Page 5 members. Most of these came into being just after the cash settle; ment, and reflects, I think, a call upon traditional rules of supplies of scarcity which in situation new organization to meet the Of particular and possible inequities of distribution threatened. the retails, additional 5 of interest is the subseouent formation was interest investment the last one in June 1957, in which restricted to the membership of a primary family with no suggestion This is the direction of change on Kili at of lineage association. present. No restriction of sales was noted, each retail being open to anyone on the island, but in practice the goods seemed to be consumed almost entirely by members of an investment group, and few managers were able to report a profit. We come back now to the house groups as residence units. Some are large, comprising several nuclear families, others are more limited. These are many instances where house groups located next to each other have close lineage or affinal ties for potential cooperation. But by no means all of this potential was realized in 1957, in fact, much less than I had observed earlier in 1949 on Kili and the year before that on Rongerik Atoll. The activities we have reviewed this moming involve contiguity of residence as an important basis for cooperation, in some importantly by lineage ties. The degree become important to Kilians is best seen into land holdings for the production of instances supplemented to which residence has in their division of Kili copra. In 1954 the Council under the leadership of Juda, elected magistrate and hereditary leader of the community, decided to allot land parcels to house groups on the basis of membership size and acreage planted to coconut trees by foreign management prior to world war II. Certain inequities of land-ownership by lineages on bikini were noted by the Council, where size of lineage membership had grown too large for inherited acreage and where other lineages were land rich. Agreement was reached by the Council on the new method which would equalize things. A date was chosen for making the allotment, and on that day all occupants of each house were vested with an equal interest in a certain parcel of land. The head of the house (in several instances, of a complex of such house groups) was named the alab, an old term on Bikini for headman status, and he was accorded the right to $1.00 as the alab share on every 100-pound sack of copra produced on that land. The remainder of the money from the sale, usually four times that amount was to be divided equally among the house occupants associated with the land, regardless of who produced the copra. Included in such land-owning groups, according to actual residence, were spouses and the children of males who ordinarily would not be included in lineage membership. In those houses (or cooperating groups of houses) where the lineage principle had contributed to the existing residence pattern, the lineage was represented in ownership. In many, if not most, houses however, the lineage principle was beclouded by one of bilateral relationship. Persons who subsequently married or for other reasons changed residence did not change their land association. New members by birth were arbitrariby assigned by the Council. The inheritance or land rights and the succession to alab-ship is confused. Some Kilians would try to follow the traditional matrilineal rules, but

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