201 research outputs found
Flower Power: Maximizing Natural Dye Sensitized Solar Cell Efficiency
(Statement of Responsibility) by Cheyenne Nelson(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2023(Bibliography) Includes bibliographical references.This bibliographic record is available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. The New College of Florida Libraries, as creator of this bibliographic record, has waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law.Faculty Sponsor: Jiang, Li
Five Scholarly Open Access Publishers
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
First Congregational Chruch & Parsonage, Cheyenne, Wyoming Territor
Carlene Herrod, Clifton Big Medicine, and Joann (Sevier) Big Medicine
L. to R.: Carlene Herrod, a Navajo-Hopi, and Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Big Medicine (Clifton and Joann). He is an Oklahoma Cheyenne and she is enrolled as Northern Cheyenne. Joann's maiden name is pronounced two ways, Sevier and Surveyor. Photo by Will T. Nelson at the All Tribes Club, 1805 South Lindsay, Oklahoma City, OK (Feb. 9, 1979)
Rodeo Event, Cheyenne, Wyo., A
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
Cheyenne Odyssey: Representing Removal in an Educational Video Game
This articles reflects on the process of creating digital media in collaboration with Native communities, using the example of Cheyenne Odyssey, a game from Mission US, to argue that such media can illuminate the perspectives of Indigenous peoples for a wide audience while also creating digital repositories for both visual and narrative forms of knowledge. This game takes on the difficult challenge of portraying very sensitive moments of US history to middle school-age children. The game walks the player through the Battle of Little Big Horn, the forced removal of the Northern Cheyenne people, their harrowing journey home again, and even the massacre of Dull Knife’s band at Fort Robinson. The creators of the game brought Cheyenne perspectives to the process by consulting Northern Cheyenne elders, historians, and even school children, as well as archival materials, and scholars of Cheyenne history, including the author. This multifaceted collaboration resulted in a game that presented Cheyenne history in a way that reflected Cheyenne values while providing non-Cheyenne people with an accessible narrative that, nevertheless, disrupts the familiar history of westward expansion in the United States. At the same time, the game makes new a history familiar to every Cheyenne by presenting it in a fresh medium that captivates young people. The public nature of this online game empowers Cheyenne people to take pride in their own historical narratives.This article is published as Hill, C.G., Cheyenne Odyssey: Representing Removal in an Educational Video Game. Museum Anthropology Review. 2018, 12(2); DOI: 10.14434/mar.v12i2.22420.</p
Bucking bronco showing off for the President-Roosevelt Day, Cheyenne, Wyo., A
Bucking bronco showing off for the President-Roosevelt Day, Cheyenne, Wyo.,
Cheyenne Dog Soldier Depredations on Settlers in the Northern Kansas Frontier From 1864 to 1869
Morgan, M.J.During the 1860s, Indian tribes raided frontier settlements across the plains, most notably the Cheyenne in North Central Kansas. Numerous counties in Kansas felt the scarring effect of the raids; however, the counties of Jewell, Mitchell, Washington, Republic, Cloud, and Clay were the most affected. Almost all sources on the matter report the Indians as "northern Cheyenne." However, the information provided by first-hand accounts points to the Dog Soldiers as being behind the raids. In this study, the author examines the raids that took place in north central Kansas between 1864 – 1869, while demonstrating how and why the Dog Soldiers committed the depredations
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