APA

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Miss Amelia Anthony and Mrs. Kathleen Moore. (1951). Retrieved from https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20155253

Chicago/Turabian

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. "Miss Amelia Anthony and Mrs. Kathleen Moore." UTA Libraries Digital Gallery. 1951. Accessed
May 13, 2024
. https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20155253

MLA

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Miss Amelia Anthony and Mrs. Kathleen Moore. 1951. UTA Libraries Digital Gallery, https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20155253. Accessed
13 May 2024
.

Special Collections Reference Information

Original image part of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Identifier: AR406-6-2621
Identifier: 20155253
Title: Miss Amelia Anthony and Mrs. Kathleen Moore
Description: Miss Amelia Anthony, left, founder of Girlstown, USA, is shown signing in to receive a chest X-ray at the Texas Tuberculosis Association's Mobil laboratory. She would speak later that week to the state convention of Beta Sigma Phi, the sorority that donated the $23,00 unit and an additional $10,000 to the TB association. Seated to the right of the image is Mrs. Kathleen Moore, a Tarrant County TB Society staff member. Published in the morning edition, May 20, 1951.
Date Created: 1951-05-19
Coverage: 1950s
Category: Institutions and Organizations, Medicine, Nature, Science and Technology
Subject Term: Document signings, Radiography, Laboratories, Vehicles
Collection: Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection
Language: None
Type: Still Image
Format: JPG
Publisher: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries
Rights Holder: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, Special Collections
Rights:
License:

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ If used, please attribute using one of the citations provided.


Project Series: Big Hair and Bigger Business: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram Captures the 1950s

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