

Materials relating to Keleman, a prominent figure in the field of somatic therapy and director of the Center for Energetic Studies in Berkeley, where he teaches and maintains a private practice. Foulis, Two Odes (1926) by the Grabhorn Press, The Odes of Keats and Shelley (1939) by Peter Pauper Press, and Endymion: A Poetic Romance (1947) by the Golden Cockerel Press. Fine press editions of Isabella, or, The Pot of Basil (1907) by T.N.

Facsimile edition of Keats’s manuscript of Hyperion (1905). Holdings include Endymion: A Poetic Romance (1818), The Poetical Works of John Keats (1858), the three-volume set The Letters and Poems of John Keats (1883), Odes, Sonnets, and La Belle Dame Sans Merci (1906), Autobiography of John Keats (1933), and John Keats’s Anatomical and Physiological Note Book (1934). Materials relating to the oldest multidisciplinary Asian American arts organization in the United States, which was established in 1972 as a collective of artists in San Francisco’s Chinatown/ Manila town neighborhood.

85+ b/w snapshots, with views of Gibraltar, Malta, Port Said, Port Sudan, and Aden, taken on the voyage to Karachi. One typescript manuscript by Ellen Beckman re Kansas in the 1850s. Interviews with UCSB librarian McNabb, re her times at Columbia Library School, Greenwich Village in the 1930s, Kansas City Public Library, and the UCSB Library. 1930s-1940s by an historian who wrote extensively on Kansas, Lincoln, and the Civil War. In: Confederate Collection (Wyles Mss 52). One letter (ALS) to William A Seaver, re Bleeding Kansas. Petrel was dispatched to the Bering Sea to discourage seal poaching and later took part in Dewey’s capture of Manila Bay. Includes images of the visit of a Russian naval ship, as well as two other ships, the H.M.S. 24 mounted black/white photographs of the Kamchatka Peninsula and the Bering Sea, with captions in Russian. Typescript, "A Manuscript Crinkled by Dewfall, Bleached by the Sun," inscribed to Wallace Hebberd, 1968.

Malcolm Gault-Williams was General Manager. KCSB-FM 91.9, a non-commercial radio station, was located in the UCSB Storke Communications Building during the time these tapes were made. 102 open reel tapes produced by radio station KCSB, with live coverage of events, other broadcasts, calls, and interviews.
