Ukrainian mythology for professor B. Medwidsky includes storytelling by interviewees collected in fieldwork.
Part I is a collection of songs with music scores as recalled by Kateryna Aponiuk categorized as harvest songs, spring songs, carols and new year's songs , wedding songs. Part II is a record of Christmas customs as recalled by Wasyl Hoshko.
Correspondence between John Lahola and Michael Kovalskyi - of Calgary, brother of Yurii Kovalskyi.
General letters, Christmas card, concentration camp mentions.
- 4 original letters - 1980, 1985, date/unknown
- 2 photocopies of the date unknown letter (accompany the original)
The collection consists of a fieldwork project and final papers done by Markian Kowaliuk for the Ukrainian Folklore courses at the University of Alberta.
Kowaliuk, MarkianA critical analysis of the dissertation : Klymasz, Robert Bogdan. Ukrainian folklore in Canada; an immigrant complex in transition (Indiana Iniversity, 1971).
This collection contains an analysis of the structure of a poetic form "dumy" for mood, emphasis, and rhythm on the overall effect of the poem.
Radio, BorisCollection of proverbs (in type form and handwritten) from Nicholas Kostyniuk. He compiled this collection gradually. Nicholas wrote down many of the proverbs from his mother Anne who used them a lot at home. He finished working on the collection in late 1980s-early 1990s and then found his notes only in 2001. Bishop Yakymyshyn said they were valuable and needed to be kept. A Basilian seminarian Yuriy typed them up. He preferred standard literary language.
A copy of the local history book from the location in Ukraine where Elizabeth's great grandmother came is enclosed.
Kostyniuk, Nicholas