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"tepee" Definitions
  1. a type of tall tent like a cone in shape, used in the past by native North American peoples of the Plains and Great Lakes regions

166 Sentences With "tepee"

How to use tepee in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tepee" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tepee". Mastering all the usages of "tepee" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The tepee can be booked for $145 a night on Airbnb.
For families, the basic tent with adjacent tepee is an ideal setup.
Parents get the fluffy bed, children get to sleep in the tepee.
Gusts of wind whipped against the tepee, and the fire began to flicker.
Hurricane Sandy blew the original tepee down, so we're now on our second one.
Most puzzling was cold spinach with sesame paste under a tepee of strawberry Pocky.
His family would live in a tepee near a pond and they were quite isolated.
"I ain't going nowhere," said Lee Plenty Wolf, who has settled in a snowbound tepee.
At the camp, defiance is rising like smoke from the stovepipe of Mr. Plenty Wolf's tepee.
Organizers had installed a skateboard ramp, a DJ and a garden tepee for those tender Tinder moments.
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — The day's top news stories are beamed from a round studio that evokes a tepee.
The night before they got to the lake they stopped at an Airbnb tepee two hours away.
There is art and clothing and jewelry, and a tepee where mannequins gather around a fake fire.
She squeezed a tepee into the corner of his bedroom and cushioned the bottom with old baby blankets.
In April, they listed the tepee on Airbnb for $135 a night and immediately started to get bookings.
A landing page for the Monster Lake Ranch indicates it was used as a guest ranch, offering cabin and tepee rentals.
But that silence won't make the issue go away: Sioux protesters erected a tepee in her Brooklyn campaign office on Thursday.
"The tepee is his refuge, but it can also be fun," said Ms. Flyer, who purchased it for less than $100.
As the video goes on, she dances around a fire, sends smoke signals, and writhes on a tepee floor with a wolf.
At Standing Rock, I even ran into my friend, activist and artist Ben Alex Dupris, who gave me a course in Tepee 101.
NEAR CANNON BALL, N.D. — Horseback riders, their faces streaked in yellow and black paint, led the procession out of their tepee-dotted camp.
As they packed into a tepee, faces aglow around a raging fire, the protesters seemed ready for wherever that dispute may take them.
"You've got Fauxcahontas way back there in the background barely out of the tepee bringing up the tail end," Limbaugh said, referring to Sen.
Her teapot in the shape of a Native American tepee shows a love for what she saw as the exotic, the whimsical, the foreign.
When she met Mr. Young, in 1974, she was working as a waitress near his ranch and living in a tepee with her dog.
PUT was clever, as long as you know to make "tepee" equal T and P, and "you" become U, all common tricks in these puzzles.
On the final night, there is a campout under the stars (or you can sleep in a tepee) complete with fiddlers by the campfire and s'mores.
At night, the family plays music together and reads by firelight — leafing through books one page at a time — before bedding down in the communal tepee.
In upstate New York, travelers can stay in a luxurious, 18-foot-tall tepee that sits in the woods on a 10-acre property at Bellfire Farm.
They appeared torn about whether they should build a tepee and throw parties on the beach or dedicate more time to growing kale in the soaking Scottish soil.
When the bell sounded for the last time, the two Nickel boys in the ring were entwined, bloody and slick, propping each other up like a human tepee.
Ms. Flyer, who often reads books to Julian in the tepee, said her son also seeks out the space on his own, especially when the family has company.
He covered the box of mementos with water-drenched bedding and blankets, made a kind of tepee over it out of three wheelbarrows, and then fled for his life.
Pinkham, who has been visiting the country since 2008, sometimes as an aid worker, encounters families displaced by war, tepee-dwelling nudists, and ultranationalists bedecked in fatigues and balaclavas.
By day, he trains them to navigate the woods like Special Ops forces; at night, they play music together and read by firelight before bedding down in a communal tepee.
Roxie slept in the tepee as Tim and I drank beer and watched the sky turn from a pale blue to a sherbet orange to an inky expanse of night.
I meandered into Paper Source and picked up some table decorations, a cute do-it-yourself tepee pack and some funny paper headdresses, some shaped like pilgrim's hats, some shaped like feathers.
Ms. Thurman had a small inheritance, and the couple bought nine acres on a hill here in Woodstock for $7,000, cleared the land and put up a few tents and a tepee.
Awed by our surroundings, Tim and I huddled in blankets designated for the fireside (to prevent guests, presumably, from using the beautiful — and expensive — Pendleton wool blankets that topped each tepee bed).
To spark a government inquiry, a female First Nations chief went on a six-week liquid-only hunger strike while camped out in a tepee on an island across from Ottawa's Parliament Hill.
In the Mark penthouse, whose square footage is eleven thousand feet, with a rack rate of seventy-five thousand dollars a night, an industrious six-year-old was seated inside a canvas tepee.
Duane Linklater, an Omaskêko Ininiwak artist from Canada, has installed towering tripodal works that recall the structure of the tepee and contrast starkly with the ever-rising condominium towers surrounding the High Line.
Inkjet-printed tepee coverings by Duane Linklater (the husband of Tanya and a member of the Omaskeko Cree) derive their floral imagery from the 17th-century goods traded by the Cree and English settlers.
Representatives of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe worked with officers to collect tepee hides left at the site, according to the department, which said it had made nearly 700 arrests during protests since Aug. 10.
On Monday, a holiday that many celebrate as Indigenous Peoples Day instead of Columbus Day, scores of protesters rallied and pitched a tepee beside a section of pipe near the tiny farming town of St. Anthony.
There is a tepee-shaped bonfire, Mr. Timberlake striking a baptism pose in a lake, and a moment where he turns his body extremely quickly so that you can see the fringe on his leather jacket fly.
Friday I was the first participant to arrive, and after hugs of greeting from Ms. Chan and Trish Barillas, a life coach who helped facilitate the retreat, I was shown across the lawn to my lavender tepee.
A gravity-defying cone of 12 tepee poles has been screwed into the wall, its cover drooping to the floor; other poles stretch up from the basement, wrapped in mink and rabbit fur coats that recall tourniquets.
Abdullah Saeed and his crew visit Mount Rushmore, sleep in a Lakota tepee to protest the Keystone pipeline and meet Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas — while trying their hands at hog-calling — at the Iowa State Fair.
Mr. Northrup never planned to write professionally, but when he returned to the reservation in 1977, "people came to visit me because living in a tepee was such a novelty," he told The Pioneer Press of St. Paul.
For another bedroom for very young children — a 4-year-old and an 18-month-old — Ms. Davies painting the ceiling bright blue, but left the walls white, adding orange accents with a striped tepee and window coverings.
A reminder of those injustices came on Thursday night when a group of young indigenous people clashed with the police in Ottawa while attempting to set up a tepee on Parliament Hill, the epicenter of this weekend's celebration.
He returns to the reservation resolved "never to lay so much as the tip of a single finger on the diseased currency of the White Man," and installs himself in a tepee on a patch of empty land.
This summer, Off the Map Travel is introducing three-night trips on Norway's Lofoten Islands, a mountainous and fjord-filled region above the Arctic Circle, based in tepee tents decorated in the style of the indigenous Sami people.
In addition to the safaris, you could visit a sauna, or go on a cultural excursion called the Authentic Sámi Experience, in which native Laplanders welcome guests into a lávvu , a tepee-like shelter, and sing traditional songs around a fire.
Left, LH: Jack gave me a tepee as a birthday gift one year and we set it up near the pool on our Berkshires property, which also includes an 18th-century farmhouse and an adjoining studio where we spend weeks sketching each season.
"Here's the thing, we're not shoving it in your face — if you're wearing it, you're supporting our issue to be sustainable — [the cause] in the clothes," Williams told Refinery29 amid a couple photo ops in a massive denim tepee that he designed.
A camping cabin at KOA New York City North in Plattekill, for example, accommodates four people and costs $112 during peak leaf-peeping season, while a 10-person tepee at a Delaware Water Gap KOA, in the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania rents for $107.
Mr. Langford, who now spends his days splitting wood for the tepee's wood-burning stove and bushwhacking paths for guests to use, said the first tepee has already paid for itself and they recently bought a second, which should be up and running soon.
The Council Lodge tepee at Standing Rock was a sign of a new political awakening, as the traditional chiefs and medicine men collaborated with grass-roots organizers — the youth and other Native American factions that had joined — to restore the old, unified tribal republic.
CANNON BALL, N.D. — Lee Plenty Wolf knows the government wants him to clear out of the snowbound tepee where he stokes the fire, sings traditional Oglala songs and sleeps alongside a pair of women from France and California who came to protest an oil pipeline in the stinging cold.
They buy fry bread and buffalo meat in the restaurant, and T-shirts and rabbit furs and tepee-building kits and commemorative hard hats in the gift shop, and watch a twenty-two-minute orientation film in which members of the Lakota community praise the memorial and the Ziolkowski family.
The sprawling, documentary-feeling portrayal of Idylwild has a woolly affection for this boob-flapping feminist jubilee: glitter and nut loaf, Indigo Girls' sing-alongs, a tepee with a Bronx-accented shaman a few feet away from a leather dyke dragging a "naughty doggy" (pro tip: Soloway herself) on a leash.
After they became engaged they found a way to combine those dreams, living in a small house in Bovina, on land that flows down to a meandering creek, and erecting a tepee in a clearing nearby, furnishing it with rustic-romantic furnishings in the vein of a Ralph Lauren photo spread.
The camp had expanded onto the floodplain across the river, and grass-roots activists and members of the unelected traditional leadership, which serves as a sort of parallel Oceti Sakowin government, erected a Council Lodge, a large tepee from the tribe's past that the young people had only heard about.
They could hardly imagine the surreal indulgences of the tourist road that would begin to emerge after World War II: renting a room built to resemble a country cottage and adorned with plastic flowers; snapping photos of a neon cactus glowing through half-drawn window shades; sleeping in a concrete tepee appropriated from Native American culture.
Satellite Island Rent out this lushly forested 76-acre island and you get everything — the three-bedroom main house, with its squishy sofas and wood-burning stove, decorated in cream-hued linens and with branches of coral; the two-bedroom boat house, perched on the dock overlooking the bay; and the canvas tepee sheltering a queen-size bed — all to yourself.
Tepee Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Tepee Creek was named for the fact ranchers discovered abandoned tepee parts near the creek.
Tepee Buttes is a mountain range in McKenzie County, North Dakota, in the United States. Tepee Buttes was so named on account of its outline being shaped like a tepee.
Chief Noc-A-Homa could be found at every home game in a tepee beyond the left field seats. There were the times when the tepee was taken down to add more seats. Superstitious fans sometimes blamed losing streaks on the missing tepee. In 1982, when the Braves opened the season with 13 wins, owner Ted Turner removed the tepee to sell more seats.
Pahaska Tepee operates as a mountain resort and the original hunting lodge is open for tours. Pahaska Tepee was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.
Tepee Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Tepee Creek's name comes from the Sioux Indians of the area, for the fact they lived in tepees.
An Oglala Lakota tipi, 1891 A tipi ( ), also tepee or teepee"teepee". www.dict.org.(last visited August 25, 2013). And rarely, "tepee" tepee (dwelling) -- Encyclopædia Britannica and often called a lodge in older English writings, is a tent, traditionally made of animal skins upon wooden poles. Modern tipis usually have a canvas covering.
One campsite consists of an authentic Native American tepee which is available for rent.
"So we put up tepees. One woman said: 'Where's the motel?' I said, 'Here's a key: tepee number one or tepee number two.'" The women camped for five days, talking about social, economic and family problems troubling native people throughout the Western Hemisphere.
Tepee for Two is the 130th Woody Woodpecker cartoon that was released in theaters on October 4, 1963.
The Tepee Trail Formation is a geologic formation in Wyoming. It preserves fossils dating back to the Paleogene period.
The Peugeot Bipper Tepee is a small MPV, which was also introduced in 2008, and is based on the same platform.
In Voer there are six four-room bedrooms, plus tepee like tents in different seizes with room for between 5 and 25 people sleeping in each tepee. There are also six shelters with room for 6-7 people in each shelter. One of the Kyst- og Fjordcenters dinghies on Randers Fjord with a 4 HP, 4-stroke outboard engine.
In 1992, Jennings (then-Morgan) reproduced a small version of the "Tepee With Battle Pictures" for an exhibit at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. The original painted tepee was created in 1845 to commemorate the continued peace agreement between the Kiowa and Cheyenne tribes, and was presented as a gift to Little Bluff, the principal chief of the Kiowa. The tepee represented an object of great cultural significance and prestige, and has been reproduced several times over the years. Jennings is a great-great-great-granddaughter of Little Bluff II. For her reproduced model, Jennings drew upon family history to depict military deeds, but because Kiowa tradition is that only men can reproduce such images, Jennings taught her son Seth to draw the battle pictures on the tepee.
He expected that they would proceed up Cody Road, along the north fork of the Shoshone River, to visit Yellowstone Park. To accommodate travelers, Cody completed the construction of the Wapiti Inn and Pahaska Tepee in 1905 along Cody RoadKensel, W. Hudson (1987). Pahaska Tepee, Buffalo Bill's Old Hunting Lodge and Hotel, A History, 1901–1946. Buffalo Bill Historical Center.
Move Along was originally released on Dunhill ABC in stereo. The album was designed by David Larkham of Tepee Graphics. Photos taken by Ed Caraeff.
The American Indian Magazine was published for another three years, and the last issue was August 1920.Hertzberg, p. 190. The American Indian Tepee, started in 1920 by Red Fox St. James' Tepee Order, became for a time an unofficial organ of the Society. It staunchly but unsuccessfully supported Society President Thomas L. Sloan for the post of U.S. Indian Commissioner and reported Society news, including the St. Louis conference.
Painted Tepee Peak, or simply Painted Tepee (also Tipi or Teepee) is a mountain located in Glacier National Park in the U.S. state of Montana near the Two Medicine Pass. The altitude of the highest point is . The summit lies to the south of Two Medicine Lake, and is within view of Grizzly Mountain, Chief Lodgepole Peak, and Mount Rockwell. The mountain lies along the Two Mountain Pass Trail.
Cody built Pahaska Tepee to accommodate tourists traveling up the Cody Road along the North Fork of the Shoshone River to visit Yellowstone. While on a hunting expedition in November 1901, Cody marked the location of the hunting lodge with a hand ax. The artist Abraham Archibald Anderson designed Pahaska for Cody sometime during 1902 or 1903 and construction started soon after. The grand opening of Pahaska Tepee was announced on July 5, 1904 in the Cody newspaper.
Chapter 38 In the morning several days later, Dick Summers wakes up to someone shouting "Wrong camp" and from the flap of his tepee sees Heavy Runner trot out of his lodge "waving his friendship paper" and be immediately shot down. Summers makes Teal Eye escape through a hole in the rear of their tepee and then sits to await his fate. A soldier looks in and remarks that Summers is a white man. The soldier also sees the nonwhite Nocansee sitting quietly.
The Braves lost 19 of their next 21 games and fell to second place. Turner told team management to put the tepee back up and the Braves went on to win the National League West.
Pahaska Tepee is William "Buffalo Bill" Cody's old hunting lodge and hotel in the U.S. state of Wyoming. It is located west of the town of Cody and two miles from the east entrance to Yellowstone National Park.
It was a big fight. The soldiers got just what they deserved this time. No good soldiers would shoot into an Indian’s tepee where there were women and children. These soldiers did, and we fought for our women and children.
In November 1904 Cody led a large hunting party from his new lodge for a ten-day hunt. Construction was completed in 1905, and the lodge was opened to guests.Kensel, W. Hudson. Pahaska Tepee, Buffalo Bill's Old Hunting Lodge and Hotel, A History, 1901-1946.
A tomahawk in the Northern Plains warrior culture could evolve from being a weapon to an item carried primarily to count coup, which transformed the item into one possessing spiritual significance. Adornments to White Swan's tomahawk (see item pictured in footnoted source, or in the photo above), probably indicated brave war deeds, and/or instructions of critical spiritual import, received through visions or through the intervention of a spiritual leader/mentor (a "medicine man"). When living at Crow Agency on the Little Bighorn river, White Swan had a tepee which had drawings around the lower portion that depicted the Custer battle. A picture of the tepee is at the footnoted citation.
When twilight came, Carson ordered part of his scouts to burn the lodges of the first village. The Kiowa-Apache chief, Iron Shirt, was killed when he refused to leave his tepee. The army declared Carson's mission a victory, despite his having been driven from the field.
She also knew what herbs to use for medicine. Amache's mother also taught her grandchildren of the ways of the Cheyenne people. She kept a tepee at her home to stay grounded in Native American tradition. The Prowers were frequently visited by Amache's mother and other family members.
The highways travel concurrently to West Thumb. :;Wyoming :: north-northwest of West Thumb. The highways travel concurrently to West Thumb. ;Eastern segment :;Wyoming :: at the East Entrance to Yellowstone National Park, southeast of Pahaska Tepee. US 14/US 20 travel concurrently to Greybull. US 16/US 20 travel concurrently to Worland.
They tanned hides to make clothing as well as bags, saddle cloths, and tepee covers. Mothers used cradleboards to carry an infant while working or traveling.Beatrice Medicine, "Gender", Encyclopedia of North American Indians, February 9, 2006. At least several dozen tribes allowed polygyny to sisters, with procedural and economic limits.
W. Hudson Kensel (June 16, 1928 – January 16, 2014) was an historian and author of the American West. He is professor emeritus from California State University at Fresno. At Fresno, he was the chairman of the Department of History. His early childhood was spent at Pahaska Tepee and Cody, Wyoming.
In 1921 the gravesite was joined by Pahaska Tepee, a large and rustic wooden lodge designed by Edwin H. Moorman, housing the Buffalo Bill Museum. Today the museum continues to host visitors from around the world, a testament to Buffalo Bill's global appeal even a century after his Wild West exhibition last performed.
One hundred and thirty seven burials were found. A triangular arrow point was found embedded in the head of adult No. 43 (Mills 1917:320). A curious comment of Mills, "'fireplace of a tepee site on the base line or floor.'" The third mound was six feet high and by at the base.
Tom Baptist Church is shaped in the form of an Indian tepee. Tom is a small unincorporated community in McCurtain County, Oklahoma, United States. The post office was established in 1916 and named for Tom Stewart, an early settler. It is the southeasternmost community in Oklahoma, in the midst of the Ouachita National Forest.
In August 1878, Chief Mosquito signed an adhesion to Treaty 6 at Battleford after taking over the Band from Little Chief. Grizzly Bear's Head originally signed Treaty 4 under Tepee Hoska at Cypress Hills in 1877. The Band migrated to the Battleford area after Tepree Hoska died in 1882. Both Bands merged in 1951.
He married three times. Henry and his third wife Margaret "Peg" Shaw, daughter of the publisher of the Cody Enterprise, converted Pahaska Tepee, a hunting lodge that once belonged to Buffalo Bill Cody, into a popular resort. He had three children; his eldest son Hank Coe represents Park County in the Wyoming State Senate.
Then, when the children say, "We all fall down!", they sit on the ground as the parachute goes up, making an air bubble. ;Tepee: The parachute is brought up, then the children raise their part of the parachutes over their heads and behind their back, and sit down. This creates an air pocket which resembles a tent.
He was always with his mother in the > daytime, so I would have to wait until night to try to talk to her alone. > She knew I wanted to walk with her under a courting blanket and make her my > wife. But she would only talk with me through the tepee cover and never came > outside.
Currently operating agricultural entities include the Parkview and Moon Valley nurseries, Garcia Farming, R&S; Farm, Pedego Farms, A&F; Growers Inc., and Greenbelt Growers. A tepee reconstruction at the Sherman Indian Museum, which highlights the traditional cultures of Native Americans. Major retail locations include grocers Albertsons, Food 4 Less, and Stater Brothers, and Lowe's Home Improvement Store.
"The Saamis Tepee", in The Great White North, Hammerson Peters website Although designed to withstand extreme temperatures and winds up to , during a severe windstorm in January 2007, a portion of the teepee was damaged. Inspection revealed that extensive weathering had weakened the structure. The necessary repairs resulted in lowering the height of Saamis Teepee by approximately .
The mascot's tradition started in 1964 while the franchise was in Milwaukee. The first recorded instance of the concept came when a 16-year-old high school student named Tim Rynders set up a tepee in the centerfield bleachers. He danced and ignited smoke bombs when the Braves scored. When the franchise moved to Atlanta the mascot was named Chief Noc-A-Homa.
Red was chosen by designer Gladys L. Moore, a Yankton Sioux from Union Lake (Ibid), Michigan, because it is a symbol of life. The color red was painted around the lower parts of tepees to indicate that those that visited would be fed or that that particular tepee was one of several in which a feast was to be held.
Brush, George de Forest (1885), "An Artist Among the Indians" in Century Magazine (May). Even years later, he still enjoyed living occasionally in a tepee. It was partly because of such "wildness" that his future in-laws refused to approve of his marriage to their daughter, née Mittie Taylor Whelpley, which took place by elopement in 1886.Bowditch 1970, pp. 30-31.
"It has a lot of life left in it …" he said. When recently asked by the Courier-Journal about his teepee project, Schickli said he would like to see his project preserved. "It's a whimsical structure; the type of thing I believe belongs in parks."Support may be building to preserve park's tepee:$80,000 sought for Cherokee Park pavilion Sheldon S Shafer.
Meanwhile, Willoughby (Lou Costello) and Duke (Bud Abbott) are vendors at the rodeo. They are not very good at their job, and soon cause enough havoc that they hide from their boss. Their hiding place winds up being a cattle car and they soon find themselves on their way out west. When they arrive, Willoughby accidentally shoots an arrow into an Indian tepee.
The women tanned and prepared the skins to cover the tepees. These were made of log poles, with the skins draped over it. The tepee remained warm in the winter and cool in the summer, and was a great shield against the wind. The women also made clothing from the skins, such as robes and moccasins, and made soap from the fat.
The Second Chancers later build a tepee only to see it get burned. They fight Pennington and his friends, because they were responsible for the fire. Tipton is poised to expel the Second Chancers, but Ernest convinces him otherwise. Meanwhile, a mining corporation run by Sherman Krader wants to mine the petrocite at Kikakee, but Chief St. Cloud refuses to sell.
The main structure (the "Tepee") is a two-story log structure measuring about by . The building faces east, down the valley of the Shoshone River. The main level is surrounded by porches on the north, south and east, with a main entrance centered on the eastern porch. The double doors lead into a hall the extends to the roof, with a stone fireplace at the opposite end.
In 2012, Aviator Nation launched a partnership with The Austin City Limits (ACL)Music Festival. Mycoskie curated a signature Aviator Nation experience in the artist's lounge inspired by Woodstock. She designed and installed a rainbow tepee for musicians to relax and play vintage instruments, which organically evolved into impromptu shows. She also designed ACL x Aviator Nation merchandise that sold out both weekends of the festival.
Creatures of the Night Show is a performance presented by the animals in the Night Safari. Food and beverage outlets in the Night Safari include Ulu Ulu Safari Restaurant, Bongo Burgers, and Casa Italia. Visitors can dine in the "Evening in the Wild" at Night Safari's only Tepee Tent. Also experience dining on the move with the Cocktail Safari Express and Gourmet Safari Express.
January 17, 1891: Young Man Afraid of His Horses and his tepee at Pine Ridge Herb Conn dangled from the faces on Mount Rushmore each fall to do maintenance work. Circa 1961 to 1972. The following works deal with the cultural, political, economic, military, biographical and geologic history of pre- territorial South Dakota, the southern part of Dakota Territory and the State of South Dakota.
Electric Tepee is the seventeenth studio album by the English space rock group Hawkwind, released in 1992. It spent one week on the UK albums chart at #53. After a European tour in March and April 1991, long-standing bass guitarist and keyboardist Harvey Bainbridge chose to leave the group. Female singer Bridget Wishart would also end her association with the group in September.
All Asian subspecies, along with other deer, have been raised for their antlers in central and eastern Asia by Han Chinese, Turkic peoples, Tungusic peoples, Mongolians, and Koreans. Elk farms are relatively common in North America and New Zealand. Elk hides have been used for thousands of years for tepee covering, blankets, clothing and footwear. Modern uses are more decorative, but elk skin shoes, gloves and belts are not uncommon.
A historical example of a Plains woman divorcing is Making Out Road, a Cheyenne woman, who in 1841 married non-Native frontiersman Kit Carson. The marriage was turbulent and formally ended when Making Out Road threw Carson and his belongings out of her tepee (in the traditional manner of announcing a divorce). She later went on to marry, and divorce, several additional men, both European-American and Indian.Sides, Hampton.
The two units were eventually dismantled due to lack of need for 12 units. Coed sessions were added in 1989 and eventually surpassed the popularity of separate gender seasons. This required some reorganization as a boys’ and girls’ side of the lake was designated, separate bathhouses were issued, and brother/sister units were developed. In 1995, Teondecoren was transformed into a tepee unit located in the upper pastures.
The town was established in 1791 from Canajoharie (in Montgomery County) as one of the original towns in the county. It was subsequently divided, giving rise to several new towns: Middlefield, Springfield, and Worcester (all in 1797) and Roseboom in 1854. In 1812, the community of Cherry Valley set itself apart by incorporating as a village. The Tepee was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.
The U.S. Army 12th Infantry Regiment coat of arms includes a number of historic symbols. A tepee with small, left facing swastikas represents the unit's campaigns in the Indian Wars of the late 19th century. The Regiment fought German forces during World War II, landing on D-Day at Utah Beach, through five European campaigns and received a Presidential Unit Citation for action during the Battle of the Bulge.
Chuck Eddy of The Village Voice wrote that the song "mixes a placid keyboard intro, spacious spaghetti-western guitars, and Andes flute solos into a tepee-and-peace-pipe lyric that repeatedly chants 'hey yaaaa!'" Deborah Evans Price of Billboard magazine also gave it a positive review, saying that it has a "very distinct vibe", also calling it "hauntingly beautiful" and saying that it had "quirky Western imagery".
The second generation offered increased cargo space and more body styles over the previous generation. It was launched in November 2006, with deliveries beginning in principal markets in January 2007. The new Citroën is available in 90 bhp, and versions with the option of four diesel engines or one petrol/gasolene engine. The Peugeot Expert II was launched in January 2007, with the addition of a people carrier model, the Tepee.
We went about half a mile above the camp where some wood > was lying near an old Indian tepee. While on the way up we met 'Dead Shot' > on a horse—about half the way to the wood. He passed me and went on into > camp. About then I saw another Indian sitting in the path—an Indian called > Ka-cIenny—who asked me where I was going.
Opened in 1987, the interpretive centre showcases 10,000 years of aboriginal history. There is also a reconstructed village and tepee camp. In 1995, Parks Canada provided funds to improve the park, including the construction of the Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah- Nung Historical Centre and traditional Roundhouse for visitors and the local First Nations communities. Along with a conservation lab and collection storage, the centre is also used as a meeting place for Elders.
William Yallup, Sr. (born September 1926, Ellensburg, Washington - died June 17, 2006, Toppenish, Washington) was a longtime leader of the Yakama Nation. A direct descendant of treaty signer Wish-Och-Kmpits, he was born in a tepee at the annual Labor Day Rodeo. He was raised with traditional Yakama teachings and spoke both Yakama and English. As a young man he joined the Army and spent 12 years in the Marine Corps Reserves.
Real Gone Woody is the second Woody Woodpecker short where both Woody Woodpecker and Buzz Buzzard lose in the end, which occurred previously in Alley to Bali. Woody Woodpecker also loses in The Coo Coo Bird, Busman's Holliday, Tepee for Two, The Screwball, Solid Ivory, Well Oiled, Woody's Clip Joint, The Dizzy Acrobat, Bye Bye Blackboard, Rough Riding Hood, Ski for Two, Chilli Con Corny, The Tenant's Racket, What's Sweepin' and The Beach Nut.
In its earlier years, Washingtonville was called "Matthews Field," even before it was known as Little York. A part of the Rip Van Dam patent, it was sold to Vincent Matthews in 1721. Matthews was the first white European settler of the region. Its earliest known inhabitant was an Indian by the name of Moringamus, whose wigwam or tepee was once pitched in back of where the Coleman bottled-gas plant is located now.
The Citroën Berlingo and Peugeot Partner are almost identical panel vans and leisure activity vehicles produced by PSA Peugeot Citroën since 1996. The third generation is also sold as the Opel/Vauxhall Combo, and as the Toyota ProAce City from 2019. The panel vans are available in passenger versions named the Berlingo Multispace and Partner Combi, Partner Tepee, and Peugeot Rifter for the third generation. In Italy, the first generation of the Partner was known as the Peugeot Ranch.
Iron Tail then presented McCreight with a tepee on which an owl had been traced with yellow chalk and told this was for him and Alice to live in. Tom-tom drums were then beaten and tribal songs put up vigorously. Concluding remarks were made by Iron Tail ending with hearty handshakes. Iron Tail and Buffalo Bill were loaded into a new 1908 Rambler touring car and driven to McCreight's town house for the banquet which followed.
It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous is the eighteenth studio album by the English space rock group Hawkwind, released in 1993. It spent one week on the UK albums chart at #75. As with the previous album, Electric Tepee, the group remained a three-piece of guitarist Dave Brock, bassist Alan Davey and drummer Richard Chadwick. The album was recorded in 1993 at Brock's own Barking Dog Studios, produced with Paul Cobbold.
Stone cairns were used by the Arapahos and the Utes to mark the forest trails. There are hundreds of sites with evidence of Native American visits, including Tepee rings found along the Thompson River and other signs of summer camps. Stone and bone tools used for hunting, butchering, processing hides, and cooking have been found in the park. Additionally, Native Americans carried river boulders to the top of Oldman Mountain, the site of their ceremonial vision quests.
After the wear had been carved away the piece is allowed to dry to a bone dry state and it is time be fired. Four tin cans are set up and a metal basket is placed on them to allow for good air flow. The pots are then placed in the basket and a fire is built under the basket. Planks of bark are leaned agents the stack in a tepee form and the whole pile is lit on fire.
The Só'taeo'o prophet Tomȯsévėséhe ("Erect Horns") had received the Ésevone (aka Is'siwun – "Sacred (Buffalo) Hat Bundle") at Toh'nihvoos (″Stone Hammer Mountain″) near the Great Lakes in the present state of Minnesota. The Ésevone / Hóhkėha'e (Sacred Buffalo Hat) is kept in the vonȧhéome (old term) or hóhkėha'éome (new term) ("Sacred Hat Lodge, Sacred Hat Tepee"). Erect Horns gave them the accompanying ceremonies and the Sun Dance. His vision convinced the tribe to abandon their earlier sedentary agricultural traditions to adopt nomadic Plains horse culture.
The son of Willard F. "Bill" Wilkinson and the former Jessie R. Brenizer, Kensel was born in Kansas City, Missouri. He made his first trip to the West as a newborn when his family bought Pahaska Tepee, Buffalo Bill's hunting lodge near the east entrance to Yellowstone National Park. His childhood was spent at Pahaska in the summer months and in Cody during the school year. The family later moved to Ellensburg, Washington, where Kensel spent his high school years.
The film features an "all-Indian cast...shot in Indian Country", with over 300 people from the Comanche and Kiowa tribes acting in the film, including White and Wanada Parker, children of Quanah Parker. The cast wore their own clothing and brought their own personal items, including tepees. The film features the "Tipi with Battle Pictures", which is a tepee in the collection of the Oklahoma Historical Society. There are lances and tomahawks in the film which represent honors earned in war by the Kiowa.
The group would go on to operate as a three piece of guitarist Dave Brock, bassist Alan Davey and drummer Richard Chadwick, making heavy use of sequencers, synthesisers and computers, both in the studio and live. The style of Electric Tepee is predominately space rock, with elements of trance, ambient and techno. The album was recorded in 1992 at Brock's own Earth Studios, produced with Paul Cobbold. "Mask of the Morning" re-uses the lyrics from "Mirror of Illusion" from the 1970 debut album Hawkwind.
In 1994, he partook in an adventure holiday in Kielder forest, which the Home Secretary at that time had to apologise for. In 2003, he again changed his name to Mark Allen Evans and has also used pseudonyms in an attempt to get his novels, poetry and short stories published. In 1992, the Space rock band Hawkwind released an album titled Electric Tepee. One of the tracks on the album, Death of War, is co-credited to Mark Rowntree as the lyrics are taken from one of Rowntree's poems.
Shawnee Mountain is a family oriented ski resort in Eastern Pennsylvania located right outside East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, I-80, exit 309, next to the Delaware River in the easternmost part of The Poconos. Shawnee Mountain has a summit elevation of and vertical elevation change of There are of skiing terrain. The mountain has a total of 23 trails, the longest of which is 5,100 feet (1,554 m), and two terrain parks. The Bushkill Park currently has many features including rails, boxes, a set of stairs, and a Tepee Wall Ride.
The Bighorns provided important resources for ancestral indigenous people, including plants, migratory big game, rock shelters, tepee poles, and stone for tools. American Indian trails crisscrossed the range, while the canyons provided important winter shelters. Stone game blinds in the high country were used by pedestrian hunters to kill migratory big game animals with atlatl spear throwers or bows. The northern Bighorns and the Tongue River drainage were formerly a significant summer range for migratory bison that wintered in either the Bighorn Basin and the Powder River/Tongue River/Little Bighorn River drainages.
Montana State University. Retrieved 2016-10-8. In 1928 he and his wife, Strikes the Iron, presented of his land in trust to Big Horn County, including the house, spring, and trees Chief Plenty Coups had envisioned, saying: > Today, I who have been called Chief of Chiefs, among red men, present to all > the children of our Great White Father this land where the snows of many > winters have fallen on my tepee. This park is not to be a memorial to me, > but to the Crow Nation.
Many of the post holes were inclined towards the centre of the building which suggests that they were for holding saplings which were bent inwards after being driven into the ground to make a tent or tepee like structure.It is assumed that this framework was then covered in hide, reed or some other organic material. Within the huts a hearth was positioned in the centre. It is thought that this site was most likely home to a small extended family group which occupied this site for most of the year.
Cottagers are beginning to head north from Muskoka to more wilderness locations such as those found at Algonquin Moose Lodge in South River. Algonquin Moose Lodge is a resort that opened up in 2017. The lodge has accommodations for all types of budgets and varied accommodations such as a 3,200 square foot custom built log home, a smaller log home (that was original to the property) as well as some smaller cottages and even a tepee. This 32 acre resort is Algonquin's last frontier of unspoiled northern wilderness.
Before Hawkwind, Mr Dibs played in two underground space rock bands, Krel and Spacehead. Krel released a series of cassettes, the first unofficial release "Bring on the Clones" having a handful of Hawkwind songs on the tape, the later "official" releases being sold commercially. Krel supported Hawkwind at 2 gigs in 1991, before being invited to do the entire Electric Tepee Tour, in spring 1992 as support band. Occasionally, Krel would perform a Hawkwind song, notably "Where Are you Now", during their set, and "Visions of You Know You're Only Dreaming" in their soundcheck.
The park features a managed herd of bison, a suspension foot bridge across the Big Horn River, picnic shelters, boat docks, flower gardens, and terraces made of naturally forming travertine (calcium carbonate) caused by a flowing mineral hot spring. The park area encompasses commercial hotels and several state-run and privately operated entities including the Gottsche Rehabilitation Center, Hot Springs County Memorial Hospital, the historic Callaghan Apartments/Plaza Hotel, the Star Plunge waterpark, the Tepee Pools waterpark, and the Wyoming Pioneer Home, a state-run, assisted-living facility.
He thereafter moved to the state of Washington where he completed his education. He is the author of Pahaska Tepee, Buffalo Bill's Old Hunting Lodge and Hotel, A History, 1901-1946 and Dude Ranching in Yellowstone Country: Larry Larom and Valley Ranch, 1915-1969, published in 2010 by the University of Oklahoma Press at Norman, Oklahoma. Valley Ranch, one of the first of the western dude ranches, was established by the New York City native Larry Larom. Now privately owned, it is located on the South Fork of the Shoshone River in northwestern Wyoming.
When Woody makes way too much racket with his TV set and musical instruments, his neighbors have had enough and evict him from the entire city. He decides he'd be better off living in the "wide open spaces" anyway and makes himself a home out west... on top of an Indian's tepee. The Indian is not pleased with the intrusive woodpecker and tries to remove him from his premises... with little luck. Finally, the Indian slingshots the redhead back to where he came from, only to discover his TV set is left behind and is now playing "The Woody Woodpecker Show".
The first family living in Montmartre was that of Auguste M.D. de Trémaudan (the only family who was brought by the Foncier Society) who brought his wife Jeanne Marie and children (Noémie, Auguste H., Aline, Desiré and Jeanne) from France. The second family was that of Mr. Berneau, who brought his wife, 18-year-old son and baby boy (who later died after their arrival in Canada). On June 1, 1893, both families arrived in their new home of Montmartre where they temporarily lived in sod-covered tepee structures.Couckuyt, Marianne in Montmartre: History of the Village, 2012, vol.
An early example was Vivian Liberto, the first wife of singer Johnny Cash. She was Italian-American but widely mistaken for African-American due to her appearance, leading to both of them receiving death threats from white supremacists. Rachel Dolezal in 2015 Civil rights activist Rachel Dolezal, then president of the Spokane chapter of the NAACP, claimed in a February 2015 profile to have been born in a "Montana tepee" and have hunted for food with her family as a child "with bows and arrows". She primarily identified as African American and had established herself as an activist in Spokane.
Saamis Tepee, installed 1991 The Medicine Hat Clay Industries National Historic District is a living, working museum based on the Medalta Potteries and Hycroft China Factory Complexes as the focal points of the district. It offers guided tours, educational and arts programming, as well as experience through collections, exhibits, and interpretation. This nationally recognized industrial historic district is a cultural initiative of the Friends of Medalta Society with federal, provincial, municipal and private support. They are working to restore, preserve and culturally develop the Medicine Hat Clay Industries National Historic District for education and public enjoyment.
With a view toward keeping the prominent property as part of the community, they adapted it as the Saamis Memorial Funeral Chapel & Crematorium. Now named the Saamis Tepee, this work of public art is the world's tallest teepee. It was installed in 1991 south of the Trans-Canada Highway and at the edge of the Blackfoot buffalo jump, above the Saamis Archeological Site along Seven Persons Creek. Commissioned for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary as a symbol of Canada's Plains Indians, it stood high (more than 20 storeys) and is in diameter at the base.
Together with Howle, the two sang a duet for the main track of a film called "Glissando." Shaner performed as the lead singer of Industrial Tepee. The band released three albums including, "What Divine Engine", "Hymns For the Civil Savage", and a self titled album. The band toured extensively throughout the United States of America. Among the musicians and friends Shaner has worked with are Whit Smith of Hot Club of Cowtown, Claude Coleman, Jr., of Ween,” Pete Fand, Paul Wegmann, Josh Margolis, Phil Cohen, Bob Sharkey, Rob Cimno, Dan Green, Chris Harfenist of “Sound of Urchin,” Merrill Garbus of Tune-Yards, Emmy Bean, and many others.
Sonic Assassins, Chapter 17 – Ian Abrahams (Published by SAF publishing; ) In 1991 Bainbridge, House and Wishart departed and the band continued as a three piece relying heavily on synthesisers and sequencers to create a wall-of-sound. The 1992 album Electric Tepee combined hard rock and light ambient pieces, while It is the Business of the Future to be Dangerous is almost devoid of the rock leanings. The Business Trip is a record of the previous album's tour, but rockier as would be expected from a live outing. The White Zone album was released under the alias Psychedelic Warriors to distance itself entirely from the rock expectancy of Hawkwind.
The bison were also forced into groups by linear cairns and logs that were placed to funnel the bison into specific locations on areas in behind the cliff face. The introduction of the horse to North America by European explorers and settlers brought about the end of the buffalo jumps. The State park has not changed much over the years; bone shards are still scattered at the base of the cliff and tepee rings still gather around the top. The buffalo jump along the Madison River was used by numerous tribes including the Hidatsa, Shoshone, Lakota, Dakota, Nez Perce, Bannock, Arapaho, Salish, Cheyenne, Blackfeet, Crow, Gros Ventres, Cree and Assiniboine.
Some have said he is somewhere between Leonard Cohen and Radiohead, among other comparisons. His music roots could be considered deep. Informed by American acoustic and electric Blues, Sun Records, the British Invasion, to Punk, New Wave, to Hip Hop, and Indie Rock, Shaner is known for his rich and mercurial songwriting. Before becoming a solo artist, Tom was lead singer and songwriter for NYC based band Industrial Tepee, and was a buddy and protégé of Jeff Buckley. Shaner first garnered success as a solo artist with the release of his E.P. titled “Get Real or Get Gone.” (2011) The E.P. was reviewed favorably by a number of online magazines including NeuFutur and Music Emissions.
The angry Indians tried to block his retreat by setting fire to the grass and brush down near the river. The wily Carson, however, set back-fires and retreated to higher ground, where the twin howitzers continued to hold off the Indians. When twilight came, Carson ordered a group of his scouts to burn the lodges of the first village, which also resulted in the death of the Kiowa- Apache chief, Iron Shirt, when he refused to leave his tepee.. "Adobe Walls Texas" September 7, 2007. Despite the fact that Carson was forced to retreat in the face of much more opposition than he had expected, the United States Army declared the First Battle of Adobe Walls a victory.
They are generally found in the Great Plains of the United States and Canada, but are also found in the foothills and mountains, near good areas for hunting, supplies of water and fuel, and main routes of travel. The rings are often in diameter and often occur in groupings. The rings of stone held down the edges of animal skin hides of the cone-shaped tipis, to keep them snug against the ground. The general pattern of a tipi (also "tepee") ring is an east-facing entrance, where there are no stones, and a heavily anchored side with extra stones for protection against prevailing winds, often on the northwestern side of the ring.
The front exterior of Nokomis, from a 1968 informational brochure Nokomis was the newest branch added to the Minneapolis Public Library system in 1967; the previous one was the Linden Hills Community Library, which was completed in 1931. It was built to replace the former Longfellow Community Library that had served the Nokomis East area for many years. In 1967, the City of Minneapolis had Buetow and Associates, Inc design the new library building, which was modeled after a tepee from the poem The Song of Hiawatha by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Additionally, the library was named for Nokomis in said poem, making the branch the only library in the system to be named after a fictional character.
Real Bird has also served on the Montana Advisory Committee on Children and Youth and the Crow Central Education Commission. As the Teacher Orientation Specialist for the pacific Northwest Indian Program, he along with Karen Stone and Joseph Coburn developed The Indian Reading Series, which is a reading and language development program utilized across twelve Native American reservations across the Northwest. The series consists of a teaching manual and stories written by Real Bird in both Crow and English, some of which include Birds and People, Far Out, A Rodeo Horse, and Tepee, Sun, and Time. Read Bird actively fights for the maintaining of the Crow language, which has largely disappeared in contemporary generations, as a way to preserve Crow tradition and culture.
The volcano has a caldera at its summit, which has a diameter of and features two crater lakes: Paulina Lake and East Lake. This caldera, known as the Newberry Crater, is forested, with small parts of its surface covered with lava flows and pumice deposits. Before the caldera's creation, the mountain's summit was greater in height than its current elevation. The caldera has reformed several times throughout the volcano's history, burying the caldera floor to a depth of and creating concentric calderas, each smaller than its predecessor. The first caldera—the volcano's largest caldera, forming approximately 300,000 years ago—was produced by the eruption of of pyroclastic ejecta, which created the Tepee Draw tuff and ash deposits that cover the volcano's eastern flank.
Peripherally related to his interest in drug-assisted therapeutics, Osmond conducted research on the long-term effects of institutionalization. He had interpreted and described the peyote ceremony he'd experienced, with its tepee setting and its particular social pattern, in terms that drew attention to its contrast with the psychiatric institutions of his day. Osmond began a line of research into what he called "socio-architecture" to improve patient settings, coining the terms "sociofugal" and "sociopetal", starting Robert Sommer's career, and contributing to environmental psychology. (sociofugal refers to a grouping of people arranged so that each can maintain some privacy from the others, while sociopetal refers to a grouping of people arranged so that each can see and interact with the others.) Osmond's interests included the application of Jung's Typology of personality to group dynamics.
These include a number of caldera-forming eruptions, producing ash flow deposits including the Tepee Draw tuff and Black Lapilli tuff, and rising or more into the stratosphere. The last of these eruptions covered tens of thousands of square miles with ash, extending to the San Francisco Bay Area in California nearly to the southwest. Here, it reaches a thickness of one centimeter. Additionally, Newberry has produced multiple, voluminous explosive eruptions, with certain studies estimating up to 60 eruptive events of rhyolite and dacite tephra that reach Idaho, Utah, and northern California. These include the eruption that produced the Paulina Creek tephra between 55,000 and 50,000 years ago, and the eruption from 20,000 years ago responsible for the Wono tephra, which extends into western Nevada and east-central California.
The game begins in 1866 Arizona when the game's hero, a cowboy named Fenimore Fillmore, tries to rescue an old peddler from a band of attacking rustlers. The dying peddler gives Fenimore a golden skull and tells him the legend of a fabulous treasure that can be found by collecting two other golden skulls. To reach his goal, Fenimore Fillmore must battle the evil Friar Anselmo and the perfidious Colonel Leconte (who also seek the treasure), fight fierce Apaches (whose Chief's son's tepee boasts a sheepskin from Harvard), engage sleepy Mexican revolutionaries (whose leader is amnesic), outwit witty French soldiers (federated with Emperor Maximilian of México), and suffer the insufferable alcohol-prohibition-ladies league. Solving the puzzles involves fabricating bootleg whiskey, blowing up a bank's safe, escaping from prison, rescuing a pianist from a well, locating and flying a balloon, and turning a devout monk into a gallant rebel general.
The construction budget for the History Center included funds from a Percent for Art program that included three integrated artworks: Charm Bracelet lies on the floor of the first-story rotunda. This project, sculpted by James Casebere, depicts a broken piece of jewelry in which each of ten "charms" represents an important aspect of Minnesota: a tractor (agriculture); a printer's ink roller (civic society and free speech); a tepee (the Dakota tribe); a mill building (lumbering and flour-milling); a house (family); a power plant (technology and industry); a turtle, bear and fish (nature, outdoor recreation, and Ojibwe totems of healing, defense and learning); and a whooping crane (lost wilderness and a metaphor for history). The entrance of the History Center includes glass etchings by Brit Bunkley above the John Ireland and Kellogg Boulevard entrances and the courtyard doors. He created a "system of icons" of sandblasted panels with multidimensional iconic imagery deeply etched onto the thick glass surfaces. Andrew Leicester created Minnesota Profiles, terra cotta columns "marking the edge of where Summit Avenue once crossed what is today’s History Center courtyard".
Museums that have collected Fields' work include the Heard Museum in McKinney, Texas, the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the Museum of Art and Design in New York City, the Museum of the American Indian at the Smithsonian Institution, and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas. Her work has been included in exhibitions such as Atlatl's Who Stole the Tepee at the National Museum of the American Indian, Legacy of the Generations: American Indian Women Potters at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Fluent Generations: The Art of Anita, Tom and Yatika Fields at the Sam Noble Museum, and Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists, a traveling 2019-2020 exhibition at Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN, Frist Art Museum, Nashville, TN, Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C., and Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa, OK. In 2019, Fields participated in an exhibition project called "Voices from the Drum" where 19 drums were dispersed to accomplished Osage artists. Each artist created a design to be displayed on the drum. The drums, having significance in Osage culture, were created by hand by Rock Pipestem.

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