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Jumano and lived
Native American tribes that lived inside the boundaries of present-day Texas include the Alabama, Apache, Atakapan, Bidai, Caddo, Coahuiltecan, Comanche, Cherokee, Choctaw, Coushatta, Hasinai, Jumano, Karankawa, Kickapoo, Kiowa, Tonkawa, and Wichita.

Jumano and their
Like the Wichita, Karankawa and Jumano, the Tonkawa tattooed their bodies and faces.

Jumano and today
Sor María de Jesús is credited by some with contributing to the evangelization of the Jumano Indians in what is today Texas.

Jumano and River
Espejo's diary places the Jumano along the Pecos River and its tributaries.

Jumano and West
Her bilocation activity occurred between her cloistered convent in Spain and the Jumano Indians of central New Mexico and West Texas.

Jumano and Texas
The Jumano was a nomadic group that traveled and traded throughout west Texas and southeastern New Mexico, but some historic records indicate that they were enemies of the Chisos.

Ndé and People
* Ndé ’ indaaí or Nédnaa ’ í ' Enemy People ' known as the Southern Chiricahua, Chiricahua proper, Pinery Apache, Ne ’ na ’ i ), or " those ahead at the end ".
* Nednhi ( Ndé ' ndai-‘ Enemy People ’, ‘ People who make trouble ’, often called Bronco Apaches, Sierre Madre Apaches, Southern Chiricahua )
* Kó ' l kukä ' ⁿ, Kó ´ l Kahäⁿ, Cuelcahen Ndé (" Tall Grass People ", " High Grass People "): lived on the Central Plains of Texas along the upper Colorado River.
* Tu ' tssn Ndé, Tùn Tsa Ndé, Tú sis Ndé, Kúne tsá, Konitsaii Ndé (" Big Water People ", " Great Water People "): formerly a Natage band they lived in the Gulf Coastal Plains towards both sides of the Rio Grande into Coahuila, in 1765 the greater part of them left San Lorenzo de Sata Cruz and went into Mexico and their territory stretched deep into Coahuila, their territory was called Konitsąąįį gokíyaa ( Big Water People Country ), Magoosh's band Tu ' sis Nde would later merge with the Mescalero as the " Tuintsunde ".
* Tindi Ndé, Tú ' e Ndé, Tüzhä ' ⁿ, Täzhä ' ⁿ (" People of the Mountain ", " Uplanders "): lived along the upper Rio Grande, in southern New Mexico and in northern Mexico, at about 1850 they were in close contact to the Mescalero.
* Twid Ndé, Tú ’ é ' diné Ndé (" Tough People of the Desert ", " No Water People "): moved north and therefore away from the gulf area, later they lived between the Rio Grande and the Pecos River, near the juncture of the two.
There they became much mixed with the Mescalero and merged later as Tuetinini with the Mescalero, the Tú sis Ndé (“ Big Water People ”) who tried to remain nearer their old territory on the gulf but who were finally driven over into Mexico, are sometimes quite critical of the Twid Ndé because of their apostacy and mixture and classify them as a Mescalero or part-Mescalero group.

Ndé and ”):
* Indantųhé Ndé, Nakaiyé Ndé (“ Mexican Clan People ”): Mexicans who mixed up with Lipan bands, as the latter thought refugee in Mexico.

Ndé and lived
* Zit ' is ' ti Nde, Tséghát ’ ahén Nde, Tas steé be glui Ndé (" Rock Tied to Head People "): wearing a red turbanlike headdress like the neighboring Mescalero, lived in the deserts of northern Mexico.
* Bi ' uhit Ndé, Buii gl un Ndé (" Many Necklaces People "): lived in the deserts and highplains of New Mexico and northern Mexico.
* Ha ' didla ' Ndé, Goschish Ndé (" Lightning Storm People "): lived from the lower Rio Grande Valley in southern Texas into the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, today descendants living in the Lower Rio Grande River area ( El Calaboz Rancheria ).
* Zuá Zuá Ndé (" People of the Lava Beds "): lived in the lava beds of eastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas.

Ndé and their
The name Lipan is a Spanish adaption of their self-designation as Hleh-pai Ndé reflecting their migratory story.

Ndé and West
It is the capital of the Ndé division of West Region.

Ndé and Texas
) ( Chief of one band in southern Texas, perhaps of the Ha ´ didla ` Ndé )

Suma and also
* Suma Indians ( Suma also spelled Yuma ), a native people of Texas and Chihuahua, Mexico
Suma Raki, i. e. distilled Raki prior to the addition of Aniseed, is generally produced from raisins but Raki factories around established wine-producing areas like Tekirdağ, Nevşehir, and İzmir may also use fresh grapes for higher quality.
* Clifton Grove: containing farmland and large residential blocks, it is down stream from the Suma Park Reservoir and also contains the Kinross State Forest.

Suma and River
* In 1987, the Spanish writer Jon Juaristi wrote a poem entitled Spoon River, Euskadi ( included in his book Suma de varia intención ) to denounce the crimes of the Basque terrorist group ETA.

Suma and West
From the collective movement, one of the most successful ventures is probably Suma Wholefoods in Elland, West Yorkshire.

Suma and ),
Supreme Master ( or " Suma ") Ching Hai, ( born 12 May 1950 ), is the spiritual teacher of the Quan Yin Method with an estimated 20, 000 followers world wide.
* The lesser-known Kabuki play Sakigake Genpei Tsutsuji ( otherwise called Ogiya Kumagai, or Suma no Miyako Genpei Tsutsuji ), where Atsumori hides his identity by dressing up as the girl Kohagi and working in a fan shop.

Suma and ).
Genji is thus exiled to the town of Suma in rural Harima province ( now part of Kobe in Hyōgo Prefecture ).
The largest examples of a British worker cooperatives include, Suma Wholefoods, Bristol-based Essential Trading Co-operative, Brighton-based Infinity Foods Cooperative Ltd and the retail giant John Lewis Partnership ( although it only uses the term occasionally ).

Red and Mud
In 2005, the Mud Hens won the International League Governor's Cup Championship against the Indianapolis Indians and again in 2006 against the Rochester Red Wings for their 2nd and 3rd championships.
The Montreal Maroons and Detroit Red Wings went scoreless until 16 and a half minutes into the sixth OT when Mud Bruneteau ends it at 2: 25 in the morning.
The Red Wings then beat the Scranton / Wilkes-Barre Red Barons three games to one in the best-of-five semifinal series but lost to the Toledo Mud Hens in five games, three games to two, in the best-of-five Governors ' Cup series.
He has produced Willy DeVille, Green on Red, Mojo Nixon, Neon Wheels, Jason & The Nashville Scorchers, The Replacements, Tav Falco's Panther Burns, Screamin ' Jay Hawkins, and The Dick Nixons, among many others, and in 1977 an aural documentary of Memphis ' Beale Street, Beale Street Saturday Night, which featured performances by Sid Selvidge, Furry Lewis and Dickinson's band Mud Boy and the Neutrons.
It has been suggested that the name Renmark refers to an Aboriginal word meaning " Red Mud "-the original inhabitants of the area were the Naralte tribe.
This time, the Mud Hens defeated the Rochester Red Wings.
Opened on October 15, 1997, the expressway currently runs along the south of Hamilton between Highway 403 and Mud Street, and is connected to the Queen Elizabeth Way via the Red Hill Valley Parkway, which opened on November 17, 2007.
Modere Fernand " Mud " Bruneteau ( November 28, 1914 in St. Boniface, Manitoba – April 15, 1992 in Houston, Texas ) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played for the Detroit Red Wings in the National Hockey League.
Wedge played his final two seasons with the Toledo Mud Hens in the Detroit Tigers organization and the Scranton / Wilkes-Barre Red Barons in the Philadelphia Phillies organization in 1996 and 1997, respectively.
The Houston ballclub went by the nicknames of Babies, Red Stockings, Mud Cats, Magnolias, and Wanderers before Buffaloes became permanent around the turn of the 20th century.
* Mud River, a tributary of the Red Lake River in Minnesota

2.835 seconds.