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Show 1 46 in the 1890s, the 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, and on to the present day. Knowledge of Kolhu/wala:wa and of the Zunis' sacred pilgrimage to that place, was notorious, both among the public in that part of New Mexico and Arizona near the shrine, and nationally in scholarly circles. 146. Bunzel, Ruth "Zuni Ritual Poetry," Forty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau £_ Ethnology, 1929-1930, Smithsonian Institution; Washington, D. C; 1932; pp. 611-835. Bunzel, Ruth "Zuni Katchinas," Forty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1929-1930; Smithsonian Institution; Washington, D.C.; 1932; especially on pp. 843, 844, 860, and 951. Bunzel, Ruth "Introduction to Zuni Ceremonialism," Forty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1929-1939; Smithsonian Institution; Washington, D. C; 1932; pp. 482-483 and 521-522. Parsons, Elsie Clews "Zuni Tales," Journal of American Folklore, Volume 43, Number 167 (January-March, 1930), pp. 3 and 24. Parsons, E. C. "A Zuni Detective," Man, Volume 16 (November, 1916), p. 169. Kate, H. F. C. ten "A Zuni Folktale," Journal of American Folklore, Volume 30 (1917), p. 497. Kroeber, A. L. "Thoughts on Zuni Religion," Holmes Anniversary Volume, Washington, 1916; p. 272. Benedict, Ruth Zuni Mythology, Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology, Columbia University Press, New York City, 1935; Vol. I, pp. 15-17, 50, 70-72, and 260. - 96 - |