Library Trends
View more issues: Fall 2003, Wntr 2003, Summer 2004
Articles in Spring 2004 issue of Library Trends
- The most influential paper Gerard Salton never wrote
by David Dubin - Foster Mohrhardt: connecting the traditional world of libraries and the emerging world of information science
by Melissa H. Cragin - Effie Louise Power: librarian, educator, author
by Melanie A. Kimball - When and why is a pioneer: history and heritage in library and information science
by W. Boyd Rayward - The art and science of classification: Phyllis Allen Richmond, 1921-1997
by Kathryn La Barre - Frances Henne and the development of school library standards
by Diane D. Kester - Information science at the University of California at Berkeley in the 1960s: a memoir of student days
by Marcia J. Bates - Cornelia Marvin and Mary Frances Isom: leaders of Oregon's library movement
by Cheryl Gunselman - Exploring new approaches to the organization of knowledge: the subject classification of James Duff Brown
by Clare Beghtol - "A brilliant mind": Margaret Egan and social epistemology
by Jonathan Furner - National planning for public library service: the work and ideas of Lionel McColvin
by Alistair Black - The role of the state in the organization of statewide library service: Essae M. Culver, Louisiana's first state librarian
by Florence M. Jumonville - The lady and the antelope: Suzanne Briet's contribution to the French documentation movement
by Mary Niles Maack - Social epistemology from Jesse Shera to Steve Fuller
by Tarcisio Zandonade - Professionalizing library education, the California connection: James Gillis, Everett Perry, and Joseph Daniels
by Debra Gold Hansen