Collections Digital Content Subjects Creators Record Groups
Log In | Contact UsView Cart (0)
Search PDF lists

Photograph File

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Subject Terms

Administrative Information

PDF Box/Folder List


Email us about these records

Finding Aid for Photograph File, circa 1900-1999 | The American Library Association Archives

By Cara Bertram; Salvatore V. De Sando

RequestSubmit request (Aeon) | Printer-friendly Printer-friendly | Email us about these records

Collection Overview

Title: Photograph File, circa 1900-1999Add to your cart.View associated digital content.

Predominant Dates:1970-1999

ID: 12/1/13

Primary Creator: Public Information Office

Extent: 2.6 Cubic Feet

Date Acquired: 08/31/2015

Subjects: National Library Week, Photographs, Photographs, Librarians, Public Information Office, Reading

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Photograph File contains photographs from ALA conferences, contest entries, events, librarians, promotional campaigns, and library patrons, 1961 new ALA building slideshow slides with accompanying audiocassetes, A Decade in Review scrapbook (c. 1980), photograph contest submissions for National Library Week (1985), A Nation of Readers (1985), Beyond Words (1999), and includes images of Bob Newhart from the You Can Call on a Library campaign (1980), and Caroline Kennedy with New York Public Library staff (2001).

Biographical Note

Recommendation was made in 1923 for a full time Headquarters staff appointment for publicity and broadened in 1929 to include information dissemination, both subsumed under a Publicity Department (1). Between 1930 and 1942, the Department, responsible to the Executive Director, acted under the supervision of the Publicity Committee (2). Thereafter, until 1973, this department became known as the Public Relations Division or Office, which also conducted the activities of the Department of Information and Advisory Services (3). As an outgrowth of this later department, the Public Information Office (PIO) first appeared in 1974 as part of "Other Services" (4).

The Public Information Office (PIO) was formed in th 1974 after a reorganization of the Public Relations and Membership Promotion Offices (5). In October 1974 the Executive Committee of the National Book Committee, Inc. voted to discontinue their library promotional effort, National Library Week (NLW), with the understanding that ALA would assume responsibility for NLW (6); PIO began functioning in 1975 when ALA inherited that responsibility (7).

The purpose of the Public Information Office is to maintain communication with the national and international press, providing information about ALA, its activities, and major developments affecting the library profession (8). "The responsibility for implementing national information programs . . . rests with the Public Information Office of the Association with support by the Public Relations (LAMA) Section and other appropriate groups" (9).

The Public Information Office is an ALA headquarters staff component (10). Its position has been changed from an original listing as "Other Services" (11) to a "Publishing Services" office (12), to a position as a Communications Services unit (13).

In 1980 the Office included a director and a publishing information officer (14); in 1983, the publishing information officer became public information officer, and the position of chapter relations officer was added (15).

"PIO produces a weekly review column "About Books" syndicated to more than 700 newspapers" (16) and, since 1982, a quarterly publication, Openers (17).

Subject/Index Terms

National Library Week
Photographs
Photographs, Librarians
Public Information Office
Reading

Administrative Information

Repository: The American Library Association Archives

Other Note: 3 pages.

PDF Box/Folder List

URL: https://files.archon.library.illinois.edu/alasfa/1201013a.pdf

PDF finding aid for Photograph File (12/1/13)


Browse by :

,
[All]


Illinios I-Mark Logo
Page Generated in: 0.281 seconds (using 83 queries).
Using 6.82MB of memory. (Peak of 7.04MB.)

Powered by Archon Version 3.21 rev-3
Copyright ©2017 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign