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dc.contributor.authorNagar, Murari Laleng
dc.date.issued1991eng
dc.description.abstractMaharaja Sayajirao of Baroda (India) was inspired by the progress of American public libraries during his visits to this country. He invited William Alanson Borden to provide similar library services for his own people. Borden went to Baroda in 1910 and founded the first public library system in the world. And the University of the Panjab at Lahore invited Asa Don Dickinson in 1915 to organize its University Library on modern American lines. These two pioneering American librarians became the architects of the Indian library edifice. They set the path for the progress of the Indian library movement. Many other American educator-librarians contributed presents a toward this display of great cultural renaissance these phenomena.eng
dc.description.tableofcontentsPart one : The inspirer; American library heritage in Baroda and beyond; America inspired Indian librarians more than England did; A search for the research resources; Indo-American library cooperation a research proposal -- Part two : What they say; U.S. wheat loan program; Wheat loan library workshop, Delhi; America assists India through the wheat loan program; Universal library service corporation.eng
dc.format.extent89 pageseng
dc.identifier.merlinb100553989eng
dc.identifier.oclc858578521eng
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10355/38579eng
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.publisherInternational Library Centereng
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSpectrum of alpha, America's library promotional heritage in Asia;array 4eng
dc.subject.lcshLibraries--India--History; Library Science--India--History; International librarianship; India--Relations--United States; United States--Relations--India; India--Civilization--American influenceseng
dc.titleIndo-American library cooperationeng
dc.typeBookeng


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