Page 3 cooking, am a reserve series of four wells sunk below ground inland from the village and supplying brackish water suitable for bathing and laundry. Almost every house had near it an oi] drum or other container which trapped rainwater from the house roof. Hach house was practically independent in this regard, therefore, and supplemented the local supply with water from the cisterns as needed. Only in extremely dry weather did the wells come importantly into a basis for sharing beyond the Kinship did not appear to be use. house group. Access to cistern or well when needed was measured by convenience in walking and carrying the water, The Kinship principle was more apparent in use of bathing facilities. Although most house groups had their ow bath hut attached to or located near the dwelling, and used only by the house occupants, there were five instances of sharing by two, or three, house groups. Where this sharing existed it depended on a sibling or other lineage tie. Copra driers had been constructed at 13 different locations in the village, and were equipped with fire hearths, sheltering roofs, and racks on which pieces of ripe coconut could be dried before sale to island traders and export for world consumption. Many of these had been built in the period 1953 to 1955 when the U. S. government initiated a community development project to assist the islanders in their adjustment to Kili. Kilians regarded them as private property associated with specifically named house groups. Regular use of the driers followed kinship lines in six instances, the link being that of adult siblings in a joint family or the membership of a single family extended two or three generations. However, no difficulty was reported in obtaining permission to use another's drier if the latter was not in use by the owner group; if justification was needed, one could usually find some kinship tie to refer to, the closeness of affiliation seemed unimportant. All cases of sharing bath facilities were identified with copra-drier share groups, although the more numerous and more inclusive. latter were slightly when it came to cooking hearths, I found that practically every house group cooked over an open hearth a short distance from the dwelling, when the weather was clear, and in this sense was autonomous. But in rainy weather, some shelter was required, a roofed cook hut, sometimes attached to the copra drier, sometimes not. I found the same number of cook huts as copra driers, and in all but two cases the complex of sharing was identical. In the exception, factors of convenience seemed to have brought adjacent house grwups into a slightly different alignment, but close kin ties still provided the basis of cooperation. Women, who did the cooking, reported a change from time to time in where they cooked if they wanted relief from the usual group or sought to gossip in a more advantageous place, but these changes were essentially brief breaks in routine. Men did the fishing, most of them using a small paddle canoe off the reef. I accounted for 12 such canoes, but 8 were at the time either disabled or lost at sea, and one was still being built.

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