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Lerner, Daniel, 1917-1980

LC control no.n 79091532
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingLerner, Daniel, 1917-1980
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Variant(s)Lin-nai-erh, 1917-1980
Rānā, Danieru, 1917-1980
Lirnir, Dānyil, 1917-1980
Associated placeNew York (N.Y.)
Birth date1917-10-30
Death date1980-05-01
Place of birthBrooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Place of deathSanta Cruz (Calif.)
Profession or occupationScholars College teachers Authors
Type of familymale
Found inHis Sykewar ... 1949.
RLIN, 2/17/98 (hdg.: Lerner, Daniel; Lerner, Daniel, 1917- ; usage: Daniel Lerner)
Contemporary authors, New Revision series, v. 6 (b. Oct. 30, 1917, d. May 1, 1980)
Library of Congress/NACO, 7 April 2017 (hdg.: Lerner, Daniel, 1917-1980)
Wikipedia, 7 April 2017 (Daniel Lerner; Daniel Lerner (1917 - 1980); Daniel Tom Lerner; was an American scholar and writer known for his studies on moderization theory; influential in launching the study and practice of media development and development communication; writer and academic; B.A. and Ph.D., New York University)
Shah, H. The production of modernization, 2011: pages 26-28 (Daniel Tom Lerner; was born in Brooklyn, New York, on October 30, 1917; enrolled in Johns Hopkins University (1934) intending to become a physician; left Johns Hopkins when his father died; enrolled at New York University and earned a Bachelor's degree in English (1939); taught coursees in the English Department at NYU and took classes in Russian and Arabic, adding to a multilingual backgournd that included French, Yiddish and German; served in the U.S. Army during World War II; after returning from the war, took a position at the Hoover Institute for War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California); research director for a project called Revolution and the Development of International Relations (RADIR); while at Stanford, accepted visiting positions at Columbia University; durning summer 1953, he got a position at MIT in the new Center for International Studies (CENIS); retired from MIT (1977) at age fifty-nine; took a position as adjunct professor of Sociology at University of California-Santa Cruz (early 1978) passing away seventeen months later on May 1, 1980)
Associated languageeng fre yid ger rus ara