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81. Native American/American Indian Employment Program
native american/american Indian Employment Program US EPA american IndianPolicy. MEMORANDUM. July 11, 2001. SUBJECT EPA Indian Policy
http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/native/2001/policy.html
Native American /American Indian Employment Program Recent Additions Contact Us Print Version Search: EPA Home Great Lakes Native American/American Indian Employment Program About ...
Partners
MEMORANDUM July 11, 2001 SUBJECT : EPA Indian Policy TO : All EPA Employees In 1984, EPA became the first Federal agency to adopt a formal Indian Policy, when William D. Ruckelshaus pledged that the Agency would support the primary role of Tribal governments in matters affecting American Indian country. The United States has a unique legal relationship with Tribal Governments based on the Constitution, treaties, statues, Executive Orders, and court decisions. This relationship includes a recognition of the right of tribes as sovereign governments to self-determination, and an acknowledgment of the Federal government's trust responsibility to the Tribes. I hereby reaffirm the Agency's commitment to this long-established policy and the principles therein that guide the Agency in building a stronger partnership with Tribal Governments to protect the human health and environment of Indian communities. Christine Todd Whitman
Attachment EPA Policy for the Administration of Environmental Programs on Indian Reservations November 8, 1984

82. Mike Crapo, U.S. Senate: Native Americans
Resources and Information Page for native Americans. However, States cannotenter into treaties with the Tribes, nor can they assert jurisdiction over
http://crapo.senate.gov/issues/native_americans.cfm
Home
Contact Me Services Resources ... Idaho
Native Americans
home issues Search Site
Contact Me
Services
Resources
Media
Legislative
Issues
I am proud of Idaho's vibrant history. Part of what makes up Idaho's culture is that it is home to five Native American Tribes: the Coeur d'Alene, Kootenai, Nez Perce, Shoshone-Bannock, and Shoshone-Paiute. They contribute to the richness of Idaho's history and are each important to its future. As part of my commitment to Idaho's Native Americans, I am a founding member of the Senate Native American Caucus, which was established in 2002. I also serve on the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, which has many important issues before it this year including trust reform, Indian health care, Indian gaming, and the investigation into Tribal lobbying abuses. I hope this web page proves useful to those of Native American heritage and to those interested in Native American affairs. I welcome your comments and suggestions to make this site even more useful.

83. NCD - Understanding Disabilities In American Indian And Alaska Native Communitie
National Resource Center on native american Aging (NRCNAA). (2002). For moreinformation you can visit the IHS Web site at www.ihs.gov. Medicaid
http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/2003/native_toolkit.htm
Contact Information:
National Council on Disability
1331 F Street, NW,
Suite 850
Washington, DC 20004 202-272-2004 Voice
202-272-2074 TTY
202-272-2022 Fax Comments and Feedback:
info@ncd.gov

Search for:
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITIES IN AMERICAN INDIAN AND ALASKA NATIVE COMMUNITIES: TOOLKIT GUIDE August 1, 2003 National Council on Disability
1331 F Street, NW, Suite 850 Washington, DC 20004 This report is also available in alternative formats and on NCD's award-winning Web site at www.ncd.gov Publication date: August 1, 2003 202-272-2004 Voice 202-272-2074 TTY 202-272-2022 Fax The views contained in this report do not necessarily represent those of the Administration as this and all NCD reports are not subject to the A-19 Executive Branch review process. About the Cover The four symbols on the cover of the Toolkit Guide were chosen to represent the spectrum of disabilities, whether visible or hidden, that may be experienced by individuals in the American Indian and Alaska Native community. The universal meaning of each symbol is described in the captions below along with the meaning of the symbol as it is used in this Toolkit specifically. Access for People Who Are Blind or Have Low Vision (blind with cane) Universally, this symbol identifies areas that are specifically designed to be accessible to or in some cases tailored to the unique abilities of individuals who are blind or have low vision. Within the Toolkit, this symbol is used to represent the community of individuals for whom sight is not a primary sensory tool.

84. Historical Government Documents
http//www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/locators/coredocs/index.html The volumescover US government treaties with native Americans from 17781883 (Volume II)
http://www.lib.utah.edu/govdoc/library/historicaldocuments.htm
Government Documents And Microforms University of Utah Marriott Library Library Departments Government Documents and Microforms
Historical Government Docuements Avalon Project
Historical Documents in the fields of Law,
History, Economics, Politics, Diplomacy, and Government (Yale University)
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/avalon.htm

A Century of Law Making for a New Nation:
U.S. Congressional Documents And Debates, 1774-1873
(Library of Congress, American Memory Project)
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/amlaw/lawhome.html

Core Documents of Democracy (United States Government Printing Office)
To provide American citizens direct online access to the basic Federal Government documents that define our democratic society.
http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/locators/coredocs/index.html
Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties (Oklahoma State University) Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties, compiled and edited by Charles J. Kappler, is an historically significant, seven volume compilation of U.S. treaties, laws and executive orders pertaining to Native American Indian tribes. The volumes cover U.S. Government treaties with Native Americans from 1778-1883 (Volume II) and U.S. laws and executive orders concerning Native Americans from 1871-1970 (Volumes I, III-VII). The work was first published in 1903-04 by the U.S. Government Printing Office. Enhanced by the editors' use of margin notations and a comprehensive index, the information contained in Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties is in high demand by Native peoples, researchers, journalists, attorneys, legislators, teachers and others of both Native and non-Native origins.

85. American West - Native Americans
Legal resources library Press releases - treaties info. - Searches. -Government Resources for native Americans on the Internet
http://www.americanwest.com/pages/natorgs.htm
NATIVE AMERICANS
Organizations and Government Sources
TABLE OF CONTENTS General Native American Resources Native American Nations Homepages Education Organizations And Government Sources ... Indian Tribes - Population Rankings
We have compiled this list of the 30 largest tribes or Native Nations in the U.S. based on the 1990 census report (U.S. Department of Commerce). Native American Rights Fund (NARF)
U.S. Department of Interior

(Responsible for the Bureau of Indian Affairs) U.S. Department of Interior - email addresses Bureau of Indian Affairs U.S. Census Bureau 8. -U.S. House of Representatives - Internet Law Library - Indian Nations and tribes Native American Legal Resources on the Internet 10. -Tribal Courts and Traditional Justice 11. -American Bar Association Law Practice Management 12. -Government Resources for Native Americans on the Internet 13. -U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs Senator Daniel K. Inouye Home Page
Vice-Chairman of the Senate's Indian Affairs Committee Ben Nighthorse Campbell
Member of the Senate's Indian Affairs Committee 16. -The Federal Web Locator

86. UCB Libraries | Redirect
If you are not automatically forwarded to the new site shortly,. please use thefollowing link. http//ucblibraries.colorado.edu/govpubs/us/native.htm
http://www-libraries.colorado.edu/ps/gov/us/native.htm
The University Libraries Website has been redesigned.
The directory structure and the domain has changed. If you are not automatically forwarded to the new site shortly, please use the following link:
http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/govpubs/us/native.htm
Please update your bookmarks.
Thank you.

87. Native Americans In Indiana
The Treaty of Fort Wayne (1803) was arranged by gov. To learn more aboutNative Americans in Indiana and elsewhere, please visit these sites
http://www.connerprairie.org/HistoryOnline/indnam.html
"The utmost good faith shall always be observed towards the Indians, their lands and property shall never be taken from them without their consent, and in their property, rights and liberty, they shall never be invaded or disturbed, unless in just and lawful wars authorized by Congress." Northwest Ordinance, 13 July 1787 From the period of French trading in the 17th century to the removals of the early 19th century, the life of the Native Americans was dominated by one central theme - the growing conflict of cultures. As nomads of the woodlands, prairies, and plains, they occupied wide expanses of land where they hunted, fished, and preserved their cultural heritage. With the coming of the white man, however, Indian society and culture were threatened. Foreign ways and customs, different values and beliefs, an increasing white population in the Trans-Appalachian region, and the white man's desire for more land were some of the problems which menaced the Indians' previously unchallenged position in the wilderness. The earliest accounts of Indians in the Great Lakes region came in the 1630s from the French Jesuit missionaries who were seeking to form a civilized Christian Indian nation. These holy men envisioned Indian tribes thoroughly imbued with French culture and patriotism and serving as an extension of the French Empire in the New World. In subsequent years, French missionaries and fur traders continued to mingle with the different tribes.

88. Links: Native Americans
It includes the full text of treaties between the US government and various Indian NARF attorneys, most of whom are native Americans, defend tribes who
http://www.nwjustice.org/links/natives.html

Online Donations

Volunteer Opportunities
Links to other web sites will be opened in a new browser window. Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians (ATNI)
http://www.atnitribes.org/

ATNI is a nonprofit organization representing 43 Northwest tribal governments from Oregon, Idaho, Washington, southeast Alaska, Northern California and Western Montana. Bureau of Indian Affairs
http://www.doi.gov/bureau-indian-affairs.html

The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), a subsidiary of the United States Department of the Interior, provides testimonies on legislation relevant for American Indians and Alaskan Natives, as well as phone contacts and information about the BIA.
http://digital.library.okstate.edu/kappler/index.htm

Volume II of this collection of Indian treaties has been digitized by the Oklahoma State University Library. It includes the full text of treaties between the U.S. government and various Indian tribes from 1778 to 1883. Compiled and edited by Charles J. Kappler.
Indian Child Welfare Act
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/25/ch21.html

89. Native American - Indian & Indigenous Links DLU:Th.1Sep05, Native American - Ind
National native american Awarness Month is also known as National american (concluded August 3, 1795 A treaty of peace between the United States of
http://www.harrold.org/rfhextra/nai.html
Remember 9.11 ...terrorists do!
Wanted Photos
Terrorists
1944 versus 2001
Native Events Calendar (src: nativeweb.org) Download the Gun Facts ebook that debunks gun-conrol myths. (by Guy Smith) Bush The Pro-Life President
src: DefendingTruth.org Education Links
You are here:
Other Study Links
The decimation of the Native Americans
Native American - Choose Another Page Harrold's Home Page Our Harrold Family Genealogy Home Index Page Harrold Surname Related Sites 54 'Search Now' Engines Abortion - America's Final Solution Art Astronomy Between Women - Cancer Support Group Big Brother, Privacy'n You Books, Online Earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanoes Free Web/PC Tools Genealogy Links Government Resources History Links HTML - Web Page Colors HTML Help, Tutors'n Tools Imperial Valley, Ca. Sites K-12 Courses, Lesson Plans K-12 Study, Reference Link Policy Military Brats+Bushy Park Native American, Indian News Briefs News Tickers Patriot Day : September 11, A Remembrance Potpourri of Favorites Privacy Statement Privacy Articles Site Map Reference Desk, Maps, Facts School-to-Career Search Engine Links Time, Calendars, Clocks

90. Librarians Internet Index Native Americans Http//lii2.wested
hundred US government treaties with native Americans from 1778 to 1883. Discusses legislation and cases related to sovereignty, native Americans and
http://lii2.wested.org/pub/subtopic/47800

91. Teaching American History Institutes
A new world class native american History and Culture Museum is coming in Speculate on what each party hoped to accomplish through this treaty.
http://score.rims.k12.ca.us/score_lessons/tah/lesson/native.html

Teaching American History Institutes
Desert Area Homepage Lesson Materials Resources ...
Native American Resources

Internet Lessons for Learning About Native Americans
Grade 5 Materials
Museum of Native American Cultures: A Project-based WebQuest
http://rims.k12.ca.us/score_lessons/native_museum/
The interactive display that the team constructs needs to have the following in order to be approved by the museum board:
a map of the region in which the people lived representations of the economy or material culture of the people including food production and consumption, housing, tools and weapons, clothing significant customs or religious practices an example of one of the stories, myths or legends significant person, event, or leader and a timeline
Create Your Own Native American Board Game
http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/nativeamericans/
Becoming an Expert on the Eastern Woodlands Indians This is a teacher-written set of eight lessons built around student reading and research about geography, food, buildings, shelters, gender roles, beliefs, tools, and modern culture of the Eastern Woodlands people. To shorten the unit, divide the class into teams to research one of the topics. Connectivity is not required. Indians of the Southwest http://www.sendit.nodak.edu/uswftn/net_lessons/lesson_plans/indianssouthwest.html

92. CORNPLANTER - U.S. NATIVE AMERICAN POLICY
Defeated, Cornplanter signed the Treaty of Fort Stanwix (1784) with the government, american Indian Alaska native Tribal Government Policy
http://www.greatdreams.com/cornplanter.htm
CORNPLANTER CURRENT U.S. NATIVE AMERICAN POLICY compiled by Dee Finney 3-29-02 - CORNPLANTER DREAM - I was dreaming about reading several paragraphs on a web page about the Native American - Cornplanter. Then the dream went into another scene where I was reading or at least scan-reading a magazine put out by a religious group about President George Bush and President William Clinton and their political relationship and police and the Native American during their terms of office. The magazine was written in 3 columns to a page, with many of the paragraphs in the center column highlighted with extra-large parentheses ( ) which stuck out into the other columns next to it on each side. When I finished looking at the magazine, I found myself in a building which was owned by a very conservative women's religious group. I was in the hallway with President Clinton and a man who did not look like, but I thought it was Al Gore. President Clinton left and I spent some time talking to Al Gore about what had been written about him and mentioned that there was nothing written about him that pointed to anything sexual about him, and the article seemed deliberately slanted that way. I was not able to go home because the room where my coat was hung had a meeting going on of all conservative religious women and I couldn't interrupt them.

93. NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE - PAGE 2
native american tribe of the Monterey Bay, California area Midwest TreatyNetwork; map Sulfide Mining in Wisconsin
http://www.greatdreams.com/nativeb.htm
updated 9-16-05 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 Pee Dee Pembina Band Pennicook Penobscot Peoria Pequot Pima-Maricopa Piman Pitt River Plateau Pocomoke Pomo Ponca Portage Band Potawatomi Powhatan Pueblo Puyallup Quapaw Quechua Quinault Ramapough Rankokus Raramuri River Yuman Sac Fox Sahnish Salish Samish Santo Domingo Saponi 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 Tulalip Tumucuan 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

94. LII - Results For "treaties"
http//www.nio.gov.uk/index/keyissues/the-agreement.htm The twenty NativeAmerican treaty tribes of western Washington created the Northwest Indian
http://www.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Treaties;subsearch=Treaties

95. LII - Results For "indians Of North America Legal Status, Laws, Etc."
Discusses legislation and cases related to sovereignty, native Americans and hundred US government treaties with native Americans from 1778 to 1883.
http://www.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Indians of North America Lega

96. Matters Of Race. Essays: ??? | PBS
Thus, the United States government began making treaties with Indian nations . Want to find out more about the Oglala Lakota and native Americans in
http://www.pbs.org/mattersofrace/essays/essay3_survival.html
"History of Survival: A Pine Ridge Example"
by Desiree Renee Martinez, Gabrielino (Tongva)
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University
Since the arrival of Europeans on the shores of the North American continent, indigenous peoples have struggled to survive in a dominate culture that does not want them. Since this moment of invasion, Europeans in what is now the continental United States have been trying to fix the "Indian problem" by removing indigenous communities from valuable land (arable, rich in ores and other natural resources) to lands that were less valuable. This removal was forced through war and unwanted treaties and without regard to the effects it would have on the cultures of the Native American people.
The Oglala Lakota are an example of a native community still dealing with this legacy. One of the 6 bands of the Lakota branch of the Sioux Nation, the Oglala Lakota currently live on the Pine Ridge reservation, located in the southeastern corner of South Dakota. The current conditions of homelessness, joblessness, poverty, and loss of traditional language fluency as described in segment three of "Matters of Race" are a direct result of the United States Indian policy of the 19th and 20th centuries.
The purchase of the Louisiana Territories from France in 1803 and its subsequent exploration by Lewis and Clark one year later brought much needed land for the growing American population. White settlers traveled across this new land, as they headed to the Oregon, California, and Alaskan territories for their respective gold rushes. Most of the land these fortune seekers traversed was used by the Sioux Nation. Indian leaders asked the United States to keep its citizens off their land while White settlers demanded that the U.S. protect them from Indian attacks that were in retaliation for the white settlers' trespassing. Thus, the United States government began making treaties with Indian nations.

97. UW Libraries - U.S. Government Documents - American Indians
american Indians and Alaska Natives. 1997 Economic Census Survey of Hosted bythe University of Oklahoma, Indian Affairs Laws and treaties is a
http://www-lib.uwyo.edu/subres/purl.cfm?id=721

98. Library Guides
There are a number of information resources for native american Studies on theWorld Wide Web. native american Organizations and Urban Indian Centers
http://www.uwm.edu/Library/guides/india154.htm
Web Resources for Native American Studies
There are a number of information resources for Native American Studies on the World Wide Web. Listed below are just a few sites that have useful information and/or links. For more Web resources, search the Internet using various search engines (AltaVista, Google). For other useful sites consult Multicultural Resources on the Internet. United States and Canada [(REF) E 184 .A1 G874 1999, and via netLibrary]. Alaska Natives and American Indians http://www.uaa.alaska.edu/just/rlinks/natives/index.html American Indian Culture Research Center http://www.bluecloud.org/dakota.html American Indians/Native Americans Health http://library.louisville.edu/government/subjects/indians/indhealth.html Center for Multilingual, Multicultural Research
Native American Resources http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~cmmr/Native_American.html First Nations Periodical Index http://www.lights.com/sifc/INTRO.HTM Index of Native American Resources on the Internet http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources National Congress of American Indians http://www.ncai.org/

99. Robert Ward
This Site Hosted By Ableza, a native american Arts and Film Institute http//oraibi.alphacdc.com/treaty/content.html More native Emvironmental Stuff
http://www.ableza.org/ward/ward.html
Dr. Robert R. Ward
American Indian Law Scientist
The Team
This is the Cherokee Flag that was used by the Native Indian Troops who were fighting for independence during the Civil War. Most history books have depicted the Civil War as being only about slavery. That is not exactly the truth. The Indian trrops from the lower plains and midwest joined Stand Watie to be armed by the Confederates in a fight for their independence. They were the last to surrender long after the war was over. The words "Cherokee Braves" is emblazoned in the white strip. The five red stars represent the five civilized tribes. This flag was carried by General Stand Waite. We will periodically be changing the opening picture with various items of Cherokee History. This Site Hosted By: Ableza , a Native American Arts and Film Institute THE PURPOSE of this page is to entice Native Indians and Volunteers from other cultures, into becoming involved in research and writing concerning matters of which are effecting the Native American Indian Nations, Tribes, and Bands. THE REASON is that each of our Native Indian Nations are constantly involved in some type of legal battle. Thus, we recognize that these days the battles are not fought in the fields, prairies, swamps, or forests. They are fought in the boardrooms and courtrooms. That means, there are not enough warriors to continue this effort. Far too-many of our people are and sitting around and waiting for others to pursue the fight for sovereignty. Where have all the warriors gone, what are you waiting for. Being a POWWOW only Indian, or standing around playing "Big Time Know It All Indian" is a privilidge that is being granted to you by others that are truly in the fight. If you can read and write, you can fight.

100. Confederation Government Policy Toward Native Americans
Government Policy Toward native Americans Cherokee Treaty Hostile Intentions Instructions to Superintendents of Indian Affairs
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/learn/features/timeline/newnatn/nativeam/native.html
The Library of Congress
home

Overview Documents
A map of the United States of America

Map Collections, 1500-2003
In 1776, the Continental Congress appointed a committee to develop a plan for a central government. Shortly thereafter, the Articles of Confederation were written and a union of states, called the United States of America, came into being. Under the Articles of Confederation, the newly developed central government was required to share power with the states. Among the powers given over to the central government were making war and peace, conducting diplomatic relations, requisitioning men and money from the states, coining and borrowing money, and regulating Indian affairs. The states were responsible for enforcing laws, regulating commerce, administering justice, and levying taxes. During the mid 1780s, the Confederation Congress was particularly attentive to problems in the Northwest Territory, an area of land located between the thirteen states and the Mississippi River. Thousands of settlers had moved into the area by 1780. However, they were not the first settlers. Living on the land were numerous nations of Native Americans. The Congress spent a good deal of time and effort developing policies to keep peace between the white settlers and the Native Americans. Treaties, the appointment of government agents and superintendents to serve as intermediaries between Native Americans and the government, and raising and arming troops to put down insurrections, are examples of strategies the Confederation Congress used to maintain peace, meet the needs of the Native Americans, and open the area for further settlement.

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