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INDIANS AND MEXICAN AMERICAS
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KAISER
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ING THUNDER: AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A WINNEBAGO INDIAN. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. (paper) (A 1966 book.)
McNickle, D'Arey. THE INDIAN TRIBES OF THE UNITED STATES: ETHNIC AND CULTURAL SURVIVAL. London and New York: Institute of Race Relations and Oxford University Press. 79 pages. $1.35 (paper). 
(McNickle is a Flathead Indian.)
McWilliams, Carey. "The Non-Vanishing Indian" in BROTHERS UNDER THE SKIN. Boston: Little, Brown, Pp. 59-88. $3.50.
Maquis, Thomas B. (interpreter). WOODEN LEG: A WARRIOR WHO FOUGHT CUSTER. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ix + 389 pages. $1.90 (paper). (A 1965 edition of a book first published in 1931. A Biographical narrative of an old Cheyenne warrior, one of the 1,600 Northern Cheyenne who fought with the Sioux against Custer at the legendary Battle of the Little Bighorn. Wooden Leg says that white soldiers shot themseles when they saw that they were surrounded by Indians.This is the fourht in the series. The other three are Crazy Horse, Black Elk Speaks and Plenty-Coups)
Marriot, Alice and Rachlin, Carol K. AMERICAN EPIC: THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN. New York: G/ P. Putnam's. $6.95. (Two anthropologists write about America's most important Indian tribes: Sioux, Apache, Navaho, Arapaho, Crow, Cheyenne, and other tribes.)
Marriot, Alice and Rachlin, Carol K. AMERICAN INDIAN MYTHOLOGY. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell. $7.95. (A collection of stories, some charming and entertaining, some about the grim years of conflict. A very high level of storytelling. The American Indian has a great oral tradition of poetry and mythology much of which is already lost but much can be preserved in writing if a systematic effort is made by scholars and university and commercial publishers.)
  Means, Florence Crannel. OUR CUP IS BROKEN. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 229 pages. $3.95. (This novel for young people is about a Hopi Indian girl who grows to womanhood in both the Indian and the white American cultures and finds adjustment in neither. Mrs. Means has earned a Hopi name.)
   Meyer, Roy W. HISTORY OF THE SANTEE SIOUX: UNITED STATES INDIAN POLICY ON TRIAL. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. xvi + 434 pages. $7.50. (This book covers the history of the Santee Sioux from the first European contacts about 1660 to the present. There is the great Sioux uprising of 1802, the sale of the ancestral lands and the removal of the Santee Sioux to a reservation.) 
   Momaday, N. Scott. HOUSE MADE OF DAWN. New York: Harper and Row. $4.95. (This first novel by a 35-year-old Kiowa Indian, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1969. Mr. Momaday, a professor of English, is starting a program in American Indian literature at the University of California at Berkeley. He is also a poet. Monday's depiction of Indian life as anachronistic although rich in meaning, holiness and beauty- and of the tragic Indian

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