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Date: | Wed, 14 May 2003 15:47:34 +0200 |
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Hello,
At 13. 05. 03, A. Oliver wrote:
>Thanks for all the replies. In the 1940s - early 1960s these seemed to be
>a "don't drive carelessly or while intoxicated" sort of thing in rural
>Washington state. They seemed to go out of "fashion" in the mid 1960s and
>I noticed them in Idaho in 1980 in profusion. In Wyoming in the 1990s one
>judge sentenced offenders to erect and maintain roadside crosses.
There is Zorica Rajkovic's book published 1988 about it, yet in Croatian
(summary: "Roadside memorial signs for traffic accident victims") and her
article in "Narodna umjetnost" ("Folk Art") vol. 30 from 1993: "Memorials
at places of death : examples from oral tradition", in English. All
searchable via OPAC in Zagreb, http://www.nsk.hr/opac-crolist/crolist.html
She is with Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Studies, [log in to unmask]
いいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいい
Jadran Kale
Muzej grada Sibenika, P.p.7, HR-22001 Sibenik
Croatia: 385 (0) 22 / 213 - 880, fax 213 - 355
@ http://zupanija.sibenik.museum
いいいSent with PINE 4.10 from CARNetいいい
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