pricing a future

"Seventy-two precious arts are held in a brocade bag, they're kept just like a great treasure. Eighteen turn out the essence in the famous treatises on pugilistic arts. Eighteen other arts describe in more detail training methods if you use special tools and training equipment. Wonderful ways of adopting the flexibility in the breath-chi, exercises in obtaining hardness and lightness, clenching methods are written with all the blood of monks in magazines that are kept being a treasure in the brocade bag. One can seldom meet people who genuinely wish to do exercises with zeal: to become a real hero, you have to often feel bitter taste of hard labour. " /Secret Shaolin Treatises about the Pugilistic Art/ Between June 25 and 26, 1876, a combined force of Lakota and Northern Cheyenne led the United States 7th Cavalry in to a battle near the Little Bighorn River in what was then the eastern fringe of the Montana Territory. The engagement is well known by several names: the Battle of Greasy Grass, the Battle of Little Big Horn, and Custer's Last Stand. Perhaps the most well-known action in the Indian Wars, it absolutely was a remarkable victory for Sitting Bull and his awesome forces. They defeated a column of seven hundred men led by George Armstrong Custer; five in the Seventh's companies were annihilated and Custer himself was killed in the engagement together with two of his brothers and a brother-in-law. Known as the battle that left no white survivors, Little Big Horn has inspired more than 1,000 pieces of art, including over 40 films. Here are four of the best...