What is their field of operation? Red Bull operate within the energy drinks sector of the soft drinks market. The product is an example of a ’functional ’ drink. Functional foods respond to consumer interest in well-being and performance. The major multinational soft drinks companies are investing in the area of functional drinks‚ developing their own brands and buying up existing ones. This is seen as being important‚ given that their traditional soft drinks markets are at the maturity stage in
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the battle of little bighorn is tThe Battle of the Little Big Horn ensured for General George Custer the fame he had always wanted. His death and the destruction of those men in the US Army’s Seventh Cavalry who fought with him by the largest gathering of Native American warriors that the country had seen‚ immortalised Custer in films‚ books and in the psyche of Americans. Paintings by the likes of Edgar Paxson and Kurz and Allison portrayed Custer as the all-American hero fighting with his men to
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Cited: Sitting bull (MLA format) “Sitting bull - Tatanka-Iyotanka (1831-1890)” (on-line) c2001: Nov‚11 2012 <http://middle.usm.k12.wi.us/faculty/taft/unit5/westwebquest/sittingbull/resources.htm> "The Song of Hiawatha." American History through Literature. Ed. Janet Gabler-Hover
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30 miles from safety and he surrendered in 1877. Sitting Bull : One of the leaders of the Sioux tribe. He was a medicine man " as wily as he was influential." He became a prominent Indian leader during the Sioux Was from 1876-1877.( The war was touched off when a group of miners rushed into the Black Hills of South Dakota in 1875.) The well-armed warriors at first proved to be a superior force. During Custer’s Last Stand in 1876‚ Sitting Bull was " making medicine" while
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Horse --> Captain William J. Fetterman @ Lodge Trail Ridge Battle of Hundred Slain Whites call it "Fetterman Massacre" :Custer 1874 - Black Hill has gold --> gold rush :1876 - Crazy Horse‚ Gall‚ Sitting Bull vs Custer’s troops (Custer dead‚ lost) :Late 1876: Sioux beaten --> Sitting Bull to Canada --> surrender for ppl’s starvation :1868 Treaty :Treaty of Fort Laramie :Gov - close the Bozeman Trail :Sioux agreed to live on a reservation along the Missouri River
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“Wounded Knee Massacre” Melinda Belcher May 2‚ 2010 In 1848 a series of gold and silver discoveries signaled the first serious interest by white settlers in the arid and semiarid lands beyond the Mississippi‚ where many Indian nations had been forced to migrate. To open more land‚ federal officials introduced in 1851 a policy of “concentration.” Tribes were pressured into signing treaties limiting the boundaries of their hunting grounds to “reservations” The Sioux tribe was limited to the
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The Ghost Dance In January 1889‚ Wavoka‚ a Paiute Indian‚ had a revelation during a total eclipse of the sun. It was the genesis of a religious movement that would become known as the Ghost Dance. It was this dance that the Indians believed would reunite them with friends and relatives in the ghost world. The legend states that after prayer and ceremony‚ the earth would shatter and let forth a great flood that would drown all the whites and enemy Indians‚ leaving the earth untouched and as it
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as the Indians begin to embrace their own culture‚ which have been heightening the tension between Americans and Indians. This time was indeed the last straw as Laughlin sent military into the Sioux territory to capture the Sioux leader Sitting Bull. Sitting Bull and a few Indians were later declared dead. 300 Sioux Indians were captured by U.S Army’s 7th regiment on their way to the Pine Ridge Agency to seek protection against the military‚ including Big Foot‚ their leader. They were led to the
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government created a peace commission A.1.d) The following year‚ in a second Treaty of Fort Laramie‚ the Sioux agreed to move to a reservation in the Black Hills regions of South Dakota A.2. Little Bighorn A.2.a) Sitting Bull-an important leader of Sioux resistance A.2.b) Sitting Bull gained the respect of his people for his courage‚ wisdom‚ and generosity. A.2.c) They were joined by hundreds of Americans Indians fleeing the BIA-sponsored encampment‚ where food was in short supply. A.2.d) George
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the sacred six directions‚ without which healing is impossible. The front legs are west and north; the back legs‚ east and south. The head and ears point to the heavens‚ and the tail anchors all to the earth. A year after the execution of the 38‚ Sitting Bull rode on horseback to see the concentration
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