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      <eadid mainagencycode="dlc" countrycode="us" identifier="hdl:loc.afc/eadafc.af000001" encodinganalog="856$u">http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af000001</eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Vance Randolph Collection</titleproper>
		<subtitle encodinganalog="245$b">
	         	<num encodinganalog="090$a">AFC 1941/001</num>   
		</subtitle>
	   <author encodinganalog="245$c">Prepared by Clare Norcio and Katie Lyn Peebles</author>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            <publisher encodinganalog="260$b"><extptr linktype="simple" href="lcseal" show="embed" actuate="onload"/>American Folklife Center, Library of Congress</publisher>
            <address>
               <addressline>Washington, D.C.</addressline>
            </address>
            <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="2000-08" encodinganalog="260$c">August 2000</date>
         </publicationstmt>
         <seriesstmt>
            <titleproper>Guides to the Collections in the Archive of Folk Culture</titleproper>
         </seriesstmt>
      </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <creation>Encoded by Library of Congress, <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="2000">2000</date>
         </creation>
         <langusage encodinganalog="546">
		Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="041">English</language>
         </langusage>
      </profiledesc>
      <revisiondesc>
         <change encodinganalog="583">
            <date normal="2004-12-16">2004-12-16</date>
            <item>converted from EAD 1.0 to EAD 2002 </item>
         </change>
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   </eadheader>
   <archdesc type="register" level="collection" relatedencoding="MARC21">
      <did>
         <head>Collection Summary</head>
         <unitid label="Call No." countrycode="us" repositorycode="dlc" encodinganalog="090">AFC 1941/001</unitid>
         <origination label="Creator">
            <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100">Randolph, Vance, 1892-1980</persname>
         </origination>
         <unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245$a">Vance Randolph Collection
	   <unitdate label="Span Dates" type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="1941/1972" encodinganalog="245$f">1941-1972</unitdate>
	   <unitdate label="Bulk Dates" type="bulk" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="1941/1943" encodinganalog="245$g">(bulk 1941-1943)</unitdate>
         </unittitle>
	 <physdesc label="Contents"> 
		<extent encodinganalog="300">24 boxes containing manuscripts, graphic materials, published articles, sound recordings, and maps</extent>
		<extent encodinganalog="300">12.5 linear feet</extent>
		<extent encodinganalog="300">18,216 items</extent>
	   </physdesc>
         <repository label="Repository" encodinganalog="852">
            <corpname>
               <subarea>Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center</subarea> Library of Congress</corpname>
		<address>
			<addressline>Washington, D.C.</addressline>
		</address>
         </repository>
         <abstract label="Summary" encodinganalog="520$a">
		The Vance Randolph Collection documents aspects of Ozark life in the early 1940s.  Randolph made field recordings of folksongs and collected stories of life in the Ozarks.  The collection also contains 213 graphic images.  In addition to the material obtained in the field, Randolph accumulated an extensive number of newspaper clippings on a wide variety of subjects relating to the Ozarks, including local legends, history, language, and sporting activities.         
	   </abstract>
         <langmaterial label="Languages" encodinganalog="546">
		Collection material in <language encodinganalog="041" langcode="eng">English</language>
	   </langmaterial>
      </did>
      <odd type="add">
         <head>Collection Concordance by Format</head>
         <table>
            <tgroup cols="3" align="left">
               <colspec colnum="1" colname="1" colwidth="20"/>
               <colspec colnum="2" colname="2" colwidth="30"/>
               <colspec colnum="3" colname="3" colwidth="70"/>
               <thead valign="bottom">
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">Quantity</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">Physical Description/Version</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">Location/I.D. Numbers</entry>
                  </row>
               </thead>
               <tbody valign="top">
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">
                        <emph render="bold">Manuscript Materials</emph>
                     </entry>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">261</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">folders</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">Boxes 1-20, 23-24</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">
                        <emph render="bold">Sound Recordings</emph>
                     </entry>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">191</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">12-inch glass-based acetate discs</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">AFS 5236-5425 in M/B/RS.  AFS 5270, 5320, 5341, 5425 missing; 5300 broken (Preservation tapes LWO 3493, reels 14-26)</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">56</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">16-inch, 12-inch, 10-inch glass-based acetate discs, 8-inch aluminum-based acetate discs</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">AFS 6397-6464 in M/B/RS. AFS 6398 missing; 6400 scratched; 6463 badly broken. AFS 6397 = Preservation tapes LWO 3493, reel 42B; AFS 6399 = Preservation tapes LWO 4872 reel 412A; AFS 6400-6463 = Preservtion tapes LWO 3493, reel 42B-46A; AFS 6464 = Preservation tapes LWO 4872 reel 412A</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">8</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">12-inch glass-based acetate discs</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">AFS 6897-6904 in M/B/RS.  AFS 6897 damaged; 6900 broken = Preservation tapes LWO 3493, reels 56-57</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">1</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">5-inch reel-to-reel tape</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">"Some Talk About Belle Starr" in Box 21</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">
                        <emph render="bold">Graphic Materials</emph>
                     </entry>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                     <entry morerows="0"/>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">213</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">photographs, including 164 prints, 8 negatives, and 41 photocopied reproductions</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">In folders 263-79, Boxes 21-22; also in subject file folders 35, 53, 74, 168, 173</entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">
                        <emph render="bold">Electronic Media</emph>
                     </entry>
                  </row>
                  <row>
                     <entry morerows="0">2</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">3.5-inch computer diskettes</entry>
                     <entry morerows="0">Folder 1a in Box 1 contains this collection guide, attachments, finding aid tagged with EAD, and 2 diskettes</entry>
                  </row>
               </tbody>
            </tgroup>
         </table>
      </odd>
      <descgrp type="admininfo">
         <head>Administrative Information</head>
         <acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
            <head>Provenance</head>
            <p>The Vance Randolph Collection began with the field recordings that the Archive of American Folk Song commissioned Randolph to make in 1941 and 1942.  Randolph donated his personal papers to the Library of Congress in 1972.</p>
         </acqinfo>
         <processinfo encodinganalog="583">
            <head>Processing History</head>
            <p>After the 1972 donation, Beverly W. Brannan prepared an inventory in 1977, and an evaluation of the Vance Randolph Collection.  The collection was then preliminarily rehoused by Judith Gray.  In 1996, Camila Bryce-Laporte and Norbert Sarsfield prepared a more detailed inventory.  The 1977 and 1996 inventories are located in the Corporate Subject files in the Folklife Reading Room under "Randolph, Vance."  In 1999, Clare Norcio began organizing and continued the rehousing of the collection.  Katie Lyn Peebles finished organizing and housing the collection in the summer of 2000.</p>
         </processinfo>
         <processinfo encodinganalog="583">
            <head>Location</head>
            <p>Although the American Folklife Center holds custody of this collection, portions are housed in other divisions.  The Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division (M/B/RS) has the original discs and preservation tape copies AFS 5236-5425 (LWO 3493, reels 14-26), AFS 6397-6464 (LWO 3493, reel 42), and AFS 6897-6904 (LWO 3493, reels 56-57).  See the Collection Concordance by Format for more information.  The Archive of Folk Culture holds a set of reference tapes.  The Prints and Photographs Division holds 40 photographs (Lot 5580).</p>
         </processinfo>
         <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
            <head>Access</head>
            <p>Listening and viewing access to the collection is unrestricted.  Listening copies of the recordings are available at the Folklife Reading Room.</p>
         </accessrestrict>
         <userestrict encodinganalog="540">
            <head>Restrictions</head>
            <p>Restrictions may apply concerning the use, duplication, or publication of items in this collection.  Consult a reference librarian in the Folklife Reading Room for specific information.  See <extref href="http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/mopic/folkrec.html" show="new" actuate="onrequest">http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/mopic/folkrec.html</extref> for information about ordering audio reproductions.  See <extref href="http://lcweb.loc.gov/preserv/pds/photo.html" show="new" actuate="onrequest">http://lcweb.loc.gov/preserv/pds/photo.html</extref> for information about ordering photographic reproductions.</p>
         </userestrict>
         <bibliography encodinganalog="581">
		<head>Publications</head>
   	      <bibref>
      	      <persname role="author">Cochran, Robert.</persname>  
            	<title>"Randolph, Vance."</title> In <title render="italic">American Folklore: An Encyclopedia. </title>ed. Jan Harold Brunvand.
			<imprint>  
               	   <geogname>New York:</geogname> 
                     <publisher>Garland Publishing, </publisher>1996.
			</imprint>
            </bibref>
         <bibref>
         	      <persname role="author">Cochran, Robert.</persname>  
            	<title render="italic">Vance Randolph: An Ozark Life.</title>  
            	<imprint>
			   <geogname>Urbana:</geogname>
      	         <publisher>University of Illinois Press,</publisher>1985.
			</imprint>
         </bibref>
         </bibliography>
         <descgrp type="add">
            <head>Related Materials</head>
            <p>The Manuscript Division has a collection entitled <title>"Papers of Vance Randolph, 1947-1953," </title>which contains the typescripts of <title>Ozark Superstitions</title>, <title>We Always Lie to Strangers</title>, <title>Who Blowed Up the Church House?</title> and <title>Down in the Holler</title> with handwritten corrections (call number MMC-3244).  The Music Division has a 1949 manuscript and microfilm copy of <title>"Unprintable" Songs and Other Folklore Materials from the Ozarks</title> [call number M1629.R23 U5 (Case)].</p>
         </descgrp>
         <prefercite encodinganalog="524">
            <head>Preferred Citation</head>
            <p>Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: The Vance Randolph Collection, Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress.</p>
         </prefercite>
      </descgrp>
      <bioghist encodinganalog="545">
         <head>The Collector</head>
         <p>Vance Randolph was a self-educated folklorist who made a living as a professional writer. Born in Pittsburg, Kansas, in 1892, he was educated as a scientist: as an undergraduate, he studied biology, and then in graduate school at Clark University, in psychology.  As a graduate student, Randolph began to earn money by coaching students and ghostwriting.  He then moved to the Ozark Mountains, where he lived for the remainder of his life.  He was married twice, the first marriage lasting through the 1930s.  In 1962 he married Mary Celestia Parler, a professor of English at the University of Arkansas and an active member of the folklore community, in Fayetteville, Arkansas.</p>
         <p>In the 1920s, Randolph began writing about the Ozark folklore he was collecting.  He published several articles on dialect, folk belief, and recreation.  His first books of folklore scholarship, <title>The Ozarks</title> and <title>Ozark Mountain Folks</title>, were published in the 1930s.  He went on to publish <title>Ozark Folksongs</title> (4 vols., 1946-50) and <title>Ozark Superstitions </title> (1947).  In the 1950s, he published four collections of folktales and a book about language in the Ozarks.  His other major publications include <title>Ozark Folklores: A Bibliography</title> (1972), <title>Pissing in the Snow and other Ozark Folktales</title> (1976), and <title>Unprintable Ozark Folksongs and Folklore</title> (1992).  In 1978 Randolph was elected as a Fellow of the American Folklore Society, crowning a distinguished career with this formal professional honor.</p>
      </bioghist>

      <controlaccess>
         <head>Key Subjects</head>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Genres</head>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Ballads</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Dialects</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Children's games</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Children's rhymes</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Fiddle tunes</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Fiddling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk songs</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Games</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Jokes</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Jump rope rhymes</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Legends</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Railroad songs and music</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Riddles</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Shape note singing</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Skipping games</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Storytelling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Swearing</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Tall tales</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Wit and humor</subject>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Instruments</head>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Banjo</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Dulcimer</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Guitar</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Violin</subject>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Languages</head>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">English language dialects - United States</subject>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Topics</head>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Agriculture</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Alcoholism</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Animals</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Bank robbery</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Belief</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Bow hunter</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Character sketches</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Christmas</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Con artists</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Decorated bones</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Distilling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Eccentrics</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Faith healing</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk belief</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk medicine</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Fraternal organizations</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Friendly societies</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Firearms</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Fishing</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk festivals</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk festivals</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folklore</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Folk music</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Fox hunting</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Gambling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Ghostwriting</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Groundhogs</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Guns and gunplay</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Hog calling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Healing waters</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Hermits</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Hidden treasure</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Hog calling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Illiterate elocutionists</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Lead miners</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Legends</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Literature</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Manners and customs</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Medicine shows</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Moonshiners</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Murders</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Nicknames</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Orators</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Outlaws</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Place-names</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Politics</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Prehistoric Ozarks</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Psychology</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Religion</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Riddles</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Show business</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Social customs</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Spiritual healing</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Superstition</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Swindlers and swindling</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Tourism</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Traditional medicine</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Weatherlore</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Witches</subject>
            <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Woodchucks</subject>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Locations</head>
            <geogname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="651">Ozark Mountains Region</geogname>
            <geogname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="651">Eureka Springs</geogname>
            <geogname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="651">Hollywood (Los Angeles, Calif.)</geogname>
            <geogname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="651">Jacob's Cavern</geogname>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Persons</head>
            <note>
               <p>Note: For more names please see individual folders and in particular, from Folder 181 to 215.</p>
            </note>
            <persname source="lcnaf" role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Emma L. Dusenbury, Mrs.</persname>
            <persname source="lcnaf" role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Randolph, Vance, 1892-1980</persname>
            <persname source="lcnaf" role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Starr, Belle</persname>
         </controlaccess>
      </controlaccess>
      <scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
         <head>Scope and Content Note</head>
         <p>The Vance Randolph Collection had its beginnings in the early 1940s with fieldwork conducted by the well-known "amateur" Ozark folklorist Vance Randolph.  In February 1941, Alan Lomax, then head of the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress, wrote to Vance Randolph, asking if he would consider making field recordings in the Ozarks.  Randolph accepted the request and began to conduct fieldwork with recording equipment supplied by the Archive.  By the end of 1942, he had collected more than 870 selections on 198 discs (either aluminum or glass-based and lacquer) for the Library of Congress.  Randolph used much of the material he collected in his book <title>Ozark Folksongs</title>, while the Archive included selections from these field recordings on the following releases: L-12, <title>Anglo-American Songs and Ballads</title>; L-14, <title>Anglo-American Songs and Ballads</title>; L-20, <title>Anglo-American Songs and Ballads</title>; L-30, <title>Songs of the Mormons and Songs of the West </title>(this release includes Randolph himself singing "Starving to Death on a Government Claim"); L-61, <title>Railroad Songs and Ballads</title>; and L-62, <title>American Fiddle Tunes.</title></p>
         <p>In addition to the field recordings mentioned above, the Vance Randolph Collection contains the author's personal papers, which he donated to the Library of Congress in 1972.  The papers consist of newspaper clippings, bibliographic notes, field notes, research notes, photoprints, manuscripts, maps, typescripts, telegrams and correspondence, dating from the first decade of the twentieth century to the 1960s.</p>
         <p>Related collections can be found in both the Music Division (call number M1629) and the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress.  The Music Division houses one manuscript and 2-reel microfilm copy of Randolph's "Unprintable" Songs and Other Folklore Materials from the Ozarks, while the Manuscript Division possesses the manuscripts to four of Randolph's published books: <title>Ozark Superstitions</title>; <title>We Always Lie to Strangers: Tall Tales from the Ozarks</title>; <title>Who Blowed Up the Church House?</title>; <title>Other Ozark Folk Tales</title>; and <title>Down in the Holler: A Gallery of Ozark Folk Speech</title>.</p>
      </scopecontent>
      <dsc type="combined">
         <head>Collection Inventory</head>
         <thead valign="bottom">
            <row>
               <entry morerows="0">Container</entry>
               <entry morerows="0">Contents</entry>
            </row>
         </thead>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle id="series1">SERIES I: MANUSCRIPT MATERIALS</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Administrative Files</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">1a</container>
                     <unittitle>Collection guide. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the collection guide and three appendices listing reprinted articles and book reviews.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">1b</container>
                     <unittitle>Log of visual images.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Table A describes the photoprints and negatives housed in the AFC 1941/001 collection; Table B describes the photographs housed in the Prints and Photographs Division as Lot 5580.  Descriptions include the photograph number, subject, location, setting, and related photographs.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">1c</container>
                     <unittitle>The Vance
Randolph Collection: Ozark Folk Music.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains photocopies
of the Archive's card catalog entries, and
the song lists, performer, place, and recording information for the field recordings made by
Randolph for the Library of Congress.  It includes photocopies of catalog cards for 5236 A-5270
B3, an annotated manuscript of catalog entries for 5271 A1-5425 B3, an annotated list of fiddle
tunes played by Lon Jordan (5314-5317, 5319-5326, 5376-5379, 5401-5402, 5404-5405), and
two lists of fiddle tunes played by Bill Bilyeu (6897 A1-6904 B3).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Subject Files</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">2</container>
                     <unittitle>Ancestors.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes about Vance Randolph's family
history.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">3</container>
                     <unittitle>Arthur Aull.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
and handwritten notes concerning the Ozark newspaperman Arthur
Aull.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">4</container>
                     <unittitle>Beat Texas.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
and correspondence relating to football.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">5</container>
                     <unittitle>Thomas Hart Benton.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings concerning artist Thomas Hart Benton.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">6</container>
                     <unittitle>Bibliography (Photocopy). </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a
chronological bibliography of Vance Randolph's published articles, compiled by
Randolph.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">7</container>
                     <unittitle>Bibliography (Original).
</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">8</container>
                     <unittitle>Booze, etc.  H-V
stuff.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings and handwritten and typed notes dealing with alcoholism, homosexuality, insomnia, and
smoking. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">9</container>
                     <unittitle>"The Butterfly Still Lives." </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a 
2-page typed manuscript dealing with Vance Randolph's childhood.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">10</container>
                     <unittitle>Cavemen of the Ozarks.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings and a typed manuscript dealing with prehistoric settlements in the
Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">11</container>
                     <unittitle>Children's games.  Folder 1 of
2.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, correspondence, handwritten and typed notes, and a reprint of "Ozark
Mountain Party-Games" (<title>Journal of American Folklore </title>
1936).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">12</container>
                     <unittitle>Children's games.  Folder 2 of 2.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
handwritten notes. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">13</container>

                     <unittitle>Children's rhymes.  Folder 1 of
2.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
a reprint of "Children's Rhymes from Missouri" (<title>Journal of American Folklore
</title> 1950), newspaper
clippings, correspondence, and typed and handwritten notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">14</container>
                     <unittitle>Children's rhymes.  Folder 2 of
2.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
typed notes. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">15</container>
                     <unittitle>College such as it was. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings and handwritten notes dealing with the Kansas State College of
Pittsburgh.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">16</container>
                     <unittitle>The Concrete Cadillac.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and
handwritten notes, and a copy of <title>The Oregon Folklore Bulletin </title> dealing with
the urban tale known
as "The Concrete Cadillac."  Also contains a Günther Grass passage, translation, and
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">17</container>
                     <unittitle>Covered wagon.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and
handwritten notes dealing with Vance Randolph's trip through the Ozarks in a covered
wagon.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">18</container>
                     <unittitle>Cuss words. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
typed and handwritten notes dealing with Ozark profanities.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">19</container>
                     <unittitle>Dance calls.  Folder 1 of 2.  
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings; typed and handwritten notes dealing with folk
dancing.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">20</container>
                     <unittitle>Dance calls.  Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed
and handwritten notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">21</container>
                     <unittitle>Dances and fiddle tunes.  Folder 1 of 1. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings; typed and handwritten notes
dealing with folk dancing and fiddle
playing. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">22</container>
                     <unittitle>Dances and fiddle tunes.  Folder 2 of 2. 

</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">23</container>
                     <unittitle>"Pea Ridge" Day. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings; typed and handwritten notes dealing with the professional baseball player Henry Clyde
"Pea Ridge" Day. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">24</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes. 
Includes the following subjects:
advertisements, disputes, word list.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">25</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect
articles.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings and notes on articles
about
dialect.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">26</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect
correspondence.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence dealing with Ozark
dialect, including letters from E.H.
Criswell, Elsie and Louis Freund, Herbert Halpert, Louise Pound, Rose Spaulding, and George P.
Wilson.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">27</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect notes. 
Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains index cards and typed notes in
sequential order.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">28</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect notes. 
Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">29</container>
                     <unittitle>J. Frank
Dobie.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a newspaper clipping and index card dealing
with the author J. Frank
Dobie.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">30</container>
                     <unittitle>Dulcimer,
banjo, guitar.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, articles, and typed
notes dealing with folk
instruments.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">31</container>
                     <unittitle>Maude
Duncan.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings dealing with
newspaperwoman Maude
Duncan.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">32</container>
                     <unittitle>Fake
antiques.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes;
articles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">33</container>
                     <unittitle>Fiddle. 
Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes and
newspaper clippings about tuning and
the manner of playing.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">34</container>
                     <unittitle>Fiddle. 
Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes about the
differences between violin and
fiddle playing.  Includes a paginated manuscript.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">35</container>
                     <unittitle>Fiddle
construction.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing with the
construction of fiddles.  Also contains an annotated photoprint of a man playing a "mussel-shell"
fiddle, along with the corresponding negative.  Includes notes on snake rattles, the three-string
fiddle, and the gourd fiddle.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">36</container>
                     <unittitle>Ozark fiddle
tunes.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence, articles, and typed and
handwritten notes.  Also contains a
reprint copy of Vance Randolph's article "The Names of Ozark Fiddle Tunes" (<title>Midwest
Folklore 
</title>1954).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">37</container>
                     <unittitle>John Gould
Fletcher.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains handwritten and typed notes, correspondence,
newspaper clippings dealing
with the poet John Gould Fletcher and the Ozark Folklore
Society.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">38</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 1 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
and typed and handwritten notes. 
Includes articles by Vance Randolph.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">39</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 2 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten
notes, newspaper clippings,
correspondence, and a term paper.  Topics included: fishing and folk
medicine.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">40</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 3 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
and a term paper.  Topics included: lead
miners and miscellaneous articles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">41</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 4 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
typed and handwritten notes, and
correspondence.  Includes: miscellaneous notes and "Our Town"
column.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">42</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 5 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
brochures, and typed and
handwritten notes.  Includes: pamphlets, and advertisements.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">43</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition.  Folder 6 of 6.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
typed and handwritten notes, and
correspondence.  Topics include: weatherlore.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">44</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition: Correspondence.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains letters and
newspaper clippings.  Includes
correspondence with Charles M. Bogert, William Edward Cox, Wayland D. Hand, Mrs. Mahnkey, May Kennedy McCord, in re. Albert Pike, Rose Spaulding, Barre Toelken, and Ruth
Tyler; also includes miscellaneous correspondence.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">45</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk
festivals.  Folder 1 of 5.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, festival
programs, correspondence, and
typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: Arkansas Folklore Society, American Folklore Society,
American Anthropology Associations, Florida Folk Festival, National Folk Camp, and other
associations.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">46</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk
festivals.  Folder 2 of 5.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, festival
programs, correspondence, and
typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: National Folk Festival in Cleveland (1946), St.  Louis
(1948-54).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">47</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk
festivals.  Folder 3 of 5.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, festival
programs, correspondence, and
typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: National Folk Festival in Oklahoma City (1957), Ozark
Folk Festival in Rolla, MO (1935), Eureka Springs (1949-53).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">48</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk
festivals.  Folder 4 of 5.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, festival
programs, correspondence, and
typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: Ozark Folk Festival in Eureka Springs
(1954-65).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">49</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk
festivals.  Folder 5 of 5.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains assorted newspaper
clippings.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">50</container>
                     <unittitle>Folklore and
history.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten
notes, dealing with folklore studies in academia and the relationship between folklore and
history.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">51</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong. 
Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence, typed and handwritten
notes, and song
transcriptions.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">52</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong. 
Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">53</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong
articles.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains assorted newspaper clippings about folksong,
articles by Vance Randolph, John
Gould Fletcher, and Sidney Robertson Cowell and Henry Cowell, and a 1939 photograph of
Sidney Robertson Cowell.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">54</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong
letters.  Folder 1 of 3.  1927-40.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence to and
from Vance Randolph dealing
with his experiences collecting folksongs in the Ozarks.  Correspondents include: Louise Pound,
Franz Boas,
Harvard University Press, George Lyman Kittredge, Dororthy Scarborough, "The Twelve
Apostles," and  "The Mermaid."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">55</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong
letters.  Folder 2 of 3.  1941-42 (June).  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Correspondents include:
The Library of
Congress, Alan Lomax, Edward
Water, Sidney Robertson Cowell, Thomas Benton, John Stilley, John Robert Moore (re. the
integrity of Child 218), and the Music Library Association.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">56</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong
letters.  Folder 3 of 3.  1942 (August)-57.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Correspondents
includs: The Library
of Congress, B.A. Botkin,
Wayland D. Hand, Mildred McMullen Green, Ruth Crawford Seeger, and Evelyn K.
Wells.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">57</container>
                     <unittitle>Folksong:
"Songs Collected in the Ozark Mountains."    </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a list of
folksongs compiled by Vance
Randolph.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">58</container>
                     <unittitle>Fox hunting. 
Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, magazine clippings,
and typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">59</container>
                     <unittitle>Fox hunting. 
Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">60</container>
                     <unittitle>Connie
Franklin.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing the alleged
murder of Connie Franklin.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">61</container>
                     <unittitle>Girard
Airship. </unittitle>
                     <abstract> Contains a newspaper clipping dealing with the first
airplane factory and flying school in
Kansas.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">62</container>
                     <unittitle>Gone Are the
Days.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains one copy of <title>Gone Are the Days: A
Book of
Boyhood Memories </title>, written by L.J.
Hedgecock.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">63</container>
                     <unittitle>"A Green
Fork Turns to Water."    </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a newspaper clipping entitled
"A Green Fork Turns to Water,"
which deals with water witches.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">64</container>
                     <unittitle>Groundhog. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes,
dealing with groundhogs and
woodchucks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">65</container>
                     <unittitle>Guns and
gunplay.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten
notes, and
correspondence.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">66</container>
                     <unittitle>Louis
Hanecke.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes dealing with
Louis Hanecke, owner of the Allred
Hotel in Carroll County.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">67</container>
                     <unittitle>The healing
waters.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing with mineral
water and spring water in the Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">68</container>
                     <unittitle>Hidden
treasure.  Folder 1 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence,
<title>Exciting Adventures Along the Indian
Frontier </title> by W.R. Draper, and typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">69</container>
                     <unittitle>Hidden
treasure.  Folder 2 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed
and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">70</container>
                     <unittitle>Hidden
treasure.  Folder 3 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">71</container>
                     <unittitle>Hog calling. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains two typewritten pages of
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">72</container>
                     <unittitle>Hollywood. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings dealing with
Hollywood's treatment of
writers.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">73</container>
                     <unittitle>Introduction. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a typescript of a title page and notes for the preface of
<title>Ozark Folklore: Selected Papers
of Vance Randolph</title>, arranged and edited by Mary Celestia
Parler.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">74</container>
                     <unittitle>Jacob's
Cavern.  Folder 1 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains manuscript articles by Vance
Randolph and Vernon C. Allison
and photographs of Jacob's Cavern, Missouri.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">75</container>

                     <unittitle>Jacob's
Cavern.  Folder 2 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed
and
handwritten notes, a drawing,
and correspondence dealing with Jacob's Cavern and the history of
elephants.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">76</container>
                     <unittitle>Jacob's
Cavern.  Folder 3 of 3.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains journal articles about Jacob's
Cavern.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">77</container>
                     <unittitle>Jacob's
Cavern: Bone Correspondence.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains letters about the
decorated bone found in Jacob's
Cavern and the resulting controversy.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">78</container>
                     <unittitle>Joke book
letters.  Contains correspondence to and from Vance Randolph related to Randolph's book  
<title>Hot Springs and Hell </title>.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract> Correspondents
include: Robert Yoder, Woman's Day,
Richard Dorson, Columbia University
Press, Herbert Halpert, Kenneth Goldstein (Folklore Associates), Carl Withers, and Gershon
Legman.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">79</container>
                     <unittitle>Sam Leath. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes
about Sam Leath, an Ozarks
collector and explorer.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">80</container>
                     <unittitle>Lecture notes
taken by Vance Randolph (Photocopy).  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the photocopy
of a notebook with Vance
Randolph's handwritten notes on G.  Stanley Hall's 1914-15 lectures at Clark University in
Worcester, Massachusetts, on "The Psychology of Christianity."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">81</container>
                     <unittitle>Lecture notes
taken by Vance Randolph (Original).  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the original 
notebook to the photocopy in Folder 80.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">82</container>
                     <unittitle>Locusts from
the city.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings and handwritten notes
dealing with the impact of tourists
from the city on the Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">83</container>
                     <unittitle>Walter Clare
Martin.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing with the bow
hunter Walter Clare Martin.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">84</container>
                     <unittitle>The Master's
desk.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed notes dealing
with
the poet Edgar Lee
Masters.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">85</container>
                     <unittitle>Medicine
show.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed notes dealing
with medicine
shows.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">86</container>
                     <unittitle>
                        <title>The
Menace </title>. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings and reprints of journal articles, and
typed notes dealing with the
Aurora, Missouri, newspaper <title>The Menace</title>.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">87</container>
                     <unittitle>The
Mollyjoggers.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed notes
dealing with fraternal
organizations.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">88</container>
                     <unittitle>Moonshine
liquor.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a newspaper clipping, and a handwritten note
dealing with
moonshiners.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">89</container>
                     <unittitle>Tom P.
Morgan.  Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
correspondence, and handwritten and
typed notes, dealing with humorist and newspaper columnist Tom P.
Morgan.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">90</container>
                     <unittitle>Tom P.
Morgan.  Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">91</container>
                     <unittitle>Mysterious
lights.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a typescript about the sightings of unexplained
lights in northeastern
Oklahoma.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">92</container>
                     <unittitle>Names and
nicknames.  Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and
typed and handwritten notes,
dealing with distinctive names and nicknames of the Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">93</container>
                     <unittitle>Names and
nicknames.  Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains index
cards.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">94</container>
                     <unittitle>"The Nobility
of the Mountaineer."    </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed notes about the character
and nature of people living in the
rural Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">95</container>
                     <unittitle>Nonsense
speeches.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing with nonsense
speeches and illiterate elocutionists.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">96</container>
                     <unittitle>Old customs. 
Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes and
typescripts dealing with traditional
Ozark social customs.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">97</container>
                     <unittitle>Old customs. 
Folder 2 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, articles, and
correspondence.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">98</container>
                     <unittitle>Old Man
Burgess.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence and a handwritten note
dealing with the faith healer J.W.
Burgess.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">99</container>
                     <unittitle>Outlawry. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes,
and
brochure about the Eureka
Springs 1922 bank robbery and famous male and female outlaws.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">100</container>
                     <unittitle>Ozark
eccentrics.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, brochure, and typed
and handwritten notes about
interesting Americans and Ozark eccentrics.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">101</container>
                     <unittitle>Ozark life. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, correspondence, and typed and
handwritten notes about returning
to the land.  Also includes two typescripts, "Christmas in the Ozarks" and "The Lure of the
Ozarks."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">102</container>
                     <unittitle>"Ozarks,
Where Are You?" Folder 1 of 2.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
and typed and handwritten notes
concerning the size of the Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">103</container>
                     <unittitle>"Ozarks, Where Are You?" Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence and a typescript for an article entitled
"Ozarks, Where Are
You?"</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">104</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 1 of 6. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence.  The folder is
subdivided
into the following subjects: A-L; M-Z; Correspondence.  Guide for Students; History and Origin;
Listing; Mountains.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">105</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 2 of 6.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract> Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: Guide for Students; History and
Origin.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">106</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 3 of 6. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes.  Included: Listing; Pronunciation;
Mountains; Waterways.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">107</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 4 of 6. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence.  Includes: Missouri
Barry
County; Missouri MacDonald County
(photocopy).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">108</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 5 of 6. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes.  Includes: Missouri MacDonald County
(original).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">109</container>
                     <unittitle>Place names.  Folder 6 of 6. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence.  Includes notes and
index
cards.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">110</container>
                     <unittitle>Politics. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings
about politics.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">111</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Biographical Material. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings dealing with the life
and work of Vance
Randolph.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">112</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Book Reviews.  Folder
1 of 4.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings and
correspondence dealing with reviews of
Vance Randolph's books.  Includes: Correspondence; <title>The Devil's Pretty
Daughter.</title>
                     </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">113</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Book Reviews.  Folder
2 of 4.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings and
correspondence dealing with reviews of
Vance Randolph's books.  Includes: <title>Down in the Holler</title>; <title>Hot
Springs and Hell</title>; Lists; <title>Ozark
Folksongs</title>.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">114</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Book reviews.  Folder
3 of 4.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings and
correspondence dealing with reviews of
Vance Randolph's books.  Includes: <title>Ozark Superstitions</title>; <title>Sticks in
the Knapsack</title>; <title>The Talking
Turtle</title>.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">115</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Book Reviews.  Folder
4 of 4.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings and
correspondence dealing with reviews of
Vance Randolph's books.  Includes: <title>The Talking Turtle</title>; <title>We
Always Lie to Strangers</title>; <title>Who
Blowed Up the Church
House?</title>
                     </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">116</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.  Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 1 of 8.  Photocopy A.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">117</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.  Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 2 of 8.  Original A.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains scrapbook pages with
mounted newspaper clippings, dealing
primarily with reviews of Vance Randolph's
books.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">118</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 3 of 8.  Photocopy B.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">119</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 4 of 8.  Original B.  </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains scrapbook pages with
mounted newspaper clippings, dealing
primarily with reviews of Vance Randolph's
books.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">120</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 5 of 8.  Photocopy C.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">121</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 6 of 8.  Original C. 
books.</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains scrapbook pages with mounted newspaper
clippings, dealing
primarily with reviews of Vance
Randolph's books.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">122</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.  Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 7 of 8.  Photocopy D.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">123</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.  Scrapbook pages. 
Folder 8 of 8.  Original D. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains scrapbook pages with
mounted newspaper clippings, dealing
primarily with reviews of Vance Randolph's
books.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">124</container>
                     <unittitle>Reading lists, annotated.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains annotated notebooks kept by Vance Randolph listing
books he read.  The folder is
subdivided into the following groups: 1/1/1916 - 9/?/1919; 5/25/1919 - 
11/29/1919.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">125</container>
                     <unittitle>Reading
lists, annotated.  Folder 2 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains annotated notebooks
kept by Vance Randolph listing
books he read.  The folder is subdivided into the following groups: 2/1/1920 - 12/30/1920;
1/1/1921 - 9/8/1921.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">126</container>
                     <unittitle>Religion.  Folder 1 of 3.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence dealing with religious
expression in the Ozarks.  Includes: Articles; bibliographic notes; sect name list.  Correspondence;
notes; sect name list; stories.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">127</container>
                     <unittitle>Religion.  Folder 2 of 3.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Includes:
Correspondence; stories.  Contains a two-page typescript entitled "Relative to
Religion."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">128</container>
                     <unittitle>Religion.  Folder 3 of 3.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Includes typed
and handwritten notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">129</container>
                     <unittitle>Will Rice.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings,
and typed and handwritten notes, dealing with the newspaper columnist Will
Rice.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">130</container>
                     <unittitle>Ted Richmond.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence dealing with writer and
"Wilderness
Librarian" James T. "Twilight Ted"
Richmond.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">131</container>
                     <unittitle>Riddles.  Folder 1 of 2.  
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed
and handwritten notes and
correspondence.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">132</container>
                     <unittitle>Riddles.  Folder 2 of 2.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed
and handwritten notes, newspaper clippings, and reprints of journal articles by Vance Randolph,
Archer Taylor, and Isabel Spradley, dealing with
riddles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">133</container>
                     <unittitle>Ritual planting.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, dealing with agricultural
superstitions.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">134</container>
                     <unittitle>Roaring River.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a nine-page
typescript entitled "Roaring River," which describes the Roaring River in
Missouri.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">135</container>
                     <unittitle>Spider Rowland.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and typed notes dealing with newspaper columnist and Arkansas gubernatorial
candidate
Hardy "Spider" Rowland.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">136</container>
                     <unittitle>"The Honorable" Salts (J.D. Salts). 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed notes  dealing with
author and presidential candidate
James D. "The Honorable" Salts.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">137</container>
                     <unittitle>Buck Saunders.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, dealing with gun collector Col. C. B. "Buck"
Saunders.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">138</container>
                     <unittitle>Shape notes (Modal tunes, gapped scales). 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes dealing with shape note
singing.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">139</container>
                     <unittitle>The Shibboleths.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and
handwritten notes and newspaper clippings dealing the proper pronunciation of the word
Arkansas.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">140</container>
                     <unittitle>Leonard Short.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and handwritten notes dealing with the outlaw Leonard
Short.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">141</container>
                     <unittitle>Short change.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, and handwritten notes dealing with con
artists.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">142</container>
                     <unittitle>Show business.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and
magazine clippings about the intersection of show business and the
Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">143</container>
                     <unittitle>Skipping games.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings, reprints of journal articles, handwritten and typed notes, and correspondence dealing
with jump rope rhymes and skipping
games.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">144</container>
                     <unittitle>"Some Call it Guts."
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a five page
typescript recounting a shooting incident that Vance Randolph was involved in as a young
man.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">145</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr: Correspondence.  Folder 1 of
3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence on the subject of Belle Starr:
3/24/1930 - 3/18/1937; 1/22/1939 - 3/3/1939; 3/10/1939 - 5/26/1939.</abstract>
                  </did>
                  <bioghist>
                     <p>Belle Starr was born on Feb. 3, 1848, in Medoc, Missouri, under the name Myra Belle Shirley, to Mr. and Mrs. John Shirley after the family moved from Virginia to Missouri about 1842.  She had two older brothers; one was a confederate solder.  Belle was described to be rather small, pretty, vivacious and of fiery temper.  She later became the head of her own gang of outlaws.  The name Belle Starr was derived from one of her husbands, Sam Starr, also an outlaw, who died before Belle died.  She was murdered by her own son, Ed Reed, when she beat him.  Her daughter Pearl, supposedly also a "bad woman," died in Arizona.  Her granddaughter showed a writer some poetry clippings and  pressed flowers collected by Belle.  According to a taped interview, Starr always got away, leaving men behind to be hung.  See Folders 145 through 154, 257, and 262 for more information about Belle Starr.</p>
                  </bioghist>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">146</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr: Correspondence.  Folder 2 of
3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence: 6/10/1939 - 10/(n.d.)/1939;
4/3/1940 - 4/25/1941; 5/17/1941 -
5/23/1941.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">147</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr: Correspondence.  Folder 3 of
3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence: 5/27/1941 - 7/2/1941; 7/7/1941 - 
3/23/1948; 5/6/1952 - 
9/3/1963.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">148</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 1 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, correspondence, and handwritten and typed notes.  The folder is subdivided
into the following subjects: Appearance; Charles Cummins; Ed Reed; Pearl Starr; Hugh Harp;
Riley Robertson.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">149</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 2 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains index
cards, and handwritten and typed notes.  The folder is subdivided into the following subjects:
Index cards; assorted notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">150</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 3 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, pamphlets, correspondence, and handwritten and typed notes.  The folder is
subdivided into the following subjects: Charles Shirley; Hands Up!; B. Babcock; Verses; Hell on
the Border; Raymond Hatfield Gardner; The True Story of Belle
Starr.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">151</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 4 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and handwritten and typed notes.  The folder is subdivided into the
following
subjects: Calamity Jane and the Lady Wildcats; The Story of Belle Starr; pictures; references;
selected bibliography.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">152</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 5 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper and magazine clippings, and handwritten and typed notes.  The folder is subdivided
into the following subjects: Interviews; assorted newspaper clippings; assorted magazine
articles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">153</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 6 of 7. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains a
numbered manuscript. </abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">154</container>
                     <unittitle>Belle Starr.  Folder 7 of 7.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the
Shackleford Manuscript.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">155</container>
                     <unittitle>Gabby Street.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings dealing with baseball player, manager, and radio commentator Charles E. "Gabby"
Street.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">156</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales.  Folder 1 of 3.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains articles,
manuscript, and newspaper clippings.  The folder is subdivided into the following subjects: "Aged
in the Woods"; Tall Tales from the Ozarks;
articles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">157</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales.  Folder 2 of 3.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence.  The folder is
subdivided
into the following subjects: Correspondence; notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">158</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales. 
Folder 3 of 3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes, and correspondence.  The folder is
subdivided
into the following subjects: Jokes; natural occurrences;
song.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">159</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales: Animals.  Folder 1 of 3. 
Contains typed and handwritten notes.</unittitle>
                     <abstract> Topics include: Bees, bugs, birds, game, fowl, cats, cows, and 
dogs.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">160</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales:
Animals.  Folder 2 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes and newspaper clippings. 
Includes: Fish, frogs, horses,
small mammals, squirrels, turtles.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">161</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall tales: Animals.  Folder 3 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings about animals and typed notes
about
people.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">162</container>
                     <unittitle>This
Writing Racket.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten notes,
dealing with ghost writing and
other aspects of the writing business.  Includes: Book ideas; writers
(miscellaneous).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">163</container>
                     <unittitle>This Writing Racket. 
Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and handwritten
notes.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>

                     <container type="folder">164</container>
                     <unittitle>"Titanic
Slim" Thompson. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings and handwritten notes dealing with the gambler Alvin Clarence "Titanic Slim" Thompson.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">165</container>
                     <unittitle>Travel and travelogues.  Folder 1
of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper and magazine clippings dealing with various
travel destinations and tourist
attractions.  Includes photocopies dated
1909-39.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">166</container>
                     <unittitle>Travel and
travelogues.  Folder 2 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Includes photocopies dated
1949-57.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">167</container>
                     <unittitle>Travel and
travelogues.  Folder 3 of 3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
originals.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">168</container>
                     <unittitle>Typescripts. 
Folder 1 of 4. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains student projects and a typescript of the
article "Folklore of the
Smackover Oil Field," including
photographs.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">169</container>
                     <unittitle>Typescripts.  Folder 2 of 4. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the
following typescripts of articles: "H.H. Dalhoff, 1/19/56"; "How to Tell an Ozark Hillbilly
Today"; "Folklore and Folkways of the Ozark Region"; "The Missouri
Ozarks."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">170</container>
                     <unittitle>Typescripts. 
Folder 3 of 4. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typescripts of the following articles:
"Ozark Superstitions"; "Racial
Elements and
Folklore."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">171</container>
                     <unittitle>Typescripts.  Folder 4 of 4. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
typescripts of the following articles: "Snap-Shots for Sportsmen"; "The Sport of Gigging
Suckers"; "Way Back in the
Hills."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">172</container>
                     <unittitle>Two
Gentlemen from Verona (Harry and Jim Browning). </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains
newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, correspondence, and pamphlets dealing with the wrestler Jim Browning and his
cousin Harry Browning, a
poet.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">173</container>
                     <unittitle>Jean Wallace.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper
clippings and an annotated photoprint dealing with Jean Wallace, "The Mystery Maid of Roaring
River."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">174</container>
                     <unittitle>The White
River Monster. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings dealing with a
legendary monster in the White
River of
Arkansas.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">175</container>
                     <unittitle>Wild Men
hermits. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings, and typed and
handwritten notes, dealing with hermits
and recluses.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">176</container>
                     <unittitle>Thomas
Williamson. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains typed and handwritten notes about the
novelist Thomas Williamson and his
time in the
Ozarks.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">177</container>
                     <unittitle>Witchcraft. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence, a copy of "A Witch Trial in Carroll
County," handwritten notes, and a
typescript of "The Hills are Full of
Witches."</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">178</container>
                     <unittitle>World War
I. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains four typed pages of notes dealing with Vance
Randolph's experiences during World
War
I.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">179</container>
                     <unittitle>Writers'
Project.  Folder 1 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains newspaper clippings and
correspondence dealing with the WPA Federal 
Writers' Project.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">180</container>
                     <unittitle>Writers'
Project.  Folder 2 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence 1936-37 about
the WPA Federal Writers'
Project.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Correspondence Files</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">181</container>
                     <unittitle>"A" Correspondence.
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains letters to
and/or from:<title>The Arkansas Gazette</title>; The American Legion; Russell Ames;
and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">182</container>
                     <unittitle>"B"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains letters to and/or from: H.M. Belden, University of
Missouri; Thomas Hart Benton;
Walter Blair, University of Chicago; Boston University; Benjamin
Botkin.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">183</container>
                     <unittitle>"B"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Carroll Bowen, University of
Chicago Press; Bertrand Bronson, University of
California; and others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">184</container>
                     <unittitle>"C"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Irene Carlisle; Cyril Clemens;
Dean Coffin Press; Columbia University; Jack Conroy; Josiah
Combs.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">185</container>
                     <unittitle>"C"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with
Henry Cowell; Sidney
Robertson Cowell; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">186</container>
                     <unittitle>"D"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. 

</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Clarence Decker; J. Frank Dobie;
Dover Publications; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">187</container>
                     <unittitle>"D"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Richard Dorson,
1952-67.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">188</container>
                     <unittitle>"E"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Albert Einstein;
Duncan Emrich; Robert Erwin; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">189</container>
                     <unittitle>"F"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Clifton Fadiman;
Orval Faubus; Charlie May Fletcher; Isabel France; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">190</container>
                     <unittitle>"G"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Henry Glassie;
Kenneth Goldstein; Rayna Green; Edith Greenburg; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">191</container>
                     <unittitle>"H"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Leonard Hall; Herbert Halpert;
Wayland Hand; A.M. Haswell;
Marion Hardgrove.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">192</container>
                     <unittitle>"H"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Lee Hays; Jack Henle, Vanguard
Press; Wayman
Hogue; Mary D. Hudgins; John
Huff.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">193</container>
                     <unittitle>"H"
Correspondence.  Folder 3 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Betty Hughes; Tom Hurley,
Channel 9 KETC; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">194</container>
                     <unittitle/>
                     <abstract>"J"
Correspondence.  Contains correspondence with Moritz Jagendorf; Katherine Jarrell; LeRoi
Jones; Louis Jones, New York State
Historical Association; Louis Webster Jones, University of
Kansas.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">195</container>
                     <unittitle>"K"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Helen Keller;
Reamer Keller; Alfred Knopf, the American Mercury; Sarah Gertrude
Knott; George Korson; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">196</container>
                     <unittitle>"L"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Rose Wilder
Lane; Ray Lawless; MacEdward Leach, the American Folklore Society;
Sam Leath; Walt Lemke, University of Arkansas; Lawrence Levin; Homer and Wilbur
Leveret.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">197</container>
                     <unittitle>"L"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with H.H.
Lewis; Alan Lomax; George Dewey Lorey; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">198</container>
                     <unittitle>"Mc"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with May Kennedy
McCord; Judith McCulloh; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">199</container>
                     <unittitle>"M"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Mrs. Mahnkey; James
Masterson; H.L. Mencken; George
Milburn.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">200</container>
                     <unittitle>"M"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Nellie Mills; Mirandy; Merlin P.
Mitchell; Ethel Moore;
Ruth Ann Musick; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">201</container>
                     <unittitle>"N"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with N.C. Nelson;
Marion Neville; Peter Nemo (pseudonym of Vance
Randolph).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">202</container>
                     <unittitle>"O"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains the Ozarks Folklore
Newsletter.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">203</container>
                     <unittitle>"O"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with
O'Bryant; University of
Oklahoma Press; Jim Owens Enterprises; Clay Anderson, of the Ozark Mountaineers; Arkansas
Folklore Society (originally the Ozark Folklore
Society).</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">204</container>
                     <unittitle>"P"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Russell Holman,
Paramount Pictures; Louise Pound, Department of English,
University of Nebraska; Gerry Parker; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">205</container>
                     <unittitle>"R"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 2. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with
Gould Randolph; John
Randolph (Sr. and Jr.); and others.  Also contains reviews for Richard Dorson's <title>American Folklore</title> and Kenneth Lynn's <title>Mark Twain and Southwestern Humor</title>.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">206</container>
                     <unittitle>"R"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 2. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Otto Ernest Rayburn, notes,
newspaper clippings, and an inscribed
copy of <title>Forty Years in the Ozarks</title>.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">207</container>
                     <unittitle>"S"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Carl Sandburg; Dore
Schary.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">208</container>
                     <unittitle>"S"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Howard Shapley; Floyd
Shoemaker; Rose
Spaulding.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">209</container>
                     <unittitle>"S"
Correspondence.  Folder 3 of 3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with
Harold Spivacke;
Isabel Spradley; Edward G. Stoy;
and others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">210</container>
                     <unittitle>"T"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Jean Thomas;
Shelby Thompson; Stith Thompson; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">211</container>
                     <unittitle>"U"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Lucile M.
Upton; Francis Lee
Utley.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">212</container>
                     <unittitle>"V"
Correspondence. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Vanguard Press;
John M.
Virden.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">213</container>
                     <unittitle>"W"
Correspondence.  Folder 1 of 3. </unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with
Leila Wade; Therese
Westermeier, Arkansas Folklore Society; John Turner
White.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">214</container>
                     <unittitle>"W"
Correspondence.  Folder 2 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Henry H.  Wiggins; Thames
Williamson; Charles
Morrow
Wilson.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">215</container>
                     <unittitle>"W" Correspondence.  Folder 3 of 3. 
</unittitle>
                     <abstract>Contains correspondence with Carl Withers; Ray Wood; and
others.</abstract>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Reprints of Journal Articles and
Reviews</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">216</container>
                     <unittitle>"Autograph
Albums in the Ozarks," by Vance Randolph and May Kennedy
McCord. </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">217</container>
                     <unittitle>"Bedtime
Stories from Missouri," by Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Western
Folklore</title> (January
1951).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">218</container>
                     <unittitle>"A Calendar of Kansas Butterflies,"
by
Vance Randolph, from <title>Entomological News</title> (March 1929).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">219</container>
                     <unittitle>"Children's
Rhymes from Missouri," by Ruth Ann Musick and Vance Randolph,
reprinted from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (October-December
1950).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">220</container>
                     <unittitle>"The
Collection of Folk Music in the Ozarks," by Vance Randolph and Frances
Emberson, reprinted from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (April-June
1947).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">221</container>
                     <unittitle>"Folksong Hunters in Missouri," by
Vance
Randolph and Ruth Ann Musick,
reprinted from <title>Midwest Folklore</title>
(1951).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">222</container>
                     <unittitle>"Further Studies of the Reliability of
the
Maze with Rats and Humans," by Vance
Randolph and Walter S. Hunter, reprinted from <title>Journal of Comparative Psychology</title> (August
1924).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">223</container>
                     <unittitle>"Jump Rope
Rhymes from Arkansas," by Vance Randolph, reprinted from
<title>Midwest Folklore</title>
(III:2)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">224</container>
                     <unittitle>"Nakedness in Ozark Folk Belief," by
Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Journal of
American Folklore</title> (October-December
1953).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">225</container>
                     <unittitle>"The Names of Ozark Fiddle Tunes," by
Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Midwest
Folklore</title> (IV:2).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">226</container>
                     <unittitle>New York
Times book reviews by Vance Randolph: <title>Tales From the Past, Some
Tall, Some True</title> (1960); <title>A Treasury to Draw Upon</title> (1960); <title>The Roots Go Deep</title> (1963).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">227</container>
                     <unittitle>"A Note on the Reliability of the
Maze as a
Method of Learning in the Angora
Goat," by Vance Randolph and Walter S. Hunter, reprinted from <title>Pedagogical Seminary and Journal of Genetic Psychology</title> (March
1926).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">228</container>
                     <unittitle>"On the Seasonal Migrations of
Dione vanillae in Kansas," by Vance Randolph,
reprinted from <title>Annals of the Entomological Society of America</title> (June 1927).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">229</container>
                     <unittitle>
                        <title>Ozark Ghost Stories: Gruesome and Humorous Tales of the Supernatural in the Backwoods of the South</title>, by Vance Randolph, Haldeman-Julius Publications
(1944).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">230</container>
                     <unittitle>"Ozark Mountain Party Games," by
Vance Randolph and Nancy Clemens,
reprinted from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (January-March
1933).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">231</container>
                     <unittitle>"Ozark Mountain Riddles," by Vance
Randolph and Isabel Spradley, reprinted
from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (January-March
1934).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">232</container>
                     <unittitle>"Ozark
Superstitions," by Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Journal of American
Folklore</title> (January-March
1933).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">233</container>
                     <unittitle>"Prehistoric Inhabitants of Crawford
County, Kansas," by Vernon C. Allison and
Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>The American Anthropologist</title> (July-September
1927).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">234</container>
                     <unittitle>Reviews of Frank Brown's The Frank
Brown Collection of North Carolina
Folklore, by Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (April-June 1953) and
<title>Mississippi Valley Historical Review</title> (June
1953).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">235</container>
                     <unittitle>Review of
John A. Lomax's Adventures of a Ballad Hunter, by Vance Randolph,
reprinted from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (January-March
1948).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">236</container>
                     <unittitle>"Riddles from Arkansas," by Vance
Randolph and Mary Celestia Parler, reprinted
from <title>Journal of American Folklore</title> (July-September
1954).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">237</container>
                     <unittitle>"Tales from the Ozarks," by Vance
Randolph, reprinted from <title>Western Folklore</title>
(January 1955).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">238</container>
                     <unittitle>"A Witch
Trial in Carroll County," by Vance Randolph, reprinted from <title>Arkansas Historical Quarterly</title> (Spring
1957).</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">239</container>
                     <unittitle>Other authors.  Contains journal
articles and reviews not authored in whole or in
part by Vance Randolph.  Includes the authors Mary Celestia Parler, B.B. Ashcom, J. Frank Dobie, and H.C.
Woodbridge.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Newspaper Clippings</unittitle>
                  <note>
                     <p>Note: Originals are contained in oversized Box 23 (Folder 240 to Folder 250) and in oversized Box 24 (Folder 251 to Folder 261); photocopies of these originals are located in Box 20.</p>
                  </note>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">240</container>
                     <unittitle>Map of
Kansas and Missouri, American Automobile Association,
1996.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">241</container>
                     <unittitle>Alcohol</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">242</container>
                     <unittitle>Character
sketches</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">243</container>
                     <unittitle>Dialect</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">244</container>
                     <unittitle>Folk belief
and superstition</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">245</container>
                     <unittitle>Guns and
gunplay</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">246</container>
                     <unittitle>Hidden
treasure (1 of 2)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">247</container>
                     <unittitle>Hidden
treasure (2 of 2)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">248</container>
                     <unittitle>Legend</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">249</container>
                     <unittitle>Literature</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">250</container>
                     <unittitle>Music (as
subject)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">251</container>
                     <unittitle>Place-names</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">252</container>
                     <unittitle>Politics</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">253</container>
                     <unittitle>Prehistoric Ozarks</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">254</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph, Vance.   Book reviews and articles authored by
him.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">255</container>
                     <unittitle>Randolph,
Vance (as subject)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">256</container>
                     <unittitle>Religion</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">257</container>
                     <unittitle>Starr,
Belle</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">258</container>
                     <unittitle>Tall
tales</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">259</container>
                     <unittitle>Miscellaneous: neighborliness, death,
sorghum making</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">260</container>
                     <unittitle>Weather</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="folder">261</container>
                     <unittitle>Writing:
Habits and methods of professional
writers</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle id="series2">SERIES II: SOUND RECORDINGS</unittitle>
               <note>
                  <p>Note: For song titles, see Archive of Folk Culture card catalog; photocopy in Folder 1c in this collection contains photocopies of catalog cards for 5236 A-5270 B3, an annotated manuscript of
catalog entries for 5271 A1-5425 B3, an annotated list of fiddle tunes played by Lon Jordan (5314-5317, 5319-5326, 5376-5379, 5401-5402, 5404-5405), and two lists of fiddle tunes played by Bill Bilyeu (6897 A1-6904 B3).</p>
               </note>
               <physloc>The originals and preservation masters are located in Motion
Picture, Broadcasting, and Recorded Sound (M/B/RS) at the Library of Congress. See Collection Concordance by Format.</physloc>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container label="AFS">5236-5425</container>
                  <unittitle>191 12-inch glass-based acetate records of original field recordings in the
Ozarks, 1941-42; 5270, 5320, 5341, 5425 missing; 5300 broken.  Duplicated on LWO 3493, reels
14-26.</unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container label="AFS">6397-6464</container>
                  <unittitle>4 16-inch, 45 12-inch, 2 10-inch, 5 8-inch glass and aluminum-based
records of "Dear Mr. President," January and February 1942.  6398 missing; 6400 n/g; 6463 badly
broken.  Duplicated on LWO 3493, reel
42.</unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container label="AFS">6897-6904</container>
                  <unittitle>8 12-inch glass-based acetate records of original field recordings in the
Ozarks, 1943; 6897 damaged; 6900 broken.  Duplicated on LWO 3493, reels
56-57.</unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">262</container>
                  <unittitle>"Some talk about Belle Starr."    Contains the 5-inch reel-to-reel original
master and a reference copy on a 60-minute audio cassette of an interview with Florence
Watts.</unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle id="series3">SERIES III: GRAPHIC IMAGES</unittitle>
               <note>
                  <p>Note: For a
complete description of images,
see Folder 1b: Log of Visual Images.</p>
               </note>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">263</container>
                  <unittitle>"Photos in
Folksong MS, Dec., 1944."   </unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains a list of photographs
selected for
inclusion in <title>Ozark Folksongs</title> (1946-50), including the name of the subject
and the place of the
photograph.  Also contains front-and-back album covers entitled "Photographs of
Singers."</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">264</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 1-10.
</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 12
photoprints identified by subject and place,
corresponding to the list in Folder
262.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">265</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs
11-23.</unittitle>
                  <abstract>  Contains 11
photoprints and 1 negative, identified by subject
and place, corresponding to the list in Folder
262.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">266</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 24-35.
</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 12
photoprints and 1 negative, identified by subject
and place, corresponding to the list in Folder
262.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">267</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 36-50.
</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 9
photoprints and 1 negative, identified by subject
and place, corresponding to the list in Folder
262.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">268</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 51-60.
</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 11
photoprints and 1 negative, identified by subject
and/or annotated.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">269</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 61-69.
.</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 11
photoprints, of which P61-64 are annotated and
P65-67 are identified by subject</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">270</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 70-83.
</unittitle>
                  <abstract>Contains 14
photoprints, all unidentified.</abstract>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="folder">271</container>
                  <unittitle>Photographs 84-96.
</unittitle>
