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Among the key organizers were Lacy W. Maynor and William C. Rickard , the son of Clinton Rickard, founder of the Indian Defense League. [2] The Emil Schwarzhaupt Foundation, Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the University of Chicago provided some financial support for the meeting. [3] The 1961 American Indian Chicago Conference.
The Convention establishes rules of airspace, aircraft registration and safety, security, and sustainability, and details the rights of the signatories in relation to air travel. The convention also contains provisions pertaining to taxation. The document was signed on December 7, 1944, in Chicago by 52 signatory states. [3]
An air transport agreement (also sometimes called an air service agreement or ATA or ASA) is a bilateral agreement to allow international commercial air transport services between signatories. The bilateral system has its basis under the Chicago Convention and associated multilateral treaties. The Chicago Convention was signed in December 1944 ...
The Convention on International Civil Aviation, also known as the Chicago Convention, in Chicago, was signed by 52 countries on 7 December 1944. Under its terms, a Provisional International Civil Aviation Organization was to be established, to be replaced in turn by a permanent organization when twenty-six countries ratified the convention ...
Convention with the Choctaw 7 Stat. 234: 122 Choctaw: 1825 February 12 Treaty of Indian Springs: Convention with the Creeks 7 Stat. 237: Creek: 1825 June 2 Treaty of St. Louis: Treaty with the Osage 7 Stat. 240: 123 Great and Little Osage: 1825 June 3 Treaty of St. Louis: Treaty with the Kansa 7 Stat. 244: 124 Kansa: 1825 June 9 Treaty of White ...
Following passage of the federal Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 and the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936, the Keetoowah Nighthawk Society organized in 1939 as the United Keetoowah Band. The Bureau of Indian Affairs approved their constitution in 1940. The United States President began appointing a Principal Chief for the non-UKB Cherokee ...
The Treaty of Chicago may refer to either of two treaties made and signed in the settlement that became Chicago, Illinois between the United States and the Odaawaa (anglicized Ottawa), Ojibwe (anglicized Chippewa), and Bodéwadmi (anglicized Potawatomi) (collectively, Council of Three Fires) Native American peoples. The first was in 1821 and ...
The NCAI's initial organization was largely created by Native American men who worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and represented many tribes. Among this group was D'Arcy McNickle of the BIA. [6] [7] At the second national convention, Indian women attended as representatives in numbers equal to the men. The convention decided that ...