Search

Optionally select the issue year and month then enter search terms for articles you are looking for. A list of matching articles grouped and sorted by the selected display settings appears below. Press the Select button to update the list.

More details on entering search terms HERE.

Select

Display

Found 7908 matches
LIMIT 25

  1. A New Venture (1)

    Jan 1944. p 1.
    First issue - masthead reads "The Federation Folk Dancer"
    View
  2. Greetings (2)

    Your Officers, Jan 1944. p 1.
    Happy New Year! We will carry on despite the wartime conditions
    View
  3. Festival News (3)

    Jan 1944. p 1.
    Next Federation Festival will be Jan. 23 1-6 pm at Oakland High School
    View
  4. Dance Research (4)

    Jan 1944. p 2.
    Plans for the Federation Research Committee
    View
  5. Federation Scrap-Book (5)

    Jan 1944. p 2.
    Plans to create a Federation Scrap-book; send duplicate material
    View
  6. Big Oaks From Little Acorns Grow (6)

    Feb 1944. p 1.
    Plans for the magazine; staff getting organized; plenty of room for others
    View
  7. National Folk Festival (7)

    Feb 1944. p 1.
    Scheduled for May 10-13, 1944 in Philadelphia
    View
  8. The Sevillanas (8)

    Madelynne Green, Feb 1944. p 2.
    Brief description
    View
  9. The February 12 Festival (9)

    Feb 1944. p 2.
    Workshop will be on Kolomijkas
    View
  10. Selected Corn of the Month (10)

    Feb 1944. p 2.
    Silly dance-related puns and jokes
    View
  11. The "Bet You Didn't Know" Dept. (11)

    Feb 1944. p 2.
    Facts about the waltz, the Scandinavian Polka, and the Hambo Polska
    View
  12. The March Festival (12)

    Mar 1944. p 1.
    Dances to be taught: Mietchi Putz Di and Troika
    View
  13. Folk Dancing - A Brief Psychological Analysis (13)

    Anonymous, Mar 1944. p 2.
    A brief review of the physical and psychological benefits of dance as it has existed from very ancient times.
    View
  14. Special Notes (14)

    Mar 1944. p 2.
    Send scrap-book materials to Clarise Dechant
    View
  15. Phoneticized Words to Korobushka (15)

    Mar 1944. p 2.
    Transliteration and translation
    View
  16. The Costumer: A Swedish Costume (16)

    Mar 1944. p 3.
    Girl's and Boy's costumes described
    View
  17. The Horah (17)

    Madelynne Green, Mar 1944. p 3.
    Her take on the history of the hora.
    View
  18. Club News (18)

    Mar 1944. p 4.
    Berkeley Folk Dancers has purchased 200 copies of Let's Dance and will forward them to BFD members. Changs has added square dances to their repertoire. A new group is forming at Castlemont High School and already has 40 members. S.F. State College has also started a new dance group. Stanford Folk Dancers and Sierra Club Dancers have petitioned to join the Folk Dance Federation.
    View
  19. Corn on Tap (19)

    Mar 1944. p 4.
    Silly dance-related puns and jokes
    View
  20. Bet You Didn't Know Dept. (20)

    Mar 1944. p 4.
    Interesting tidbits about dances - Moravian Saroca, Gavotte, Musette, etc.
    View
  21. The Fever Chart (21)

    Ed Kremers, Mar 1944. p 4.
    Please do dances as they are intended to be danced - no added claps, no added figures but okay to double an existing figure to fit a recording
    View
  22. The Dance Descriptions (22)

    Mar 1944. p 5.
    First two dance descriptions: Crested Hen and Little Man in a Fix - upcoming: Swedish Fancy Schottisch and Bleking.
    View
  23. Who's Whoey (23)

    Mar 1944. p 5.
    Ed Kremers will be stationed in Nevada (wartime duties), so Walter Grothe will take over his duties; Madelynne Green is attending the National Folk Festival in Philadelphia May 10-15.
    View
  24. The Swedish Polska (24)

    Mar 1944. p 6.
    As told to Lucille Czarnowski in Sweden by Andreas Lindblom
    View
  25. Contra Dances (25)

    Mar 1944. p 6.
    "Contra" takes its name from the fact dancing couples stand across from each other on the line; the Square-D's of Danville are doing contras (before contras had caught on)!
    View
of 317