Viewing page 90 of 113

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

152

LOGGER'S SHEET 

LOGGER: Andras Golinger
REEL NUMBER: 4/9
STAGE: AFS Centennial
DATE: 7/3/88
PRESENTOR: Charles Camp
GROUP NAME: " [[strikethrough]] Folklorist on [[/strikethrough]] Folklore as a Helping Profession
REGION/STYLE:

[[2 columned table]]
| PERFORMER(S) | INSTRUMENT/OCCUPATION |
| --- | --- |
Bess Lomax Hames | N.E.A. folklorist - Wash., D.C.
Leo Calac | Linseñon cultural historian
Richard March | folklorist - Madison, Wisc.
Robert McCarl | folklorist - Boise, Idaho

CONTENTS

1. C.C. - general intros - helping folk artists -
2. B.L.H - grantsmanship - hard to get money to artists - N.E.A. Folk Arts program - apprenticeship programs - state programs - 
3. R.M - Wisconsin state folklore program - start from scratch - Indian population - first place for apprenticeship programs - people were skeptical - 5 yr. old programs - more & more applicants; more traditions learned - Ojibway "dream catcher" - success of program
4. 
5. L.C. - Luiseño culture bank project - N.E.A. help - materials existent - but scattered - 
6. now available to Luiseños, ideas for native museums in San Diego county - give kids self-esteem, drop out rates highest - [[?]] now more respect - basketry in S. California materials gone - 
7. 
8. C.C. returning products to makers sources,
9. B. Mc. - textile makers project - in S.C. - claim stories used in brown lung movement.
10. B.L.H. - extent of problem - across the nation - ex. recordings of Appalachia - not available in Appalachia - Paiute tribe - Ariz/Utah - didn't have baskets scattered + sold - no models to work from - now exists, full range of designs - 
11.
12. accessability - morale of pop - crucial to solving bigger problems - 
13. L.C. - Colorado - Chimwebe reservations - one basketmaker left - problems
C.C. - Maryland - repatriation of Indian objects - curatorial care - tribal museum debate vs. university, big national museums.
B.L.H. - questions now debated - discussed - local access - 
R.M. - pickle analogy vs. cucumber - planting new cucumber - keeps it alive

(over)