Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Charles Ammi Cutter (March 14, 1837 – September 6, 1903) was an American librarian.In the 1850s and 1860s he assisted with the re-cataloging of the Harvard College library, producing America's first public card catalog.
Wilbur Olin Atwater (May 3, 1844 – September 22, 1907) was an American chemist known for his studies of human nutrition and metabolism, and is considered the father of modern nutrition research and education.
History of the Book in America: A Survey from Colonial to Modern; History of the Book in America, c. 1700–1830; American Book in the Industrial Era, 1820–1940; BibSite – via Bibliographical Society of America. (Includes articles on American book history) Davies Project. "American Libraries before 1876". Princeton University.
Yudkin wrote several books recommending low-carbohydrate diets for weight loss, including This Slimming Business (1958). He gained an international reputation for his book Pure, White and Deadly (1972), which warned that the consumption of sugar ( sucrose , which consists of fructose and glucose ) is dangerous to health, an argument he had made ...
Hard Labor (book) Harlem's Rattlers and the Great War; The Harness Maker's Dream; Harry S. Truman: A Life; The Haymarket Tragedy; The History of Photography; A History of the Book in America; A History of the Civil War, 1861–1865; A History of the German Baptist Brethren in Europe and America; History of the Movement from 1854 to 1890
The National Union Catalog (NUC) is a printed catalog of books catalogued by the Library of Congress and other American and Canadian libraries, issued beginning in the 1950s. The National Union Catalog is divided into two series: the Pre-1956 Imprints is a 754-volume set containing all older records in a consolidated alphabetical format, while ...
Among the book series in the arts published by Cambridge University Press are: [4] Cambridge Film Classics; Cambridge Library Collection - Art and Architecture
The Book of the Dead of Hunefer, c. 1275 BCE, ink and pigments on papyrus, in the British Museum (London). After extracting the marrow from the stems of papyrus reed, a series of steps (humidification, pressing, drying, gluing, and cutting) produced media of variable quality, the best being used for sacred writing. [10]