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Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, June 16, 1945
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, Florence Stoff to George Stoff, January 16-17, 1945, Letter 2
Letter, 8 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, Florence Stoff to George Stoff, Brooklyn, New York, December 16, 1943
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Fort Snelling, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 2, 1944
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Aspect Magazine vol. 8, issue 48, February, 1973
This issue's cover contains a misprinted date. It reads February 1972, but is referenced throughout the magazine as February 1973. The paperback stabled bound issue starts with a cover portraying artwork from Harland Ristau overlaying the purple background, the same color found on the back cover. The interpretive illustration of Lady Macbeth by Harland Ristau was the second cover in a row that Aspect used by Ristau. He continued his work by designing covers for the Lilliput Review.February 1973 was the last issue of Aspect's fourth year and sold for fifty cents. Hogan was co-editor at the time and provided high standards for editing and publishing. Hogan ends the magazine with a note from the editor, himself; by questioning if there will be another four years to the poetic work of art. Readers were to only come to the conclusion by the release of the next month's issue that it would indeed continue to publish. In fact the magazine lived on for another year after, which can be seen by the March 1973- February 1974 index that was a supplemental piece Hogan distributed. The Keene State College Archive includes some of the original Aspect magazines but unfortunately the March-April 1973 issue is not part of the collection. The May-June 1973 issue is though, and includes a coincidental editor change after the proceeding question from Hogan. The February 1973 issue was edited by Hogan and Ellen Link, where as in May-June 1973 Hogan, Ellen Schwartz, and Gail Braatelien combined as editors.This issue begins with a fiction short story by David Craft titled "The Chilled Wren." The fictional piece ends with an anonymous picture of a birdcage. Hogan placed this fiction short story as the first piece of writing in this issue and the non-fiction piece, written by himself, as second to last, allowing what happened in between to stay in a similar range of themes.The non-fiction political essay Hogan wrote depicting Nixon and the future budget was titled "The Nixon Budget." The piece is broken into three categories with the following sub headers: 1: An Attack On The Poor, 2: Revenue-Sharing: Panacea & Hoax, 3:The Spending Ceiling and The Military. Hogan described the 1974 budget concerns for decreased funding for the Office of Economic Opportunity (O.E.O.), subsidized housing, hospital construction funds, urban development, manpower programs, education, criminal justice, agriculture, and the environment. He also offered the answers from Nixon's administration officials that, "to defend the sweeping budget cuts has been to point to revenue-sharing as a substitute" (Hogan, 16). Revenue-sharing can leave poor cities with less money than they had to begin with. The third section suggests a tax increase would be necessary to improve the "quality of life in this country" (Hogan, 17). He concludes his work and lists his references at the end of the piece, but then adds a page break with corresponding stars to provide attention to a quote from India: Yesterday and Today, edited by Clark D. Moore and David Eldredge. The quote notes the Mauryan Dynasty and the great ruler, Asoka. According to India: Yesterday and Today, Asoka saw the harm his campaign had caused the country and converted to Buddhism to then rule under a "humanitarian Buddhist ethic" (20).The other poets, in between the fiction and non-fiction stories, provided poems that dealt with issues of death, bleeding, betrayal, and decaying. The poets included Angela Bristow, Sally S. Anderson, Esther M. Leiper, Lori Petri, L.S. Fallis, Walter Griffin, and Richard Latta.Richard Latta's poem, which was untitled, was the only poet in this edition to play around with formatting. His poem followed after "The Nixon Budget" by Hogan and was the last piece of work in the February 1973 issue. His style of writing replicates the work of Edgar Lee Masters from his poetry in the Spoon River Anthology. Masters used the names of people that have past, that he found etched on gravestones, to develop poems and a life for the departed. Latta's poem in this issue seems to use this approach but places his own name in the center of his poem broken up with white space and precedes it with a certain eulogy for his name.The issue concludes with an index for volumes 7 and 8, from March 1972-February 1973. The index is categorized under Poetry, Prose and Prose-Poems, Fiction, Non-fiction, Books, Artwork, Photography and then subcategorized by author, with title, page, and issue. Following the index and advertisement includes a Small Presses/ Received section listing a journal titled Cotyledon edited by Michael Mayer with a small description by Hogan. After this section locates Hogan's editorial note questioning four more years with his hope to continue to publish Aspect for a fifth year. -
Letter, Bob Stoff to George, Florence, and Jim Stoff, December 6, 1942
Letter, 8 Pages, Envelope -
The Effects of an Educational Brochure About Strength Training and Protein Intake on Strength and Frequency of Lifting David F. Putnam Science Center, Room 154
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Post card of Hurricane of 1938
Postcard photo taken outside of Student Union building at KSC after 1938 hurricane showing three women and a child standing amongst up-rooted trees. Labeled "Buster, Velma, Aunt Tressie, and Hazel" on the back. -
Post Card
Postcard depicting Eleanor Roosevelt -
'We Shall Overcome' from 'Birmingham Post-Herald'
Clipping about overcoming what happened. -
Birmingham Post-Herald Federal Registrars Sign 1144 Negroes
Newspaper clipping talking about a bill being signed -
Protestors Walking by Post Office
Protestors walking by outside the Post office -
Use of 3,4 Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) in the Treatment of Persons with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) L. P. Young Student Center, West Dining and Flag Room
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505 - Post Office, Setapak
Image: Photograph of Post Office, Setapak -
Post-Baccalaureate Special Education Certification Program (PB SPED) - Section I: Context
Section I - Context KSC Post-Baccalaureate Special Education Certification Program (PB SPED) -
Adela S. Baer Collection
Adela S. Baer received a Bachelor of Science Degree in Zoology from the University of Illinois at Urbana in 1953. After receiving a Ph.D. in Genetics from the University of California in 1962, she took a professorship at San Diego State University and served as the coordinator of graduate programs in Biology in 1969-1971 and 1981-1983. She also was chair of the Biology Department between 1975-1978 and in 1982. Baer received a Fullbright Scholarship to the University of Malaya in 1967-68 and had the opportunity to make a brief visit to Mah Meri at Pulau Carey, Jah Hut in Pahang and Temuan in Bukit Manchong, Selangor. During a year's sabbatical in 1971-72 she worked with the Hooper Foundation, a cooperative Malaysian-American medical research foundation, and lived in the Temuan village of Ulu Serendah, Selangor studying human genetics and related health problems of the Temuan. Baer continued to observe Orang Asli as a short-term visitor for a decade and then made contact and began working with Malaysian colleagues working on the same issues, research that has continued through today. She has also worked in East Malaysia, particularly in 1999-2000, and has provided comparative health information on Orang Asli vs. Sarawakian rural ethnic groups. Between 1997 and 2001 she was a co-coordinator (with Kirk Endicott of Dartmouth) of the Orang Asli Assistance Fund (which was under the umbrella of Cultural Survival of Cambridge MA). Baer visited Sarawak, Malaysia under a Fullbright scholarship in 2001. She belongs to the following associations: Sigma Xi, the American Society of Human Genetics, the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association and is a fellow of the Borneo Research Council. -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Lippstadt, Germany, July 2, 1945, Letter 2
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, June 7, 1945
Letter, 3 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, June 11, 1945
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, June 13, 1945
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, August 10, 1945, Letter 2
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, May 24, 1945
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Letter, Florence Stoff to George Stoff, June 6, 1944, Letter 2
Letter, 4 Pages, Envelope -
Post-Master's Certification Proposal; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Letter, George Stoff to Florence Stoff, Hamm, Germany, June 4, 1945
Letter, 4 pages, Envelope