[27542] in linux-announce channel archive
Remote control raptor plane provides hours of fun to any age
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Curtis Baker)
Fri Jul 16 15:56:52 2021
Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2021 15:39:03 -0400
From: "Curtis Baker" <curtis.baker@haloangels6.club>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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** ENJOY HOURS OF HIGH FLYING FUN **
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Are you ready to take to the skies? Using the Raptor RC is so easy that you'll be flying in minutes. Style? Check. Durability? Check. The Raptor RC is built with a lightweight and durable foam structure that helps it survive crashes better than any other plane on the market. Pick from six different color combinations to build your ultimate airplane.
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Openheimer & Pascal Communication Labs
2130 Erie Avenue
Springfield, OH 45505-4713
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<!--Learning about skull science ?was disgusting,? says Mike Catches Enem=
y, who is Lakota, from the Oglala Band Sioux. He lives on the Pine Ridge Re=
servation in Little Wound, S.D., not far from where Miller would hunt, and =
works as an administrative assistant for the tribe. He was encouraged by hi=
s elders to get a master?s degree in archaeology and help the tribe better =
understand the methods of the profession. ?I?m asking myself during that pr=
ocess: What am I doing, as a Lakota man, trying to be in archaeology?? he r=
ecalls. ?But I had my elders who were encouraging me, saying, ?Go ahead, le=
arn it so that we can be at the table with archaeologists today and they ca=
n?t talk over us. You can be our interpreter.? ?
By the 1900s, Native Americans were believed by many to have disappeared. J=
acquetta Swift, who is Comanche/Fort Sill Apache and works as a repatriatio=
n manager at the Smithsonian?s National Museum of the American Indian in D.=
C., explains it to me this way: ?Imagine you go into a natural history muse=
um and you?ve got animals, and then you?ve got the cave men, and then you?v=
e got Native people and Indigenous cultures. ... We?re in with the animals =
and the fossils. That is embedded, sadly, in American culture and the world=
?
A panoramic view of the basement of Miller?s main house. (FBI)
Legal challenges by Native Americans over the desecration of their graves b=
egan as soon as Colonial courts existed to file them, but for a long time i=
t wasn?t explicitly illegal to dig into Native American burial sites. It wa=
sn?t until 1906, as a market for Native American cultural items grew, that =
Congress passed the American Antiquities Act to try to protect some of what=
was being taken. The law levied fines and even jail time against those doi=
ng unauthorized excavations on federal land, and it gave the president the =
authority to designate national monuments. Native American bones and funera=
ry items were given special distinction, but as material culture. ?In that =
act, we?re referred to as resources, alongside pots,? says Swift. ?We were =
considered things.?
The act did little to stem looting, and by the 1920s, the decade in which M=
iller was born, amateur archaeology was a thriving hobby and searching for =
Indian artifacts a popular pastime. Publications like Hobbies: The Magazine=
for Collectors included classified sections in the back advertising arrowh=
eads and stone tools for sale. You could order an Indian finger bone for a =
few pennies. A skull might run you $2. In 1935, several pothunters cracked =
into a mound of earth in Oklahoma and unearthed a Native American burial cr=
ypt. Today, the raiding of Spiro Mounds is considered one of the great trag=
edies in archaeological history, scattering untold items to the wind. But a=
t the time, it helped spur excitement over what many considered treasure hu=
nting. ?Most dealers and collectors, even some universities and museums, ac=
quired many of their artifacts from the pot hunters who fanned out across t=
he countryside in search of old Indian sites,? historian David La Vere writ=
es in ?Looting Spiro Mounds: An American King Tut?s Tomb.?
Pothunters, archaeologists, anthropologists and museum collectors could oft=
en be found working shovel to shovel. In some places like Utah and New Mexi=
co, pothunting was a viable business where professional institutions came t=
o the amateurs for finds. By the 1940s, the professions of anthropology and=
archaeology in America were coalescing. Amateurs like Miller were getting =
left out, so the hobbyists began forming clubs of their own. Archaeological=
societies bloomed across the country. Miller had a doctorate in electrical=
engineering and worked full time at Naval Avionics in Indianapolis, but he=
spent his free time scouring the land for artifacts. Miller and his first =
wife, Sue, who died in 2000, would hop on his motorcycle and spend afternoo=
ns at digs, alone or with friends. Miller often wrote about their adventure=
s in archaeological society magazines, including one article from the 1950s=
about digging into a Native site, titled ?Fun on a Sunday--->=20
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<td align=3D"center"> <a href=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/5ed6SY239T5A8KU611g3ddCdn78aZ40Bhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47KQLnKSn6PJQm105mlspv/quadrillion-cybernetic"> <img style=3D"width:=
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</div> <a href=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/5ed6SY239T5A8KU611g3ddCdn78aZ40Bhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47KQLnKSn6PJQm105mlspv/quadrillion-cybernetic"> <img style=3D"width: 100%; max-wid=
th: 640px;" src=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/appropriations-affecting/8646w23_I95QR7xa12c3kdek5_78ao40Ehbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47HQLnKSn7lglLO105VNskv" alt=3D"plane in sky" /> </a> <h1 style=3D"c=
olor: #ffa300;">ENJOY HOURS OF HIGH FLYING FUN</h1> <p style=3D"color: #585=
95b; width: 100%; max-width: 550px;">Are you ready to take to the skies? Us=
ing the <strong> Raptor RC </strong> is so easy that you'll be flying in mi=
nutes.</p>=20
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r: white; background-color: #ffa300;" href=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/5ed6SY239T5A8KU611g3ddCdn78aZ40Bhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47KQLnKSn6PJQm105mlspv/quadrillion-cybernetic"> <strong> SHOP NO=
W </strong> </a>=20
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th: 600px;" src=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/draftsmen-Dutchmen/a085j23W95e7iaI11Ev3de6o78aY40hhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47uQLnKSn6jT1g0N6IOBsvq" alt=3D"remote control planes" /> </a> <h1 s=
tyle=3D"color: #ffa300; width: 100%; max-width: 500px;">CHOOSE THE RIGHT PL=
ANE FOR YOUR PILOT!</h1>=20
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r: white; background-color: #ffa300;" href=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/5ed6SY239T5A8KU611g3ddCdn78aZ40Bhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47KQLnKSn6PJQm105mlspv/quadrillion-cybernetic"> <strong> SHOP NO=
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</div> <p style=3D"color: darkgray;">Openheimer & Pascal Comm=
unication Labs</p> <p style=3D"color: darkgray;">2130 Erie Avenue</p> <p st=
yle=3D"color: darkgray;">Springfield, OH 45505-4713</p> <p><a href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/Boniface-academia/5b24e2395pFn8612v3dXduev78an40ahbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47lQLnKSn7fk10SDo5IJsvT"> Update Email Preferences </a></p> <p> </p> <p> </p> </td>=
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<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;">T<a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/9ad5Pg2395htC8610z3ddfp78ah40qhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47tQLnKSn5K1w0F5Q0svk/appropriations-affecting">hroughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, anthropologists, p=
rofessional archaeologists and amateur pothunters alike aimed to build coll=
ections around Native American artifacts and bones. ?The whole ide</a>a of =
how museums even started was as cabinets of curiosity,? Tayac says. ?It was=
outright desecration, and an essential lack of acceptance of the humanity =
of certain people.?</span></p>=20
<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;">Samuel <a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" hr=
ef=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/appropriations-affecting/1f26l23gX95D86vj11eK3de0o78aC40Xhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47hQLnKSn5q10mj6hXOsvl">George Morton, a member of the Academy of Natural Science=
s, procured skulls from pothunters and others around the world during the 1=
9th century, and these now make up the Morton Cranial Collection at the Pen=
n Museum in Philadelphia. There was ?quite a lot of interest in racial hier=
archies,? Tayac says, ?showing cranial size and who is intelligent and what=
's the scale from barbarism to savagery to the most highly civilized, which=
of course is the White race.?</a></span></p>=20
<p> </p>=20
<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;">n a <a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=
=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/8814U2395Q8Yj611Q3lde1o78aw40zhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47UQLnKSn6l10zUL6L1sv22/sailboat-subjective">cold Decemberday in 1620, several Pilgrims at Plymouth set =
out to find the local Indians. They followed a beaten path through the wood=
s, which they presumed would lead to a town or at least houses, but after t=
raveling for some time, they saw no signs of life. On the way back, they ca=
me to a clearing in the woods and discovered, instead, a ?place like a grav=
e, but it was much bigger and longer.? The Pilgrims dug it up.</a></span></=
p>=20
<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;"><a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/8814U2395Q8Yj611Q3lde1o78aw40zhbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47UQLnKSn6l10zUL6L1sv22/sailboat-subjective">What they found is recounted in the diary ?Mourt's Relation: A J=
ournal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth.? Inside were knives and bows and variou=
s Indian ?trinkets.? They came upon two sealed bags. The first, which was f=
illed with a mass of fine red powder, contained the bones of a man whose sk=
ull still had traces of hair and</a> decomposing flesh. A second, smaller b=
ag contained the remains of a child whose body had been encircle<a style=3D=
"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"http://www.haloangels6.club/maintainers-disliking/g305l23_95O8X6t11eL3de2m78al40Ahbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47zQLnKSn6L1Unn06FlXsPv">d with ?bracelets of fine white Beads=
? They took ?sundry of the prettiest things? and left.</a></span></p>=20
<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;"><a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/maintainers-disliking/g305l23_95O8X6t11eL3de2m78al40Ahbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47zQLnKSn6L1Unn06FlXsPv">What compels a person to reach inside the grave of another and t=
ake what's there? ?There's this notion that some people's graves are for pl=
under because they are not considered to be fully people,? says Gabrielle T=
ayac, a member of the Piscataway Indian Nation and an associate professor o=
f public history at George Mason University. ?Everything can be owned, take=
n over and assumed by a conquering society.?</a></span></p>=20
<p><span style=3D"color: #ffffff;"><a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/maintainers-disliking/g305l23_95O8X6t11eL3de2m78al40Ahbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47zQLnKSn6L1Unn06FlXsPv">Since the arrival of European ships on these shores, White Ameri=
cans have been obsessed with dead Indians. The U.S. Army made it official p=
</a>olicy to dig up bones for study. In 1868, Madison Mills, the leading me=
dical officer in the U.S. Army, instructed in writing: ?The Surgeon General=
is anxious that our collection of<a style=3D"color: #ffffff;" href=3D"=
http://www.haloangels6.club/quadrillion-cybernetic/f126L23_g95D8vx610c3de3D78av40ohbr47Ga-Drrs4rGIEHbwG4wwfGaDvsrEibxEIH47OQLnKSn5A1I0l5dLsMv"> Indian crania, already quite large, should be made as complete as =
possible.? Military grave-robbing continued for decades. In 1892, an army s=
urgeon named Z.T. Danie broke into a cemetery belonging to the Blackfeet tr=
ibe in Montana, and while the residents slept, he sneaked skulls out under =
his coat. ?The greatest fear I had was that some Indian would miss the head=
s, see my tracks and ambush me, but they didn't,? he wrote in a letter. The=
se bones eventually ended up in the Smithsonian's National Mus</a>eum of Na=
tural History.</span></p>=20
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