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Show HI. Wetsak'yaya Onnanet The Trail to Kolhu/walatwa Detailed descriptions of the quadrennial pilgrimage to Kolhu/walatwa have been provided by a number of authors (including the Zuni people themselves),81 and recently Zuni religious leaders have made public depositions giving new details 81. Cushing, Frank Hamilton "Outlines of Zuni Creation Myths," Thirteenth Annual Report 2_ _!__ Bureau of Ethnology, 1891-92, Government Printing Office (hereafter GPO); Washington, D.C.; 1896; pp. 321-462. Stevenson, Matilda Coxe "The Zuni Indianst Their Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities, and Ceremonies," Twenty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology; GPO; Washington, D.C.; 1904; especially page 327~~ "~ Stevenson, Mrs. Tillie E. "The Religious Life of the Zuni Child," Fifth Annual R eP°r t 2_ the Bureau of Ethnology, 1883-84; GPO; Washington, D. 071887; pp. o«iy-o4o. Parsons, Elsie Clews "The Origin Myth of the Zuni," Journal of American Folklore; Volume 36 (1923); pp. 135-162. ~" Bunzel, Ruth "Zuni Origin Myths," Forty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology; GPO; Washington, D.C.; 1932; pp. 547-612. Tedlock, Dennis Finding the Centert Narrative Poetry of the Zuni Indians; Dial Press; New York; 1972; 300 pp. The Zuni People The Zunist Self-Portrayals; University of New Mexico Press; Albuquerque; 1972; pp. 129-137. Hart, E. Richard "The Zuni Indian Tribe and Title to Kolhu/walatwa (Kachina Village)," ZUNI INDIAN TRIBE LANDS BILL, Written Testimony presented at a Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs hearing on S. 2201, April 9, 1984; U.S. Government Printing Office; Washington; 1984; pp. 26-62. - 56 - |