Hinááh bee atiingóó éànaasháOn the Trail of Life, I walk in beautyNizhónànaasháIn Harmony I exist, I walk in beauty
HARRIS HAWK IN ACRYLIC BY (MY DAUGHTER)GINGER LEE BERKCLINK PALLET BELOW FOR HER ART SITE
"MUSIC FROM THE WINGS OF THE HAWK"
THE POETIC INDIGENOUS JAZZ OF MY FRIEND, JOY HARJO
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SONGS FROM THE SOUL OF A POET, MY FRIEND, JOE PUG
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MY FRIEND
SINGER/SONGWRITER STEVEN DELOPOULOS
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MY FRIEND "BIG JOHN MILLS"
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RAPTORS(BIRDS OF PREY),
THE FINE ARTS,HORSES,GOOD MUSIC,FAMILY,HISTORY,FISHING,NEW YORK YANKEES,INTERESTING BOOKS,MOVIES
!
I, THE HAWK
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Weightless,
I spiral on unseen currents,
loftily, without effort
I leave the earth behind
on a soft breeze
absorbing the kissing sun
up here blanketed from all sound
save the soft flutter
of my feathers.
I oversee the earth,
the continuous struggle
for perspective and position,
knowing my place--
alone,
and uninhibited,
I choose my direction and
remain aloft as long as
it suits me.
I, the hawk,
free as air
define my days,
gliding unnoticed,
dreamlike through broad loops,
my shadow lost in the landscape,
and for an instant,
I know
I am the finishing detail
in God's composition.........Charles Albano
c. 1998............It is I ,who travel in the wind.
It is I ,who whisper in the breeze.
I shake the trees,
I shake the earth,
I trouble the waters on every land.
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LEARNING THE OLD WAYS
HAWKS-LEARNING TO FLY
THE RAPTORS FROM THE CARBON COUNTY ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION CENTER
WHA THA HUCK _ THE WORLDS GREATEST ATHELETE
THE TOWN THAT HONORS "WHA-THA-HUCK"--JIM THORPE'S MAUSOLEUM AND MEMORIALclick logo below
TOM WAITS,PAUL SIMON,JOY HARJO,MOZART,ALABAMA THREE(A3),JOE PUG,STEVEN DELOPOULOS,BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN,BILLY JOEL,TOM PETTY,ROBINELLA ,MARILYN MANSON
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APOCALYPTO, LAST OF THE MOHICANS,LONSOME DOVE, GETTYSBURG,GERONIMO, BLADERUNNER,THE SHIPPING NEWS,FIELD OF DREAMS,THE BLACK ROBE
DEADWOOD,THE SHIELD,THE SOPRANOS,THE LAW AND ORDER SERIES,NYPD BLUES,OVER THERE,mXc,RESCUE ME,HOMICIDE LIFE ON THE STREET.
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DEE BROWN - BURY MY HEART AT WOUNDED KNEE JOSEPH HELLER- CATCH 22, NOVELS OF JOSEPH WAMBAUGH,DALTON TRUMBO-JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN,BOOKS OF jOHN O'HARA-OTHERS
HILLARY CLINTON,BILL CLINTON,JOHN AND BOBBY KENNEDY,MOHAMMAD ALI, MARTIN LUTHER KING,SITTING BULL,RED CLOUD,CHIEF JOSEPH
TATANKA
An average buffalo bull provided a great deal of meat, about 700 kilograms. Prepared fresh, the meat was roasted on a spit or boiled in a skin bag by adding stones hot from the fire to make a rich soup. The remaining meat was either cut into thin slices and dried in the sun to produce jerky or it was made into pemmican, a high protein food which consisted of dried meat pounded into a powder and mixed with melted buffalo fat and berries. Both foods were packed tightly into skin bags and would remain edible for years. Almost nothing of the buffalo were wasted. Bones were fashioned into tools and horns served as containers, sinew was used as thread and shaggy hair was braided into halters. Hooves were either made into rattles or boiled to make glue. The hides of the animal provided most of the clothing for the indians and were sewn together to produce tipi covers .The women were experts in the tanning of skins, a long and tiring process. This process was considered so important that each woman was judged largely on the quality and quantity of the skins she tanned. Even making the simplest hard rawhide for moccasins was an exhausting process that required both sides of the skin to be scraped clean; soft skin took a week to produce. The women also made the tipis, and therefore had ownership of them. In addition to the preparation meats and skin women made weapons, shields, tools, drums, and pipes, although men were the primary hunters .
Two frogs!A group of frogs were traveling through the woods, and two of them fell into a deep pit. When the other frogs saw how deep the pit was, they told the two frogs that they were as good as dead. The two frogs ignored the comments and tried to jump up out of the pit with all their might. The other frogs kept telling them to stop, that they were as good as dead. Finally, one of the frogs took heed to what the other frogs were saying and gave up. He fell down and died. The other frog continued to jump as hard as he could. Once again, the crowd of frogs yelled at him to stop the pain and just die. He jumped even harder and finally made it out. When he got out, the other frogs said, "Did you not hear us?" The frog explained to them that he was deaf. He thought they were encouraging him the entire time.This story teaches two lessons:1. There is power of life and death in the tongue. An encouraging word to someone who is down can lift them up and help them make it through the day.2. A destructive word to someone who is down can be what it takes to kill them.Be careful of what you say. Speak life to those who cross your path. The power of words... it is sometimes hard to understand that an encouraging word can go such a long way. Anyone can speak words that tend to rob another of the spirit to continue in difficult times. Special is the individual who will take the time to encourage another.
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