279 research outputs found

    Fort Laramie Scenes at Pageant, Cheyenne River Agency, Dewey and Ziebach Counties

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    1 x 2 photograph, people with a stagecoach pulled by two horses, the people are all in costumesMiscellaneous Subject File Forts - Laramie, Leavenworth, Lincoln, Lookout, Manuel, Meade, Niobrara P94 Poster board Ft. Laramie P94 [stamp] Property of South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society.Ft. Laramie Scenes from pageant at Cheyenne Agency. Miller photo Sept., 1951

    Fort Laramie Scenes at Pageant, Cheyenne River Agency, Dewey and Ziebach Counties

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    1 x 3 photograph, row of young riders on horses, the riders are dressed in uniforms and hatsMiscellaneous Subject File Forts - Laramie, Leavenworth, Lincoln, Lookout, Manuel, Meade, Niobrara P94 Poster board Ft. Laramie P94 [stamp] Property of South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society.Ft. Laramie Scenes from pageant at Cheyenne Agency. Miller photo Sept., 1951

    View in Cheyenne, Wyoming.

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    View in Cheyenne, Wyoming

    Fort Laramie Scenes at Pageant, Cheyenne River Agency, Dewey and Ziebach Counties

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    1.5 x 5 photograph, two images, the image on the left is of men dressed as soldiers by two shelters made of wood and grasses, there are people in the background, the image on the right is of people with tipisMiscellaneous Subject File Forts - Laramie, Leavenworth, Lincoln, Lookout, Manuel, Meade, Niobrara P94 Poster board Ft. Laramie P94 [stamp] Property of South Dakota State Historical Society Pierre, South Dakota [stamp] Give photo credit to: South Dakota State Historical Society.Ft. Laramie Scenes from pageant at Cheyenne Agency. Miller photo Sept., 1951

    Five Scholarly Open Access Publishers

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    This review critically examines five international scholarly publishers that publish academic journals using the gold (author pays) Open Access model. The author-pays model is changing scholarly publishing because authors, rather than libraries or other subscribers, become the publishers' customers, an arrangement that creates a built in conflict of interest. The more articles a publisher accepts, the more revenue it earns. New gold Open Access publishers are appearing almost weekly, and many are engaged in unethical practices. The review covers four predatory publishers, Academy Publish, BioInfo, ScienceDomain International, and Scientific Research Publishing, and one legitimate publisher, AOSIS Open Journals

    First Congregational Chruch & Parsonage, Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory

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    First Congregational Chruch & Parsonage, Cheyenne, Wyoming Territor

    Cheyenne, Wyo. Depot Park and Union Depot.

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    Cheyenne, Wyo. Depot Park and Union Depot

    Letter to the Superintendent of the Cheyenne and Arapaho agency from Sam B. Davis.

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    Letter recommending the enrollment of Sullivan Miller (Sullivan Bignose) at the Genoa Indian School

    Miller Bignose and Frank Old Bear

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    Portrait photograph of Miller Bignose and Frank Old Bear, Cheyenne Indians. They are both seated in the photo

    Rodeo Event, Cheyenne, Wyo., A

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    A RODEO EVENT. In Cheyenne a Wild-West show is given each year. It is called Frontier Days. The most interesting part of the show is the rodeo. The riding of the backing bronchos is only one event at the rodeo. Prizes are given to the best riders. Other events are the roping and the branding of calves and steers. Rodeos are held only in a few places. The one at Cheyenne, which lasts almost a week, is the best known, and it usually attracts a large crowd. The rodeo reminds us of the "dude ranch." This is a ranch where paying guests, usually from the eastern cities, are taken. Its name comes from the cowboys' custom of calling men from the east or from the cities dudes. The guests are provided with guides and horses so that they may take long rides over the prairies or up into the mountains. Some hunting and fishing is done. Various entertainments in the way of games and shooting matches are provided. Many city people enjoy a week or two on a dude ranch as a part of their vacation. Today the owners of some ranches make more money from their paying guests than they do from their cattle
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