NEJM -- Sign In pemphigus foliaceus (fogo selvagem) in native americans from Brazil. is similar to North American pemphigus foliaceus 15920102017.Abstract; matis W, Anhalt http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/343/1/23
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Book Thoughts - Sitemap painting material polymer base painting matis painting mazda painting of woman in native costume painting of distortion paintings by african americans in the s http://www.book-thoughts.com/s/s_cam.html
Subject BI-L Digest 709 Date Tue, 02 Apr 2002 000157 -0700 firstname searching for nonnative English speakers Library, and Michael matis, Reference/Information opportunity/affirmative action/americans with Disability http://bubl.ac.uk/mail/bild/0204.txt
Extractions: Subject: BI-L digest 709 Date: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 00:01:57 -0700 (MST) From: Multiple recipients of list To: Multiple recipients of list BI-L Digest 709 Topics covered in this issue include: 1) ACRL Webcast on personalized research clinics by Martin Raish 2) NASIG Announcement: Tuttle International Grant by Martin Raish 3) 'lastname firstname' searching for non-native English speakers by Martin Raish 4) Re: 'lastname firstname' searching for non-native English speakers by Martin Raish 5) Re: 'lastname firstname' searching for non-native English speakers by Martin Raish 6) instruction and sfx a brief survey by Martin Raish 7) POSITION: Head of Public Service, Northern Michigan U. by Martin Raish - Subject: ACRL Webcast on personalized research clinics Date: Mon, 01 Apr 2002 11:29:49 -0700 From: Martin Raish To: BI-L From: Stephanie Orphan To: BI-L From: Connie Foster To: BI-L From: Karen Evans Hi. I am looking for ideas on how to instruct non-native English speaking students in searching the library catalog and databases using "last name, first name." Often, the students are confused on which name is last and first. Any suggestions? Thanks, Karen x - Subject: Re: 'lastname firstname' searching for non-native English speakers Date: Mon, 01 Apr 2002 13:13:00 -0700 From: Martin Raish
United University Professions of the privacy audit has come with the PATRIOT Act, matis said in US history, when people perceived as differentnative americans, Africanamericans http://www.uupinfo.org/voice/feb/feb04.html
Extractions: View the Voice in PDF format or read the text version here. To the Point: A tough year ahead By William E. Scheuerman UUP President Its budget time again in New York state and all indicators suggest that SUNY is in for another tough year. The trustees budget request doesnt stop there. In addition to asking for a flat budget, the trustees want another tuition hike of an unspecified amount. Public statements by the chancellor indicate they want to tie tuition to a consumer price index, thereby creating a rational and predictable tuition policy that avoids large tuition hikes that could drive students from SUNY. Traditionally, UUP has not taken a position on tuition. We do so for obvious reasons. If we discuss tuition, the focus of the debate shifts from SUNYs needs to the cost of attendance. In other words, the implications of budget cuts to SUNY are lost in the dialogue. One thing is certain: Hundreds of thousands of students will speak against a tuition hike. But who besides UUP will talk about the implications of funding cuts? Take last year, for example. Many elected officials spoke against the proposed tuition increase. Nevertheless, the practical problems of focusing on tuition rather than on SUNYs fiscal needs became obvious when I approached the anti-tuition speakers and asked them how they were going to fill the $183.5 million budget deficit at SUNY.
From Top@actcom.co.il Wed Dec 15 212920 1999 Return-Path Top ruling class prefers to let such a native be its Rav matis Weinberg sees Yosef as culmination of Yaakov, the to your readers than it does to most americans. http://shamash3.shamash.org/tanach/tanach/commentary/top/top.vayigash-4of5-fulls
Extractions: From top@actcom.co.il Wed Dec 15 21:29:20 1999 Return-Path: Delivered-To: top@shamash.org Received: (qmail 6845 invoked from network); 16 Dec 1999 02:29:15 -0000 Received: from lmail.actcom.co.il (root@192.114.47.13) by shamash.org with SMTP; 16 Dec 1999 02:29:15 -0000 Received: from default (p5.j1.actcom.co.il [192.115.22.5]) by lmail.actcom.co.il (8.9.3/8.9.1) with SMTP id EAA05399 for ; Thu, 16 Dec 1999 04:27:24 +0200 Message-Id: X-Sender: top@actcom.co.il X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Light Version 3.0.2 (32) Date: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 04:21:08 +0200 To: Torah Outreach Program Yaakov Fogelman From: Yaakov Fogelman From: "Shmuley Boteach" To: Answers to questions on Judaism posed by Oxford students to their Rabbi
Extractions: Native American Indian Cultures Indian Cultures from Mexico and South America Hands Around the World introduces unique Indian cultures from Mexico and various parts of South America, particularly the Amazon basin. We are rapidly becoming a global culture. Many of the Native American cultures, especially in North America, have been lost forever and are still honored only in myth and memory. Fortunately there are some Indian cultures that are relatively intact, especially in Amazonia. Hands Around the World feels that it is important to preserve the art, stories, myths, belief systems, details of day to day life, in short all aspects of Native American culture while we still can. This web site is an educational resource to introduce these unique indigenous tribes. We have provided web links to use as additional educational resources. We encourage you to browse this site to learn more about these interesting cultures. Contents Indian Cultures Search: Trip to visit traditional villages and shamans Native American Indian Crafts To Translate Links Mexican Indian Cultures States of Jalisco and Nayarit Huichol South American Indian Cultures Orinoco River Delta of Venezuela Amazon Rain Forest of Venezuela Amazon Rain Forest of Venezuela and Brazil Warao Guahibo Yanomamo Penare Ecuador - Columbia Piapoco Cofan Piaroa Yekuana Amazon Rain Forest of Brazil Matto Grosso / Xingu of Brazil Amapa / Para of Brazil Desana Assurini Satere-Maue Kampa ... Kamayura Peru - Andes
Bookmarks on native americans. National Archeological Database native American Grave native Fields Contemporary native American Artist for native Art. Navajo Rugs, native americans Arts and http://tv200.homestead.com/files/master_tv200_bookmark_list.htm
Archaeology At Crow Canyon: Education Internships 1988, Assistant Director of Education, native American Issues Coordinator. Hammond, AA, Institute of American Indian Arts Lew matis, BA, Fort Lewis College, 1968, http://www.crowcanyon.org/Jobs/intern_education.html
Extractions: The Crow Canyon Archaeological Center's mission is to initiate and conduct archaeological research and public education programs in partnership with Native Americans and institutions with common interests. The Center is located in southwestern Colorado near the town of Cortez and close to Mesa Verde National Park. Last year, four interns were selected from a field of more than 50 applicants from all across the U.S. Our Web site ( www.crowcanyon.org ) contains more information about Crow Canyon. EDUCATION The Crow Canyon education department, using experiential education methods, engages learners of all ages in an inclusive and dynamic study of the human past. The staff works toward this goal by teaching about past and present cultures of the Southwest, investigating student learning, and communicating the Center's educational methods and theories to others. The work of the department is guided by a respect for Native American peoples and is conducted in collaboration with other communities. Archaeology, education, and applied anthropology provide the academic foundation for Crow Canyon programs. Crow Canyon's innovative education programs not only provide instruction in archaeology but also involve the lay public in the actual research process. This first-hand approach increases awareness of, and appreciation for, our rich cultural heritage, while providing broad-based support for archaeological research and preservation. Through Crow Canyon's programs, students of all ages gain an understanding of culture, Native American history, archaeological research, human interaction with the environment, and the importance of cultural resource preservation.
Archaeology At Crow Canyon: Four Corners Travel adventure spotlights the archaeology and native peoples of the Southwest. Connolly, assistant director of education, Lew matis, lab educator, and Shaine Gans, educator results, and educational programs. Connolly, matis, and Gans have a combined total http://www.crowcanyon.org/AboutUs/pr_outdoor_education.html
Extractions: Three of Crow Canyon Archaeological Center's educators will present Teaching Archaeology on the Colorado Plateau, Saturday, March 8, at 2:45 p.m. at the Third Annual Colorado Plateau Bioregional Outdoor Education Conference in Blanding, Utah. The conference is part of the Four Corners School's Bioregional Outdoor Education Project that was started in 1999 to allow students and teachers to study their roles in the natural and cultural heritage of the Colorado Plateau. The presentation, conducted by Crow Canyon staff members, Margie Connolly, assistant director of education, Lew Matis, lab educator, and Shaine Gans, educator, will explore avenues for engaging elementary grade students in the study of the human past on the Colorado Plateau. Various topics related to archaeology will be addressed, and teachers will be introduced to several resources about archaeological education. Teachers will also have an opportunity to try a simulated paper excavation lesson. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center is located just outside of Cortez, Colorado. The Center is dedicated to long-term archaeological research on the ancestral Pueblo Indian (Anasazi) occupation of the Mesa Verde region and offers school group programs to students in grades four through twelve. Crow Canyon has gained national prominence in the archaeological community for its methodology, research results, and educational programs. Connolly, Matis, and Gans have a combined total of over thirty years experience teaching the archaeology of the Southwest.
All H-Net Book Reviews Sorted By Reviewer Title Sifters native American Women's Lives. Author Theda Author Alice Teichova and Herbert matis, eds. Title native Pragmatism Rethinking the Roots of American Philosophy http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/index.cgi?sort=rev
H-Net Book Reviews Sorted By Reviewer Title Sifters native American Women's Lives. Author Theda Perdue, ed Author Alice Teichova and Herbert matis, eds. Hollywood's Indian The Portrayal of the native American in Film http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showlist.cgi?sort=rev&lists=
About Me I was married with an American who dies in a I sponsor a child from an native Indian Reservation. musics Nirvana, Frank Sinatra, Johnny matis Dean Martin http://quicksitebuilder.cnet.com/reglisseusa/welcometoreglisseworld/id13.html
Extractions: Welcome to Reglisse's World About me Home My Awards U.S. Under Attack - An American Tragedy Profiles of the Victims ... Talking Leaves Special Page About me Webrings My Lovely Kitties Special Cats Adoption Native Indian Events ... Contact Me My name is Helen Hatat, I am an Olympic Silver Medallist. I come from France (born and raised), and I have lived in the United States for many years. I was married with an American who dies in a terrible car accident with our daughter. I was born the 21th of November, sometimes ago. During many difficulties in my life, I have meeting a lot of terrible people that you will never imagine. But I can say thank you to all of them because of their nastiness, they open my eyes to the world and my heart to people. I am a member of the Amnesty International Human Rights Constitutional Law.
Index To Volume 106 October 2001 The American Historical Alice Teichova, and Herbert matis, editors, Economic Cambridge History of the native Peoples of Sanneh, Lamin, Abolitionists Abroad American Blacks and http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/106.4/ah0401001541.html
Extractions: Set up your online account for the first time. AHA members can go to the AHA individual membership section to locate their member numbers. If you are not a member of the American Historical Association, you can: Join the AHA and receive many member benefits including print and electronic issues of the American Historical Review. Purchase a research pass to gain two hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of the American Historical Review (104.3-present). Note: the Research Pass does not provide access to JSTOR's holdings of the American Historical Review. Instititutions can: Subscribe to this journal and receive print and electronic issues.
Extractions: Performance Art Comes To Town and Cool Cleveland readers can get a deal on tickets. First, check out the free Preview Night at CSU Art Gallery, 2307 Chester on Thu 5/29 at 7PM to get a look at the exhibition of photos and videos, along with a plethora of live performances. Then, visit ( www.performance-art.org ) to make reservations to see some of the 30 performance artists coming to Cleveland Public Theatre (6415 Detroit) this week and next from eight countries. When you make your reservation, simply write " Cool Cleveland " in the "Company" field, and take $5 off your ticket price. This week: Fri 5/29 at 6PM: at 8PM: Cleveland's multicultural SAFMOD, Jess Dobkin's (Toronto) vignettes, and the grrrl duo Pink Punk (Estonia) ask, "Aren't we pretty...give us money..." Sat 5/30 at 8PM: Eliot Fintushel (Santa Rosa, CA) reads Revelations verbatim, speaking in tongues, Marcello Mercado (Germany) reads Marx's Das Kapital with Internet traffic cameras and 100g of California worms, plus Pink Punk (Estonia);
January 2002 Newsletter It is a true story from North American history, from the world of the first americans, the native americans, as they encountered what we now call higher http://tlink5.tripod.com/newsljan03.htm
Extractions: January 2003 - Selected Articles Index to this issue: Grammar in Action by Eve Chambers Selecting Appropriate Passages for EFL Reading Lessons by Aytül Akçaba Liberating Learning - A Talk by John Fritsche reported by TESOL Travel Awards Announced ... Selina E. Matis Grammar In Action Eve Chambers First, we wrote four sentences on the board for students to copy, for example: A. She was talking to her friend when the man stole her purse. B. I was walking down the street when I tripped and fell. C. Michael was reading when Eve came and took his book. D. I was eating breakfast when the phone rang. Then we told students to watch as we acted out a short drama. Skit 1: Michael is reading a book. Eve comes along and steals the book from him. After acting out Skit 1, we asked the students to choose one of the four sentences on the board to describe what had happened in the skit. After they successfully accomplished this, we proceeded to act out the other scenes in random order until all four sentences had been acted out and matched with the sentences on the board.
INDIAN HISTORY 1700-1999 Metis, Joseph Daily, Metis, Joseph Trotier, matis, Henry A 18041838) however became an instant American Folk Hero McKenzie would retire with his native wife to http://www.telusplanet.net/public/dgarneau/indian20.htm
Extractions: Mongozid (Loons Foot) son Obenegeshipequaq and Kadowaubeda (Broken Tooth) of Sandy Lake was chief of the Fond du Lac band of Ojibwa from 1825 to 1847. Fort Vancouver, B.C. is built this year. A volcano at Mount Rainier, Washington erupted this year. April 1825: Nicole Finlawson of Lac Seul reported that when the Ojibwa brought moose and caribou meat to the post that, indeed they are the worst hunters of fur and the rascals will not hunt fur when they can get a living on big animals. Thomas Vincent of Lac Seul noted that the Ojibwa pride and ambition to excel each other is vanished. A young man may now be seen wearing an old tattered rabbit skin garment that only a few years ago he would have considered a degrading covering for even a helpless old woman. Charles MacKenzie reported a large fire from Winnipeg River to Osnaburgh that is destroying much of the moose habitat. This is an ancient native custom that encourages new plant growth and therefore an increase in wild life.
METIS CULTURE 1836-1847 Joseph Daily, Metis, Joseph Trotier, matis, Henry A settlers and sympathized with American republicanism, ended up people (Excludes Metis and native) in 1912 to http://www.telusplanet.net/public/dgarneau/metis41.htm
Extractions: Margaret La Oine Allore, Ojibwa Metis, at Mackinac, listed March 28, 1836 treaty. Rejected not in the country. Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bird, Ottawa Metis, living Green Bay listed March 28, 1836 treaty. Rejected as living Green Bay last 11 years. Hester Boutwell, Ojibwa Metis, living Leech Lake, listed March 28, 1836 treaty. Rejected as living west of Mississippi. Esabelle Chabeau, Ottawa Metis, b-February, 1836, Grand River, daughter , Louis Chebeau, Ottawa Metis and Elizabeth Chebeau, Ottawa Metis, b-1806 Mackinac, listed March 28, 1836 treaty. Rejected as born since treaty. Charles Cadotte, Ojibwa Metis, b-1821, living 1836 Sault Ste Marie, listed March 28, 1836 treaty. Rejected as descendent of a Canadian tribe.
Wildlife Film News 26 - August 2001 water supply and the regions native animals South Americas most evocative animal, the jaguar is also through an indigenous tribe the matis, or Jaguar http://www.wildlife-film.com/Wfn/wfn26.htm
Extractions: It will be held in the superb diving resort of Pulau Mabul, Sipadan, Malaysia, with places for 10 - 14 people for 12 days. The time will be spent practising underwater filming, using your own or supplied equipment. There will be local specialists and professional filmmakers and divers on-hand. Expect over 20 dives in this one trip! With opportunities to film turtles, sharks, barracuda schools, octopus - you name it. Plus a visit to the Orang-utan Rehabilitation Centre.