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Coyote Press Archives of California Prehistory No. 51. Salinas, California. (Includes editions of all DuBois' Kumeyaay articles, plus some unpublished material in footnotes.) Lee, Melicent. 1933. Indians of the Oaks. Ginn and Company, Boston. (Children's story incorporating some traditional narratives.) Meigs, Peveril, III. 1971.
William Albert "Bert" Wilson (September 23, 1933 – April 25, 2016) [3] was a scholar of Mormon folklore. [4]: 2 The "father of Mormon folklore" [5] helped found and organize folklore archives at both Utah State University (USU) and Brigham Young University (BYU).
In 1983, UNC purchased the John Edwards Memorial Collection, and, in the fall of 1986, the UNC Folklore Archives and the JEMC were combined to form the Southern Folklife Collection. The SFC officially opened for research during the Sounds of the South conference at UNC in April 1989. Australian collector and discographer John Edwards
Journal of American Folklore 57:190-207. (Versions, including Earth Diver and Theft of Fire, collected in 1938.) Stewart, George W. 1906. "A Yokuts Creation Myth". Journal of American Folklore 19:322. (Brief Wikchamni narrative collected in 1903 from Jim Herrington.) Stewart, George W. 1908. "Two Yokuts Traditions". Journal of American Folklore ...
The BYU Folklore collection was started by William A. Wilson, a professor at the university. He was given a small office space to begin a folklore archive. In 1995 this archive hired its first full permanent archivist to oversee the collection. When Wilson retired, this archive became part of the Harold B. Lee Library. [30]
Kuya (older) Brother or Older male Ate (older) Sister or Older Female Panganay (oldest) Child/Sibling Bunso (youngest) Child/Sibling Lolo: Grandfather Lola: Grandmother Tita, Tiya: Aunt Tito, Tiyo: Uncle
The prestigious annual culinary awards named one of L.A.'s own as the top chef in the state, while Ruth Reichl, former L.A. Times Food critic and editor, received the lifetime achievement award.
It is a member of the Canadian Council of Archives and the Association of Newfoundland and Labrador Archives. MUNFLA was founded in 1968 by folklorist Herbert Halpert, head of the Folklore Department, and his wife, researcher-librarian Violetta Maloney Halpert, [1] as a joint-venture by the Folklore and English departments at Memorial University.