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The Library World Volume 54 Issue 1

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 July 1952

23

Abstract

OUR correspondents have commented upon the meagreness of the newspaper attention to the Annual Meeting of the Library Association. The opportunities which the affair would seem to afford for press comment are probably exaggerated by librarians, who quite naturally think their matters to be of importance. They are, but they have never been spectacular and are not likely to be so. What the modern pressman wants is a story ; he is not often interested in passive matters nowadays, and more than one editor has admitted that he is not concerned with what people say but with what they do. We may console ourselves to some extent by believing that our quiet work is more enduring than much that is greeted with fanfares. Snippets of facts about high issues of books, parsimony, or believed extravagance, are things that do find their way into the small paragraphs of daily papers. These may be good for our movement but there is no certainty that they are. The only sure advertisement of a library, publicly or otherwise maintained, is the quality of the service it can give.

Citation

(1952), "The Library World Volume 54 Issue 1", New Library World, Vol. 54 No. 1, pp. 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009359

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1952, MCB UP Limited

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