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Putnam s Sons, ( 1915 ); Indy Publ.
Putnam s Sons, 1908.
Throughout Herbert Putnam s career, he was described by his colleagues as maintaining “ an impenetrable dignity … formal manner, invariable gracious and cordial, covered shyness and a deep reserve.
In 1891, Putnam resigned his Minneapolis post due to his mother-in-law s ill health, and promptly returned to Boston to be near her.
Putnam s activities with the American Library Association led him to join with Justin Winsor and Melvil Dewey as official delegates to the International Conference of Librarians in London in 1897 When Winsor died shortly thereafter, Putnam served the remainder of his term as President of the ALA.
Although Putnam s administration would need time in order to collect, organize, and disseminate all of the material within the Library of Congress collection, the task was completed with enormous success.
Herbert Putnam s administration as Librarian of Congress lasted for forty years, from 1899 until 1939.
The system is a series of interconnected reservoirs and lakes in northern Westchester and Putnam Counties that provides 10 % of New York City s water under normal conditions and up to 30 % of the in-City consumption in times of drought.
People in diverse communities " don t trust the local mayor, they don t trust the local paper, they don t trust other people and they don t trust institutions ," writes Putnam.
## Verrill, A. Hyatt ( 1950 ), Shell Collector s Handbook, New York: Putnam, p. 77
Emerson assisted her in publishing her first essay on the Shakespearean question in the January 1856 issue of Putnam s:
Putnam s Sons, 1907 – 21.
Hanifan in Putnam s Book:
Putnam say s “… beyond a doubt that social connectedness is one of the most powerful determinates of our well being .” In particular it is face to face connections which have been show to have greater impacts then non-face to face relationships.
Putnam s Sons, 1934
Putnam s Sons, 1935
The southern area of campus consists of many of NDSU s historic buildings, including Old Main, Minard Hall, Ceres Hall, Putnam Hall, South Engineering, and Morrill Hall.
Putnam s Sons, 1886.
Raney pointed out to the detractors that, “ MacLeish was a lawyer like Putnam ... he was equally at home in the arts as one of the four leading American poets now alive ... and while it was true that he had not attended a professional school of library science, neither had thirty-four of thirty-seven persons presently occupying executive positions at the Library of Congress .” The main Republican arguments against MacLeish s nomination from within Congress was: that he was a poet and was a “ fellow traveler ” or sympathetic to communist causes.

Putnam and s
At the meeting, Putnam relayed his desire to come to the Library for work and that his office would be down the hall from MacLeish s.
Putnam s Sons, 1898.
This settlement was the final resolution in an investigation of Putnam s payments to 80 brokers that was conducted over a three-year period.
That year, Putnam launched the industry s first suite of absolute return funds available to U. S. retail investors and re-entered the institutional defined contribution business with a 401 ( k ) product offering.
* Bosley Crowther, The Great Films ( G. P. Putnam s Sons, 1967 ), pages 247-250

Putnam and request
) F. W. Putnam, curator of the American museum, asked for his help on a report in 1896 and repeated the request to the navy the following year.
Murray began to compile a collection of books and pamphlets authored by African Americans at the request of Herbert Putnam, the successor to Spofford.

Putnam and was
The basic search procedure was proposed in two seminal papers in the early 60s ( see references below ) and is now commonly referred to as the Davis – Putnam – Logemann – Loveland algorithm (" DPLL " or " DLL ").
Although Shelton's version is cherished by some, according to John Ormsby and Samuel Putnam, it was far from satisfactory as a carrying over of Cervantes's text.
His mother, Maria Louisa Putnam Bellamy, was herself the daughter of a Baptist minister named Benjamin Putnam, a man forced to withdraw from the ministry in Salem, Massachusetts, following objections to him becoming a Freemason.
Novel version The Missing Man was published by Putnam in 1975.
Ultimately, it failed to solve many of the problems with which it was centrally concerned, and after the Second World War, its doctrines increasingly came under attack by thinkers such as Nelson Goodman, Willard Van Orman Quine, J. L. Austin, Peter Strawson, Hilary Putnam, and Richard Rorty.
It was while in this last job that he announced his engagement to Pamela Gail Putnam ( born 1952 ), an aspiring dental assistant.
Pamela was the daughter of Duane Putnam, who was then the Atlanta Falcons football line coach.
At Yale, he participated in the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition and was on the team representing Yale University ( along with Murray Gerstenhaber and Henry O. Pollak ) that won the second prize in 1947.
Herbert Putnam ( 20 September 1861 – 14 August 1955 ) was an American lawyer, publisher, and librarian.
George Herbert Putnam was born in New York City – “ at 107 East Seventeenth Street ” -- on September 21, 1861, and was the sixth son and tenth child of Victorine and George Palmer Putnam.
“ The father, one-time collector of internal revenue in New York by appointment of Abraham Lincoln, was the founder of a well known publishing house ”, known previously as the Putnam Publishing house, but now known as G. P. Putnam's Sons.
Putnam was elected city librarian of the Minneapolis Public Library at that time and served while simultaneously being admitted to the Minnesota bar of Law.
Putnamwas admitted to the Suffolk bar, and practiced law in Boston until the 18th of February 1895 ” when he was appointed Librarian of the Boston Public Library.
At the end of his four years there were 10 branches, 5 minor branches, called ‘ reading rooms ,’ and 56 deposit stations … the library grew from a total of 610, 375 volumes at the close of 1894 to 716, 050 at the close of 1898 .” Another contribution made by Putnam towards the Boston Public Library was the addition of a room devoted to juveniles, “ believed to have been the first room wholly devoted to the service of children in any of the larger libraries of the country .”
John Russell Young died in January 1899, and “ President William McKinley found himself faced with the responsibility of appointing a Librarian of Congress who should preside over the affairs of the institution whose building had been completed but years ago .” President McKinley requested Herbert Putnam to be appointed to the task, and Putnam was officially confirmed to the duties of Librarian of Congress on December 12, 1899.
Upon the confirmation of Putnam to his appointed duty of Librarian of Congress, one daunting task Putnam faced from the onset was the sheer volume of materials that had to be reorganized for the newly opened Thomas Jefferson Building – the newly appointed library for the Library of Congress.

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