"Dakota Fanning" Essays and Research Papers

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    going on a rip for work. She agreed to my terms even if it was going to kill her to do so. So I left during the night when the family is soundly asleep and went on with my trip. My first trip before heading to California I heard of a place in South Dakota‚ Deadwood. So I finally made it to Deadwood and there was a lot of crime but a lot of people looking for gold buying land to gold prospect. So I went into town to look for where I can go buy some little land to get land to prospect. Well I finally

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    Biography of Gertrude Bonnin (Zitkala-Sa) Notes Gertrude Bonnin was the third child of Ellen Tate ’I yohiwin Simmons‚ a full-blood Yankton Sioux. Born in 1876 on a Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota and known as Zitkala-Sa (Red Bird) Age 8 she was determined to learn the white man’s ways raised in a tipi on the Missouri River until she was 12 when she went to a Quaker missionary school for Indians (White’s Manual Institute) in Wabash‚ Indiana. Though her mother was reluctant to let her

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    The Mandan tribe was a Native American group that lived in what is present day North Dakota for hundreds of years before its culmination in the late 1800s. They were very unique and had minimal technologies or or formal civilizations‚ forcing them to live off the land. The practices of the Mandan tribe were different to those of any other peoples‚ either today or centuries ago. The Mandans’ way of life‚ religion‚ and culture greatly contrast other people and tribes from both when they existed and

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    Chief Crazy horse was and Oglala Lakota Indian chief who fought against removal to a reservation in the Black Hills. In the end the brave man gave his life for his tribe. The Lakota tribe gave his life for his tribe. The Lakota tribe wanted to honor one of their amazing chiefs by asking Korczak Ziolkowski‚ to make a sculptor of chief Crazy Horse. Crazy Horse got his name from his father who was also name Crazy Horse; he passed the name on to him after his son had demonstrated his skills as a warrior

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    Red Convertible

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    The story‚ “The Red Convertible”‚ by Louise Erdrich is narrated by Lyman Lamartine. The story embarks on two Native American brothers named‚ Lyman and Henry. The setting is based on a reservation named Chippewa in North Dakota. The brothers have a great bond. Henry is a comical brother who seems to have a great sense of humor. Lyman is an entrepreneur; he knows how to make money. One day the brothers decide to buy a red convertible olds. The convertible‚ which the brothers share‚ seems to bring the

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    Windeby Girl Discovery The body was found in 1952 in an estate called Windeby in Northern Germany. It was discovered when the owners decided to cut the peat to sell for fuel. During the process‚ the body of a 14 year old girl was found‚ however at that time‚ the machinery had already caused some damage to the body. It severed a leg‚ a foot and a hand. Work was then immediately stopped to investigate the find. State in which the body was found When the body was first found‚ parts such as the

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    map of Great Sioux Reservation Great Sioux Reservation Treaties and statutes[edit] Crow Dog[fn 1] was a Brulé[fn 2] subchief who lived on the Great Sioux Reservation‚ in the part that is now the Rosebud Indian Reservation in south-central South Dakota on its border with Nebraska. The tribe had made several treaties with the United States‚ the most significant being the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie.[4] This treaty provided that Indians agreed to turn over those accused of crimes to

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    agree on one thing? Native Americans all around the world continued to camp out near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota during the cold weather. Citizens of the Standing Rock Sioux and other Natives and even people against the pipeline “set up the Sacred Stone Camp in April to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline” (Halpert). The Main problem with the Dakota Access Pipeline is that it has a very high risk of water contamination‚ and it would threaten nearby sacred burial sites Can you

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    Dust Bowl

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    John Mayernik History 124 November 20th 2009 The Dust Bowl The southern plains were one of the greatest places to be in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s. Farmers were producing crops with ease‚ some were even overproducing. Wheat was one of the main things that were making farmers so successful‚ everything was just growing right for them at the time. In 1931 though there was a drought for farmers‚ in which many dust storms hit the Southern plains‚ causing an indescribable amount of damage to

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    500 Nations

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    corral the native people would forever alter‚ and in some instances destroy‚ the lives of future generations of Indians. One of the most startling examples of this was the decimation of the Lakota Indians by the 7th Calvary at Wounded Knee‚ South Dakota in 1890. Their leader‚ Big Foot‚ certainly was feeling the hopelessness and frustration of his people living on the Cheyenne River Reservation having to rely on the handouts from corrupt government officials for survival. It is likely‚ compelled by

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