Kendall paints a grim picture of what could happen if the 'elites' of today's world are left unchecked in their self-anointed determination to eliminate national borders and create their vision of utopia - of everyone being 'citizens of the world'. For all of history, Western civilization has been the driving force for the advancement of mankind, and yet a small group of leftists - think Merkel, Trudeau, the EU parasites and many others - have already wreaked havoc by changing forever the makeup Kendall paints a grim picture of what could happen if the 'elites' of today's world are left unchecked in their self-anointed determination to eliminate national borders and create their vision of utopia - of everyone being 'citizens of the world'.
For all of history, Western civilization has been the driving force for the advancement of mankind, and yet a small group of leftists - think Merkel, Trudeau, the EU parasites and many others - have already wreaked havoc by changing forever the makeup of the societies they've been voted in to 'govern'. By what right do they do this? And at what cost?Anyway, Ward Kendall reveals what those costs could really be, and the stark results this kind of 'virtuous' social engineering can lead to. It ain't pretty.
I found Hold Back This Day to be very timely, considering both Europe and North America are under demographic siege by swarming hordes of illegal aliens and so-called “refugees”.Kendall’s novel is set a hundred years from now, after the West has capitulated (which they are in the process of doing now) and what’s left over is a world lain waste by multiculturalism, race-mixing, and leftist policies that have destroyed the last vestiges of freedom and innovation. It’s like Orwell’s “1984”, except I found Hold Back This Day to be very timely, considering both Europe and North America are under demographic siege by swarming hordes of illegal aliens and so-called “refugees”.Kendall’s novel is set a hundred years from now, after the West has capitulated (which they are in the process of doing now) and what’s left over is a world lain waste by multiculturalism, race-mixing, and leftist policies that have destroyed the last vestiges of freedom and innovation. It’s like Orwell’s “1984”, except Kendall’s version is much grimmer, and much more likely to happen.If you like dark tales, told with relentless pace, then “Hold Back This Day” is the book for you. It’s dystopia on steroids.
I'm rating this five stars for the content rather than the actual quality of the writing. It's a very readable book, but the writing isn't going to win any awards. However, the content is something everyone really ought to get to grips with, because it's a very believable dystopian glimpse into the future. It's one of those books that if you'd read it thirty or forty years ago (if you're that old), you'd have dismissed as utterly unlikely. However, now, it seems entirely plausible. Just as Camp I'm rating this five stars for the content rather than the actual quality of the writing.
It's a very readable book, but the writing isn't going to win any awards. However, the content is something everyone really ought to get to grips with, because it's a very believable dystopian glimpse into the future.
It's one of those books that if you'd read it thirty or forty years ago (if you're that old), you'd have dismissed as utterly unlikely. However, now, it seems entirely plausible. Just as Camp of the Saints seems tame to what has actually happened in Europe, so this novel only grows the seeds of what has already been planted.The main character (white) lives in a world of nineteen billion, racially blended people. On a scale of 1 to 10, (1 being Caucasian, and 10 being Sub-Sahara African Black), Skintone 5 is the optimum and breeding to achieve this blend is mandated by law by the One World Government. More, given the shortages of food, the population has to be controlled, so infants are assigned either heterosexual or homosexual futures and are then mentally and physically molded to fit their assigned roles-pedophilia is also entirely accepted and encouraged.All history has been rewritten by the One World Government to fit the narrative that the white race was a savage, evil race only tamed when the Africans and Asians arrived from their superior civilisations and created the modern world. (The first human on the moon was Neela Armstrong, an African woman).
No one knows the truth anymore, except the main character, who by a quirk of fate found a long-forgotten history of the world. Once he knows the truth, he finds it increasingly difficult to live in this new world.But where can he go?This is a great read (again, a bit clunky and in-your-face at times) which should be mandated on all school reading lists (with the stomach-churning pedophilia scenes removed, obviously).Highly recommended. An interesting dystopian novel with a scfi thread running through the book. The fundamental flaw of multiculturalism is slowly uncovered by the main character where the celebrated diverse population is anything but and the much repeated lie that ‘diversity is our strength’ is eventually revealed to lead to the same destination for all white people as once the lie ‘arbeit macht frie’ led to the Holocaust for European Jews.As part of its plan to re-engineer the planet’s population the WorldGov ha An interesting dystopian novel with a scfi thread running through the book.
The phone rang. It was late in the afternoon, the day after Christmas. 'I'm coming from the church office to get you,' Bill said.
'Meet me outside. I'll be right there.' His voice sounded heavy. What could be so wrong? I hurriedly put on my boots and coat, and then stepped outside and stood in the cold to wait.Bill pulled into the driveway. 'What's wrong?' I asked as I climbed into the car.'
![Hold Hold](https://cdn.counter-currents.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/1-2-2017-1.jpg)
He looked at me. 'Promise me you'll believe I love you. Will you promise me that?' 'Well, of course. We drove into the church parking lot and came to a stop. He took my hand and told me that Ron Kelton (the new pastor of our former church) and the district superintendent were inside. 'They have signed statements charging me with inappropriate behavior and immoral actions.'
'Bill, they must be mistaken!' 'Someone is lying about you. Or somebody didn't understand what he saw.' I looked at him. 'They are wrong, aren't they?'
'The charges are exaggerated,' he said.
White nationalists have to study the history of so-called Latin America. Once you introduce it you see that the ethno-suicidal policies, specifically mestization with natives and blacks, started in the continent long before Jewish takeover of the US media. Let me illustrate it with a single example.
In 1814 the first president of Paraguay, banned marriages between ethnic Spaniards. Iberian whites had to wed the brown natives, blacks or mulattoes! Ward Kendall’s dystopian Hold Back This Day, depicting a future in which a totalitarian government promotes universal miscegenation to exterminate whites, had a precedent in real life in the Hispanic side of the conquest of the Americas. Later Emerald got to talking about some stuff I didn’t want to hear. Stuff about the world and how it came to be. She told me that a long time ago the world had hundreds of millions of white people.
I didn’t like what she was saying and started getting scared. There were Wopo in the park, I said. And when you’re both Skintone 1s like us, you got to be extra careful about what you say. Only Emerald didn’t seem to care. She laughed, and told me she wasn’t scared of Wopo or World Gov anymore. That really got me edgy, and I started to leave. But Emerald wouldn’t let go of my arm, so I stayed and listened.
She told me what happened just before the Unification. How the rest of the world wanted to conquer people like us. And when they couldn’t do it by force they got to calling us “racists” so we’d feel bad about ourselves until we got weaker and weaker in spirit. He knew that Euro-centric culture, as it was known, was virtually extinct. It had been overrun by a largely Afro-centric world-view long ago, before melding itself with its Asian-centric counterpart. In time, this Afro-Asian synthesis absorbed Latin-centric culture, thus setting the stage for the worldwide unification of humanity. Once under the iron rule of the Unification, this multicultural alloy melted and fused yet again, eventually forming one globe-spanning monolithic culture under which all mankind came to live.
The only significant victim—if one should dangerously risk the assumption that there was one—was Euro-ethnic culture. Two millenniums of its history—along with many of its most noble achievements—had since undergone almost a century of deliberate, state-sanctioned revisionism.
The greatest of the “conservative” thinkers, Joseph de Maistre, pointed out long ago that the French Revolution led the revolutionaries rather than was led by them. For he believed that certain Providential forces rule our lives. These forces he saw in Christian terms, but others, like Heidegger, for instance, saw them in terms of Being, over which humans have no control. In either case, the force of Providence or Being or Destiny has a power that has often made itself felt in our history. For this reason, I have little doubt that Europeans will eventually throw off the Judeo-liberal system programming their destruction. I’m less confident about we Americans, given the greater weakness of our collective identity and destiny. But nevertheless even we might be saved from ourselves by this force—as long as we do what is still in our power to do.
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Steps to Become a Member of the SARThe process of becoming a member of the Sons of the American Revolution requires a number of steps:. Determine eligibility: Check that you satisfy the and that your ancestor providedNote: The SAR does not restrict membership based on race, color, religion, national origin, or nation of citizenship or residency. Marriage (and its documentation) for the several generations going back to the Patriot Ancestor is desired, but is not a requirement. Legitimacy in any generation is not a requirement.
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Descendants of plural marriages are not excluded from SAR membership. Bloodline descent - legitimate or illegitimate - from a Patriot Ancestor is what is required and is what must be documented.
You must also have two members recommend you for membership. Find a Helper: Contact the in your state's SAR society, and Email or call or write him for assistance in get started with defining your lineage from a patriot ancestor and collecting the documentation required for an SAR application. He will also help you find a member living near you to help you learn about our programs. Collect and organize the documentation: Tracing your lineage back to your patriot ancestor. Your helper should be familiar with Form #0912 to help with this step.Your Helper may also provide a copy or you can download one here of an SAR Application Worksheet.
Documenting Your LinePlease understand that discovering and documenting a genealogical line to a Patriot ancestor can often be accomplished with only a modest amount of effort, providing you know what to look for and where to find it. If you have an ancestor who lived in the United States prior to 1900 chances are likely that you could to be the descendant of a Revolutionary War patriotThe material presented here is excerpt from a talk given by William B. Neal (DESSAR), who has chaired the National SAR Lineage Research and Workshop Committee for many years. Neal has a quarter-century of experience in genealogy and he was the Founding President of the Delaware Genealogical Society.
His SAR credentials include receiving the Liberty Medal with several oak leaf clusters (indicating that he has helped dozens of people become members of the SAR thus far). He has held the National Office of Genealogist General for several terms.This discussion covers. Relative in the SAR or DAR or CAR.
A family tree going back to the Revolution.NOTE: Please read through this material. It will help you get a basic understanding of how to look for genealogical information and as you become more experienced at finding information you will become a treasured resource for your local Chapter and State Society. Enjoy the fastest growing hobby in the United States.NOTE: The primary focus of this resource is getting the documentation needed for an SAR application, so it does not cover immigration records or many other fascinating aspects of researching your ancestry. Documenting Easy Cases AN EASY CASE - A RELATIVE IN THE SAR/DAR/CARFirst, let's take the easiest case. If the prospect has a relative in the SAR, DAR, or CAR, then the Patriot ancestor's name and service and most of the lineage has already been determined and documented.
All the prospect needs is documentation of the relationship to the relative and a 'record copy' of the SAR, DAR or CAR application. While an SAR record copy is already on file at headquarters, the Chapter and State Registrars may wish to check the present application against the one on file to be sure the dates and names are copied accurately. A son typically needs only his own birth certificate, his parents' marriage license, and a record copy of his father's (or mother's) application. An SAR Chapter or State Society officer can request record copies from the SAR, DAR, or CAR; the cost is estimated to be about $10.For more information concerning the DAR and its procedures visit their web site at:A FAMILY TREE, BUT WAS THE ANCESTOR A PATRIOT?Suppose the prospect has a family tree or a family story about an ancestor who was here during the Revolutionary War era, but isn't sure whether he (or she) might qualify as a Patriot ancestor. Documenting Difficult Cases Documenting Difficult Cases: Some heavy Lifiting may be requriedNot everyone has an easy case, where a family member has already done a lot of the research, some individuals may need to do some of the research themselves. Do not fear, these days, it is becoming easier to find the documents that you need, and below we provide a list of resources for you to start with.OK, maybe you don't have a family tree, but the family believes that it goes 'way back' or you think it might because you don't know for a fact that all your ancestors came to this country recently. Where to start?.When you have run out of leads from the items list on the other pages you will have to get into the items shown below.
This may be more that you want to do, especially if the information has to come from another state.From the census you can get get year of birth (by subtracting the person's age - or age bracket - from the census date) and sometimes the parents names, the state where the person was born, and the states where the person's parents were born. Census records are available.County and town records may be your best bet for documenting family relationships and dates prior to the 1850 census. While the originals are filed in county courthouses or record centers, it is often easier and more efficient.
Recent Generations: Back to 1900 STARTING NOW AND GOING BACK TO 1900OK, maybe you don't have a family tree, but the family believes that it goes 'way back' or you think it might because you don't know for a fact that all your ancestors came to this country recently. Where to start?FAMILY ARCHIVES: Interview the older members of your family to see what they know the names of their forebears and the dates and places of their births, marriages, and deaths. If your grandmother knows the name of her grandmother, you can write a family tree going back five generations.
This will get you into the mid-1800s.Older relatives may also have documents or scrapbooks that show the names of ancestors and the dates they were born, got married, and died, deeds, wills, etc. Family bibles may be acceptable as documentation, and they are valuable because they often list many generations. Be sure to copy the page that lists the publisher and the date of publication. These items are often thrown out (when the owner dies) by descendants who do not realize the value of keeping such documents. Try to get the originals or copies into a safe place while there is yet time. Also, get a copy for your files.
Possiable sources of documentation include:. Wills. Birth Certificates. Death Certificates. Marriage Certificates. Family BiblesNOTE: The SAR does not require certified copies of these documents; 'xerox' copies are satisfactory.FAMILY HISTORIES: are available for many surnames (your family name, the Smith of John Smith).
These are available at genealogical or historical libraries, college and public libraries, and lineage society libraries. Except for the lineage societies, libraries generally cover only families in the local area. The Library of Congress has a huge collection of family histories and publishes an index which is available in many large libraries.NOTE: When you copy pages from a book, be sure to also copy the title page and see that it contains the title, publisher, city of publication, and date of publication. Sometimes you have to copy two pages to get all this. The Census Records: 1930 to 1850 The United States Census Records: 1930 to 1850FEDERAL CENSUSES (and mortality schedules):From the census you can get get year of birth (by subtracting the person's age - or age bracket - from the census date) and sometimes the parents names, the state where the person was born, and the states where the person's parents were born. Census records are available on microfilm at the ten federal Branch Archives and at the larger genealogical libraries (SAR, DAR). Some censuses are becoming available on CD-databases.
Ward Kendall Hold Back This Day Pdf Reader Free
Some libraries may order a reel of census film for you for a reasonable charge - but you have to know what you want (the indexes note the roll on which the name appears).NOTE: When you copy a record, note on the back of the copy the year, state, microfilm roll, and frame or city, ward, and page (and note that some pages bear multiple numbers). You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name.What's in the Federal Census? Wills and Deeds: before 1850 Wills and Deeds: before 1850County and town records may be your best bet for documenting family relationships and dates prior to the 1850 census. While the originals are filed in county courthouses or record centers, it is often easier and more efficient to look at the indices and abstracts (and often the microfilm copies) that are available at county or state history or genealogical libraries and local college libraries. Many of these are becoming available through the Internet or on CD-databases.
Libraries are now collecting these CD-databases and making them available to the public. It's a whole lot easier to do genealogical research now than twenty years ago.DEEDS document land transfers and document whether the participant was alive or dead ('for the estate of'). Originals are generally filed with the county, but books of abstracts and microfilm of the originals may be more widely available. They may note a chain of inheritance and death dates in reciting the history of the tract, or indicate a nominal price for a sale within the family (essentially a bequest prior to death or an exchange for lifetime support of an elder family member). They may also indicate the use of land as security for in intra-family loan. Even if it does not note a family relationship it serves to document a name and location and that a person was alive at the time.
Ward Kendall Hold Back This Day Pdf Reader Pdf
The deed is not helpful for documenting a family relationship if the relationship is not stated, but it can serve as circumstantial proof of such a relationship.NOTE: When you copy a page, note on the back of the copy where you got it - the name of the book (and publisher and date). You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name.PROBATE FILES contain the copy of the will (along with the date it was written) that was filed after a person's death. The will generally names the wife (if living) and all living children, and it may name grandchildren (especially if the parent has died), siblings, nephews, and nieces. A disinherited child may be left out of the will, but that child may show up in another relative's will. Originals are filed with the county, but books of abstracts and microfilm of the originals may be more widely available.ORPHANS' COURT RECORDS cover cases where a person died intestate, a minor child was orphaned and had to be assigned to foster parents, or a will was contested. Letters of administration may be issued to appoint someone to settle the estate, a valuation of the estate may be filed, and finally a court order for dividing the estate among the heirs.NOTE: When you copy a page, note on the back of the copy where you got it - the name of the book (and publisher and date).LISTS OF TOMBSTONE INSCRIPTIONS (many recorded in the 1930s) may provide information about family cemeteries that no longer exist, before cemeteries kept good records, or in case the cemetery information was lost. WARNING: Mis-reading of dates and names is common, so if it looks wrong, it may be wrong.NOTE: When you copy a page, note on the back of the copy where you got it - the name of the book (and publisher and date).
You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name. In case of suspected error you may note ON THE COPY next to (for example) '1747' your comment, 'other sources support 1774'.TAX RECORDS may document that a person was alive or dead ('for the estate of') as well as the town in which they were living. These may be state, county, or local taxes. The older records are primarily property tax records.NOTE: When you copy a page, note on the back of the copy where you got it - the name of the book (and publisher and date). You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name. Helpers, IGI, Biographical SketchesHIRE A HELPER: When you have run out of leads from the items list on the other pages you will have to get into the items shown below.
This may be more that you want to do, especially if the information has to come from another state. It can cost a lot to visit a distant state to do research using records and libraries with which you are not familiar. Local genealogical researchers can provide an efficient alternative. Genealogical magazines (available at local genelaogical societies) and local genealogical researchers can help you get contact information for a researcher who is familiar with the records you seek. Email makes the contact and exchange of information fast and inexpensive.THE LDS AND IGI: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS, often callen the Mormons) has the largest collection of genealogical source material in the world.
They have microfilmed records in churches, government files, and private collections all over the world, and they have kindly made this information available to the entire community without charge. Family relationships between tens of millions of people have been placed in the International Genealogical Index (IGI). A CAUTION: In the enthusiasm to find relationships between many people links were sometimes assumed that are not supported by documentation. Since several transcriptions of data were involved in producing the IGI names, dates, and places were sometimes mispelt or swapped.
So while IGI is a valuable resource to get you started on research it has a fair number of errors and is not acceptable as documentation.You may either search for your ancestor in IGI on the LDS Web site or visit a local LDS family history center and use their microfilm or CD-databases to see if they have information on the parents of or additional information about a known ancestor. The microfilm that contains further information about that ancestor is noted on the index listing. You may rent that film for use (over several weeks) at the local center for a nominal charge. Beyond the IGI information there is microfilmed information on virtually all the types of source noted on the present page. Even if you can't afford to visit fifteen records centers in Michigan, you can order from the LDS microfilms containing the deeds, family histories, probate records, census lists, church baptismal records, tombstome listings, etc.
That you want to search.Be sure to make the copies that you need for documenting your application. Handwritten summaries are not acceptable documentation.NOTE: When you copy a record, note on the back of the copy the year, state, microfilm roll, and frame or city, ward, and page (and note that You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name.CHECK A GENEALOGIST'S GUIDE TO RECORDS: There are several (thick) books that tell you what is available and where to find it in every county and state in the nation. This will probably reveal sources you had not thought of and keep you from hoping to find sources that do not exist. It tells when state censuses were taken (in-between federal censuses), when vital records began to be required in the state, whether biographical histories are available for the county, the addresses to write for information, when the county was founded and what county covered the area previously (records remain with the county which was in existence at the time the record was made), etc.You may find these books at a local library, college library, historical society, or genealogical society. Several popular books of this sort are:. 'The Source'.
'Vital Records Handbook' by Thomas Kemp. 'The Handy Book for Genealogists' (Everton Publ. Co., Logan UT). 'Compendium of Historical Sources', by Ronald Bremer (Progenitor Gen. Soc., Salt Lake City UT, 1983 etc.).
'Ancestry's Redbook'NOTE: We plan to get full citations here shortly.Most of these have been published in several editions, and while the later ones are more comprehensive, the information in the earlier editions should generally be accurate.CHECK ON-LINE RESOURCES: Several major starting points may be found on our Genealogical Resources page.VITAL RECORDS (birth, marriage, and death records): For many years states have required hospitals, clergy, and doctors to report these and have recorded them in state record centers. Some states (or towns) started this practice in the 1600s, others started as late as the early 1900s. The records are usually kept at and are available for viewing at a Bureau of Vital Statistics or the Health Department.NOTE: Be sure to get the 'long form' of a birth certificate (or other certificates). The 'short form' simply confirms the birthdate, place, and name. The 'long form' has the names of the parents and perhaps even more information such as their ages and birthplaces.The ease and cost of viewing or getting copies of these records varies from state to state.
In some states (such as New Jersey) you can phone the vital records office, ask them to copy a specific record, and give a credit card number to pay for the copy and for mailing it to you - and you will have it in ten days. However many states require that you write in to get a form, then send in the form with a check, then wait several weeks. If you do not know how the name was spelled and the exact year of the event it may be difficult or expensive to locate the record.Note that death certificates may be especially helpful by having in addition to the date and place of death, the date and place of birth, the spouse or a child's name (as next of kin), and the parents' names and places of birth.CHURCH, CEMETERY, and FUNERAL DIRECTOR RECORDS:These records often provide excellent name, date, place, and relationship information on family groupings over three or more generations. Women sometimes went to their mothers' homes for their first birth. Members of the same family were often baptized (or christened), married, and participated in activities at the same church for many generations. At death they had memorial services there and used familiar funeral parlors to arrange for burial in family plots. So the names of relatives may be found with records for the deceased.NOTE: When you copy a record, note on the back of the copy where you got it - the name of the book (and publisher and date) or the file folder and the record center where you got it.
You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name.FRATERNAL ASSOCIATIONS, MILITARY RECORDS, COLLEGE RECORDS:These may provide information on birthdate and place, parents' names, and links to other records about the parents. The names and ethnic affiliations of many fraternal organizations are listed in the genealogy source books noted above. Some of the older, larger ones are B'nai B'rith, Elks, Free Masons, Hibernians, Knights of Columbus, Knights of Pythias, Masons, Odd Fellows, and Red Men.COUNTY BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORIES: were very popular in the 1890s. A large percent of the nation's people had immigrated or moved to new states (sometimes several times) in recent times and they wanted to record their ancestors, previous homes, and present occupations for the benefit of their descendants - US (And aren't you glad they did, and don't you want to leave a similar record for your descendants?). While the extended biographies and woodcut portraits were printed only for those who could and chose to afford them, they often provide listings of everyone in town.
These are available at county or state history or genealogical libraries and local college libraries.NOTE: When you copy pages from a book, be sure to also copy the title page and see that it contains the title, publisher, city of publication, and date of publication. Sometimes you have to copy two pages to get all this.CITY DIRECTORIES were the phone directories of their day. They helped deliverymen and friends locate the homes of residents and provided a means for advertizing the products and services of local firms. They provide circumstantial evidence that a person was alive and living at a certain address. Death dates may be inferred from a dropped listing or a change in listing from John Smith to Jane Smith, widow of John.NOTE: When you copy pages from a book, be sure to also copy the title page and see that it contains the title, publisher, city of publication, and date of publication.
Sometimes you have to coppy two pages to get all this. You may make a pencil mark (ON THE COPY ONLY) to help the reader find your ancestor's name. SAR Application Program Choices Application ProgramsNow that you have traced your lineage, and collected your documents, the next step in the process is the preparation of the actual application to the SAR. The preparation of the application may be done by a genealogy Helper, Chapter or State Registrar, or you can do it yourself.There are currently several methods in which you can prepare a SAR Application, some of which include Software applications. We have listed them below. Each one offers a different method to complete the application.This is a PDF file that allows the user to produce an application form that is (within the limits of the printer being used) very similar to the current pre-printed NSSAR Membership Application Form, Form #0915.
The form and data can be saved to your hard drive for editing later or to use when filing a Supplemental Application which uses much of the same lineage. Remember to use the 'Save As' Command, and change the name of the file.This is a program written by Compatriot Cox (TX) that assists in the preparation of a SAR Application. Online Application preparationThe NSSAR is currently working an online Application Submission tool that you can use to prepare applications. We are working hard on getting this ready, and it should be available soon. Check back for more details.Below are is of the basic information regarding the defaults for all applications submitted to the NSSAR, regardless of how they are prepared. All applications are required to be printed on a special 8.5 by 14 inch SAR watermarked paper.
This paper is available from the SAR Merchandise Department and is listed as catalog number #0917 Blank Archival Paper. Please visit the SAR for a supply. The text format for the forms should be Times New Roman in a normal print, NOT bold typeface. The data entered onto the form may be in Helvetica or Times Roman or Courier and in either normal or bold typeface.NOTE: The National Headquarters will return any application whose text, logo or data are badly printed.
Since new applicants are usually not familiar with what a properly printed form looks like, Chapter and State Society individuals who are involved with the application process should watch for problem applications. SARApAid by Cox Software Cox SoftwareSARApAid by Ray Cox (TX)This program has been licensed as an approved NSSAR Application form software package.