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1. Re: Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb
- lists.gnu.org
- Top All Lists Advanced Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next Date Index Thread Index Re: Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb.
- Re: Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb.
- com> wrote: >| Hi List, >| >| I have successfully compiled and installed GNUstepWeb >| framework, but I having problem when I compile Apaches >| modules for GNUstepWeb. ...
- Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb, nyap hong, 2004/04/23 .
- Re: Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb, Manuel Guesdon <= .
- Previous by thread: Failed to compile Apaches modules for GNUstepWeb .
2. Apaches
- www.texancultures.utsa.edu
- Spanish officials estimated that, between 1748 and 1772, the Apaches killed more than 4,000 persons and stole or destroyed property valued at over 12 million pesos.
- Timeline Caddos Plains Quanah Parker Apaches Ft. ...
3. Lonestar Apaches Themes
- www.lonestarapachesthemes.com
- Welcome to Lonestar Apaches Themes Website! Here you will find Desktop Themes, Wallpapers, Screensavers and Much more! Stop by as often as you like as our content is always changing. ...
4. Apaches For Cultural Preservation
- personal.riverusers.com
- Apaches For Cultural Preservation.
- Apaches for Cultural Preservation was founded by Wendsler Nosie Sr. ... because of the need to educate Apaches from various Apache reservations. ... Currently, there are many Apaches who still experience post war syndrome including denial. ...
- Apaches for Cultural Preservation is working with the young native people, teaching them to preserve what is left, such as Traditional ceremonies, songs, language, foods, spirituality, and Sacred sites. ...
- ACP has constructed a monument in Old San Carlos which honors all those fallen Apaches who stood for who they were and lost their lives.
- Apaches for Cultural | Mt. ...
5. KIOWA APACHE INDIANS
- www.rra.dst.tx.us
- Although their common name is derived from the erroneous belief that they were a detached band of Apaches from New Mexico and Arizona, their myths and oral history tell of a northern home, probably near the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, when they were an independent tribe with north and south divisions. ... Although many scholars lean toward the view that the Kiowa Apaches were linked with one of the Athabascan divisions, some speculate that they were originally eastern or Plains Apaches who became separated from their kinsmen when the Comanches first intruded into the southern Plains. Aside from linguistic differences, the Kiowa Apaches were practically indistinguishable from the Kiowa proper. ... Like the Kiowas, the Kiowa Apaches believed in the passage of the spirit into the other world. ...
- Cohesion was also achieved by the Apaches' functioning as a unit in the annual Kiowa camp circle, by linguistic isolation which distinguished the group and set it apart from plains peoples, and by inferiority of number which practically necessitated mutual agreement and cooperation for protection and consequent survival. ... With so many social forces tending toward unity, it is not surprising that the Kiowa Apaches were a closely integrated people. ...
- The Kiowa Apaches were first mentioned in European records under the name "Gattacka" by the French explorer René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, in 1681 or 1682, at the frontier outpost on Peoria Lake, in the Illinois country. ... Apparently both the Kiowas and Kiowa Apaches were ranging at that time between the Platte River and eastern New Mexico and engaging in a lucrative trade in Spanish horses. ... Although the two pathfinders apparently made no actual contact with the Kiowa Apaches, they estimated their number as around 300 "in twenty-five tepees" and reported them rich in the horses that they traded to the Arikaras and Mandans on the upper Missouri. ...
- The first recorded contact between the Kiowa Apaches and Anglo-Americans occurred on August 11, 1820, when Stephen H. ... " Along with the Kiowas and Tawakonis, the Kiowa Apaches (Katakas) entered into their first treaty with the United States government in 1837. ...
- Under the leadership of their head chief, Pacer (or Peso), the majority of Kiowa Apaches were early advocates of peace and cooperation with the federal authorities; in October 1872 Pacer and two sub-chiefs, Daha and Gray Eagle, represented the tribe in the joint delegation to Washington, D. ... Although a few individuals accompanied the war party led by Quanah Parker to Adobe Walls that summer, the Kiowa Apaches, as a whole, remained quietly on the reservation throughout the Red River War. ... Due mainly to increased intermarriage with the Kiowas and other neighboring tribes, the Kiowa Apaches numbered roughly 100 adults by 1933. ...
6. Apache Indians Southwest
- www.epcc.edu
- No other Indians in the Southwest caused the terror and constant fear in settlers as the Apaches did throughout their fierce existence. ...
- The Apaches were essentially nomadic hunters and warriors, dwelling at any one place only temporarily in brush shelters known as wickiups, short, rounded dwellings made of twigs and mud, or tepees of cow or buffalo hides. ...
- When the Spanish came to New Mexico in the late 1500s, they brought horses with them, and the Apaches raided their settlements for the animals which they learned to ride in expert fashion. The Spanish fought back, enslaving the Apaches and sending them south to work in mining camps. ... Raids against the Spanish intensified, with the Apaches intent on destroying Spanish settlements wherever they existed.
- By the late 1600s, the Apaches occupied lands stretching westward from Texas to the lower Colorado River and southward from Colorado into Sonora and Chihuahua, Mexico. ...
- When the Comanches invaded Apache territory in the early 1700s, the Lipan and other Apaches were forced to move south away from the buffalo, their main food source, and the Apaches began to raid for food.
- In the late 1700s, the Spanish began to offer the Apaches plots of land and rations in exchange for peace- an arrangement similar to what the Anglos would later call reservations. The Apaches would often make peace with one Spanish province and raid all the others. ...
- Leon Metz writes that around 1800, Spanish scouts found many Apaches living near the presidio of San Elizario on the Rio Grande. The Mescalero Apaches looted wagon trains traveling between El Paso and Chihuahua City. In fact, the entire upper part of the Camino Real was exposed to attacks from the Mescalero and Mimbreño Apaches. ...
- As Americans began moving westward in great numbers, the Apaches and the military met in frequent battles. ... The Apaches continued their reign of terror against settlers, which now included great numbers of Anglos. ...
- " Geronimo and his people reluctantly agreed to accept the Chiricahua Reservation in southeast Arizona, but the Apaches found it difficult to adjust to confinement and some kept raiding.
- Geronimo and the Apaches were sent by train to a confinement center in St. ... Martinez notes that Apaches continued their guerilla tactics from the border mountains as late as the 1920s, despite the elimination or capture of famous leaders.
7. Dancing Gods: VIII: The Apaches
- www.sacred-texts.com
- VIII: The Apaches.
- Apaches are defeated. ...
- Apaches, like Navajos, could not understand why the United States, having fought Mexicans, became the protectors of Mexicans. ...
- Cremony, who fought Apaches for many years, has left an account of his enemy, which shows that the Major was a student as well as a soldier, and an officer willing to give full credit to his foe.
- He says that he knew of friendships between Apaches and white men, but in his experience they were extremely rare. ... The Apaches knew who would defeat them in the end. ...
- Major Cremony concluded that "those who believe that they the Apaches can be tamed and rendered peaceable under any circumstances, are wonderfully in error. " The error, though, seems to be on the part of the Major; for the Apaches have not only been tamed and rendered peaceable, but they seem to come closest to the professed government ideal of the Indian who gives up his own ways and adopts the dress, speech, manners, and religion of the American.
- In the round-up which followed, many Apaches were conquered, along with the Navajos, and moved with them to the Bosque Redondo. ... When the government began to establish them on reservations, Apaches came into conflict with white men who protested against giving desirable land to Indians. So the Apaches were moved from place to place, subjected to distress, in unaccustomed climates, and extreme irritation due to the vacillating policy of the authorities. ...
- Apaches now live on four reservations: the Mescalero and the Jicarilla in New Mexico, and two in the White Mountains of Arizona. ...
- Apaches still make tiswin, the tribal intoxicant, and mescal, and they take readily to American whisky. ...
8. ApachES - Documentación de Apache en español
- quark.fe.up.pt
- ApachES es el nombre del proyecto de traducción de la documentación de Apache al español.
- © 2001, ApachES .
9. Boeing To Upgrade Egyptian AF Apaches (Dec. 4)
- www.defense-aerospace.com
- Boeing To Upgrade Egyptian AF Apaches (Dec. ...
- government to upgrade 35 Egyptian AH-64A Apache helicopters into next-generation AH-64D Apaches.
- The FMS contract for the Egyptian Army Apaches, which includes associated spares and ground support equipment, is valued at approximately $400 million, including the aircraft, ordnance, spares, training and support. ...
- In addition, Boeing is producing next-generation Apaches for several nations, including The Netherlands and the United Kingdom. ...
- Army Sign Contract For 35 Egyptian AH-64D Apaches .
10. In Memory of Big Mike Noonan
- www.vtc.net
- On May 17, 1885 the final breakout of Apaches from the San Carlos Reservation took place. ... The term that was applied to these escaped Apaches as well as to the Apaches who never went to the reservation in the first place was "Broncos". ...
- Bronco Apaches existed in the high mountain areas of Mexico until the 1930s. Therefore one cannot say for certain whether the act of terror perpetrated against Big Mike was done by members of Geronimo's band of escapees or by other Bronco Apaches. ...
- He figured he needed a place to hide from outlaws and Apaches and the tunnel was his emergency hideout. ...
- Shortly after Big Mike established this herd, it was completely wiped out by a band of Apaches that was heading south along the base of the Dragoons after attacking a wagon train up near Willcox. ...
- Rather than stealing the cattle and driving them south into Mexico or just killing one to eat, these Apaches decided to kill every single cow in the expansion herd. ... If there were 15 Apaches, they would have had to kill only 5 cows apiece to reach their goal. ...
- Apologists for the Apache terrorists will tell you that the Apaches only raided to obtain food and supplies necessary for survival in the harsh high desert area they had occupied for a few hundred years. ...
- They interpreted the signals as a warning from Apaches in the Stronghold that a cavalry detachment from Fort Grant up near Willcox was in the area, following the Apaches because of their raid of the wagon train. As the Apaches finished off the last cow and took off again to the south, Big Mike arrived on the scene. ...
- The soldiers had arrived on the scene and Mike probably told them to take whatever beef they needed for the pursuit of the Apaches. ...
- He bought more cattle and ranched successfully for three more years while the Apaches mostly refrained from raiding and stayed either back on the reservation or in Mexico. ...
- One fall day when Rockfellow was visiting Noonan, a man arrived from Tombstone with word that Bronco Apaches had been sighted in the nearby Middlemarch Pass area of the Dragoons. ...
- Tracks of two Apaches were observed leading up to the door of the cabin. ...
- The Apaches had raided some ranches to the north down in the Sulphur Springs Valley and were headed south with a quantity of stolen horses. ... Apparently two of the Apaches rode over to Mike's cabin and concealed themselves among some cover on one side or another of the wash that passed in front of the cabin door. ...
11. Les Apaches cloués au sol par mesure de sécurité
- www.checkpoint-online.ch
- Présentés comme les "tueurs de chars" par excellence lors de leur envoi en Albanie, durant l'opération "Allied Force" de l'OTAN, les Apaches subissent des revers en série: la lenteur de leur déploiement, leur incapacité à être engagés dans les Balkans et leurs incidents en vol ont considérablement assombri une aura héritée de la guerre du Golfe.
- Ces limitations sont d'ailleurs à l'origine du non-engagement des Apaches américains durant l'opération "Allied Force". ... De plus, les montagnes de 3000 mètres au sud du Kosovo ont diminué drastiquement l'autonomie des Apaches, puisque l'obligation de voler à une altitude importante réduit celle-ci à 100 km; or des réservoirs supplémentaires auraient réduit au moins de moitié le nombre de Hellfire embarqués.
- Par ailleurs, la nécessité d'emprunter certains passages précis entre les montagnes kosovares auraient sans aucun doute permis de prévoir l'itinéraire des Apaches en cas de mission contre l'armée yougoslave. ...
12. JManly: The Apaches of Paris
- ejmas.com
- The Apaches of Paris.
- From a dozen tough bars came reinforcements to the Apaches-as the toughs delight to call themselves, and the name has stuck. ... Nine wounded Apaches were left on the ground by the fleeing bands. ...
- That the Apaches are brutal trouble hunters is seen by their interminable fights among themselves, while the columns of the Paris daily papers testify without cease to their willing use of the knife on passing citizens of the night. ... As to the obtaining of evidence, it is rendered wonderfully difficult by the unfailing faithfulness of the Apaches to each other-in the midst of this most desperate battles and in spite of tempting money bribes-"beef" being the one unpardonable Apache crime. ... It is not this that sets Parisians talking about the Apaches. What raises their interest is the Apaches' street fighting-so much so that there is not a "Review" (of Paris local happenings) in a single café-chantant this present Summer that has not its Apache street battle in it for picturesqueness. ...
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