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Libraries established in 1950 (5 P) Libraries established in 1951 (8 P) Libraries established in 1952 (7 P) Libraries established in 1953 (8 P)
Librarians have often been depicted in broadcast and streamed television series. Last of the Summer Wine, a BBC comedy that ran from 1973 to 2010 was originally titled The Library Mob. [30] Many episodes took place in the local library and featured library staff. CBS, NBC, Cartoon Network, and Disney Channel had a number of shows which depicted ...
Lion was a weekly British comics periodical published by Amalgamated Press (and later Fleetway Publications and IPC Magazines) from 23 February 1952 to 18 May 1974.A boys' adventure comic, Lion was originally designed to compete with Eagle, the popular weekly comic published by Hulton Press that had introduced Dan Dare.
The Boy's Own Paper, front page, 11 April 1891. Magazines intended for boys fall into one of three classifications. These are comics which tell the story by means of strip cartoons; story papers which have several short stories; and pulp magazines which have a single, but complete, novella in them.
The public librarian: a report of the public library inquiry (Columbia University Press, 1952) Carrier, Esther Jane. Fiction in public libraries, 1876-1900 (Scarecrow Press, 1965) Garrison, Dee. Apostles of Culture: the public librarian and American society, 1876-1920. (Free Press (1979)) ISBN 0-02-693850-2; Jones, Theodore.
Mary Helen Mahar – president of the New York Library Association in 1950; Margaret Mann – library educator, particularly cataloging; founding faculty member at University of Michigan library science program (1926) Allie Beth Martin; Harry S. Martin – former Head Librarian, Harvard Law Library; Kathleen de la Peña McCook – library ...
Pages in category "1950s photographs" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The Allegheny Conference hired Roy Stryker in 1950 to record the city before its famous urban renewal, dubbed Renaissance I, and to shoot positive images of the "progress" for national consumption. Stryker hired professional photographers and directed the project, based at the University of Pittsburgh .