This edition had all images removed.
Title: Copyright Renewals 1959
Note:
This is an unused empty file reserved many years ago for an ebook
of the Project Gutenberg's "U.S. Copyright Renewals" series.
Copyright Renewal's data for 1959, intended for this file number,
were instead placed in these files: #11819 (Jan-Jun); #11820 (Jul-Dec)
Note:
All Project Gutenberg etexts of U. S. Copyright Renewals have been reposted, in their six-monthly volumes, as etext #11801 through #11856 inclusive.
A combined, complete edition of all Copyright Renewals has been posted as etext #11800.
Credits: Produced by Michael Dyck, Charles Franks, pourlean, David Garcia, Liz Hanks, Steve Schulze, Thomas Berger, William Fishburne, and the Online Distributed Proofreading team, using page images supplied by the Universal Library Project at Carnegie Mellon University
Summary: "Copyright Renewals 1959 by Library of Congress. Copyright Office" is a brief informational publication released in the 21st century. It provides guidance on copyright renewals specifically for works from the year 1959. The likely topic of the book is the legal framework surrounding copyright, focusing on the processes and entries related to copyright renewals during that time. The content of this document serves as a placeholder and informs readers that the intended data for the copyright renewals of 1959 were instead organized into two separate files. It directs readers to those files for complete information on copyright renewals that were structured and archived by the Project Gutenberg team. Essentially, this publication is more of an administrative notice rather than an extensive exploration of copyright law. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Reading Level: Reading ease score: 54.0 (10th to 12th grade). Somewhat difficult to read.
Author: Library of Congress. Copyright Office
EBook No.: 6419
Published: Sep 1, 2004
Downloads: 79
Language: English
Subject: Copyright -- United States -- Catalogs
LoCC: Bibliography, Library science
Category: Text
Rights: Public domain in the USA.
This edition has images.
Title: Copyright Renewals 1959
Note:
This is an unused empty file reserved many years ago for an ebook
of the Project Gutenberg's "U.S. Copyright Renewals" series.
Copyright Renewal's data for 1959, intended for this file number,
were instead placed in these files: #11819 (Jan-Jun); #11820 (Jul-Dec)
Note:
All Project Gutenberg etexts of U. S. Copyright Renewals have been reposted, in their six-monthly volumes, as etext #11801 through #11856 inclusive.
A combined, complete edition of all Copyright Renewals has been posted as etext #11800.
Credits: Produced by Michael Dyck, Charles Franks, pourlean, David Garcia, Liz Hanks, Steve Schulze, Thomas Berger, William Fishburne, and the Online Distributed Proofreading team, using page images supplied by the Universal Library Project at Carnegie Mellon University
Summary: "Copyright Renewals 1959 by Library of Congress. Copyright Office" is a brief informational publication released in the 21st century. It provides guidance on copyright renewals specifically for works from the year 1959. The likely topic of the book is the legal framework surrounding copyright, focusing on the processes and entries related to copyright renewals during that time. The content of this document serves as a placeholder and informs readers that the intended data for the copyright renewals of 1959 were instead organized into two separate files. It directs readers to those files for complete information on copyright renewals that were structured and archived by the Project Gutenberg team. Essentially, this publication is more of an administrative notice rather than an extensive exploration of copyright law. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Reading Level: Reading ease score: 54.0 (10th to 12th grade). Somewhat difficult to read.
Author: Library of Congress. Copyright Office
EBook No.: 6419
Published: Sep 1, 2004
Downloads: 79
Language: English
Subject: Copyright -- United States -- Catalogs
LoCC: Bibliography, Library science
Category: Text
Rights: Public domain in the USA.