudio The Museum of the native American Resources Center, UNC Pembroke - lots of
    http://www.juntosociety.com/native/in1899.htm
    1899 Map of Indian Nations Index of Indian Tribes

    If you find links have broken please notify me at webmaster@juntosociety.com
    Abenaki
    Accohannock
    Alabama-Coushatta
    Alaska Natives

    95. Creation/Migration/Origin Stories
    Origin of the Clans (Hopi), Origin of the iroquois Nations (iroquois) North American indians tell many stories about the stars individual stars
    http://www.indians.org/welker/legend.htm
    Creation/Migration/Origin Stories
    Ancient One Anishnabe Migration Story Apache Creation Story Aztec Creation Story Blessed Gift of Joy is Bestowed Upon Man California Creation Story (Yokut) Commanche Creation Story Coyote and Multnomah Falls (Wasco) Creation of the First Indians (Chelan) Creation of the [Maya] World - Version 1 Creation of the [Maya] World - Version 2 Creation of the Red and White Races (Flathead/Salish) Diguenos Creation Story First Fire (Cherokee) First Moccasins (Plains Nations) Flood on Superstition Mountain (Pima) Gaelic Myths/Legends Godasiyo the Woman Chief (Seneca) Grandmother's Creation Story (Creek) Great Flood (Salish) Great Serpent and the Great Flood (Chippewa) How Corn Came to the Earth How the Great Chiefs Made the Moon and the Sun (Hopi) How the Hopi Indians Reached Their World (Hopi) How the Old Man Made People How Rabbit Brought Fire to the People (Creek) In the Beginning In the Beginning (Yuchi) Men Visit the Sky (Seminole) Morning Star (Plains Indians) MicMac Creation Story Origin of Earth (Tuskegee) Origin of Fire (Jicarilla-Apache) Origin of Game and of Corn (Cherokee) Origin of Medicine (Cherokee) Origin of Summer and Winter (Acoma/Laguna) Origin of the Animals (Jicarilla-Apache) Origin of the Buffalo (Cheyenne) Origin of the Clans (Hopi) Origin of the Iroquois Nations (Iroquois) Origin of the Lakota Peace Pipe (Lakota) Origin of the Medicine Man (Passamaquoddy) Origin of the Sweat Lodge (Blackfeet/Piegan) Origin of the Thunderbird (Passamaquoddy) Origin of the Winds (Aleuts) Origin of Tu-Tok-A-Nu-La (Yosemite)

    96. Native American Masks
    Information about traditional and contemporary native American masks, Today most American Indian masks are used for dances, cultural drama, decoration,
    http://www.native-languages.org/masks.htm
    American Indian Art Indian Wood Carving > American Indian Masks Native American Languages Native American Tribes What's new on our site today!
    American Indian Masks
    Masks have been part of dance regalia and traditional ceremonies in many Indian tribes since ancient times. The most renowned native mask-makers were the Northwest Coast Indians, who carved elaborate cedar dance masks. The most impressive of these could be opened at a pivotal point in the story to reveal a second face carved within the first one. The Hopi and other Pueblo Indians carve and paint wooden kachina masks for their traditional dances the Iroquois create sacred "false face" masks from wood and cornhusks, the Navajo and Apache make leather masks for dancing, and the Cherokee would craft gourd masks for storytelling. Cherokee mask art has fallen into decline since the forced removal of the Cherokees to Oklahoma, where their traditional mask materials were not available, but some artists are working to revive the tradition Southwestern and Northwest Coast mask carving remain a vibrant part of contemporary native culture. Today most American Indian masks are used for dances, cultural drama, decoration, and as crafts for sale. The exception is Iroquois false faces, which are used only for internal religious ritual. The Iroquois consider it sacrilegious to sell, publicly display, or mimic a sacred false face mask, and they have been petitioning museums to return false faces from their exhibits. There is some debate among Iroquois traditionals about whether it is unacceptable to sell or display

    97. Native American Pottery
    Southwestern native American Pottery A beautiful collection of Indian pottery native American Cultures View our pages for individual Indian tribes,
    http://www.native-languages.org/pottery.htm
    Native American Art > Native American Pottery Native American Languages Native American Tribes What's new on our site today!
    American Indian Pottery and Sculpture
    As with basketry by the Cherokee and other Southeastern Indians, the Iroquois and other Eastern Woodland Indians, the Sioux and other Plains Indians, and the Shoshoni and other Great Basin Indians. (Further to the north, most of the people were hunter-gatherers, for whom pottery is less useful and more of a liability.) Some artists from these non-Southwestern tribes have recently begun to reclaim their ceramic traditions. Though Native American pottery styles, firing and finishing methods, and decorative patterns varied widely, the basic technology did notas far as I know no tribe ever used pottery wheels or other spinning instruments. All of them made coil and pinch pots by hand, as their descendants still do today.
    If you are looking to buy pottery or ceramics that were actually made by Native Americanseither because it's important to you to have the real thing or because you want to support native people with your purchasethen here is our list of American Indian artists whose pottery is available online. If you have a website of Indian pottery to add to this list, let us know . We gladly advertise any individual native artist or native-owned art store here free of charge, provided that all pottery was made by tribally recognized American Indian, Inuit, or First Nations artists.

    98. US Lacrosse --
    History of native American Lacrosse. By Thomas Vennum Jr. Author of AmericanIndian Lacrosse Little Brother of War Lacrosse was one of many varieties of
    http://www.lacrosse.org/museum/history.phtml
    US Lacrosse Home About US Lacrosse About the Sport Membership ... Members Only
    History of Native American Lacrosse
    By Thomas Vennum Jr.
    Author of American Indian Lacrosse: Little Brother of War
    Lacrosse was one of many varieties of indigenous stickball games being played by American Indians at the time of European contact. Almost exclusively a male team sport, it is distinguished from the others, such as field hockey or shinny, by the use of a netted racquet with which to pick the ball off the ground, throw, catch and convey it into or past a goal to score a point. The cardinal rule in all varieties of lacrosse was that the ball, with few exceptions, must not be touched with the hands. Early data on lacrosse, from missionaries such as French Jesuits in Huron country in the 1630s and English explorers, such as Jonathan Carver in the mid-eighteenth century Great Lakes area, are scant and often conflicting. They inform us mostly about team size, equipment used, the duration of games and length of playing fields but tell us almost nothing about stickhandling, game strategy, or the rules of play. The oldest surviving sticks date only from the first quarter of the nineteenth century, and the first detailed reports on Indian lacrosse are even later. George Beers provided good information on Mohawk playing techniques in his Lacrosse (1869), while James Mooney in the

    99. Native American Lore Index
    Below are links to several stories of native American Indian Lore from If you have a story of native Indian Lore you would like to have posted here,
    http://www.ilhawaii.net/~stony/loreindx.html
    Native American Lore Index Page
    Below are links to several stories of Native American Indian Lore from several Tribes across Turtle Island. If you have a story of Native Indian Lore you would like to have posted here, send it to me with as much information about the Lore that you can, and I will post it with others found here. Help me to make this site the best Lore site on the Web . Id like to extend a warm welcome to all those visiting from either Discovery School Magazine project or Animal Planet. Osiyo Oginalii, Ulihelisdi Owenvsv.... Cherokee for Greetings Friend, welcome home. Our site has been selected as a valuable Internet resource for Discovery Channel School's Discover Magazine theme for fall 1997 Buffalo and the Mouse
    Origin of the Buffalo Dance
    Blackfoot
    Comrades

    The Raccoon and the Bee-Tree

    Big Long Mans Corn Patch

    How Coyote Stole Fire
    ...
    How Fly Saved the River
    Anishnabeg
    Geow-lud-mo-sis-eg : Little People
    Maliseet
    How Glooskap Found the Summer
    Algonquin
    The Origin of Light
    Inuit
    The Magic Arrows
    The Runnaways The Legend of Wountie Squamish The Snake with the Big Feet Ravens Great Adventure Porcupine Hunts Buffalo The Legend of the Bear Family ... MicMac Creation Story Mic Mac How Bear Lost His Tail Ableegumooch, the Lazy Rabbit

    100. Thanksgiving Information
    Chronicles of American Indian Protest, The Council on Interracial Books forChildren, A THANKSGIVING PRAYER FROM THE iroquois (SENECA) PEOPLE Gwa!
    http://www.2020tech.com/thanks/temp.html
    Thanksgiving Information
    This material is provided by the Fourth World Documentation Project . A Table of Contents and some name tags have been added by 20/20 Technologies. For more Thanksgiving Links, please visit our Thanksgiving page.
    Table Of Contents
    Back to Index :: :: Olympia, Wa Fido Net 1:352/333 :: :: 98507-2574 206-786-9629 :: :: USA The Quarto Mundista BBS :: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Back to Index Back to Index Back to Index Back to Index ... Back to Index FTP ftp.halcyon.com /pub/FWDP/CWIS Center For World Indigenous Studies P.O. Box 2574 Olympia, WA U.S.A. 98507-2574 BBS: 206-786-9629 OCR Provided by Caere Corporation's PageKeeper Back to Index

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