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Weiser Papers, 1948 -1992 Finding Aid\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\nGeneral Information 3\n\nBiographical Sketch\n\n4\n\nScope and Content Note\n\n5\n\nSeries Description Container List\n\n6 7 - 11\n\nBibliography\n\n12\n\n2\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession No.: Size: Provenance: Restrictions: Location: 98-01 2.2614 cu. ft. Mr. Norman Weiser None. Range 5 Section 1 Shelf 6\n\nArchivist: Assistant: Date:\n\nProf. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Ms. Dane Guerrero June 2010\n\nRevised:\n\nNovember 2014\n\n3\n\n�BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH\nMarjorie Phillis Pearle was born in the Bronx, New York on February 2, 1934. She was one of two children born to Joseph Pearle (a certified public accountant and attorney) and Cecelia (Klein) Pearle, both of whom were Hungarian. Marjorie graduated from Hunter College High School on June 21, 1951, and subsequently received a Bachelor of Arts degree with a concentration in English and Anthropology from Hunter College on June 16, 1955. Marjorie’s academic success (Magna Cum Laude) enabled her to become a member of Phi Beta Kappa shortly after graduation. Marjorie continued her interest in Anthropology at Columbia University where she attended from 1955 to 1956, but failed to graduate from said university. On January 5, 1957, Marjorie married Herbert M. Katz which resulted in the births of son Daniel Seth and daughter Nina Judith. The marriage lasted 16 years but dissolved in divorce in 1973. After 3 years as a divorcee Marjorie met and married Norman Weiser (a radio producer and public relations manager) on November 26, 1976. Marjorie and Norman remained as a couple until Marjorie passed away in 1996. After leaving Columbia University in 1956 Marjorie accepted a post as an editorial trainee with The Rockefeller Foundation, Office of Publications, in New York City. Marjorie’s next assignment was with Funk and Wagnalls where she worked as an associate editor in the trade book department from 1957 to 1960. Between 1960 and 1978 Marjorie became a free-lance writer, but she continued to work as a development editor through 1990 with Beard Glasser Wolf (independent packager producing books on food and cookery), Prentice-Hall (Book Project Division), Cambridge Book Company (Simon & Shuster Educational Division), Chelsea House, and Worth Publishers. Marjorie was attentive, meticulous, productive, and excelled in completing publisher related assignments. While diligently working as a development editor with the aforementioned companies, Marjorie somehow managed to author and co-author a total of 16 books. Some of her key publications include Pegs to Hang Ideas On (1972), Shaped by Hands (1975), Ethnic America (1978), Womanlist (1981), and Snapshots (1984) to name a few. In a March 22, 1981, New York Times Book Review of Womanlist Marjorie explains the task of being an editor and writer: For me, the challenge of being an editor and writer lies in the opportunity to explore a variety of subject areas, and to present information to specific audiences. The joy of working both with ideas and people can be found in few other occupations – and here it produces a useful lasting product. Marjorie’s work as a development editor and writer did not deter her from being actively involved with the Alumni Association of Hunter College (1982 - 1990?), the Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association (1973 -1990?), and Temple Shaaray Tefilia in New York City (1974 - 1990?). Marjorie P.K. Weiser passed away in 1996 and left a legacy of an individual who loved her family and friends and who cherished life with passion.\n\n4\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\nThe Marjorie P.K. Weiser Papers primarily document her affiliation with the Hunter College High School (Class of 1951) and with Hunter College of the City of New York (Class of 1955). It also highlights her active and simultaneous participation with the Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association and with the Alumni Association of Hunter College. The files that pertain to Weiser’s years at Hunter College High School and her subsequent participation with the Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association include, among other things, notebooks on Biology and Hygiene (1948 -1951), committee minutes (1986 - 1992), reminiscences by select alums of their years at the high school, and publications that Weiser either wrote for or actually spearheaded; these would include Alumnotes (1979 -1996), An AlumNotes Extra (1987 - 1988), AlumNotes Reunion Extra (1990 - 1994), Hunter Hi-Lites (n.d.), That’s What’s Special (1990 - 1991), and What’s What (1951, 1980, 1987, 1990, 1992). The files that relate to Weiser’s undergraduate years at Hunter College include awards, report cards, research papers, and copies of specific Hunter College publications. Documents that are associated with the Alumni Association of Hunter College consist of correspondence, financial reports, minutes, etc. The Marjorie P.K. Weiser Papers provide researchers with an opportunity to comprehend the intricacies of student life by sifting through unique documents that were left by an extraordinary individual who attended and graduated from Hunter College High School and Hunter College during the first half of the 20th Century.\n\n5\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSERIES I - BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Series I consists of biographical entries in Contemporary Authors (1983) and in Something About the Author Facts and Pictures about Authors and Illustrators (1994). In addition there is a questionnaire from the University of California that Marjorie responded to in 1985. Lastly, there is a copy of a eulogy that was presented by Norman Weiser on May 21, 1996. SERIES II - HUNTER COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL Subseries 2.1 – Notebooks Subseries 2.2 – Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association Subseries 2.1 includes Marjorie’s Hunter College High School diploma, dated June 26, 1951, and several Biology and Hygiene notebooks spanning the years 1948 through 1951. In addition, there are materials regarding the Senior Show and Sing for 1951; there is also a Senior Proclamation dated April 1951. Series 2.2 documents Marjorie’s active involvement with the Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association. Of possible interest to researchers are the folders on the history of the school and reminiscences of former students Esther Hoffman Beller, Shirley Unger, and Edna Lewinson, which are recorded on cassette tapes. Also included are transcripts of interviews for Esther Hoffman Beller, Viola Herman Selling, and Edna Lewinson. Another interesting component of this subseries includes copies of Alumnotes (1979 - 1994), An Alum Extra (1987 - 1988), AlumNotes Reunion Extra (1990 - 1994), Hunter Hi-Lites (n.d.), That’s What’s Special (1990 - 1992), and What’s What (1951, 1980, 1987, 1990, 1992) which Marjorie helped to produce. SERIES III – HUNTER COLLEGE Subseries 3.1 Alumni Association of Hunter College Series III documents Marjorie’s tenure as an undergraduate student and her outstanding academic achievement at Hunter College by graduating Magna Cum Laude. Marjorie’s awards, report cards, and research papers provide a glimpse of an astute and disciplined individual who enjoyed her years at Hunter College and who was determined to succeed in life. Subseries 3.1 highlights Marjorie’s active involvement with the Alumni Association of Hunter College.\n\n6\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box 1 Folder 1 Contents Contemporary Authors A Bio-Bibliographical Guide to Current Writers in Fiction, General Nonfiction, Poetry, Journalism, Drama, Motion Pictures, Television, and Other Fields. Vol. 103. Edited by Frances C. Locher. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1983, p. 540 - 541. Something About the Author Facts and Pictures about Authors and Illustrators For Young People. Volume 33. Edited by Ann Commire. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1994, p.229. School of Education, Department of Counseling and Special Education, University of Southern California, Questionnaire, 1985. Margie: A Eulogy by Norman Weiser, May 21, 1996. SERIES II – HUNTER COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL Subseries 2.1 - Notebooks 1 2 Commencement Diploma, June 26, 1951 “Sara Maria Jones of Hunter High-Affectionately for Miss Louise M. Webster.” Lyric and Music by Charlotte Hochman, n.d. Senior Show, June 1951 Senior Proclamation, April 1951 The Sing, June 1951 3 4 5 6 7 Notebooks Biology Notes, December, 1948 Biology 7 - B, September, 1950 Biology 8 - A, February - June 1951 Biology Notebook, n.d. Hygiene, January 1951\n\n7\n\n�SERIES II – HUNTER COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL Subseries 2.2 – Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association Box 1 Folder 8 9 Contents By-Laws, n.d. Committee Minutes and Materials Executive Committee, 1989, 1991, 1992 Fund Raising Committee, 1988, 1989 Hall of Fame Awards, 1988 Long Range Planning Committee, 1987, 1988 Nominating Committee, 1988 Steering Committee, 1986, 1987 Correspondence, 1988 - 1994 Directory, 1993 Distinguished Alumnae/i History of Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Highlights, n.d. Before (the) Coming of (the) Alumnae/i Association, n.d. Heads of the (Hunter College High) School, n.d. Hunter College High School and its Alumnae Association: A Chronology, n.d. 14 15 16 2 1 2 Homecoming (Sing), Fall 1988 Membership Receipts Miscellaneous Materials Miscellaneous Materials Newspaper Articles and Clippings Oral History Cassette Tapes Esther Hoffman Beller (Class of 1911), October 20, 1984 Shirley Unger (Class of 1934), October 20, 1984 Esther Hoffman (Class of 1911), December 3, 1987 Edna Lewinson, February 16, 1988 Transcripts Esther Hoffman Beller, December 3, 1987 Viola Herman Selling, December 9, 1987 Edna Lewinson, February 16, 1988\n8\n\n10 11 12 13\n\n3\n\n4\n\n�SERIES II – HUNTER COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL Subseries 2.2 – Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association Box Folder Contents Photographs Hunter College High School Reunion May 16, 1982 1983 Esther Hoffman, Edna Lewinson, Viola Selling, Mildred Speiser Unidentified Alums Publications Alumnotes Fall 1979 - Fall 1984 Spring 1985 - Spring 1996 Correspondence April 1986 - September 1988 October 1988 - November 1990 Logos and Drafts Miscellaneous Materials Poetry Submissions, 1988, 1990 - 1992 Reminiscences, 1987 - 1991 An AlumNotes Extra, 1987 - 1988 AlumnNotes Reunion Extra, 1990 - 1994 Argus, 1989 Blue Muse: The Poetry of Doris I. Warren, 1987 Hunter Hi-Lites, n.d. That’s What’s Special Summer, 1990 Minutes and Revisions, 1990 Summer, 1991 Correspondence and Revisions, 1991 Edited Copy, 1991 Pictures of Paintings by Claudia Markovich, ca. 1992 Correspondence, March 1990, February 1991\n\n2\n\n5 6 7 8\n\n9 10 11 12 13 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 4 1\n\n9\n\n�SERIES II – HUNTER COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL Subseries 2.2 – Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association Box Folder Contents Publications What’s What June 15, 1951, March 1980, December 1987, February 28, 1990, April 27, 1992, May 15, 1992 Questionnaire Class of 1948, 1953, 1954, 1958, 1966, 1970, 1971 Reunions Class of 1950 Class of 1951 Class of 1952 Class of 1965 Class of 1984 Roster of Students, 1930 - 1940 Student Papers “The History of Sara Maria Jones,” by Marian A. Goldhamer, 1952 “The First Reunion: Best of All?” by Ted Louie, 1983\n\n4\n\n2\n\n3\n\n4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11\n\nSERIES III – HUNTER COLLEGE 4 12 Undergraduate Years of Marjorie Pearle Awards and Membership Dean’s List, Fall 1954, Spring 1955 Report Cards, June 1954, June 1955 Research Papers 13 “Ashanti: The People, Their Nation, Religion, Art and Folklore.” n.d. “Outline: Beginnings of Lexicography.” n.d. “The Blessing.” April 30, 1953 “Europe 1954.” September 1954 “Madam Butterfly: Story, Play and Opera.” n.d. Commencement Program, June 16, 1955 Hunter College Diploma, June 16, 1955\n\n14\n\n10\n\n�SERIES III – HUNTER COLLEGE Box 4 Folder 15 16 17 18 19 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 Report 7 “Early Identification of the Gifted and Talented: A Community Forum,” October 31, 1987 Contents Hunter College, 1934 - 1984 Publications The Alumni Spectator, March 1989, Winter 1990 At Hunter October 1986 - March 1988 Chapter News: Special Libraries Association, September 1985 Hunter Hall of Fame, 1987 - 1992 Hunter College Birthday Luncheon, April 27, 1985 The Hunter Magazine, 1987 - 1988 NewsHunter, October 1973 The Renaissance, Winter 1984 Report from the President, 1980 - 1985 Wordbath ‘92, ca. 1992\n\nSubseries 3.1 Alumni Association of Hunter College 5 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Birthday Celebration Seating List, April 27, 1991, May 2, 1992 Constitution and By-Laws, February 1988 Correspondence, November 1984 - November 1989 Financial Reports, 1982 - 1987 Hunter College Birthday Celebration Programs, 1985, 1988, 1990, 1991 Inauguration of Dr. Paul LeClerc, November 20, 1988 Memoranda, 1986, 1990 Minutes, May 1987 - February 1988 Reunions Class of 1955 Class of 1955 Milestone Reunion Questionnaire Roster Class of 1959 (Silver Anniversary) April 28, 1984\n\n11\n\n�BIBLIOGRAPHY\nColle, Vivienne, and Marjorie P. K. Weiser. Vivienne Colle’s Make-It-Yourself Boutique. New York: M. Evans; distributed in association with Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1967. Katz, Herbert M.; Weiser, Marjorie P. and Peter Burchard. Museum Adventures; an Introduction to Discovery. New York: Coward-McCann, 1969. Schenk, Brian and Marjorie P.K. Weiser. Snapshots: a Collection of Readings for Adults. New York: Cambridge, 1984. Weiser, Marjorie P. and Herbert M. Katz. Museums, U.S.A.: A History and Guide. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1965. Weiser, Majorie P.K. Ethnic America. New York: H.W. Wilson, 1978. ---. Fingerprint Owls and Other Fantasies. New York: M. Evans, distributed in association with Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1972. ---.Grace Kelly. New York: Coward-McCann, 1970. ---. Instant-effect Decorating; Hundreds of Easy, Inexpensive Ways to Make Your Home Exciting and Livable. New York: M. Evans; distributed in association with Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1972. ---. Shaped by Hands: Indian Art of North America. New York: Macmillan, 1975. Weiser, Majorie P.K. and Jean S. Arbeiter. Pegs to Hang Ideas On; A Book of Quotations. New York: M. Evans, 1973. ---. Womanlist: A Book of Lists By, About, of Interest To, and Celebrating Women. New York: Atheneum, 1981. Weiser, Marjorie P.K., Arbeiter, Jean S. and Taoko Hori. Uman Risuto. Japan, 1983. Weiser, Marjorie P.K. and Regina Avraham. Consumer Education: Student Videotext. New York Cambridge, 1985. ---. Rights and Citizenship: Student Videotext. New York: Cambridge, 1985. Weiser, Marjorie P.K.; Jackson, Robert, and Carolyn Moy. Boxes, Strings, and Things: Gifts You Can Make. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1975. Weiser, Marjorie P.K. and Edgar Allan Poe. Tales of Mystery and Terror. New York, N.Y.: Playmore Publishers under arrangement with I. Waldman & Sons, 1979.\n\n12\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10905"},["text","Weiser, Marjorie Paula K."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10906"},["text","Weiser is an alumna of both Hunter College High School and Hunter College. Gathered here is an assortment of documents that provide a glimpse of a graduate who was very active with both the Hunter College High School Alumnae/i Association and the Hunter College Alumni Association from 1974 until her passing in 1996."]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2487","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2714"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/e797780770c101e611aef2969e9f1016.pdf"],["authentication","2430094bc288b3aaf3b32e4f37f4e732"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10929"},["text","The Kate Simon Papers 1959-1989 Finding Aid\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\nGeneral Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Description Container List 3 4 5 6-7 8 - 16\n\n2\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession Number: Size: Location: Provenance: Restrictions: Archivist: Assistants: 96-01 6.3321 cu. ft. Range 5 Section 8 Shelves 46 - 48 Kate Simon None. Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Ms. Gretchen Opie Ms. Nicole Thomas June 1999 November 2014\n\nDate: Revised:\n\n3\n\n�BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH\nKate Simon was born Kaila Grubschmeidt in Warsaw, Poland on December 5, 1912. At the age of four, with her mother and younger brother, she immigrated to the United States where they joined her father who had already been there for more than two years. In 1917 the family settled in a Jewish immigrant neighborhood in the Bronx. Simon was raised in a traditional Jewish family with a father she has described as “tyrannical.” Her mother, unlike other women in the neighborhood, had once owned her own shop in Poland, and encouraged her daughter to get an education and to be financially independent before she married. After a difficult childhood, Simon left home at fifteen and supported herself with a variety of jobs. Eventually she was able to work her way through college, and in 1937 she graduated from Hunter College with a BA in English. Simon married twice. Her first husband, Dr. Stanley Goldman, died in 1942, and a marriage to publisher Bob Simon ended in divorce in 1960. Her only child, Alexandra, died in 1954 at the age of twenty. Simon began her writing career doing book reviews for several publications including The New Republic and The Nation. She began writing books after a publisher friend suggested she write a travel guide to New York City. The publisher’s idea had been to highlight the most chic and exclusive places in the city, but instead Simon wrote New York Places and Pleasures: An Uncommon Guidebook. Published in 1959 by Harper and Row, it vividly describes lesser known and unusual aspects of New York City from the intimate perspective of someone who had lived there nearly all her life. The book became a bestselling paperback, has been revised four times, and is now considered a classic among New York guidebooks. After the success of her first book, Simon was able to continue writing travel guides, living at her publisher’s expense for months or years at a time in the area she was exploring. Her successful and popular guides include Mexico: Places and Pleasures (1963), London: Places and Pleasures (1968), Kate Simon: Paris Places and Pleasures (1971), Rome: Places and Pleasures (1972), England’s Green and Pleasant Land (1974), Fifth Avenue: A Very Special History (1978), and Italy: The Places in Between (1984). Using the same vivid, descriptive prose she is known for, Simon also published three volumes of memoirs: Bronx Primitive: Portraits of a Childhood (1982), A Wider World: Portraits in Adolescence (1987), and Etchings in an Hourglass (1990). Simon has received several awards for her work. She won the National Book Critics Circle Nomination in 1982 and was named a Books-Across-The-Sea Ambassador of Honor in 1983. Her name was added to the Hunter Hall of Fame in 1983, and in 1989 she received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Hunter College. On February 5, 1990, when she was 77 years old, Kate Simon died from stomach cancer in her home in Manhattan. Gretchen Opie Nicole Thomas 4\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\nKate Simon was a popular and prolific writer, known for her humor, her honesty and her vivid descriptions of the places and people around her. She was a world traveler who related her varied experiences to her readers in her many guidebooks. Her writings about New York, including her memoirs, have established her as an expert on the city, and she continues to be cited as an authority. The Kate Simon Papers consists of documents dating from 1959 (the year Simon’s first book was published) to 1989 (the year she was diagnosed with stomach cancer). There are personal documents, notes and drafts of Simon’s writing, clippings of articles, reviews of her work, teaching materials, photographs from her travels, and slides that she used during her lectures. The bulk of the collection contains materials relating to Simon’s writings. There are travel logs, journals and handwritten notes which record her initial impressions of the places, people and events she would later write about. Similarly, the photographs in the collection capture the appearance of places described in her guidebooks. The most extensive part of the collection contains typed drafts of Simon’s well-known books and other writings. Simon generally gave the drafts working titles which don’t always correspond to the names of published chapters or section headings. In some cases there is nothing else to identify the pieces, and it can be difficult for the researcher to determine which drafts later became parts of books, which were preparatory writings, and which may have been published as separate articles or essays. It is clear, however, that the drafts included in the collection are fairly comprehensive. There are parts of Etchings in an Hourglass and A Wider View, a musical version of Bronx Primitive, and sections from her various travel guides. A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzaga of Mantua is particularly well represented with two extensive drafts. In several cases there are multiple drafts revealing Simon’s successive revisions. The collection as a whole thoroughly documents the various stages of Simon’s writing process, from her initial ideas to the published piece. The papers are as unique and idiosyncratic as Kate Simon herself, and provide researchers with a unique opportunity to better understand Simon’s life and work. Gretchen Opie Nicole Thomas\n\n5\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSeries I – Biographical Information Series I consists of articles about Kate Simon, awards she received, her marriage certificate, financial documents, royalty records, and handwritten travel logs. In addition, there are articles about Simon receiving an honorary doctorate from Hunter College. Folders are arranged alphabetically. Series II – Correspondence Series II consists of incoming and outgoing letters which are arranged chronologically from 1959 to 1989. Series III – Writings Subseries 3.1 Drafts Subseries 3.2 Research Notes Subseries 3.3 Articles Written by Kate Simon Subseries 3.4 Articles Written by Kate Simon Undated Subseries 3.5 Brochures and Essays Subseries 3.6 Miscellaneous Materials Subseries 3.7 Publisher Announcements of Kate Simon’s Books Subseries 3.1 consist of drafts of articles, essays, and book chapters. Many of the drafts contain corrections, inserts, deletions, and comments. Subseries 3.2 consists of handwritten research notes that Simon referred to while preparing several of her publications. Subseries 3.3 consists of articles written by Kate Simon which appeared in various newspapers and magazines. The articles are arranged by date of publication. Subseries 3.4 consists of articles written by Kate that are undated. The articles are arranged alphabetically by title. Subseries 3.5 includes a brochure on the Cooper Union Museum and an essay on writing. Subseries 3.6 consists of miscellaneous materials and Subseries 3.7 consists of publisher announcements of Bronx Primitive Portraits in a Childhood (1982), Italy The Places In Between (1971), and New York Places & Pleasures: an uncommon guidebook (1959). Series IV – Reviews of Kate Simon’s Works Series IV consists of reviews of Simon’s works that appeared in The Cooper Union Magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, Harper’s Magazine, Herald Tribune, Newsday, New York Magazine, The New York Times, Travel & Leisure, and Vogue Magazine. Reviews are arranged alphabetically by title of each work. Series V – Teaching Materials Series V consists of instructional materials that Simon used in the classes and seminars she taught. There are also documents relating to speeches, lectures and readings she participated in.\n\n6\n\n�Series VI – Photographs Series VI consists of black-and-white and color photographs and slides. Included are publicity shots of Simon as well as prints and slides of her numerous travel destinations. Many of the photographs are untitled.\n\n7\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – BIOGRAPHICAL AND PERSONAL INFORMATION Box 1 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8-9 10 11 1 Contents Articles, 1951 - 1989 Awards, 1982 - 1983, 1986, 1989 Biographical Materials Clippings, n.d. Financial Documents, 1986 - 1988 Marriage Certificate, November 27, 1946 Medical Documents, 1980 Royalty Statements, 1973 - 1978, 1980 - 1981, 1983, 1988 Tenant Association Papers, 1985 - 1989 Travel Logs, n.d. Honorary Doctorate from Hunter College including the Ceremonial Shawl, 1989\n\n2\n\nSERIES II – CORRESPONDENCE 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 Incoming 1949, 1956, 1958 - 1962 1963 - 1964, 1970 - 1971, 1973 - 1980, 1982 - 1985 1986 - 1989 n.d. Outgoing 1959 - 1961, 1970, 1972, 1975, 1978, 1983 - 1986, 1989 n.d.\n\nSERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts 4 1 2 3 Addresses Abigal Adams Smith, n.d. 42nd Street Library “5th Avenue,” n.d. Address delivered at (Hunter College) Commencement, Times Square, April 1989 8\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts Box 4 Folder 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Contents Alberti, Leon Batista (1404 - 1472) Albi and Monte Carlo, n.d. Aldo, n.d.* And Music, n.d. And Once Again, Hospital, n.d. Aristo, n.d. Bandello, n.d. Barcelona, 1979 Bazar Sabado, n.d. Betty and Golf Pro, n.d. Bill, n.d. Bob Simon, n.d. Box Material, n.d. Brinton, n.d. (The first 22 pages are missing) Brooklyn College, n.d. Bronx Primitive (a musical), n.d. Castiglione, n.d. Children, n.d. The City Dwellers, n.d. Cuidad Trujillo and Haiti, n.d. Collections, n.d. Culture Encounters (Caribbean), n.d. Culture Shock, n.d. Culture Shock/India, n.d. Culture Shock Overwhelming India, n.d. Dalmation Montage, n.d. Death My Friend & Companion, n.d. Eastward Ho, n.d. Eating, n.d. Encounters—Ruth, n.d. End, n.d. Enna, n.d. Episodes in the Life of a Step-Parent, n.d. Essays – Literature, n.d. Est ce que vous ete Juive?, n.d. Estes, n.d.\n\n5\n\n*(Different drafts of this work are titled Aldo, Aldo the Gold, Aldo the Shoe Shine Boy, Aldo with Italy, Italy Aldo, My Italian Life Aldo?, and My Life in Italy??? Aldo?) 9\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts Box 5 Folder 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Contents Etchings in an Hourglass, n.d. Ethel—Ruth, n.d. Fifth Avenue Christmas, n.d. Five –Spot Café, n.d. Following Separation, n.d. Forward, n.d. Girl, n.d. Golden Man—Cordoba, n.d. The Gonzaga Lords of Mantua, Selwyn Brinton, 1927 Greek Island, n.d. Greg and Laura, n.d. The Greenbelt, n.d. Haiti Revisited, March 18, 1975 Harvard, n.d. History, n.d. History—Europe and Italy, n.d. Hold for “Machismo”, n.d. Hollywood Romance, n.d. Hospital, n.d. Illness, Analysis, n.d. India, n.d. Introduction to New York Observed, n.d. Isabella, n.d. Ischia, n.d. Israel, n.d. Italy, n.d. Jaffa, n.d. Jerome, n.d. Jerry, n.d. Jerusalem, n.d. Jerusalem Byways, n.d. Jugoslavia, n.d. Julius II - Michelangelo Buonarotti, n.d. Layering Views of New York City, n.d. Lessons, n.d. Letter, n.d. Letter to My Nieces, n.d. Lexie Illness, n.d. The Little Virtues, n.d. 10\n\n6\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts Box 6 Folder 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15-19 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Contents Machiavelli, n.d. Machiavelli and Castiglione, n.d. Machiavelli’s “Prince,” n.d. Magics and Sciences, n.d. Mantegna, n.d. Mantua, n.d. Marriage, n.d. Marthe and Del, n.d. The Meeting, n.d. Melteme, n.d. Memoires of a Renaissance Pope, n.d. Mexico I: Places and Pleasures, n.d. Mexico II, n.d. Mexico Paris 7, n.d. Mexico-Tom, n.d. Minor Deities—Esther, n.d. Monreale, n.d. Mysteries ñ Puzzles Conundrums (Edgar Wind Pagan Mysteries), n.d. Ned, n.d. Not Quite Chance Encounters, n.d. Opening, n.d. Oxaxca, n.d. Painter, n.d. Pandora’s Box Dora and Erwin Panofsky, n.d. Pantheon Books, 1956 Paris, n.d. Paris II, n.d. Parks Renaissance, n.d. Pavanne for a Dead Princess, n.d. Peter and Norma, n.d. Plague, n.d. Poetry, n.d. Preface, n.d. A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzagas of Mantua p. 1 - 100 p. 82 - 129 p. 101 – 200 11\n\n7\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts Box 8 Folder 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Contents A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzagas of Mantua p. 130 - 200 p. 201 - 255 p. 201 - 300 p. 261 - 295 p. 301 – 381 Untitled Chapters Inserts Roads Not Taken, n.d. Rubens, n.d. Russian Lessons, n.d. Siena et al (Information), n.d. Simon for November, n.d. Small Loves, n.d. Small Renaissance Court, n.d. Songs without Words, n.d. The Smith from Lichterfeld, n.d. Spanish Civil War, n.d. Speech: 158th Commencement Address at Hunter College Splendor of Israel, n.d. Stella and Fanny, n.d. The Storekeeper, n.d. Sylvia, n.d. Theatre, n.d. Third Autobiography, n.d. Three Faces of Humanism Mantegna, n.d. Three Faces of Humanism Vittorino Ramboldini, n.d. Travel and Leisure Possibilities, n.d. Triangles, n.d. Triptych, n.d. Two Bronx Girls, n.d. Two Men, Two Women, A Phantom, n.d. Untitled Drafts, n.d. Vignettes, n.d. Visits to Israel, 1953 Who and Where Am I, n.d. A Wider World: Portraits in An Adolescence, n.d. Women, n.d. Words and Thought, n.d. 12\n\n9\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Drafts Box 9 Folder 32 Contents The Zocalo: The Immortal Place, n.d.\n\nSubseries 3.2 Research Notes 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Autobiography III Gonzaga Jerusalem Mexico Miscellaneous I Miscellaneous II New York Park Renaissance Smithsonian Institute Travel and Leisure\n\nSubseries 3.3 Articles Written By Kate Simon 11 1 Simon, Kate. “The New York Shopper A To Z: An Alphabet of Oddities.” Harper’s Bazzar (May 1959): 134 - 135, 154. ---. “The Three Harlems and What is Happening to Them.” Harper’s Magazine (March 1960): 62 - 65. ---. “Hongos Magicos/Mexico’s Hallucinogenic Mushrooms.” Cavalier (September 26, 1963): 26, 62-65. 2 ---. “Did the Italians Invent Opera – Or Vice Versa?” The New York Times, February 8, 1970, n.p. ---. “Encounter on a Train.” Travel & Leisure (February 1976): 14, 19 - 20. ---. “ Double Takes.” Travel & Leisure (December 1976): 6, 8. 3 ---. “A Modest Proposal.” Travel & Leisure (December 1976): 58. ---. “A Modern Canterbury Tale.” Travel & Leisure (January 1977): 68. ---. “The Spanish Girl.” Travel & Leisure (July 1977): 74. 13\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.3 Articles Written By Kate Simon Box 11 Folder 4 Contents Simon, Kate. “Monumental Mexico.” Travel & Leisure (May 1978): 22 - 25. ---. “Serendipitous Discoveries.” Travel & Leisure (July 1978): 78. ---. “The Magic Market.” Travel & Leisure (November 1978): 156 5 ---. “Mr. Lincoln’s Land.” Travel & Leisure (September 1978): n.p. ---. “Barcelona.” Travel & Leisure (December 1978): n.p. ---. “Sienna in the Sun.” Travel & Leisure (June 1979): 82 - 88. 6 ---. “Private Eye on New York.” Vogue Magazine (July 1980): 110, 120, 122. ---. “Saluting the Statue of Liberty.” Travel & Leisure (July 1984): 73 - 84. ---. “The Tower of London.” Travel & Leisure (June 1985): 123 - 126, 160. 7 ---. “Jerusalem.” Travel & Leisure (January 1986): 95 - 136. ---. “A Contempt for Danger.” The New York Times, November 16, 1986, n.p. ---.“Bringing New Life to the Parks.” The New York Times Magazine, April 26, 1987, pp. 22-25, 39. 8 ---. “The Cloisters: New Treasures and Pleasures.” The New York Times, May, 15, 1988: Section 2: 1, 45. ---. “Two Girls from the Bronx.” Newsday, December 12, 1988, 62. Subseries 3.4 Articles Written By Kate Simon Undated 11 9 Simon, Kate. “Central Park, Recycled.” Travel & Leisure, n.d. ---. “Cozumel.” (n.d.): 188. ---. “London For Sale.” (n.d.): 91-96. 10 ---. “Love Letter from Mexico.” Travel & Leisure, (n.d.): 88. 14\n\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.4 Articles Written By Kate Simon Undated Box 11 Folder 10 11 Contents Simon, Kate. “No Place Like Home: A Traveler Returns to New York.” New York Magazine (n.d.): 108 - 113 ---. “The Tourist As Writer.” Travel & Leisure (n.d.): 118 ---. “They Who Guard the Treasures” Travel & Leisure (n.d.): 122 ---. “Typical New Yorker?” Herald Tribune (n.d.): n.p. ---. “What About America? The New York Times, (n.d.) 12 ---. Published Excerpts (n.d.)\n\nSubseries 3.5 Brochures and Essays Written By Kate Simon 11 13 Simon, Kate. “The Cooper Union Museum as seen by Kate Simon” in New York Places & Pleasures, Meridian Books, Inc., 1959. Simon, Kate. “Jimmy and Death.” from Bronx Primitive in The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing by Rise B. Axelrod and Charles R. Cooper, New York: St. Martin’s Press, p. 18 - 23. Subseries 3.6 Miscellaneous Materials 11 14 Miscellaneous Materials\n\nSubseries 3.7 Publisher Announcements of Kate Simon’s Books 11 15 Bronx Primitive, 1982 Italy: The Places In Between, 1970 New York: Places and Pleasures: an uncommon guidebook, 1959\n\n15\n\n�SERIES IV – REVIEWS OF KATE SIMON’S WORKS Box 12 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Contents Bestsellers List Bronx Primitive, 1982 Bulletins, 1963 - 1964, 1974, 1982, 1988 - 1989 England’s Green and Pleasant Land, 1975 Fifth Avenue: a Very Social History, 1978 Italy: The Places In Between, 1970 London: Places and Pleasures, 1968 Mexico: Places and Pleasures, 1963 New York, 1963 New York: Places and Pleasures: an uncommon guidebook, 1959 Paris: Places and Pleasures, n.d. A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzaga of Mantua, 1988 Rome: Places and Pleasures, n.d. A Wider World: Portraits In An Adolescence, 1986\n\n13\n\nSERIES V – TEACHING MATERIALS 13 4 5 6 Class Materials Instructional Materials Lectures, Speeches and Readings\n\nSERIES VI – PHOTOGRAPHS 13 7 8 Candid and Portrait Photographs of Kate Simon, 1963 General Photographs Arts in New York, 1983 Literary Lions, 1989 The New York Times Book Review, 1986 Slides The New York Public Library, 42nd Street & 5th Avenue Byron Book, James Book, Library Torch, Crystal Palace and the Frick Collection Lecture: Slides from Abigail Adams Smith Unlabeled Transparencies of Countryside Unlabeled Photographs and Negatives 16\n\n14\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10927"},["text","Simon, Kate (1959--1989)"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10928"},["text","Simon is a Hunter alumna and member of the Hunter Hall of Fame. Simon was a writer who wrote about her travels to Europe and Latin America. The papers consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper clippings, book reviews, and photographs."]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2488","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2715"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/2da85083e8f32b8aeba9e0681d83990b.pdf"],["authentication","d6e22941b7c4b7233ed536b7aa63da1b"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10930"},["text","THE MURIEL FULLER PAPERS 19 14 - 19 9 1\r\n\r\nArchives and Special Collections\r\n\r\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\r\nGeneral Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Description Container List Addenda Bibliography 2 3-4 6 8-9 11-34 35-37 38\r\n\r\n1\r\n\r\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\r\nAccession Number: Size: Provenance: Location: Restrictions: Archivist: Date:\r\nRevised: 92-01\r\n\r\n15.8302 cu. ft. Muriel Fuller Range 5 Sections 6-7 Shelves 34-39 None. Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado March 2001\r\nNovember 2014\r\n\r\n2\r\n\r\n�BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH\r\nMuriel Fuller was born in Brooklyn Heights, New York on August 25, 1901, to Dr. David J. Fuller and Olive Beatrice Muir. Dr. Fuller had a dental practice and was a veteran of the Civil War (New Hampshire Volunteers). Olive Beatrice Muir was an author and the daughter of John Muir who founded a stock brokerage firm in New York in 1898. As a child Muriel developed a voracious appetite for reading which she attributed to her mother who had exposed her to a wide range of books and magazines. Olive’s familiarity with New York City theatre also whetted her daughter’s early passion for dramatic productions. Muriel attended many acclaimed performances like “The Wizard of Oz”, “The Red Mill”, and “Peter Pan” to name a few. The Fuller family left the friendly confines of Brooklyn Heights and came to settle in Hendersonville, North Carolina in 1909. Muriel graduated from Asheville High School in 1918, attended Temple University from 1918 - 1919, and received a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature from Wheaton College (Illinois) in 1923. In 1923, Muriel accepted a secretarial post in the Children’s Editorial Department of the Rand McNally & Company. Muriel was an astute employee and quickly learned how to interact with prospective authors, prepare jacket blurbs, and gained an understanding of bookmaking and editing. In 1926, Muriel left Rand McNally & Company and headed East to write a biography on her grandfather, John Muir. Her efforts came to fruition when the Knickerbocker Press published John Muir of Wall Street in 1927. While preparing the book she became the associate editor of Book Trails until 1929. In 1929, Muriel became the Children’s Book Editor and assistant editor at Robert M. McBride Company until 1934. Ever restless, Muriel returned to Rand McNally & Company in 1934 and assumed the post as the eastern representative of Child Life. Between the 1940's and 1950's, Muriel worked for the McCall Corporation, Vanguard Press, Greystone Press, Thomas Nelson & Sons, and Abelard Press. In 1960, Muriel became the Book Review Editor for the Christian Herald Magazine. Muriel was instrumental in finding publishers for Margaret Landon, Frank Yerby, Hortense Landru, Virginia Voight, Edward Ormondroyd, Frances Cavanah, and Mary Wallace. Many of the authors were so enamored by Muriel’s professionalism that 15 books were dedicated to her. Muriel exhibited a flair for writing in her senior year at Wheaton College. She commenced her professional career by submitting book reviews to the Chicago Daily News under the editorship of Harry Hansen, and later under Keith Preston, Robert Ballou and Howard Vincent O’Brien. When Mr. Hansen went to the New York World-Telegram Muriel continued to write reviews for him and, in his absence, wrote the First Reader column in the aforementioned newspaper. Muriel wrote her first children’s book, The Book of Dragons, in 1931. She cleverly selected and edited 20 dragon tales from around the world. This compilation was critically acclaimed and warmly received. In 1932, Muriel co-authored Marko: the King’s Son, Hero of the Serbs with Clarence Manning. Manning translated 40 Serbian ballads, while Muriel tailored the stories for an audience of older boys. Lady 3\r\n\r\n�Editor: Careers For Women In Publishing (1941) and The Runaway Shuttle Train (1946) were two additional works that were welcomed by the general public. Muriel authored and/or co-authored a total of twelve books which had a fair distribution. Muriel had also managed to write biographical sketches of authors and editors of children’s books. Between 1935 and 1962 Muriel wrote over 65 profiles for Publishers’ Weekly and Wilson Library Bulletin where she highlighted the works of outstanding writers like Dorothy Bryan, Virginia Fowler, Dorothy Waugh, Ursula Nordstrom, and Ruth A. Knight. Muriel’s ultimate creative venture was as an instructor. It was in this capacity that she enthusiastically shared her knowledge of writing, editing, and publishing. Muriel taught writing at Hunter College of The City University of New York, Hofstra University, The New School For Social Research, and Columbia University. She also conducted short story workshops at the University of New Hampshire, University of Kansas City, Texas State Teachers College, and Fordham University. Many of Muriel’s students later commented that her sessions were informative and highly inspirational. Muriel Fuller was two days short of her 95th birthday when she died of heart failure on August 23, 1996. She was a religious and multi-talented woman who touched the lives of many men, women, and children. It was her passion for life that enabled her to leave a creative mark on the world.\r\n\r\nReferences\r\n1. Muriel’s birth name was Olive Muiriel Fuller, but she later decided to shorten her name to Muriel Fuller. 2. The biographical sketch on Muriel Fuller was written by David Otis Fuller, Jr. and edited by Julio Luis Hernandez-Delgado.\r\n\r\n4\r\n\r\n�Muriel poses with a self-made dress at fourteen years old. April, 1915\r\n\r\n5\r\n\r\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\r\nThe Muriel Fuller Papers document the life of an extraordinary woman who excelled as an editor, writer, literary agent, and college instructor for more than 30 years. The papers reveal the creativity, ingenuity and productivity that emanated from a committed and multi-talented individual. In addition, the papers provide an insight into the field of children and young adult literatures and the intricacies involved in publishing in these disciplines. The papers consist of personal documents, articles, financial statements of publishers, contracts, books, diaries, bibles, correspondence, manuscripts, black & white and color photographs, newspaper clippings, flyers, scrapbooks, and sheet music. Correspondence comprises the bulk of the collection. Fuller exchanged many letters with family members, male associates, clients, and publishers. Many of her letters are addressed to clients and publishers, but the bulk of the correspondence pertain primarily to Caroline Crane, Harry Hansen, Ruth Adams Knight, Hortense Landru, Edward Ormondroyd, Virginia Voight, and Mary Wallace. Another major segment of the papers comprises Muriel’s publications. Series III contains articles, biographical sketches, book reviews, poetic verses, and short stories. Muriel’s writings are varied, informative, and reflect her interest in children and young adult literature. Articles like “Authors I have Known” (1963), “Some of My Best Friends are Books” (1964), and “Touring the World by Book” (1981) reveal a unique writing style that she developed during her illustrious career. The Muriel Fuller Papers may be of interest to patrons of children and young adult literature, prospective writers, and researchers seeking to learn about female writers and editors of the 20th Century.\r\n\r\n6\r\n\r\n�Muriel Fuller, ca. 1930 - 1940\r\n\r\n7\r\n\r\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\r\nSeries I – Biographical and Personal Information Series I documents the private life of Muriel Fuller. The autobiographical and biographical sketches, along with Fuller’s diaries, provide a personal touch to the life of this extraordinary individual. The folders are arranged alphabetically by category. Series II – Correspondence Series II consists of correspondence between Muriel Fuller and her mother, Olive Muir Barbour, siblings, friends, and male associates. This series is arranged alphabetically by surname and chronologically therein. Series III – Writings 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Articles Biographical Sketches Reviews Papers Published Books\r\n\r\nSubseries 3.1 consists of articles written by Fuller between the years 1934 and 1981. Subseries 3.2 consists of biographical sketches written by Fuller that appeared in Publisher’s Weekly (1935 -1962) and in Wilson Library Bulletin (1955 - 1960). Subseries 3.3 consists of reviews of The Book of Dragons (1931), Marko: The King’s Son, hero of the Serbs (1932) and Lady Editor: Careers for Women in Publishing (1941). Subseries 3.3 also consists of reviews written by Fuller that appeared in The Book World (1927-1930), The Chicago Daily News (1925 -1930), Child Life (1934 -1940), Christian Herald (1971 -1972), The Daily News (1923 -1926) and The New York World Telegram (1930 -1939). Subseries 3.4 consists of papers written by Olive Muir Barbour between 1936 and 1942, and poetic verses. Subseries 3.5 consists of correspondence related to The Book of Dragons, copies of published dragon tales, one copy of The Runaway Shuttle Train (1946) plus related correspondence and several short stories. The subseries are arranged alphabetically by category and chronologically therein. Series IV – Photographs Series IV consists of black & white and color photographs of Muriel, family members, Frances Cavanah, Marguerite Dickson, Harry Hansen, Hans Kreis, Raymond I. Lindquist, and Manly W. Wellman. In addition, there are a number of unidentified photographs and negatives. This series is arranged alphabetically by category and/or surname. Series V – Authors and Associates Fuller maintained files on associates and writers that she helped get published. Many of the files contain correspondence, biographical data, articles, book contracts, manuscripts, newspaper clippings, publications, royalty notes, and scrapbooks. This series is arranged alphabetically by surname. 8\r\n\r\n�Series VI – Writings By Other Authors Series VI consists of articles, books, papers, bibliographies, and newspaper clippings that Fuller accumulated during her long and distinguished career. Muriel’s interest in astrology and theatre are reflected in the articles and books she collected. This series is arranged alphabetically by author or title. Series VII – Sheet Music During her life Muriel Fuller attended many dramatic performances that were held in many cities throughout the United States. Muriel’s love for music and the theatre was reflected in the sheet music she acquired and preserved. Series VII is arranged alphabetically by title of song or name of dramatic performance. Addenda I Materials consisting of diaries (1948 - 1979), poetic verses, newspaper clippings, and the publications Young Wing Books (1929 - 1955), Junior Literary Guild (1955 - 1960) and Young Literary Guild (196l - 1976) were added to the Muriel Fuller Papers after the collection was processed. Addenda II Framed photographs and an assortment of books belonging to Muriel Fuller were discovered and subsequently added to the collection.\r\n\r\n9\r\n\r\n�Muriel Fuller, October 10, 1948\r\n\r\n10\r\n\r\n�CONTAINER LIST\r\nSERIES I – PERSONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box 1 Folder 1 Contents Articles about Olive Muriel Fuller, 1916, 1936, 1939 Association of Children’s Book Editors/Children’s Book Council Bylaws, ca. 1950 Luncheon, May - June, 1952, September, 1952 Minutes, 1945 - 1952 Autobiographical Information, n.d. Bibles, 1932, 1944 Biographical Information, 1942, 1958, 1963, 1996 Book Marks, n.d. Class Assignments, October 1925 - January 1926 Class Notes on Writing, 1961, 1965 Contract for More Junior Authors, December 20, 1955 Diaries 1918, 1920 1921 - 1922 1923 - 1924 1925 - 1926 1927 - 1928 1929 - 1930, 1935 1936, 1938 - 1939 1940 - 1942 1943, 1944 1945-1947 Unidentified Diary Notes, August 18, 1889 - November 14, 1998 Education Northwestern University Certificate of Credit, 1925 - 1926\r\n\r\n2\r\n\r\n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2\r\n\r\n3\r\n\r\n4\r\n\r\n3\r\n\r\n11\r\n\r\n�SERIES I – PERSONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box Folder Contents Education Wheaton College (Illinois) Transcript, November 2, 1931 Wheaton Alumni, July, 1950 Wheaton College Scholastic Honor Society Certificate, May 21, 1979 History, Constitution, Directory, 1983 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Employment Announcements, 1934, 1936, 1944, 1947, 1951 Columbia University, 1957 - 1961 The Fuller/Muir Family, 1914, 1926, 1929, 1942, 1946, 1963 Hunter College Book Fair, March 18, 1975 The Muriel Fuller Collection, 1974 - 1994 Lecture Notes, May 7, 1947 List of Books Authored by Muriel Fuller, August 17, 1959 Miniature Book by Aunt Laura, Orphan Willie, 1862 Religious Materials, n.d. Tea & Talk Series, 1971 - 1972, 1980\r\n\r\n4\r\n\r\n4\r\n\r\nSERIES II – CORRESPONDENCE 5 Fuller, Muriel Olive Incoming 1898, 1914 - 1944 1945 - 1959 1960 - 1973 1976 - 1992 Outgoing 1926 - 1958 1960 - 1967 1970 - 1980 Birthday Cards Holiday Cards Postcards Undated Letters\r\n\r\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11\r\n\r\n12\r\n\r\n�Muriel Fuller with nephew\r\n\r\n13\r\n\r\n�SERIES II – CORRESPONDENCE Box 6 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10-11 12 7 1 2 Contents Fuller, Muriel Olive Undated Letters Unidentified Letters Cherami, July, September 1926 John, 1978 - 1980 Liz, 1966, 1973 Maggie, 1963, 1967 - 1968 Barbour, Olive Muir Incoming, 1919, 1921 - 1922, 1926 - 1929, 1938, 1946 Letters to Muriel Fuller 1926, 1929, 1936, 1939 - 1947, 1953 Letters to Olive Muir Barbour 1919 - 1925 1926 - 1930 Undated Becker, May L. Incoming, 1946, 1947, 1952, 1954 Feather, Bill Incoming, 1950, 1961 - 1966, 1968 - 1970 Fisher, Dorothy Canfield Outgoing, 1934, 1963, 1979 Incoming, 1951, 1962 - 1963, 1965, 1969 Fuller, David Otis Incoming, 1963, 1965 - 1966, 1972, 1996 Fuller, Dukie Incoming, 1929, 1953, 1963\r\n\r\n3 4\r\n\r\n14\r\n\r\n�SERIES II – CORRESPONDENCE Box 7 Folder 5 Contents Fuller, Grace P. Outgoing, 1945, 1953, 1959, 1963 Incoming, 1962, 1964 Howard, H. Trumbull Outgoing May - September, 1920 November - December, 1920, 1922 January 1921 - July 1922 August 1922 - August 1923, 1935 Key, Alexander Outgoing February 1937 - May 2, 1943 May 3, 1943 - May 21, 1943 May 22, 1943 - June 13, 1943 June 14, 1943 - August 14, 1943, January 27, 1949 Kreis, Hans Outgoing, 1954, 1960, 1968 Lord, Anthony Outgoing, 1918 - 1922, 1939 Triggs, Fred E. Outgoing 1948 - 1950 1951 - 1952 1953 - 1955 1956 - 1958 1959 - 1971\r\n\r\n6 7 8 9\r\n\r\n10 11 12 13 8 1 2\r\n\r\n3 4 5 6 7\r\n\r\nSERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Articles 9 1 Fuller, Muriel. “Authors I have Known.” The Christian Herald (November, 1963). ---. “Books Tell the Story.” Christian Life (November, 1948): 35-39.\r\n\r\n15\r\n\r\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.1 Articles Box 9 Folder 1 Contents Fuller, Muriel. “Cats and a Lion.” The Horn Book Magazine (March-April, 1936): 91-93. ---. “Children’s Books.” The Guardian for Leaders of Camp Fire Girls (March, 1934): 2-3. ---. “The Deputy Controversy.” Christian Herald (June, 1964): n.p. ---. “Dorothy Bryan: Fine Books for Young People.” Poise, n.d: 15, 42. Graham, Alberta P. and Muriel Fuller. “Inaugural Firsts.” The American Mercury (February 1945): 169-173. Fuller, Muriel. “Youth Magazines in the United States.” The Hunt Breakfast. 110, 112. ---. “Literature, Children’s.” International Yearbook, 1996. ---. “Make It All Ring True, Says Child Fiction Editor.” New York Evening Post (February 23, 1934): n.p. ---. “Movie News.” Child Life (August 1946): 19, 36. ---. “The Shuttle and I.” Young Wings n.d.: 9, 18. ---. “Some of My Best Friends are Books.” Christian Herald (November, 1964): 98 -100. ---. “Emily P. Street.” The Bookwoman (Spring, 1947): 1. Fuller, Muriel. “Three Little Pigs.” Publishers’ Weekly (October 21, 1933): n.p. ---. “Touring the World by Book.” The Epsworth Herald (November 14, 1981): 7, 18.\r\n\r\n16\r\n\r\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.2 Biographical Sketches Box 9 Folder 2 Contents Duff, Annis Fayerweather, Margaret D. Patton, Frances Gray Robinson, Mabel Louise Sauer, Caroline Ware, Harriet 3 Publishers’ Weekly Allen, Grace Andrews, Siri Bartlett, Susan Blake, Eunice P. Blumenthal, George Bonino, Louise Bragdon, Lillian J. Brown, Paul Bryan, Dorothy Colby, Jean P. Cosgrave, Mary S. Creighton, Beatrice Cummings, Patricia Dalgliesh, Alice Dittman, Marion Dobbs, Rose Duff, Annis Durell, Ann Epstein, Constance P. Fish, Helen D. Forenbach, Rita Fowler, Virginia Friskey, Margaret Frye, Helene C. Gilman, Elizabeth L. Gunterman, Bertha L. Hall, William Hamilton, Elisabeth B. Harmon, Mary K. Harris, Laura Hoke, Helen 03/21/1936 04/24/1948 02/13/1961 07/04/1936 10/29/1949 10/28/1939 08/25/1945 06/28/1951 02/08/1936 10/28/1950 02/11/1957 04/24/1943 02/11/1957 07/30/1949 07/29/1950 10/22/1938 02/15/1950 07/02/1962 07/04/1960 08/31/1935 07/03/1961 03/14/1953 07/29/1957 10/26/1946 12/14/1935 10/19/1935 07/28/1951 09/28/1935 07/28/1958 04/18/1936 08/26/1944 17\r\n\r\n4\r\n\r\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.2 Biographical Sketches Box 9 Folder 4 5 Contents Publisher’s Weekly Ives, Vernon Jessup, Marie Jones, Helen L. Jones, Mary Alice Kingman, Lee Lesser, Margaret Meyer, Edith P. Morton, Elizabeth McElderry, Margaret Moore, Ann C. Nordstrom, Ursula Patee, Doris S. Pfeiffer, May Raymond, Louise Riley, Elizabeth Rotter, Helen Torrey, Alice Vance, Margaret Varner, Velma Waugh, Dorothy Miscellaneous Materials Wilson Library Bulletin Chastain, Madye L. Coleman, Lonnie Evatt, Harriet T. Faulkner, Nancy Gault, William C. Heden, Worth T. Keith, Harold Knight, Ruth A. Neilson, Frances F. Salverson, Laura G. Speare, Elizabeth G. Watkins, Shirley Wilson, Dorothy C. 04/1958 02/1958 n.d. 04/1956 06/1960 02/1957 06/1958 03/1955 10/1955 06/1957 04/1959 10/1958 n.d. 04/26/1947 10/23/1943 10/22/1955 03/26/1949 04/27/1946 08/08/1936 08/28/1948 04/28/1945 10/30/1948 07/28/1951 10/25/1947 08/29/1936 07/30/1956 10/17/1936 03/10/1951 10/27/1957 10/25/1952 10/24/1942 07/27/1959 03/29/1939\r\n\r\n6 7\r\n\r\n18\r\n\r\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.3 Reviews Box 9 Folder 8 Contents Reviews of Muriel Fuller’s Books The Book of Dragons (1931) Marko: The King’s Son, Hero of the Serbs (1932) Lady Editor: Careers for Women in Publishing (1941) Reviews written by Muriel Fuller The Daily News, 1923 - 1926 The Chicago Daily News, 1926 - 1930 The Book World, 1927 - 1930 The New York World-Telegram “The First Reader,” 1930 - 1935 The New York World-Telegram, 1931 - 1932 The New York World-Telegram “Book Marks for Today,” 1932, 1936 - 1938 The New York World-Telegram, 1933 - 1934 “Our Book Friends.” Child Life, 1934 - 1940 “Book Notes for Mothers.” Child Life, 1939 News of Books and Authors. E.P. Dutton & Co., 1939 - 1940 “Between the Lines.” Christian Herald, 1971 - 1972 Undated Reviews\r\n\r\n9 10 11 12 13 14 10 1 2 3 4 5 6\r\n\r\nSubseries 3.4 Papers 10 7 8 Early writings Papers\r\n\r\nBarbour, Olive Muir “God Has Promised,” December 1942 “God Is the Father of Whom” “The Good....The Better....The Best,” March 1936 “The Hairs That God Splits” “Of Whom Is God the Father?” July 1941\r\n\r\n9\r\n\r\nPoetic Verses\r\n\r\n19\r\n\r\n�SERIES III – WRITINGS Subseries 3.5 Published Books Box 10 Folder 10 11-12 13 11 1 Contents The Book of Dragons (1931) Correspondence, 1928 - 1932, 1945, 1966, 1980 Dragon Tales Lady Editor: Careers for Women in Publishing (1941) Correspondence, 1940 - 1942 Random Rimes The Runaway Shuttle Train (1946) Correspondence 1941 - 1953 1954 - 1958, 1963 Preview Copy Scrapbook Scrapbook Miscellaneous Materials Short Stories “Burning Leaves” “The Lost Shuttle Train” “Stephen Foster, Who Sang America”\r\n\r\n2 3 4 5 6 7 8\r\n\r\nSERIES IV – PHOTOGRAPHS 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 9 10 Photograph Album (digitized) Cavanah, Frances Dickson, Marguerite Fuller, Muriel Hansen, Harry Key, Alexander Lindquist, Raymond I. Wellman, Manly W. Assorted Photographs Unidentified Photographs Unidentified Negatives\r\n\r\n20\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box 13 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 Contents Burbeck, Gloria Outgoing Letters, 1959 - 1962 Burnett, Constance Buel Outgoing Letters, 1957 - 1969 Incoming Letters, 1952 - 1965 … “Horse Fair: The Story of Rosa Bonheur.” (draft), n.d. Butler, Edgar A. Outgoing Letters, 1955, 1981 Caryl, Jean Outgoing Letters, 1977 - 1979 Incoming Letters, 1975 - 1981 Cavanah, Frances Outgoing Letters, 1965 - 1973 Incoming Letters, 1957 - 1973 Coray, Henry W. Outgoing Letters, 1961, 1974 - 1975, 1981 - 1982 Incoming Letters, 1974 - 1982 Crane, Caroline Outgoing Letters 1968 - 1972 1973 - 1983 Incoming Letters 1970 - 1978 1976 - 1977 Dickson, Marguerite Outgoing Letters, 1950 - 1951 January - June, 1952 July - December 1952 1953 Incoming Letters, 1950 - 1952\r\n\r\n6\r\n\r\n7 8\r\n\r\n9 10 11 12 13 14 1 2 3 4\r\n\r\n21\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box 14 Folder 5 6 7 8 9 10 Contents Dickson, Marguerite Incoming Letters, 1953 Dobler, Lavinia Outgoing Letters, 1956, 1958 - 1959, 1974 Donahey, Mary D. and William Donahey Outgoing Letters, 1959 - 1969 Evans, Howell G. Outgoing Letters, 1946 - 1963 Ferris, Helen Fimognari, Eleanor Outgoing Letters, 1963, 1975, 1979 Incoming Letters, 1963 - 1968 Griffin, Gillett G. Outgoing Letters, 1952 - 1958 Incoming Letters, 1952 - 1953 Hansen, Harry Articles by Harry Hansen Biographical Information Outgoing Letters 1923 - 1929 1930 - 1932 1933 - 1937 1938 - 1940 1941 - 1943 1944 - 1948 Undated … Three Reviews. National Broadcasting Company, The Woman’s Radio Review, n.d. Scrapbook\r\n\r\n11 12 13 14 15 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 16 1-2\r\n\r\n22\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box Folder Contents Hill, Donna Outgoing Letters 1967 - 1976 1972 - 1981 Incoming Letters 1977 - 1979 1980 - 1981 Horne, Ann Incoming Letters, 1939 - 1944 Keeler, Katherine Incoming Letters, 1943 - 1946, 1950 - 1953 Key, Alexander Scrapbook, n.d. Knight, Ruth Adams Incoming Letters, 1962 - 1967 Outgoing Letters, 1959 - 1967 Miscellaneous Materials …“Top of the Mountain,” Classmate, May 9, 1954 …“Luck of the Irish,” Boys Today, November 4, 1951 Kossen, Mary Outgoing Letters, 1969 - 1975 Landru, Buck. The Fairbanks Dog Races, 1948 Landru, Hortense Outgoing Letters, 1950 - 1956, 1962 - 1982 Incoming Letters, 1951 - 1960, 1979 - 1980 Le Clair, Dorinda B. Incoming Letters, 1975 - 1978 Outgoing Letters, 1976 - 1978\r\n\r\n16\r\n\r\n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11\r\n\r\n17\r\n\r\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8\r\n\r\n23\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box Folder Contents Lindquist, Ray & Linda Outgoing Letters 1947, 1959 - 1968 1970 - 1975 Incoming Letters, 1964 - 1974 … By-Products. By-Products.. By-Products…Trumansburg, N.Y.: A Crossing Press, 1972. Lund, Florence A. Incoming Letters, 1949 - 1965, 1975 McConnell, Adelene Incoming Letters, 1968 - 1970, 1975 MacCraig, Hugh Incoming Letters, 1943, 1956 - 1958 … “Hearts Aflame.” (draft), circa 1959 … “My Private Ghost Story.” (draft), circa 1958 … “When Woodrow Wilson Laughed.” (draft), circa 1956 2 3 4 5 6 7 Miscellaneous Materials Manning, Clarence A. Outgoing Letters, 1931 - 1941 Martin, Terry McNally III, Andrew Outgoing Letters, 1948, 1950, 1954 Mitchel, Ruth Mary Incoming Letters, 1965 - 1969 Neilson, Frances F. Ormondroyd, Edward Incoming Letters 1953 - 1956 1957 - 1961 1962 - 1964 24\r\n\r\n17\r\n\r\n9 10 11 12\r\n\r\n13 14 18 1\r\n\r\n8 9 10\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box Folder Contents Ormondroyd, Edward Incoming Letters 1965 - 1966 1967 - 1970 1971 - 1980 Outgoing Letters 1953 - 1969 1970 - 1973 … “David and the Phoenix: A One Act Play in Eight Scenes.” (draft) Pepper, Benjamin & Morton Incoming Letters, 1959 - 1966 Outgoing Letters, 1966 - 1971 Preston, Keith Outgoing Letters, 1927, 1966 Rittenhouse, Mignon Incoming Letters, 1955 - 1965 Outgoing Letters, 1955 - 1959 Ship, Cameron Incoming Letters, February - March 1951 Outgoing Letters, 1937 - 1951 Smith, Wilbur Outgoing Letters, 1953 Smith, William W. Outgoing Letters, 1941 Stuart, Jesse Outgoing Letters, 1954 - 1964 Turngren, Annette Outgoing Letters, 1953 - 1968, 1977 - 1980 Incoming Letters, 1954 - 1980 Memorandum of Agreements, 1954 - 1969, 1981 25\r\n\r\n18 19\r\n\r\n11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7\r\n\r\n8 9 10\r\n\r\n11 12\r\n\r\n20\r\n\r\n1 2 3\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box 20 Folder 4 Contents Vetter, Marjorie Outgoing Letters, 1954 - 1966 Voight, Virginia Incoming Letters 1955, 1964 - 1969 1980 - 1981 Outgoing Letters 1942, 1961 - 1979 1980 - 1982 Miscellaneous materials Wallace, Mary Incoming Letters 1964 1965 1966 1967 - 1968 1969 - 1970, 1978 - 1979 1980 1981 … “Brendan’s Birthday Party.” Woman’s Day (March, 1965): 62, 100, 103 - 104. … “Brendan’s Birthday Party” (drafts) … “Mr. Bonaventura’s Friends.” The Sign (September, 1966): 44 - 48. …“The Grand Dream” from Blue Meadow. William & Morrow, 1975, p. 71-72, 154, 156, 158 - 159, 161, 163 - 164. …“ The Man on the Corner” (n.p.): n.d. … “Reason for Gladness” (draft) … “The Visit.” The Sign (June, 1966): 36 - 39. 10 22 1 Miscellaneous Materials Wallace, May N. The Ghost of Dibble Hollow, n.d.\r\n\r\n5 6 7 8 9\r\n\r\n21\r\n\r\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9\r\n\r\n26\r\n\r\n�SERIES V – AUTHORS AND ASSOCIATES Box 22 Folder 1 2 Contents Weidinger, A.R. Von … “Aller Seelen” (draft), n.d. … “The Black Madonna” (draft), n.d. … “Portrait of a Nun” (draft), circa 1957. Wellman, Manly W. Outgoing Letters, 1948 - 1982 Incoming Letters, 1981 - 1983 Miscellaneous Materials\r\n\r\n3 4\r\n\r\nSERIES VI – WRITINGS BY OTHER AUTHORS 23 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Articles on the Astrological Sign of Pluto Astrological Charts The Astrological Review, September 1933 - August 1941 Baum, Julie. Pluto: The Planet of our Time and Pluto in its Aspects. A lecture given at the AFA Convention in Washington, D.C., 1966. Bibliography of Children and Young Adult Titles Books sponsored by Olive Muriel Fuller Brunhubner, Fritz. “Pluto.” Paper translated by Julie Baum for Members of the American Federation of Scientific Astrologers, circa 1934. ---. “Pluto in the Sign Leo.” Paper translated by Elizabeth Friedel, 1969. Bullard, Nadine. “Pluto -The Liberator from Bondage.” Paper Tanslated by Elizabeth Friedel, 1969. Children’s Writers College Songs Connell, Lenora. “Pluto - Planet of Cooperation.” A Talk given at the 1955 AFA Convention, 1956. 27\r\n\r\n�SERIES VI – WRITINGS BY OTHER AUTHORS Box 23 Folder 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 24 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Contents Gunn, Bill. “Johnnas: A Play in One Act,” n.d. (draft) Heacock, Edna K. “The House Positions of Pluto.” Paper translated by Elizabeth Friedel, 1970. Imprint: Oregon, Spring 1974, Fall 1975, Spring-Fall 1977. Jackson, Helen H. “A Christmas Tree for Cats.” (draft). Kimmel, Eleonora. “Pluto, Planet of Force and Destiny.” Paper, 1971. Kozminsky, Isidore. Practical Application of the Zodiacal Symbols. N.p.,1949 Krenbiel, H.E. ed. Famous Songs: Standard Songs by the Best Composers. New York: The John Church Company, n.d. Lothar, Minda “Sarah.” 1959 (draft). Lothar, Minda. “A Rage of Joy.” n.d. (draft) Luntz, Charles E. “The New Planets: Their Ruler Ships and Exaltation Signs.” Astrological Roundtable of St. Louis, 1944. Luxon, Leonora K. “Pluto as a Ruler of Scorpio.” A lecture given at the 1965 AFA Convention in Boston, 1965. Marriage Handbook, n.d.. McGaffery, Ellen. Mundane Astrology. Materials condensed from stenotype notes taken at various lectures, lessons, and discussion groups, n.d. Megis, Cornelia. “The Art of Writing.” September 1950 - January 1951. Morgan, Jane. “Lee De Forest: The Boy Inventor Who Changed the World.” circa 1989 (draft) Myers, Frederick W.H. “Saint Paul,” n.d. (draft) Newspaper Articles and Clippings Oliver, Ruth H. “Pluto.” An address delivered at the 1958 AFA Convention, 1958. 28\r\n\r\n�SERIES VI – WRITINGS BY OTHER AUTHORS Box 24 Folder 10 11 25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 26 1 2-3 Contents PARM. Pluto: The Planetary Picture as Compared with Neptune. Preface to the Second Edition, n.d. Pearce, Alfred J. An Abridged edition of the Textbook of Astrology. 2nd ed., January 1911 Pryor, Olive Adele. “Pluto-Cardinal or Angular.” Paper, n.d. … “Thirty-Five Years of Pluto.” A lecture given at the 1964 AFA Convention in Boston, 1964. Simmonite, W.J. Complete Arcana Astral Philosophy of the Celestial Philosopher. N.p., c. 1890. Story Parade: A Magazine for Boys and Girls, November 1951. Smith, B.H. and Reginald de Koven. Bob Roy: a Romantic Opera. New York: G. Schirmer, 1894. Young Wings, 1929, 1946. St. Nicholas. May 1915, Stops: A Handbook For Those Who Know Their Punctuation and for Those Who Aren’t Sure. Middlebury College Press, 1940 Thorp, Caroline L. “The Wheels of Heaven.” (draft) Weston, L.H. “Pluto in Nativities,” n.d. Miscellaneous Materials\r\n\r\nSERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC 27 Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life All Were There Always Anchored A Banjo Bars of Gold Because 29\r\n\r\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 27 Folder Contents Beautiful Ohio The Bells of St. Mary’s Blue Bell The Broad Highway By the Way Bye Lo Callest Thou Thus Oh Master The Camel and the Butterfly Candle in the Window Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man Can’t Yo’ Heah Me Callin’ Caroline Carolina Moon Castles in the Air Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes A Connecticut Yankee A Cottage in God’s Garden Could I The Cuck-Coo Clock Dance Little Lady Dear Heart Dear Old Pal of Mine Dearest in the World to Me Deep in My Heart Dear A Dream Dream Kisses Dreaming Dreams Drinking Song Duna The Elephant and the Portman Team English Songs and Ballads Face to Face Fair Ellen A Fairy Story by the Fire Farewell! Adieu! The Fiddler Flirtation 30\r\n\r\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 27 Folder Contents Forgotten Funeral March Gentle Little Jesus Golden Gate Golden Days Good Bye Sweet Day Good Night Sweetheart The Greatest of These The Green-Eyed Dragon The Gypsy Trail Hallelujah! The Home Road The “Humoreske” Song I Dare Not Love You I’m Always Chasing Rainbows I’ve Told You Everything Little Star I Hear You Calling Me I Know a Lovely Garden I Love You Better Than You Know I Love You Truly I Want to Be Happy If I were King I’ll See You in My Dreams Indian Cradle Song Indian Love Call It’s in the Stars Just a Wearying For You Just We Two Kashimiri Song Keep the Home-Fries Burning Kentucky Babe Kentucky Dream Kiss Me Again Knit, Knit, Knit, 60 The Lady Slavery The Lamplit Hour Let Me Awake 31\r\n\r\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 27 Folder Contents The Little Damozel A Little Dutch Garden Little Grey House in the West The Little Irish Girl Love Letters in the Sand Love Nest Lover, Come Back to Me The Magic Night of Christmas The Mascot March of the Musketeers Marche Funebre Military March in D The Missouri Waltz The Moonlight, The Rose, and You My Castle in Spain My Dear My Dream Girl My Heart Stood Still My Hero 28 The Navy Took Them Over and the Navy will Bring Them Back A Necklace of Love Night and Day No Sir O Katharina! O Thou Sublime Sweet Evening Star Oh, Promise Me! Ol’ Man River Old Favorites The Old Road One Alone Only a Dream Face The Parade of the Wooden Soldiers A Perfect Day Princess Flavia Remember The River Song Rose in the Bud Roses Bring Dreams of You Russian Lullaby 32\r\n\r\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 28 Folder Contents Scherzo I Serenade Silver Moon Sing Me to Sleep The Slumber Boat Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise Someday I’ll Find You Sometime Sometimes I’m Happy Song of an Indian Child Song of the Flame Song of the Vagabond Star Light, Star Bright Students March Song Studies in Sixths The Sunshine of your Smile Sur la Glace a Sweet Brair A Sweetheart of My Own Swing High and Swing Low Tea For Two Temple Bells That’s Why I Love You Thou Swell Till We Meet Again The Trumpeter To an Old Love To an Old Song To the Spring To You Two Hearts Up with the White and Gold Valencia Valse Tristle Venetian Moon Violets Wait Till the Cows Come Home We’ll Be the Same What Do I Care? When I Behold When My Ships Come Sailing Home When You Look in the Heart of a Rose 33\r\n\r\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 28 Folder Contents Who Knows? Why Do I Love You? Will You Remember Me? The Chevalier Portfolio Fr. Schubert Compositions for the Piano Gems from Famous Operas Gems from Francis Wilson’s Half a King Good Old Timers Hansel and Gretel The Merry Monarch Miniature Classics Orchester Suite Selected Opera Gems from Standard Operas Songs by Ciro Pinsuti Songs with Obbligato Two Songs for Contralto Vocal Compositions by Reginald de Koven\r\n\r\n29\r\n\r\n34\r\n\r\n�ADDENDA I\r\nSERIES I – PERSONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box 30 Folder 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 Contents Diaries 1948 - 1950 1951 - 1953 1954 - 1956 1957 - 1959 1960 - 1962 1963 - 1965 1966 - 1967, 1975 - 1976 1977-1979 Diaries-Miniature 1932, 1938 - 1941, 1945, 1951 - 1953, 1955 - 1957, 1960, 1962, 1964\r\n\r\n31\r\n\r\n32\r\n\r\nSERIES VII – MISCELLANOUS MATERIALS 33 1 2 3 Miscellaneous Materials Newspaper Clippings Poetic Verses\r\n\r\nSERIES IX – SERIALS 34 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Young Wings Books 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938\r\n\r\n35\r\n\r\n�SERIES IX – SERIALS Box 34 35 Folder 11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 37 1 2 3 4 5 6 Contents Young Wings Books 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 Junior Literary Guild 1955 - 1957 1958 - 1960 1961 - 1963 1964 - 1966 1967 - 1969 1970 - 1972 1973 - 1974 1975 - 1976\r\n\r\n36\r\n\r\n36\r\n\r\n�ADDENDA II\r\nSERIES IV – PHOTOGRAPHS Box 38 Folder Contents Self portrait of Muriel Fuller by Clare Turlay Newberry, Winter 1935 - 1936 Several framed illustrations from juvenile and young adult books Several unidentified framed photographs\r\n\r\nSERIES VI – WRITINGS BY OTHER AUTHORS 39 The Holy Bible, Authorized King James Version Barrie, J.M. What Every Woman Knows and Other Plays. New York: Charles Scribners’s Sons, 1928. Coray, Henry W. J. Gresham Machen A Silhoutte. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Kregel Publications, 1981. Malory, Sir Thomas. Le Morte D’Arthur. London: J.M. Dent & Sons LTD., 1947.\r\n\r\n37\r\n\r\n�BIBLIOGRAPHY\r\nAlcott, Louisa May. Little Women. Abridgement by Muriel Fuller. New York: Scholastic Inc., 1986. Closson, Ernest. The Fleming in Beethoven. Translated from the French by Muriel Fuller. London: Oxford University Press, 1936. Dobler, Lavina G. The Dobler World Directory of Youth Periodicals. Compiled and edited by Lavinia G. Dobler and Muriel Fuller, 3rd enl. ed. New York: Citation Press, 1970. Fuller, Olive Muiriel. The Book of Dragons. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company, 1931. Fuller, Muriel. ed. Favorite Old Fairy Tales. New York: T. Nelson, 1949. ---. John Muir of Wall Street. New York: Knickerbocker Press, 1927. ---. More Junior Authors. New York: H. W. Wilson Co., 1963. ---. Zodiac Birthday Book. New York: Crowell, 1945. ---. The Runaway Shuttle Train. Philadelphia: David McKay Company, 1946. Manning, Clarence A., Fuller, Olive Muiriel, and Alexander Key. Marko, the King’s Son, Hero of the Serbs. New York: R.M. McBride & Company, 1932. Shuler, Marjorie, Knight, Ruth Adams, and Muriel Fuller. Lady Editor: Careers for Women in Publishing. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1941. Stern, Renee B. and O. Muiriel Fuller, eds. Book Trails. Chicago: Child Development, 1946.\r\n\r\n38\r\n\r\n�"]]]]]],["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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Fuller was a Children’s Editor at Rand McNally &amp; Company and at Robert M. McBride Company., Muriel was also affiliated with the McCall Corporation, Vanguard Press, Greystone Press, Thomas Nelson &amp; Sons, and Abelard Press. The papers consist of diaries, correspondence, contracts, manuscripts, book reviews, biographical sketches, newspaper articles and clippings, photographs, sheet music, royalty notes, scrapbooks, and publications."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"47"},["name","Rights"],["description","Information about rights held in and over the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"11099"},["text","Copyright Hunter College, CUNY"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"11100"},["text","English"]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2489","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2716"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/8119056cc0204807acf8a8b31821e556.pdf"],["authentication","25c0633cec918f0e44b42dc60b041315"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10933"},["text","The Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Collection 1943 - 2009 Finding Aid\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\n\nGeneral Information Historical Note Scope and Content Note Series Description Container List Bibliography\n\n4 6-7 9 11-12 14, 16, 18, 20-30\n\n31\n\n2\n\n�The Roosevelt Library Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n3\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession Number: Size: Provenance: Restrictions: Location: Archivist: Associate: Assistants: 96-09 9.9504 cu. ft. Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House None. Range 5 Section 3 Shelves 13-17 Prof. Julio Luis Hernandez-Delgado Mr. Eli Arthur Schwartz Ms. Barbara Molin Ms. Gretchen Opie Ms. Faith Williams Ms. Dane Guerrero June 1999 November 2014\n\nDate: Revised:\n\n4\n\n�Hunter College Students Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n5\n\n�HISTORICAL NOTE\nIn 1907, Sara Delano Roosevelt bought two existing row houses at 47 and 49 East 65th Street and had both houses demolished for a new building designed by Social Register artist-architect, Charles A. Platt. It would become a double townhouse. In 1908, Sara Delano Roosevelt gave one house to Franklin as a Christmas gift for him and his young family, while she resided in the house next door. The design of the house is similar to numbers 6 and 8 East 76th Street, the Ludlow-Parish houses, where, in 1905, Eleanor had been given in marriage to her distant cousin Franklin by her uncle, President Theodore Roosevelt. The young family moved into number 49 in the autumn of 1908. They lived in the 65th Street residence whenever they were in New York City, where Franklin Roosevelt carried on his activities as a lawyer and later as an officer of an insurance firm. In August 1921, he was stricken with poliomyelitis. Upon being released from the hospital at the end of October, he went directly to the townhouse and began his convalescence in the fourth floor front bedroom. In the remaining months of 1921 and in 1922, the house became the scene of the most critical struggle in the political life of Franklin Roosevelt—a struggle between his mother who wanted him to be a recluse (because of his disability) and his wife who wanted him to continue in public life. When Franklin Roosevelt was elected Governor of New York in 1928 he moved to Albany, visiting 49 East 65th Street only briefly. After 1928, members of Roosevelt’s family lived at No. 49 only for brief periods. Sara Delano Roosevelt occupied No. 47 periodically until her death in 1941. After the death of Sara Delano Roosevelt in 1941, the Jewish Hillel Foundation and representatives of the Catholic and Protestant laity, responded to a suggestion by Hunter College president George N. Shuster and launched a campaign to raise $50,000 to purchase the house. On March 20, 1943, Governor Thomas E. Dewey signed into law an act to incorporate the Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association. The act enabled this group to acquire the houses from Franklin Roosevelt and offer them to Hunter College to foster the interest of the students in religion, comradeship, and intergroup understanding. Six student organizations established their headquarters at Roosevelt House. These included the Hillel Foundation, the Newman Club, the Hunter College Protestant Association, the Pan-Hellenic Association, the House Plan Association, and the Toussaint L’Ouverture Society. In addition, the Alumni Association and the Association of Neighbors and Friends also maintained offices in Roosevelt House. One of the objectives of the Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association was “To serve without discrimination the educational, spiritual, charitable and social needs of the students of Hunter College with a view to fostering religious idealism in the students: to generate, encourage and promote religious activities, good fellowship and ideals of the democratic way of living, as well as the recreational and educational welfare of the students of Hunter College, in their relations with each other, with the members of the staff, the alumnae and the community....”\n\n6\n\n�On November 22, 1943, members of the Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association, Inc., officially opened the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House. Throughout the years a variety of cultural programs for students, alumni, faculty and friends of Hunter College have been presented at Roosevelt House. Representatives from the United Nations and from various universities often appeared on these programs. Roosevelt House was usually referred to as a little U.N. In 1973, Roosevelt House was designated a New York City Landmark on the basis of its historical interest. It has also been placed on the National Register of Historical Sites. Roosevelt House remained operational until 1992 when it was closed for financial reasons. In 1997 the Association voted to convey ownership of the buildings and any related assets, to the Hunter College Foundation, Inc., a 501 (c) 3 Corporation, founded in 1991 to raise funds for Hunter College and its facilities. Transfer of ownership occurred because successful fund raising activities needed to re-open the House could not be affected by its legal owners, the Board of Directors of the Hunter College Student Social, Community, and Religious Clubs Association. The restoration of Roosevelt House culminated in the establishment of the Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute which is dedicated to innovative approaches to teaching, research, and public programming. The institute provides a platform from which high quality scholarship effectively informs and influences public debate and public life. The mission of Roosevelt House is three-fold: to educate students in public policy and human rights, to support faculty research, and to foster creative dialogue.\n\nFaith Williams Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado\n\n7\n\n�The Toussaint L’Ouverture Society Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n8\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\nThe Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Collection documents the creation and development of the first college center in the United States to foster religious idealism, good fellowship, and a democratic way of life among the Protestant, Jewish and Catholic students of Hunter College, who constituted a good portion of the student body in 1943. Reciprocal appreciation of the diversity of students, faculty, and community members was cultivated through religious, recreational, and educational activities. The historical development of the Sara Delano Roosevelt House is documented in the minutes of the Board of Directors of the Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association from 1943 to 1954. Further insight into the evolution of the Roosevelt House can be attained by examining the files of the Association of Neighborhood and Friends of Hunter College and its predecessor, the Roosevelt House League, both of which functioned as supportive and fund raising bodies. The collection spans the years 1943 to 1992, and consists of annual reports, board of directors’ minutes and correspondence, constitutions and by-laws, reports, schedule of events, club histories, membership lists, proposals, publications, newspaper clippings, photographs, programs, flyers, fund raising records, and scrapbooks. Key components of the collection are associated with the activities and events that were sponsored by the B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation, the Newman Club, and the Hunter College Protestant Association. Few documents remain of The House Plan Association and, the Toussaint L’Ouverture Society which was the first African-American student group at Hunter College. The Pan-Hellenic Association of Hunter College is well documented and includes constitution and by-laws, membership lists, and brief histories of many sororities. Delta Pi is one organization that is well documented with constitution and by-laws, minutes, pledge manuals, and publications. The records of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House collection provide remarkable documentation of a facility that fostered religious toleration, social activity, and understanding among the students of Hunter College for almost fifty years.\n\n9\n\n�The House Plan Association Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n10\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSeries I –The Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association Subseries 1.1 Administration Subseries 1.2 The Roosevelt House League Subseries 1.3 The Association of Neighbors and Friends of Hunter College Subseries 1.1 highlights the administration of the Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association, Inc. Included are Board of Directors’ correspondence, membership lists, minutes, constitution and by-laws, incorporation papers, fund raising statistics, publications, and Roosevelt House history. Subseries 1.2 documents the creation of the Roosevelt House League which operated as an unincorporated organization and worked on behalf of the broad purposes of the Roosevelt House. In 1951, The Roosevelt House League changed its name to the Association of the Neighbors and Friends of Hunter College and became incorporated under the laws of the State of New York. Subseries 1.3 documents the name change and underscores the activities of the Association as an advisory/fund raising support group. All three subseries are arranged alphabetically, then chronologically within most of the folders. Series II – Activities and Events Series II documents the multitudinous affairs that were sponsored by the religious and secular student organizations of Hunter College. Examples of important affairs that took place at the Roosevelt House include the Dedication of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House (1943); the memorial assembly for Franklin D. Roosevelt (1946); and the Helmut Brauss concert (1957). This series is arranged alphabetically, then chronologically within most of the folders. Series III – Constituent Groups Subseries 3.1 Religious Clubs Subseries 3.2 Social Clubs Subseries 3.1 consists of records associated with The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation, the Hunter College Protestant Association and the Newman Club. Each of these clubs served to meet the spiritual needs of their constituents and sponsored events that encouraged religious idealism, good fellowship, and a democratic way of life. The bulk of the materials in this subseries relate to the Hunter College Protestant Association. Unfortunately The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation and the Newman Club are survived by too few records. Subseries 3.2 features clubs and sororities that utilized Roosevelt House for meetings and functions. Researchers will find the histories, membership lists, and constitution and by-laws for specific clubs and sororities. The Pan-Hellenic Association of Hunter College is well documented with constitutions and by-laws, minutes, and selected reports. Of the college sororities that are delineated in the collection, Delta Pi has the most comprehensive coverage. Both subseries are arranged alphabetically, then chronologically within most of the folders. 11\n\n�Addenda Series I –The Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association, Inc. Minutes from the Board of Directors from 1983 - 1996, and correspondence from President Jacqueline Grennan Wexler from May 1973 - May 1978, were added to the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Collection after it was processed. Series IV – Restoration of the Roosevelt House This series was created to encompass materials that are related to the conceptualization, planning and eventual restoration of Roosevelt House. Included here are proposals, reports, memoranda, correspondence and brochures from 1992 through 2009. The restoration of Roosevelt House culminated in the establishment of the Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute which is dedicated to innovative approaches to teaching, research, and public programming. The institute provides a platform from which high quality scholarship effectively informs and influences public debate and public life. The mission of Roosevelt House is three-fold: to educate students in public policy and human rights, to support faculty research, and to foster creative dialogue.\n\n12\n\n�The Hillel Foundation Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n13\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – THE HUNTER COLLEGE STUDENT SOCIAL, COMMUNITY AND RELIGIOUS CLUBS ASSOCIATION, INC. Subseries 1.1 Administration Box 1 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 2 1 2 3 4 5 Contents Board of Directors Membership List, 1942, 1959, 1974 Roosevelt House History, August 2, 1982 Minutes, 1943 - 1952, 1954, 1994 Constitution and By-laws, 1943 Correspondence General, 1942 - 1943 Horn, Aaron, C., 1942 - 1943 Shuster, George Nauman Incoming, 1942 - 1944 Outgoing, 1940 -1959 Financial Data, 1963 - 1964 Fund Raising, 1942 - 1943 Gifts, 1943, 1959 - 1962 Hunter College Roosevelt House History and Legal Status History of the Sara D. Roosevelt Memorial House, n.d. Landmarks Designation Report, September 25, 1973 Legal Status, 1943 - 1944, 1956, 1957, 1966 Miscellaneous Materials Publications Here at Hunter, January 1959 The Reconstructionist, December 1948, January 1949 The Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House at Hunter College, n.d.\n\n14\n\n�The College Protestant Association Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n15\n\n�SERIES I –THE HUNTER COLLEGE STUDENT SOCIAL, COMMUNITY AND RELIGIOUS CLUBS ASSOCIATION, INC. Subseries 1.1 Administration Box 2 Folder 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 Contents Schedule of Events September 1972 - December 1974 January 1975 - December 1976 January 1977 - February 1979 February 1979 - December 1980 January - December 1981 January - December 1982 February 1983 - December 1984 January 1985 - December 1986 January 1987 - December 1988 January - December 1989 January 1990 - December 1992 Calendar of Events, September 1949 - May 1950\n\n3\n\n4\n\nSubseries 1.2 The Roosevelt House League, 1945 - 1951 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 5 1 Committees Executive Committee - Minutes, 1945 - 1951 Junior Committee, 1949, 1951 Membership Committee, 1947 - 1951 Student Relations Committee for the Roosevelt House League, n.d Constitutions and By-Laws, 1949 Correspondence General, July 1943 - May 1951 Ridder, Mrs. Victor, October, 1950 Shuster, George Nauman, May 1943 - May 1953 Tichy, Henrietta, September 1950 - January 1973\n\n16\n\n�The Athletic Association Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial Hose\n\n17\n\n�SERIES I – THE HUNTER COLLEGE STUDENT SOCIAL, COMMUNITY AND RELIGIOUS CLUBS ASSOCIATION, INC. Subseries 1.2 The Roosevelt House League, 1945 - 1951 Box 5 Folder 2 3 4 5 6 7 Contents Financial Statements, 1947 - 1951 Membership Lists, 1945 - 1950 Miscellaneous Materials Program Invitations, 1950 Programs, 1946, 1949, 1950 - 1951 Publications The Roosevelt House League Newsletter, 1947-1949\n\nSubseries 1.3 The Association of Neighbors and Friends of Hunter College, 1952 - 1965 5 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 6 1 2 3 4 5 Board of Directors Annual Meetings, 1957, 1959, 1963 Annual Reports, 1952, 1955, 1957 - 1958, 1962, 1964 Membership List, 1963 Minutes 1953 - 1959 1960 - 1962 1963 - 1965 Brochures Calendar of Events, 1949 - 1963 Committees Award Committee, Ann Anthony Finance (Budget) Committee, 1958 - 1960 The Junior Associates, 1949, 1955, 1958 Constitution and By-Laws, n.d. Correspondence General, 1946 - 1964 Berenson, J.S., 1964\n\n18\n\n�The Newman Club Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House\n\n19\n\n�SERIES I – HUNTER COLLEGE STUDENT SOCIAL, COMMUNITY AND RELIGIOUS CLUBS ASSOCIATION, INC. Subseries 1.3 The Association of Neighbors and Friends of Hunter College, 1952 - 1965 Box 6 Folder 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13-14 15 16 17 7 1 2 3 4 Contents Correspondence Deiches, R.G., 1943 - 1947 Lewinson, Edna, 1958 - 1959 McLaughlin, Isabel, 1960 - 1962 Rendt, Margaret A., 1953, 1958, 1961 Shuster, George Nauman, 1953, 1955, 1957, 1960 Finance Ledger Book 1947 - 1952 1947 - 1952 Financial Reports, 1951 - 1964 Intergroup Council of the Roosevelt House, 1951 Membership List, 1958 Miscellaneous Materials Publication Newsletter, October 15, 1954 Program Invitations, 1952 - 1954, 1957 Programs, 1950 - 1964 Proxy Agendas, 1955, 1965\n\nSERIES II – ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS 7 5 6 7 Report of the Association of Neighbors and Friends of Hunter College, May 31, 1964 Tax Information, 1955 - 1956, 1959 - 1962, 1964 Dedication of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Address by President George N. Shuster, November 22, 1943\n\n20\n\n�SERIES II – ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS Box 7 Folder 8 9 Contents Dedication of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Address by Hon. Charles H. Tuttle, November 22, 1943 Dedication Ceremony, November 22, 1943 Correspondence Deiches, Ruth G. Incoming, November 1943 Incoming, November 1943 Shuster, George Nauman Incoming, November 1943 Outgoing, October - November 1943 Helmut Brauss Concert, 1949, 1950, May 15, 1957 Intercollegiate Conference, 1947, 1953 Lake George Workshop Seminar, September 21, 1946 Memorial Assembly for Franklin D. Roosevelt, April 12, 1946 Newspaper Articles & Clippings 1934, 1940 - 1974, 1991, 1996 - 1997, 2003, 2005 Undated Photographs Art Exhibition, n.d. Paul Meltsner Paintings, 1943 Military Reception, n.d. Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Exterior and Interior Views, ca. 1940’s Students at Roosevelt House, ca. 1940’s Recommendations for the Aaron C. Horn Memorial Award, 1953 - 1961 Receptions and Teas, 1944 Resolution in Honor of Hattie Leventhal, February 15, 1960 The George N. Shuster Room, 1952 Unveiling of the Aaron C. Horn Portrait, 1944\n\n10-11 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 9 1 2 3\n\n21\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.1 Religious Clubs 9 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation Articles, 1952, 1957, 1983 Constitution and By-Laws, April 8, 1948 Correspondence, 1942 - 1957, 1985 Guest Registrar Book, 1944 - 1958 Jewish Student Coalition, 1982 - 1983 Photographs, unidentified, 1944 Prayer Book, n.d. Programs, 1956, 1960, 1968 - 1969 Publications Hi-Lites, 1956, 1975 Hillel At Hunter, n.d. (Box 21) 13 14 15 16 17 18-19 Hillel Bulletin, March 10, 1952 Hillel Handout, 1949 The Hillel Lite, February, April, 1956 Hillel at Hunter, February - June 1946 The National Jewish Monthly, December 1952 Miscellaneous Materials Hunter College Protestant Association Board of Trustees Membership Lists 1948, 1951 - 1952, 1955 - 1961, 1974 - 1977 Minutes 1947 - 1958 1959 - 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 - 1966 1967 - 1975 Bronx Building Bronx Project Planning Committee, 1955, 1956 Committee on Bronx Building, 1961 22\n\n20 21 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.1 Religious Clubs 10 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Hunter College Protestant Association Committee on Focus and Function, January 2, 1968 Proposal for a Religious Center for Hunter College in the Bronx, 1962 Coffee House and Conference Materials, 1970 - 1971 Constitutions and By-Laws, 1947, 1952, 1955, 1961, 1974 Correspondence General, 1943, 1952, 1963 - 1978, 1983 Hollos, Paul E., 1960 - 1965 Keating, John, 1973 - 1980 Marengo, Mildred M., 1968 - 1969 Rhude, Beth E., 1969 - 1971 Shuster, George N., 1942, 1943, 1945, 1949, 1954, 1960 Speyer, Judith, 1960 - 1962 Ward, Margaret L., 1962 - 1968 Counselor’s Reports, 1965 - 1966, 1969 - 1970 Ecumenical Foundation for Higher Education Constitution and By-Laws, n.d. Mailing List, 1968 Miscellaneous Materials Minutes, 1969 - 1970 Financial Drives 1966 1967 Churches, 1968 Denominations, 1968 Faculty, 1968 Foundations, 1968 Franklin Savings Bank, 1969, 1973 Miscellaneous Materials Papers Metropolitan Campus Ministry Association Project Analysis, Spring 1968\n\n11\n\n23\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.1 Religious Clubs Box Folder Contents Hunter College Protestant Association Papers Project Abstract: the Dynamics of Decision Making Among Co-ed Leaders, June 17, 1968 - May 31, 1969 Religious Groups within the University Community of Metropolitan New York, The Ecumenical Foundation: A Brief Description, January 10, 1971 11 12 13 14 Program Flyers, 1962, 1968, 1969 - 1972 Programs, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1981, 1983 Publications Windows, 1973 Witness, April, December 1954 Proposal for a United Ministry in Higher Education at Hunter College of City University of New York, 1971 Reports First Year Impressions from a City University Subway Ministry, November 1969 A Report from a City Campus Ministry, December 1969 Report of Lyle R. Guttu for the Annual Meeting of The Foundation for College and University Work in N.Y.C., Inc., May 1972 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Student Writings, n.d. Treasurer’s Reports, 1963 - 1967 The Newman Club Constitution and By-Laws, 1948, 1945, 1993 Correspondence, 1942 - 1943, 1945, 1957, 1977, 1991 History of the Newman Club, 1938-1960 Miscellaneous Materials Publications Cardinal, 1947, 1967, 1969 24\n\n12\n\n10\n\n15 16\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.1 Religious Clubs Box Folder Contents The Newman Club Publications Newman Community News, 1972 - 1974 Newman Community News, 1974 - 1975 Orion, 1964 - 1966 Reflections, 1969\n\n13\n\n8 9 10 11\n\nSubseries 3.2 Social Clubs 14 1 The Athletic Association, 1915 Artemis, 1943, 1947 Cercle Français, n.d. Il Circolo Italiano, n.d. Education Club, 1935 Hunter College Menorah Society, 1938, 1947 Hunter Evangelical Fellowship, 1948 Deutscher Verein, 1924 - 1926 Ibid., n.d. Hunter College Ski Club, 1974 The Pan-Hellenic Association of Hunter College Constitution and By-Laws, 1961, 1963 - 1964, 1969 Correspondence, 1952 - 1954, 1956 - 1961, 1963 - 1965 Foster Parent Plan for War Children Inc. Foster Parent’s Plan Report, 1964 - 1966 Information Sheet for Foster Parents of Greek Children, 1963 - 1966 Letters from Foster Children, 1956-1966 Miscellaneous Materials Handbook, n.d. Inactive file, 1955, 1962, 1964, 1965 Indices, 1961, 1963 - 1964, 1965 - 1966, 1966 - 1967 Judicial Board, 1964 List of the President, Rush Captain, and Social Chairman of Each Sorority, n.d. 25\n\n2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.2 Social Clubs Box Folder Contents The Pan-Hellenic Association of Hunter College Minutes 1953 - 1959 1960 - 1962 1962 - 1964 Miscellaneous Materials National Pan-Hellenic Conference, 1953, 1955, 1958 National Pan-Hellenic Officers, 1967 - 1968 Reports President’s Report, September 1960 - June 1961 Report of the Bronx Membership Chairman September 1961 - May 1962 Report of the Park Avenue Membership Chairman, June 1961 - June 1962 Secretary’s Report, 1960 - 1961, 1963 - 1964 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Rush Roster, 1951 - 1954 Rushing Rules, 1964, 1967 Pan-Hellenic Workshop, April 24, 1964 Hunter College Sororities Alpha Delta Chi, 1965 Alpha Delta Phi, 1964 Alpha Epsilon Phi, 1964 - 1965 Alpha Omicron Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta, 1964 - 1967 Alpha Sigma Rho, ca. 1951 - 1952 Alpha Theta Chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta, 1963 Alpha Theta Chapter of Eta Sigma Phi, 1963 Beta Sigma Omicron, 1963, 1965 Chi Sigma Delta, n.d. Delta Phi Epsilon, 1963 Alpha Omega Pi Membership List, 1952 Minutes, 1954 - 1955 Pledging Manual, n.d. 26\n\n15\n\n2 3 4 5 6 7 8\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENT GROUPS Subseries 3.2 Social Clubs Box Folder Contents Hunter College Sororities Delta Pi Constitution and By-Laws Alpha Chapter, n.d. Beta Chapter, 1963 - 1964 National Constitution, n.d. Correspondence General, 1950 - 1958, 1962 - 1963 Tiller, Susan, 1962 - 1963 Violenus, Agnes, 1955 - 1964 History of Delta Pi, 1946 Membership Lists, 1956 - 1957 Minutes of the Executive Board, 1957 Miscellaneous Materials Pledge Manual, n.d. Publications Alumnae Bulletin, n.d. Delta Pi Newsletter, 1961 - 1964 Official Publication of Pi Beta Sigma, Fall 1950 Reports, 1956 - 1957 Songs, n.d. Student Organizations Lists, Spring - Fall 1962 Scrapbook, n.d. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Delta Zeta, n.d. Epsilon Delta Tau, n.d. Iota Alpha Pi, 1966 Kappa Delta, 1953 Kappa Delta Phi, n.d Eta Chapter of Kappa Delta, 1946 - 1953, 1963 Phi Sigma Sigma, 1913, 1952, 1969 Kappa Delta Sorority, 1955 - 1956, 1963 Sigma Alpha Kappa, n.d. Sigma Delta Tau-Alpha Delta Chapter, 1965 Sigma Tau Delta, 1943, 1945, 1946, 1949 27\n\n16\n\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17\n\n17 18\n\n�SERIES III – CONSTITUENTS GROUPS Subseries 3.2 Social Clubs Box 18 Folder 12 13-14 15 Contents Hunter College Sororities Sigma Xi, 1958 - 1962 Ibid., 1963 - 1966 Miscellaneous Materials Publications The Angelos of Kappa Delta Vol. L, November 1947 - 1948 Vol. LI, November 1954 - 1955 Vol. LII, November 1955 - 1956 Vol. LIII, November 1956 - 1957 Vol. LIV, May 1957 - May 1958 Vol. LVII, November 1960 - November 1961 Vol. LVIII, November 1961 - November 1962 Vol. LIX, November 1962 - November 1963 The Katydid, June 1959 Mid Night Oil, Spring 1936 The Rectangle 1940, 1943 - 1944 1948 - 1949 1950 - 1953 1954 - 1955 1967, 1970 The Sphinx, Fall 1962, Fall 1967, Spring 1968 Ta Takta, 1945, 1957, 1961\n\n19\n\n1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9\n\n20\n\n22\n\n28\n\n�ADDENDA\nSERIES I – THE HUNTER COLLEGE STUDENT SOCIAL, COMMUNITY AND RELIGIOUS CLUBS ASSOCIATION, INC. Series 1.1 Administration Board of Directors Minutes 1983 - 1990 1991 - 1993 1994 - 1996 Operations and Maintenance Plan for Hunter College-Roosevelt, March, 1989 President Jacqueline G. Wexler Correspondence, May 1973 - May 1978\n\n23\n\n1 2 3 4\n\n5\n\nSERIES IV – RESTORATION OF THE ROOSEVELT HOUSE 23 6-7 8 9 10 11 A Study for the Rehabilitation of Roosevelt House A Facility of Hunter College, January 4, 1974 The Proposed Renovation of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House, May 1, 1992 The Case for Roosevelt House at Hunter College, August 9, 1995 Roosevelt House and Hunter College: Preserving History, Creating Change, July 1996 License Agreement among Hunter College, CUNY, Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association, and the Hunter College Foundation Regarding the Legal Transfer of the Roosevelt House to Hunter College, October 15, 1997 Appraisal of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House: Request for Proposal, November 1997\n\n12\n\n29\n\n�SERIES IV – RESTORATION OF THE ROOSEVELT HOUSE Box 23 Folder 13 Contents Details of Residence at 47- 49 East 65th Street,June 28, 2000 A Proposal to Restore the FDR Presidential Library in Historic Roosevelt House, September 19, 2000 A Proposal to Restore the Historic East 65th Street Home of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and Create a State-of-the-Art Academic Conference Center, September 28, 2000-November 13, 2000 Roosevelt House and Hunter College: Preserving A Legacy, November 2000 Roosevelt House and Hunter College: Preserving A Legacy: A Proposal to Renew the Historic East 65th Street Home of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, November 9, 2000; November 17, 2000 24 1 Dunlap, David W. “Fixing the Moment To Mother-in-Law.” The New York Times, March 18, 2003, n.p. Roosevelt House and Hunter College: The Story of Franklin and Eleanor’s New York City Home, 2009 Roosevelt House: Public Policy Institute at Hunter College, n.d. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Committee for the Restoration of Roosevelt House, 1998 - 2001 Correspondence, October 2000 - June 2001 Roosevelt House Prospects - Individuals, April 2000 Correspondence Hunter College, March 1990 - February 2001 Hunter College Foundation, March 1990 - July 2005 Miller, Claire C. Incoming, August 1990 - September 2005 Outgoing, March 1990 - August 2006 Memoranda, October, 1993, February 2000 - March 2001 Miscellaneous Materials Roosevelt House Oral History Project, ca. 2001 Brochures and Information, 2008\n\n30\n\n�BIBLIOGRAPHY\nGray, Christopher. “The Roosevelt Townhouse 47-49 East 65th Street.” Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club Decorator Show, April-May 1994, p. 71 - 75. The Hunter College Foundation, Inc., Hunter College of the City University of New York. Appraisal of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House, November 1997. Landmarks Preservation Commission. Number 2-LP-0702, September 25, 1973. Laws of New York, Chapter 140: An Act to Incorporate Hunter College Student Social, Community and Religious Clubs Association, 1943. Luetz, Edna Wells, ed. The Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House at Hunter College. New York: Comet Press, Inc., 1943. Miller, Claire G. “Roosevelt House: Jewel in the Crown.” At Hunter (Winter 1991): 1. Rendt, Margaret N. “The Nineteenth Year of Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House,” n.d. Rendt, Margaret N. “Roosevelt House.” Here at Hunter, January 1959. Roosevelt, Curtis. Proposed Renovation of the Sara Delano Roosevelt House, n.d. Saunders, Rubie. “Twenty Years at Roosevelt House.” Hunter Alumni Quarterly (June 1963): 15-16. Shuster, George N. “Sara Delano Roosevelt House in New Toggs.” The Alumni News No. 8 (November 1943). Stone, May N. “From Presidential Home to Campus Center and Now, A City Landmark.” NewsHunter 3.2 (December 1973): 10-11. Tuttle, Charles H. Address at the Dedication of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House, November 22, 1943.\n\n31\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10934"},["text","Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial House Collection, 1943--1992"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10935"},["text","This collection documents the creation of the first college center in the United States that was established to foster inter-religious activity, good fellowship, and a democratic way of life amongst Protestant, Jewish and Catholic students of Hunter College. Included are the Board of Directors membership lists and minutes, correspondence, constitution and by-laws, papers, proposals, publications, schedules of events, and folders on The Roosevelt House League (1945–1951) and The Association of Friends and Neighbors of Hunter College (1952–1965)."]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2490","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2718"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/a8f3376ec295596c5ed1b23477245dcb.pdf"],["authentication","aa1a1277c52a0621087265002c24088f"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10939"},["text","The Department of Health & Physical Education of the Normal/Hunter College 1908, 1911, 1929-1972, 1986-2003 Finding Aid\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�The Department of Health & Physical Education of the Normal/Hunter College 1908, 1911, 1929-1972, 1986-2003 Finding Aid\nNovember, 2012 PREPARED BY: Julio Luis Hernandez-Delgado, Associate Librarian CHIEF LIBRARIAN: Dan Cherubin DEPUTY CHIEF LIBRARIAN: Claibourne Williams, Associate Professor COVER DESIGN: Julio Luis Hernandez-Delgado, Associate Librarian\n\nCover Photograph: A Demonstration by Physical Education Students Engaged in an Exercise at the former Bronx Campus of Hunter College, ca. early 20th Century\n\n2\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\n\nIntroduction General Information Historical Note Series Description Container List\n\n4 5 6-7 8-9 10 - 23\n\n3\n\n�INTRODUCTION\nIn 1988, Professor Dorothy M. Vislocky, of the Department of Health & Physical Education of Hunter College, established an Archival Committee to identify and acquire documents and objects of historical value. Committee members gathered documents, reports, oral histories, badges, commencement gowns, teaching uniforms, sports letters, medals, pins, plaques, and trophies, many of which were donated by faculty and alums. In the spring of 1997, Professor Vislocky donated the aforementioned materials to Archives & Special Collections of the Hunter College Libraries. Professor Julio Hernandez-Delgado accepted the donation and continued to accept additional materials from Professor Vislocky until the summer of 2004. Professor Vislocky must be acknowledged for her foresight and tireless work as the unofficial archivist of the Department of Health & Physical Education. She understood the importance of preserving key documents and objects especially when Hunter College announced that the Department of Health & Physical Education would cease operation in 1999. Professor Vislocky’s task of gathering and preserving historical documents and objects was made easier by donations from faculty and alums. Special thanks to Jo Burke, Lenore Foebrenback, Maxine Goldberg, Phyllis Handler Gould, Al Kahn, Olga Kulbitsky, Anne Lowery, Evelyn Narad, Robin E. Rank, Matilda Schaefer, A. Sequine, Kathryn Sicilian, Morton Thompson, Linda Wurmser, and Norma Zabka.\n\n4\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession Number: Size: Provenance: Restrictions: Location: Archivist: Assistant: Date: Revised: 94-04 11.3073 cu. ft. Health & Physical Education Department None. Range 2 Section 1 Shelves 1-3 Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Mr. Curvin Sawyer Ms. Dane Guerrero April 1997 November 2014\n\n5\n\n�HISTORICAL NOTE\n1897 1912 1914 - 1915 1917 - 1918 1922 1922 - 1923 1932 - 1933 1938 1941-1942 1951 1953 1964 1965 1967-1968 1968 1970s 1970 1970’s 1971 1973 1976 Mabel H. Taylor, first Physical Trainer hired Athletic Association Formed Department of Physical Training established Physical Education for credit established Name changed to Department of Physical Education Physical Education classes a requirement for graduation 18 Credit Physical Education Minor established 24 Credit Physical Education Major established First graduation class with Physical Education Majors First male graduate with a Physical Education Major Mabel H. Taylor Scholarship Fund announced Men’s Division of Physical Education established A.W. Neidhart Scholarship Award designated Name changed to the Department of Health & Physical Education Bronx Campus closes–becomes Lehman College Health Education Major established Dance Major Program established Non Teaching Major established in Physical Education Dance Therapy Masters Program established Changed from B.A. to B.S. in Physical Education Teaching Major Gerontological Studies Program established 6\n\n�1982 1982 1988\n\nHAPPY Program funded by Easter Seals B.A. in Human Body Studies established School Health Management Program established\n\nSource:\n\nThe Fiftieth Anniversary of the Physical Education Major at Hunter College, October 22, 1988\nThe Department of Health & Physical Education would cease operation.\n\n1999\n\n7\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSeries I – Administration Series I consists of annual reports of the Physical Education Department, the Inter-Collegiate Athletics for Men, and the Intramural & Extramural Activities, By-laws, correspondence, curriculum course outlines, proposals, plus undergraduate student records and advisement forms which will remain closed to public scrutiny. Folders are arranged alphabetically. Series II – Activities and Events Series II documents the 25th and 50th anniversaries of the department, along with the Annual Award Banquet, the Annual Athletic Awards, and the Easter Colleges Science Conference. The folders are arranged alphabetically. Series III – Faculty Materials Subseries 3.1 Files Subseries 3.2 Commencement Gowns and Uniforms Subseries 3.1 consists of papers, syllabi, lesson plans, notebooks, newspaper articles and clippings, lecture notes, programs, and pamphlets from professors Olga Kulbitsky, E. McGary, and Eugenie Schein. In addition, there are class record books, fieldwork journals and reports, Kinesiology laboratory attendance books and reports, and the papers of students of former professor Dorothy M. Vislocky. Subseries 3.2 consists of Hunter College commencement gowns and teaching uniforms that were originally owned by former Professors Augusta W. Neidhardt, G. Berchielli, Mabel H. Taylor, and Dorthy M. Vislocky. The middy blouses, neck ties, teaching tunics, uniform shirts, folk dance vests, and commencement gowns worn by Hunter College students from the 1920's - 1960's. The folders are arranged alphabetically. Series IV – Student Materials Subseries 4.1 Memorabilia Subseries 4.2 Writings Subseries 4.1 consists of athletic participation letters and patches, medals, pins, plaques, and trophies that were awarded to Hunter College students for the years 1946, 1949 - 1950, 1960 - 1967, and 1981. Subseries 4.2 consists of student diaries, notebooks, publications, and reminiscences. The folders are arranged alphabetically.\n\n8\n\n�Series V – Photographic Images Subseries 5.1 Prints Subseries 5.2 Negatives Subseries 5.3 Oversized Prints Subseries 5.4 Album Subseries 5.5 Slides Subseries 5.1 consists of black & white prints of various athletic and physical activities that were held primarily at the former Bronx Campus of Hunter College. Subseries 5.2 consists of unidentified black & white negatives. Subseries 5.3 consists of black & white oversized prints of lockers and washing facilities, teams, activities, faculty and students. Subseries 5.4 is an album containing photographs of teams, dance programs, sports activities, and special events that were held in the former Bronx Campus from the 1940’s through the 1960’s. Subseries 5.5 consists of color slides of the 50th Anniversary of the Department of Health & Physical Education. Series VI – Videos Series VI includes videos in VHS format of former professors of the Department of Health & Physical Education. Also visually captured is the celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the Department of Health & Physical Education. Series VII – Sheet Music Series VII consists of sheet music, publications, syllabi, notebooks, newspaper clippings, programs, and pamphlets. The documents are housed in 14 acid-neutral envelopes marked A-N. This series contains sheet music of classical music, Morris dances, folk dances, polkas, tap dance, ballet dance, Fox Trot, Marches in 2/4, 4/4, and 6/8 time, and waltzes. This sheet music is housed in 20 acidneutral envelopes numbered 1 to 20. Addenda Professor Dorothy M. Vislocky returned in 2006 and donated additional folders of correspondence, memoranda, publications, student materials and sheet music that she had uncovered in her office. These materials now constitute the Addenda segment of this collection.\n\n9\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – ADMINISTRATION Box Folder Contents Annual Reports Physical Education Department 1908, 1911, 1929 - 1932 1940 - 1944 1945 - 1950 1950 - 1953 1954 - 1956 Intercollegiate Athletics Annual Report, 1974 - 1975 For Men, 1962, 1964 - 1965 Intramural & Extramural Activities, 1962, 1964 By-Laws, 1972 Committees of the Department of Physical Education Reports of Meetings, February - June 1949 Clubs Physical Education Club\n\n1\n\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7\n\n2\n\n1 2\n\n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 3 1\n\nCorrespondence Dean of Administration, 1962 - 1966 Dean of Faculty 1950 - 1964 1965 - 1966 Graduate Division, 1955 - 1966 President of Hunter College, 1959 - 1966 Course Offerings in Physical Education, 2001 - 2003 Curriculum Course Outlines Activity Courses Pedco, 215 - 245 Pedco, 315 - 476 10\n\n�SERIES I – ADMINISTRATION Box 3 Folder 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Contents Curriculum Vitas A-H M-W Equivalencies-Evaluations History of the Health & Physical Education Department Minutes, February, May, June, 1949 Proposals Physical Education Major Revision, n.d. Proposal for a New Academic Program in Physical Education Leading to a B.S. Degree, February 1976 Proposed Revision of the Existing Undergraduate Curriculum in Health Education, n.d. Publications The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Physical Education Major at Hunter College, October 22, 1988 How’s Your Health?, 1977-1979 Newsletter, 1975 - 1977 Student Teaching Handbook, n.d. Undergraduate Student Records (CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC) A - Ay Ba - Bel Ben - Bly Bo - Bro Bron - By Cai - Cas Case - Cocu Coh - Cri Cru - De Bolt De Blasio - Devine Deu - Don Dole - Edel, Hogan, Humphrey, Rotter 11\n\n10 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 5 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4\n\n6\n\n�SERIES I – ADMINISTRATION Box 7 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 Contents Undergraduate Student Records (Closed to the Public) A-L M-W Undergraduate Advisement Forms (Closed to the Public) A-M W-V Miscellaneous Materials\n\nSERIES II – ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS Album of Programs and articles (Box 22) Anniversary of the Health & Physical Education Department Programs 10th November 19, 1948 20th April 26, 1958 25th May 4, 1963 50th The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Physical Education Major at Hunter College, October 22, 1988 Guest Book, October 22, 1988 Guest List, October 22, 1988 Sample Invitations and Tickets Awards Annual Athletic Awards, 1977 - 1979 Annual Awards Banquet, 1966 - 1967\n\n8\n\n2 3 4 5\n\n6\n\n7 8 9\n\nThe Department of Physical Education and the Mabel H. Taylor Club Presents Badminton, Basketball, Fencing, [and] Volleyball, April 27, 1945 Hunter College Annual Tumbling and Apparatus Demonstration - Presented by the Apparatus Class and the Apparatus Club of the Athletic Association, April 27, 1945\n\n12\n\n�SERIES II – ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS Box 8 Folder 9 10 Contents Hunter College Field Day - Bronx Campus, May 20, 1947 The Hunter College Swimming Club Presents “Alice in Waterland,” n.d. Fourteenth Annual Eastern Colleges Science Conference, May 21 - 23, 1960\n\nSERIES III – FACULTY MATERIALS Subseries 3.1 Files 8 11 Kulbitsky, Olga A Masque of Light and Color, 1935 Resume, 1972 McGary, E. Collection of Folk Dance Descriptions Pencil Drawings of English Country Dance Costumes, n.d. Hunter College Evening and Extension Session Folk Dance Syllabus, n.d. Index of Folk Dance Ukrainian Dance by Sonia Serova Dance Notebook, 1950 Collection of Dance Descriptions Folk, Tap and Ballroom, ca.1940 - 1951 Schein, Eugenie Clippings, Programs, and Pamphlets, 1936 - 1937 Vislocky, Dorothy M. Class Record Books 1986 - 1987 1987 - 1988 1989 - 1990 Fall, 1990 - Spring, 1991 Fall, 1991 - Spring, 1992 Fall, 1992 - Spring, 1993 Fall, 1993 - Spring, 1994 Fall, 1994 - Spring, 1995 Fall, 1995 - Spring, 1996, Fall 2000 13\n\n12 13\n\n14\n\n15\n\n9\n\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7\n\n�SERIES III – FACULTY MATERIALS Subseries 3.1 Files Box Folder Contents Vislocky, Dorothy M. Class Record Books Fall, 1997 - Spring, 1998 Fall, 1998 - Spring, 1999 Spring, 2000 Field Reports by De Jesus, John Hayes, Wyakee Monteiro, Leticia Moronta, Anthony Olson, Donna December 11, 2001 December 12, 2000 May 15, 2001 Spring, 2001 February 26, 1998\n\n10\n\n1 2 3\n\nField Work Journal by Pilates, Debbie L. Spring, 1996 4 Kinesiology Lab Attendance Books Fall 1993 - Fall, 1995 Fall 1993 - Spring, 1997 Kinesiology Laboratory Reports by Anonymous Binder, Yelena Edwards, Christina Fall, 1994 Figueroa, Miguel A. Spring, 1995 Figueroa, Miguel A. Fall, 1995 Giles, Simone L. Greenberg, Alex Izzo, Sally Izzo, Sally Lasky, Jana Monteiro, Leticia Monteiro, Leticia Olson, Donna Fall, 1994 December 14, 2000 Fall, 1994 Spring, 1995 December 14, 2000 May 5, 2001\n\n5\n\n6\n\n7\n\n14\n\n�SERIES III – FACULTY MATERIALS Subseries 3.1 Files Box Folder Contents Vislocky, Dorothy M. Kinesiology Laboratory Reports by Steigerwald, Robert December 16, 1997 Stiene, Adele Fall, 1994 Wai Yee Tham Fall, 2000 Lecture Notes Public Health... n.d. Lesson Plans Manual New Outline for Field Experience Pedco 47002 February 17, 2002 The Organization & Administration of Physical Education Section 18.37 Section 18.85 Section 18.86 Unidentified Materials Papers Psychosomatic Medicine, n.d. ca. 2001 n.d. ca.1995 February 1994 May 27, 1998 November 26, 2002 Spring, 1994 May, 1984\n\n11\n\n1\n\n2 3 4\n\nNotes 5 6 7 8-10 11 12\n\nStudent Papers Aragones, Ronny Brown, Karen Edwards, Christy Gugliaro, Dawn Luska, Catherine Monteiro, Letcia Newsome, Dessire Yaffe, Kim\n\n13\n\n15\n\n�SERIES III – FACULTY MATERIALS Subseries 3.2 Commencement Gowns and Teaching Uniforms Box 12 Folder Contents Berchielli, G. Teaching Uniforms, ca.1950's Uniform Shirt, ca. 1950's Neidhardt, Augusta W. Commencement Gowns and Hood, ca. 1950's Demonstration Uniform-Gym Bloomer, ca. 1930 Folk Dance Vests, ca. 1950's - 1960's Middy Blouse, Neck Ties, ca. 1930's Middy Blouse and Bloomers, ca. 1930's Teaching Uniform, ca.1930 Teaching Uniform - Bloomers, ca.1930's Teaching Uniform (grey), ca. 1950's Teaching Uniform - Middy Blouse, ca.1930 Taylor, Mabel H. Commencement Gown, ca.1920's Vislocky, Dorothy M. Old Physical Education Major Uniform, ca. 1950’s Teaching Uniform (Navy blue), ca. 1948 - 1949 Teaching Tunic, ca. 1950's SERIIES IV – STUDENT MATERIALS Subseries 4.1 Memorabilia 13 1 Academic Regalia Graduation Cap Tassel, 1967 Athletic Participation Letters, \"H\", 1961, 1963 - 1965 Athletic Participation Patches Hunter College W.A.A., 1963 - 1965 Sig-Coll-Hunter-Nov-Ebor, n.d.\n\n16\n\n�SERIIES IV – STUDENT MATERIALS Subseries 4.1 Memorabilia Box 13 Folder 2 Contents Block-Janson, Joan. Class of 1950 Athletic Award, ca.1949 - 1950 Basketball (Varsity) Hunter Letter “H” (purple) Mabel H. Taylor Club Card, June 1946 DiGenaro, Jo Tina Cheerleading Letter “H”, 1960 Medals Cheerleader Award, ca.1961 - 1964 (Donated by Maxine Goldberg) Metropolitan Association of the A.A.U., 1981 Dance Award, 1961 - 1964 (Donated by Maxine Goldberg) Linda Wurmser 4th Plateau W.A.A., n.d. 1975 CUNY Team Champions\n\n3\n\n14\n\nPins Plaques\n\n15\n\nTrophies Wurmser, Linda WAA, 1965 - 1966 3rd Year Varsity Basketball Softball WAA, (1966 - 1967) 4TH Year Varsity Basketball Softball\n\n16\n\n17\n\n�SERIES IV – STUDENT MATERIALS Subseries 4.2 Writings Box 17 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 17 7 8 9 10 11 Contents Diary Gloria Berchielli \"From My College Diary,\" Class of 1950\n\nNotebooks Anonymous. School Hygiene, ca.1947 Gerardi, Helen P. Class 15.341 - March 1959 Class 18.37 - May 1958 Class 18.38 - January 1959 Ring, Dorothy Class 15.58 Publications Alum Page, April 14, 1952 Athletic Association News, 1949 – 1951 M.H.T. News, February 29, 1952, November 7, 1952, December 22, 1952 Senior Tea, 1979, 1981, 1983 Reminiscences Borneman, Edith H. Highlights Class of 1945\n\nSERIES V – PHOTOGRAPHS Subseries 5.1 Prints 17 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Bronx Campus Sports Activities, 1946 - 1948 CSSR National Visiting Team, ca. 1967 Dance, n.d. Faculty-Varsity Basketball Game, 1949 Men’s Folk Dance Club (Bronx Campus), ca.1967 Men’s Swimming Team, n.d. Olympic Champion Vera Caslavska at Hunter College, 1967 Student Resource Room West 1137, 1984 - 2003 18\n\n�SERIES V – PHOTOGRAPHS Subseries 5.2 Negatives Box 17 Folder 20 21 Contents Bronx Campus Sports Activities Unidentified Negatives\n\nSubseries 5.3 Oversized Prints 18 Storage Cabinet in Room 635 - Fencing Room Swimming Team, ca.1947 Entrance to Women’s Locker Room Washing Facilities, Women’s Locker Room Washing Facilities, Women’s Locker Room Baseball Team, Bronx Campus, 196? Fencing, Dance, Gymnasium - Room 635 Fencing, Dance, Gymnasium - Room 635 Lockers, Women’s Locker Room Lockers, Women’s Locker Room Gymnastics Gymnasium, Room 434 Swimming Team, Coach, Bronx Campus, 196? May Festival - Bronx Campus, Maypole Dance, n.d. Tennis Team, Myra & Arlene Seguine, 1962, 1963 Men’s Folk Dance Club, Bronx Campus, n.d. Three Members of Swimming Team, ca.1947 Gymnastics Club Prof. Norma Zabka, ca. 1960’s Physical Education Department Demonstration Professors and Students, n.d.\n\nSubseries 5.4 Album 19 Photographs of Teams, Dance Programs, Sports Activities, and Special Events in the Bronx Campus, 1940 - 1948, 1950’s, 1960’s\n\nSubseries 5.5 Slides 20 50th Anniversary of the Department of Health & Physical Education Unidentified Images News articles 19\n\n�SERIES VI – VIDEOS Box 21 Folder Contents Archival Displays, Boyce, Grace, Burke, Jo Drager, Jane 50th Anniversary of the H&PED Fishman, Sylvia Havel, Richard Kulbitsky, Olga Malamet, Sarah Schmais, Claire & Thomas Burke October 5, 1988 October 13, 1988 May, 1988 October 3, 1988 October 22, 1988 April 28, 1988 n.d. June 1, 1988 May 20, 1988 June 1, 1988\n\n21\n\nHealth Education Titles & Titles over Video Titles over Interviews SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC 23 1 1A 1B 1C 2-2E 3-3C 4 4A 5 6-6D 7 7A 8 Mazurka, ca., 1914 - 1922 Classical Music in 2/4 Time, ca. 1914 - 1922 Classical Music in 6/8 Time, ca. 1914 - 1922 Swedish and Popular Folk Dances, ca. 1914 - 1922 Collection of Chalif Dances Classical, Folk, Creative ca. 1914 - 1922 Collection of Chalif, Folk and Classical Music, ca. 1920's Collection of Music Notes, Folk Dances, ca. 1939 - 1940 Collection of Chalif Dances, ca. 1939 - 1940 Folk Dance Music, ca. 1936 - 1945 Classical and Morris Dances ca. 1930 Folk Dances - Schotische, Sword, Morris, Country, 1938 Folk Dances - Handwritten Notes, ca. 1922 - 1938 Gymnastics & Folk Dances - Clogs, Jings, Miscellaneous Folk Dances, ca. 1914 - 1922\n\n20\n\n�SERIES VII – SHEET MUSIC Box 24 Envelope 9 9A 10-10C 11 12-12A 13 14 15 15A 15B 16 17 17A 17B-17E 18 18A 19 19A 20 Contents Polkas in 2/4 Time, ca. 1914 - 1922 English Country Dance, ca. 1914 - 1922 Collection of Folk & Popular Dances ca. 1930 Folk Dance and Singing Games with Dance Descriptions, ca. 1930 - 1939 Classical Sheet Music for Ballet Accompaniment, ca. 1914 -1922 Music Notes for Ballet, ca. 1914-1922 Classical Books - Ballet Accompaniment, ca. 1914 - 1922 One Step, 1914 - 1922 Fox Trot, ca. 1914 - 1922 Music for Tap Dances, 1914 -1922 Children Songs, Music for Singing Games. Handwritten and Typed Notes, ca. 1914 - 1922 Waltzes-Popular & Semi-Classical, ca. 1914 - 1922 Waltzes-Popular & Semi-Classical with Descriptions, ca. 1914-1922 Waltzes-Popular & Semi-Classical, 1914 - 1922 Marches in 2/4, 4/4 times, ca. 1914 - 1922 Marches in 6/8 Time, ca. 1914 - 1922 Collection of Folk & Gymnastic Books with Dance Descriptions Descriptions, ca. 1930's Music Notebooks and Classical Sheet Music, ca. 1914 - 1922\n\n21\n\n�ADDENDA\nSERIES I – ADMINISTRATION Box 25 Envelope 1 Contents Administrative Sample Forms Correspondence Vislocky, Dorothy Incoming, June 2001 - February 2002 Outgoing, April 2001 - May 2003 Information for Teaching Staff of the School of General Studies Department of Physiology, Health, Hygiene Hunter College CUNY, n.d. Memoranda, March 2001 - February 2003 Miscellaneous Materials Publications Board of Education. Physical Activities for Elementary Schools. A Manual for Physical Activities in the Health Education Program, 1949. The Country Dancer, 1941 - 1943, 1949 Folkraft: Library of International Folk Dances, Vol. 9, n.d. Odlozilik, Otakar. Jan Amos Komensky (Comenuius) Czechoslovak National Council of America, Chicago, 1942.\n\n2 3 4 5-6 7 8 9 10\n\nSERIES IV – STUDENT MATERIALS 25 11 An EMG of the Muscles in the Lower Limb During a Grand Rhonde de Jambre en L’air. Honors Project By Gail Notarmuzi. Undergraduate Student Records (Closed to the Public) A-W\n\n26\n\n22\n\n�SERIES VI – SHEET MUSIC Box 25 Envelope 12 13 14 15 Contents Gounod, CH. Ballet Music of Faust, n.d. Brahms Hungarian Dances for Pianoforte, 1898 Ponchielli, A. Danza delle Ore (Dance of the Hours), n.d. Gilbert, Melvin B. Gilbert Dances. Vol. 1, 1913 Chopin, Frederic. Waltzes. n.d.\n\n23\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"9"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10801"},["text","Academic Departments"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10937"},["text","Department of Health & Physical Education, 1908--1911, 1929--2003"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10938"},["text","Annual reports, by-laws, correspondence, programs, and memoranda. Also included are student notebooks and writings, medals, pins, plaques, sheet music, and gymnastic attire  worn by former Normal/Hunter College students."]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2491","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2719"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/53d04569f4940bba49df9fc17b8368cd.pdf"],["authentication","b9060d0209406a1681560af12a499eb8"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10940"},["text","Publications Collection 1950 - 2014 Finding Aid\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\nGeneral Information Scope and Content Note Series Description Container List 2 3 4 5 - 15\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession Number: Size: Provenance: Restrictions: Location: Archivist: Assistant: 98-20 10.8550 cu. ft. The City University of New York None. Range 6 Section 1 - 2 Shelves 6 - 10 Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Mr. Manuel Rimarachin Ms. Dane Guerrero Ms. Maria Enaboifo April 2002 November 2014\n\nDate: Revised:\n\n2\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\nOn April 11, 1961, the municipal colleges of the City of New York (City, Hunter, Brooklyn and Queens) along with the community colleges of Staten Island, the Bronx, and Queens were organized into The City University of New York. The unification of the municipal and community colleges facilitated access to higher education to a larger contingent of local, national, and international students. Presently, The City University of New York consists of the 11 four-year colleges, 7 community colleges, Macaulay Honors College at CUNY, CUNY Graduate Center, CUNY School of Public Health, CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, CUNY School of Professional Studies, and CUNY School of Law. Since its inception CUNY’s central office has generated a variety of publications covering many aspects of its operation. The publications of the City University of New York Collection consists of reports, bulletins, newsletters, handbooks, newspapers, proposals, and periodicals spanning the years 1963 to the Present. The publications are arranged alphabetically by title and chronologically therein. The Master Plan of the City University of New York comprises reports, drafts, blueprints, budgets, statements, guidelines, memoranda, correspondence, and proposals for the planning and renovation/construction of facilities throughout the 24 campuses. These plans range from the years 1950 to the Present.\n\n3\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSeries I – Publications Series I is an alphabetical arrangement of titles, published by The City University of New York covering the years 1963 to Present. Key publications include annual reports, the Chancellor's budget requests, and University Faculty newsletters. Series II – Master Plan of the City University of New York Series II consists of reports, drafts, blueprints, budgets, statements, guidelines, memoranda, correspondence, and proposals for the planning and renovation/construction of facilities throughout the 24 campuses. These plans range from the years 1950 to the Present and are arranged chronologically.\n\n4\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 1 Folder 1 2-3 4 5 Contents American Social History Project, Annual Report, July 1985 - June 1987, 1987 Building on a Strong Foundation, 2012 Career Graduates: A Profile, August 1971 The Chancellor’s Advisory Committee on Academic Program Planning, Report to the Chancellor, December 2, 1992 The Chancellor’s Advisory Committee on Articulation and Transfer, Report to the Chancellor, June 30, 1993 6 7 Chancellor’s Report to the Board of Trustees on Academic Program Planning, Draft May 28, 1993 The Citizen’s Commission on the Future of The City University of New York, April 1972 City University Construction Fund Annual Report 1968 - 1973 1974 - 1977, 1979 1980 - 1983 1985 - 1989 1992 - 1997 1997 - 2003 2003 - 2004 City University News, 1986 - 1988, 1992 City University News & Reviews 1980 - 1981 1982 - 1983 The City University of New York Annual Report 1981 - 1984 1985 - 1986 1988 - 1989, 2000 5\n\n8 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3 1 2 3\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 3 Folder 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Contents The City University of New York Budget Request 1967 - 1968, 1968 - 1969, 1969 - 1970 1970 - 1971, 1971 - 1972, 1972 - 1973 1973 - 1974, 1974 - 1975, 1975 - 1976 1976 - 1977, 1978 - 1979, 1979 - 1980 1981 - 1982, 1983 - 1984, 1984 - 1985 1985 - 1986, 1986 - 1987, 1990 - 1991 1992 - 1993, 1994 - 1995, 1995 - 1996 1996 - 1997, 1998 - 1999, 1999 - 2000 2000 - 2001, 2003 - 2004, 2004 - 2005 2005 - 2006, 2006 - 2007, 2007 - 2008 2008 - 2009, 2009 - 2010, 2010 - 2011 The City University of New York Enrollment Report, 1969 - 1970 The City University of New York For the Next Decade, (Draft), November 1980 The City University of New York Graduate Newsletter, 1964 - 1975 The City University of New York Integrated Library System News, 1987 - 1989 The City University of New York Manual of General Policy, December 31, 1967 The City University of New York 2000-2001 State Executive Budget Recommendations, City 2001 Preliminary Budget, January 28, 2000 The City University Unity Caucus, February 1997 College Discovery News, Fall 1977 CUNY Bibliography of Basic Skills, January 1980 CUNY Bulletin of Asian American/Asian Affairs, Points of Connection: South Asians and the Diaspora, Proceedings of the AAARI Conference on South Asians, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2006 CUNY Coalition of Concerned Faculty and Staff Legal Action Community Newsletter, ‘ 1992 - 1993\n\n4\n\n5 6\n\n11\n\n6\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 6 7 Folder 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 10 Contents CUNY Community Newsletter, 1984 The CUNY Courier* (formerly published as Courier, see folder 1) 1969 - 19711 1973 1974 1975 1976 CUNY: For the Record, February 1999 CUNY Gifts To the World: 111 Alumni Achievers, 1995 CUNY Handbook/Introduction to the Colleges, 1971, 1973 CUNY Honors College Annual Report, 2003 - 2004 CUNY Instructional and Classified Staff, Fall 2005 CUNY Matters, 1994 - 2013 CUNY News, 1969 - 1970 CUNY Skills Inventory of Faculty Talents (SIFT), 1985 CUNY Sports, 1989, 1994 - 1996, 1998 - 1999 CUNY Statistical Profile, 1980-1998, April 1999 CUNY Student Data Book, Fall 1992 Fall 1993 Fall 1994 Fall 1996 vol. I Fall 1996 vol. II CUNY University Computer Center Communications, 1975 - 1976, 1988 - 1992 The CUNY Voice, 1974 - 1980, 1982 - 1984, 1994\n\n1\n\nOriginally published under the title Courier. It was subsequently renamed to The CUNY Courier.\n\n7\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 11 Folder 1 2 3 4 Contents The CUNY World, 1980 CUNYform, 1994 Distribution of Grades: 1971-1974, 1976 Documents Related to the August 1998 Management Review of the Research Foundation of the City University of New York Employment Status of Students Who Completed During 1963 Ibid., 1964 Ibid., 1965 Ibid., 1966 Facets, 1986 - 1987, 1989, 1991 Faculty Development Program, 1987 - 1988, 1988 - 1989, 1989 - 1990 Faculty Guide to the Libraries of CUNY, 1991, 1995 Faculty Handbook for the Preparation of New Academic Programs, 1989 Faculty Handbook of the University Budgetary Process at The CUNY, 1979, 1983 5 6 7 8 9 13 1 The Faculty of the City University of New York, ca. 1989, 1997 - 1998 Faculty Welfare Trustees Newsletter, 1968 - 1969, 1971 - 1973, 1975 - 1980 Financial Report of the City University of New York, June 30, 1966, June 30, 1967 Focus on the City University of New York, 1970 - 1971 For Your Electronic Information: The Information Services Newsletter of The City University of New York, 1996 - 1997 Governor’s Executive Budget for Higher Education, 1982-83, February 1982\n\n5 6 7 8 12 1 2 3 4\n\n8\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 13 Folder 2 Contents Improving Student Transfer at CUNY, October 22, 2010 Institutions in Comparison: Examining Racial Disparities in Access and Success at CUNY, June 3, 2009 3 4 5 6 7-8 9 14 1 2 3 Into the Academic Mainstream: Guidelines for Teaching Language Minority Students, 1992 Italian-American Institute Newsletter, 1986 - 1989, 1991, 1994, 1996 - 1997 Journal of the CUNY Mathematics Discussion Group, 1978 - 1979 Libraies of the City University of New York, June 2014 Making Waves, 1972 - 1973 Manual of General Policy, Parts I & II, 1990 Myths and Facts about Remediation at CUNY, 1998 The New York Student, 1985-1987 News Report of the Graduate School and University Center of CUNY, February 1989 1987-1990 Agreement Covering Clerical, Administrative and Professional Employees of the Classified Service of The City University of New York, White Collar Contract 1995-96 Operating Budget Request, The City University of New York, October 12, 1994 1996-2000 Agreement Covering Clerical, Administrative and Professional Employees of the Classified Service of The City University of New York, White Collar Contract 1965 Progress Report on the Regents Statewide Plan for the Expansion and Development of Higher Education, November 1965 Pathways Ahead: Reform & Rigor, ca. 2011 Persistence and Achievement: The June 1981 Graduates, ca. 1983 Personnel Rules and Regulations of the CUNY Classified Service, Parts I & II, April 1, 1988 9\n\n4 5\n\n6 7 8-9\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 14 Folder 10 Contents Preliminary Enrollment Report, Fall 1997 Proceedings of the Fifth Annual CUNY Association of Writing Supervisors (CAWS) Conference, March 1982 Proposal for the Establishment of An Educational Skills Center in New York City, October 1965 [Draft III] A Proposal for Training Health Manpower in the City University, November 1966 Reasonable Accommodations, A Faculty Guide to Teaching College Students with Disabilities Report and Recommendations, Commission on Academic Personnel Practice in The City University of New York, October 1974 Report of the CUNY ESL Task Force, Spring 1994 2 3 Report of the Mayor’s Advisory Task Force on the City University of New York, 1999 Report of the Task Force on Science, Engineering, Technology and Mathematics, 1989 Report of the Teacher Education Advisory Commission of the City University of New York, 1986 Report of the University Faculty Senate Task Force on the Educational Mission of CUNY, 1974 4 5 6 Report of the Vice-Chancellor’s Advisory Committee on Computing & Systems, 1992 Research at CUNY, n.d The Research Foundation of the City University of New York, 1970 - 1971, 1977 - 1978 The Research Foundation of the City University of New York Annual Reports 1982 1983 - 1987 1987 - 1991 2000 - 2001\n\n11 12 15 1\n\n7 8 9 16 1\n\n10\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 16 Folder 2 3 4 5 6 7 Contents Revised Report on Sixth Year Certificate Programs, June 1970 A Salute to Scholars, 1982, 2009 The Senate Digest 1998 - 2002 2003 - 2009 2010 - 2012 Summary of Benefits Instructional Staff, Fall 1996 Summary of the 1982-1983 State Executive Budget Recommendations for City University, February 1982 8 9 Terms and Conditions of Employment for Staff in the Executive Compensation Plan, 1987 Toward a Greater City University: A Report by the Friends of CUNY in Response to the Schmidt Commission Report, August 1999 Towards a New Educational Partnership, 1989 10 17 1-2 3 Trends in Demographic Composition and Student Experience, 1989 and 1995 Tuition and Fee Manual of the City University of New York, June 1990, June 1995 University Faculty Exchange Program, 1990 - 1992 University Faculty Senate Newsletter (formerly published as University Senate Newsletter see folder 4) 1968 - 19712 1973 - 1979 1980 - 1984 1985 - 1990 1991 - 1993 1994 - 1998 University Fiscal Handbook for the Control and Accountability of Student Activities Fees, 1984, 1992\n\n4 5 6 7 8 9 18 1\n\n2\n\nThis publication was originally titled University Senate Newsletter. It was later renamed to University Faculty Senate Newsletter.\n\n11\n\n�SERIES I – PUBLICATIONS Box 18 Folder 2 3 Contents The University in the Community: Directory of Collaborative Programs, 1987 University Student Senate Audit, 1983 University Student Senate Newsletter, 1983 4 5 The University Times, 1985 University Working Group on Collaborative Programs, 2006\n\nSERIES II – MASTER PLAN OF THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK 19 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 20 1 2 3 4 Data Used in the Development of Plans and Estimates for Various Municipal Colleges, January 1950 Supplement to the Report of the Master Plan Study Public Higher Education in the City of New York, January 1950 A Long-Range Plan for the City University of New York, 1961-1975, June 1960 Draft of the Master Plan for the City University of New York, March 1964 Master Plan for the City University of New York, June 1964 Draft of Proposed Amendments to the 1964 Master Plan For the City University of New York, May 1965 Amendments to the 1964 Master Plan for the City of New York, June 1965 Working Copy Parts II, III, IV and V of the 1964 Master Plan for the City University of New York, January 1966 Draft of the Second Interim Revision of the 1964 Master Plan for the City University of New York, April 1966 1964 Master Plan for the City University of New York, June 1966 The Report of a Self-Study of Hunter College of the City University of New York, June 1966, pp. 1-107 12\n\n�SERIES II – MASTER PLAN OF THE CITY UNIVERISTY OF NEW YORK Box 20 Folder 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Contents The Report of a Self-Study of Hunter College of the City University of New York, June 1966, pp. 108-189 Interim Report of the Park Avenue Master Plan Committee Meeting December 9, 1966 Expansion Program for Hunter Park Avenue, February 1967 Joint Meeting of the Committee on Park Center Expansion and the Park Avenue Master Plan-Monday, March 13, 1967 Distribution of March 31 Draft of 1967 Revision of the Master Plan, March 1967 Draft of Third Interim Revision of the 1964 Master Plan for the City University of New York, April 1967 Proposed Changes in the April 11, 1967 Draft of the Master Plan, April 1967 The College Academic Plan, October 1967 Background Paper for Formulation of Undergraduate Enrollment Goals for the 1968 Master Plan, November 1967 Report Submitted to the Committee on the Quadrennial Revision of the Master Plan 1968 - 1972, December 1967 Master Plan Committee, 1967 Master Plan Correspondence, 1967, 1969 - 1971 A Preliminary Analysis of Space Requirements and Enrollment Alternatives at Hunter College, January 1968 Draft Chapter 2 Student Enrollment Policies and Trends, February 1968 Draft of the 1968 Master Plan, May 1968 Summary of the May 15, 1968 Draft Master Plan, May 1968 Master Plan of the Board of Education for the City University of New York, June 1968 13\n\n�SERIES II – MASTER PLAN OF THE CITY UNIVERISTY OF NEW YORK Box 21 Folder 9 10 22 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 23 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Contents Hunter College Program for the Master Plan, November 1968 Hunter College Ad Hoc Committee on Quadrennial Revision of the Master Plan, 1968 Master Plan Hunter College Park Avenue Campus, 1968 Space Program (New Building), 1968 Master Plan Hunter College Park Avenue Campus, January 1969 Report of the Special Committee on the Organization of the Board of Higher Education, May 1969 Draft of the 1969 First Revision Master Plan, 1968, June 1969 Memorandum on Public Hearing on the 1969 Master Plan, June 1969 The Hunter College Master Plan Committee, 1969 - 1970 1970 Second Revision Master Plan, June 1970 Revised Position of the Budget Division on the Hunter College Master Plan, September 1970 Planning Information Form for 1971 Master Plan Revision, January 1971 Committee on the Master Plan of the Hunter College Senate, June 1971 Planning Guidelines for the 1972 Master Plan, June 1971 Hunter College Comprehensive Plan, November 1971 Report of the Hunter College Senate Standing Committee on the Master Plan, February 1972 Draft 1972 Master Plan for the City University of New York, 1972 1972 Master Plan of the Board of Higher Education for the City University of New York, July 1972 Master Plan, Ulrich Franzen Plan, August 1972 14\n\n�SERIES II – MASTER PLAN OF THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Box 23 Folder 9 10 24 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Contents The Development of the 1972 Master Plan for the City University of New York, 1972 Audiovisual Systems Description, Hunter College Phase One, July 1973 Progress Report on the Master Plan, June 1974 Vice-Chancellor for Budget and Planning Office of the Master Plan, July 1975 The 1976 Master Plan of the City University of New York, September 1976 The Mission Structure and Programs of the City University of New York, February 1979 The Master Plan the City University of New York for the Next Decade, January 1981 A Hunter College Expansion, September 1981 Progress Report on the 1980 Master Plan of the City University of New York June 1982 The Master Plan, November 1984 The Master Plan, The City University of New York, 1988-1992, November 1988 1988 Master Plan, 1988 The City University of New York Five-Year Plan, 1990-1995, ca. 1990 CUNY Master Plan, 2000 - 2004, June 2000 CUNY Master Plan, May 2004 Request for Proposals for Space Utilization and Planning Study for the Hunter College Library, November, 28, 2007 2008-2012 CUNY Master Plan, March 2008 2012-2016 CUNY Master Plan, 2012 15\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10941"},["text","CUNY Publications Collection, 1950--2013"]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2492","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2720"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/f76f4248edb02c121c04d274849ddbf7.pdf"],["authentication","701cb7a42475c75f361d6341b4008992"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10942"},["text","THE STEVEN KENNEDY PAPERS 1929 - 1967 FINDING AID\n\nArchives and Special Collections\n\n�TABLE OF CONTENTS\n\nGeneral Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Description Container List\n\n3 4 5 6 7 - 10\n\n2\n\n�GENERAL INFORMATION\nAccession Number: Size: Provenance: Restrictions: Location: Archivist: Assistant: Date: Revised: 94-02 2.2614 cu. ft. Steven Kennedy Family None. Range 3 Section 1 Shelf 6 Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Mr. Joseph Pagan April 1997 November 2014\n\n3\n\n�BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH\nSteven Kennedy, whose real name was Melvin Stephen Hemphill, was born on January 1, 1912, in the Pittsburgh suburb of Avalon, but was raised in Moundsville, West Virginia. During his formative years Steven delighted in hearing soloists in churches and theatres, and at the age of six decided to become a singer. He received much of his early training as a member of his church choir and with several local glee clubs. Steven Kennedy attended Moundsville High School in West Virginia where he developed an extraordinary voice. After high school he enrolled in the Pittsburgh Musical Institute in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to pursue studies in piano and voice. Subsequently he attended the famed Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York for post-graduate work in voice study. While attending Eastman, Kennedy appeared as a soloist with the Rochester Philharmonic, the Wheeling Symphony, and the San Bernadino Symphony. Kennedy’s first professional performances were with a Gilbert and Sullivan Company where he sang stellar roles in “The Pirates of Penzance” and “Iolante.” After performing in New York with the Winthrop Ames Sullivan Company, he went to Europe to further his studies in voice and language. It was in Naples, Italy, where he made his debut in the role of Germont in “La Traviata.” The success of this engagement allowed him to perform other roles like Sharpless in “Madame Butterfly”, Valentin in “Faust”, Marcello in “Boheme”, Sylvio in “Pagliacci”, and Enrico in “Lucia.” After touring major European opera houses, Kennedy returned to the United States where he made his American debut in Town Hall, New York City, in 1936. Critical acclaim of the aforementioned recital led to tours with leading symphonies in the United States and Canada. World War II interrupted Kennedy’s career while he served two years with the U.S. Infantry. It is important to note that he became one of the first artists to sing for men in uniform and travel more than 18,000 miles to perform for wounded soldiers in many hospitals. After the war he returned to New York City and appeared in leading baritone roles with the New York City Opera Company and continued to tour throughout the United States and Canada. In addition to his singing career, Kennedy was also devoted to teaching voice. Initially he held private sessions in his New York City studio with selected clientele. However, in 1954 he was hired by the University of Texas to teach voice. This was followed by a one-year appointment at the Jordan College of Music at Butler University (1955 - 1956) and a subsequent ten-year assignment at Hunter College, CUNY (1956 - 1966) where in addition to voice he also taught music appreciation. Kennedy passed away 1986. He will be remembered for his lovely baritone voice, and for passing on his love of music to younger generations.\n\n4\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\nThe Steven Kennedy Papers came to Archives & Special Collections of the Hunter College Libraries from the Peabody Institute of John Hopkins University in 1994 at the behest of Kennedy’s descendants who wanted his papers deposited in our repository. Steven Kennedy had an obscure but productive career as a baritone singer and as an instructor of music at several universities. His voice was adored by many fans as he sang stellar roles with many musical production companies. Kennedy’s attraction and popularity served him well as he recorded several long playing albums with Bost Records, Melo Tone Recording Studio, Nola Recording Studios, G. Schirmer Inc. Studio, David Trible Recordings, and WOR Recording. Between 1954 and 1966, Kennedy accepted teaching posts at the University of Texas, the Jordan College of Music at Butler University, and at Hunter College of The City University of New York. As an instructor he taught voice and music appreciation. Kennedy enjoyed teaching and inspired his students to excel. He was a good communicator and was admired by his pupils. These papers should attract the attention of students and music aficionados who are interested in researching the genre of music that was performed by professional soloists like Steven Kennedy from 1929 through the 1960's.\n\n5\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\nSeries I – Personal and Biographical Information This series includes newspaper clippings, correspondence, personnel records and a family scrapbook. The files are arranged alphabetically by category. Series II – Musical Career Subseries 2.1 Newspaper clippings Subseries 2.2 Programs Subseries 2.1 is an assortment of newspaper clippings which highlight many of Kennedy’s concerts that were performed throughout the United States and Canada. These newspaper clippings are arranged chronologically. Subseries 2.2 consists of programs from performances that occurred from the 1930's through the 1960's. The programs are also arranged chronologically. Series III – Academic Career Included in this series are appointment books, copies of examinations, and lesson plans for courses taught by Kennedy at Hunter College for the years 1957, 1959, and 1961 - 1967. The files are arranged alphabetically by category and chronologically therein. Series: IV – Photographs Subseries 4.1 General Photographs Subseries 4.2 Promotional Photographs Subseries 4.1 contains black and white photographs of specific concerts, associates, and family members. The files are arranged alphabetically by category. Subseries 4.2 consists of oversized promotional photographs of Kennedy produced by the National Concert and Artists Corporation for the 1951-1952 season. In addition, there are photographs of Kennedy that appeared in Musical America (November 15, 1950) and in Musical Courier (October 1943). The photographs are arranged alphabetically by event, individual, and/or family member. Series V – Long Playing Records Included in this series are long playing records containing songs recorded by Steven Kennedy for the years 1943, 1945 - 1946, 1948, and 1950. The records are arranged alphabetically by recording studio and, where applicable, chronologically therein.\n\n6\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – PERSONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box 1 Folder 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Contents Biographical Information Correspondence Letters Postcards Kennedy, Mary Johnson Personnel File Scrapbook Miscellaneous Materials\n\nSERIES II – MUSICAL CAREER Subseries 2.1 Newspaper Clippings 1 8 9 1929 - 1956 n.d.\n\nSubseries 2.2 Programs 1 2 10 11 1 2 3 1930's 1940's 1950's 1960's n.d.\n\nSERIES III – ACADEMIC CAREER 2 4 5 6 7 3 1 Appointment Book, 1963 - 1964, 1966 Examinations, 1961 - 1964 Lesson Plans Course 71.1, 1957, 1959, 1961 - 1964 Course 571.5, 1961 - 1962 Course 81.19Z, 1965, 1967 7\n\n�SERIES IV – PHOTOGRAPHS Subseries 4.1 General Photographs Box 3 Folder 2 3 4 5 6 7 Contents Concerts and Events Family Individuals Robert Johnson and Sara G. Hamilton Johnson Steven Kennedy Portraits Unidentified Photographs\n\nSubseries 4.2 Promotional Photographs 4 “Musical America,” November 15, 1950 “Musical Courier,” October 1943 National Concert and Artists Corporation, 1951 - 1952\n\nSERIES V – LONG PLAYING RECORDS 5 1 Bost Records Side A: (1) “Nightmare” song from “Iolanthe” (2) “Shoes” [Manning] Side B: (1) “Vision Fugitive” Melo Tone Recording Studio Side A: (1) “Border Ballad,” November 14,1943 Side B: (2) “Her Name is Mary” Melo Tone Recording Studio Side A: (1) “La Belle Jeunesse,” November 14,1943 Side B: (2) “Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal” Nola Recording Studios Side A: (1) “If I loved You,” July 18,1945 (2) “June is Busting Out All Over” Side B: (1) “Strange Music” Side A: (1) “If I Loved You,” July 18, 1945 (2) “Vagabonds” Side B: (1) “Strange Music”\n\n2\n\n4\n\n3\n\n4\n\n5\n\n8\n\n�SERIES V – LONG PLAYING RECORDS Box 5 Folder 6 7 Contents Nola Recording Studios Side A: (1) “The Lord is My Lord Is My Light, July 21, 1946 Side A: (1) (2) Side B: (1) (2) “If I Loved You,” September 1945 “June is Busting Out All Over” “Strange Music” “Song of the Open Road”\n\n8\n\nSide A: (1) “Midnight in Paris,” February 2, 1946 Side B: (1) “Nemico Della Patria” G. Schirmer Inc. Studio Side A: (1) “Brothers of Romany,” May 22, 1945 (2) “Salt Water” Side A: (1) “Brothers of Romany” 78rpm (2) “Salt Water”\n\n9\n\n10\n\nDavid Timble Records Side A: (1) “Chanson A Danser” (2) “Man is for Woman Made” Side B: (1) “Since From My Dear” Side A: (1) “Das Standchen,” November 3, 1950 Side B: (1) “Der Schreckenberger” Side A: (1) “Il fault nous amier,” November 3, 1950 (2) “Le diable dans la nuit” Side B: (1) “La ronde autour de monde” Side A: (1) “Verschwiegene Liebe,” November 3, 1950 (2) “Der Tambour” Side B: (1) “Wiegenied” (2) “Das Kohlerweib is trunken” Side A: (1) “La complainte du soldat vaincu” Side B: (2) “La complainte du pont de Gien” Side A: (1) “La complainte a dieu” - Prayer I Side B: (2) “La complainte a dieu” - Prayer II\n\n11 12\n\n13\n\n14 15\n\n9\n\n�SERIES V – LONG PLAYING RECORDS Box 5 Folder 16 Contents David Timble Records Side A: (1) “Aria of Alazim from Zaide” Side B: (2) “Recit et air de Cadmus” WOR Recording Side A: (1) “Haunted Heart,” April 14, 1948 Side B: (2) “Midnight in Paris” Side A: (1) “Aria”, April 29, 1948 Side B: (1) “Sylvia” (2) “Border Ballad”\n\n17 18\n\n10\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. 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Edna Wells Luetz Range None. Prof. Julio L. Hernandez-Delgado Ms. Maria de Graaf Enaboifo May 2008 5 Section 8 Shelves 43 - 44\n\nRevised\n\nNovember 2014\n\n4\n\n�Edna Wells Luetz posing by one of her paintings\n\nEdna Wells Luetz behind the camera, 1958\n\n5\n\n�BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH\n\nEdna M. Wells was born in Germany in 1894, and was the daughter of an English father and German mother. Existing records provide scant information about Edna’s parents, her sister and her formative years in Germany and in New York City. The Wells family probably arrived in New York City around the turn of the 20th Century. Edna attended and graduated from Hunter High School in 1912, and subsequently received a Bachelor of Arts from Hunter College in 1916. Edna excelled as an undergraduate and exhibited an affinity for Mathematics, English and other languages. Edna’s facility with German was acknowledged when she was awarded the prize in German at commencement. Edna subsequently went on to obtain a Masters of Arts from Columbia University and a Teacher of Fine Arts diploma from Teachers College in 1919. It should be noted that Edna continued her education and learned stage and costume design under the tutelage of Robert Edmund Jones and Norman Bel Geddes and at the Reinhardt Theatre in Germany. Edna M. Wells began her professional career at Hunter College as a Temporary Instructor in the Department of Art in 1917. She taught a variety of art courses and seemed to have had an affinity for theatrical productions. Edna was acquainted with the intricacies of stage and costume design, architecture and lighting. This served her well when she later designed production sets in the Hunter College Auditorium, the Hunter College Playhouse and the Little Theatre. Edna served as Chair of the Department of Art from1948 to1963. During her tenure, she was instrumental in bringing Robert Motherwell, William Baziotes, Richard Lippold, Ad Reinhardt, Fritz Bultman, George Sugarman, Gabor Peterdi, and Ray Parker to Hunter College. The outstanding abstract painters and sculptors, along with her innovative, substantive curriculum design changes brought legitimacy and national prestige to the Art Department. The Edna Wells Luetz/Frederick P. Riedel Endowment appropriately memorializes a woman of multiple talents, rigorous intellect, and uncompromising artistic standards.\n\n6\n\n�SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE\n\nThe Edna Wells Luetz Papers highlight Luetz’s association with Hunter College from 1920 to 1961. There are very few documents that attest to her role as an instructor and as an administrator in the Department of Art. In addition, there is insufficient information on Luetz’s interest and creativity as a painter and as a stained glass artist. However, despite the limitations of this collection, researchers can still appreciate the significant contributions that Luetz made as the Chair of the aforementioned department. The collection consists of awards and certificates, dossier and vitae, articles, reports, correspondence, publications, photographs, etchings, drawings, and woodblock prints that were created by Luetz. Key folders in this collection include: 1) Sketch of the Seal of the Board of Higher Education of the City of New York, 1926; 2) Plans for New York World’s Fair Board of Higher Education Hunter College, 1938; 3) Exhibition of the Board of Higher Education for the Golden Anniversary of New York City, August 21, 1948; 4) Goethe Bicentennial Convocation, October 1529, 1949; and 5) Hunter College Motion Pictures: “695 Park Avenue” (1956) and “Mihi Cura Futuri” (1961). The papers should appeal to researchers seeking to learn about college administrators of art departments in the 20th Century. Edna Wells Luetz is a case in point, as she molded Hunter College’s art department into a unit of national recognition.\n\n7\n\n�SERIES DESCRIPTION\n\nSeries I – Personal and Biographical Information Series I consists of Luetz’s dossier and vitae, awards and certificates, newspaper articles and clippings, and candid photographs. In addition, there is a folder on Edna’s husband, Alfred Luetz, who taught briefly at Hunter College. Series II – Correspondence Series II consists of Luetz’s incoming and outgoing letters and are arranged chronologically from 1916-1962. Series III – Hunter College Series III consists of plans and reports from the Department of Art, 1949 - 1950, the New York World’s Fair Board of Higher Education, ca. 1938, the Mayor’s Committee for the Commemoration of the Golden Anniversary of the City of New York, ca. 1948, the Goethe Bicentennial Convocation, October 15 - 29, 1949 and the Hunter College Motion Picture Project, 1950 - 1951. In addition, there are folders on two motion pictures “695 Park Avenue” (1956) and “Mihi Cura Futuri” (1961) that were produced by Professor Luetz. Series IV – Art Works Series IV consists of several unidentified pencil sketches, etchings and woodblock prints that were created by Professor Luetz. One prominent sketch in the series is the Seal of the Board of Higher Education of the City of New York, date 1926. Series V – Photographs Series V consists of black & white and color prints of Professor Luetz and her art work, Varsity productions of “Alice in Wonderland” and “The Ivory Don”; the presentation of the Hunter College film “Mihi Cura Futuri”; and the exhibition of the Board of Higher Education for the Golden Anniversary of New York City, on August 21, 1948. Series VI – Publications This series consists of a number of brochures, reports, issues of Theatre Arts Monthly, and a sketch book by Kappa Pi, ca. 1955.\n\n8\n\n�CONTAINER LIST\nSERIES I – PERSONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Box 1 Folder 1 2 Contents Articles 1938, 1939 - 1940, 1945, 1948 - 1950, 1952, 1962, 1986, 1994 - 1995 Awards and Certificates Golden Anniversary of the City of New York, 1948 Aerial Course Certificate TWA, June 23, 1953 Beta Nu Chapter of Kappa Pi Fraternity, February 25, 1954 The German Society of City of New York, March 23, 1966 Dossier and Vitae, 1939, 1949 Luetz, Alfred, n.d. Photographs of Edna Wells Luetz, n.d.\n\n3 4 5\n\nSERIES II – CORRESPONDENCE 1 6 7 8 Incoming, 1924 - 1962 Outgoing, 1926 - 1956 General, 1916 - 1961\n\nSERIES III – HUNTER COLLEGE 1 9 10 11 12 Annual Report, 1949 - 1950 Drama “A Masque of Light & Color,” May 9 - 10, 1938\n\nPlans for New York World’s Fair Board of Higher Education Hunter College by Edna Wells Luetz, ca. 1938 The Exhibition of the Board of Higher Education For the Golden Anniversary of New York City, August 21, 1948 The Board of Higher Education’s Participation in the World’s Fair: The Records of Plans, of Procedures, and the Results, May 26, 1938 - May 22, 1939 (Box 2) Oversized Photographs of The Exhibition of the Board of Higher Education for The Golden Anniversary of New York City, August 21, 1948 (Box 3) 9\n\n�SERIES III – HUNTER COLLEGE Box 1 Folder 12 Contents “Design for Learning 50 Years of Progress in the Educational and Cultural Activities of New York City: A Report by the Mayor’s Committee for the Commemoration of the Golden Anniversary of the City of New York,” ca. 1948 (Box 3) Goethe Bicentennial Convocation, October 15 - 29, 1949 Hunter College Motion Picture Project, 1950 - 1951 Hunter College Motion Pictures “695 Park Avenue,” 1956 “Mihi Cura Futuri,” May 19, 1961 Recommendation for Promotion, 1939, 1940 Staff Personnel Record, 1939, 1942 Who’s Who in America, 1960 Miscellaneous Materials\n\n13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20\n\nSERIES IV – ART WORKS 4 1 2 3 4 5 Drawings for Stained Glass Windows, n.d. Etchings, n.d. Pencil Sketches, n.d. Woodblock Prints, n.d. Sketch of the Seal of the Board of Higher Education of the City of New York, 1926\n\nSERIES V – PHOTOGRAPHS 4 6 7 8 9 10 11 Art Works Unidentified Black & White Prints, n.d. Unidentified Color Prints, n.d. Candid Photographs of Edna Wells Luetz, n.d. Dramatic Productions (unidentified) Hunter College Building, ca. 1940 - 1982 Individuals (unidentified)\n\n10\n\n�SERIES V – PHOTOGRAPHS Box 4 Folder 12 13 14 15 16 17 Contents Prints belonging to the Hunter College Journalism Office Presentation of the Hunter College Film “Mihi Cura Futuri” President George N. Shuster, n.d. Varsity Productions “Alice in Wonderland” “The Ivory Don” The Exhibition of the Board of Higher Education For the Golden Anniversary of New York City, August 21, 1948\n\nSERIES VI – PUBLICATIONS 4 18 19 20 21 22 Brochures on Art Scholarships from the Department of Art, n.d. “Report of the Chairman of the Board of Higher Education,” 1946 - 1948 The Sketch Book, by Kappa Pi, Spring 1955 Theatre Arts Monthly September 1924 and October 1927 A Token of Remembrance from the Faculty of Hunter College, May 25, 1956\n\nSERIES VII – MISCELLANEOUS MATERIALS 5 Album of Letters and Photographs, n.d.\n\n11\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10950"},["text","Luetz, Edna Wells (1916--1961)"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10951"},["text","Luetz was a former professor and chair of the Art Department at Hunter College. The papers consist of awards and certificates, dossiers and vitae, articles, reports, correspondence, publications, photographs, etchings, drawings, and woodblock prints."]]]]]]]]]