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Grinnell Outdoor Recreation Program (GORP)

File 1 includes handbooks for student leaders for the groups and drafts of David Zeiss' (leader of GORP in the late nineties) rulebook for GORP leaders, along with other miscellaneous group notes, such as minutes from meetings
File 2 includes brochures and fliers for publicizing GORP
File 3 includes reference materials for the group, such as maps and routes for locations, and guidebooks on specific nature areas the group may have visited
File 4 includes a vast number of photos from many different outings, such as kayaking, climbing, spelunking, and hikes
File 5 includes two DVDs, one that consists of a slide presentation Zeiss gave, and the other being a collection of digital photos
In oversize there are more reference materials, specifically large maps for trails that the group used

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1989 Sept. 5 Debate on abortion 1990 Dec. 11 Profs are funnier 1991 Feb. 9 Gulf crisis debate 1991 Mar. Ban on offensive expression 1991 April Public readings 1991 Dec. 10 College education is a waste of time 1992 Mar. 3 Ronald Reagan on the $1 bill 1992 April 14 We dread the future 1992 Oct. 13 Sink the Mayflower 1993 Mar. 18 This house believes that Iowa is heaven 1993 May 4 Death penalty 1993 Oct. 5 Refugee policy 1993 Nov. 15 Right to bear arms 1993 Fall Should this college act in loco parentis? 1994 Feb. 16 This house is politically correct 1994 Mar, 9 This house believes that private guns should be significantly curtailed in civil society 1994 Oct. 4 This house believes that animals have the right to life, liberty and happiness 1994 Oct. 7 This house would welcome a world without religion 1994 Oct. 27 This house believes that guarantee of citizen safety is more desirable than the protection of civil liberties 1994 Nov. 17 This house would shop for dope at the supermarket 1994 Mar. This house would juice the juice 1995 Oct. 30 The Feminist movement has reached the dead end 1995 Nov. There is no place in a sensor in a democracy 1995 Dec. 150 years is long enough 1996 Mar. This house believes that veganism is the only diet for a small planet. 1996 April 30 This house believes there can be no debate on the Grinnell campus 1996 June This house believes the death penalty is morally justifies 1996 Oct. 7 This house believes that character and politics don't mix 1996 Nov. 13 This house would negotiate with terrorists 1996 Dec. 11 This house is revolting 1997 Feb. 24 This house supports physician assisted suicide 1997 Oct. 8 This house would study the humanities, not the sciences 1998 Mar. This house believes that liberal arts colleges are elitist scams 1999 Mar Debate 1999 April Debate This house would resurrect I.V. This house believes that men are funnier than women The american dream is a nightmare debate.

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Ledgers/Notebooks: #3 Treasurer's book, Congregational Church, 1913-19. (D.K. Ross, Treasurer) #4 [Secretary's book for DK Society?], 1912-16 #5 Secretary's records for DK Society, 1917-28. Includes minutes of meetings and lists of members. Inserted in the book are programs for: Brotherhood Dramatic Club (Dec. 22, 1916), Ordination and Installation of Rev. W.W. Maxwell (Mar. 12, 1918), Weekly Calendar (Feb. 11, 1917), National "Every Member Drive" (Dec. 28, 1919) #6 Treasurer's book, DK Society, 1908-20 [Note: When received, book had some sort of grass or grain stems pressed into book.] #7 Secretary's book, Home Missionary Society, 1894-98 #8 Home and Foreign Missionary Society, 1899-1917 #9 Secretary's book of the Women's Home and Foreign Missionary Society, Congregational Church, Victor, Iowa, 1918-26 #10 Secretary's book of the Ladies' Social Society, Congregational Church, 1893-1929 #11 Treasurer's book of Ladies' [Social?] of Congregational Church, 1909-17 #12 Secretary's book of Women's Missionary Society of Congregational Church, 1928-33 #13 Account book with Victor Savings Bank (J.E. Bach, Treasurer, Congregational Church), 1916-19.

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Folders: #1 Checks and receipts (found folded into the account book), 1916-20 #2 Certificate of Association, deeds, mortgages, 1883-97 #3 Correspondence, minutes, insurance information, 1887-1922 Ledgers/Notebooks: #1 Record of the Congregational Church of Christ in Victor, Iowa, 1883-94. Includes minutes of meetings; letters from pastors inserted in book. Highlights: • Nov. 1, 1883: first minister (p. 55) • Jan. 7, 1884: annual meeting (p. 57) • Jan. 1884: sexton's duties (p. 59) • Aug. 11, 1884: discussion regarding the salary for a pastor ("impossible for the Victor members to raise over $200.00 towards the salary") (p. 67) • May 1885: consideration of engaging Rev. W.L. Coleman of Grinnell as pastor for six months (p. 73) • Nov. 6, 1885: Rev. J.M. Bowers [Bowens?] accepts offer to preach for six months (p. 75) • May 28, 1886: Mr. H.L. Marsh accepts call to the pastorate for one year (p. 81) • Sept. 1, 1888: Rev. James Rowe engaged for one year (p. 91) • Dec. 2, 1889: annual meeting (p. 95); first parsonage (p. 96) • Dec. 1892 annual meeting (p. 105) • Dec. 30, 1893: annual meeting (p. 113) • Sept. 1894: William B. Payne accepts pastorate (letter between p. 116-117) • Dec. 1, 1894: annual meeting (p. 118) • Lists of members, 1883-94 (p. 122-141) #2 The second record book of the First Congregational Church of Victor, Iowa, 1895-98. Includes minutes from meetings; letters from pastors who received a call from the congregation are inserted in the book. Highlights: • Dec. 14, 1895: annual meeting ("parsonage full of debt") • Dec. 19, 1896: annual meeting • between March and July 1897: pages cut out ("expunged") • Jan. 3, 1898: annual meeting • Mar. 30, 1898: addition to parsonage

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Series 4: Writings of Harold L. Clapp, published and unpublished A. Published articles and manuscripts of published material. 1929-1959 [Partial bibliography of other published articles is in Harold L. Clapp Manuscript Inventory, Appendix A. Paper copies of many articles are filed in Grinnell College Archives] 1. “Those Dirty French Writers.” The Willow Path. Nov. 1929. 6 p. 2. “An American Scholar and Public Education.” South Atlantic Bulletin, Jan. 1957, 4 p. 3. Some Lessons from Swiss Education. 1958. 9 p. Typed manuscript with appended bibliography of newspapers and journals which published the article. 4. Some Hints from the Swiss. No date. 18 p. Typed manuscript. (No record of where this was published) B. Unpublished stories, articles, and reports, 1958-1960 Arranged chronologically. Mr. Clapp’s writings on education also in “Talks” (series 3) and “Council for Basic Education” (series 2) 1. “Paris Green.” 1938. 14 p. 2. “Sammy Carpenter’s Friends.” ca. 1939. 7 p. (Story for children) 3. “Linguistics Lament.” ca. early 1940s. 7p. 4. “Without Study or Effort.” ca. 1946. 15 p. 5. Letter to Chairman of Modern Foreign Languages, Grinnell College, June 1946. 1946. 4 p. 6. “Sand in the Ears of European Business.” ca. 1949. 7p. (Based on the 1946-7 experience in Switzerland) 7. “On Stinging Beads.” 42 p. 8. “A simple man’s Revolt.” 5 p. 9. “Educational Hypothesis.” 6 p. 10. “Et Tu Brutal Digest.” ca. 1955. 7 p. 11. “The Question of Ernest P. Goodfellow.” ca. 1955. 8 p. 12 The New-Rich Curriculum by Voltaire. Ca. 1955. 9 p. 13. “A Few More Thoughts on Why Johnny Can’t Read.” ca. 1955-56. 2 p. 14. “Pedagogical Perceptions for Cooperative Laymen.” ca. 1957. 6 p. 15. Report of Chairman of the Faculty. 1959. 10 p. 16. “What Are the Essential Ingredients in a Sound Education for Teachers?” 1960. 5 p. 17. “Grinnell College. [Faculty Salaries and Benefits].” Report by HLC. Summer 1960. 9 p. 18. [Paper on education requirements for teachers] undated, ca. 1951-56. 2-22 p. (p. 1 with title is missing) 19. “Specific Suggestions for Increasing Reading Power in French.” 2 p.

[Series 4 continues in Box 2]

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Talks Includes radio shows, chapel talks, talks to PA, professional groups in modern language and education, church groups, college students, etc. Arranged chronologically. Talks for council for Basic Education filed with CBE materials (series 2). Radio programs: Chautauqua County YMCA – Vocational Guidance Series, Nov. 1938. 7 p. What’s in a Name Quiz, ca 1950. 1 p. Rob and Bay ca. 1950, 10 p. French Colloquium, 1952. 1-pg. summary Jules Romains. No date. 13 p. As Others See Us. Jan. 1945. ( for Poweshiek Club) 12 p. Memorial Service Address (F. D. Roosevelt), April 1945. 2 p. [Talk on language study] (for Classical Conference in Mount Vernon) Spring 1946. 2 p. Rumbo A Mexico. (Chapel Talk) March 1946. 8 p. Talk to Dubuque language teacher’s meeting. Sept. 1946. 4 p. Meditations on a Placement Program, or When Should a Foreign Language Be Studies? (Classical Conference, Mount Vernon. Published in Modern Language Journal, 1947) Spring 1947. 7 p. Talk to Kansas Foreign Language Conference, Hayes, Kan.] ca. late 1940s. 65p. Review of Wave of the Future by Anne M. Lindbergh. (Chapel talk) 1949. 6p. [Talk on counseling] 1950. 2p. Here I Stand. (Chapel Talk) Spring 1952. 10 p. [Talk to Toledo PTA] April 1952. 4 p. How Scholarly Can We Get (Phi Beta Kappa Chapel) Oct. 1952. 11p. [Talk to Grinnell rotary Club] ca. Apr. 1953. 3 p. What’s Funny? (Kiwanis Club) April. 1953. 3 p. [Talk to Advanced Communications class] ca. 1953-54. 8 p. [Sermon at Congregational Church] Early 1950s. 7p. [Sermon] ca. 1953. 5 p. The Church in Our Time (First congregational Church) Oct. 1954. 4p. [Lecture to Advanced Communication class] Feb. 1955. 14 p. Words for a College Freshman. (Revision of Lecture to Advanced Communication class) ca. 1956. 7 p. [Draft of Chapel address] ca. 1955. 3 p. Education – Protestant problem-Child. (Chapel talk) Mar, 1955. 4 p. Ethics in Advertising. (Chapel Talk) Nov. 1955. 10 p. [Preparation of teachers for our public schools] (Audience unknown) Late 1950s. 6 p. (incomplete) [Outline of remarks proposed for Brookville PTA] April 1957. 1 p. [Talk on education to Sphinx Club, Washington, D.C.] 1957. 9 p. [Second talk on education to Sphinx Club Washington, D.C.] 1957. 3 p. The American Scholar and Public Education – Chapter II (Univ. of Kentucky Foreign Language Conference) April 1957. 9 p. [Introduction to talk on education] ca. 1957. 1 p. (transcribed by Mrs. Clapp) The Public and the Public Schools. (Annual meeting of Girls’ Latin School Alumnae Association, Boston) June 1957. 4 p. The Role of the Liberal Arts College in Teacher Education. (26th Annual Conference of Academic Deans of the Southern States, Richmond, VA.) Dec. 1957. 11 p. [Talk to Grinnell Congregational Church on merger of Congregational Christian and Evangelical and Reformed Churches] Spring 1958. 6 p. Schools Need More Than Money. (Wichita Rotary Club) June 1958. 9 p. Proceedings of the Editor and Educator conference on “The purpose of Education in the American Democracy” and HLC’s prepared notes. (Arden House, New York) Nov. 1958. Elements in the Teacher Education Program – Subject Matter preparation. (State Conference sponsored by Iowa Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards, Ames, Iowa) Nov. 1958. 12 p. Also press release, 1 p. How Far Is It to Ideal Teachers College? Ca. 1958. 10 p. Education for the Extremes. (Debate with Harold Hand at Milwaukee meeting of Department of Secondary Education of university of Wisconsin at Milwaukee) April 1959. 19 p. The Education of Teachers –If I Had My Way. (Kansas Conference, Lawrence, Kan.) June 1959. 4 p. [Talk on education to Grinnell Rotary Club] Aug. 1959. 10 p. Story of the Y building (Rededication of Y Building as Steiner Hall) Oct. 1959. 2 p. Discussion of three aspects of J. B. Conant’s The American High School Today. *(Iowa Association of School Administrators) Nov. 1959. 11 p. [Notes for Phi Beta Kappa panel discussion] May 1960. 5 sheets. Who’s on First in Teacher Education? Ca. 1961. 20 p. What Are the Essential Ingredients in a Sound Education for Teachers? Ca. 1961. 6 p.

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Council for Basic Education Harold Clapp was one of the founders of the Council for Basic Education (1956), served as the Council’s First Executive Secretary 1956-57, as President 1959-60, and was editor of the CBE Bulletin 1956-57. CBE was a nonprofit educational organization show “primary purpose was strengthening the basic subject in American elementary and secondary schools.” CBE Certificate of Incorporation. 1956. 12 p., and 2 descriptive leaflets. CBE Bulletins, ed. By HLC, Aug. 1956-Aug. 1957 also two August 1958 Bulletins with unsigned articles by HLC. Articles not signed or initialed by someone else were written by HLC during the year of his editorship. Executive Secretary’s Report, Oct. 1957. 7 p. Typescript. Bibliography of articles about CBE in US newspapers. 7 p. “The Main job of Schools” manuscript of editorial by HLC in Des Moines Sunday Register, Sept. 2, 1956. “Some Overtones – National and International -- of American Education.” 1959, 8 p. Talks given by HLC under auspices of CBE: Remarks to Division of Arts and Sciences, American Association of Land Grant Colleges and State Universities, Washington, Nov. 13, 1956. 5 p. “Schools Need More Thank Money” to National Conference of Taxpayer Executives, Washington. Feb. 4, 1957. 8 p. “The American Scholar and Public Education.” Wayne State Chapter of the AAUP, Feb. 19, 1957. 8 p. “The Need for Substance in Secondary Education" Southern Humanities Conference, Tulane University. Mar. 29 and 30, 1957. 8 p. Remarks at Farewell Luncheon. Brookings Institution, Washington. Aug. 6, 1957. 4 half-sheets. “Basic Education – and the Council Therefore,” University of Kentucky. Foreign Language Conference. April 24, 1959. 9 p. General Prospectus of Council for Basic Education. Autumn, 1959. 16p. [Author unknown. Describes CBE’s point of view, operations, assessments of its work, etc,] Miscellaneous papers.

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Letters from Switzerland, 1947-1948 [Mr. Clapp directed the University of Delaware Foreign Study Group in Geneva, Switzerland 1947-48] “Transplanting our family” summary of the Swiss experience by Laura (Mrs. Harold) Clapp. 26 p. Typed. “Perspectives on these papers: by Laura Clapp. 5 p, typed. Summary information handwritten by Laura Clapp, 1971. 8 p. 22 letters from HLC and Laura Clapp to their families with clarifying comments by Laura Clapp added later (16 are holograms, 6 are typed and may not be the original copies).

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Correspondence, obituaries, and letters of condolence 1928-1961. Arranged chronologically. Correspondence, 1928-61. 3 undated. 23 items. Obituary notices and letters of condolence, 1961. 13 items. Includes 2 notes from BADM H.G. Rickover. Letters about Prof. O. H. Hauptmann.

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Scrapbook of newspaper clippings about HLC, programs of meeting, letters, etc. ca. 1937-72, most material 1955-1960. Arranged chronologically. Items pasted to or Xeroxed on 24 sheets.

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French Play School – Summers 1949, 1950, for children ages 4-10 Summary of the project by Mrs. Clapp (1 p.) Lists of words and phrases (3 typed pages, 13 handwritten blue-book pages) Song sheet (2 pages) Scripts of 3 puppet shows by Mrs. Clapp (11 p.) Summary notes by HLC (2 pgs. Transcribed by Mrs. Clapp) “A Punch and Judy Theater” – manuscript of unpublished article by HLC based on French Play School experience (3 pgs. Text, 5 pgs. Diagrams of stage construction, scenery, puppets, 1 pg. of 5 photographs) [No complete outlines of curriculum or daily lesson plans were preserved.] [See also Clapp, Harold L. “Second Fiddle to a Puppet.” French Review 37 (May 1954): 453-59]

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