"Discussion of origins of Ghost Dance, Crow Dance, and significance/role of Yellow Calf to these ceremonies. Discussion of families associated with paraphrenalia used in 'dance of god' ceremony."
Source
Hatton, Orin T. Ghost-era Songs of the Arapaho Crow Dance, 1995. (Mss.Rec.242);
audio:3144; APSdigrec_2445; Recording Number: 25; Program Number: 01
Description
Transcription and glossing session of previously recorded Arapaho stories played back. This program contains the story "How Sitting Bull Quit the Rain Dance." The Sitting Bull referred to is the consultant's grandfather, unrelated to the Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull.; Original tapes held at Berkeley Language Center, University of California, Berkeley. This program is a copy of the Language Center tape 24:2, collector's original tape 22, side A.
Source
Weigel, William F. Study of Arapaho tonal phonology, 1992. (Mss.Rec.258);
audio:3147; APSdigrec_2446; Recording Number: 25; Program Number: 02
Description
Transcription and glossing session of previously recorded Arapaho stories played back. This program contains the story "How Sitting Bull Quit the Rain Dance." The Sitting Bull referred to is the consultant's grandfather, unrelated to the Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull.; Original tapes held at Berkeley Language Center, University of California, Berkeley. This program is a copy of the Language Center tape 25:1, collector's original tape 22, side B.
Source
Weigel, William F. Study of Arapaho tonal phonology, 1992. (Mss.Rec.258);
audio:3142; APSdigrec_2444; Recording Number: 24; Program Number: 02
Description
Transcription and glossing session of previously recorded Arapaho stories played back. This program contains the stories "The Peach Tree" and "How Sitting Bull Quit the Rain Dance." The Sitting Bull referred to is the consultant's grandfather, unrelated to the Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull.; Original tapes held at Berkeley Language Center, University of California, Berkeley. This program is a copy of the Language Center tape 24:1, collector's original tape 22, side A.
Source
Weigel, William F. Study of Arapaho tonal phonology, 1992. (Mss.Rec.258);
audio:3113; APSdigrec_2422; Recording Number: 12; Program Number: 02
Description
Original tapes held at Berkeley Language Center, University of California, Berkeley. This program is a copy of the Language Center tape 13:1, collector's original tape 13, side A.
Source
Weigel, William F. Study of Arapaho tonal phonology, 1992. (Mss.Rec.258);
"Play tape of [Fred] Gone singing song #1. [3:05 - 6:50] Discussion follows: Arapaho text, notation, and English translation; 'day of wind'. Irrelevant discussion of Indian word for St. Louis and reference to Mexicans or Spaniards as 'bread people.' Discussion of misappropriation of term 'Crow Dance' for the 'Dance of God'; language used in prayers; Jack Wilson (Wovoka) and Ghost Dance; origins of 'Dance of God' from the Sioux people; Omaha dance from the Omaha people (wolf people), 'Wolf Dance'; Rabbit Dance and Owl Dance."
Source
Hatton, Orin T. Ghost-era Songs of the Arapaho Crow Dance, 1995. (Mss.Rec.242);