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Henle, Alea. The Widow's Mite: Hannah Mather Crocker And The Mather Libraries. Information & Culture: A Journal Of History 48, no. 3. Information & Culture: A Journal Of History (2013): 323-43.
Beaton, Gail M. The Widening Sphere Of Women's Lives: The Literary Study And Philanthropic Work Of Six Women's Clubs In Denver, 1881-1945. In Essays And Monographs In Colorado History, 1-68. Essays And Monographs In Colorado History, 1992.
Jenkins, Keith. Why History? Ethics And Postmodernity. London, England: Routledge, 1999.
Loveland, Jeff. Why Encyclopedias Got Bigger . . . And Smaller. Information & Culture: A Journal Of History 47, no. 2. Information & Culture: A Journal Of History (2012): 233-254.
Harris, Michael, and Stanley Hannah. Why Do We Study The History Of Libraries? A Meditation On The Perils Of Ahistoricism In The Information Era. Library & Information Science Research 14, no. April-June. Library & Information Science Research (1992): 123-130.
Walters, John Spencer. Whose Vision Fulfilled? Toward A Rightful Ideological Progenitor For The U.s. Federal Depository Library Program. Journal Of Government Information 26, no. July/August. Journal Of Government Information (1999): 347-59.
Yee, Martha M. Wholly Visionary: The American Library Association, The Library Of Congress, And The Card Distribution Program. Library Resources & Technical Services 53. Library Resources & Technical Services (2009): 68-78.
Slauter, Will. Who Owns The News?: A History Of Copyright. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2019.
Post, Robert C. Who Owns America's Past: The Smithsonian And The Problem Of History. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013.
Polansky, Patricia A. Who Created Us? Faculty, Staff, Book Dealers, And Russian Libraries That Shaped The University Of Hawaii Russian Collection. Slavic & East European Information Resources 9, no. 2. Slavic & East European Information Resources (2008): 174-225.

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