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Correspondence and Notes

10/1: Correspondence, notes and copies of legal papers concerning the lands of Demetrio Morales and his heirs in Webb County, Texas.

10/2: Correspondence, notes, clippings, and other materials related to this history of San Ygnacio, Randado, Falcon and so forth, 1936-1963.

10/3: Correspondence, mostly between Mercurio Martinez and Antonio Martinez about Martinez vs. Vidaurri, 1956-1962.

10/4: Mercurio Martinez rent control materials, 1942-1948.

10/5: List of persons whose addresses were required by the Department of Justice to mail them citations, in the case of Enrique Martinez et. al. vs. Maria Vidaurri Herbst, 1958.

10/6: Copies of lists of persons with lands along the Rio Grande in Zapata County, 1958.

10/7: Correspondence related to Martinez vs. Vidaurri, 1942-1959.

10/8: Notes on original owners of lands in Zapata County for Falcon Reservoir by the U.S. government, 1958.

10/9: Notes on Porcion 52, Webb County, 1958.

10/10: Copies of La Trinidad Ranch contracts.

10/11: Poll tax exemption receipts of Mercurio Martinez, 1947-1961.

Newspaper Clippings

17/1: General newspaper clippings, 1936-1945.

17/2: General newspaper clippings, January - May 1946.

17/3: General newspaper clippings, June 1-14, 1946.

17/4: General newspaper clippings, June 15-30, 1946.

17/5: General newspaper clippings, July 1946.

17/6: General newspaper clippings, August 1946.

17/7: General newspaper clippings, September - December 1946.

17/8: General newspaper clippings, January - May 1947.

17/9: General newspaper clippings, June - August 1947.

17/10: Washington Post, Atomic Supplement, August 3, 1947.

17/11: General newspaper clippings, September 1-5, 1947.

17/12: General newspaper clippings, September 6-30, 1947.

Other Materials

3-10/1: Tearsheets of articles by Binder in general interest magazines, 1936, 1953 - 1961, undated

3-10/2: United States Air Force report: Testing for Extrasensory Perception With a Machine (1963), with letter to Binder from USAF Office of Aerospace Research, January 1964

Letters to Charles Perry Gould and The Simple Cobbler of Aggawam Introduction Drafts

1/01: Llewelyn Powys to Charles Perry Gould discussing a book being published which Llewelyn wrote an introduction for, also included two postcards of Davos, Switzerland. March 22, 1936 (with envelope)

1/02: Llewelyn Powys to Charles Perry Gould, asking to send Mr. Gould his Story of Life. April 2, 1937

1/03: Carlie Mallett to Charles Perry Gould in response to Gould's inquiry about the editions they have for The Simple Cobbler of Agawam. July 21, 1938

1/04: John C. Powys to Charles Perry Gould responding to Mr. Gould's inquiry about knowledge of The Simple Cobbler of Agawam. John knows nothing of the book but refers the inquirer to his brother Llewelyn. October 21, 1938

1/04.1: Llewelyn Powys to Charles P. Gould discussing details and payment for Llewelyn to write the introduction for the book. October 26, 1938 (with envelope and photograph of Llewelyn)

1/05: Llewelyn Powys to Mr. Gould speaking of the enclosed introduction and the pleasure it gave Llewelyn to write it. Also included is a postcard of Davos. December 18, 1938 (with envelope)

1/06: Alyse Gregory (Powys) to Charles Perry Gould asking Mr. Gould for a copy of the book that Llewelyn wrote an introduction for. Asks specific things depending upon whether the book was published or not. It's her second letter to Mr. Gould on this topic. April 23, 1947 (with envelope)

1/07: First Draft of Introduction to The Simple Cobbler of Agawam by Nathaniel Ward. Undated (typed)

1/08: Second Draft of Introduction to The Simple Cobbler of Agawam, Undated (typed)

1/09: Third Draft of Introduction to The Simple Cobbler of Agawam, Undated (typed)

1/10: Alyse Gregory to Mr. Gould with talks of how well her husband's works are selling, and plans for more collections to come. Mr. Gould sent her a typed manuscript of the introduction of Llewelyn Powys. April 19, 1948

Travel Diary Entries

1/1: Mexico Travel Diary (2 copies, 8 pages each): Traveling from Laredo to Mexico City; Talking about buildings in city and comparing meals and restaurants; Shops, movie theatres, museums; Cathedral and Cueravaca; Returned back to Laredo by the end

1/2: A revised copy of "Mexico Travel Diary" (2 copies, now 9 pages): no major changes noticed

1/3: "Two Innocents Abroad In Mexico" (17 pages): Arnold's train trip from San Antonio to Laredo, Monterrey, and Mexico City; July 2-July 7-8

1/4: Florida Bound (12 pages): Map of travels included; Houston to Miami; Brief history of Florida; Experiences on train… seems to ride the train a lot; Talks about different parts of Florida they visited (Dayton, Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale, etc); Provides specific times; Returned to Houston, January 1937

1/5: "Away Out In The Mountains" (16 pages): Includes a map of travels; Talks about train ride experience; Poem about a pelican; Traveling to California[?], July 1936

1/6: Canada Travel Diary (17 pages): Map of travels included; Left from Houston, on a train; Brief summary of places stopped at; Small excerpt about Rockefeller Center; Talks about Montreal; On the ride back talks about an African American being on his train, July 1937

1/7: "Canadian Pacific" (37 pages): Random excerpt, don’t know where it came from (6 pages); Yet another train ride; Song excerpt; Talks about the mountains in Canada; Experiences at Banff, Johnson’s Canyon, Beaver Dam, Rebel stock; Compares Canadians, July 1939

1/8: "Canadian Pacific" Revised (now 38 pages): Map of travels included; Newspaper clipping included on the last page; No major changes

Article Clippings, Letters and Envelopes Sent to Margaret

24/1
Newspaper clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/2
Newspaper clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/3
Newspaper clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/4
Newspaper clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/5
Newspaper clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/6
Magazines and magazine clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/7
Magazines and magazine clippings about Margaret. May 21, 1972 - June 22, 1997

24/8
Letters to Margaret. September 6, 1972 - November 30, 1992

24/9
Envelops sent to Margaret. August 13, 1936 - November 16, 1972

24/10
Envelops sent to Margaret. November 19, 1972 - March 4, 1974

24/11
Envelops sent to Margaret. March 4, 1974 - November 25, 1983

24/12
Envelops sent to Margaret. January 20, 1984 - November 16, 2000

Cromlech - Fanciful

S1-6/1: Howard, Robert E., "Shadow in the Well", Cromlech: The Journal of Robert E. Howard Criticism Vol. 1 No. 2, Fall 1987

S1-6/2: Cromlech: The Journal of Robert E. Howard Criticism Vol. 1 No. 3, 1988

S1-6/3: Cromlech: The Journal of Robert E. Howard CriticismVol. 1 No. 3, 1988 (Copy 2)

S1-6/4: Howard, Robert E., "Golden Hope Christmas", Cross Plains Vol. 1 No. 1, January 1974 (Copy 1)

S1-6/5: Howard, Robert E., "Golden Hope Christmas", Cross Plains Vol. 1 No. 1, January 1974 (Copy 2)

S1-6/6: Howard, Robert E., "The Sign of the Snake", Cross Plains Vol. 1 No. 2, March 1974 (Copy 1)

S1-6/7: Howard, Robert E., "The Sign of the Snake", Cross Plains Vol. 1 No. 2, March 1974 (Copy 2)

S1-6/8: Howard, Robert E., "A Horror in the Night", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 3 (Copy 1)

S1-6/9: Howard, Robert E., "A Horror in the Night", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 3 (Copy 2)

S1-6/10: Howard, Robert E., "Law Shooters of Cowtown", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 4 (Copy 1)

S1-6/11: Howard, Robert E., "Law Shooters of Cowtown", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 4 (Copy 2)

S1-6/12: Howard, Robert E., "Under the Boabab Tree", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 5 (Copy 1)

S1-6/13: Howard, Robert E., "Under the Boabab Tree", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 5 (Copy 2)

S1-6/14: Howard, Robert E., "The Devil's Joker", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 6 (Copy 1)

S1-6/15: Howard, Robert E., "The Devil's Joker", Cross Plains, Vol. 1 No. 6 (Copy 2)

S1-6/16: Howard, Robert E., "The Frost-Giant's Daughter"; an Early Draft, The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies, No. 1, August 1990 (Copy 1)

S1-6/17: Howard, Robert E., "The Frost-Giant's Daughter"; an Early Draft, The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies No. 1, August 1990 (Copy 2)

S1-6/18: Howard, Robert E., "Bill Smalley and the Power of the Human Eye", The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies No. 2, July 1991

S1-6/19: Howard, Robert E., "What the Nation Owes to the South", The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies No. 3, April 1993

S1-6/20: Howard, Robert E., "Casonetto's Last Song" Etchings and Odysseys: A Tribute to the Weird No. 1

S1-6/21: Howard, Robert E., "Skull-Face", Famous Fantastic Mysteries, December 1952 (Copy 1)

S1-6/22: Howard, Robert E., "Skull-Face", Famous Fantastic Mysteries, December 1952 (Copy 2)

S1-6/23: Howard, Robert E., "Solomon Kane's Homecoming", Fanciful Tales of Time and Space, Fall 1936

Manuscripts

1-1/1: "When Superminds Clash" [originally published as "Spawn of Eternal Thought", 1936], typescript first carbon, undated, and continuation notes with handwritten notes, undated

1-1/2: "When Superminds Clash" [originally published as "Spawn of Eternal Thought", 1936], typescript second carbon, undated, and tearsheets from Astounding Stories, April-May 1936

1-1/3: "Via" series (1937-1942), typescript carbons and notes, with handwritten notes, undated

1-1/4: "Giants of Anarchy" (1939), typescript carbon of old version, and notes, undated

1-1/5: "Giants of Anarchy" (1939), first and second typescript carbons, 1939?, and tearsheets from Weird Tales, June-July 1939

1-1/6: "The Timeless Trap" [originally published as "Prison of Time", 1939], typescript first and second carbons, 1939?, and tearsheets from *Dynamic Science Stories", April-May 1939

1-1/7: "Where Eternity Ends" (1939), typescript carbon with handwritten edits, undated

1-1/8: "Where Eternity Ends" (1939), typescript carbon, undated; letter to Binder from Scott Meredith, undated; handwritten notes, March 1974; and tearsheets from Science Fiction, June 1939

1-1/9: "The Little People" (1940), typescript carbon and handwritten notes, undated

1-1/10: "Jon Jarl" stories, photocopies of various stories, 1941-1949?

1-1/11: "Secret of the Red Spot" [originally published as "The Destroyers from Mars", 1940], typescript first carbon, pages 1-87, undated

1-1/12: "Secret of the Red Spot" [originally published as "The Destroyers from Mars", 1940], typescript first carbon, pages 88-158, undated

1-1/13: "Secret of the Red Spot" [originally published as "The Destroyers from Mars", 1940], typescript first carbon, pages 159-187, undated; continuation notes, undated; copyright renewal form, March 1967; and tearsheets from Action Stories, June 1940

1-1/14: "Secret of the Red Spot" [originally published as "The Destroyers from Mars", 1940], typescript second carbon, pages 1-97, undated

1-1/15: "Secret of the Red Spot" [originally published as "The Destroyers from Mars", 1940], typescript second carbon, pages 98-187, undated

Stra - Swor

Strange Attractor
No.1 1991(?)

Strange Adventure Magazine
Vol. 1 No.1 Dec 1936

Strange Horizons
Apr 2002
Jul 2002

Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror
Vol.4 No.1 2003

STUPH n.s.
No.1 Aug 2001

Subterranean
No.4 circa 2006

Superamalgamation Presents
Vol. 2 No.1 Number 1 Oct-Dec 1974

Sword & Fantasy
No.1 Jan 2005
No.2 Apr 2005
No.3 Jul 2005

Miscellaneous

2/1
Seven miscellaneous thank you letters to Mrs. Harris (Undated)

2/2
Howell’s Antiques Card from Beaumont, Texas
The Governor’s Ball Invitation 1936 Texas Centennial Special Train
Cookie recipe written on the back of a partial piece of letter from R. W. Swift, October 3, 1885
A handwritten manuscript of an article for Susie Barton's shower with typed note FRAGILE
Founder Member Certificate from New York American Homemaker’s Club, New York Chapter
2 notes of peoples address
5 pages handwritten, "Memories of Experiences of an Oldtime News Agent, Henry Spofford (sp?)

2/3
Clippings of recipes from newspapers and magazines, and handwritten ones by Ma Harris.

2/4
Miscellaneous magazine articles. 1933-1938

Book - Chec

Books Are Everything!
Vol. 1 No.4 Number 4 Jul 1988
Vol. 2 No.3 Number 9 May 1989
Vol. 3 No. 4 Number 16 Winter 1990

Boskone
No. 9
No. 10 Mar 1973

BRG
No. 1 Oct 1990

British Fantasy Society, The (Cover ONLY)
No. 35 Jun 1974 (Bulletin)

British Science Fiction Association
Newsletter No. 4 Oct/Nov 1960
No. 5 Nov/Dec 1960
No. 6 Feb 1961
Bulletin No. 16 Jan 1968
No. 27 Sept 1969
No. 28 Nov 1969
No. 29 Dec 1969
No. 30 Jan 1970
No. 31 Mar 1970
No. 32 Apr 1970
No. 33 Jun 1970
No. 35 Aug 1970
No. 36 Sept 1970
No. 38 Nov 1970
No. 39 Dec 1970
No. 40 Jan 1971
No. 41 Apr 1971
No. 42 Jun 1971
No. 44 Nov 1971
No. 45 Dec 1971
No. 46 Feb 1972
No. 47 May 1972
Newsletter No. 1 Aug 12, 1975
Newsletter No. 3 Feb 1976
Newsletter No. 5 Mar 1976
Newsletter No. 6 May 1976 (2 Copies)
A Brief Look…
Agenda Apr 11, 1971
Agenda Apr 2, 1972
Balance Sheet Dec 31, 1970
Balance Sheet Dec 31, 1971
Bruce Harper No. 1 Dec 1, 1978
BSFA Award 1970
BSFA Award 1983
BSFA Convention Newsletter No. 1 1961
BSFA Convention Newsletter No. 1 1969
BSFA Constitution
BSFA Library 1974
“DOC WEIR” Award
Information Leaflet May 1982
Membership List 1970 (2 Copies)
Membership List 1972
Membership List Apr 1981
Membership List Jun 1981
Membership List Jun 1982
Membership List Oct 1982
Membership List P.1 Apr 1984 (2 Copies)
Membership List Apr 1984 (2 Copies)
Minutes Mar 29, 1970
Minutes Apr 2, 1972
Report of the Vice-Chairman 1970-1
Report of the Vice-Chairman 1971-2
Regional BSFA Meeting Oct 23
SF Books published in Britain Jan 1984
SF Books published in Britain Mar 1984
Useful Addresses

British Sciencefiction Fantasy Review, The
Vol. 1 No. 1 Jan 1937
Vol. 1 No. 2 Apr 1937
Vol. 1 No. 3 Jun 1937
Vol. 1 No. 4 Aug 1937
Vol. 1 No. 5 Oct 1937
Vol. 1 No. 6 Jan 1938
Vol. 2 No. 7 Mar 1938 (2 Copies)

Bruzzfuzzel News
Vol. 1 No.53 Feb/Mar 1988
Vol. 1 No.54 Apr/May 1988
Vol. 1 No.55 Jun/Jul 1988
Vol. 1 No.56 Aug/Sept 1988
Vol. 1 No.57 Oct/Nov 1988
Vol. 1 No.61 Jun/Jul 1989
Vol. 1 No.62 Aug/Sep 1989
Vol. 1 No.63 Oct/Nov 1989
Vol. 1 No.64 Dec/Jan 89/90
Vol. 1 No.65 Feb/Mar 1990

BS
No. 1 Apr 1976

Bulletin of the Science Fiction Writers of America
Vol. 8 No.4 Number 43 c1972
Vol. 8 No.5 Number 44 c1972
Vol. 8 No.6 Number 45 c1973
Vol. 9 No.1 Number 46 c1973
Vol. 14 No.1 Number 69 SPR 1979

Buried Mountains
No. 1 Aug 1972 (2 copies)

Burroughs Bulletin, The
No. 46 SPR 2001

Burroughsania
Vol. 1 No.7 Aug 1957

BYOB CON program
No. 5 Jul 1975

Call- Wright
Vol. 1 No.1 Nov 1978

Cambion
No. 2 Win 1975/1976

Catalog of the NFF TAPE BUREAU
Jul 1970

Celestial Inventory
No. 36 c1991

Cepheid Variable
No. 3 Jan 1971
No. 4 May 1971
No. 5 1971
No. 6 Dec 1971
No. 7 1972

Challenger
No. 27 WIN 2008

Checklist, The
No.2 Oct 1978

Boonville History Materials

1/1: Boone and Bryan Families
Daniel Boone biography of the Boone family history including a family history of William Joel Bryan of Brazos County [typed]

Excerpt from Dallas Public Library titled "The Boon Family", describing the Boon Family history with handwritten notes on Joseph Bryan. 1979 [2 pages, photocopy]

"Pioneer Families of Missouri" [pages 2-3, 132-133] describing the history of Daniel Boone. Undated [2 pages, photocopy]

Handwritten family tree of Boone Family. Undated

"Bryan Family Patriots and Veterans". Undated

Handwritten Boone-Family Chart. Undated [photocopy]

"The Family Moving Together" with the Boone, Austin, and Bryan Family. Undated

Francis Bryan, III, and Sarah Brinker Bryan family tree. Undated

1/2: Manuscript
"Boonville Revisited" by Cornelious and Margaret vat Bavel describing Boonville family and Brazos and Boonville county histories. 1977 [10 pages, 2 copies]

1/3: Junus and Harvey Mitchell
Manuscript, "Information on the Mitchell Family" describing the history of Harvey Mitchell's family history starting from James Mitchell of Montgomery County TX. Undated

Handwritten court record, "Court Record Sept[ember] Term 1856" describing James Mitchell. Undated [2 pages, photocopy]

Manuscript, "Information about Harvey Mitchell", a biography of Harvey Mitchell. Undated

Book page titled "James Henry Mitchell, Bryan". Undated [photocopy]

Book page titled "Indian Wars and Pioneers of Texas" [page 288]. Undated [photocopy]

Clipping of book titled "Mitchell, J. H." [page 476]. Undated [photocopy]

Manuscript, "Harvey Mitchell File, TAMU" collection catalog [at Cushing?]. Undated

Manuscript, "Harvey Mitchell's Genealogy", autobiography and genealogy written by Harvey Mitchell. Undated [2 pages]

Book page, "Harvey Mitchell from Indian Wars and Pioneers" [page 38, 594, 595]. Undated [3 pages, photocopy]

Handwritten document titled "Debra's Great-Great-Grandfather" describing Harvey Mitchell biography and history. Undated [8 pages, photocopy]

The State of Texas County Deed of Harvey Mitchell deed. Undated [4 pages]

1/4
Indian Wars and Pioneers of Texas describing the history of Samuel Parker. Undated

1/5
Benjamin Hubert biography. Undated [3 pages]

1/6
Eli Seale - Joseph Arnold Seale biography. Undated

1/7: Bowman Family
Narrative of Anny Day who was a former slave owned by Eliza Bowman, November 5, 1937 [2 pages]

Document of the Thomas Bowman Family history. Undated [9 pages]

1/8
Clippings from the Conventions and Congresses (1832-1845) discussing pioneers in the Brazos County, TX region. Undated [photocopy]

1/9
Miscellaneous Boonville Notes a Chronology and a list of Documents. Undated [5 pages]

1/10
Petition to Form New County 1841. Undated [7 pages]

1/11: Exhibit Brochure
"Boonville: The First Seat of Brazos County". 1987 [2 pages]

1/12: County Records Regarding Boonville
"Report by the Three Commissioners Appointed by the County Court to Survey the Town Site of Boonville and to Sell Town Lots". Undated [4 pages]

"County Commissioners Minutes Book" May 6, 1844 [3 pages]

Deed Book B 940. Undated [2 pages]

County Commissioners Minutes. May [?], 1844 [2 pages]

Nancy Millican, Bill of Sale and Republic of Texas. Undated [2 pages]

Brochure, "College Station's First Settler: Artifacts from Home sit of Richard Carter", by Shawn Carlson. Undated

Deed Book, page 149 describing John Galloway. Undated [photocopy]

Handwritten letter by John Galloway. May [?], 1845 [photocopy]

The State of Texas (county of Calhoun) from Book B, page 320. Undated [3 pages]

County Commissioners Minutes: Book A, page 519. February 5, 1848 [2 pages]

Book E, page 28. Undated [5 pages]

County Commissioners Minutes Book A, page 582. November 1854 [2 pages]

E. R. Montgomery to Deed, Book D, page 435. 1855

County Commissioners Minutes Book A, page 166 discussing Boonville County. November 19, 1866 [2 pages]

County Commissioners Minutes Book D, page 349. May 12, 1890 [2 pages]

County Commissioners Minutes Book G, page 527. 1915

Deed Book B page 320. Undated [2 pages]

Location of Public Well in Boonville Deed Book L, page 434 and 485. 1872 [2 pages]

1/13: Hood's Brigade Bryan Centennial magazine The Early History of Bryan and the Surrounding Area by Joseph Milton Nance. 1962 [50 pages] attached Hood's Brigade Centennial coin

1/14: Plats, Property, and Overlay Maps
Land plots in Bryan-Boonville. 1920[?] [photocopy]

Land plot property map of Bryan-Boonville. 1920 [photocopy]

Blank map of Bryan-Boonville?. Undated

Road [?] map of South Highway 6 East Bypass to College Station. Undated [photocopy]

Overlay of a map of south highway 6 East bypass to College Station. Undated

Infrared [?] photograph of Highway 6 East Bypass to College Station. Undated

Overlay of Town Plot of Boonville Scale 1'=857'-0". Undated

Town Plot of Boonville Scale 1'=857'-0". Undated [photocopy]

Plot of the Town of Boonville, TX 1"-400' Drawn from data on page, by C.H. M. van Bavel. January 17, 1977 [2 copies]

Cemetery Corner-Corner of Boonville. Undated

Negatives of Maps. Undated [1 strip]

1/15
Field Survey of Boonville. Undated[6 pages]

1/16
Petition for a Post Office, Navasota County. 1841 [4 pages]

1/17: Manuscripts by Harvey Mitchell
"Courthouse History, Boonville". Undated [3 pages]

"Jail History of Brazos County". Undated [8 pages]

"Deer Hunt" personal narrative. Undated [16 pages]

"Bear Hunt" personal narrative. Undated [8 pages]

"Christmas Dinner" personal narrative. Undated [10 pages]

1/18
"Interview with Mr. Dela Carol" describing Mr. Carol's recollections on the Boonville County log courthouse. April 4, 1976 [2 pages]

1/19 Centennial History of Brazos Union Lodge, 1854-1954 by George A Long. January 1, 1954 [10 pages, photocopy]

1/20
"American Sketch of Brazos County" from American Sketch Book. Undated [14 pages]

1937-1939 Football Seasons

1937 Season
2/1: Bound copies of programs. 1937 season

2/2: Texas A&M vs Mississippi State, October 9, 1937
Game played in Tyler, Texas as part of the Rose Festival.

2/3: Texas A&M at Texas Christian University (TCU), October 16, 1937

2/4: Texas A&M vs Baylor, October 23, 1937
(2 copies, each have different cover art)

2/5: Texas A&M vs Southern Methodist University (SMU), November 6, 1937 (2 copies)

2/6: Texas A&M at Rice, November 13, 1937

2/7: Texas A&M Frosh vs Texas Yearlings, November 24, 1937 (Freshman game)

2/8: Texas A&M vs Texas, November 25, 1937

1938 Season
2/9: Bound copies of programs. 1938 season

2/10: Texas A&M vs Texas A&I, September 24, 1938

2/11: Texas A&M vs Tulsa, October 1, 1938
Game played in Tyler, Texas as part of the Rose Festival.

2/12: Texas A&M vs Arkansas, October 29, 1938

2/13: Texas A&M vs Texas Christian University (TCU), October 15, 1938

2/14: Texas A&M at Baylor, October 22, 1938

2/15: Texas A&M vs Rice, November 12, 1938

2/16: Texas A&M at Texas, November 24, 1938

1939 Season
2/17: Texas A&M vs Centenary College, October 30, 1939

2/18: Texas A&M vs Villanova, October 14, 1939
Game played in Tyler, Texas as part of the Rose Festival.

2/19: Texas A&M at Texas Christian University (TCU), October 21, 1939

2/20: Texas A&M vs Baylor, October 26, 1939

2/21: Texas A&M vs Southern Methodist University (SMU), November 8, 1939

2/22: Texas A&M at Rice, November 15, 1939

2/23: Texas A&M vs Texas, Thanksgiving 1939

2/24: Texas A&M vs Tulane, January 1, 1940
Sugar Bowl played in New Orleans, LA. 1939 National Championship Game. (3 copies)

Speeches

5/1: "History and First Observed Phenomena of X-Rays" Lecture I outline, 6 pp., October 12, 1937.

5/2: "Concepts Basic to an Understanding of Radiation Processes" Lecture II outline, 5 pp., October 19, 1937.

5/3: "Concepts Basic to an Understanding of Radiation Process" Lecture III outline, 3 pp., October 26, 1937.

5/4: "Review on Nature of Matter" and "Energy and Its Transference" Lecture IV, 7 pp., November 2, 1937.

5/5: "Interaction of X-Rays and Matter" Lecture V outline, 3 pp., November 9, 1937.

5/6: "Traversal of Photons Through Matter" Lecture VII outline, 3 pp., November 23, 1937.

5/7: "Absorption and Scattering of X-Rays" Lecture VII outline, 3 pp., November 23, 1937.

5/8: "Experimental Evidences for Absorption Processes" Lecture VIII outline, 7 pp., November 30, 1937.

5/9: "Absorption and Filtration" Lecture IX outline, 6 pp., December 7, 1937.

5/10: "Absorption and Filtration" Lecture X outline, 3 pp., December 13, 1937.

5/11: Talks on neutrons notes and outlines, 24 pp., 1937.

5/12: "Quantity: Exposure and Dosage of Radiation" Lecture XII, 3 pp., January 11, 1938.

5/13: "Quantity Measurements of X-Rays" Lecture XIII outline, 5 pp., January 18, 1938.

5/14: "The Standardization of Quantity" Lecture XIV outline, 5 pp., January 25, 1938.

5/15: "Dosage by Small Volume Walled Chamber" Lecture XV, 7 pp., February 1, 1938.

5/16: "The Collimation of Fast Neutrons" abstract, meeting of the Physical Society, Washington D.C., 1 p., December 28, 1938.

5/17: "Protection from Neutron Rays and Other Products of Nuclear Transformation", 4 pp., 1938.

5/18: "Cyclotron and How It Transforms Matter" January 13, 1940.

5/19: Outline of an untitled talk on atom-smashing, Berkeley Lion's Club, 2 pp., February 1940.

5/20: "Modern Nuclear Physics and Medicine (Cancer Therapy)" outline, Los Angeles Cancer Society, 4 pp., September 30, 1940.

5/21: "Natural and Induced Radioactivity and the Nature of Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Neutron Rays" outline, Radiology Convention, 9 pp., 1940.

5/22: Outline of an untitled talk on atoms, 3 pp., November 11, 1941.

5/23: "Adventures in Science", Chicago, interview on radio station WBBM on radioisotopes, 8 pp., text in mimeo and 9 pp., June 22, 1946.

5/24: "The Pile: A Nuclear Reactor", Chicago Radiological Society of North America, 5 pp., December 2, 1946.

5/25: "Status of Program Involving Distribution of Radioisotopes", 2 pp., January 15, 1947.

5/26: "By-Products of Atomic Energy for Use by the Medical Profession", 15 pp., February 5, 1947.

5/27: Outline of an untitled talk on radioisotopes, Vanderbilt Conference on Radioisotopes, 4 pp., April 21, 1947.

5/28: "Atomic Research Dividends for the Farmer", American Agricultural Editors Association meeting with the U.S. AEC, 6 pp., May 13, 1947.

5/29: "Problems in the Production, Distribution, and Use of Isotopes", St. Louis, Fourth International Cancer Research Congress, 5 pp., September 6, 1947.

5/30: "Recent Developments in the Availability of Isotopes", Madison, WI meeting of scientists, 33 pp., September, ca. 10, 1947.

5/31: "Atomic Energy and the War Against Cancer", Atlanta, GA Division American Cancer Society, 17 pp., November 12, 1947.

5/32: Untitled speech labeled draft remarks, Knoxville Cancer Society, 3 pp., November 21, 1947.

5/33: "Isotopes Available for Research", Auburn, AL, Conference on the Use of Radioactive Isotopes in Agricultural Research, 30 pp., December 18, 1947.

5/34: "Isotopes and their Application to Peacetime Use of Atomic Energy", Chicago, 114th Meeting of American Association for the Advancement of Science, 11 pp., December 29, 1947.

5/35: Outline of an untitled speech commenting on papers on isotopes, New York City, James Ewing Society, 3 pp., January 16, 1948.

5/36: "The Availability of Radioactive Isotopes", Brookhaven National Laboratory, 21 pp., January 14, 1948.

5/37: Outline of an untitled speech labeled Y 12 research staff talk on uses of isotopes, 4 pp., February 2, 1948.

5/38: "What Atomic Energy Means to the Farmer", Ames, IO, 48th Annual Farm and Home Week, 18 pp., February 11, 1948.

5/39: "Atomic Energy and Human Welfare", Des Moines, IO, National Farm Institute, 23 pp., February 14, 1948.

5/40: "Atomic Energy - For Fear or Faith", McAllen, TX, Knife and Fork Club, 32 pp., March 23, 1948.

5/41: "Peacetime Atomic Energy and Industry", Galveston, TX, Spring convention of the Southern Gas Association, 35 pp., carbon copy text, 19 pp., printed text, March 25, 1948.

5/42: "Atomic Developments and Technology in Cancer Research", New York City, NY, opening of the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, 4 pp., April 16, 1948.

5/43: Untitled introduction, New York City, NY, New York Electrical Society, 3 pp., April 23, 1948.

5/44: Outline of an untitled speech labeled Batelle talk, Columbus, OH, Battelle Memorial Institute, 6 pp., June 3, 1948.

5/45: "Medical Professions' Participation in Atomic Energy" outline, Columbus, OH, Ohio State University class of medical students, 3 pp., June [4], 1948.

5/46: Outline of an untitled talk on the use of isotopes in the treatment of cancer, Columbus, OH, Ohio State University, 3 pp., June 4, 1958.

5/47: Outline of an untitled speech labeled notes for meeting on isotope program, Oak Ridge, 6 pp., June 18, 1948.

5/48: "Isotopes for Medicine", Chicago, IL, American Medical Association, 9 pp., (Published in the Journal of the American Medical Association), June 22, 1948.

5/49: "Isotopes and Their Application in the Field of Industrial Materials" abstract, Detroit, MI, Marburg Lecture before American Society for Testing Materials, 9 pp., (Published in Proceedings of the ASTM), June 24, 1948.

5/50: "Recent Developments in Use of Isotopes in Biology and Medicine" outline, Woods Hole, MA, Marine Biological Laboratory, 8 pp., July 23, 1948.

5/51: Outline of untitled remarks, Gordon Cancer Research Conference, 5 pp., September 2, 1948.

5/52: "The New World of Atomic Energy", St. Paul, MN, Hamline University Institute of Inter-American Relations and World Affairs, 16 pp., October 22, 1948.

5/53: "Isotopes and Education" outline and slide list, Washington, Office of Education Federal Security Agency, 5 pp., October 25, 1948.

5/54: "Isotopes and Their Peacetime Applications for Human Welfare", Los Alamos Forum, 1 p., November 7, 1948,

5/55: "Isotopes and Cancer Research" outline and slide list, Louisville, Kentucky Division, American Cancer Society, 7 pp., November 13, 1948.

5/56: "New World of Atomic Energy" ("Atomic Energy - Challenge to Humanity" scratched out), Dallas, TX, Knife and Fork Club, 25 pp., November 16, 1948.

5/57: "Recent Developments in Radioisotope Distribution" outline, San Francisco, CA, Radiological Society of North America, 6 pp., December 6, 1948.

5/58: "The Atom and Education" text of preliminary remarks, Washington, 1 p., December 29, 1948.

5/59: "Radioisotopes - Production, Distribution, Use and Control" outline, Washington, AEC Seminar on Disposal of Radioactive Wastes, 3 pp., January 24, 1949.

5/60: "Production of Radioisotopes" outline and slide list, Army Medical Center indoctrination course, 7 pp., January 28, 1949.

5/61: "Procurement and Handling of Radioisotopes" outline and slide list, Army Medical Center indoctrination course, 4 pp., January 28, 1949.

5/62: "Isotopes - Benefits to Human Welfare" outline, Oak Ridge, Women's Club, 3 pp., February 10, 1949.

5/63: "Present and Future Scope of Isotope Distribution Program", notes for discussion with General Manager, 10 pp., March 4, 1949.

5/64: Outline and notes for an untitled lecture on isotopes, University Park, Pennsylvania State College Chapter of Sigma XI, 8 pp., March 14, 1949.

5/65: "The Development of the Isotopes Distribution Program", New York City, Commercial Chemical Development Association, 17 pp., March 16, 1949.

5/66: Outline of untitled remarks on isotopes, Oak Ridge, Reserve Officers' Club, 3 pp., March 23, 1949.

5/67: Outline of untitled speech on isotopes, Roane County Medical Association, 6 pp., March 29, 1949.

5/68: "Atomic Energy Benefits - Radioisotopes", New York City, Teachers' In-Service Course on Atomic Energy, 23 pp., April 7, 1949.

5/69: "Isotopes for Research and Industry" abstract, Newark, North Jersey Section of the American Chemical Society, 2 pp., April 11, 1949.

Be - Cha

Ben'zine #2
[Ben Zuhl, pub., 1977]

Best Lines are off the Wall #5
[April 1976]

Best Lines are on the Floor
[July 1975]

Best of the Mage, The #8, 10
[Harry Dolan, ed., Fall 1987 - Summer 1988]

Between Worlds
[1979]

Bhowling #2
[Taral Wayne, ed., April 1979]

Bibliofantastiac #7
[March/April 1983]

Bibliofantastiac #9
[July/August 1983]

Bill Bridget is Alive and Well and Living in Argentina
[Bill Bridget, ed., 1977]

Bimonthly Monthly, The #13
[Christine Kulyk, ed., October 1980]

Bimonthly Monthly, The #3.2
[David M. Vereschagin, ed., December 1980 - January 1981]

Bionic Rabbit #16
[August 1980]

Biotimber
[Gene Wolfe, ed., 1973]

Bioya #2
[David Moyer, ed., pub., 1976]

Bioya #3
[David Moyer, ed., January 1977]

Bird is Cruel, The #14
[Patrick Hayden, ed., Undated]

Bird is Cruel, The #15
[Patrick Hayden, ed., pub., Undated]

Bird is Cruel, The #16
[Patrick Hayden, pub., Undated]

Bird is Cruel, The #17
[Patrick Hayden, ed., Undated]

Bird is Cruel, The #18
[Patrick Hayden, ed., March 1976]

Bird is Cruel #20
[Patrick Hayde, ed., May 1976]

Bird is Cruel, The #21
[Patrick Hayden, pub., ed., Undated]

Bird is Cruel, The, unnumbered issues
[Patrick Hayden, ed., Undated]

Bird on the Housetop #1.4
[Steve Lehman, ed., Undated]

Bizarre Accidents in the Home are a Major Health Hazard #1
[Karen Pealston, ed., ath., Undated]

Bizarre #4.1
[Jack Chapman Miske and Walter E. Marconette, ed., January 1941]

Black Triangle #4
[1985]

Black Wolf #18
[G. Sutton Breiding, ed., June 1975]

Black Wolf #20
[G. Sutton Breiding, ed., 1976]

Blotter, The #6 [C. F. Kennedy, ed., 1986]

Blue Eyed Solstice Train #1
[Undated]

Bob, The #35b
[Bob Rodgers, ed., 1988]

Bode Bulletin #4
[George W. Beahm, ed., March 1972]

Bode Bulletin #8
[George Beahm, ed., pub., Undated]

Bondapa #1
[Derek McCulloch, ed., Undated]

Bondapa #2
[Duncan Brown, ed., October 1982]

Bondapa #4-7
[Derek McCulloch, ed., Undated]

Bondapa Mailing
[Duncan Brown, ed., Undated]

Bonfire
[Michael J. Macomber, ed., February 1984]

Bonfire #3.6-3.7
[December 1943 - November 1944]

Books in My Life, The
[John Foyster, ed., February 1981]

Booklist, The #30.1
[1977]

Books of 1981, An Eclectic Assortment
[Do - Ming Lum, pub., February 1982]

Boonpark #5
[Dan Stefan, ed., pub., August 1981]

Boowatt #1
[Garth Danielson, ed., pub., Undated]

Boowatt #3
[Garth Danielson, ed., pub., December 1975]

Boowatt #4-5, 7
[Garth Danielson, ed., pub., January 1976 - April 1976]

Boowatt #16-18
[Garth Edmond Danielson, ed., January 1977 - March 1977]

Boowatt #24
[Garth Edmond Danielson, pub., November 1977]

Boowatt #25
[Garth Edmond, ed., January 1978]

Boowatt #26
[Garth Edmond Danielson, ed., March 1978]

Boowatt #27
[Garth Danielson, pub., 1978]

Boowatt #28
[Garth Edmond, ed., pub., December 1978]

Boowatt #43
[Garth Daneilson, ed., Undated]

Boowatt Weekly
[Undated]

Boowatt Weekly #7-11, 14-17
[Garth Danielson, ed., ath., February 1975 - April 1975]

Boowatt Weekly #18-22
[Boowatt Publications, pub., Garth Danielson, ed., ath., May 1975]

Boowatt Weekly #23-27, 35-36
[Garth Danielson, ed., May 1978 - July 1978]

Boowatt Weekly #37-50, 95
[August 1978 - February 1979; September 1979]

Boreal #80
[Undated]

Borealis #1.1-1.2
[John Bell and Alain Chabot, ed., Summer 1978 - Spring 1979]

Bosh #2
[Roger Sjolander, ed., Undated]

Bosh #6
[Roger Sjolande, ed., Undated]

Boston in 1980
[1980]

Bottle Fatigue
[Eric Lindsay, ed., Undated]

Bozo Bus Tribune, The
[Garth Danielson, ed., Undated]

Bozo Bus Tribune, The #2.1-2.10
[Fra M. Thornhill, ed., Undated]

Brass Potato Quad, The
[Cathy Howard, ed., Undated]

Brass Potato Trey, The
[Cathy Howard, ed., Undated]

Brassor #4
[Marty Levine, ed., 1979]

Brassor #6
[Marty Levine, ed., January - April 1980]

Breakfast in Bedlam #16
[Lloyd Penney, ed., 1989]

British Science Fiction Fantasy Review, The 3-4, 6
[Walter Gillings, ed., June 1937 - January 1938]

Broadside
[Undated]

Brotherhood of Bronze Bulletin #2
[1976]

Brownian Motion #4
[Brian Earl Brown, ath., ed., pub., 1978]

Brownian Motion #7
[Brian Earl Brown, ed., pub., October 1984]

Brownian Motion #8
[Brian Earl Brown, ed., December 1984]

BRSFL News #13
[J. R. Madden, ed., 1981]

BRSFL News #1.27
[Clay Fourrier, ed., October/November 1983]

BRSFL News #1.31
[Clay Fourrier, ed., June/July 1984]

BRSFL News #1.32
[Clay Fourrier, ed., August 1984]

BRSFL News #1.34-1.35
[Clay Fourrier, ed., December 1984 - April/May 1985]

BSFAN #7-8
[Mike Kurman, ed., June 1977]

Btamp
[Barbara Teresa Anna Maria Przeklasa, ed., 1979]

Bug Drug #1
[Vaughn Fraser, ed., September 1977]

Bug Drug #3
[Vaughn Fraser, ed., January 1978]

Bug Drug #4
[Vaughn Fraser, ed., pub., 1978]

Bug Drug #5
[Undated]

Bug Drug #7
[December 1978]

Bulletin, The #1.1-1.2
[January 1980]

The Bullzine #87
[Arthur Hayes, ed., June 1979]

Burblings
[Charles Burbee, ed., February 1982]

Burnt Toast
[Mike Wallis, pub., 1978]

Bus to Never Ever Land, The
[Fred Haskell, ed., June 1981]

By His Windows Even #3
[Dave Vereschagin, ed., Undated]

Cacciatore
[Patrick Nielsen Hayden, ed., Undated]

Caer Pedryvan #14
[Jim Allan, ed., May 1981]

Cafe of the One Bridge #1
[Frank Denton, ed., Undated]

Cafe of the One Bridge #2
[Frank Denton, ed., June 1984]

Cafe of the One Bridge #3
[Frank Denton, ed., June 1984]

Calcium Light Nights
[Phil Paine, ed., Undated]

Calcium Light Nights #2-3
[Phil Paine, ed., 1975]

Callisto Rising #1.2
[E. B. Klassen, ed., 1982]

Canadapa #29
[June 1977]

Canadapa #30
[Roy Berger, pub., August 1977]

Canadapa #31
[Undated]

Canadapa #32
[December 1977]

Canadapa #33
[Undated]

Canadapa #34-36
[Apr 1978 - Aug 1978]

Canadapa #37
[Vaughn Fraser, ed., September 1978]

Canadapa #63
[Harland Ronning, ed., 1984]

Canadata #51-52
[Jim Shedden, ed., Undated]

Canadapa Book Of Records #3-4
[1977-1978]

Canadian Fandom
[Beak Taylor, pub., November 1943]

Canadian Fandom #19
[Gerald Steward, ed., December 1953]

Canadian Fandom #33a
[William D. Grant, ed., February 1957]

Canadian Graphic Collector #1
[Dick Houston, ed., pub., January/February 1978]

Canadian Graphic Collector #2
[R. H. (Dick) Houston, ed., February/March 1978]

Candiru #2
[John Foyster, ath., February 1988]

Candiru #4
[John Foyster, ed., November 1988]

Canfan #14
[William D. Grant, ed., November 1956]

Caprion #2
[James Dean Schofield, ed., July 1980]

Capsule Reviews #1
[Lynne Holdom, ed., 1977]

Captain George's Penny Dreadful #627-630
[Vast Whizzbang Org, ed., February 1981 - March 1981]

Captain George's Yellow Journal
[August 1975]

Carefully Sedated #1
[Catherine Crockett, ed., April 1983]

Carefully Sedated #2
[Alan Rosenthal, ed., September 1983]

Carefully Sedated #4
[Alan Rosenthal, pub., 1985]

Carol, The Ancient Yuletide Troll
[Undated]

Carrion #2
[James Dean Schofield, ed., July 1980]

Casperapa #4
[Franskene, ed., November 1987]

Catenary Tales
[Elliot "Elst" Weinstein, ed., Spring-Summer 1986]

Cause We've Ended as Lovers
[Michael Hall, pub., Undated]

Celaphais
[Bill Evans, pub., Undated]

Celephais
[Bill Evans, pub., February 1985]

Central Ganglion, The #2
[Garth Spencer, ed., 1982]

Central Ganglion, The #6
[Garth Spencer, ed., April 1983]

Central Ganglion, The #7
[Garth Spencer, ed., May 1983]

Central Ganglion, The #11
[E. B. Klassen, ed., July 1983]

Challenge and Response #1
[Eric Lindsay, ath., Undated]

Changeling
[Undated]

Chankhulations Among The Gemini
[Bill Paul. ed., June 1977]

Chankulations Made to Measure
[Bill Paul, ed., 1977]

Chankulations Prepares For Fall
[Bill Paul, ed., October 1977]

Chankulations Presents A Chankuchristmas
[1977]

Chaps
[Dale A. Goble, ed., Undated]

Chat #35, 38
[Dick and Nicki Lynch, ed., August 1980 - November 1980]

Chat #39(4.30)
[Dick and Nick Lynch, ed., December 1980]

Chat #40
[Dick and Nicki Lynch, pub., February 1981]

Correspondence and Biographic Materials

1/1: Biographical materials including job applications, position descriptions, biographical sketches, and other notes, 1944-1963.

1/2: General correspondence, including letters from K. H. Kingdon and C. W. Metz, a part of the program of the Fifth International Congress of Radiology held in Chicago in September 1937 at which Mr. Aebersold gave a paper entitled "Practical Considerations in the Comparison of Depth Doses Achieved by 1000 KV and 200 KV X-Ray Apparatus," as well as notes on dose measurement and radiation ionization, 1937-1938.

1/3: Notebook kept by Mr. Aebersold labeled, "Neutron Biology", a record of neutron exposures at the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California in Berkeley, June 1938 - November 1939.

1/4: Notebook kept by Mr. Aebersold labeled "Protection Measurements, Cyclotron", June 1938.

1/5: General correspondence, including letters from Edith H. Quimby, Douglas F. Lea, M. A. Tuve, and Robly D. Evans. Most of the correspondence deals with fast neutrons through there is some mention of the awarding of a Nobel Prize to Ernest O. Lawrence, Mr. Aebersold's report of his activities under the Finney-Howell Foundation Fellowship, and a program for the final examination of Dr. Aebersold for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 1939.

1/6: General correspondence, including letters from Milt Green, Robly D. Evans, L. Marinelli, J. R. Dunning, Edith H. Quimby, T. N. White, and William A. Fisher of the Finney-Howell Research and Foundation. One of the letters gives a summary of the work of Dr. Aebersold during the previous year. Also included is a typed copy of a statement by Ernest O. Lawrence on the operation of the 60-inch cyclotron, 1940.

1/7: General correspondence, including letters from Louis Alvarez, R. R. Newell, L. Marinelli, Marvin M. D. Williams, and Raymond E. Zirkle, 1941.

1/8: Notes and other materials for a course entitled "Medical Physics" in which Dr. Aebersold appears to have been the lecturer, Spring 1942.

1/9: General correspondence, including a list of the personnel at the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley in 1943, Dr. Aebersold's identification card for his work in the Manhattan Project, certain records of employment, and a mimeographed notice from J. R. Oppenheimer concerning the release of information on the Manhattan Project, 1943-1945.

1/10: General Correspondence, including materials regarding Dr. Aebersold's employment in the Manhattan Project and his notes on a discussion he had with J. G. Hamilton, January-June 1946.

1/11: General correspondence, including letters from E. P. Wigner, A. V. Peterson, Waldo E. Cohn, Joseph W. Kennedy, L. F. Curtiss, Andrew H. Dowdy, A. Baird Hastings, and L. A. DuBridge, many of which relate to the activities of the Interim Advisory Committee on Isotope Distribution Policy. Also includes a memorandum by Dr. Aebersold, entitled "General Information Concerning Isotopes Branch", July-December 1946.

1/12: Booklet, entitled "A Guide to Oak Ridge" produced by the Community Relations Section of the United States Engineering Department. Includes a street map and contains pictures and information on the early development of the Oak Ridge Laboratory, 1946.

1/13: General correspondence, including letters from L. A. DuBridge and David E. Lilienthal, and copies of programs for meetings at which Dr. Aebersold spoke, 1949-1951.

1/14: General correspondence, including a letter from Bernard Manowitz and copies of programs for meetings at which Dr. Aebersold spoke. Among these are programs for the Fission Product Utilization Conference at Brookhaven National Laboratory, the Fourth Inter-American Congress of Radiology in Mexico City, and the American Management Association, 1952.

1/15: General correspondence, including letters from Sam R. Sapirie and Marvin Fox, notes for a staff meeting at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, two memos on the distribution of cyclotron irradiated materials or radioisotopes, a memo on the VI International Cancer Congress to be held in Sao Paulo, Brazil in 1954, a memo and agenda for a meeting on the Atomic Energy Commission's Cyclotron program and reactor pricing policy, and a capsule summary of the isotopes distribution program as of December 1953.

1/16: General correspondence, including an agenda for an Atomic Energy Pricing Policy meeting, programs and other material for the VI International Cancer Congress at Sao Paulo, Brazil, a memo on Union Carbide's pricing policy for radioisotopes, a memo from Dr. Aebersold dealing with the improvement of isotope distribution to South America, a capsule summary of isotopes distribution program as of September, a memo from Dr. Aebersold regarding the providing of radioisotopes at reduced prices for medical, biological, or other research uses, and notes made by Dr. Aebersold of his trip to Brazil, 1954.

Series 7

Series 7, Master Farm Family Speeches, Articles, and Correspondence. 1937-1968; Undated

5/1: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, 1937-1939

5/2: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, 1940-1944

5/3: Master Farm Family - Correspondence and Record Books, 1953

5/4: Master Farm Family - Correspondence and Record Books, 1953

5/5: Master Farm Family - Correspondence and Record Books, 1953

5/6: Master Farm Family - Correspondence and Record Books, 1953

5/7: Master Farm Family - Correspondence and Record Books, 1953

5/8: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, 1954-1957

5/9: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, January - October 1958

5/10: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, November 1958

5/11: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, November 1958

5/12: Master Farm Family - Correspondence, 1959-1968

5/13: Master Farm Family - V. P. Allsupp. Undated

5/14: Master Farm Family - Joe Barkman. Undated

5/15: Master Farm Family - Albert Brockreide. Undated

5/16: Master Farm Family - Henry S. Davidson. Undated

5/17: Master Farm Family - J. C. Donnell. Undated

5/18: Master Farm Family - R. E. Echols. Undated

5/19: Master Farm Family - J. C. Edds. Undated

5/20: Master Farm Family - C. L. Ezell. Undated

5/21: Master Farm Family - J. E. Gayder. Undated

5/22: Master Farm Family - Oscar J. Grossman. Undated

5/23: Master Farm Family - H. B. Hales. Undated

5/24: Master Farm Family - Harland A. Hawk. Undated

5/25: Master Farm Family - W. L. and H. C. Hay. Undated

5/26: Master Farm Family - J. J. Hegi. Undated

5/27: Master Farm Family - G. V. Hensarling. Undated

5/28: Master Farm Family - Bill Holloway. Undated

5/29: Master Farm Family - Ottomer E. Hugo. Undated

5/30: Master Farm Family - Roy C. Humphries. Undated

5/31: Master Farm Family - K. B. Ivey. Undated

5/32: Master Farm Family - E. C. Johle. Undated

5/33: Master Farm Family - Melvin C. Josselet. Undated

5/34: Master Farm Family - Henry Jund. Undated

5/35: Master Farm Family - C. A. Kiker. Undated

5/36: Master Farm Family - Grady Lankford. Undated

5/37: Master Farm Family - F. O. Masten. Undated

5/38: Master Farm Family - William McKelvey. Undated

5/39: Master Farm Family - John G. McMichael. Undated

5/40: Master Farm Family - Chester W. Mitchell. Undated

5/41: Master Farm Family - Fay Mowrey. Undated

5/42: Master Farm Family - J. C. Oelkers. Undated

5/43: Master Farm Family - A. V. Peterson. Undated

5/44: Master Farm Family - Don Pustejovsky. Undated

5/45: Master Farm Family - William Ranley. Undated

5/46: Master Farm Family - Carl Reese. Undated

5/47: Master Farm Family - Clint Robinson. Undated

5/48: Master Farm Family - J. S. Samples. Undated

5/49: Master Farm Family - W. E. Scarborough. Undated

Correspondence with Julian Symons

1/1: Series Scope Note and Contents.

1/2: Contents Note by Julian Symons.

1/3: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Roy Fuller's poetic approach. Subjects: "Ashby" ("Lord Ashby...,"), "The Waste Land". January 18, 1937.

1/4: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, unsigned (the letter was signed, but the signature was cut from the page), 1 leaf. Re: submission to Twentieth Century Verse. January 20, 1937.

1/5: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Submission to Twentieth Century Verse. Subjects: John Lehmann. April 16, 1937.

1/6: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: reviewing poems for Twentieth Century Verse, visiting London. June 1, 1937.

1/7: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: a review. June 6, 1937.

1/8: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: poem published in Twentieth Century Verse, general poetry. October 9, 1937.

1/9: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: submission to Twentieth Century Verse, thirties views of Wyndham Lewis, Eliot, Earp, Porteus, Constant Lambert, Cyril Connolly, Grigson. October 11, 1937.

1/10: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: changes made to Twentieth Century Verse for the coming year. December 23, 1937.

1/11: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: Marxist beliefs, Left Review, Twentieth Century Verse, job in London. Subjects: Herbert Mallalieu, Geoffrey Pollitt, C. Day-Lewis, Hoodlum Grigson, Auden, Dylan Thomas, Kathleen Raine. December 28, 1937.

1/12: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: submission to Twentieth Century Verse. December 29, 1937.

1/13: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: "Lord Ashby...," idea of a "Left number" in Twentieth Century Verse, a previous submission to Twentieth Century Verse. January 3, 1938.

1/14: Poem: the original version of "Lord Ashby...," typed, signed, 10 leaves with corrections and changes by the author.

1/15: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: the "Left number," critique of the ballad ("Lord Ashby..."). January 10, 1938.

1/16: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: publication of the ballad ("Lord Ashby..."), analysis of Auden. Roy Fuller: "On reading through this [letter], I find it very Monday morningish-- certainly not a document for the archives!" January 24, 1938.

1/17: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: cheque for subscription to Twentieth Century Verse. Subjects: Lehmann. January 28, 1938.

1/18: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Sonnet. Re: "Ode to Spring," "Left number." Subjects: American Proletarian Anthology, Lehmann, New Writing. February 9, 1938.

1/19: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: "Sonnet," "Ode to Spring," American Proletarian Anthology, mention of Roy Fuller in Poetry. Subjects: Derek Savage, Fearing. February 11, 1938.

1/20: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: "Ode to Spring," payment. Subjects: Poetry, Savage, Grigson. February 13, 1938.

1/21: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: Symons' poem in London Mercury versus left poetry. February 16, 1938.

1/22: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed February 23, 1938.

1/23: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: blurb on Roy Fuller. Subjects: Roy Fuller's comments about Symons' poem. Same page: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: said blurb, poem in New Writing. [February/March 1938].

1/24: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. Re: rendezvous. March 3, 1938.

1/25: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. Re: rendezvous. March 4, 1938.

1/26: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: a possible libel action against Symons. Subjects: Herring, Herbert Mallalieu, Todd, rendezvous. March 11, 1938.

1/27: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: Roy Fuller's political/economic/artistic views. Subjects: sending poems to Herring, "Ode to Spring," Southern Review. March 19, 1938.

1/28: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Herring's rejection. Subjects: John O'London's Weekly. March 30, 1938.

1/29: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: political views. Subjects: Herring, The Year's Poetry. April 14, 1938.

1/30: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: Twentieth Century Verse, political views. Subjects: Roy Fuller's poem in New Writing, Herring, Todd, Allott. April 19, 1938.

1/31: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: Wordsworth, Twentieth Century Verse, Day-by-Day Publishers. Subjects: Auden, Todd, Allott, Nicholas Blake. April 20, 1938.

1/32: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Grigson, Todd, Humphrey Jennings, Herring. May 21, 1938.

1/33: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: issue no. 10 of Twentieth Century Verse. Subjects: New Writing, Todd, Herbert Mallalieu, Left Review. May 30, 1938.

1/34: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: reviews for Post Victorian Poetry and New Writing, no.10 of Twentieth Century Verse, Herring. Subjects: Seven. May 31, 1938.

1/35: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Symons' periodicals review in L&L Today, New Verse, archives at "Buffalo (sic) University, USA." June 1, 1938.

1/36: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: reviews for New Writing/Post Victorian Poetry, The Wild Goose Chase, Buffalo, Herring. June 8, 1938.

1/37: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: reviews. June 10, 1938.

1/38: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: a coming vacation, poem in an anthology of Partisan Review. Subjects: Savage. June 18, 1938.

1/39: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans. Subjects: Savage. June 22, 1938.

1/40: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: vacation (Daltons), Partisan Review, Twentieth Century Verse Subjects: Barker, Dylan Thomas, Ewart, K. Rhys, Allott. June 24, 1938.

1/41: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Partisan Review, Left Review. July 1, 1938.

1/42: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans. Subjects: "Small Wireless." July 6, 1938.

1/43: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans (The Old Golf House), Todd's novel. July 8, 1938.

1/44: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans, Roy Fuller poems published in the last twelve months. July 11, 1938.

1/45: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans. Subjects: Herbert Mallalieu. July 14, 1938.

1/46: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: vacation plans, "left" writing. July 21, 1938.

1/47: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Symons denying liability [Polocke], poems sent to Poetry. Subjects: poems sent to Lehmann, The New Statesman. September 1, 1938.

1/48: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: poetry. Subjects: "Lemon" (Lehmann), Seven. [September 1938].

1/49: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: pictures from vacation, poems sent to Seven, Kate going to Blackpool. September 6, 1938.

1/50: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: possible rendezvous, activities while Kate's away. September 13, 1938.

1/51: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Desmond Hawkins, Hogarth. September 25, 1938.

1/52: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: The Examiner, Aiken, Seven, Kate, and John Fuller's return. October 2, 1938.

1/53: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: possible rendezvous in London. October 5, 1938.

1/54: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: poetry submission. Subjects: Twentieth Century Verse no. 9, Hogarth, Poetry. October 23, 1938.

1/55: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: review of C. Day-Lewis book, broadsheets for Savage. Subjects: Barker, Fortune Press. October 25, 1938.

1/56: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: review of C. Day-Lewis book, Savage's broadsheets. Subjects: "He spoke of poetry," "To Murder Someone," Dylan Thomas, Fortune Press. October 26, 1938.

1/57: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: "He spoke of poetry," Hogarth's refusal, C. Day-Lewis book. October 27, 1938.

1/58: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: poetry submissions, visit to London, job in Woolwich. Subjects: Chameleon, The Listener, Savage, Blackheath, Poetry. November 6, 1938.

1/59: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: flat in London, C. Day-Lewis book review. [November 1938].

1/60: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Typed letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: poetry submission, review of On the Frontier. Subjects: The Listener, "Street Accident," Herbert. November 12, 1938.

1/61: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: poetry submission. Subjects: Chameleon, The Listener, Herbert, Herbert Read's Collected Essays. November 15, 1938.

1/62: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: move to Blackheath, accepted poems, Partisan Review. Subjects: Dylan Thomas, Ego 3, Daily Express. November 24, 1938.

1/63: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Poetry, not writing, Savage. January 6, 1939.

1/64: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: review, Confessions about X. January 26, 1939.

1/65: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Twentieth Century Verse, Seven, Poetry, cold weather. January 30, 1939.

1/66: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Savage, sonnet. [January/February 1939].

1/67: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Twentieth Century Verse no. 15/16, The Exiles Press (New York City). February 28, 1939.

1/68: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Chameleon, Poetry, "Yellow Jacket." March 23, 1939.

1/69: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: "young Simians" (young novelists). Subjects: visiting, "Yellow Jacket." March 31, 1939.

1/70: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Marxist article. Subjects: Grigson. April 5, 1939.

1/71: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Good Friday, Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: review, Marxist article, fair at Blackheath. 1939.

1/72: Review by Roy Fuller: "Confusions about X" by Julian Symons, Several Observations by Geoffrey Grigson. Typed with handwritten corrections. 4 leaves.

1/73: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Marxist article, Poetry, rendezvous. April 14, 1939.

1/74: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: new books. April 28, 1939.

1/75: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: review, article. Subjects: Cyril Connolly. May 12, 1939.

1/76: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: the (Marxist) article, Journey to a War [?]. May 1939[?].

1/77: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Blackpool. Talks of Blackpool ("the ideal fascist state") and its people ("without independent political thought and well disciplined...also abundantly fed and amused.") Subjects: Epstein's Adam and the commissioning of Eve. July 20, 1939.

1/78: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: Blackpool, new periodical, resignation from "a revolutionary party." Subjects: Grigson, Josh Reynolds, William Etty, William Coldstream. July 25, 1939.

1/79: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. Subjects: the party. July 27, 1939.

1/80: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: A Penny for the Poor, Hawkins. August 16, 1939.

1/81: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Subjects: A Penny for the Poor, Grigson's anthology, Spender, Isherwood and Todd, Little History of American Literature. [August 1939].

1/82: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Thank-you letter. Subjects: writing a play together. October 30, 1939.

1/83: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. Re: poems mentioned in the previous letter. November 4, 1939.

1/84: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Sunday visit, speculation on "immediate events" (e.g. "death of Auden" and "rise of new poet, age about 23..."). Subjects: Geoffrey Grigson. December 12, 1939.

1/85: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: rendezvous, Prokosch. January 8, 1940.

1/86: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: "Privileged Chronicles." February 8, 1940.

1/87: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: play. Subjects: The American, Spender, Symons' and Roy Fuller's books. February 12, 1940.

1/88: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf; plot for play, handwritten, 1 leaf. Letter re: difference between Symons' plot and Fuller's plot (very politically oriented) for the play. February 1940.

1/89: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: canceled rendezvous (Roy Fuller ill). Subjects: Pirandello. February 21, 1940.

1/90: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: points for play, Roy Fuller still ill. Subjects: Jack Clark. [1940s].

1/91: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. In Blackpool. July 11, 1940.

1/92: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Re: rendezvous, poem in Kingdom Come. Subjects: Robert Louis Stevenson. October 30, 1940.

1/93: Roy Fuller to Kathleen Clark. Autograph postcard, signed. Re: piquet. Roy Fuller: "'I remain, my dear Kathleen, your sincere and obliged friend - old friend let me say.' - Robert Louis Stevenson." October 30, 1940.

1/94: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: the play. Subjects: Jack Clark. November 14, 1940.

1/95: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Roy Fuller referring to the play: "lose your aestheticism and recover your morality." November 21, 1940.

1/96: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: scrapbook, pool. November 27, 1940.

1/97: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Symons's manuscript. December 27, 1940.

1/98: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: sending "enclosed" to Jack, rendezvous. December 31, 1940.

1/99: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: rendezvous, Kate, weather. April 16, 1941.

1/100: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. In Ganges, Ipswich. Begins Roy Fuller's war letters. April 25, 1941.

1/101: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Subjects: Now, Modern Reading, Jonathan Edwards, J. Boyd Brent, Woodcock, Derek Savage, Tuttifruitti, Chattos, Poetry, Francis Scarfe, A.D. Hawkins. April 28, 1941.

1/102: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Dated: "Tuesday-28(?).vi.41." Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Subjects: French George, NOW, Roy Fuller's poem in NOW, Symons' poem, conditions at Roy Fuller's location/military situation. Roy Fuller: "If you expect wit and humour you will be disapp: I have no energy and must perforce eschew it." April 29, 1941.

1/103: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Dated: "Thursday, May the something, 1941." Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: published poetry/reviews, war folk songs, proletarianization, description of activities, and "naval discipline." Roy Fuller: "My brain is becoming as enfeebled as my body and I must stop." May 1941.

1/104: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Symons' tribunal, weekend. June 5, 1941.

1/105: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. In Blackpool on leave. Subjects: story sent to Horizon, Jerry Wade. July 6, 1941.

1/106: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. In Aberdeen. Re: lost respirator. July 26, 1941.

1/107: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope with a poem written on the back (by Symons?). Subjects: the course he is taking, George Eliot. July 31, 1941.

1/108: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Poetry, Roy Fuller's soliloquy, Shakespeare plays, Roy Fuller's location. August 17, 1941.

1/109: Roy and Kate Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Response to Symons' letter. Subjects: Horizon, NOW, Poetry. August 28, 1941.

1/110: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons and Jack Clark. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: Kate, Kathleen, Roy Fuller's course. September 16, 1941.

1/111: Julian Symons to Roy Fuller. Typed letter, unsigned, 1 leaf. Re: lunch with Marie Stopes, coming move and separation, Penguin book deal, Newlin (Managing Directory of the Aeraspray Co.). October 2, 1941.

1/112: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Subjects: "The James' letters," Blake, Poetry, moving, movies. October 9, 1941.

1/113: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Ganges, Ipswich. Re: anthology. Subjects: Horizon. November 12, 1941.

1/114: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Subjects: writing inclinations, Lehman, The Arabian Nights Murder, war speculation. November 17, 1941.

1/115: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Chatham. Re: Air fitter training. Subjects: anthology, Spender. December 9, 1941.

1/116: Roy Fuller to Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Ganges, Ipswich. Re: general news. Subjects: Melville. Roy Fuller: "I wish we were all together again in our cozy, safe, pre-doom world." 1941.

1/117: Poem by Roy Fuller. "ABC of a Naval Trainee." November 12, 1941.

1/118: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Havant, Hants. Re: war, Symons' book, Roy Fuller's ballad in Poetry, war story. February 5, 1942.

1/119: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and poem, "Middle of a War," by Roy Fuller. In Blackpool. Letter re: poem, leave. February 19, 1942.

1/120: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Havant, Hants. Subjects: poems, Jack Clark, "Naval Air Station." March 4, 1942.

1/121: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: availability for draft (Roy Fuller: "I stand face to face with the invader Luck..."), poems sent to Lehmann. March 18, 1942.

1/122: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Africa. Re: living conditions, Ellen Queen novel, The Tragedy of X. June 4, 1942.

1/123: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Kenya. Re: "The Middle of a War," Poetry, writing, delay of mail. July 1, 1942.

1/124: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf, air graph. Re: Symons' conditions in the army, inspiration to write. September 10, 1942.

1/125: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf, air graph. Re: literary ventures. Roy Fuller: "I wish Twentieth Century Verse were still alive to demolish these Asian and apocalyptic monsters;" "I wish we were all together again: it is sickening to think of what lies between us and that."

1/126: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf, air graph. Subjects: delayed mail, need for more information from/about Julian, The Family Reunion. November 17, 1942.

1/127: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf, air graph. Subjects: lack of communication, published poems, Auden and After. January 7, 1943.

1/128: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Nairobi. Re: news back home. February 6, 1943.

1/129: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf, air graph. Re: Symons' operation, Roy Fuller's malaria, poetry. June 3, 1943.

1/130: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In London. Re: literary news, Roy Fuller's book of poems to be published. July 7, 1943.

1/131: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Ariel, Warrington, Lancs. Re: re-stationing, Christmas. July 20, 1943.

1/132: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Letter/poem, Autograph letter, unsigned, 1 leaf, air graph. In Africa. "Petty Officer Fuller to Trooper Symons." August 23, 1943.

1/133: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Blackpool on leave. Re: Fuller's book of poems. November 10, 1943.

1/134: Roy and Kate Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 2 leaves. Re: book of poems, Symons' poems, visit to London. Subjects: Lehmann. November 17, 1943.

1/135: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Havant, Hants. Returned from leave after a visit with the Symons'. Subjects: The Ministry of Fear. December 3, 1943.

1/136: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. In Ariel, Warrington, Lancs. Subjects: Lady Barb, "The Gold Bowl," Connolly. December 3, 1943.

1/137: Roy Fuller to Julian and Kathleen Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: visit, uncertainty of next location. January 14, 1944.

1/138: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph postcard, signed. Re: rendezvous. February 11, 1944.

1/139: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Kate's move to Blackpool, literary news (Spender, Horizon). March 19, 1944.

1/140: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Re: literary news, R.C. Hutchinson, Woolwich Equitable. April 8, 1944.

1/141: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Kate in Blackpool, "non-arrival" of the play (by Roy Fuller and Symons), poems recently published by Roy Fuller. April 13, 1944.

1/142: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: arrival of aforementioned play, talk of its publication/production, general literary news, reviews of Symons' work. April 19, 1944.

1/143: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Lehmann reading the play. [April 1944].

1/144: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Subjects: Drummond Allison, joining public library, Symons' publications. April 30, 1944.

1/145: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: commentary on writers. [April/May 1944].

1/146: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: proofreading Roy Fuller's work for "mis-spellings and Fullerian grammar." May 14, 1944.

1/147: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf and envelope. Re: Julian's proofreading of Roy Fuller's work, dedication. May 18, 1944.

1/148: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. Re: Henry Reed, visit to London, photograph to be made, illness. June 16, 1944.

1/149: Roy Fuller to Julian Symons. Autograph letter, signed, 1 leaf. In Blackpool. Re: appointment to Admiralty, visit, Orwell. June 26, 1944.

Disks 79-104

This box contains the following items:

Disk 79a: Every Time I Feel the Spirit [2:26] / 79b: Every Time I Feel the Sprit [2:10]
78a: Gospel Hymn sung by Shiloh Baptist Church (Colored), Houston, TX [n.d.]
78b: Gospel Hymn sung by Miss Freddie Lee Kirby of Galveston, TX [n.d.]
Owens 112/113

Disk 80a-1: [La Victoirie?] [0:30]; 80a-2: Amor [Chanson Italienne "La Margerita Cucha?"] [1:03] / 80b: Italian Lullaby [Gianni Pucca?] [0:50]
80a: French and Italian folk songs sung by unidentified females [n.p.] [n.d.]
80b: Italian folk song sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 282/283

Disk 81a: Cantata dell Sig [2:23] / 81b-1: [Prayer to Joseph and Mary in Italian] [0:49]; 81b-2: [Introduction of song] [0:18]; 81b-3: [Cantata del Pietra Catalan] [1:41]
Songs and Prayers sung and spoken by John Cuccia at Steele's Store near College Station, TX [1939]
Owens 292/293

Disk 82a: [unidentified song] [2:49] / 82b: [unidentified song] [2:48]
Cajun folk songs sung by [Calisse Coleman] near [Lafayette, LA] [1938]
Owens 236/237

Disk 83a: Allons a Lafayette [1:44] / 83b: [Allons a Lafayette] [2:33]
Cajun folk song sung and played on accordion by unidentified male [n.p.] n.d.]
Owens 240/241
[note: song mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 84a: Corinne, Corinna [2:43] / 84b: J'ai fait tou' l'tour du Grand Bois [2:35]
84a: Folk song sung and played by Tony Allemand, fiddle, with Eric Domingue, guitar, near St. Martinville, LA [1938]
84b: Cajun folk song sung by unidentified male wiht Tony Allemand, fiddle,and Eric Domingue, guitar, near St. Martinville, LA [1938]
Owens 242/243
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 85a: Le Semaine [1:33] / 85b: Le Breton [2:48]
Cajun folk songs sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 243/244

Disk 86a-1: Calinda [0:49]; 86a-2: Madelon [1:46] / 86b-1: La Lorette [1:25];86b-2: Frere Jacques [0:35]
86a: French folk songs sung by Vavaseur Mouton in Lafayette, LA , 1937.
86b: French folk song sung by Vavaseur Mouton; French folk song sung by Vavaseur Mouton and his wife, Lafayette, LA, 1937.
Owens 244/245
[note: track times mislabeled on CD; "Madelon" and "Frere Jacques" mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 87a: [unidentified song] [1:54] / 87b-1: [unidentified song] [0:18]; 87b-2: [unidentified song] [012]; 87b-3: [unidentified song] [1:01]
87a: Cajun folk song sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
87b-1/2: Cajun folk song sung by unidentified male; 87b-3: Cajun folk song sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 247/248

Disk 88a: Le Breton [2:51] / 88b-1: [unidentified song] [1:21]; 88b-2 [unidentified song] [0:29]
French folk songs sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 249/250

Disk 89a: [unidentified song] [3:04] / 89b: [unidentified song] [1:29]
French folk songs sung by unidentifed male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 251/252

Disk 90a: St. Joseph [2:50] / 90b-1: [St. Joseph] [1:26]; 90b-2: [St. Joseph] [1:22]
Italian hymn sung by group choir at Steele's Store near College Station, TX, 1939.
Owens 286/287
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 91a: Number 3 [St. Joseph] [2:51] / 91b: Number 4 [St. Joseph] [2:45]
Italian hymn sung by group choir at Steele's Store near College Station, TX, 1939.
Owens 288/289

Disk 92a: ["San Giuseppe chimava li orfanelli"] [2:56] / 92b-1: [unidentified song] [1:31]; 92b-2: [St. Joseph] [0:25]
92a: Italian hymn sung by [Margarita Cuccia] at Steele's Store near College Station, TX, 1939.
92b: Italian folk hymn sung by group; Italian hymn sung by [Margarita Cuccia] at Steele's Store near College Station, TX 1939.
Owens 290/291
[note: 92a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 93a: [Brown Kelly] Waltz [2:50] / 93b: Goodnight Waltz [2:57]
93a: Fiddle tune played by [Robert Smith, fiddle] and unidentified musicians [n.p.] [n.d.]
93b: Fiddle tune played by Sam Welch, fiddle and unidentified musicians [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 294/295

Disk 94a: Wagner [Wagoner] [1:59] / 94b: Pick the Devil's Eyes Out [1:55]
Fiddle tunes played by unidentified musicians [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 302/303

Disk 95a: Military Schottische [2:32] / "Uncle Jack" Waltz [2:24]
Fiddle tunes played by A. J. "Uncle Jack" Mears (fiddle), V. Teller (guitar), and J. D. Dillingham, banjo. [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 304/305

96a: Durang's Hornpipe [2:21] / Rickett's Hornpipe [2:20]
Fiddle tunes played by J. A. "Jack" Mears (fiddle), V. Teller (guitar), and J. D. Dillingham, banjo. [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 306/307

Disk 97a: Eighth of January (Battle of New Orleans) [2:19] / 97b: Soldier's Joy [2:27]
Fiddle tunes played by J.A. "Uncle Jack" Mears (fiddle), V. Teller (guitar), and J. D. Dillingham, banjo. [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 310/311

Disk 98a-1: Patsy Mind the Baby [1:27]; 98 a-2: Old Sally Goodin [1:17] / 98b-1: Heel and Toe Polka [1:20]; 98b-2: Polka Schottische [1:29]
Fiddle tunes played by Colonel Denoon and his son Jimmy. [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 308/309

Disk 99a: Give the Fiddler a Dram [2:42] / 99b: The Little Fish [2:43]
Fiddle tunes played by [J. McInman] and his Alabama Boll Weevils string band [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 314/315

Disk 100a: Irish Wash Woman [Irish Washerwoman] [2:09] / 100b: Billy in the Low Ground [2:10]
Fiddle tunes played by unidentified string band [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 319/320

Disk 101a: Leather Britches [2:22] / 101b: Rustic Dance [2:12]
Fiddle tunes played by unidentified string band [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 318/319
[note: titles are reversed/mislabled on disk and CD]

Disk 102a-1: Madame Blanchard [unidentified song, false start] [0:19]; 102a-2: Madame Blanchard [unidentified song] [2:15] / 102b: La Belle Louise [2:44]
French folk songs sung by Madame Amédée Blanchard of Bayou Blue in Houma, LA, 1938.
[note: titles reversed on disk and CD; 102b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 103a: Madame Blanchard [unidentified song] [1:21] / 103b: Madame Trosclair ["In My Father's House"] [2:06]
French folk songs sung by Madame Blanchard and Madame Trosclair of Bayou Blue at Houma, LA, 1938.
[note: titles reversed on disk and CD label; 103b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 104a: Run Nigger Run [2:09] / 104b: Cattle in the Canebrake [2:14]
Fiddle tunes played by unidentified musicians [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 316

Disks 105-130

This box contains the following items:

Disk 105a: Amazing Grace [2:54] / 105b: Swing Low [2:36]
Gospel hymns sung by choir and congregation at [African Methodist Episcopal Church] [Calvert, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 109/110
[note: 105b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 106a: Te's Petite [2:34] / 106b: Mais, Jolie Ville, mais, tu connais [2:50]
Cajun folk song sung and played by unidentified male and musicians [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 238/239

Disk 107a: Cornhuskin' Sal [2:43] / 107b: Rochester or Seashore Schottische [2:32]
Fiddle tunes played by Sam Welsh and Leroy Billman [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 312/313

Disk 108a: Sally Johnson [2:38] / 108b: San Antonio Rose [2:29]
Fiddle tunes played by unidentified string band [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 298/299

Disk 109a: My Record [w/ Steal Away] [2:38] / 109b: I'm On My Way Home [2:11]
Gospel songs sung by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 205/206

Disk 110a: J'ai petit, j'ai mignon [2:25] / 110b: C'est Hip puis Taiaut [2:25]
Cajun dance songs sung and played by Tony Allemand and Eric Domingue, Scott, LA, 1937.
Owens 232/233
[note: 110b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 111a: [unidentified song] [2:27] / 111b: Et pi tu crois [1:53]
Cajun songs sung and played on accordion and harmonica by unidentified males [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 234/235

Disk 112a: Italian Hymn [St. Joseph] [2:03]; [names of singers] [0:20] / 112b: Cantico Siciliano [2:46], 03/19/1939
Italian hymns sung by group including Mrs. Pete [Scamardo], Antoinette Scamardo, Ann Scamardo, Mrs. Frank [Canavespi] and Mrs. Bonnano at Steele's Store near College Station, TX, March 19, 1939.
Owens 284/285

Disk 113a: Windy Bill [2:06] / 113b: Git Along Little Dogies [2:45], 02/19/1939
Cowboy songs sung and played by Brownie McNeill at Austin, TX, February 19, 1939.
Owens 90/91

Disk 114a: When I Was in my Father's House [2:29] / 114b: [unidentified song] [1:21]
French folk songs sung by Madame Trosclair and Madame Blanchard, Houma, LA, 1938.
Owens 231

Disk 115a: German Officer [2:08] / 115b: She Came Rollin Down the Mountain [2:23]
Folk songs sung by unidentified male and female [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 116a: She Came Rollin Down the Mountain [1:59] / 116b She Came Rollin Down the Mountain [2:06]
Folk songs sung by unidentified male and female [n.p.] [n.d.]
[note: lacquer disk]

Disk 117a: Heaven [Shout All Over God's Heaven] [2:17] / 117b: [Tryin to Make Heaven My Home] [2:51]
[Dubs of commercial gospel records]

Disk 118a: Paderewski [minuet] [2:43]
Piano music played by [Ignacy Jan Paderewski] [n.p.] [n.d.]
[dub of commercial record]

Disk 119a: Orchestra [2:48] / 119b: Orchestra [2:01] [0:44]
Unidentified orchestral music [possibly dub from commercial disk or radio] [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 120a: Recitative, Verdi [2:53] / 120b: The Snow is Falling [2:54]
Opera performances by unidentified male [dubs from commercial records or radio]

Disk 121a: Stille Nacht [2:53]
Christmas carol sung in german by unidentified female [dub of commercial disk or radio]

Disk 122a: Paderewski [Beethoven "Moonlight Sonata"] [2:57] / 122b: Paderewski [unidentified music] [2:43]
Piano music played by [Ignacy Jan Paderewski] [dub from commercial disk or radio] [note: overmodulated]

Disk 123a: Kelly Waltz / 123b: Good Night Waltz [note: disk is unrecorded/blank]
unrecorded/blank disk

Disk 124a: Manon - The Dream [2:54] / 124b: Gournod - Santus [2:30]
Dub of commercial recording of [Jussi Bjorling]. [note: 124a on CD is blank]

Disk 125a: Asleep in the Deep [2:27] / 125b: In einem kühlen Grunde [2:09]
American spiritual and German lieder sung by George [Bushong] [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 5

Disk 126a: [Edward, Edward] [1:56] / 126b: [Edward, Edward] [2:57]
Folk ballad sung by [Lawrence Tibbett] [dub of commercial recording]

Disk 127a: Ohé Hélène [1:41] / 127b: Marie Magdelène [1:30]
Cajun folk songs sung by Madame Trosclair of Bayou Blue in Houma, LA, 1938.
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 128a: Good News [2:05] / 128b: Dry Bones [2:24]
Gospel songs sung by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 129a: Ah, Suzette, Chère [2:08] / 129b: Jungle Nanny Song [2:03]
French folk songs sung by unidentified female [New Orleans, LA] [1937]
Owens 246
[note: 129a mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 130a: Unusual Newscast [0:29]; Poetry [0:57]; Piano [Bells of St. Mary's] [0:44]; Cadet Call [0:22]; Mary Had a Little Lamb [0:16]; Goldilocks [0:31] / 130b: Piano Song [0:41]; Blank [0:11]; Silent Night [0:56]; Call for Someone [0:28]; Foreign Language [0:08]
Miscellaneous spoken word, piano music, and songs performed by Bill Owens and other unidentified males and females [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disks 131-156

This box contains the following items:

Disk 131a: Bjorling - Strauss [1:55] / 131b: Hymn ["God of our Fathers"] [2:53]
131a: Operatic aria sung by [Jussi] Bjorling [dub from commercial recording]
131b: Hymn sung by unidentified choir [dub from commercial recording]

Disk 132a: "A Soldier"; "The Runaway" [2:04] / 132b: "The Runaway"; "An Old Man's Winter Night" [2:54]
Note (in William Owens' hand) "Robert Frost recorded these for me at Iowa City, Iowa, in the summer of 1939. He thought at the time that they were the best readings he had recorded. I part with them reluctantly. Treat them well. There will be no more like them."

Disk 133a: "Desert Places"; "A Leaf Treader" [2:04] / 133b: ["The Runaway"; "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening"] [1:42]
Note (in William Owens' hand) "Robert Frost recorded these for me at Iowa City, Iowa, in the summer of 1939. He thought at the time that they were the best readings he had recorded. I part with them reluctantly. Treat them well. There will be no more like them."

Disk 134a: Dis Sem Hodil Dosoli [0:36]; The Death of a Lover [2:00] / 134b: Nat Žačovu je Hayck [A Song Sung at a Wedding] [2:47]
Czech folk songs sung by Ethel Jecmenek of Rosebud, TX [1940]
Owens 274/275
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 135a: Black Girl Blues [2:46] / My Million Dollar Baby [2:51]
Blues songs played on piano and sung by Grey Ghost [R.T. Williams] in Navasota, TX [1940]
Owens 267/268

Disk 136a: Rainy Day [2:52] / 136b: Louise [2:53]
Blues songs played on piano and sung by Grey Ghost [R.T. Williams] in Smithville, TX [1941]
Owens 252/254
[note: 136b mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 137a: My Nights are Lonesome [2:57] / 137b: My Nights are Lonesome [2:54]
Blues songs played on piano and sung by Grey Ghost [R.T. Williams] in Smithville, TX [1941]
Owens 261/262

Disk 138a: Ain't You Sorry [2:52] / 138b: Shine on Harvest Moon [2:28]
Blues songs played on piano and sung by Grey Ghost [R.T. Williams] in Navasota, TX [1940]
Owens 265/266
[note: 138b mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 139a: Once I Had a Little Sweetheart [1:51] / 139b: Two Little Children [Two Orphans] [2:54]
Folk songs sung by unidentified females [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 27/28

Disk 140a: Play Party Tune [2:55] / 140b: Fifty Cents [2:54]
Blues music played on piano and sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 41/42
[notes: disk badly scratched and sound distorted]

Disk 141a: El Corrido de Cananea [2:47] / 141b: La Borrachita [1:39]
Mexican folk songs of the Revolution played by Brownie McNeill at Austin, TX, February 18th, 1938 [1939?].
Owens 272/273

Disk 142a: Alla en el Rancho Grande [1:59], 10/21/1939
Mexican folk song performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, October 21, 1939.
Owens 271

Disk 143a: Jesus is Mine [2:03] / 143b-1: Mrs. Neutra [unidentified Swiss folk song] [1:37]; 143b-2: [unidentified song] [0:50]
143a: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
143b: Swiss folk song and unidentified Mexican folk song sung by Mrs. Richard (Yvonne) Neutra at home of William Owens, College Station, TX, 1942. [Richard] Neutra here as consulting architect.
Owens 160/170

Disk 144a: The Death of a Lover [Slunecko Sviti] [part 1] [2:51] / 144b: [The Death of a Lover [Slunecko Sviti]] [part 2] [0:37]; My Old Daddy-in-Law [0:24]; Sailor Boy [1:12]
144a: Czech folk song sung by Ethel Jecmenek of Rosebud, TX [1940]
144b: Czech folk song sung by Ethel Jecmenek of Rosebud, TX [1940]; Folk songs sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 278/279
[note: 144a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 145a-1: The Fair Maid [1:16]; 145a-2: Bye Bye My Darlin [1:00] / 145b: I Have a Father [1:02]
145a: Folk songs sung by unidentified females [n.p.] [n.d.]
145b: Gospel song sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 19/20/21

Disk 146a: [unidentified Czech song] [1:28] / 146b: [Louka zelena] [1:04]
146a: Czech folk song sung by [Ethel Jecmenek] of Rosebud, TX {1940]
146b: Czech folk song sung by [Ethel Jecmenek] and unidentified females, Rosebud, TX [1940]
Owens 276/277
[note: 146b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 147a: Too Late [2:36] / 147b: Soldier, Soldier [2:45], 03/04/1939
147a: Folk song performed by Clay Cochran of Amarillo, TX, March 4, 1939
147b: Folk song performed by Abe Melton of Austin, TX, March 4, 1939.
Owens 40
[note: 147b included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 148a-1: [Banks of Cloddie [part 2] [0:27]; 148a-2: I Wish to my Lord I Was Single Again [0:57] / 148b: Banks of Cloddie [part 1] [2:41], 06/05/1939
148a: Folk ballad sung by Mrs. DeNoon; Folk ballad sung by [Colonel DeNoon] Springfield, MO, June, 5, 1939.
148b: Folk ballad sung by Mrs. DeNoon, Springfield, MO, June 5th, 1939
Owens 22/23
[note: songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 149a: The Arkansas Traveler [2:11] / 149b: Hell Among the Yearlings [2:17], 02/18/1939
Fiddle tunes played by J.A. "Uncle Jack" Mears, fiddle, V. Teller, guitar, and J. D. Dillingham, banjo, Austin, TX, February 18, 1939.
Owens 300/301
[note: tunes mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 150a: When I Lay My Burden Down [1:10] / 150b: A Mother Loves Her Children [2:53]
150a: Gospel song sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
150b: Gospel song performed by unidentified mixed quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 142/143

Disk 151a: Old Time Religion [2:00] / 151b: Leadin' Me On [Precious Lord, Lead Me On] [2:56]
151a: Gospel hymn performed by North New Hope Baptist Church choir, Franklin, TX [1938]
151b: Gospel hymn performed by North New Hope Baptist Church quartet, Franklin, TX [1938]
Owens 103/104
[2:56] [note: 151b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 152a: Pompey Smash and Davy Crockett [part 1] [2:06] / 152b-1: Pompey Smash and Davy Crockett [part 2] [1:55]; 152b-2: [Mr. Jeffus giving recording location] [0:17]
Folk ballad performed by Lemuel Jeffus of Neville's Prairie near Weldon, TX. Recorded at home of Lona Yeager in Crockett, TX [n.d.]
Owens 29 a b
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 153a: Bohunker [and Kychunker] [2:31] / 153b: Hurrah for Arkansas [2:29]
Folk songs sung by Mrs. Lizzie Mathis of Lexington, OK. She learned them in Lamar County, TX shortly after the Civil War. [n.d.]
Owens 77/78
[note: songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 154a: My Shanghai Rooster [1:35] / 154b: Home Sweet Home [2:38]
154a: Folk song performed by unidentified string band [n.p.] [n.d.]
154b: Folk song sung by unidentified male and female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 63/64

Disk 155a: Utah Carroll [part 1] [2:47] / 155b: Utah Carroll [part 2] [2:13]
Cowboy folk song performed by Daniel Jeffus of Lovelady, TX, [1938]
Owens 92
[note: tracks are sides are reversed on CD tracks; included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 156a: Cowboy Jack [part 1] [1:40] / 156b: Cowboy Jack [part 2] [2:19]
Cowboy folk song performed by Daniel Jeffus of Lovelady, TX [1938]
Owens 94
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song...."]

Flying Tigers (AVG) Materials

1/1: Diary of George J. Burgard, September 24, 1941 - July 5, 1942

1/2: John Donovan Papers. Undated

1/3: Diary of Olga Greenlaw. December 2, 1941 - February 24, 1942

1/4: Diary of Robert B. Keeton. September 9, 1941- August 23, 1942

1/5: Diary of Charles Mott. July 9, 1941 - December 24, 1941

1/6: Diary of Robert M. Smith. July 4, 1941 - May 27, 2942

1/7: Diary of the 3rd Squadron. August 24, 1941 - June 9, 1942

1/8: The Peter Wright Papers. Undated

1/9: A.V.G. Fighter Tactics. Undated

1/10: "Flying Tigers American Volunteer Group - Chinese Air Force". Undated

1/11: "Americans, Valiant and Glorious…". Undated

1/12: "The American Volunteer Group". Undated

1/13: "Bill of Rights Requesting Veteran Recognition by Congress for the Original Flying Tigers American Volunteer Group - Chinese Air Force, China 1941- 1942"

1/14: "AVG 41st Anniversary". Undated

1/15: "Terms of Agreement between Major C. L. Chennault and the Chinese Government". May 27, 1937

1/16: "Air Tactics and Techniques". July 29, 1941

1/17: "Selected Combat Reports". December 25-26, 1941

1/18: "General Order Selection". October 27, November 19, December 8, and December 31, 1941; March 12, 1942

1/19: "Cablegram from Magruder and Bissell (in Chungking) Sent to the Adjutant General". March 31, 1942

1/20: "Miscellaneous Reports". Undated

1/21: "General Charles Bond's Letters and Documents on Origin of the Flying Tigers Insignia". Undated

Disks 1-26

This box contains the following items:

Disk 1a: If Brother Jack Were Here [2:48] / 1b: The Little 'Dobie Shack [2:16]
Folk songs performed by Daniel Jeffus, Lovelady, [TX] [1938]
Owens 61/62
[note: side b fair condition; both songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 2a: The Two Orphans [2:10] / 2b: The Cruel War [2:45]
Folk songs sung unaccompanied by Lemuel Jeffus of Lovelady, TX [1938]
Owens 57/58
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 3a: The Butcher's Boy [2:57] / 3b: Goodbye Little Bonnie Blue Eyes [2:34]
Folk ballads performed by May Kennedy McCord of Springfield, Missouri, June 5th, 1939.
Owens 55/56
[note: side b fair condition; both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 4a: The Orphan Girl [1:49] / 4b: The Irish Girl [1:37]
Folk songs sung by Daniel Jeffus of Lovelady, Texas. [1938]
Owens 53/54
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 5a: Claude's Wife [2:51] / 5b: O Girls Mind Who You Slight [2:46]
Folk songs performed by Lemuel Jeffus, Lovelady, Texas. [1938]
Owens 51/52
[note: song 5a included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 6a: Rolly Troodum [2:36]
Folk song sung by May Kennedy McCoy of Springfield, MO, [n.d.]
Owens 50
[note: fair condition, multiple skips; song included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 7a: Old Jay Bird [0:37] / 7b: Go To Sleep, Baby [0:28]
Play-party song and lullaby sung by Mrs. Imogene Hyde of Calvert, [TX], [n.d.]
Owens 49
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 8a: The Bright Sherman Valley [2:19] / 8b: Kitty Wells [2:41]
Folk songs sung by unidentified male with guitar accompaniment. [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 38/39
[note: side b fair condition, skips; both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 9a: Green Corn [with history of Ben Thompson's banjo] [2:27] / 9b: I Got Mine [2:17]
Folk songs sung and played on banjo by J. D. Dillingham of Austin, TX, [n.d.]
Owens 45/46
[note: song on side 9a included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 10a: I Went Out A-Sparkin' [1:37] / 10b: John Dobber [1:44]
Folk songs sung by Maidy Kelly of the Soda community near Livingston, TX, [n.d.]
Owens 30/31
[side b fair condition, skips; both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disc 11a: The Boston Burglar [2:40] / 11b: How Come That Blood [On Your Shirt Sleeve] [1:29]
Folk songs sung by Mrs. T. H. [or C. H.] Burke of Silsbee, Texas, [n.d.]
Owens 32/33
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 12a: Broken Engagement [2:39] / 12b: Dying Girl's Message [2:52]
Folk songs sung by Mrs. Irvin Thompson at Silsbee, TX, [n.d.]
Owens 71/72
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 13a: Dry Bones [1:59] / 13b: [Old Ship o'] Zion [2:34]
13a: Gospel song sung by The Uplifted Four [African American quartet], Hearne, TX, 1938.
13b: Gospel hymn sung by an unidentified female, [n.p.], [1938]
Owens 179/180
[both songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 14a: The Little Sparrow [2:14], 06/05/1939
Folk song performed by May Kennedy McCord, [Springfield, MO] on June 5th, 1939.
Owens 37
[note: alternate title given "Come All Ye Fair and Tender Ladies"; song included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 15a: By and By [2:55]
Gospel song sung by unidentified African American female with piano accompaniment at Old Elam Baptist Church, Hearne, TX [1938]
Owens 111
[note: song included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disc 16a: Singing Tonight [1:41] / 16b: By and By [1:57]
16a: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified choir with piano accompaniment [n.p] [n.d.]
16b: Gospel song sung by unidentified male with piano accompaniment [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 183/184 CD access copy Box 9

Disk 17a: My Shepherd's Gone and Left Me [1:53] / 17b: Ride On King Jesus [1:47]
Gospel songs sung by The Silsbee Four [African American quartet] [Silsbee, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 148/149
[note: song 17a mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 18a: Swing Low [2:12] / 18b: By and By [2:49]
18a: Gospel song sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
18b: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 156/157 CD access copy Box 9

Disk 19a: Two Wings [2:18] / 19b: By and By [2:47]
19a: Gospel song sung by unidentified African American quartet.
19b: Gospel song sung by an unidentified female with piano accompaniment.
Owens 171/172
[note: both songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 20a: Little Joe the Wrangler [part 1] [2:56] / 20b-1: Little Joe the Wrangler [part2] [0:25]; 20b-2: Going to Leave Old Texas [1:40]
20a: Folk song sung by unidentified male with guitar accompaniment. [n.p.] [n.d.]
20b: Fragment of folk song sung by unidentified male; Folk song sung by Mildred Webb with guitar accompaniment, Austin, TX, March 4th, 1939.
Owens 93 CD access copy Box 9

Disk 21a: The Massa's Runned Away [2:33] / 21b: Joe Bowers [1:45]
Folk songs sung by Lemuel Jeffus, Lovelady, TX [n.d.]
Owens 59/60
[note: 21b included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 22a: The Bastard King of England [2:38] / 22b: Diamond Joe [The Chisholm Trail] [2:27]
22a: Folk song sung by unidentified male with guitar accompaniment, Austin, TX, March 1939.
22b: Folk song sung by unidentified male with banjo accompaniment, [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 88/89
[note: song 22b alternate title given "The Chisholm Trail" included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 23a: The Zebra Dun [Part 1] [2:48] / 23b: The Zebra Dun [Part 2] [1:20], 02/19/1939
Cowboy song sung and played on guitar by Brownie McNeill at Austin, TX, February 19, 1939.
Owens 81
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 24a: The Hangman's Tree [2:30] / 24b: Barbara Allen [2:28]
English ballads sung by Mrs. I. L. Stowe of Silsbee, TX [n.d.]
Owens 1/2
[note: song 24a included as "The Hangman's Rope" in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 25a: Flirtation [1:50] / Mohea [alternate title "Little Mohea"] [2:30]
25a: Folk song sung by Mrs. Irvin Thompson of Silsbee, TX [n.d.]
25b: Folk ballad sung by Mrs. C. H. Burke of Silsbee, TX [n.d.]
Owens 34/35
[note: song order is reversed on CD; both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 26a: The House Carpenter [2:45] / 26b: Ti Risslety Rosslety [1:43]
26a: English ballad sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
26b: Folk song sung by Colonel Denoon of Springfield, MO [n.d.]
Owens 7/8
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Tri - War

Tribbled Thoughts #2
[Rick and Jane Lavigne, ed., May 1988]

1, 3, 7, Trimethyl Xanthine
[Joanne Burger, ed., August 1969]

Triode #20
[Eric Bentcliffe, ed., October 1974]

Triode #21
[Eric Bentcliffe, ed., June 1975]

Triode #22
[Terry Jeeves, ed., Winter 1975]

Trip #78
[1978]

Truckin
[Fred Haskell, ed., Undated]

True Spirit of Fandom, The
[Eric Lindsay, ed., Undated]

Trumpet #11
[Tom Reamy, ed., 1974]

Tupemara #1
[October 1982]

Turn Left At Thursday
[John Rowley, ed., April 1979]

Twelve Misty Mountains
[Fred Haskell, ed., September 1979]

Twibbet #7
[Patrick Hayden, ed., 1978]

Twilight of Decadent Winnipeg Fandom, The
[Randy Reichardt and Mike Hall, ath., 1978]

Twll-ddu #16
[Dave Langford, ed., August 1979]

Twll-ddu #19
[Dave Langford, ed., April 1981]

Twiltone #1
[Taral Wayne MacDonald, ed., September 1978]

Twilltonez
[Ontario Science Centre, pub., Undated]

Two Good Eyes
[Fred Haskell, ed., April 1981]

Typo #2
[Victoria Vayne, ed., 1978]

Typo #9
[Taral Wayne, ed., June 1980]

Typographic Oceans #1
[Taral Wayne, ed., 1980]

Typographic Oceans #8
[Taral Wayne, ed., June 1981]

Ukulele #1
[Daniel Farr, ed., February 1982]

Ukulele #2
[Daniel Farr, ed., March 1986]

Ukulele #3
[Daniel Farr, ed., April 1986]

Ultra Dumb
[Dave Vereschagin, ed., Undated]

Unberufen
[Taral Wayne MacDonald, ed., 1977]

Uncensored #3
[Undated]

Uncharted Mindscapes
[Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty to Sci-Fi Writers, ed., 1983]

Under the Azalea
[Redd Boggs, ed., pub., May 1986]

Undulant Fever #5
[Bruce D. Arthurs, ed., 1980]

Undulant Fever #6
[Bruce D. Arthurs, ed., 1980]

Undulant Fever #8
[Bruce D. Arthurs, pub., Summer 1983]

Undulant Fever #9
[Bruce D. Arthurs, ed., 1985]

Undulant Fever #10
[Bruce D. Arthurs, ed., May 1986]

Unifan #1
[Ellen Pedersen, ed., Tohubohu Press, pub., June 1978]

Unifan #2
[Ellen Pederson, ed., March 1979]

Unique #1.2-1.3
[Unique, pub., January-April 1938]

United Fandom #1
[Ben Singer and George Young, ed., Undated]

Universe #1
[Steve George. ed., June 1977]

Universe #3
[Steve George, ed., 1977]

Universe SF Review #1-4
[Keith L. Justice, ed., May-August 1975]

Unknown Apa, The
[Christine Kulyl, ed., Undated]

Unknown Apa, The #10
[Christine Kulyk, ed., Undated]

Unteleported Fan, The #6
[Joe Moudry, ath., ed., Undated]

Unteleported Fan, The #8
[Joe Moudry, ed., August 1988]

Untitled zine about printing
[Eric B. Lindsey, ed., September 1972]

Up Against the Wall
[Michael Hall, ed., 1980]

Usual Part, The #2
[Chris Lewis, ed., 1979]

Utopia Prime
[Bob White, ed., Undated]

Utopia Prime #2
[Bob White, ed., Undated]

Vain at Last
[Fred Haskell, ed., August 1980]

Vainomoinen #4
[Guy Lillian III, ed., Undated]

Vainomoinen #5
[Guy Lillian, ed., January 1982]

Value of a Cup, The
[A. Trimpi, ed., 1980]

Vanishing Point #1
[Alan Lankin, ed., pub., January 1977]

Vanishing Point #2
[Alan Lankin, ed., pub., July 1977]

Variant #1.1, 1.3
[Allison Williams, ed., February 1947; September 1947]

Variegation #27
[Mike Bailey, ed., 1976]

Vati-con III
[Victoria Vayne, ed., January 1975]

VCBC Bulletin #23
[Kevin Partridge, ed., March 1981]

V-Con VI
[May 1978]

V-Con #7
[1979]

V-Con #8
[Vaughn W. Frasier, ed., 1980]

V-Con #9
[May 1981]

V-Con #10
[1972]

V-Con Bulletin #2
[May 1980]

Vector #79
[Christopher Fowler, ed., January-February 1977]

Vector #81-84
[Christopher Fowler, ed., May-November 1977]

Vector Reviews Supplement, The #1
[Christopher Fowler, ed., February 1977]

Venture #4
[Steve Fahnestalk, ed., Summer 1976]

Verbal Assault
[Steve McBean, ed., March 1984]

Vereschagin of Newsarepta
[Don Fitch, ed., February 1978]

Vert #1
[Gil Gaier, ed., November 1975]

Vert #2
[Gil Gaier, ed., May 1976]

Vert #3
[Gil Gaier, ed., January 1977]

Vert #4
[Gil Gaier, ed., November 1977]

Very Short Osfic Newsletter, A
[Henry Troup, ed., February 1981]

Vieing
[Wayne Strickland, ed., pub., August 1955]

Voice of Comicdom
[Rudy Franke, ed., May 1969]

Voices in the Dark
[New Writers Guild, pub., Undated]

Volta #5
[Daniel Farr, ed., March 1979]

Vootie #15.5
[Garth Danielson, ed., Undated]

Vor-Zap #1.1
[Walter Daniels, ed., 1975]

Vor-Zap #2.1
[Walter Daniels, ed., July 1979]

Vorpal #1
[Richard Brandt, pub., July 1973]

Vorpal #5
[Richard Brandt, ed., July 1978]

Voyager Bulletin #41-47
[NASA, pub., April 1979 - July 1979]

Wahf-Full #1
[Jack R. Herman, ed., 1983]

Wahf-Full #3-6
[Jack R. Herman, ed., December 1979 - June 1981]

Wahf-Full #7
[Jack R. Herman, ed., December 1981]

Wahf-Full #8
[Jack R. Herman, ed., March 1982]

Wahf-Full #9
[Jack R. Herman, ed., June 1982]

Wahf-Full #10
[Jack R. Herman, ed., September 1982]

Wahf-Full #11
[Jack R. Herman, ed., February 1983]

Wahf-Full #12
[Jack R. Herman, ed., September 1983]

Wahf-Full #13
[Jack R. Herman, ed., February 1984]

Wahf-Full #14
[Jack R. Herman, ed., June/July 1984]

Wahf-Full #16-17
[Jack R. Herman, ed., February-September 1986]

Wahf-Full Necessity, A #15.5
[Jack R. Herman, ed., March 1985]

Wam #7
[Denys Howard, pub., October 1980]

Wapentake's Stave, The #2
[Fred Patten, ath., September 1977]

Warehouse #5
[D. Gary Grady, ed., February 1977]

Warhoon #28
[Richard Bergeron, ed., May 1978]

Warhoon #28
[Richard Bergeron, ed., May 1978]

Warp #16, 18
[Greg Hills, ed., April 1980; September 1980]

Disks 157-182

This box contains the following items:

Disk 157a: Trail to Mexico [part 1] [2:37] / 157b: Trail to Mexico [part 2] [0:59], 10/21/1939
Cowboy folk song performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, October, 21, 1939.
Owens 83
[note: sides are reversed on CD tracks]

Disk 158a: The Santa Fe Trail [2:55] / 158b: The Buffalo Skinners [2:03], 02/18/1939
Cowboy folk songs performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, February, 18, 1939.
Owens 95/96
[note: 158b mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 159a: Roy Bean [part 1] [2:56] / 159b: Roy Bean [part 2] [0:48], 12/02/1939
Folk song performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, December 2, 1939.
Owens 24

Disk 160a: Great Grandad [2:13] / 160b: The Old Chisholm Trail [2:28], 10/21/1939
Folk songs performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, October 21st, 1939.
Owens 86/87
[note: 160a begins with false start of "The Old Chisholm Trail']

Disk 161a: Daniel Saw the Stone [2:26] / 161b: Oh Tais Toi [1:37]
161a: Gospel song performed by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
161b: French folk song performed by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 227/228
[note: 161a mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 162a: Jealous Lover [part 1] [2:46] / 162b-1: Jealous Lover [part 2] [0:37]; 162b-2: The Colored Man's Lament [0:53], 03/04/1939
162a: Folk ballad sung by Opal Patton, Leesville, TX, March 4th, 1939.
162b: Folk ballad sung by Opal Patton, Leesville, TX, March 4th, 1939; Folk song performed by Abe Melton, Appleby, TX, March 4th, 1939.
Owens 65/66
[note: sides switched on CD]

Disk 163a: Las Cuatro Milpas [2:01] / 163b-1: Adalita [0:57]; 163b-2El Petate [1:05], 02/19/1939
Mexican folk songs performed by Brownie McNeill, Austin, TX, February, 19, 1939.
Owens 269/270

Disk 164a: Mockingbird [Listen to the Mockingbird] [2:51] / 164b: Cripple Creek [2:52]
Fiddle tunes played by Sam Welch [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 296/297

Disk 165a: William Hall [Brisk Young Farmer] [part 1] [2:53] / 165b-1: William Hall [Brisk Young Farmer] [part 2] [0:20]; 165b-2: Hebrew Children [2:19]
Folk ballad and hymn sung by Lilly Williams [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 5/6
[note: sides reversed on CD; 165a included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 166a: When I Can Read My Title Clear [2:49] / 166b: Introduction [1:53]
166a: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified church choir at Franklin, TX, [1938]
166b: Spoken message from unidentified pastor of church at Franklin, TX [1938]
Owens 192/193
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 167a: Watermelon [1:25] / 167b: Oh Mona [1:22]
167a: Song sung by Tom Ballentine near Beaumont, TX [n.d.]
167b: Song sung by Ernest M. Horse [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 199/200

Disk 168a: The Right Chuch (But the Wrong Pew) [2:00] / 168b: Driften Apart [Drifting Further from Me] [2:25]
Songs sung by Tom Ballentine [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 187/188
Disk 169a: Boogie Woogie [2:30] / 169b: The Sun is Sinking Down [2:29]
169a: Piano music played by [Grey Ghost (R. T. Williams)] [n.p.] [n.d.]
169b: Blues song sung and played by [Grey Ghost (R. T. Williams)] [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 257/258

Disk 170a: I Cried All Night [2:53] / 170b: Call the Number [of the Train I Ride] [2:51]
Blues songs sung by Popeye Johnson and played by [Grey Ghost (R. T. Williams)] , Navasota, TX 1940.
Owens 263/264
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 171a: The Good Ship Zion [2:59]
Gospel hymn sung by [North New Hope Baptist Church] choir, Franklin, TX [1938]
Owens 121
[note: included as "Ship 'o Zion" in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 172a: Toiling [2:52] / 172b: One Day Too Late [1:56]
Gospel songs performed by The Uplifted Four quartet, Calvert, TX, [1938]
Owens 119/120
[note: 172a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 173a: Standing in the Need of Prayer [1:54] / 173b: Oh Mary, Don't You Weep [2:47]
Gospel hymns sung by Mary Riley and choir, Franklin, TX [1938]
Owens 116/117
[note: 173b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 174a: God is Calling [When the Gates Swing Open] [2:54] / 174b: Wade in the Water [1:38]
174a: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified male [First Baptist Church, Colored] [Silsbee, TX] [1938]
174b: Gospel hymn sung by Ella Prescott and First Baptist Chuch, Colored choir, Silsbee, TX [1938]
Owens 114/115
[note: 174b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 175a: Lead Me On [Precious Lord] [2:59]
Gospel hymn sung by North New Hope Baptist Church choir at Franklin, TX, 1938.
Owens 108
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..." as "Precious Lawd."]

Disk 176a: You Ought to Saw My Lord [2:05] / 176b: I'm Looking for that Man [1:46]
Gospel hymns sung by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 140/141

Disk 177a: Rye Whiskey [The Rebel Soldier] [part 1] [2:41] / 177b-1: Na Na Se Alei [Na Nasej Aleji] [1:08]; 177b-2: Rye Whiskey [The Rebel Soldier] [part 2] [0:46]
177a: Folk ballad performed by Clay Cochran of Amarillo, TX [n.d.]
177b: Czech folk song performed by unidentified females, [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 280/281
[note: 177a included in "Texas Folk Songs"; 177b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 178a: I'm Watching Every Devil [2:44] / 178b: Hitler Blues [2:51]
Piano blues songs performed by Grey Ghost [R. T. Williams] at [Smithville, TX] [1941]
Owens 255/256
[note: 178b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 179a: There's a Big White Robe [1:42] / 179b: I Can't Stay Away [1:43]
Gospel songs performed by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 122/123
[note: 179a mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 180a: Make a Change [1:26] / 180b: When the Saints [Go Marching In] [1:47]
180a: Gospel song performed by unidentified male and female [n.p.] [n.d.]
180b: Gospel song performed by unidentified pianist, female singer, and audience at honky-tonk near Washington-on-Brazos, TX [n.d.]
Owens 124/125
[note: 180b mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 181a: He's Everything to Me [2:32] / 181b: You've Got To Move [2:17]
181a: Gospel song performed by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
181b: Gospel song performed by unidentified children [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 126/127

Disk 182a: The Blood Done Signed My Name [2:17] / Climbing Jacob's Ladder [1:44]
Gospel hymns performed at African Methodist Episcopal Church, Calvert, TX [1939]
[note: songs in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]
Owens 128/129

John Wyndham Research Files and Charles Reade: A Biography Manuscript Copy

John Wyndham (1990) Research Files

  • Notebook #1, Undated
  • Notebooks #2 - 3, Undated
  • Unnumbered notebooks, Undated
  • Storied by Wyndham (photocopies), 1938; Undated

Charles Reade: A Biography (Unpublished)

  • Photocopied manuscript with edits, pp. i - 117, 1973
  • Photocopied manuscript with edits, pp. 118 - 231, 1973
  • Photocopied manuscript with edits, pp. 232 - 358, 1973
  • Photocopied manuscript with edits, pp. 359 - 484, 1973

Rodeo Club Materials

1-01: A&M Budgets, 1947-1949

1-02: Articles, 1940-1941; April 1990; October 22, 1993

1-03: Correspondence, December 8, 1950; April 11, 1990; October 10, 1990; November 9, 1994; January 10, 1996

1-04: Government Documents, April 26, 1996

1-05: Magazine Publications, June 1949; May 1967; November 1974; October 1990; October 1993

1-06: Miscellaneous Articles, Undated

1-07: Newsletters, August 26, 2002; February 9, 2003; September 2003

1-08: Notes, 1946; 1948; 1972; 1974; 1976; 1996

1-09: Photographs, 1938; 1946-1947; 1949-1951

1-10: Programs, 1939-1941; 1948-1949; 1951; 1953; 1970-1972; 1974; 1990; 1993; 1997

1-11: University of Arizona Programs, 1946; 1948

Short Stories

2-13/1: "The Admiral" (Story, March 1938)

2-13/2: "Alkali Basin" (Range Riders Western, January 1949)

2-13/3: "And Proudly Die (in Yondering*, revised version, 1989)

2-13/4: "And The Strong Shall Live" (West, March 1978) - 3 copies

2-13/5: "And The Strong Shall Live" (West, March 1978) - original copy of West

2-13/6: "Anything For A Pal" (True Gang Life, October 1935) - 1 copy, and 3 copies of story from louislamour.com, 2001

2-13/7: "Author's Tea" (Script, August 26, 1939) - 2 copies

2-13/8: "Backfield Battering Ram" (Popular Football, Winter 1947) - 3 copies

2-13/9: "Bad Place To Die" (Best Western, December 1955) - 2 copies

2-13/10: "Barney Takes a Hand (Thrilling Western*, October 1946) - 2 copies

2-13/11: "Big Man" (Giant Western, April 1953) - 4 copies

2-13/12: Big Medicine (as Jim Mayo, Thrilling Western, January 1948) - 3 copies

2-13/13: Bill Carey Rides West (as Jim Mayo, West, July 1947)

2-13/14: "The Black Rock Coffin-Makers" (as Jim Mayo, .44 Western, February 1950)

2-13/15: The Blood of Ryan (Thrilling Western, May 1951) - 2 copies

2-13/16: "Booty for a Badman" (The Saturday Evening Post, July 30, 1960) - 4 copies, and 3 copies of 1988 reprint

2-13/17: "Bowdrie Hits a Cold Trail" (Popular Western, October 1947) - 4 copies

2-13/18: "Bowdrie Rides a Coyote Trail" (Popular Western, April 1947) - 3 copies

2-13/19: "Bowdrie Trails West" (Popular Western, June 1947) - 3 copies

2-13/20: "The Burning Hills" (The Saturday Evening Post, November 26, 1955) - 5 copies

2-13/21: "The Burning Hills" - marked copy - 2 copies

2-13/22: "By the Ruins of El Walarieh" (in Yondering, revised 1989)

2-13/23: "The Cactus Kid" (Two-Gun Western, August 1953) - missing page 123

2-13/24: "The Cactus Kid Goes A-Courting" (Two-Gun Western, August 1953)

2-13/25: "The Cactus Kid Pays a Debt" (Rio Kid Western, May 1952) - 2 copies

2-13/26: "Case Closed - No Prisoners" (Popular Western, October 1949) - 4 copies

2-13/27: "Chick Bowdrie Passes Through" (Popular Western, August 1948) - 4 copies

2-13/28: "Coast Patrol" (Thrilling Adventures, January 1943) - 2 copies

2-13/29: Corpse on the Carpet" (Popular Detective*, May 1948) - 4 copies

2-13/30: "Crash Landing" (Male, July 1952) - 3 copies

2-13/31: "The Crime, the Place, and the Girl" (G-Man Detective, Fall 1950) - 2 copies

2-13/32: " The Cross and the Candle" (Cowboys and Indians, September 2000) - published version and copy

2-13/33: "Dead-End Drift" (The New Mexico Quarterly, August 1940) - 3 copies

2-13/34: "Dead Man's Trial" (Thrilling Detective, August 1947)

2-13/35: "Death, Westbound" (10 Storybook, March 1933) - 2 copies

2-13/36: "The Defense of Sentinel (Country Style, May 1977) - 1 copy and 2 later reprints

2-13/37: "Desert Death-Song" (Dime Western, February 1950)

2-13/38: "The Diamond of Jeru" (in Off The Mangrove Coast, 2000) - Original story, 2 copies

2-13/39: "The Diamond of Jeru" (in Off The Mangrove Coast, 2000) - rewrite by Beau L'Amour, 2 copies

2-13/40: "The Diamond of Jeru" (in Off The Mangrove Coast, 2000) - Screenplay by Beau L'Amour

2-13/41: "Down Paagumere Way" (Sky Fighters, March 1944) - 2 copies

2-13/42: "Down Sonora Way" (Five Western Novels, December 1951)

2-13/43: The Drift" (Western Short Stories*, March 1954) - 2 copies

2-13/44: "Duffy's Man" (Texas Rangers, June 1951) - 5 copies

2-13/45: "Dutchman's Flat" (Giant Western, Fall 1948) - 2 copies

2-13/46: "East of Gornotalo (Thrilling Adventures*, January 1940)

2-13/47: "Fighters Don't Dive" (Popular Sports, Summer 1946)

2-13/48: "Fighters Should Be Hungry" (Popular Sports, February 1949) - 2 copies

2-13/49: "Flight to Enbetu" (Sky Fighters, Summer 1945) - 5 copies

2-13/50: "Flight to the North" (Sky Fighters, September 1943) - 2 copies

2-13/51: "Flowers for Jenny" (screenplay for Schlitz Playhouse, August 1956)

2-13/52: "Fork Your Own Broncs" (as Jim Mayo, Thrilling Ranch Stories, May 1947) - 6 copies

2-13/53: "Four Cord Draw" (as Jim Mayo, Giant Western, February 1951) - 4 copies

2-13/54: "From Here to Banggai" (Thrilling Adventures, June 1940)

2-13/55: "Get Out Of Town" (The Saturday Evening Post, May 16, 1959) - 1 copy, and 5 Post reprints from September 1983; and reprint from Collected Stories - 1 copy

2-13/56: "The Ghost Maker" (as Jim Mayo, Rodeo Romances, Spring 1950)

2-13/57: "The Ghosts of Buckskin Run" (Thrilling Ranch Stories, May 1948)

2-13/58: "The Gift of Cochise" (Collier's, July 5, 1952) - 1 copy; reprint in Bar 3 (1951) - 2 copies; reprint in Country Style (April 1977)- 1 copy; reprint in Reader's Digest (September 1984) - 1 copy; reprint in Tales of the Wild West (1993) - 1 copy; and reprint in A Century of Great Western Stories* - 1 copy

2-13/59: "Gila Crossing" (Complete Western Book Magazine, September 1956) - 2 copies

2-13/60: "Glorious! Glorious!" (The Tanager, December 1939) - 2 copies

2-13/61: "Gloves for a Tiger" (Thrilling Adventures, January 1938) - 2 copies (1 marked)

2-13/62: "Gold Does To A Man" (Thrilling Western, January 1952) - 2 copies

2-13/63: "Gold is How You Keep It" (Thrilling Adventures, July 1941)

2-13/64: "The Goose Flies South" (Sky Fighters, Summer 1947) - 3 copies

2-13/65: "The Greatest Fighter in the World" (Exciting Sports, Summer 1947) - 3 copies (1 marked)

2-13/66: "Grub Line Rider" (as Jim Mayo, Triple Western, June 1951) - 4 copies

2-13/67: Guns of the Timberland (as Jim Mayo, West, September 1950) - 2 copies

2-13/68: "The Guns Talk Loud" (Fifteen Western Tales, April 1947) - 2 copies

2-13/69: "The Guns Talk Loud" (Zane Grey Western Magazine, March 1970)

2-13/70: "Heritage of Hate" (as Jim Mayo, Texas Rangers, July 1947) - 2 copies

2-13/71: "The Hills of Homicide" (Detective Tales, May 1949) - 2 copies

2-13/72: "His Brother's Debt" (Giant Western, April 1950) - 2 copies

2-13/73: "Home in the Valley" (as Jim Mayo, The Rio Kid Western, August 1949)

2-13/74: "Home is Where We're Going" (John Bull, November 7, 1959)

2-13/75: "Horse Heaven" (as Jim Mayo, The Rio Kid Western, April 1950) - original pulp and 2 copies

2-13/76: "The House of Qasavara" (Thrilling Adventures, December 1940)

2-13/77: "I Hate to Tell His Widow" (Detective Tales, July 1949) - 2 copies

2-13/78: "In Victoria's Country" (Giant Western, June 1949) - 2 copies

2-13/79: "It's Your Move" (*The Tanager, February 1939) - 2 copies

2-13/80: "Jackson of Horntown" (as Jim Mayo, Texas Rangers, March 1947) - 2 copies

2-13/81: "A Job for a Ranger" (Popular Western, December 1946) - 2 copies

2-13/82: "Keep Travelin', Rider" (Thrilling Western, March 1948)

2-13/83: "The Killer From Pecos" (Popular Western, February 1950) - 2 copies

2-13/84: "Law of the Desert-Born" (Dime Western Magazine, April 1946)

Disks #27-52

This box contains the following items:

Disk 27a: Gypsy Davy [2:48] / 27b: Lady Mary [2:22]
English folk ballads sung and played on guitar by May Kennedy McCord, [Springfield, MO] June 5, 1939.
Owens 25/26
[note: both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 28a: Sacred Harp No. 421 [Cooper] We'll All Shout Together [Sweet Morning] [2:12] / 28b: Sacred Harp [Cooper 501, That Beautiful Land] [2:36]
Shape note hymns sung by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 99/100 CD access copy Box 9

Disk 29a: Frog Went A Courting [2:52] / Frog Went a Courting [2:02]
29a: Folk song sung and played by May Kennedy McCord, Springfield, MO, June 5, 1939.
29b: Folk song sung by Mrs. C. H. Burke [Silsbee, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 24
[note: 29a included in "Texas Folk Songs"] CD access copy Box 9

Disk 30a: Frog Went a Courting [1:17] / 30b: Sailor Song [1:34]
Folk songs sung by Donald Davidson [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 5
[note: song order is mis-labled on CD]

Disk 31a: Rich Irish Lady [part 1] [2:30] / 31b-1: [Rich Irish Lady, part 2] [0:30]; 31b-2: Lazy Man [2:13]
Folk ballads sung by unidentified females [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 75/76
[note: all songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 32a: The Old Woman from Ireland [2:27] / 32b: Jennie Jenkins [0:45]
Folk songs sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 73/74
[note: 32b bad condition; both songs included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 33a: Travelin On [2:08] / 33b: By and By [2:37]
33a: Gospel song sung by unidentified choir and male soloist with piano accompaniment [n.p.] [n.d.]
33b: Gospel song sung by unidentified choir and female soloist with piano accompaniment [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 144/145

Disk 34a: Sacred Harp Parting Song [Cooper #62, Parting Hand "My Christian friends, in bonds of love"] [2:50] / 34b: Sacred Harp minor key [Cooper 47b, Idumea "And am I born to die?"] [2:12]
Shape note hymns sung by unidentified choir at Austonio, TX, summer 1940.
Owens 144/145
[note: 34b included as "Idumea" in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song"]

Disk 35a: Poor Pilgrim [1:48] / 35b: Poor Pilgrim [2:11]
Gospel hymn sung by Ella Prescott [First Baptist Church, Colored, Silsbee, TX] [n.d.]

Disk 36a: Steal Away [2:53] / 36b: There's No Hiding Place [2:17]
Gospel hymns sung by unidentified female and choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 150/151
[note: 36b has 0:55 silence at beginning of track]

Disk 37a: Jesus is Sweeter [2:21]
Gospel song sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 152

Disk 38a: Somebody Touched Me [1:25] / 38b: Good News [1:58]
Gospel songs sung by [Ella Prescott] and unidentified females at [First Baptist Church, Silsbee, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 154/155
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song"]

Disk 39a: Toiling [2:51] / 39b: Every Time [1:57]
39a: Gospel song sung by [General Washington] at [Old Elam Baptist Church, Hearne, TX] [n.d.]
39b: Gospel hymn sung by [Old Elam Baptist Church Choir] with unidentified female at [Hearne, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 158/159
[note: 39a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song"]

Disk 40a: It May Be the Best for Me [2:43] / 40b: Heaven's Radio [2:56]
Gospel songs sung by Miss Freddie Lee Kirby with piano accompaniment, Galveston, TX [n.d.]
Owens 173/174
[note: 40b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 41a: Swing Low, Sweet Chariot [2:15] / 41b: Swinging on the Golden Gates [2:14]
Gospel song and hymn sung by [African Methodist Episcopal Church] choir, [Calvert, TX] [n.d.]
Owens 181/182
[note: hymns included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 42a: Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray [1:42] / 42b: Walk Together Children [1:49]
Gospel songs sung by [Ella Prescott] and choir at [First Baptist Church, Colored] Silsbee, TX [n.d.]
Owens 175/176
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 43a: Put Your All on the Altar [2:48] / 43b: When the Morning Comes [2:08]
43a: Gospel hymn sung and played by Carol [Swain] with unidentified female and choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
43b: Gospel hymn sung by [Old Elam Baptist Church] choir, Hearne, TX [1938]
Owens 177/178
[note: 43b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 44a: I'm On the Battlefield [2:39] / 44b: I've Been Listening [1:15]
Gospel hymns sung by [General Washington] and [Old Elam Baptist Church] choir, Hearne, TX [1938]
Owens 185/186
[note: 44b shallow grooves; song included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 45a: Walking Around [2:41] / 45b: The Old Maid [0:53]; [Put My Little Shoes Away] [1:26]
45a: Gospel song sung by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
45b: Folk songs sung by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 196/197
[note: side 45b bad condition, severe scratches; "The Old Maid" included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 46a: Old Ship of Zion [2:28] / 46b: Down the Lonesome Road [2:03]
Gospel hymns sung by The Silsbee Four [male quartet], Silsbee, TX [1938]
Owens 194/195
[note: 46a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 47a: When The Morning Comes (By and By) [1:50] / 47b: Dry Bones [2:09]
47a: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
47b: Gospel song sung by [The Uplifted Four] [Calvert, TX] [1938]
Owens 189/190
[note: 47a shallow groove, fair sound; 47b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 48a: The Wicked Daughter [2:34] / The Old Fashioned Cot [2:55]
48a: Gospel ballad sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
48b: Folk ballad sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 69/70
[note: 48a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 49a: Jesse James [2:57], 06/05/1939
Folk ballad sung and played by May Kennedy McCord, Springfield, MO, June 5, 1939.
Owens 67/68
[note: included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 50a: The Cowboy's Lament [Streets of Laredo] [2:54] / 50b: My Love is a Rider [2:19]
Folk ballads sung and played by unidentified male [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 98/99
[note: 50a included as "Streets of Laredo" in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 51a: Leakin' in the Ole Building [1:43] / 51b: John Wrote the Seven Churches [2:04]
Gospel songs sung by The Silsbee Four, Silsbee, TX [n.d.]
Owens 203/204
[note: 51b included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 52a: Mother [1:45] / 52b: Good Ship Zion [2:56]
52a: Gospel song sung by unidentified female with piano accompaniment [n.p.] [n.d.]
52b: Gospel hymn sung by unidentified mixed quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 201/202

Disks 183-199

This box contains the following items:

Disk 183a: After Awhile [2:22] / 183b: In Thy Service [Use Me / Run All The Way] [2:24]
Gospel songs performed by unidentified pianist and male singer [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 138/139

Disk 184a: Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray [2:28] / 184b: I'll Be a Witness [2:04]
184a: Gospel song performed by Ella Prescott and choir at First Baptist Church, Colored, Silsbee, TX [1938]
184b: Gospel song performed by unidentified female solo and choir at First Baptist Church, Colored, Silsbee, TX [1938]
Owens 136/137
[note: 184a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 185a: Hand Me Down [the Silver Trumpet, Gabriel] [1:35] / 185b: Jericho [Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho] [2:07]
185a: Gospel hymn performed by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]
185b: Gospel song performed by unidentified male quartet [n.p.] [n.d.] [speed fluctuations on disk start]
Owens 134/135
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 186a: Old Ship of Zion [3:00] / 186b: Mother [2:18]
186a: Gospel hymn performed by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]
186b: Gospel song performed by Mary Riley, Franklin, TX [n.d.]
Owens 132/133
[note: 186a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 187a: John Saw the Stone [2:10] / 187b: Two Wings of Glory [2:15]
187a: Gospel song performed by The Uplifted Four quartet, Old Elam Baptist Church, Hearne, TX, [1938]
187b: Gospel song performed by the Junior Girls Quartet, Old Elam Baptist Church, Hearne, TX, [1938]
Owens 130/131
[note: 187b mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 188a: Farmer's Cursed Wife [2:51] / 188b-1: Where is the Crow [0:48]; 188b-2: When the Saints [Go Marching In] [1:15]
Folk songs and spiritual sung by unidentified male [William Owens?] [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 9/10/11
[notes: 188a included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 189a: The Wild Moor [2:31], 06/05/1939
Folk ballad performed by David Rice, [n.p.], June 5, 1939.
[note: song included in "Texas Folk Songs"]

Disk 190a: MacGimsey ["Shadrack"] [2:02] / 190b: [La Paloma] [1:48]; [Smoke Get's in Your Eyes] [0:49]
190a; Popular song performed by composer Robert MacGimsey (vocals, whistling) of Pineville, LA, [1940]
190b: Popular songs performed by Robert MacGimsey (whistling), of Pineville, LA [1940]
Owens 7
[note: 190a mentioned in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 191a: Heaven's Radio [2:31] / 191b: C'est Hip puis Taiaut [2:26]
191a: Gospel song sung by Miss Freddie Lee Kirby with piano accompaniment, Galveston, TX [n.d.]
191b: Cajun folk song sung and played by Eric Domingue, vocal and guitar, and Tony Allemand, fiddle, St. Martinville, LA [1938]
Owens 4
[note: poor sound]

Disk 192a: Swing on de Golden Gate [1:53] / 192b: Han' Me Down [My Silver Trumpet, Gabriel] [1:49]
Gospel songs performed by Francis German, [n.p.] [n.d.]
Owens 15
[note: lacquer disk]

Disk 193a: The Happy Bluebird; How Shall I Get Home? [2:11] / 193b: One Day as I Wandered [2:06]
Temperance songs performed by Ruth Messenger [n.p.] [n.d.]
[note: lacquer disk]

Disk 194a: Go to Sleepy, Little Baby; Goodbye, Swing Low [2:29] / 194b: Dese Bones [1:55]
Lullabies and gospel songs performed by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 195a: The Harlot of Jerusalem [1:53]
Bawdy folk song sung by The Barroom Quartet [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 196a: [I Had But Fifty Cents] [2:48] / 196b-1: [Cindy] [1:02]; 196b-2: [Roxy Ann] [0:36]; 196b-3: [Josie] [0:52]
Folk songs sung by unidentified female [n.p.] [n.d.]

Disk 197a: Iowa City [2:49] / 197b: Mrs. Neutra [2:38]
197a: Group of writers/artists including Robert Frost and Grant Wood introducing themselves and saying humorous quotes, Iowa City, IA [1939]
197b: Swiss folk song sung and performed on cello by Mrs. Neutra; [Mr. Neutra speaking] [College Station, TX] [1942]

Disk 198a-1: A janta a ja [0:31]; 198a-2: Har ni hort en forskracklig handelse [0:33]; 198a-3: The Kvasarvalsen [0:25], 10
Swedish folk songs performed by [Mr. and] Mrs. F. E. Hansen [n.p.] [n.d.]
[note: songs included in "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song..."]

Disk 199a: When the Morning Comes [2:14]
Gospel hymn performed by unidentified choir [n.p.] [n.d.]

Correspondence and Materials Related to Volume 1

Correspondence

  • S2-1/28: L.W. Currey. (2000; 2017)
  • S2-1/29: Peter Fitting. (1989-1990)
  • S2-1/30: Peter Franck (attorney), with photocopies of Philip K. Dick letters, 1964-1974. (1989)
  • S2-1/31: James Gunn. (1989-1990)
  • S2-1/32: Harry Harrison. (1989-1990)
  • S2-1/33: Doris Sauter. (1991)
  • S2-1/34: Norman Spinrad. (1989-1990)

Correspondence with Proofreaders and Typists

  • S2-1/35: Proofreaders during 1980-1981. (1991-1992)
  • S2-1/36: Proofreaders from 1975-1976. (1992)
  • S2-1/37: Proofreaders from 1977-1979. (1991-1992)
  • S2-1/38: Proofreaders during 1980-1981. (1991-1992)
  • S2-1/39: Proofreaders and typists volunteer list during 1980-1982. (1994)
  • S2-1/40: Proofreader and typist correspondence. (1991-1993)
  • S2-1/41: Correspondence re: Philip K. Dick and Stanislaw Lem. (1990)

Introductions, and Introduction Correspondence

  • S2-1/42: James Blaylock. (1994)
  • S2-1/43: Dennis Etchison. (1993)
  • S2-1/44: William Gibson. (1990)
  • S2-1/45: Dan Herron, (Undated)
  • S2-1/46: K.W. Jeter. (1994)
  • S2-1/47: Dean R. Koontz. (1990)
  • S2-1/48: Ursula K. Le Guin. (1990)
  • S2-1/49: Tim Powers. (1987-1990)
  • S2-1/50: Art Spiegelman. (1990-1992)
  • S2-1/51: Tim Underwood-Lists of potential introducers. (1989-1990)
  • S2-1/52: Robert Anton Wilson. (1992-1996)

S2-1/53: Photocopies of Philip K. Dick letters and letter file. (1942-1983), with additional correspondence to Tim Underwood from 1997

S2-1/54: Production documentation. (1986; 1992; 1994; Undated)

The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick. 1938-1971 (1997)

  • S2-1/55: Corrected galleys, Introduction - page 112. (1995)
  • S2-1/56: Corrected galleys, pages 113 - 226. (1995)
  • S2-1/57: Corrected galleys, pages 227 - 344. (1995)
  • S2-1/58: Production documentation. (1993-1997; Undated)
  • S2-1/59: Photocopies of Philip K. Dick letters. (1938-1962)

Mona - Note

Monadnock
No.1 2003

Moonphog
No.2 Mar 1970

Mr. Monster
Dec 2008

Mumblings from Munchkinland
No.6 Jan 1992
No.27 Apr 2009
No.28 Feb 2010

Munich Round Up (MRU)
No.115 Nov 1970

Mytholore: A journal of J.R.R Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature
Vol. 22 No.3 WIN 1999
Vol. 22 No.4 No.86 SPR 2000

The Naked Id
No.14

Nargothrond
No.1 1967(?)

National Fantasy Fan
Vol. 9 No.1/2 Jun 2009
Vol. 9 No.3 Sep 2009
Vol. 9 No.4 Dec 2009

Nautilus
No.1 1992
No.2 1992

Necrophile
1991

New Fandom
Vol. 1 No.1 Sep 1938
Vol. 1 No.2 Nov 1938
Vol. 1 No.3 Jan 1939
Vol. 1 No.5 Apr 1939
Vol. 1 No.5 Jul 1939
Vol. 1 No. 6
Vol. 2 No. 2 May 1940

New Unknown, The
No.2 Nov 1967

New Worlds
No.1 Spr 1978

New York Review of Science Fiction
Vol. 22 No.6 Feb 2012
Vol. 24 No.3 Nov 2011
Vol. 24 No.5 Jan 2012

Nexus
Vol. 1 No.1 Apr 1991
Vol. 1 No.3 Spr 1993

Nickelodeon
No.1 circa 1975

Niekas
No.20 FAL 1968

No Award
No.17 circa 2008

NoreasCon
No.4 Sep 2004 (62th World Science Convention)

Nostalgia News (formerly The DallasCon Bulletin)
No.1
No.12 1971(?)
No.13 circa 1972

Notes from The Chemistry Dept.
No.1 Dec 1973
No.3 Feb 1974
No.8 Oct 1974
No.9 Nov 1974
No.12 Jul 1975
No.13 Sep 1975

Correspondence

1/1 through 1/16
Miscellaneous business and personal communications including social notes, invitations, greeting cards, Christmas cards, medical, and miscellaneous informal correspondence.

Findley Correspondence and Miscellaneous

1/1:

  • 22 W. E. Greiner Junior High and Sunset High School report cards for Findley. 1940-1942 (with envelope)
  • Commencement Exercises, Texas A&M College (Findley graduated in Chemical Engineering). June 3, 1949
  • Elementary Pupil's Report Card for Findley. 1938-1940
  • Texas A&M Officers Reserve Corps Commissioning Exercises. January 21, 1955
  • Post card to Mrs. Rex Redwood from Rae
  • Certificate of Honor Awarded to Findley
  • Handmade song sheet about the state of Texas

1/2: 35 Photographs

  • Captain Marshall E. Findley. 1949
  • Findley. 1946 [?]
  • Findley and Doris Jean Powledge. 1948 or 1949
  • The remaining 32 photos are unlabeled, mostly of cadets

1/3: 36 unlabeled photos of cadets

1/4: Correspondence

  • To Mr. G. E. Findley from James Schneioler
  • A father to wife and son. Sunday, May 2, 1942
  • Findley to his parents. January 9, 1944
  • Findley to his Parents. March 3, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. March 8, 1944
  • Cap. Paul H. Fuqua to Cap. G.E. Findley. May 15, 1944 (contained in the original envelope)
  • Findley to his parents. June 9, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. June 12, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. June 17, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. June 20, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. June 26, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. June 28, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. July 7, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. July 12, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. July 16, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. July 20, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. July 24, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. July 28, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. August 1, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. August 5, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. August 20, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. August 22, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. August 31, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. September 2, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. September 6t, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. November 13, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. October 11, 1944
  • Capt. Paul H. Fugnas to Cap. Glenn E. Findley. December 29, 1944
  • Findley to his parents. April 20, 1945
  • Findley to his parents. January 3, 1945
  • Findley to his parents. Undated
  • Findley to his parents. February 19, 1945
  • Findley to his parents. February 23, 1945
  • Findley to Julie. November 5, 1945
  • From a father working at Morten Milling Company to his family. Undated
  • P.L.F to his family on December 9, 1945
  • Findley to his parents. March 4, 1945
  • National Capital Texas A&M Club Meeting. July 1948
  • National Capital Texas A&M Club Annual Muster. 1948
  • Dean of Engineering to Marshall E. Findley
  • To Marshall and Susan from their father. October 13, 1953
  • To Marshall and Susan from Margie, Warren, Dad and Mother. October 15, 1955
  • To Dr. and Mrs. Findley from Mother. Undated (contained in the original envelope)
  • To M. E. Findley from Dad. November 6, 1956
  • To M.P.S from Mother. Undated
Results 281 to 315 of 3954