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Indians and Mexican Americans
Kaiser 

who carry on their own businesses with Negro slaves are capitalists." 
"The development of the colonies are all the nations," says Foster finally, "opened up a whole series of new markets for budding European capitalism. The ensuing American political revolutionary struggles also gave a big push to the struggle of the rising capitalist class in Europe against feudal-clerical reaction. The new hemisphere, particularly the U.S., itself was destined to play such a decisive role in shaping world capitalism, so that today it has finally become the center and main stronghold of the world capitalist system."
The Indians' contributions to the U.S., according to Allan Harper's monograph, in foodstuffs and drugs alone are phenomenal. Four-sevenths of the total agricultural production of the U.S. consists of economic plants domesticated by the Indians and adopted by whites. Whites appropriated the Indians' canoe, snowshoe and toboggan, built their roads and canals over the Indians' trails, emulated the Indians' methods of warfare, fishing, and recreation, copied and adopted the Indians' clothes for life in the forest. The Indians taught whites how to live with the outdoors, quickened their imagination and became an important subject for American literature. They have also contributed to American music, literature, theatre, law, medicine, psychology, folklore and mythology and folk arts and crafts, language, cookery and modern clothes and hair styles. The three-record album Authentic Music of the American Indian includes ward dances, honor songs, social and folk songs, ceremonial songs and chants of over 20 western tribes (Sioux, Apache, Hopi, Navajo, etc.) performed by the Indians. These contributions have usually been overlooked or ignored. But the Indians' indelible and ineradicable marks on the American land and people are everywhere. American literature is replete with poems, stories and novels about Indians usually stereotyped as noble savages, Tontos or brutish beasts. The same themes are in the films, newspaper stories and TV programs about Indians. The Americana Hotel in New York City has moved the stereotyped figure of the wooden Indian from the fronts of cigar stores to the entrance of its spacious wooden Indian room. Most of the truth about Indians is still confined to the several Indian museums and Indian wings of general museums throughout the U.S.
Every schoolboy used to know and thrill to these lines from the "Hiawatha's Childhood" section of Longfellow's long poem The Song of Hiawatha: 

By the shores of Glitch Gumee
By the sining Big-Sea-Water, 

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Transcription Notes:
I did not find anything on the transcription guide as to how to format parenthetical sections so I copied it directly as in the scan.