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Vol. 25 No. 3 Oklahoma's First Senator Dies
Vol. 25 No. 3 Oklahoma’s First Senator Dies ------------------------------------------------------------ 178 Save the Historical Records by Charles Evans ------------------------------------------- 180 History of Phillips University by I.N. McCash ----------------------------------------- 181 Israel G. Vore and Levering Manual Labor School by Carolyn Thomas Foreman - 198 The First Hospital and Training School for Nurses in the Indian Territory, Now Oklahoma by Fred S. Clinton -------------------------------------------------------------- 218 The Diary of Charles Hazelrigg by Angie Debo ---------------------------------------- 229 Oklahoma War Memorial – World War II by Muriel H. Wright ---------------------- 271 Registration and Drawing for Opening of Kiowa and Comanche Country, 1901 By E.H. Linzee ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 289 Notes and Documents ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 295 Necrologies Junius Talcott Foote by Robert L. Williams ------------------------------------ 299 James Arthur Harris by Robert L. Williams ------------------------------------ 300 John B. Harrison by Robert L. Williams ---------------------------------------- 301 Bert E. Nussbaum Muskogee Bar Association. By Homer Baughman, Chairman, Howell Parks, and George W. Leopold ------------------------------------------ 303 Minutes --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 304 178 Chronicle, of Oklahoma OKLAHOMNS FIRST SENATOR DIES Early -
Dangerously Free: Outlaws and Nation-Making in Literature of the Indian Territory
DANGEROUSLY FREE: OUTLAWS AND NATION-MAKING IN LITERATURE OF THE INDIAN TERRITORY by Jenna Hunnef A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Department of English University of Toronto © Copyright by Jenna Hunnef 2016 Dangerously Free: Outlaws and Nation-Making in Literature of the Indian Territory Jenna Hunnef Doctor of Philosophy Department of English University of Toronto 2016 Abstract In this dissertation, I examine how literary representations of outlaws and outlawry have contributed to the shaping of national identity in the United States. I analyze a series of texts set in the former Indian Territory (now part of the state of Oklahoma) for traces of what I call “outlaw rhetorics,” that is, the political expression in literature of marginalized realities and competing visions of nationhood. Outlaw rhetorics elicit new ways to think the nation differently—to imagine the nation otherwise; as such, I demonstrate that outlaw narratives are as capable of challenging the nation’s claims to territorial or imaginative title as they are of asserting them. Borrowing from Abenaki scholar Lisa Brooks’s definition of “nation” as “the multifaceted, lived experience of families who gather in particular places,” this dissertation draws an analogous relationship between outlaws and domestic spaces wherein they are both considered simultaneously exempt from and constitutive of civic life. In the same way that the outlaw’s alternately celebrated and marginal status endows him or her with the power to support and eschew the stories a nation tells about itself, so the liminality and centrality of domestic life have proven effective as a means of consolidating and dissenting from the status quo of the nation-state. -
SEQUOYA.Ii Constitu'tional Conveifflon 11
THE SEQUOYA.Ii CONSTITu'TIONAL CONVEifflON 11 THE SEQUOYAH CONSTITUTI OKAL CONVE?lTI ON AMOS DeZELL MAX'wELL,, Bachelor or Science Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College Stillwater, Ok1ahana 191+8 Submitted to the Department of History Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College In Part1a1 Fu:l.f'illment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF AR!S 195'0 111 OKLAHOMA '8BICULTUltAL & MlCHANICAL COLLE&I LIBRARY APR 241950 APPROVED Bia ) 250898 iv PREl'.lCE the Sequoy-ah Constitutional. Convention was held 1n Husk-0gee, Indian ferri to17, 1n. the aUBDller of 1905. It was the culminating event of a seriea ot eol.orrul occasions in the history or the .Five Civllized. Tribes. It was there that the deseendanta of those who made the trek west seventy-:f'ive years earlier sat with white men to vr1 te a eharter tor a new state.. They wrote a con st1tution, but it was never used as a charter tor a State or Sequo,yah. This work, which is primarily a stud,y or that convention and tbe reasons for its being called and its results, was undertaken at the suggestion of..,- father, Harold K. Max.well, in August, 1948. It has been carried to a conclusion through the a.id of a number o! persons, chief' among them being my wife, Betty Jo Max well. The need tor this study is a paramount one. Other than copies of the )(Q§koga f!l91P1J, the.re are no known records or the convention. Because much of the proceedings were in one or more Indian tongues there are some gaps in the study other than those due to the laek ot records,. -
Library Extension Publication [Serial]
University of North Carolina Library Studies Number 2 ORTH CAROLINA FICTION 1734-1957 An Annotated Bibliography 1958 University of North Carolina Library Studies Number 2 NORTH CAROLINA FICTION 17344957 An Annotated Bibliography Prepared by the Joint Committee On North Carolina Literature and Bibliography of The North Carolina English Teachers Association and The North Carolina Library Association UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY STUDIES No. 1 North Carolina County Histories, A Bibliography, by William S. Powell, 1958 No. 2 North Carolina Fiction, 1734-1957: An Annotated Bibliography, by a Joint Committee of the North Carolina English Teachers Association and the North Carolina Library Association, 1958 NORTH CAROLINA LITERATURE SERIES in Library Extension Publications 1949 John Charles McNeill, North Carolina Poet, 1874-1907, a Bio- graphical Sketch, by Agatha Boyd Adams 1949 North Carolina Writers [a study outline], by Walter Spearman 1950 Thomas Wolfe: Carolina Student, a Brief Biography, by Agatha Boyd Adams 1951 Paul Green of Chapel Hill, by Agatha Boyd Adams, edited by Richard Walser 1952 Inglis Fletcher of Bandon Plantation, by Richard Walser 1952 North Carolina Authors: a Selective Handbook 1954 Frederick H. Koch: a Short Biography, by Samuel Selden and Mary T. Sphangos 1955 Bernice Kelly Harris, by Richard Walser 1956 North Carolina Musicians 1957 O. Henry in North Carolina, by Cathleen Pike Imaginary landing of a ballonist near Salem in 1789. See No. 528. NORTH CAROLINA FICTION 1734-1957 An Annotated Bibliography William S. Powell Editor CHAPEL HILL THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY 1958 Copyright 1958 by The University of North Carolina Library JOINT COMMITTEE fFlorence Blakely, Duke University Library Grace S. -
Friends of the Capitol 2009-June 2010 Report
Friends of the Capitol 2009-June 2010 Report Our Mission Statement: Friends of the Capitol is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) corporation that is devoted to maintaining and improving the beauty and grandeur of the Oklahoma State Capitol building and showcasing the magnificent gifts of art housed inside. This mission is accomplished through a partnership with private citizens wishing to leave their footprint in our state's rich history. Education and Development In 2009 and 2010 Friends of the Capitol (FOC) participated in several educational and developmental projects informing fellow Oklahomans of the beauty of the capitol and how they can participate in the continuing renovations of Oklahoma State Capitol building. In March of 2010, FOC representatives made a trip to Elk City and met with several organizations within the community and illustrated all the new renovations funded by Friends of the Capitol supporters. Additionally in 2009 FOC participated in the State Superintendent’s encyclo-media conference and in February 2010 FOC participated in the Oklahoma City Public Schools’ Professional Development Day. We had the opportunity to meet with teachers from several different communities in Oklahoma, and we were pleased to inform them about all the new restorations and how their school’s name can be engraved on a 15”x30”paver, and placed below the Capitol’s south steps in the Centennial Memorial Plaza to be admired by many generations of Oklahomans. Gratefully Acknowledging the Friends of the Capitol Board of Directors Board Members Ex-Officio Paul B. Meyer, Col. John Richard Chairman USA (Ret.) MA+ Architecture Oklahoma Department Oklahoma City of Central Services Pat Foster, Vice Chairman Suzanne Tate Jim Thorpe Association Inc. -
A Requiem for Indigenous Treaty Rights
University of Richmond UR Scholarship Repository Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications Jepson School of Leadership Studies 1999 The Reinvigoration of the Doctrine of Implied Repeals: A Requiem for Indigenous Treaty Rights David E. Wilkins University of Richmond, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.richmond.edu/jepson-faculty-publications Part of the Indian and Aboriginal Law Commons, and the Leadership Studies Commons Recommended Citation Wilkins, David E. “The Reinvigoration of the Doctrine of Implied Repeals: A Requiem for Indigenous Treaty Rights.” The American Journal of Legal History 43, no. 1 (January 1999), 1-26. https://doi.org/10.2307/ 846128 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Reinvigoration of the Doctrine of 'Implied Repeals:' A Requiem for Indigenous Treaty Rights by DAVID E. WILKINS* INTRODUCTION America's indigenous nations occupy a distinctive political/legal sta- tus within the United States as separate sovereigns whose rights are based in the doctrine of inherent tribal sovereignty, affirmed in hundreds of rati- fied treaties and agreements, acknowledged in the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, and recognized in ample federal legislation and case law. Ironically, while indigenous sovereignty is neither constitution- ally defined or delimited, it may be restricted or enhanced by federal law. -
The Iron Cold of the Marshall Trilogy
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota) North Dakota Law Review Volume 82 Number 3 The Pedagogy of American Indian Article 2 Law 1-1-2006 The Iron Cold of the Marshall Trilogy Matthew L.M. Fletcher Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.und.edu/ndlr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Fletcher, Matthew L.M. (2006) "The Iron Cold of the Marshall Trilogy," North Dakota Law Review: Vol. 82 : No. 3 , Article 2. Available at: https://commons.und.edu/ndlr/vol82/iss3/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Law at UND Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in North Dakota Law Review by an authorized editor of UND Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE IRON COLD OF THE MARSHALL TRILOGY ∗ MATTHEW L.M. FLETCHER This house is old. For two hundred years a woman has risen in the iron cold of the deepest hour. —Louise Erdrich1 Students of American Indian law cannot—and should not—escape from reading the three famous opinions of Chief Justice John Marshall that expounded for the first time in the halls of the United States Supreme Court the bases for federal Indian common law—the opinions we now refer to as the “Marshall Trilogy.”2 These foundational principles resonate today,3 more than eighteen decades after the Court put them into words. These words resonate in ways that the members of the Marshall Court could not have anticipated.4 In fact, a cursory review of the holdings and obiter dicta ∗Assistant Professor, Michigan State University College of Law; Director, Indigenous Law and Policy Center; Appellate Judge, Hoopa Valley Tribe, Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, and Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians; Enrolled Member, Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians. -
Vice in the Veil of Justice: Embedding Race and Gender in Frontier Tourism Daniel Richard Maher University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK Theses and Dissertations 8-2013 Vice in the Veil of Justice: Embedding Race and Gender in Frontier Tourism Daniel Richard Maher University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd Part of the Folklore Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Maher, Daniel Richard, "Vice in the Veil of Justice: Embedding Race and Gender in Frontier Tourism" (2013). Theses and Dissertations. 817. http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/817 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Vice in the Veil of Justice: Embedding Race and Gender in Frontier Tourism Vice in the Veil of Justice: Embedding Race and Gender in Frontier Tourism A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology By Daniel R. Maher Illinois State University Bachelor of Science in Sociology, 1990 Illinois State University Master of Science in Sociology, 1992 August 2013 University of Arkansas This dissertation is approved for recommendation to the Graduate Council. ________________________________________ Dr. Kirstin Erickson Dissertation Director ________________________________________ ____________________________________ Dr. JoAnn D’Alisera Dr. Ted Swedenburg Committee Member Committee Member _________________________________________ Dr. Patrick Williams Committee Member ABSTRACT This dissertation analyzes how “frontier” discourses in Fort Smith, Arkansas simultaneously constitute mythological narratives that elide the deleterious effects of imperialism, racism, and sexism, while they operate as marketing schemes in the wager that they will attract cultural heritage tourists. -
Kevin E. Dudley, Et Al.; Town of Fort Gibson, Oklahoma
INTERIOR BOARD OF INDIAN APPEALS Alan Chapman; Kevin E. Dudley, et al.; Town of Fort Gibson, Oklahoma; Muskogee County, Oklahoma; Oklahoma Tax Commission; Harold Wade; Quik Trip, Inc., et al.; City of Catoosa, Oklahoma v. Muskogee Area Director, Bureau of Indian Affairs 32 IBIA 101 (03/13/1998) Related Board case: 35 IBIA 285 United States Department of the Interior OFFICE OF HEARINGS AND APPEALS INTERIOR BOARD OF INDIAN APPEALS 4015 WILSON BOULEVARD ARLINGTON, VA 22203 ALAN CHAPMAN, : Order Lifting Stay, Vacating Appellant : Decisions, and Remanding KEVIN E. DUDLEY, et al., : Cases Appellants : TOWN OF FORT GIBSON, OKLAHOMA, : Appellant : MUSKOGEE COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, : COMMISSIONERS, : Appellants : ALAN CHAPMAN, : Appellant : KEVIN E. DUDLEY, et al., : Docket No. IBIA 96-115-A Appellants : Docket No. IBIA 96-119-A OKLAHOMA TAX COMMISSION, : Docket No. IBIA 96-122-A Appellant : Docket No. IBIA 96-123-A OKLAHOMA TAX COMMISSION, : Docket No. IBIA 96-124-A Appellant : Docket No. IBIA 96-125-A HAROLD WADE, : Docket No. IBIA 97-2-A Appellant : Docket No. IBIA 97-3-A OKLAHOMA TAX COMMISSION, : Docket No. IBIA 97-10-A Appellant : Docket No. IBIA 97-11-A QUIK TRIP, INC., et al., : Docket No. IBIA 97-12-A Appellants : Docket No. IBIA 97-14-A OKLAHOMA TAX COMMISSION, : Docket No. IBIA 97-40-A Appellant : CITY OF CATOOSA, OKLAHOMA : Appellant : : v. : : MUSKOGEE AREA DIRECTOR, : BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS, : Appellee : March 13, 1998 32 IBIA 101 These are consolidated appeals from four decisions of the Muskogee Area Director, Bureau of Indian Affairs, to take certain tracts of land into trust. -
The Normal Offering 1917
Bridgewater State University Virtual Commons - Bridgewater State University Bridgewater State Yearbooks Campus Journals and Publications 1917 The orN mal Offering 1917 Bridgewater State Normal School Recommended Citation Bridgewater State Normal School. (1917). The Normal Offering 1917. Retrieved from: http://vc.bridgew.edu/yearbooks/25 This item is available as part of Virtual Commons, the open-access institutional repository of Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater, Massachusetts. R"& NORMAL OFFERING VOLUME XVIX A year book published by the students of the Bridgewater Normal School under the direction of an Editorial Board chosen by the student body. Price, - - - One Dollar and a Quarter Address Richmond Barton, Bridgewater Normal School, Bridgewater, Mass. Orders for 1918 Offering should be placed with Business Manager on or before February 1, 1918. Printed by Arthur H. Willis, Bridgewater, - Massachusetts. o ®0 Ultam 1. ilarkaon for mang pars our trarljrr anb altuags our frtrttfc, ®I|ts hook is fofttratrfL (Eotttettta Alumni, ........ 28 A Misinterpretation, ....... 98 Athletics: Tennis Club, ....... 94 Athletic Association, . .94 Football, ....... 95 Baseball, ........ 97 Basketball, ....... 99 Clara Coffin Prince, . .20 Commencement Week, ...... 25 Contents, . .6 Dedication, ....... 5 Editorial Board, . .23 Editorial, ........ 24 Faculty, ........ 9 Faculty Notes, ... ... 16 Histories: Class A, . .40 Class B., . 42 Class K. -P., 48 Seniors, . 53 Specials, ........ 71 Olass \j, . Id Juniors, ........ 78 Hon. George H. Martin, ...... 18 Kappa Delta Phi Fraternity Play, . 101 Kappa Delta Phi, ....... 103 Normal Clubs, ....... 31 NORMAL OFFERING 7 Organizations: Dramatic Club, . • . 87 Glee Club, ....... 89 Y. P. U., 91 Woodward Hall Association, . .92 Robert E. Pellissier, ...... 20 Sororities: Lambda Phi, ........ 105 Alpha Gamma Phi, ...... 107 Tau Beta Gamma, . -
Challenge Bowl 2020
Notice: study guide will be updated after the December general election. Sponsored by the Muscogee (Creek) Nation Challenge Bowl 2020 High School Study Guide Sponsored by the Challenge Bowl 2020 Muscogee (Creek) Nation Table of Contents A Struggle To Survive ................................................................................................................................ 3-4 1. Muscogee History ......................................................................................................... 5-30 2. Muscogee Forced Removal ........................................................................................... 31-50 3. Muscogee Customs & Traditions .................................................................................. 51-62 4. Branches of Government .............................................................................................. 63-76 5. Muscogee Royalty ........................................................................................................ 77-79 6. Muscogee (Creek) Nation Seal ...................................................................................... 80-81 7. Belvin Hill Scholarship .................................................................................................. 82-83 8. Wilbur Chebon Gouge Honors Team ............................................................................. 84-85 9. Chronicles of Oklahoma ............................................................................................... 86-97 10. Legends & Stories ...................................................................................................... -
Winter 2002 (PDF)
CIVILRIGHTS WINTER 2002 JOURNAL ALSO INSIDE: EQUATIONS: AN INTERVIEW WITH BOB MOSES FLYING HISTORY AS SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION WHILE WHERE ARE YOU REALLY FROM? ASIAN AMERICANS AND THE PERPETUAL FOREIGNER SYNDROME ARAB MANAGING THE DIVERSITY Lessons from the Racial REVOLUTION: BEST PRACTICES FOR 21ST CENTURY BUSINESS Profiling Controversy U.S. COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS CIVILRIGHTS WINTER 2002 JOURNAL The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights is an independent, bipartisan agency first established by Congress in 1957. It is directed to: • Investigate complaints alleging that citizens are being deprived of their right to Acting Chief vote by reason of their race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin, Terri A. Dickerson or by reason of fraudulent practices; • Study and collect information relating to discrimination or a denial of equal Managing Editor protection of the laws under the Constitution because of race, color, religion, sex, David Aronson age, disability, or national origin, or in the administration of justice; Copy Editor • Appraise federal laws and policies with respect to discrimination or denial of equal Dawn Sweet protection of the laws because of race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin, or in the administration of justice; Editorial Staff • Serve as a national clearinghouse for information in respect to discrimination or Monique Dennis-Elmore denial of equal protection of the laws because of race, color, religion, sex, age, Latrice Foshee disability, or national origin; Mireille Zieseniss • Submit reports, findings, and recommendations to the President and Congress; • Issue public service announcements to discourage discrimination or denial of equal Interns protection of the laws. Megan Gustafson Anastasia Ludden In furtherance of its fact-finding duties, the Commission may hold hearings and issue Travis McClain subpoenas for the production of documents and the attendance of witnesses.