Original title: "Korea-Negs 181-3(1)-182-3(1) Fertilizer Plant-Chungyu- USAID 7" Two men sit facing away from the camera filling bags with fertilizer on an assembly line. The machine they are using appears to be sealing the bags. Their faces are not visible, and they appear to be wearing protective masks. From scrapbook page 23.
Letter from Beverly Keever to her parents and sister shortly after her arrival in Japan. She discusses the flight from the U.S., the airport, her stay at Tokyo International House, the Tokyo AP office and Press Club, her first impressions of Tokyo, a short visit to Ginza, and being asked to write several "womanish" articles
Article proposal about the Japanese jazz craze. Keever wrote one page, and then writes what the rest of the article will be. This proposal was sent to several publishers throughout 1961.
A group of Japanese men stand on stage playing instruments. There is a piano, two saxaphones, a trumpet, a bass, and a drum set. The stage is brightly lit, but the rest of the photo is very dark. There is a sign in japanese hung behind them.
A guide to interviewers asking newspaper readers about their reading habits and preferences. Keever was trained in interviewing for public opinionm at Columbia University by Samuel Lubbell, who was famour for predicting the outcome of election based on public opinion interviews. These notes are likely for interviews she did under his supervision
Beverly Keever's letter to her parents and sister from Alma Ata, Khazakhstanduring her trip through the USSR in 1958. The letter discusses hiking, illness of Keever's travelling companions, writing AP articles, Sputnik, and visiting a collective farm
Scrapbook pages from Beverly Keever's University of Nebraska Lincoln scrapbook. These pages are related to Keever's voting activity while she she was serving on student council.
Alpha Xi Delta (ΑΞΔ) Achievement Awards Dinner program, where Keever received an award. The program includes the dinner menu, a list of events, and Keever's notes on one of the speeches
An American soldier is exchanging some sort of supply to a villager, as another American soldier named Hibbs examines another villager in the background. The supplies may be soap.