82 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1952 



continue linguistic training as a part of the Institute of Social Anthro- 

 pology program, and he left the staff to accept a position at the Uni- 

 versity of Oklahoma. 



Both Drs. Kelly and Wonderly represented the Smithsonian Insti- 

 tution at the Mexican Government's "Round Table" anthropological 

 conference in Jalapa, Veracruz, in August. 



Peru. — Ozzie Simmons continued his teaching activities at the In- 

 stitute de Estudios Etnologicos in Lima, and continued to direct 

 research in the mestizo village of Lunahuana in the Canete Valley 

 south of Lima. In December Mr. Simmons was detailed to the United 

 States Public Health Service and sent to Chile to participate in the 

 evaluation of II AA health projects in that country. This work con- 

 tinued until late January 1952. Mr. Simmons was brought to Wash- 

 ington in April 1952, following which he took leave to defend his 

 dissertation at Harvard University, where he was awarded his doc- 

 torate. He returned to Lima in May to conclude his study in the 

 Lunahuana Valley. 



EDITORIAL WORK AND PUBLICATIONS 



There were issued during the year one Annual Report, four Bulle- 

 tins, and one Publication of the Institute of Social Anthropology, as 

 listed below : 

 Sixty-eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1950-1951. 



ii + 40 pp. 1952. 

 Bulletin 146. Chippewa child life and its cultural background, by Sister M. Inea 



Hilger. xiv+204 pp., 31 pis., 1 fig. 1951. 

 Bulletin 147. Journal of an expedition to the Mauvaises Terres and the Upper 

 Missouri in 1850, by Thaddeus A. Culbertson. Edited by John Francis 

 McDermott. viii-f 164 pp., 2 maps. 1952. 

 Bulletin 148. Arapaho child life and its cultural background, by Sister M. Inea 



Hilger. xv+253 pp., 40 pis., 1 fig. 1952. 

 Bulletin 149. Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture. Edited by 

 William N. Fenton. v + 187 pp., 21 figs. 1951. 

 No. 1. Introduction : The concept of locality and the program of Iroquois 



research, by William N. Fenton. 

 No. 2. Concepts of land ownership among the Iroquois and their neighbors, 



by George S. Snyderman. 

 No. 3. Locality as a basic factor in the development of Iroquois social 



structure, by William N. Fenton. 

 No. 4. Some psychological determinants of culture change in an Iroquoian 



community, by Anthony F. 0. Wallace. 

 No. 5. The religion of Handsome Lake ; Its origin and development, by 



Merle H. Deardorff. 

 No. 6. Local diversity in Iroquois music and dance, by Gertrude P. Kurath. 

 No. 7. The Feast of the Dead, or Ghost Dance at Six Nations Reserve, 



Canada, by William N. Fenton and Gertrude P. Kurath. 

 No. 8. Iroquois women, then and now, by Martha Champion Handle. 

 Institute of Social Anthropology Publication No. 14. The Indian caste of Peru, 

 1795-1940. A population study based upon tax records and census reports, 

 by George Kubler. vi+71 pp., 2 pis., 1 fig., 20 maps. 1952. 



