Programs of Ukrainian Culture Festivals, predominantly in Edmonton, Calgary, Vegreville, Smoky Lake, Vancouver (Canada), but also in the USA which Chester and Luba Kuc presumably attended or organized.
Kuc, Chester and LubaPoster advertising for the Ukrainian Folk Art Exhibit at the National Museum of Man in Ottawa, Ontario. Event to take place April 1 to May 17, 1969.
This annotated bibliography includes sources discussing Ukrainian customs and holidays.
Hong, SoguStudio I, No experience necessary; featuring a dancing man in Ukrainian costume
Studio I, Participation in Choreography.
Diachronic study of three generations of the Greshcuk - Hladunewich family with regards to the knowledge of Ukrainian folk songs. A study to determine whether or not a knowlege of folksongs decreases in succeeding generations
Kostyshen, LauraAn investigation of Ukrainian folklore theory as presented in Ukrainian serial publications in the 20th century.
Bandera, Mark JaroslavPoster for the Ukrainian Folklore Centre. Describes many of the functions of the centre.
The collection consists of photos and video footage from the event of the re-naming and additional gift by Drs. Peter and Doris Kule held in the Timms Centre, University of Alberta on 6 September 2006. Recognizing the contribution Ukrainian folklore plays in the development and preservation of Ukrainian culture and heritage, the Kules made another substantial gift to the University of Alberta in September 2006. To honor the Kules’ vision to see the centre expand and grow as a leading entity, the centre was renamed the Peter and Doris Kule Centre for Ukrainian and Canadian Folklore at a ceremony attended by several dignitaries including Dr. Indira Samarasekera, UofA President, and Dr. Daniel Woolf, Dean of Arts.
With this gift, the Kule Centre Endowment and the Kule Fellowship Endowment was established. Funds from the interest generated from these endowments is used for research projects, scholarships, publications and teaching. The Centre has been able to expand beyond Ukrainian Folklore to include Canadian Folklore studies, filling a much needed resource void in Western Canada.
Kule Folklore CentreA story, told by Mary Achitura at 78 of his age.
Wasylyshen, AudreyThis series consists of records pertaining the first Ukrainian Folklore course offerings at the University of Albert, as well as the establishment of the Ukrainian Folklore master and PhD degrees. It also includes documents related to establishing several endowments in support of the Ukrainian Folklore Studies: the Huculak Chair Endowment, the Kule Chair Endowment, the Ukrainian Folklore Archives Endowment, the Ivan Franko Ukrainian Scholarship, and others.
A collection of folksongs sung by the Shumka Ukrainian Dancers before a performance in Calgary Nov. 1985. bib., quest.
Topolnisky, DonnaA comparison of the funeral traditions presented in Kotsiubynsky’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors and Klymasz’s Funerary rhetoric among Ukrainians in western Canada
Onufrichuk, AnnePoster advertising the 1968 Jubilee for the Ukrainian Greek-Orthodox Church of Canada Sobor and Conference in Saskatoon. Event to take place July 5 to 7. Text in Ukrainian and English.