. Annual report of the New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University and the Agricultural Experiment Station. New York State College of Agriculture; Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). The Life of Prtmitive Womax 1669 Paper.— Eskimo, Hopi, and Iroquois dolls. It woiild be interesting to have a group of small children pia\-ing with toys like those of Indian and Eskimo children. Paper.— Pipes and smoking among primitive men and women. STXTOY TOPICS FOR PROGRAM 14 The common hviman need of amusements; therefore, games of chance and d
. Annual report of the New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University and the Agricultural Experiment Station. New York State College of Agriculture; Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). The Life of Prtmitive Womax 1669 Paper.— Eskimo, Hopi, and Iroquois dolls. It woiild be interesting to have a group of small children pia\-ing with toys like those of Indian and Eskimo children. Paper.— Pipes and smoking among primitive men and women. STXTOY TOPICS FOR PROGRAM 14 The common hviman need of amusements; therefore, games of chance and dexterity for grown-ups, and toys for small children. Three classes of toys: 1. For attracting, soothing, and amusing infants: for example, rattles. 2. Those invented or appropriated by chil- dren for their own use; for example, bits of wood, rags, and the hke. idealized by imagination. 3. Those supplied by adults from religious, educational, or aesthetic motives: for example, doUs, miniature implements, and dishes. World-wide de\"elopment of games: 1. Games of chance. 2. Games of dexteritj^. Summaiy- of modem games those of primitive peoples: lacrosse and jackstones. Ij ^j i j derived from for 1 Fig. 49.— A corn husk doll, such as Iroquois children have always enjoyed. This was made by an Iroquois woman PROGR.\M 15 PRIMITR'E WOMAN AS PATROX OF RELIGION Roll call.— Each member should name an object or a force in nature that might be feared and worshipped by primitive woman. Paper.— Iroquois reUgious beliefs and the priestesses, or keepers of the faith. Discussion.— Are primitive people at all religious in the modem sense? Paper.— Religious dances and their meaning to primitive people. Sur- \4vals among the Hopi and the Iroquois. Parts of Roosevelt's article on this subject from The OtUlook, October i8, 1913, and of Morgan's League of the Ho-de-no-saii-nee, or Iroquois, should be read aloud. STUDY TOPICS FOR PROGRAM 15 Definition of creed and cult. Al
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