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''IGAS'' is the abbreviation for ''International Graphoanalysis Society''. The organization is far more commonly referred to by its initials than the full name. IGAS traces its beginnings back to 1929, when Milton N. Bunker formed ''The American Grapho Analysis Society''. The company has seen an ownership change many times since it was founded. Around 1957, that organization was replaced by ''The International Graphoanalysis Society'', which was run by V. Peter Ferrara. Upon V. Peter Ferrara's death, ownership of the company fell to his daughter, Kathleen Kusta. In June 2003, Kathleen Kusta sold most of the assets of IGAS by private auction to Greg Greco. From the early seventies through the early eighties, the organization put energy into graphological research, the most important being Crumbaugh & Stockholm (1977) and Stockholm (1980), (1983). == Members == IGAS is a privately held corporation. As such, information about its finances, membership numbers, actual number of graduates, and related items can not be independently verified. The masthead of its publication ''The Journal of Graphoanalysis'' lists the organization's current claimed statistical data. IGAS has roughly 30 chapters, covering the United States, parts of Canada, the UK, and South Africa. The highest reported membership number, which was issued to a student of Graphoanalysis was just over 50,000. There are no reliable figures on the number of students at any specific time. Both the number of dues paying members, and the number of students are believed to have peaked during the late seventies. This was just before IGASHQ started the wholesale purging of members and chapters. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「International Graphoanalysis Society」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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