Blue Eagle News

     yigaquu osaniyu adanvto adadoligi nigohilvi nasquv utloyasdi nihi

        May the Great Spirits Blessings Always Be With You

Editor: TxRose8018/Blue Eagle Wm

Sagonigei Awohali

November 15, 1998

CONTENTS:

1. Bison Banned & Grazing Permits Exempted

2. New Study Acknowledges Value of Echinacea for Treating Colds

3. US Indians Want Battle Shirt Back

4. Squanto and the English

5. Paiute Grave Desecration

6. From the Air Force Academy

7. READERS RESPONSE

Bison Banned & Grazing Permits Exempted

Date: 11/15/98 6:29:56 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: jrp05@gnofn.org (JRP)

FOREST SERVICE TO REMOVE BISON HERD FROM CARSON NATIONAL FOREST

Ranchers pressure agency into removing herd from Valle Vidal Unit

A small herd of bison will be permanently removed from the Carson National

Forest and forced to be kept on private lands. The decision comes as a

result of a Forest Service investigation into the ownership of the bison,

initiated this Spring at the request of local ranchers. The herd, which has

migrated between the privately owned Vermejo Park Ranch and national forest

for at least the last two decades is one of only a handful of herds in the

Southwest allowed to roam relatively freely on public lands.

Until this September the Forest Service allowed the approximately 40 bison

to graze seasonally on national forest land believing that the public owned

half of the bison as a result of a 1982 donation from the Pennzoil

Corporation, which had also donated the 200,000 acre ranch at the time.

Although a February 23, 1982 memo clearly indicates that the Forest Service

agreed to accept a donation of 20 bison, apparently the transfer was never

formally completed.

Forest Guardians is investigating the matter to ensure that one of the last

free roaming bison herds in the Southwest is protected. In the meantime,

the Forest service has told the Vermejo Ranch to build the fence necessary

to contain the bison by the summer of 1999. Vermejo Park Ranch, which was

also once owned by Pennzoil, was recently acquired by Ted Turner.

PROPOSAL TO LEGISLATE EXTINCTION WITHDRAWN BY GAME AND FISH

Director Maracchini will not ask the legislature to axe the Conservation

Services Division

A proposal by NM Department of Game and Fish Director Jerry Maracchini to

eliminate funding for the Conservation Services Division was killed by the

Game Commission itself. Maracchini had submitted his proposal to the

Governor without the Game Commission's approval, prior to the most recent

meeting. The commissioners then voted unanimously to rescind the Director's

action and withdraw the proposal. There had been very little support for

and vocal citizen opposition to the proposal that would have eliminated

critical funding for the conservation activities of the Department of Game

and Fish. In further news from the Game Commission meeting, an amendment to

the NM Wildlife Conservation Act was also approved extending protection to

threatened species under state law.

Popular Press Misreports Value of Echinacea Says American Botanical Council; New Study Acknowledges Value of Echinacea for Treating Colds

AUSTIN, Texas, Nov. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- The following was issued today by American Botanical Council:

Despite press reports to the contrary, the popular herb echinacea is useful for colds. An Associated Press article dated November 12 titled "Study: Popular Herb echinacea Does Little for Common Cold" misrepresents the potential benefits of echinacea for treatment of the common cold. The recent news about echinacea is based on a study published in the Archives of Family Medicine (Vol. 7, No. November/December 1999) by a group of German researchers who gave liquid echinacea extracts from the roots of two of the most popular forms of echinacea plants and compared these against a placebo in healthy adults to see whether the echinacea could help prevent the onset of a cold over a period of 12 weeks.

According to the study results, echinacea was only slightly more effective than placebo in preventing colds. However, the authors of the study point out that several recent clinical trials published on echinacea have shown benefit for treatment of colds, reducing the severity and duration of the symptoms.

On Tuesday the American Medical Association published various articles on "alternative" and herbal medicines, including this one on echinacea in one of its journals. Mark Blumenthal, executive director of the non-profit American Botanical Council and Adjunct Associate Professor at the College of Pharmacy at the University of Texas at Austin, voiced his concern that in publishing this research, the popular press may sometimes misinterpret or not clearly report the data. "In this case," he said, "the press has misinformed the public by suggesting that the echinacea has no value when, in fact, the authors of the study acknowledge its value for treating colds."

Echinacea is one of the best-selling herbs in U.S. drugstores and supermarkets and is the top seller in health food stores for the past four years. According to Blumenthal, most people use echinacea as a way to treat colds and flus at the first sign of symptoms. "This new research suggests that echinacea may not prevent a cold, but it does not invalidate the previous research that shows its effectiveness for treatment," he said.

Echinacea, popularly known as purple coneflower, is a native American medicinal plant and was the most widely-used medicine of the plains Indians. The genus Echinacea contains nine different species, three of which are used in commercial herbal products (Echinacea purpurea, E. angustifolia, and E. pallida). Since the late 1930s, German researchers have been interested in the immune system stimulating effects of echinacea preparations. Numerous clinical studies from Germany indicate efficacy of echinacea for treating colds. Echinacea preparations have been approved as nonprescription medicines for therapy for upper respiratory tract infections and for lower urinary tract infections by the Commission E, an expert panel of the German Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices. Commission E's approval of echinacea is based on the scientific experience by German physicians, as well as clinical studies conducted in Germany.

The results of the Commission E in evaluating echinacea and over 300 herbal medicines have been translated into English and published in a 700 page book by ABC.

The American Botanical Council is a 10-year-old non-profit organization in Austin, Texas that publishes accurate, responsible, science-based information on herbs and medicinal plants. ABC publishes HerbalGram, a quarterly peer- reviewed journal whose contents reflect the goals and mission of ABC. Visit the website: www.herbalgram.org.

Contact: Nancy Beckham of American Botanical Council, 512-926-4900.

SOURCE American Botanical Council

CO: American Botanical Council

ST: Texas

IN: MTC

SU:

11/13/98 17:41 EST http://www.prnewswire.com

From: Riverwn

To: TxRose8018

US Indians Want Battle Shirt Back

.c The Associated Press

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) -- An American Indian group on Friday pleaded for the return of a sacred warrior shirt, believed recovered from the 1890 Wounded Knee battlefield and now on display in Scotland.

The ``ghost'' shirt, which Sioux Indian fighters believed would protect them in battle, is on display at Glasgow's Kelvingrove Art Gallery. It is said to be stained with the blood of a slain warrior.

Wounded Knee in southwestern South Dakota was the last major armed conflict between Indians and U.S. troops. Accounts differ as to who fired first and how many died. The federal government says about 150 Indians and 30 soldiers died. The Sioux say the troops massacred as 400 Indians.

The shirt should be brought home to help the people heal their grief, Marcella Le Beau, secretary of the Wounded Knee Survivors' Association, said Friday. A working group is scheduled to make a recommendation to the Glasgow City Council on Nov. 19.

``For the remaining descendants it will bring closure to the sad and horrible event in the history of our people,'' said Mrs. Le Beau, who lives in South Dakota.

The shirt and other Indian artifacts were brought to Glasgow in 1891 with Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West traveling show. It has remained in the art gallery ever since.

The effort to have the artifact repatriated to the Lakota Sioux began after the tribe became aware it was at the museum six years ago.

Mark O'Neill, head of curatorial services for Glasgow Museums and Art Galleries, said the city wants to keep the shirt.

``There are few other objects in our collections which can communicate so powerfully the bloody consequences of the encounter between Europeans and first people all over the world,'' he said.

But he said he could understand the Sioux argument.

``It may make a genuine contribution to the search of the Lakota people for healing which will enable them to move forward to find a new identity,'' he said.

AP-NY-11-13-98 1921EST

Squanto and the English

Date: 11/13/98 4:40:34 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: hokshi@ohiolinks.com (SunHawk)

Reply-to: hokshi@ohiolinks.com

From: bill

http://www.YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net/articles/squantorevisit.htm

"the People's Paths home page!" Paths To Arti...

Thought this may be of interest to concerned People!

Bill Skelly

Paiute Grave Desecration

Date: 11/14/98 6:16:02 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ShngSprt

BCC: TxRose8018

Paiutes want Lake County remains reburied

LAKEVIEW - Representatives of the Northern Paiute tribes met recently

to discuss the reburial of the human remains unearthed in the River's End

Ranch project.

Northern Paiute people from Beatty, Burns, Warm Springs and Fort

Bidwell agreed their ancestral remains have been above the ground for too

long.

Scattered remains of Native Americans were located several years ago

during the construction of a dam at the River's End Ranch near Valley Falls

in Lake County. A 1,400-acre wetlands project was developed on the

6,000-acre ranch 25 miles north of Lakeview to restore historical wetlands

on the Chewaucan River and to create wildlife and waterfowl habitat.

The discovery has led to complex, lengthy actions against ranch owner

Oliver Spires and widespread criticism of government agencies. Although

government agencies said the area was of no cultural significance, suits

were directed against Spires.

***********

This story is from the Herald News of Klamath Falls, Oregon. Letters to

the editor can be sent to:

heraldandnews@heraldandnews.com

From the Air Force Academy

Date: 11/14/98 6:15:26 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ShngSprt

The Air Force Academy will be hosting an art exhibit called "Sky Warriors:

Native Americans in the Army Air Corps/Air Force, 1940-1997," and dinner in

honor of Native American Heritage Month. The exhibit in Fairchild Hall, 3rd

floor, is free and open to the public through Dec 4.

The dinner sponsored by the academy chapter of American Indian Science and

Engineering Society will be Nov. 20th. Featured speaker is Navy Lt. Cmdr.

John Herrington. Cost for dinner is $20 and begins at 6 p.m.. Call 333-3430

for reservations and information.

A pow-wow sponsored by the academy and Lone Feather Indian Council is

scheduled for Nov. 21 at Fort Carson's field House. Start time 2 p.m. and

dinner at 4 p.m., the pow-wow is from 6 to 10 p.m. The event is free and

open to the public.

QUESTIONS/ANSWERS

To: ShngSprt

From:

Subj: deer toes

QUESTION: I'm trying to get the bone out of deer hooves. Any ideas?

ANSWER: How to do those deer toes

Build a big fire out side.{deer legs stink when cooking} Put large

kettle on fire with lots of water in kettle. when water is boiling drop

in deer legs, cook until toes come loose from bone. I take a large pair

of pliers hold the deer leg then with a knife pry of the toe. After toe

is cool scrape inside with knife,and pour salt in them, store in cloth

bag until hard.

READERS RESPONSE

Subj: Re: Wed~ Nov. 11,1998 Blue Eagle Newsletter

Date: 11/15/98 8:57:11 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: Horsecorel

To: TxRose8018

Hi!

Regarding the Essiac formula for cancer -- I have some experience with it, and with making my own.... WAY CHEAPER, needless to say, and to me, more powerful, to make your own medicines....

Please give the person who needs the formula my email, and I will keep looking for my recipe....

Have moved and lost a lot of my paperwork in the last year, but I believe I have or can easily get hold of the Essiac formula recipe.

Also, I have some other ideas on herbs and things to do to clear cancer. I've had breast cancer myself.

Blessings,

Running-Horse Correll

Animal Rescue Team animalSOS@aol.com

Subj: Re: Wed~ Nov. 11,1998 Blue Eagle Newsletter

Date: 11/13/98 11:16:02 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: hokshi@ohiolinks.com (SunHawk)

Reply-to: hokshi@ohiolinks.com

To: TxRose8018@aol.com

Sister, I know of Essiac, my father used some, in his case it was too late,

however Grandfather Grey Eagle, and Grandfather Grizzly are both herbalists

and I will get with them. Griz doesn't have e-mail but does have a store

in Arkansas. His ads run in each publication of The New Phoenix. His

address and all is in the ad. I will forward Firehairs note to Grandfather

Grey Eagle. I'm sure he will respond. He is the author of the articles on

Cayenne pepper, etc that have been featured in The New Phoenix.

I apparently lost Fire Hairs address so I am sending this to you. Please

forward to her and have her contact me!

Wakantanka nici un!

Canska Kinyan Wi (SunHawk)

Mitakuye Oyasin!

_________________________________________________

November 12th,1998

CONTENTS:

1. Bullet killed rare wolf, not lion

2. MORE INFO FROM NAIIC

3. Acoma Pueblo goes fiber-optic

4. Veteran's Day Greetings

5. Reunion of Injured Vietman Vet

6. READER COMMENTS/RESPONSES

7. WEB LINKS OF INTEREST

8. POWWOWS in Louisiana

Bullet killed rare wolf, not lion

Date: 11/9/98 6:49:09 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ShngSprt

BCC: TxRose8018

Subj: Rare Wolf Died by Bullet, Not Lion

Date: 98-11-07 01:03:01 EST

From: AOL News

Rare Wolf Died by Bullet, Not Lion

.c The Associated Press

By MATT KELLEY

PHOENIX (AP) -- When authorities first discovered the body of a rare Mexican gray wolf in the Arizona wilds this summer, they thought the gaping wound in her shoulder was a mountain lion bite.

It turned out to be the exit wound from a large-caliber bullet, and now federal officials are offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to whoever shot the wolf, the mother of the first Mexican gray wolf pup born in the wild in nearly 50 years.

``This is so tragic, because this is the female wolf that was stomped on by an elk while hunting, and for a while this summer she was dragging one of her hind legs,'' Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Tom Bauer said Friday.

``In spite of that, she successfully raised a pup, and then somebody shoots her, and the pup hasn't been seen since Aug. 27 and it's presumed dead, too,'' Bauer said.

The female wolf was one of 11 rare lobos raised in captivity and then released into the wilds of eastern Arizona earlier this year. Only four of the 11 remain alive in the wild; three were recaptured, another was shot dead by a camper and another was found dead last month.

The wolf reintroduction program has drawn criticism from some ranchers who fear the wolves will attack livestock and others who say they could pose a threat to campers and hikers in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest. Bauer said the wolves hadn't attacked livestock and were not a threat to people.

The newest wolf shooting was ``not entirely unexpected. We plan to go after the individuals responsible as aggressively as we possibly can,'' Bauer said.

``I don't think there would have been questions about whether the program was successful or not had people not intervened in this malicious manner,'' he said.

Officials found the female wolf's body Aug. 7 near Lake Sierra Blanca in the national forest south of Springerville, Bauer said. The wolf was near two forest roads and also near the carcass of an elk killed by a mountain lion.

The first officer at the scene thought the wolf had been killed by a mountain lion because it died from a large wound in its shoulder, Bauer said. A necropsy found that the shoulder wound was the exit wound of a large-caliber bullet, Bauer said.

Authorities decided to keep quiet about the cause of death, hoping the gunman would tell someone else about the shooting, Bauer said. Officials hope the reward will encourage people who may have heard about the shooting to come forward.

The shooting happened on the first day of bear hunting season in the area, but it would be difficult to mistake a wolf for anything other than a wolf, Bauer said.

``These wolves have radio collars, and those are pretty unmistakable,'' Bauer said.

Deliberately killing one of the wolves is a federal crime that carries a penalty of up to six months in jail and a $100,000 fine. Richard Humphrey of Tucson, the camper who shot the other wolf, was not charged because he said that wolf had attacked his dog and was threatening Humphrey and his family.

AP-NY-11-07-98 0102EST

MORE INFO FROM NAIIC

From: naiic_tx@hotmail.com (Board Directors)

To: TxRose8018@aol.com

Hau!

Thanks for your assistance. I am pleased to announce that we finally

have a "work in progress" home page located at:

www.farhorizons.net/NAIIC

NAIIC Main Page

It is still under construction and will definately be changing some more

but it has more info on it.

DONATIONS: We would like to ask those who can to send donations to:

NAIIC

5033 Hueco Tanks Rd.

El Paso, TX 79938

All donations are tax deductible since we are a tax exempt,

501 (c)(3) community.

Please feel free to reprint this in your newsletter. We really do need

all the help we can get!

BlackWolf

Director, NAIIC

Acoma Pueblo goes fiber-optic

Date: 11/11/98 3:20:41 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: Aphreal986

From: Sonja Keohane

Subject: [FN] Acoma Pueblo goes fiber-optic

Friday, November 6, 1998

Historic Indian Pueblo Going Fiber-Optic

The Associated Press

ACOMA PUEBLO, N.M. -- One of the oldest communities in the United

States is going fiber-optic.

Acoma Pueblo, dating from about the year 1,200, signed a right-of-way

agreement Friday with U S West to bring the advanced technology to the

pueblo 50 miles west of Albuquerque.

U S West official Daniel Sanchez said the technology will change the way

people do business, receive health care and the way children learn at school.

Completion of the 81-mile fiber-optic line into Acoma is expected by next

June.

"We want our people to share in the benefits of advanced technology, and

this fiber through our land will help provide better health care, better

education

and will increase our economic base," Acoma Gov. Reginald T. Pasqual said

in a statement.

The right-of-way agreement was signed by Pasqual and by Edward J.

Lopez Jr., vice president of U S West New Mexico, company spokeswoman

Deborah Sedillo Dugan said.

She said fiber-optic capability will allow the Indian tribe to upgrade its

computers and communications to higher speeds and greater capacities.

Editor's Note: I apologize for not being able to put together a special Veteran's Day issue like we did last year. It's a day late but know you were not forgotten.

Veteran's Day Greetings

Date: 11/11/98 10:38:55 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: jrp05@gnofn.org (JRP)

I did not write this. This was sent to me by the author, an older friend.

He has given permission to repost but has asked that his name be removed.

--

We remember and give thanks:

To the warriors lost in the mists of time who turned the Romans back from

Germany,

To the warriors lost in them mists of time who turned the Romans back from

Scotland,

To the warriors lost in the mists of time who kept Scotland, Wales, and

Cornwall alive,

To the first warrior who died at the hands of the Vikings,

to those whose bones lie under the Greasy Grass,

to those who died at Wounded Knee, Washita, a thousand other cold

and lonely places,

to those who died in the Great Swamp, who struggled that others might escape,

to the nameless souls who inhabit the memorial at Arlington,

to the young ones who died in accidents at basic training,

to the millions who fought and died to exterminate (we hope) Nazism,

to the tens of thousands on the Wall,

to those who lived and fought on,

to those who live and fight still,

I remember Canonicus, Metacom, the Narragansett, the Wampanoag,

I remember the Pequot, the Massachusett, the Niantic, the Nipmuk,

I remember the Mahikan ...

I remember Great Uncle Fred, cousin killed by cousins,

I remember my father, my uncles, Normandy, warriors,

and the liberation of Dachau, man's inhumanity to man,

I remember the warriors and the healers,

I remember my companions all,

and let us never forget the Bunker Bunnies, warriors also.

I give thanks to Creator that I am here to remember and to give thanks,

and wonder what right I had to have been spared.

Reunion of Injured Vietman Vet

Date: 11/12/98 7:03:37 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ShngSprt

Subj: Veteran Injured in Vietnam Reunited

Date: 98-11-11 17:58:05 EST

From: AOL News

Veteran Injured in Vietnam Reunited

.c The Associated Press

By JOSEPH SCHUMAN

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Amid the Veterans Day crowds at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Donel Erickson happened onto the man who carried him from a firefight three decades ago and saved his life.

On June 9, 1969, 1st Lt. Stephen Maness, a platoon leader only three months in Vietnam, pulled squad Sgt. Erickson away from a skirmish after Erickson was shot through both legs. Maness was awarded the Silver Star.

``You never find out what happened to people,'' Maness, now 51, said Wednesday. ``It was such a people mill,'' he said. ``He was gone, and the next day someone came in and took his place.''

Erickson and Maness might very well have missed each other at the Wall's Veterans Day ceremony, unaware they live only miles apart: Erickson in Washington, Maness in suburban Fairfax Station, Va.

Balmy weather and a clear blue sky prompted thousands to come to pay their respects and remember. The group, mostly men, held dozens of U.S. and brigade and company flags, including one representing the 196th Light Infantry Brigade -- khaki, with a field of sky blue and a looped yellow rope with both ends aflame. That's the one that brought Maness and Erickson together.

Erickson, 52, was standing with other veterans of the 196th, talking about their war. ``I come down here every year looking for my unit,'' said Erickson, who now works as an education specialist for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

In the space of 10 minutes, several other vets came by to shake hands and say they too were with the 196th.

One was Maness.

When he said he was with Erickson's unit, the 3rd Battalion of the 21st Infantry of the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, the two looked each other over and then started asking questions: ``Do you remember .

Suddenly, Erickson said, ``I've got a picture of you,'' and the story unfolded: Their unit came under heavy fire in the mountains west of Tam Ky after helicoptering in to rescue a smaller reconnaissance unit. Erickson left a covered area to pick up a fallen comrade and was shot by a sniper. Maness, the platoon leader he barely knew, went in and carried him out.

``This guy, he saved my life,'' Erickson said.

Emotionally moved, Maness responded, ``I remember. I carried you to the helicopter, to the dust-off. You were really in pain.''

``I had your blood all over me,'' Maness said. He never saw Erickson again, until Wednesday.

Erickson was flown to a hospital in Danang and almost lost a leg, saved by several operations. Maness received the Silver Star for the episode, for what his citation describes as ``gallantry in action against an armed hostile force.''

On Wednesday, they hugged, grasped hands and talked for more than 20 minutes, about officers they hated and friends killed in combat whose names are on the Memorial's wall. They exchanged telephone numbers.

``I don't think too much about Vietnam, but when I meet these guys again ...,'' Maness said before leaving.

Hours later, reached by phone, Maness, who retired as a colonel in 1996 and now works for the Red Cross, said he'd already left a message for his new old friend.

``My memories have just been flooding back all day since I met him,'' Maness said. Before this, ``I've had no one to talk to about it.''

AP-NY-11-11-98 1756EST

READER COMMENTS/RESPONSES

Subj: Re: Wed~ Nov. 11,1998 Blue Eagle Newsletter

Date: 11/11/98 7:18:30 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: Foster319

To: TxRose8018

here is some information on the herbal combination called "Essiac" Essiac is Caisse spelled backwards..it stands for Renee Caisse a Canadian nurse who was given the combination of herbs by an old indian for the cure of terminal diseases including cancer. There are many companies who claim to have the "only combination with Ms Caisse's permission" It is a costly combo which can be made at home a lot cheaper. I am a Native American registered Herbalist with a degree in Herbal Medicine and have used the combo of herbs myself...i have "cured" myself of Bone cancer in 1989 and again of liver cancer in 1995

write to me personally and i will give u the combination and instructions to make the "tea" yourself. my email address is Foster319@aol.com

Peace and Love,

Rosemary Lonebear Foster

Subj: Help Please!

Date: 11/11/98 3:22:34 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: TPtears

This is a request from a young man in college who is sincere and honest in his thoughts and deeds. If you could PLEASE, take the time to answer his questions, it would me so much to me and to him. Feel free to include as much or as little info as you are comfortable with. This is one way to reach the masses and to let the Next Generations know of Our Enduring Pride and Our Honorable Spirit. *smilin* Please do all you can to help this man in his good works. We will publish his paper online for all to read when it is completed. A ni shi.... thank you! (oh, by the way.... please feel free to forward this request to anyone who dances that is on your mailin lists!)

THANK YOU all for your help. Please send the answers back to me ASAP - I might have to get back to some of you to go over some of your answers. I'm doing this paper upmost respect for all of you, also I really want to learn about our dancing. It is an area that I was never really told much about - so THANK YOU for helping me learn :)

WOLFNAGI

1) Name

2) Nation / Tribe

3) Age

4) How long have you been dancing

5) At what age did you start to dance

6) Who / What got you into dancing

7) Does any of your family members also dance

8) What type of dance do you perform

9) Can you tell me the story / meaning behind the dance(s) that you perform

10) Do you make your own outfit

11) If so is there a certain way that the outfit must be made

12) Please explain a hightlight of a time that you have danced

13) Explain how dancing has made ( if it has ) you proud of being a dancer and who

you are

14) Are there any certain feelings that come to you before you walk into the circle

to dance? If there are please explain them the best you can

15) If there is 1 or 2 things that you could tell the non - dancer about dancing or of

yourself what would it be?

Read on Please:

This paper is for my Native American Religions class at Stockton State College

Here in NJ. And my Prof. name is Kenneth Dollarhide from the Pine Ridge

Reservation in SD. So please go as deep / into as you need.

THANK YOU AGAIN

Subj: Info needed on Tribes of VA?????

Date: 11/12/98 7:05:26 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ShngSprt

Subj: Gloucester County, VA -- Native Americans

Date: 98-11-11 20:42:59 EST

From: Nanticoke9

I hope someone on the list can help me.

I am searching for information about the tribes that were or currently are in Gloucester County, VA. Does anyone know this information? Can anyone point me in the right direction?

Thanks.

WEB LINKS OF INTEREST

Subj: Check out Naming the Indians

Date: 11/12/98 4:57:43 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: Aphreal986

To: TxRose8018, Cat3eye, Miketben

Naming The Indians

Subj: Check out Los Angeles Times Nation & World News

Date: 11/12/98 5:17:40 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: Aphreal986

To: Cat3eye, MOONCLOUD, Dbraveone, TxRose8018

To: BlkStream

Click here: Los Angeles Times Nation & World News

I dont think the land should be laid to waste just for a rock that is pretty it should be left in the hands of the indians for the reason its a holy place given to those indians that need that vibration in there systems

a terrible shame this is

Katie

Subj: Website for Native built log homes

Date: 98-11-12 03:02:02 EST

From: SANTEESON

Native Construction Log Homes

Hope you enjoy it. Thanks SumerWCree for all your hard work.

From: Riverwn

Subj: RED DEER TABLE

Date: 11/8/98 6:51:52 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: ApachePass

Welcome all to

Red Deer Table Native

American Crafts Web Site

Please visit this web site..

a portion of the proceeds will go to help the Apaches at Sancarlos Reservation

For Music such as R.Carlo Nakkai

Robby Robertson and Joanna Shennandoah

Click bellow

RED DEER TABLE ( Native American Crafts )

http://members.aol.com/apachepass/index9.html

The Apachepass Web Site!

http://members.aol.com/apachepass/index.htm

I am making many updates at this time to the site so new Photos are coming, and even RealPlayer Powwow videos that you can see while online with no download time. So all my friends come visit the new Apachepass Web site.

Peace and Balance of life to you

--Chief Jerry Eaglefeather

Subj: ~*~ NATL ~*~ Stories & Legends To Share...

Date: 11/8/98 6:17:28 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: BratiSoGAL

~*~ Native American Trading List ~*~

Submission from: .Forwarded from Maliashley. Thanks hon!!

To Join Us: Add Me To The NA Trading List To Make A Submission: NA Trading List ~ Submission

To Make a Request: I Have A Request... To Leave The List :~REMOVE ME~

Visit our: Native American Message Board

Subj: hogy bear gift

Date: 11/9/98 6:29:18 PM Pacific Standard Time

From: HOGY BEAR

you may like ! BIDS - Crafts - Native American War Bonnet

                           http://www.bids2000.com/warbonnet.html

POWWOWS in Louisiana

Subj: Two powwows coming up in Lousiana!!

Date: 11/7/98 9:20:52 AM Pacific Standard Time

From: jrp05@gnofn.org (JRP)

Grand Bois Inter-tribal Celebration Nov 20-22 Bourg, Grand Boise Park,

Hwy 24. Rescheduled event with American Indian crafts, food, and dancing.

Call (504) 594-6826 or (504) 594-7410

LIHA Powwow Nov 27 - 28 Robert, La. Hidden Oaks Famliy Campground.

American Indian crafts, dancign, food, costumes (sic). Call (225 766-9656

or (504) 464-6893

http://www.bids2000.com/warbonnet.html

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