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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" !}\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 -^\n|f^5CBBi \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 | i \u25a0 \u25a0 ^ \u25a0 m^^r^^^^^^^^^^mu \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ,- mrnrm \u25a0 n \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 m >J^\n\u25a0\nS\nM\u2014iJ ' \u2014\u2014 .,\u2014\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\u201e,\u201e.\u2014^^^.(pii\n^j-*- \u25a0 hh fc ft 1iii \u00b1\u00b1 tllll\n- \u25a0: wy\nrf\nwranan\nThs Report of the University\nto Ths Senate\n45TH YEAR: SEPTEMBER 19^9 TO AVGUJT lgfo\nThe University of 'British Columbia\nF ip1 ^\n^1\nl^.,,,^ \u25a0 The University of British\nColumbia\nThe Report\nof the University Librarian\nto the Senate\n45th Year\nSeptember 1959 to August\nI960\nVancouver\nNovember i960 Contents\n\u2022 * \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nt * \u2022 \u2022\n\u2022 t \u2022 \u2022\nProgress: a move in the right direction\nRecord and Estimate\t\nThe Year 1959\/60\nThe Collections...\nBook Funds\t\nUse of the Library\nThe Library Staff.\nThe Building\t\nThe Friends of the University Library\nThe Senate Library Committee\t\nThe School of Librarianship\t\nRec ommendat Ions ,\t\nI. Research Collections and Book Funds\nII. Subject Divisions and Teaching Departments\nIII. Additional Staff Needs\nIV. College Library Development\nV. Salaries of Librarians\nVI. To The Senate and Library Committee\nReports upon Library Divisions\nReference Division...\nAcquisitions Division\nLoan Division\t\nSerials Division\t\nLibrary Bindery\t\nCatalogue Division...\nBiomedical Library...\nExtension Library....\nCurriculum Laboratory\nIn Acknowledgment\t\nAppendices\nA. (1) Expenditures for Books, Periodicals,\nand Binding\n(2) Volumes added to the Collections\nB. New Periodicals Received\nC. Selected List of Notable Acquisitions\n(I) Serials, (II) Books\nD. Loan and Interlibrary Loan Statistics\nE. Library Staff as of August 31, I960\nF. Professional Activities of Staff\nG. Senate Library Committee\nH. Council of the Friends of the Library\n. 1\n. 3\n. 6\n. 6\n. 8\n.10\n.14\n.15\n.16\n.17\n.18\n.21\n.23\n.24\n.26\n.27\n.28\n.29\n.30\n.31\n.32\nCover design by Robert R. Reid The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate\n1959\/1960\nPROGRESS is, by definition (ours), a move in the right direction,\nand this is the way we claim to have been going in recent months\nwhile making major changes in the University Library. But the\ngoing has been difficult. Not only has Library use increased\nat a notable (or alarming) rate, but no section of the building\nhas been left untouched, the entire collection has been shifted\nfrom one location to another and the Library's organization\nrecast into another mold. It is not now our privilege to report the eventual outcome, for the goal was not quite reached\nin this academic period, but we can look over into the promised\nland, hoping that next year's end will have justified so arduous\na wilderness journey.\nFrom long range plans, and an immediate past of noise,\ndust, sudden dislocations, and uncertainty, a new form and\nconcept of library service have been created, affecting every\nlevel of the University. The new College Library is tailored\nto the general needs of students in their first two years\u2014a\ncollection of essential, useful, and apposite books to ease and\ninduce the use of the Library in introductory courses. The\nSubject Divisions (Humanities, Social Sciences, Science, the\nBiomedical Library, Fine Arts) provide centres for study,\nreference, and research in the broad fields indicated] .here,\nspecialization is recognized and implemented, and the basic\nindexes, abstracts, bibliographies, and journal files are\nbrought together for convenience in each area, in relation\nto the pertinent book collections. The Division of Special\nCollections offers new evidence of University interest in\nadvanced study In the humanities and social sciences, as well as in Science, and provides facilities both for the conservation of unusual materials and for their convenient and\nproper use by individuals and seminar groups.\nBy thus segregating materials and services according to\nlevels of academic maturity and use, we propose to match\nLibrary resources more nearly to University needs.\nThe rationale of these changes can be briefly explained.\nEnlarging an existing building creates additional enclosures\nof space, and if they are not to become appendages, they must\nbe brought into a generally revised scheme by which they can\ncontribute to Library use In a positive way. The opportunity\nto rearrange space and readers made possible the concentration\nof materials and services in selected fields, and both the new\nand existing buildings were necessarily-involved In the final\nplan.\nThe dangers of segregating materials and interests where\noverlapping and intercommunication should instead prevail has\nbeen guarded against through internal organization and by\nshelving materials In a central place, with specialization\nlimited to the approaches made from the outer edge. Users may\nenter the bookstacks by way of Chemische Berichte and go out\nvia the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, with pertinent biblio-\ngraphies and reference assistance at either end.\nOther physical and psychological factors have been taken\ninto account in affecting a workable plan. Privacy is not\noften found in large reading rooms, but planned traffic\npatterns, visual screens which set off but do not enclose,\na variety of surfaces to absorb sound, high level lighting\nwith few contrasts, and the quiet stimulation which color\ncan give have produced an atmosphere for study which students\napparently have accepted with willingness and relief. 3\nRecord and Estimate\nThe Library derives much of Its character and meaning from its\nhistory and prospects, and we (as daily users) may sometimes\nmiss what is most significant and impressive about it because\nof too close a look. Behind the new facade is forty-five years\nof book collecting, during which the Library has grown from\n21,000 volumes to 452,370 (a factor of 21.5) and book funds\nfrom $1,300 to $245,265 (multiplied 188 times). Projected\nahead at what seems a likely pace, the Library will contain\na million volumes by 1975 (1,500,000 a decade later) and\nmight reach the $300,000 mark in its annual book fund (our\n1959\/60 goal) by 1962 or 1963.\nAlthough the book collections of research libraries tend\nto increase (like so many other modern phenomena) at an exponential rate--and U. B. C, true to form, has doubled its\nholdings about every decade\u2014the above predictions are more\nconservative than that. Book funds, as an inspection of our\nown will verify, are made up of a number of segments, all\nvariable from year to year, and the continuing growth of the\ncollections cannot be left to graphic probability unless much\nhuman interest and energy are active elements in the equation.\nSince 1949\/50--ten years, a period easier to comprehend\u2014\nthe size of the Library has doubled (from 228,231 to 452,370\nvolumes), and book funds have multiplied almost four and a half\ntimes ($54,735 to $245,265). Inflation, it must be noted, has\ntaken its conspicuous share, for the price of new scholarly\nbooks has risen in that time about 50$, journal subscriptions\n(on top of 81% and 58$ in the previous decade). It has, nevertheless, been a period of very substantial growth.\nThe decade, it is well remembered, opened with a gloomy\nprospect, for a diminishing veterans' subsidy threatened the\nLibrary with early closing and severe reductions in its\nbudget and staff--a fate avoided only by promises of federal\naid. In 1950 an optimum book budget had just been prepared,\ntailored to meet all forseeable needs and proposing the then\nunprecedented and unlikely figure of $85,000 a year. Staff\nsalaries were low, even for 1950, librarians starting at\n$2,575, and persons with long and responsible service being\nonly a few hundred dollars ahead. The year's binding totaled\n3,200 volumes (11,797 in 1959\/60), with more than 10,000 in\narrears. The Biomedical Library had just opened; Slavonic\nand Asian Studies were only begun. There was no College of\nEducation, no school of Music, no courses in Fine Arts (except\nthose for architects). The Library's first \"new\" wing had been\nin operation nearly two years. Enrolment was dropping from its\npost-War high of 9,300, still three years from its next upward\nturn. A decade of unpredictable difficulty and development\nlay ahead.\nAnd what of ten years hence? Our position in relation to\nthe future may be as precarious as ever before, but, whatever\nthe issue, the Library must necessarily play a leading and\ndemanding role. The University of California Library (Berkeley)\nwas about our size in 1922, the University of Washington in\n1939, Indiana in 1941. If this perspective is to indicate\nanything about our own subsequent growth we must look to our\nannual book funds which are trailing (from $50,000 to $250,000)\nbehind a dozen institutions which we should begin to regard as\nour academic peers (Florida, Kansas, Indiana, Louisiana State,\nMlsouri, Ohio State, Northwestern, Pennsylvania, Washington,\nWisconsin, U. C. L. A., and others). Somehow the slack must\nbe taken up. Because of the fixed nature of many Library costs, the\nchief item in the annual budget request which can be pared\ndown is that for \"Books and Magazines,\" and this is what often\noccurs:\nIncrease Increase\nYear Requested Granted\n1956737 $19,000 $ 6,500\n1957\/58 18,725 10,000\n1958\/59 26,000 19,000\n1959\/60 14,575 14,575\nIn view of the urgency to develop advanced study at the\nUniversity, it was proposed in the Annual Report a year ago\nthat $100,000 be produced for library materials, beyond the\namount then being received\u2014half from the University, the other\nfrom Friends--but the University's contribution was $14,575,\nthe Friends some $5,000 to $6,000. Only in 1958\/59, when the\nUniversity's Board of Governors acquired the P'u-pan Chinese\nlibrary and Mr. Walter Koerner contributed to the purchase of\nthe Murray collection of Canadiana did the book funds come\nclose to this goal.\nWe labor to keep abreast of current publication, fill in\ngaps with out-of-print books, and acquire a few back files of\nperiodicals, but we are unable to embark upon a serious program\nof acquiring fundamental and expensive sets (in Slavonic Studies\nalone a priced want list totals $90,000). We seldom look for\nmajor collections in the book market as do the librarians of\nmany major universities from year to year. In the general cry\nbeing raised on the campus for greatly increased financial\nsupport for research, Library needs must find a receptive ear.\nIt is pertinent to note that although we are accepting\na vast number of undergraduate students, the total output of\nour Faculty of Graduate Studies has not in ten years materially\nIncreased. Doctoral candidates in the humanities and social\nsciences are just beginning to appear. 6\nThe Year 1959\/1960\nThe Collections\nThe rate of growth of the collectlons--measured in volumes\ncataloged and sent to the bookstacks (subtracting withdrawals)\u2014rises gradually, this year's Increase being 32,951\nvolumes (31,767 in 1958\/59), of which 10,286 were bound\nperiodicals (10,913). The size of the collection at the\nend of the fiscal year was 452,370.\nIn addition to the books and journals formally counted\nabove, there were 54,993 items added to the Reference collections (56,721 the previous year): government publications\n45,612 items (49,896), pamphlets and university calendars,\n3,937 (5,013), and 5,4o4 maps (1,818).\nThere were 272 new journal subscriptions received (227),\nas listed in Appendix B, bringing the total to 5,237 titles.\nThe Library Bindery produced 11,797 volumes (11,343), plus\n1,258 in storage binding (919). The most notable acquisitions\nare reported in Appendix 0.\nThe Book Funds\nDuring the past year the following amounts, from all sources,\nwere expended upon books, periodicals, and binding (xvith comparable figures for two preceding years): 7\nExpenditures Upon Books, Periodicals, and Binding\n1959\/60 1958\/59 1957\/58\nLibrary $136,179.67 $117,275.84 $95,007.57\nCollege Library 14,544.73 8,090.96\nSpecial Grant 12,000.00\nMedicine 31,716.76 31,175.60 33,326.72\nLaw 14,015.65 12,274.13 12,612.47\nEducation 10,131.96 10,541.17 11,972.37\nNon-University 26,676.32 32,896.48 37,577.75\n$245,265.09 $212,254.18 $190,496.88\nOf the 1959\/60 expenditures, $213,349.67 was for books and\nperiodicals, $30,734.00 for binding. This year's total from\nall sources exceeded the previous year's by 15.5$. There was\nan Increase of $14,562.31 in the Library's formal budget for\nbooks (14.8$), plus the item for the College Library and a\ngrant of $12,000 toward the purchase of the Thomas Murray\ncollection.\nExpenditures for all Library purposes were $53.26 per\nstudent ($49.43 and $50.42 the two previous years)j and the\nratio of Library to total University costs (omitting capital\nitems, but including research) was 4.1$ (compared with 4.3$\nand 4.65$). Comparing expenditures for 1959\/60 with those of\n116 institutions of university rank on the continent for the\nprevious year, 1958\/59 (the latest available and therefore\nweighted in our favor7), we rank 36th in total library expendi-\ntures (4oth last year), 33rd in funds for books-periodicals-\nbinding (29th), and 60th In size of book collection (65th).\nNotable contributions from non-University sources were\nreceived from Mr. Walter C. Koerner (Slavonic Studies, Humanities);\nDr. H. R. MacMillan (Forestry, History); the Leon and Thea\nKoerner Foundation (Asian Studies, English and Australian\nliterature, Law); the Otto Koerner Memorial Fund (Fine Arts);\nthe Men's Canadian Club of Vancouver (Canadiana); the Institute\nof Chartered Accountants of B. C. (Accounting); the B. C. Association of Broadcasters (Communications); and Frank W. Horner,\nLtd. (Pharmacology). The Graduating Class of i960 presented\napproximately $3,500 to the Library as an endowment fund from\nwhich to buy special research materials from year to year. 8\nUse of the Library\nThere are a variety of academic uses of the Library, many of\nthem not readily measurable. Often the statistics collected\nrecord some part of the work done by the Library staff rather\nthan by the user, but when they are prepared uniformly over\na period of years they Indicate the growth or decline of\ncertain specific services.\nThe Library may indeed be regarded broadly as a study\ncentre where a majority of the serious students do their\nreading and prepare their essays and other assignments under\noptimum study conditions and In the closest association with\nthe University's book collection. This aspect of use will be\nthe chief objective of the new College Library, where Individual study units, conveniently related to a model collection\nof books should have a noticeable influence upon student habits\nand accomplishments. The more mature student, faculty member,\nand research scholar will make other more complex requisitions\nupon Library resources, and the Library is being prepared to\nhandle these at every level. As any day's observation will\nindicate, the University Library is a hive of academic activity,\ntouching every Department and undertaking.\nThe number of books borrowed from the Loan Division (a\nstandard measuring device) totaled 328,142 (266,451 In 1958\/59),\nof which 201,833 were from the main Loan Desk, 126,309 from the\nReserve collection. This is an increase of 23$ over the previous\nyear (25$ at the main Desk, 19$ in the Reserve Room), an extraordinary gain, compared with a 6,9^ rise in the number of students.\nSince 1952\/53, when the post-war \"bulge\" had diminished to\nits lowest ebb, there has been a 109$ increase in the student\nbody (5,085 to 10,642) and an accompanying 107$ increase in\nrecorded loans. But of the 7-year increase, 39$ has occurred\nduring this report year, 52$ in the last two (while enrolment\nexpanded only 18.4$). This is the more remarkable when it is\nremembered that thousands of students have been given direct access to the book collection during this period and have\ntherefore selected for home use only those books which are\npertinent to their need. This rapid growth, however, has put\na great strain upon staff and loan facilities. (See Appendix D\nfor monthly loan statistics.)\nThe Faculty Library Delivery Service distributed 14,240\npieces to bO designated delivery points during the year\n(12,471 in 1958\/59), and a similar number of volumes were\nreturned by this ready means.\nCautionary note: many faculty borrowers are unnecessarily\ncareless with citations in making requests or they expect more\nbibliographic service than the clerical staff assigned to this\nwork can provide. The Delivery Service is not a reference service, and inadequate or inaccurate information may simply result\nIn the delivery not being made.\nInterlibrary Loan. Libraries constitute a voluntary network which is meant to supplement the resources of local research\ncentres by providing specific materials to satisfy exceptional\nneeds. In order not to jeopardize, by misuse, the continuation\nof this service, practice follows a recognized pattern set\ndown in an Interlibrary Loan Code.\nIn 1959\/60, transactions totaled 2,504 items lent (2,070\nin 1958\/59) and 843 borrowed (571), a 20$ increase in materials\nsent to other libraries and a 47$ rise in our borrowings. This\nyear, 66$ of the volumes borrowed for use at UBC came from the\nUnited States, 28$ from Canada outside British Columbia, and\n5$ from within the province. Materials loaned went 47$ to B. C.\nusers, 40$ to the rest of Canada, and 11.5$ to the U. S.\nBorrowed from Loaned to\n1959\/60 1958\/59 1957\/58 1959\/60 1958\/59 1957\/58\nUnited States 66$ 70$ 56$ li.5$ 13.6$ 25$\nCanada outside B.C. 28$ 25$ 32$ 40$ 35.4$ 25$\nBritish Columbia 5$ 5$ 7$ 47$ 50$ 50$ 10\nWe borrowed most heavily from: the University of Washington,\n102; Harvard University, 94; Public Archives, Ottawa, 43; McGill\nUniversity, 42; National Research Council, Ottawa, 39; National\nLibrary of Medicine, Washington, 29; University of California,\nBerkeley, 27; University Microfilms, 25; University of Toronto,\n22; Provincial Library, Victoria, 18; Department of Agriculture,\nOttawa, 15; University of Oregon, 14; University of Southern\nCalifornia, 11; Geological Survey of Canada, 10; and a hundred\nand twenty-five other institutions.\nWe lent most often to: the Fisheries Research Board\nBiological Station, Nanaimo, 156; B. C. Electric Co., 153; International Power and Engineering Consultants (B. C. Engineering),\n131; University of Manitoba, 128; University of Alberta, 101;\nUniversity of Saskatchewan, 94; Shaughnessy Hospital, 89; Shell\nOil Company Limited, Calgary, 88; Imperial Oil Limited, Calgary,\n84; University of Washington, 66; B. C. Provincial Library, 61;\nInternational Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission, 54; Department\nof Agriculture Research Branch, Lethbridge, 40; Pacific Naval\nLaboratory, Esquimalt, 39l Fraser Valley Regional Library, 38;\nVictoria College, 34; Moose Jaw Public Library, 33; St. Paul's\nHospital, 32; Victoria Medical Society, 26; Crease Clinic, 23;\nShell Oil Company Limited, Edmonton, 22; and 250 other libraries\nand research organizations.\nThe Library Staff\nThe new building provides space for users and books, more or\nless ideally designed for the purposes intended, but it will\nnot function as a university library without an adequate and\ncapable working force.\nThe Library is a complex organization which must satisfy\nits own varied internal needs and, at the same time, provide an\neffective environment for study and research. With insufficient,\ninadequate, or inexperienced staff, its operations may be imperfectly performed, its materials difficult of access, and its full\nand ready use thwarted. 11\nSalaries, staff-selection policies, working conditions,\nhealth, and a \"mobility factor\" (a miscellaneous heading to take\nin the Incidence of wanderlust, marriages, transfer of husbands,\nhomesickness, and the like) all affect the continuity of employment and require continuing attention if difficulties are to be\nforestalled. For the outsider, a large library building full\nof study tables, books, and a throng of users tends to dwarf\nthe human element in its organization.\nKey staff members are the Division Heads, who are responsible for Library operations both in the processing and public\nservice divisions. For these positions people with initiative\nand administrative ability are needed, but they must also have\nappropriate subject and bibliographic knowledge, technical\ncompetence and experience, and the opportunity and inclination\nto work closely with other divisions and with Library users.\nThese are heavy requirements, particularly In a rapidly\ngrowing institution, and it is necessary to find mature and\nable persons to satisfy them. Higher monetary rewards, more\nadequate supporting staffs, and sufficient freedom for individual development are essential factors.\nIn spite of several major salary increases in recent years,\nDivision Heads stand but little above the salary floor of Assistant Professors (the high is $700, the median $200), and their\nposition in relation to this group is not as favorable as it was\nthree years ago. These are all persons with post-graduate professional degrees (as a minimum) and experience In library work\nranging from 4 to 34 years (the average is 16 years, the median\n12). This situation constitutes a serious barrier to Library\ndevelopment on the campus, and the relationship of Division\nHeads, both to new Library staff and to faculty, should be\nreviewed. 12\nA number of new positions, chiefly clerical, were established in August i960 in order to staff the new Library building\n(as asked for in the budget request), but these provided personnel chiefly to man new stack entrances in order to improve\naccess to the collections. It was noted then that the basic\nworking force was not being sufficiently enlarged and that it\nwould be necessary to \"make do\" until it could be built up.\nExtremely rapid increases in Library use during the initial\nmonths of the new year make the personnel request for 1961\/62\ncritical.\nBeginning salaries for the professional staff at U.B.C.\nhave been in the forefront for a brief period, and this seems\nnecessary on the west coast if we are to attract young persons\nof first quality from all parts of Canada. (The margin would\nnot draw people from the United States.) This position we are\nnot now likely to hold, and it must be retained if we are to\nexercise any parity of choice.\nIt is pertinent to note that the average beginning salary\nof librarians completing the requirements for the B. L. S.\ndegree at the University of Toronto this year was $4,560\n(with U. B. C. starting at $4,600).\nWorking conditions have been basically improved by the new\nbuilding, and if the present shortage of staff is relieved,\nthe subject divisions will provide increasingly attractive\nopportunities for individual growth and advancement. 13\nReport upon Staff Tenure. The record of continuing\nemployment was not much changed during the past year, except\nthat the rate of turnover in the Library Assistant category\nhas risen steadily (from 54$ to 95.8$) during the last three\nyears.\nResignations in Relation to Size of Staff\n 1957\/38\u20141958\/59\u2014T^W6o\nAll Staff\nLibrarians\nLibrary Assistants\nClerical Staff\n38.7$\n10$\n54$\n57$\n50.6$\n13$\n86.3$\n62$\n48$\nI3.8ji\n95.89\n38.4^\nAverage (Mean) Length of Service*\n(in months)\n1957\/58 1958\/59 1959\/60\nAll Staff\nLibrarians\nOther\n32.6\n44.7\n26.4\n35\n59.4\n22.8\n32.3\n57.3\n20.7\n* Omitting 4 long-time professional staff who are\nnormally left out of this tabulation to avoid distortion, since their total record of service, ranging\nfrom 22 to 34 years, almost equals that of the other\nprofessional members.\nThe average length of service of the professional staff\nat the end of the year was, therefore, 4 years and 9 months\n(compared with 4 years and 11 months last year), the median\nbeing 4 years (cf. 3 years, 1 month). There were four\nvacancies in the professional staff during the year for which\nlibrarians could not be found, and most of these were filled\ntemporarily by non-professional staff.\nCandidates for the Library Assistant classification must\nhold university degrees, and it seems likely, judging from\nthe record above, that salaries for this class (compared with\nclerical categories and similar positions in public libraries\nin the area) are not high enough to encourage persons to\nremain. 14\nThe Building\nThe second major addition to the 1925 building was completed\nin i960, thirty-five years after the initial construction.\nContinuity of this kind is probably not often achieved in\nmodern buildings, for architectural plans are not likely to\nbe that adaptable. The 1925 and 1948 structures were found\nto be flexible enough to permit the very considerable alterations and additions required to adapt them to the vastly\nchanged needs of another age.\nAlterations. For the record, in the north wing a Humanities room (named for Garnett Sedgewick) was created from space\nformerly occupied by Cataloging and Acquisitions, part of the\nReserve Book Room, and a corridor. It and the Social Sciences\nDivision above (in the Ridington Room, where work space and a\nbibliographic area were brought out of the bookstack) were\noriented toward the Buchanan Building (Arts) by creating a new\nentrance foyer leading into the north wing. The three processing divisions were united for the first time in what\nremained of the Reserve Room, with direct access both to the\nfreight elevator and delivery room stair. The great Concourse\nwas converted to its natural use by introducing catalog cases\nwhere massive reading tables had been before and by expanding\nthe Loan Desk area. The Fine Arts Library was enlarged by\nshifting the book collection into the main bookstack (with a\nnew interconnecting door) and converting three rooms into a\nsingle space. Offices and a committee room were made from the\nspace formerly occupied by the Howay-Reid collection, and the\ntop floor of the north wing was re-designed for occupation by\nthe proposed Library School.\nNaming the new south addition--with all of Its facilities\nelsewhere described--\"The Walter C. Koerner Wing\" recognizes\nin a very appropriate way the major part played by one individual in bringing the building into being. Matching grants from 15\nthe Canada Council and Provincial Government are also gratefully acknowledged.\nThe building opened for use on September 19, I960, and\nits seating capacity was fully taxed by the 21st. Reports of\nusers' satisfaction with its convenience, privacy, quiet, and\nillumination were often heard. A newly established position\nof commissionaire helped the transition between old and new.\nThe small loss of potential seating capacity, brought about\nby the adoption of Individual study tables and the removal\nof seats from the Concourse, seemed at once amply repaid by\nthe greater concentration of use. We can now confirm last\nyear's prophecy that \"The total building will not be large\nenough when it is completed, but It will seat a thousand more\npeople, give them greater opportunity for independent study,\nand serve them better as the library of a university.\"\nThe Friends of the Library\nThe membership of the Friends was markedly increased this year\nby adding many alumni of the University who are sufficiently\nInterested to earmark their contributions (through the Development Fund) for Library collections. This does not comprise a\ngreat bonanza, but the number of new donors is heartening after\nso brief an appeal through the Alumni Association. A \"low\nlevel\" campaign is under way to enlist the interest of individuals, firms, and industries in an annual giving program in\norder to provide a source of \"instant aid\" when important\nresearch collections become available.\nThe plan of the Friends to provide no less than $50,000--\nannually\u2014for the University Library with which to secure collections in support of advanced study (comparable in importance\nto the Murray and P'u-pan acquisitions last year) is yet a good\nmany dollars from realization, but work is going steadily ahead. 16\nThe Annual Meeting of the Friends was held on December 8,\n1959, under the chairmanship of Mr. Kenneth Caple, when Dr.\nN. A. M. MacKenzie delivered the main address, Dr. Ping-ti\nHo described the great Chinese collection, and recent additions of research materials in a wide range of subject fields\nwere on display. A second number of \"Footnotes for Friends\"\nwas issued in June i960. (For a list of the Council of\nFriends, see Appendix G.)\nThe Senate Library committee\nThe Senate Library Committee advises and assists the University Librarian in formulating library policy, in allocating\nbook funds to subject fields, and in developing the program\nof library services for the whole campus. It is responsible\nfor official liaison\u2014both ways--between Library and\nUniversity.\nThe Committee met four times during the report year,\nunder the chairmanship of Dr. Ian McT. Cowan, to discuss\nthe Librarian's Annual Report and to forward recommendations\nconcerning it to the Senate; to concern itself with the\nbuilding program; to discuss with the Library Committee of\nthe Alma Mater Society their brief relating to the improvement of study conditions; to make recommendations regarding\nsalaries of Library staff; to advocate the provision of study\nrooms in new buildings; to discuss the employment of a commissionaire; to consider the book budget and make allocations\nto Departments; to consider 11 p.m. closing, the increasing\nload of binding, and many other matters affecting the Library's\nprogram. 17\nThe School of Librarianship\nNot a part of the University Library, but certainly closely\nrelated to the development of libraries here and throughout\nCanada, the proposed School of Librarianship is reported upon\nhere briefly from year to year. When established, it will\nspeak more clearly for itself, and it is expected this may\ncome to pass within another year.\nApproved in principle by the Faculty of Arts and Science,\nand this recommendation concurred in by the Senate, the proposal has also received favorable consideration from the Board\nof Governors. Subject to a final approval of the curriculum\nby the Faculties concerned and a reconsideration of Its budget\nby the Board in relation to other University needs, the School\nmay be inaugurated in 1961\/62. It Is likely that the B. L. S.\n(Bachelor of Librarianship) will be instituted the first year,\nwith the Master's degree offered at a later session. 18\nRecommendations\n(I) After forty-five years, the University of British Columbia\nLibrary has achieved the standing held by the University of\nCalifornia Library (Berkeley) about 1922, the University of\nWashington in 1939, and Indiana University in 1941. Their\nsubsequent development challenges our own determination; but\nif we adapt this perspective we must model our program along\nmore resolute lines.\nOur annual book funds are now trailing from $50,000 to\n$250,000 behind a dozen institutions which we should begin\nto regard as our academic peers (Florida, Kansas, Indiana,\nLouisiana State, Missouri, Ohio State, Northwestern, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wisconsin, U.C.L.A. and others). In\nthe general cry for greatly increased financial support for\ncampus research, Library needs must find a receptive ear,\nand our immediate aim should be an increase of $100,000 a\nyear, from University and outside sources.\n(II) The Library's new \"subject divisions\" are intended to make information and materials more accessible\nby convenient arrangement and closer liaison with teaching\ndepartments. The Heads of subject divisions should report\nupon the Library at Departmental meetings and to the Library\non Departmental needs.\nThe subject Divisions, by catering to selected subject\ninterests, can turn the use of Library resources into particular channels, help shape the collections to fit growing\nneeds, and join teaching and library service into a common\neducational pattern. 19\n(III) Because of the Library's rapidly increasing size\nand use, and too few staff members to meet immediate needs, it\noperates in many Divisions at close to the maintenance level,\nwith no margin for Increased service nor protection against\ninterruptions caused by illness or resignation. It is urged\nthat additional staff positions be authorized as indicated\nin the 1961\/62 budget request.\n(IV) The College Library is intended to provide prime\nstudy conditions and a large collection of apposite materials\nfor students in their first two university years. With the\nassistance of faculty, a basic collection was ready on the\nopening day, but its inadequate size was quickly demonstrated\nby embarrassingly heavy use. The College Library must be\nconstantly enlarged and refreshed . by the addition of new\nmaterials, and faculty are urgently requested to continue\nregular and appropriate suggestions.\n(Requisitions are not charged against Departmental\nallocations but to a special College Library fund.)\n(V) The new building provides space for users and books,\nbut it will not function as a university library without an\nadequate and capable professional staff. With an insufficient,\ninexperienced, or ineffective force, its operations will be\nimperfectly performed, the materials difficult of access, and\nits full and ready use thwarted. To attract persons of highest 20\ncalibre from anywhere in Canada and to retain for useful periods\nthe most competent and experienced, both the beginning salary\nfloor and an adequate \"spread\" must be provided.\nBeginning salaries for professional staff at U.B.C. have\nbeen in the forefront for a brief period, but this position\nwe are not now likely to hold without a new revision. And\nin spite of several major increases in recent years, senior\nstaff (at the Division Head level) are in a less favorable\nposition in relation to faculty grades than they were a few\nyears ago.\n(VI) Under the University Act, the Library reports directly\nto the University Senate, a recognition of the academic importance of this administrative unit. Underlying the whole\nacademic establishment, it is fundamental to the work of all\nDepartments and Faculties, yet must compete for consideration\nand support with every specialized interest. The Senate and\nits Library Committee are uniquely responsible for the Library's\nwelfare, and this is a plea for their particular and zealous\nattention to its continuing growth. 21\nReport Upon Library Divisions\nThe substantive accomplishments of the year are the work\nof the Library Divisions, adding continually to the usefulness and importance of the Library's resources, and\nsupporting the University-wide program of study, teaching,\nand research.\nReference Division\nFor those who use the Library as a source of information,\nthe reference services provide an improved, route to the\navailable record. The current move to create broad subject\ndivisions is an evolutionary adaptation to changing academic\nconditions.\nDuring the year the Division acquired 54,993 items to\nsupplement the main book collection, of which 45,612 were\npublications of government and official bodies, 3,937 were\npamphlets and university calendars, and 5,404 maps and charts\n(compared with last year's 48,896 documents, 5,013 pamphlets\nand calendars, and l,8l8 maps). Canadian items totaled\n11,205, of which 6,998 were federal documents and 4,207 provincial (2,176 from British Columbia). Back files of Council\nof Europe publications were secured to support last year's\ndepository arrangement. Official atomic energy publications\nfrom France were added to those coming steadily from Canada,\nBritain, Australia, and the U. S.\nOf 27,477 recorded questions answered (29,247 last year),\n8,886 were by telephone (cfi 8,651), half from off-campus.\nMicrotext readers were used a total of 870 hours, accomodating\n66l persons; use included 475 items from the Library's collections, 109 obtained on Interlibrary loan, and 61 belonging\nto individuals. Displays totaled 61 in Library cases, on\nsubjects ranging from Japan to linguistic dictionaries, fungi,\nand space travel. 22\nEighty-one lectures were given by the Reference staff,\nin addition to which instruction was provided to some 35\nclasses and groups by other Divisions. As the number of\nfreshment English sections exceeded 80, the long-time,\nsuccessful program of meeting each class and making Individual assignments was reluctantly discontinued. In its\nstead, four lectures were given each day during a week's\nperiod (in as many sections as required), to which, in the\nabsence of compulsion, some 1,500 were attracted; of these\napparently half were more advanced students with their own\nmotivation.\nInterlibrary loans, under the guidance of Miss Marion\nSearle and, later, Mrs. Joan Selby, totaled 2,504 volumes\nlent (cf. 2,070) and 843 borrowed (571), a 20$ increase\nover last year's record of loans to other institutions and\n47$ in borrowings. (See above summary, p. 9, and Appendix B.)\nThe annual Publications of Faculty and Staff was again\nprepared under the direction of Miss Anne Smith, this year's\nedition containing 690 distinct entries, compared with last\nyear's 524. Its compilation is an exacting and courageous\ntaskj\nThe Fine Arts Room, headed by Miss Melva Dwyer, increased its volume of loans to 15,571 (from 14,247), mostly\nbecause of reading assignments in the College of Education.\nThe most intensive and consistent use of the section is by\nstudents in Community Planning, and by those from the School\nof Architecture. The increasing number of students in Music\nand the Fine Arts brings a growing pressure upon the facilities,\nand even the enlarged quarters and staff will be hard pressed\nto satisfy demands. Situated next to the new south wing,\nnoise from \"inside, outside, and underneath\" plagued staff\nand operations throughout the entire period. Because the\narea available for the book collection is Inadequate for\nfuture growth, a stairway to an adjacent stack level must be\nbuilt at an early date.\nThe Howay-Reid collection of Canadiana, under Miss\nBetty Vogel, served a variety of users and projects during\nthe year, accomodating within its limited space and hours\n260 readers. Among bibliographic work in progress is a\ndetailed list of the writings of Dr. Roderick Haig-Brown,\na record of materials in the pamphlet collections, and\nemendations to the Watters and Smith bibliographies. At the\nend of the year the Howay-Reid collection was transferred to\nthe new Division of Special Collections. 23\nIn the Map Room, Mr. Geoffrey Selth, with student\nassistants, made great progress in clearing up accumulations, processing 5,404 maps during the period, and\nbringing the total nearly to the 40,000 mark.\nThe end of the report year concludes a stage in the\ndevelopment of reference service at the University which\nhas for thirty years been guided and impelled by its leading\nproponent, Miss Anne M. Smith. In her continuing role as\nAssistant Librarian, she will be responsible for coordinating\nthe work of the subject divisions, in an era of greater\nemphasis upon subject specialization. The past year was\nmade extremely difficult by problems of building and reorganization, and the staff's performance was a model of\nstrength, perseverence, and patience. To Miss Joan O'Rourke,\nFirst Assistant, and acting Division Head during Miss Smith's\nillness, special recognition.\nAceuisitions Division\nOf buying books there is no end and this year's record of\ntransactions again exceeds that of any similar period.\nExpenditures for books and periodicals this year (from\nall sources) totaled $213,349.67, an increase of 15.5$ over\nlast year's amount ($186,318.38). Of this, $12,000 was a\nsingle transaction. (For more detailed information, see\nAppendix A, and p. 7, above.)\nThere were 23,605 items ordered (compared with 16,964\nin 1958\/59), of which 4,578 were from used-book catalogs\n(2,197). The Division handled 28,515 volumes (last year,\n25,233), and 25,098 were forwarded to Cataloging (21,213),\nthe remainder given special treatment. Book requisitions\nreceived, for which bibliographic searching was done,\ntotaled 35,388 (23,259 the previous year).\nGifts totaled 2,931 volumes (3,914), and the number\nhandled in the Division came to 6,838 (8,909). Under Mr.\nStephen Johnson's direction a large cumulation of gifts has\nbeen processed or distributed through an international exchange\narrangement (with disposition of 90$ of the items offered), the\nprogram entitling U.B.C. to benefit from a variety of similar\nlistings. 24\nThe Division also operates (as a by-product of the\nReceiving Room) the Faculty Library Delivery Service, and\n14,240 items were dispatched to 80 designated delivery\npoints (12,471 last year), a similar number being returned.\nThe shipping of books throughout the province to suport in-\nservice courses offered by the College of Education also falls\nto this Division.\nInaugurating the College Library has made heavy claims\nupon the Division's resources, 4,667 book requisitions having\nbeen handled, 3,693 individual items ordered, and 2,432 volumes\nreceived, with payments totaling $14,544. Assistance has often\nbeen commandeered for this purpose from other Divisions, and\nfuture projects of this proportion must come with special\nassistance built-in.\nAcquisitions, with the other processing divisions, lived\nthrough a trying period while its new quarters were being remodeled around it. But more extensive and useful floor and\nshelf space, accoustical tile, and improved lighting have\ncreated greater comfort and efficiency (the ventilation Is\ninadequate). Throughout this busiest and perhaps most hectic\nyear, work has gone ahead with remarkable determination and\nsuccess under the direction of Miss Eleanor Mercer, Head,\nand Mr. G. G. Turner chief assistant (until July 1), followed\nby Miss Priscilla Scott.\nLoan Division\nThe Loan Division is charged with managing the book collection\nand is responsible for its use, availability, and physical\ncondition. Massive increases in the size of the bookstack\nand book stock and in the number of loan transactions are\nsigns of the Library's greater usefulness and of the Division's\nproblems.\nThere were 328,142 loans made at the Loan and Reserve\ndesks during the year (266,431 in 1958\/59), an extraordinary\nincrease of 23$ over the previous year, with a 6.9$ rise In\nthe number of students. 25\n1-year 2-year\n1959\/60 Increase 1958\/59 Increase 1957\/58\nLoan Desk 201^833 25$ 160,822 36.8$ 147,522\nReserve Room 126,309 195* 105,609 29$ 97,668\n328,142 23$ 266,431 33.8$ 245,190\nThe 2-year increase of 33.8$ in the number of loans, with\nan accompanying 18.4$ rise in enrolment required the emergency employment of temporary staff and will soon necessitate the adoption of a new and more efficient record system.\nOther effects of heavy use are the need for more re-\nbinding, the replacement of worn-out volumes, and the addition\nof multiple copies in heavy demand. Although no full inventory has been taken this year, losses appear to be rising,\nbecause of larger numbers of students in the bookstacks.\nThe annual return of books by faculty is becoming less\neffective, with some 380 volumes (from 150 professors)\nstill outstanding.\nBooks placed by faculty \"on reserve\", and thus recommended for brief periods of use, should be only those titles\nwhich are in fact required reading for groups and are actually\nin heavy demand. During the year about 50$ of the books put\non reserve (some 2,000 volumes) were returned to the book-\nstack (with notice to faculty) because of insufficient use,\nand their general availability was in this way greatly\nincreased.\nPreparations for opening the College Library occupied\nmuch of the Division's attention in selecting for transfer\nand purchase titles appropriate to the new collection. Some\n3,900 volumes were shifted to the College Library on a permanent or temporary basis.\nThe building program caused many temporary shifts within\nthe collection, and, beginning about July 1 (and completed\nbefore the fall term), every book in the Library was relocated\nin relation to the new subject divisions. Mr. Leonard Williams,\nworking with Mr. Bell and Mr. Stuart-Stubbs, managed this\noperation with distinction.\nSome 80 students were employed during the year to fill\nabout 50 part-time positions; their practice of dropping out\nor of suddenly reducing their working schedules detracts\nseriously from the value of their employment. 26\nMiss Mabel Lanning has watched vigilently over the collection since it was about 50,000 volumes in size, and as a\nfamiliar, continuing figure at the Loan Desk is doubtless\nremembered by more students than any other member of the\nUniversity. Recent growth has taxed every staff member's\nenergy and initiative, but she has never lessened her\npersonal interest and concern in maintaining a clear path\nbetween books and the serious student. Mr. Inglis Bell,\nFirst Assistant, has provided major support in coping with\nthe rising flood, and with Mr. Leonard Williams, Stack\nAttendant, and other staff members, have earned great credit\nand gratitude for their resourcefulness during an unsettled\nyear.\nSerials Division\nPeriodicals are an essential means of communication among\nscholars, a basic record of investigation and discovery, and\nthe foundation of a research collection. They are also very\nnumerous, bulky, and expensive, and costly to handle, store,\nand bind. These are all pertinent concerns of the Serials\nDivision.\nThe total number of periodical titles received is 5,237\n(4,965 in 1958\/59), with 272 new subscriptions placed during\nthe year (227). Of these, 3,927 are received by paid subscription, 1,200 by gift, and 110 by exchange. The new titles\n(see Appendix B) range over a wide subject area, but they continue to represent only the most pressing needs expressed by\nfaculty members. There were 10,286 bound volumes of journals\nadded to the collection (10,913). (A list of the most notable\nback files acquired is found as Appendix C-1)\nRecorded loans of unbound issues totaled 9,305, the decline in number from last year's 10,411 probably resulting\nfrom freer use by students of the current files in the main\nbookstacks, to which third year students and upward have\naccess. This privilege has been costly to the University, for\nabout 500 individual issues have disappeared during the year,\ncreating a serious handicap in binding, replacement, and interrupted use. It is proposed under the new subject arrangement\nto provide greater control of these evanescent materials. 27\nIn September i960 the public service functions of the\nSerials Division are being transferred, with the current files,\nto the new subject divisions. Serials, long camped under\nvarying temporary conditions, and victim of two remodeling\nprograms, is now at home in the new processing area with the\nrelated divisions of Catalogue and Acquisitions; the Bindery\npreparation unit is also being relocated adjacent to the\nLibrary Bindery,\nLibrary Bindery. It is clear that binding facilities\nare again no longer adequate to handle the existing load.\nWith present staff and equipment, output in nine years has\nrisen from 3,200 to 11,797 volumes, and an earlier backlog\nof above 10,000 volumes has been absorbed. New journal\ntitles (over 1,200 added in 5 years), the Influx of paperbacks resulting from Increased foreign purchases (3,200\nbound last year), a vast number of volumes in the Library\nneeding rebinding, and the heightened Interest in government publications from around the world have surpassed\npresent binding resources.\nBindery operations are a delicately balanced relationship into which new equipment and staff must be introduced\nwith care. To the present staff of two journeymen binders,\ntwo journeywomen, and a male apprentice it is proposed to\nadd a female apprentice, then a journeyman and journeywomen\nfor a night shift (to take full advantage of equipment and\nspace already available). By this expansion it is expected\nto increase Bindery output by 50$, and It is recommended\nthat this be done at the earliest possible date. It will\nalso be necessary at this time to make a full-time addition\nto the BindaryPreparations staff.\nDuring the fiscal year 11,797 volumes In full binding\nwere processed (11,099) and 1,258 put Into storage covers\n(919). Some additional floor space, a more convenient\nrelationship with the Preparations unit, and internal improvements inaugurated by the staff have reduced some of the\nlimitations upon output. A single innovation in the binding\nprocedure, introduced by Mr. Percy Fryer, Jr., cumulated\nsavings of material and labor valued at over $1,400 (2\\ rolls\nof buckram and 525 hours).\nMr. Percy Fryer, Sr., heads one of the most effective\nbindery operations anywhere, and its steadily increasing\noutput over many years has produced sturdy and handsome\nbindings at a moderate cost which has risen only a few cents\na volume during the total period. He is ably seconded by Mr.\nPercy Fryer, Jr., journeyman binder, whose qualities of experience and imagination are of inestimable value to the department. The staff is a well-knit and cooperative Library unit. 28\nSupervising the whole complex Division is Mr. Roland\nLanning, who will perhaps not receive from the University\nthe full recognition he deserves. Because of his modest,\npersevering, constructive, and long-time work behind the\nscenes, he has had a greater influence upon the Library's\nimportant journal collections than any other. His First\nAssistant, Mr. Basil Stuart-Stubbs, is a man of many useful\nabilities who has during the year also been engaged in the\nbuilding and remodeling program and in planning the new\nDivision of Special Collections. The staff has come through\nthe year of \"the exodus\" well.\nCatalogue Division\nFrom a wide choice of books and journals, on a diversity of\nsubjects, in a variety of languages, the cataloger produces\na workable bibliographic pattern by which access to a large\nlibrary is made possible for readers of many differing interests,\nIn 1959\/60 the Division cataloged and classified 33,485\nvolumes (31,767 last year), of which 10,286 were bound serials\n(10,913). Add to this materials recataloged, withdrawn, rebound and replaced, and the Division's total production reached\n39,921 items (36,412). The increment to the book collection\n(subtracting 534 volumes withdrawn) totaled 32,951 volumes\n(31,767).\nBecause of many staff changes, vacancies, and the necessity\nto train new personnel, while maintaining necessarily strict\nprocedures of revision, the backlog of unprocessed material\nwhich disappeared a year ago again stands at 2,650 volumes.\nThe necessity to obtain competent staff members, in sufficient\nnumbers, who will remain over a period of years is nowhere more\npointedly demonstrated than in the Catalogue Division.\nA number of special projects also affected the work of\nthe Division: the reclassification of sections of the collection (important but extremely time-consuming); the continued\ncataloging of Departmental collections; and preparations for\nthe College Library. Moving into new quarters can also be\nregarded as a costly project; although the shift Itself was\nquickly made, several months of turmoil and disturbance\nensued, which at last provided markedly improved working\nconditions (except for inadequate ventilation and outmoded\nand noisy fluorescent fixtures). 29\nThe Division is very fortunate in having had at its head\nfrom July 1954 to June i960 Mrs. Marjorie Turner, whose\nstraightforward and competent direction carried through much\nof the reorganization upon which present operations are based.\nShe was succeeded, after her resignation, by Mr. G. G. Turner,\nwho brings both cataloging and acquisitions experience to his\nnew position, and a keen analytical mind. Miss Geraldine\nDobbin and Mrs. Margaret Little, and a number of unusually\nresponsible staff in all categories, brought the Division\nsuccessfully through an otherwise arduous year.\nBiomedical Library\nThe Biomedical Library was established as the first full-\nfledged subject division, encompassing the Biological Sciences\nand Medicine. Its pattern is being generally followed in\nthe new reorganization scheme.\nBy the end of its ninth year the Biomedical Library has\ncompleted its initial stage of development and can (in cooperation with the other subject divisions) begin to place\nmore emphasis upon the biological sciences. Its program will\nalso be affected by the establishment this year, under the\nB. C. College of Physicians and Surgeons, of the British\nColumbia Medical Library Service (for medical practitioners);\nthe Inauguration in the Faculty of Medicine of the Departments\nof Continuing Medical Education and of the History of Medicine\nand Science; and plans for the University Hospital with permanent quarters for the Biomedical Library. The reinstatement\nof bibliographical lectures to medical students as part of the\nFaculty teaching program is also of importance.\nRecorded use of materials in the Branch Library at the\nGeneral Hospital (where it can be readily measured) was 17,941\nvolumes (14,954 last year), and there were 3,406 loans during\nthe once quiet summer months (May, June, July), each passing\nthe 1,000-volume figure for the first time. Tabulated use of\njournals by date of publication (totaling 12,951 volumes\nborrowed at the Branch, chiefly clinical material) shows that\n32$ of use was of publications Issued in the current year (28$),\n57$ of volumes were dated 1948-1958 (64$), 7$ were issued from\n1938-1948 (5.5$), and 3$ for all previous years (2$). There\nwas a 28$ increase in the number of reference questions handled,\n6,426 (cf. 4,997). Seven bibliographical lectures were given\nto students in Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy and Education. 30\nAdditions to the collection in the field of Medicine\ntotaled 3,705 (2,773), bringing this section approximately\nto 39,420 volumes (35,715). Forty-six new journal titles\nwere added, with a total of 1,358 in the medical field, and\n58O pertinent journals in the biological sciences.\nSeven numbers of the \"Selected List of Recent Acquisitions\" were issued. Nearing completion are the long contemplated revision of the Library's \"Current Titles List\"\nof 1954 and the \"Bibliography Manual and Guide to the Biomedical Library.\"\nMiss Doreen Fraser, Biomedical Librarian, has been\nactive in a study of health agency libraries being carried\non under the sponsorship of the Greater Vancouver Health\nLeague; in working as Consultant and as a member of the\nExecutive Board of the B. C. Medical Library Service; in\nassisting a number of provincial medical library groups;\nand as an officer of the Medical Library Association. She\nand her assistants have weathered a year of staff changes\nand shortages and the inconceniences and discomforts of\nconstruction.\nThe Extension Library\nFrom Whitehorse, Vancouver Island, the Cariboo, the Okanagan\ncome such letters as thisV \"For those who live in the more\nrural places throughout the province it would be difficult\nto express what the Extension Library means.\" As one of\nthe services provided directly to the province by the University, it is surely the most far-flung and keenly appreciated.\nHaving been a year in its new quarters in the north wing,\nthis section of the Library, alone, escaped . building turmoil.\nAlthough the number of borrowers dropped slightly during the\nperiod, the total circulation was the highest to date, and,\nduring the summer months, use by general readers did not, as\nheretofore, decrease.\nBy the end of the year, the number of general borrowers\nwas 461 (formerly 502, several withdrawals caused by the death\nof older readers), those in the drama group, 139 (152), making\nthe total of registered borrowers 600 (654). General loans 31\nnevertheless numbered 14,731 (cf. 13,954), plays 6,024 (5,621),\nand books for correspondence courses 1,852 (1,703), a grand\ntotal of 22,607 (21,278). Most of the activity in course\nwork was in English 200 (with 1,037 volumes), History 304\n(Mediaeval Europe, with 256), Education 520 (History of\nEducation, with 256), and English 429 (American Literature,\n1865-, 129). There were 1,894 volumes borrowed through the\nExtension Library from the main University collection.\nAlthough Miss Edith Stewart, Extension Librarian,\nkeeps in touch with her borrowers by mail, she maintains\nthe immediate relationship of the professional practitioner\nto his client, and they rely upon her for reading guidance\nand aid. She and her assistant comprise one of the finest\nand strongest links the University has forged with the\nprovince.\nThe Curriculum Laboratory\nThe Curriculum Laboratory is a working collection of textbooks and related material jointly operated by the University\nLibrary and the College of Education for the use of student\nteachers. Not a library of professional literature, nor a\nsubject collection relating to the content of courses, it\nprovides work space, outlines, guides, illustrations, and\ncopies of actual texts employed in British Columbia schools.\nLocated from September 1956 to May i960 on an interim\nbasis in the Library building, it moved at the beginning of\nthe remodeling program into somewhat more adequate temporary\nquarters in the old Faculty Club, and will take a central\nposition in the new Education building (perhaps in two years).\nLoans during the 9-month period (September 1959-April\nI960) totaled 37,974 (34,567 in 1958\/59) from a collection\nof 10,129 volumes (8,774); 1,355 volumes were added during\nthe period (1,521). In addition, 4,228 \"audio-visual aids\"\nwere borrowed. Losses are still over 500 volumes a year. To\nthe picture collection of some 13,000 classified and mounted\nitems about 2,000 were added. During the summer months, when\nthe Laboratory was not normally open to students, a good deal 32\nof preparatory work for the fall was completed, including\nthe installation of book shelving and counters and readying\n5,425 prescribed textbooks for loan in the fall.\nAlthough the Laboratory is crowded throughout the\nUniversity year, loans are at a peak prior to the \"practicum\"\nperiods, creating a characteristic problem of this service.\nMrs. Pat Hodge, with one full-time assistant and student help,\nmanaged the operation well during the fall and spring under\nextremely overcrowded conditions, and was succeeded in July\nI960 by Mrs. Emily Woodward, the first professional librarian\nassigned to this post. Mr. Walter Lanning, of the College\nof Education, serves as official liaison between College and\nLibrary with a clear understanding of the Laboratory's purposes and operations.\nIn Acknowledgment\nIn this year of construction and change we are more than\never Indebted to many Individuals: to Library staff and\narchitects, to contractors and workmen, to members of the\nUniversity's administration, the Board of Governors, the\nSenate, and Library Committee, to many faculty and Friends,\nand to thousands of students who bore with little aspersion\nthe discomforts of rapid expansion.\nTo the Library staff, particularly, who suffered long\nand were remarkably kind in the face of months of commotion\nand seeming insecurity--may some justification become evident from a long backward look.\nTo Mr. Walter C Koerner, a committee-of-one on the\nLibrary's development, whose effective support has given\nnew scope and usefulness both to building and books.\nAnd to Dr. Samuel Rothstein, Associate Librarian,\nwhose name seems seldom to appear in \"the official dispatches\"\nbut whose labor, counsel, judgment, and fund of ideas are 33\nintricately woven into the University's pattern of library\nservice; in so few words deep gratitude.\nThe last word of acknowledgment is to the Senate\nof the University, in recognition of its past support and\ngreat future responsibility.\nNeal Harlow\nUniversity Librarian APPENDIX A\n(1) Expenditures for Books, Periodicals, and Binding\n(Fiscal years, April through March)\nTotals\nBooks and Periodicals Binding Books-Periodicals-Binding\n 1958\/59 1959\/60 1958\/59 1959\/60 1958\/59 1959\/60\nLibrary Budget $ 97,886.84 $112,449.15 $19,389.00 $23,730.52 $117,275.84 $136,179.67\nCollege Library 8,090.96 14,544.73 -- \u2014 8,090.96 14,544.73\nSpecial Grant -- 12,000.00 \u2014 \u2014 -- 12,000.00\nFaculty of Medicine 25,595.10 26,716.76 5,580.50 5,000.00 31,175.60 31,716.76\nFaculty of Law 11,307.83 12,012.17 966.30 2,003.48 12,274.13 14,015.65\nFaculty of Education 10,541.17 10,131.96 -- \u2014 10,541.17 10,131.96\nNon-University Funds 32,896.48 25,494.90 -- -- 32,896.48 25,494.90\nTotals $186,318.38 $213,349.67 $25,935.80 $30,734.00 $212,254.18 $244,083.67\n(2) Volumes added to Collections\n1958\/59 1959\/60\nBooks 20,854 22,565\nSerials 10,913 10,286\nTotal volumes 31,767 32,851\nSize of\nLibrary 419,519 452,370 APPENDIX B\nNew Periodical Titles Received\nA I R; Archives of interamerican rheumatology\nA S H A (American Speech and Hearing Association)\nAcademy of Management. Journal.\nAcademy of Sciences of the USSR. Bulletin. Geology series.\n(tr. Russian)\nAcademy of Sciences of the USSR. Bulletin. Geophysics\nseries (tr. Russian)\nActa historica\nActa vertebratica\nL'Action nationale\nAdvances in applied microbiology\nAdvances in organic chemistry\nAdvances in pest control research\nAdvances in petroleum chemistry and refining\nAdvances in psychosomatic medicine\nAfricana nova\nAmerican Antiquarian Society. Proceedings\nAmerican Association of Law Libraries. Publication series\nAmerican camellia yearbook\nAmerican Choral Foundation. [Publications]\nAmerican Council on Industrial Arts Teacher Education.\nYearbook\nAmerican Historical Association. Service Centre for Teachers\nof History. Publications\nAmerican Iris Society. [Publications]\nAmerican School of Classical Studies. [Publications]\nAmerican Society of Planning Officials. [Publications]\nAnalytical biochemistry\nAnnales historiques de la Revolution francaise\nL'Annee balzacienne\nAnthropological linguistics\nArchiv fur Geschichte des Buchwesens\nArchiv fur Reformationsgeschichte\nArchives suisses de neurologie\nArkiv for botanik\nArizona law review\nAsahi journal\nAsahi shukusataban (Condensed edition)\nAussenpolitik\nAustralian letters\nAustralian Mathematical Society. Journal\nAustralian periodical index\nAutomation and remote control (tr. Russian)\nB P R; American book publishing record\nBibliographie ge'n^'rale de literature compared\nBibliothekar\nBooks to come\nBotaniska notiser\nBurgei shurju Appendix B (cont.)\nBurma Law Institute. Journal\nBusiness history\nCahiers du monde russe et sovie'tique\nCanadian communications\nCanadian literature\nCanadian mineralogist\nCancer current literature index\nCaribbean quarterly\nCarleton miscellany\nCatholic historical review\nCeskoslovenska Akademie Ved. Rozpravy. Rada S.V.\nChina quarterly\nChosen gakuho\nChuo-koron\nCommittee of Planning Librarians. Exchange bibliography\nClinical pharmacology and therapeutics\nCommunist China problem research series\nCommunity Planning Association of Canada. [Publications]\nComparative biochemistry and biophysiology\nCopyright law symposium\nCreative drama\nCrustaceana\nCurator\nCurrent anthropology\nCurrent chemical papers\nCurrent contents\nCurrent municipal problems\nDevelopmental biology\nDial\nEarly California travel series\nEditor and publisher International yearbook\nEducation U.S.A.\/Education scope\nElectrical engineering\nEmpire survey review\nEntomological review (tr. Russian)\nEpilepsia\nEthnohistory\nEuropa-Archiv\nFiji Society. Transactions and Proceedings\nFinancial analysts journal\nFlora Malesiana\nFolia psychiatrica et neurologlca japonica\nFolia psychiatrica, neurologlca et neurochirurgica neerlandica\nForeign education digest\nFortschritte der Arzneimittelforochung\nForum\nFrankfurter Hefte; Zeitschrift ftir Kultur und Politik\nFriesia\nGaiko jiho\nGenetlcal research\nGeografiska annaler\nGermanistik\nGut Appendix B (cont.)\nHandbuch der Histochemie\nHandbuch der Pflanzenanatomie\nHarvard economic studies\nHarvard historical monographs\nHarvard historical studies\nHarvard studies in comparative literature\nHarvard-Yenching Institute. Monograph series\nHarvard-Yenching Institute. Studies\nHealth physics instrumentation\nHogaku zasshi\nHongqi\nHoritsu jiho\nHo-shakaigaku\nHoward journal\nI.G.Y. Glaciological report series\nImpulse\nIndian Law Institute. Journal\nIndian national bibliography\nIndian press digests. Monograph series\nIndustrial hygiene news report\nInternational bibliography of the history of religions\nInternational journal of air pollution\nInternational journal of radiation biology\nInternational journal of Slavic linguistics and poetics\nInternational review of neurobiology\nIntervales\nIstoricheskii arkhiv\nIstoriia SSSR\nIt starts in the classroom; Newsletter\nJapan scientific monthly\nJohns Hopkins University. Studies in historical and\npolitical sciences\nJournal of African history\nJournal of chemical and engineering data\nJournal of communication\nJournal of law and economics\nJournal of lipid research\nJournal of mental deficiency research\nJournal of neuropsychiatry\nJournal of nuclear medicine\nJournal of petrology\nJournal of reproduction and fertility\nJournal of speech and hearing research\nJournal of tropical geography\nJus Finlandiae\nKeizae kenkyu\nKyoiku shakai-gaku kenkya\nLibrary Association. Reference and Special Libraries\nSection. Proceedings\nLondon. University. Institute of Classical Studies.\nStudies in Mycenaean inscriptions\nLondon School of Economic and Political Science. Monographs\non social anthropology Appendix B (cont.)\nMcGill University. Institute of International Air Law.\nPublications\nMalacological Society of Australia. [Publications]\nManager\nManchester School of Economic and Social Studies. [Publications]\nMankind\nMassachusetts review\nMedical letter\nMelos\nMicrochemical journal\nMidland Mental Deficiency Society. Journal\nModern and contemporary history (tr. Russian)\nMoscow. Universitet. Vestnik. Seriia Istorii; Serlia\nekonomiki, filosofii\nMountain-Plains library quarterly\nMusikforschung\nNational Federation of Science Abstracting and Indexing.\nAnnual conference proceedings\nNational Microfilm Association. Proceedings [of the] annual\nmeeting\nNew York certified public accountant\nNikon rekishi\nNorth American Lily Society. [Publications]\nNorthern Ireland legal quarterly\nNutritlo et dieta\nOccupational therapy\nOsgoode Hall law journal\nOsteuropa Wirtschaft\nOutposts\nOxford University. Institute of Statistics. Bulletin\nPacific viewpoint\nPalaestra\nPanminerva medica\nPanorama\nPantheon\nPartiinaia zhizn'\nPerception\nPlanning and property reports\nPlant physiology (tr. Russian)\nPlasma physics-accelerators-thermonuclear research\nPopulation bulletin\nPortfolio\nPractical anthropology\nPrism\nProgress in chromatography\nProgress in inorganic chemistry\nProgress In nuclear energy\nPsychological issues\nP sychopharmac ologia\nPublic library abstracts\nRadio engineering and electronics (tr. Russian)\nRassegna medica\nReactor science Appendix B (cont.)\nReactor technology\nDie Reihe\nReklshI chiri\nRevue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine\nRoyal Institute of Chemistry. Lectures\nRoyal Society of Edinburgh. Proceedings. A. & B.\nRussian journal of inorganic chemistry (tr. Russian)\nRussian review of biology (tr. Russian)\nSaeculum\nSaguenayensia\nSalamanca. Universidad. Facultad de Filosofia y Letras.\nCuadernos de la Catedra Miguel de Unamuno\nScandinavian studies in law\nSchool libraries\nScience world\nScottish agriculture\nScottish journal of political economy\nSevern Wildfowl Trust. Annual Report\nShien\nShirin\nShiso no kagaku\nSituations\nShakai jinrui jaku\nSlow-learning child\nSociety of Archivists. Journal\nSociety of Rheology. Transactions\nSoil science (tr. Russian)\nSolid state electronics\nSovetskaia bibliografia\nSovetskaia iustitsia\nSoviet astronomy (tr. Russian)\nSoviet education (tr. Russian)\nSoviet mathematics (tr. Russian)\nSoviet physics. Crystallography (tr. Russian)\nSoviet physics. Solid state (tr. Russian)\nSpecial Libraries Association. Technology Division.\nScientific meetings\nStanford University. Food Research institute. Studies\nSterkiana\nStory\nStudies in art education\nStudies in coordinate indexing\nStudies in linguistics\nSymposia in pure mathematics\nT A A B (The American antiquarian booksellers weekly)\nTetrahedron\nTheory of probability and its applications (tr, Russian)\nTokyo. Maison Franco-Japonaise. Bulletin\nTopical problems of psychotherapy\nToronto stock exchange review\nToshai mondai\nToyo Bunka Kenjiyo Kijo\nTrace Appendix B (cont.)\nTransatlantic review\nTrimestre economico\nUkrains'kyi istorychnyi zhurnal\nUniversity of Malaya law review\nUniversity of Minnesota pamphlets on American writers\nVeliger\nVestnik istorii mirovoi kultury\nVierteljahrshefte fur Zeitgeschichte\nVieteljahrschrift fur Sozial-und Wirtschaftsgeschichte\nVoprosy literatury\nVoprosy istorii\nWaterloo review\nWelsh history review\nWelt der Slaven\nWildlife disease\nWilliam and Mary quarterly\nWisconsin studies in contemporary literature\nWorld neurology\nX (a quarterly review)\nZeitscbrift fur deutsche Wortforschung\nZeitschrift fur Mundartsforschung'-\nZodiac APPENDIX C\nSelected List of Notable Acquisitions\nPart I: Serials\nAcademia de la Historla. Boletin. v. 80-144, 1922-59\nAmerican journal of conchology. v. 1-7, 1865-72\nArbor, v. 9-27, 1948-54\nArchaiologike Hetairia. Praktika. 1920-53\nArchiv fiir Hygiene und Bakteriologie. v. 117-125, 1936-40;\nv. 130, 1943.\nArchiv fur Hydrobiologie. v. 4-25, 1924-59, Supplement\nArchiv fur kllnische und experimentelle Dermatologie.\nv. 191-2, 196-202, 1949-56\nAufbau. v. 1-14, 1945-59\nAustria. Kommission fiir neue Geschichte Osterreichs.\nVeroffentlichungen. v. 19-27, 1929-32\nBibliographie der deutschen Zeitschriftenllteratur.\nV. 1-94, 1896-1944\nBiological Photographic Association. Journal, v. 11-26,\n1942-58\nCambridge Philological Society. Transactions, v. 2-10,\n1881-1959\nBirmingham, Eng. University. Historical journal, v. 1,\n1947, to date\nCasopisza slovenski jezik. v. 1-8, 1918-31\nDer Chirurg. v. 1-26, 1928-55\nClavileno. v. 1-8, 1950-57\nCollier's, v. 39-62, 65-68, 1907-21\nCopenhagen. Universitet. Institut for Human Arvebiologi\nog Eugenik. Opera, v. 2, 3, 5-7, 10, 11, 18-20, 22, 25,\n28\nCosmopolitan, v. 1-78, 1886-1925\nDaily Klondike nugget, v. 1-4, 1900-03 (Microfilm)\nDanske Videnskabernes selskab. 16 volumes.\nDeutsches Arch&ologisches Institut. Athenische Abt.\nMItteilungen. v. 18, 20, 21, 25-31, 33-47, 50-56,\n65, 67\nEdinburgh. Royal Botanical Garden. Notes, v. 14-23,\n1924-58\nEntomological Society of Southern Africa. Transactions.\nv. 1-22, 1939-59\nEpoch, v. 1-10, 1947-59\nFinska Vetenskaps-Societeten. 17 volumes.\nFortschritte der Zoologie. v. 1-8, n.s. v. 1-11, 1907-59\nFreies deutsches Hochstift. Jahrbuch. 1903-40\nGastroenterology, v. 41-71, 1927-46\nGmelins Handbuch. 19 volumes Appendix C (cont.)\nBraithwaite, John. The history of the revolutions in the\nempire of Morocco, upon the death of the late Emperor\nMuley Ishmarl ... London, 1729. (Gift of Dr. H. R.\nMacMillan.)\nBrown, Philip L., ed. Clyde Company papers, 1821-45.\nLondon, 1941. (The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nButler, Samuel. Hudibras; in three parts. London, 1689.\n(The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nCassin, John. Illustrations of the birds of California,\nTexas, Oregon, British, and Russian America.\nPhiladelphia, 1856.\nChina. Organizing Committee, International Exhibition of\nChinese Art, London, 1935-1936. Illustrated catalogue\nof Chinese government exhibits for the International\nexhibition of Chinese art in London. Shanghai, 1936.\n4 v. (The Otto Koerner Memorial Fund.)\nCodices graeci et latlni photographice depict! ... v. 16.\nLugduni Batavorum, 1911\nGolden, Cadwallader. The history of the Five Indian nations\nof Canada ... 2d ed. London, 1750. (Gift of Dr. H. R.\nMacMillan.)\nCollections costumes et modes d'autrefois. Paris, 1955-59.\n7 v. (The Otto Koerner Memorial Fund.)\nColumbia University. Libraries. Avery Architectural\nLibrary. Catalog of the Avery Memorial Architectural\nLibrary of Columbia University. Boston, 1958. 12 v.\n(The Walter C. Koerner Grant for the Humanities and\nSocial Sciences.)\nCraick, William Arnot. Port Hope historical sketches.\nPort Hope, Ont., 1901. (The Men's Canadian Club of\nVane ouver.)\nCuvier, Georges. Le rbgne animal distribue' d'apres son\norganisation, pour servir de base a l'histoire naturelle\ndes animaux, et d'introduction a 1'anatomie compare'e.\nParis, 1836-49. 11 v. in 20. (The Fisheries Library\nFund.)\nDampier, William. A collection of voyages. London, 1729.\n4 v.\nDay, Francis. The fishes of Great Britain and Ireland.\nLondon, 1880-84. 2 v. (The Fisheries Library Fund.)\nDickens, Charles. The Nonesuch Dickens. London, 1937-38.\n24 v. and plate\nDonovan, Edward. The natural history of British fishes ...\nLondon, l804. 2 v. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nDubech, Lucien. Histoire gene'rale illustre'e du theatre, par\nLucien Dubech, avec la collaboration de Jacques de\nMontbrial et de Madeleine Horn-Monval. Paris, 1931-35.\n5 v. (The Otto Koerner Memorial Fund.) Appendix C (cont.)\nHandbuch der Haut-und Geschlechtskrankheiten. v. 1-23,\n1927-37\nHarvard University. Museum of Comparative Zoology. Memoirs.\nv. 1-5$, 1864-1938\nHermes, v. 46, 48, 49, 58, 59, 69, 75-77\nDie Horen. (Schiller) v. 1-12, 1795-97\nHudson's Bay Record Society. Publications. Sets 2, 3,\nv. 14-17, 18-21\nHyperion, v. 1-3, n.s. v. 1-3, 1908-10\nInsectes sociaux. v. 1, 1954, to date\nInstitute of Mediaeval Music. 8 volumes\nInternational Congress of Biochemistry. 4th. 1958. v. 1-15\nInternational quarterly, v. 1-12, 1900-06\nIrish historical studies, v. 1, 1938, to date\nJahresbericht Chirurgie. v. 11-43, 1905-39\nJahresbericht Ophthalmologic, v. I-65\nJahresberichte uber die Fortschritte der Anatomie.\nv. 3-20, 1884-92\nJugoslavenska Akademija Znanosti i Umjetnosti. Rad.\nv. 125-315, 1896-1915\nKlinische MonatsblMtter fur Augenheilkunde. v. 64-123,\n127, 1921-55\nKlondike nugget, v. 1-6, 1898-1901 (Microfilm)\nKwatalnik historyczny. v. 1-53, 1887-1945\nKyklos. v. 1, 1941, to date\nLangenbecks Archiv fur klinische Chirurgie. v. 129-379,\n1922-57\nManual of conchology. ser. 1, v. 14-17; ser. 2, v. 8,\n18, 1892-1903\nMonatshefte fur Chemie. v. 76, 1945, to date\nMontreal gazette. 1785-I867 (Microfilm)\nMonumenta Germaniae historica. 6 volumes\nMonumenta spectantia historiam slavorum meridionalium.\nv. 1-46, 1868-1920\nMunsey's magazine, v. 12-68, 1894-1920\nMusica disciplina. v. [1], 1946, to date\nMuttersprache. v. I-58, 1886-1943\nNordisk matematisk tidsskrift. v. 1, 1953, to date\nNumismatic chronicle, n.s. v. J; ser. 5, v. 10, 1877-1930\nPetermanns geographische Mitteilungen. Erganzungshefte.\nv. 119, 154, 166, 168, 179, 186-8, 198, 200, 202,\n209, 210, 247\nPrzeglad zachodni. v, 3, 1946, to date\nReview of reviews, v. 7-44, 1893-1911\nRevue de philologie, de litte'rature et d'histoire anciennes.\nser. 3, v. 3-32, 1929-58\nRio de Janeiro. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Memorias.\nv. 22, 24-26, 31, 33, 35, 41-44, 49, 52-54\nRomanische Forschungen. v. 10, 12, 17-27, 35-52, 1895-1938\nRoyal Australian Historical Society. Journal, v. 28,\n1941, to date Appendix C (cont.)\nRusskoe Istoricheskoe Obshchestvo, Leningrad. Sbornik.\nv. 4, 131, 1870-1910\nScriptorium, v. 1, 1946, to date\nSocie'te des Anciens Textes Francais. 1876, 1879, 1883, 1884,\n1902, 1905, 1906, 1911, 1914, 1919, 1936, 1937\nSocie'te Historique du Saguenay. Bulletin, v. 1-33, 1946-1958\nSocie'te' Mycologique de France. Bulletin, v. 50-70, 1939-54\nSouth African geographical journal, v. 2, 1919, to date\nSouthern economic journal, v. 5, 1938, to date\nSouthwest review, v. 22, 1936, to date\nStudia historica. v. 1-18\nSubject index to children's magazines, v. 1, 1948, to date\nSvenska botanisk tidskrift. v. 1, 1907, to date\nTables of physico-chemical selected constants, n.s. v. 1-11\nToronto globe. 1870-95 (Microfilm)\nUngarische Jahrbucher. v. 1-23, 1921-43\nVegetatio. v. 1, 1948, to date\nVictoria history of the counties of England. 14 volumes\nWalkabout, v. 18, 1949, to date\nWestern speech, v. 9, 10, 16-23, 1945-59\nWorld's work. v. 1-39, 1902-23\nZeitschrift ftlr Botanik. v. 3-6, 8, 9, 13-33, 35-46,\n1911-58\nZeitschrift fur deutsche Wortforschung. v. 1-15, 1900-14\nZeitschrift fiir die gesamte experimentelle Medizin.\nv. 23-49, 1921-28\nZentralblatt fur die gesamte Neurologie. v. 80-102,\n1934-42\nZentralblatt fiir Haut-und Geschlechtskrankheiten. v. 38-86,\n1928-53\nZoologische Jahrbilicher. Abt. Systematik. v. 77, 1944, to\ndate; Abt. Physiologie. v. 61, 1945, to date\nPart II: Books\nBattarra, Giovanni Antonio. Fungorum agri ariminensis\nhistoria. Faenza, 1755\nBengough, John Wilson. The prohibition Aesop, a book of\nfables. Hamilton, Ont., n.d. (The Men's Canadian\nClub of Vancouver.)\nBianchi Bandinelli, Ranuccio. Hellenistic-Byzantine miniatures\nof the Iliad (Ilias Ambrosiana). Olten, 1955- (The\nWalter C. Koerner Grant for the Humanities and Social\nSciences\nBismarck, Otto, Fiirst von. Die gesammelten Werke. Berlin,\n1924-35. 15 v. in 19 Appendix C (cont.)\nDugdale, Sir William. Monasticon anglicanum: a history\nof the abbies and other monasteries, hospitals,\nfrieries, and cathedral and collegiate churches,\nwith their dependencies, in England and Wales:...\nNew ed. London, 1846. 6 v. in 8\nDumont D'Urville, Jules Sebastien Ce'sar. Voyage de\nde'couvertes de 1'Astrolabe, exe'cute' par ordre du\nRoi, pendant les annees 1826-1827-1828-1829 ...\nParis, 1830-1835. v. 11-20 and atlases 2-4.\n(The Fisheries Library Fund.)\nHandbuch der Kunstwissenschaft. Berlin, 1914-39. 38 v.\n(The Otto Koerner Memorial Fund.)\nHardwicke, Thomas. Illustrations of Indian zoology,\nchiefly selected from the collection of Major-General\nHardwicke by John Edward Gray. London, 1830-32.\n(The Fisheries Library Fund.)\nHayashi, Tadamasa. Collection Hayashi. Paris, 1902-03.\n3 v. (Gift of Mr. Lester McLennan.)\nHewson, William. Experimental inquiries; being a second\nedition of An inquiry into the properties of the\nblood ... London, 1772-1777. (The Fisheries Library\nFund.)\nHobson, Robert Lockhart. The later ceramic wares of China\n... London, 1925. (The Otto Koerner Memorial Fund.)\nHomerus. Mss. (Cod. Ambrosianus F. 205 inf.) Ilias\nAmbrosiana; Cod. F. 205 P. inf., Blbliothecae\nAmbrosianae Mediolanensis. (Facsimile reproduction\nof MS in the Ambrosian Library) Berne, 1953. (Fontes\nAmbrosiani, 28.) (The Walter C Koerner Grant for the\nHumanities and Social Sciences.)\nJungmann, Josef Jakub. Slownjk cesko-nemecky Josefa\nJungmanna. Prague, 1835-39. 5 v. (The Walter C.\nKoerner Slavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William\nJ. Rose.)\nKe'ler, Stefan von. Entomologisches Wttrterbuch, mit\nbesonderer Beriicksichtigung der morphologischen\nTerminologle. 2d ed. Berlin, 1956. (The Stanley\nMurray Sager Memorial Fund in Entomology.)\nLaignel-Lavastlne, Maxime, ed. HIstoire ge'ne'rale de la\nme*decine, de la pharmacie, de l'art dent aire et de\nl'art ve'te'rinaire. Paris, 1936-49. v. 1-2 (to\ncomplete set)\nLejeune, John Mary, polyglott manual. Kamloops, B. C,\n1896-97. 11 v. in 1. (The Men's Canadian Club of\nVancouver.)\nMcCoy, Sir Frederick. Natural history of Victoria.\nProdromus of the zoology of Victoria ... Melbourne,\n1885-90. 2 v. (The Fisheries Library Fund.) Appendix C (cont.)\nManwood, John. A Treatise of the Lawes of the Forest ...\nLondon, 1615. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMavor, William Fordyce. A general collection of voyages\nand travels, including the most interesting records\nof navigators and travellers from the discovery of\nAmerica, by Columbus, in 1492, to the travels of\nLord Valentia. London, 1813. 28 v. (Gift of\nDr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMichaux, Francois AndrC The North American sylva; or, A\ndescription of the forest trees of the United States,\nCanada, and Nova Scotia ... Translated from the French\n... Philadelphia, 1857. 5 v.\nMudie, James, The felonry of New South Wales: being a\nfaithful picture of the real romance of life in Botany\nBay. London, 1837. (The Leon and Thea Koerner\nFoundation.)\nNagy Thabor, Georgius Rattkay, baro' de. Memoria regum et\nbanorum, regnorum Dalmatiae, Croatiae, & Sclavoniae,\nInchoata ab origine sua, & usq. ad praefentem annum\nMDCLII deducta. Vienna, 1652. (The Walter C Koerner\nSlavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nPaglialni, Attilio. Catalog\u00a9 generale della libreria\nitaliana dall'anno 1847 ... Milan, 1901-1935. 16 v.\n(The Walter C. Koerner Grant for the Humanities and\nSocial Sciences.)\nPhillip, Arthur. The voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany\nBay; with an account of the establishment of the\ncolonies of Port Jackson & Norfolk Island; compiled\nfrom authentic papers ... London, 1789. (The Leon\nand Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nPhillips, John Charles. A natural history of the ducks.\nWith plates-in color and in black and white from\ndrawings by Frank W. Benson, Allan Brooks and\nLouis Agassiz Fuertes. Boston, 1922-26. 4 v.\nPhillipps-Wolley, Clive. Gold, gold, in Cariboo.' A\nstory of adventure in British Columbia. London, 1902?\n(Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Ingledow.)\nPorter, Arthur Kingsley. Romanesque sculpture of the\npilgrimage roads. Boston, 1923. 10 v. (The Otto\nKoerner Memorial Fund.)\nPriestley, Joseph. The history and present state of\ndiscoveries relating to vision, light and colours.\nLondon, 1772.\nPrynne, William. The soveraigne power of parliaments\nand kingdomes. London, 1643.\nRussell, Patrick. Descriptions and figures of two hundred\nfishes; collected at Vizagapatam on the coast of\nCoromandel ... London, 1803. 2 v. in 1. (The\nFisheries Library Fund.) Appendix C (cont.)\nSchaltenbrand, George. Einfuhrung in die stereotaktischen\nOperationen mit einem Atlas des menschlichen Gehirns.\nIntroduction to stereotaxis with an atlas of the\nhuman brain. Stuttgart, 1959. 3 v.\nSchreiber, Wilhelm Ludwig. Handbuch der Holz- und\nMetallschnltte des xv. Jahrhunderts ... Leipzig,\n1926-30. 8 v.\nSeilhamer, George Overcash. History of the American\ntheatre. Philadelphia, 1888-91. 3 v.\nA Select collection of modern poems, by the most eminent\nhands, viz. Milton rand others] Glasgow, 1744.\n(The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nSharpe, Richard Bowdler. A monograph of the Alcedinidae:\nor, family of kingfishers. London, 1868-71. (The\nUniversity of British Columbia Alumni Association\nDevelopment Fund.)\nShea, John Dawson Gilmary, ed. Early voyages up and down\nthe Mississippi, by Cavelier, St. Cosme, Le Sueur,\nGravier, and Guignas. Albany, l86l. (Gift of Dr.\nand Mrs. Thomas Ingledow.)\nSitwell, Sacheverell. Fine bird books, 1700-1900.\nLondon, 1953. (The Walter C Koerner Grant for the\nHumanities and Social Sciences.)\nSmith, Paul Jordan, comp. Burton's Anatomy of melancholy\nand Burtoniana; a checklist of a part of the collection\nin memory of Sarah Bixby Smith. Oxford, 1959- (Gift\nof Mr. Lester W. McLennan.) ,\nStuart, Henry Coleridge. The Church of\/England in Canada,\n1759-1793. From the conquest to the establishment of\nthe see of Quebec. Montreal, 1893. (Gift of Dr. and\nMrs. Thomas Ingledow.)\nWalpole, Horace. A catalogue of the royal and noble authors\nof England, with lists of their works ... 2d ed.\nLondon, 1759. 2 v. (The Leon and Thea Koerner\nFoundation.)\nWestwood, Thomas. Bibliotheca piscatoria; a catalogue of\nbooks on angling, the fisheries and fish-culture,\nwith bibliographical notes and an appendix of\ncitations touching on angling and fishing from old\nEnglish authors. London, 1883. (The Harry Hawthorn\nFoundation for the Inculcation & Propagation of the\nPrinciples & Ethics of Fly-Fishing.) APPENDIX D\nLoan Desk\nTotals\nSept.\nCIRCULATION STATISTICS\u2014September 1959-August I960\nOct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May\nJun. Jul. Aug. Totals\n7,565 24,142 22,279 15,059 24,984 25,513 28,015 14,755 6,138 6,617 19,024 7,742 201,833\nReserve Book\nRoom\n3,833\n18,828\n18,791\n11,052\n14,15$\n16,146\n19,031\n10,744\n103\n1,350\n9,184\n3,089\n126,309\nReference\nRoom\n807\n3,643\n3,833\n1,242\n3,105\n4,093\n4,345\n1,565\n415\n391\n1,833\n926\n26,198\nFine Arts\nRoom\n780\n1,428\n1,193\n702\n1,028\n2,597\n2,813\n1,283\n222\n397\n2,184\n944\n15,571\nBiomedical\nLibrary\n1,953\n2,565\n2,538\n1,752\n2,260\n2,44o\n2,444\n2,094\n1,603\n1,567\n1,382\n1,565\n24,169\n14,938 50,606 48,634 29,807 45,535 50,795 56,648 30,441 8,481 10,322 33,607 14,266 394,080\nExtension Library 22,607\nInterlibrary Loan Statistics\n1959\/60 1958\/59 1957\/58\nVolumes borrowed 843 571 648\nVolumes loaned 2,504 2,070 1,532 APPENDIX E\nLIBRARY STAFF AS OF AUGUST 31, I960\nADMINISTRATION\nHarlow, Neal\nRothstein, Samuel\nMaclean, Hilda\nTraff, Vera\nREFERENCE DIVISION\nSmith, Anne M.\nDwyer, Melva\nO'Rourke, Joan\nBrearley, Mrs. Anne\nAnderson, Susan\nBeattie, Margaret\nJohnson, Mrs. Marlon\nVogel, Betty\nWilson, Maureen\nCampbell, Edith\nMagnuson, Mrs. Norma\nFukuyama, Mrs. Margaret\nBlusson, Sandra\nBoyd, Barbara\nDeJong, Mrs. Freya\nForbes, Theresa\nKing, Mrs. Lorna\nRoss, Elizabeth-Anne\nCATALOGUE DIVISION\nTurner, George G.\nDobbin, Geraldine\nLittle, Mrs. Margaret\nSelby, Mrs. Joan\nForsyth, Marianne\nSelth, Geoffrey\nMacaree, Mrs. Mary\nPike, Mary\nPlows, Sharon\nThompson, Mrs, Marilyn\nRoss, Mrs. Wilma\nBaker, Mrs. Gloria\nCunningham, Audrey\nGoossen, Lorna\nLokhorst, Mrs. Judith\nMondin, Mrs. Elena\nRose, Mrs. Bessie\nUniversity Librarian\nAssociate University\nLibrarian\nSecretary\nClerk II\nAssistant University\nLibrarian and Head\nof Reference\nLibrarian III\nLibrarian III\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nStenographer II\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nHead\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nClerk II\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nAug. 1951-\nSept. 1947-\nAug. 1959-\nDec. 1956-\nSept. 193^-\nJuly 1953-\nJuly 1948-\nAug. 1956-\nAug. 1960-\nAug. 1960-\nJune 1958-\nSept. 1956-\nOct. 1959-\nMay 1958-\nSept. 1959-\nAug. 1959-\nAug. 1960-\nAug. 1960-\nAug. 1960-\nAug. 1960-\nSapt. 1959-\nAug. 1960-\nJune 1956-\nJune 1956-\nSept. 1956-\nSept. 1959-\nJuly 1958-\nJune 1959-\nJuly 1959-\nMar. 1958-\nMay 1960-\nMar. I96O-\nJan. 1959-\nDec. 1956-\nJune 1960-\nJune 1960-\nNov. 1959-\nAug. 1960-\nJan. 1957- CIRCULATION DIVISION\nApendix E (cont.)\nLanning, Mabel M.\nBell, Inglis\nHempell, Mrs. Lettice\nButterfield, Rita\nRussell, Eleanor\nWilliams, Leonard\nRolfe, Dorothy\nBlair, Diane\nDeRuyter, Mrs. Anita\nKuipers, Mrs. Marian\nRamsey, Lois\nWheatley, Carolyn\nCOLLEGE LIBRARY\nMinard, Sylvia\nDeLotbiniere-Harwood,\nM. Anne\nACQUISITIONS DIVISION\nMercer, Eleanor B.\nScott, Prlscilla\nBowker, Mrs. Mary\nBreuer, Otto\nfHiggs, David C.\n,Bangert, Adolf\nBrolund, Mrs. Mary-Lynne\nEsselmann, Mrs. Alexandra\nForsythe, Mrs. Yvonne\n. Morrison, Marion\n. Rempel, Mrs. Hilda\nSpence, Joyce\nSERIALS DIVISION\nLanning, Roland J.\nStuart-Stubbs, Basil\nJohnson, Stephen\nBoak, Anne\nChikamori, Mrs. Eiko\nEdmonds, Mrs. Barbara\nGerwing, Howard\nLougheed, Joan\nGutterldge, Mrs. May\nBINDERY\nFryer, Percy\nFryer, Percy Jr.\nBrewer, Mrs. Elizabeth\nLynch, Mrs. Isobel\nHarrison, Roger\nHead\nSept. 1926-\nLibrarian III\nJune 1952-\nSenior Library\nAssistant\nMay 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nSept. 1959-\nLibrary Assistant\nMay 1959-\nStackroom Attendant\nMar. 1958-\nClerk II\nSept. 1944-\nClerk I\nJune 1960-\nClerk I\nMar. 1960-\nClerk I\nOct. 1956-\nClerk I\nApr. 1956-\nClerk I\nJuly 1959-\nLibrarian I\nJuly 196O-\nLibrary Assistant\nSept. 1959-\nHead\nOct. 1938-\nLibrarian II\nJuly 1953-\nLibrary Assistant\nJune 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nJuly 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nJuly 1960-\nClerk II\nFeb. 1959-\nClerk 11\nJuly 1960-\nClerk II\nMay 1958-\nClerk I\nJuly 1948-\nClerk I\nJune 1960-\nClerk I\nSept. 1959\nClerk I\nSept. 1952'\nHead\nSept. 1926\nLibrarian III\nMay 1956-\nLibrarian I\nJuly 1957-\nLibrary Assistant\nNov. 1959-\nLibrary Assistant\nJuly 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nMar. 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nJune 1960-\nLibrary Assistant\nOct. 1954-\nClerk II\nJuly 1959-\nForeman\nDec. 1951-\nJourneyman\nApr. 1952-\nJourneywoman\nFeb. 1952-\nJourneywoman\nOct. 1953-\nApprentice\nMar. 1957- Appendix E (cont.)\nBIOMEDICAL LIBRARY\nFraser, M. Doreen E.\nAllan, Helen\nLeith, Anna\nBarner, Lynn\nCummings, John\nMitchell, Deidre\nDournovo, Tanya\nHead\nLibrarian I\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nStenographer II\nJuly\nSept.\nSept.\nJune\nJune\nSept.\nJuly\n1947-\n1958-\n1959-\n1959-\n1960-\n1959-\n1959-\nEXTENSION LIBRARY\nStewart, Edith Extension Librarian\nDoby-Salamon, Mrs. Csilla Stenographer II\nJuly 1948-\nJuly 1959-\nCURRICULUM LABORATORY\nWoodward, Mrs. Emily\nLibrarian I\nJuly 1957- Appendix E (cont.)\nRESIGNATIONS DURING PERIOD 1 SEPT. 1959 - 31 AUG. I960\nREFERENCE DIVISION\nDore, Mrs. Nancy\nThomas, Diana\nDerewenko, Helen\nLibbis, Greta\nCATALOGUE DIVISION\nTurner, Mrs. Marjorie\nChamberlain, Josephine\nGould, Mrs. Florence\nWeinberg, Mrs. Florence\nFrederick, Mrs. Rita\nCreemer, Gloria\nDeBionne, Jacqueline\nEvans, Mrs. Janet\nPump, Judy\nSexsmith, Patricia\nCIRCULATION DIVISION\nCartwright, Margery\nEpp, Ingrid\nFox, Mrs. Marguerite\nHardie, Joan\nLane, Mrs. Josephine\nMcLean, Pamela\nBrooke, Lynda\nChoudhury, Mrs. Margaret\nGrove, Mrs. Mary\nHall, Mrs. Marie\nMurray, Anne\nWhitten, Mrs. Anne\nACQUISITIONS DIVISION\nPeyman, Doris J.\nSorenson, Mrs. Louise\nStein, Carole\nSERIALS DIVISION\nBrooks, Mrs. Kathleen\nKovacs, Audrey\nLeslie, Peter\nPiercy, Margaret\nLibraria\n.n I\nLibrary\nAssist.\nClerk I\nClerk I\nHead\nLibrarian I\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nClerk I]\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary\nAssist.\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary Assist,\nLibrary Assist.\nSept. 1956-Aug. I960\nJune 1959-Aug. I960\nMay 1959-Sept. 1959\nAug. 1960-Aug. I960\nAug. 1951-June i960\nAug. 1957-Dec. 1959\nSept. 1959-Feb. I960\nJune 1956-Aug. I960\nMay 1958-July I960\nJuly 1958-Oct. 1959\nAug. 1959-Sept. 1959\nOct. 1959-Aug. I960\nJuly 1959-Apr. I960\nSept. 1959-May I960\nJan. 1960-May i960\nMar. I960-Apr. i960\nOct. 1959-Feb. I960\nSept. 1959-Apr. I960\nSept. 1958-Sept. 1959\nMay 1960-May I960\nSept. 1959-Aug. I960\nApr. 1956-Feb. i960\nJune 1960-June I960\nFeb. 1960-May i960\nJuly 1960-Aug. I960\nJuly 1959-July I960\nOct. 1959-June I960\nJuly 1959-Apr. i960\nJune 1959-Dec. 1959\nOct. 1959-July I960\nSept. 1958-May I960\nAug. 1959-Mar. I960\nJune 1957-Nov. 1959 Appendix E (cont.)\nBIOMEDICAL LIBRARY\nLaddy, Maria\nDavidson, Wendy\nRead, Mrs. Christina\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary Assist.\nAug. 1958-Sept. 1959\nOct. 1959-June i960\nAug. 1959-May i960\nCURRICULUM LABORATORY\nHodge, Mrs. Patricia\nBeattie, Janet\nFord, Lesly\nGoldenberg, Mrs. Heather\nSenior Library\nAssistant\nLibrary Assist.-\nLibrary Assist.\nLibrary Assist.\nJune 1959-Mar. i960\nNov. 1959-July I960\nMar. 1960-Aug. i960\nFeb. 1959-Nov. 1959 APPENDIX F\nProfessional Activities\n 5T\t\nThe University Library Staff\nALLAN, Helen. Member: C.L.A,; A.L.A.\nBELL, Inglis F. Member: B.CL.A.; C.L.A. (Membership Committee);\nA.L.A. (Library Periodicals Round Table); Bibliographical\nSociety of Canada (Nominating Committee); Editorial Committee,\nU.B.C Alumni Chronicle. Attended: B.CL.A. Conference.\nLectures and Papers: Ten lectures on bibliography to\nstudents In English 200. Publications: \"Canadian\nLiterature, 1959: A Checklist'1, Canadian Literature\nno. 3:91-108, Winter, I960; \"Mechanics of Editorial\nWork\", LPRT Newsletter 6(no.2), 4-6; \"Some Themes of\nChange: The Naegele Report\", British Columbia Library\nQuarterly 23:17-19, October, 1959; \"Mountains with\nLegends\", Canadian Literature no. 4:74-76, Spring, I960.\nCanadian Editor, Annual Bibliography of English Language\nand Literature; Contributing Editor, \"Current Literature\",\nin Twentieth Century Literature; Business Manager,\nCanadian Literature.\nBREARLEY, Mrs. Anne. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A. (Recruitment\nLiaison Committee); (British) Library Association.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference. Lectures and papers:\nEight lectures to students in English 100; three\nlectures to students in Summer Session.\nDOBBIN, Geraldine F. Member: B.CL.A. (Secretary; Secretary,\nPublications Committee); C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference.\nDORE, Mrs. Nancy. Member: B.C.L.A. (Chairman, public Relations\nand Recruitment Committee). Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference.\nLectures and Papers: Six lectures to students in English\n100; three lectures to students in Summer Session.\nDWYER, Melva. Member: B.C.L.A. (Social Committee); C.L.A.;\nP.N.L.A.; A.L.A.; Canadian Music Library Association\n(Council); Committee of planning Librarians (Secretary);\nInternational Music Library Association. Attended:\nC.L.A.-A.L.A. Joint Conference. Lectures and Papers:\nOne lecture to students in Architecture; one lecture to\ngraduate students in Planning; one lecture to Colombo\nPlan students in Planning; CM.L.A.-M.L.A. Joint Meeting\n(\"Report of the Committee Working on the Bio-bibliographical Finding List of Canadian Musicians\"). Appendix F (cont.)\nFORSYTH, Marianne. Member: B.C.L.A. (Bursary-Loan Committee);\nC.L.A.; A.L.A. Editorial Assistant, British Columbia\nLibrary Quarterly.\nFRASER, M. Doreen E. Member: B.CL.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.;\nSpecial Libraries Association; Medical Library Association (Treasurer; Finance Committee, Board of Directors);\nB. C. Medical Library Service (Advisory Panel, Executive\nCommittee; Conference Committee); Greater Vancouver\nHealth League (Chairman, Interprofessional Education\nDivision; Executive Committee* Chairman* Library\nCommittee). Attended: Medical Library Association\nMidwinter Meeting. \"Lectures and Papers: Seven lectures\nto students in Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Education;\nGreater Vancouver Health League Library Institute;\nMedical Library Association Pacific Northwest Group,\nPublications: \"Canadian Medical School Libraries and\ntheir Collections: a Brief Review\", Bulletin of the\nMedical Library Association 48:l49-6l, April, 19b0.\nAssistant Librarian, Anglican Theological College;\nLibrary Consultant, British Columbia Medical Library\nService.\nHARLOW, Neal. Member: B.CL.A. (Representative on A.L.A.\nCouncil); C.L.A. (President; Committee on Committees;\nA.L.A.-C.L.A. Liaison Committee; Microfilm Committee;\nFinance Committee; Canadian Library Research Foundation); A.L.A. (Executive Board; Council; Committee\non Accreditation; Headquarters Visiting Committee;\nInternational Relations Committee; Director, A.C.R.L.);\nP.N.L.A.; Bibliographic Society of Canada; National\nResearch Council Associate Committee on Scientific\nInformation; Canadian Universities Foundation Committee\non Research Libraries; B. C. Department of Education\nBoard of Certification for professional Librarians;\nB. C. Medical Library Service (Board; Advisory Panel);\nVancouver Community Arts Council (Board); Friends of\nthe University Library (Secretary); many University\ncommittees. Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A.-A.L.A.\nJoint Conference; A.L.A. Midwinter Conference; annual\nconferences of Canadian provincial library associations;\nPublications: \"Every Idle Silence\", Canadian Library,\n17:b3-bfa, June I960; \"Are We a Part of the Problem?\"\nOntario Library Review, 44:l6l-l63; Review of Coastal\nExploration of Washington, by Robert B. Whitebrook\n(Palo Alto, 1959), pTnTlTA. Quarterly, 24:153-154.\nSecretary, Projects Committee, Leon and Thea Koerner\nFoundation. Appendix F (cont.)\nJOHNSON, Mrs. Marion. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A. (Canadian\nIndex Promotion Committee); Beta Phi Mu (Library Science\nHonorary Fraternity). Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference.\nLectures and papers: Seven lectures to students in\nEnglish 100.\nJOHNSON, Stephen. Member: C.L.A.\nLANNING, Mabel M. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\nLANNING, Roland J. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\nLEITH, Anna Member: B.C.L.A. (Secretary, Bursary-Loan Committee; Resolutions Committee); P.N.L.A. Attended:\nB.C.L.A. Conference. Lectures and Papers: B. C. Branch\nof Canadian Society of Laboratory Technologists (panel\ndiscussion).\nLITTLE, Mrs. Margaret L. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.;\nA.L.A.\nMERCER, Eleanor B. Member: B.CL.A. (Chairman, Committee on\nthe Dictionary of Canadian Biography; programme Committee);\nC.L.A. (Resolutions Committee); P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.; Bibliographical Society of Canada. Attended: B.C.L.A.\nConference; C.L.A.-A.L.A. Joint Conference.\nO'ROURKE, Joan. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference; P.N.L.A. Conference and\nWorkshop. Lectures and Papers: Eleven lectures to\nstudents In English 100; two lectures to students in\nPublic Administration; three lectures to students in\nSummer Session; two lectures to students in Education 58l.\nROTHSTEIN, Samuel. Member: B.C.L.A. (President; Programme\nCommittee); C.L.A. (Council; Councillor, Cataloging\nSection; University Library Statistics Committee); P.N.L.A.;\nA.L.A. (Joint Committee on Recruiting); Bibliographical\nSociety of Canada (Council); University Archives Committee (Chairman); University Committee on the University\nBookstore (Chairman); University Committee on Audio-\nVisual Services; University Committee on the Computing\nCentre; University Committee on Linguistics; College of\nEducation Curriculum Laboratory Committee. Attended:\nB.C.L.A. Conference (General Chairman; panel Discussion);\nC.L.A.-A.L.A. Joint Conference (Panel Discussion on\nMicroforms; Panel Discussion on Reference Work; address\non \"Reference Service: The New Dimension in Librarianship\");\nP.N.L.A. Conference. Lectures arid Papers: Victoria Public\nLibrary (\"Libraries and Learning1'); English Honours\nSeminar (\"Canadian Scholarly Libraries\"); B.C.L.A. Fall Appendix F (cent.)\nMeeting (\"Students and Libraries\"); Vancouver Public\nLibrary (\"The Proposed Library School at U.B.C\");\nCourse for Regional Library Personnel (\"The Library\nas an Information Centre\"); television and radio\ninterviews. Publications: \"Education for Librarian-\nship in the Pacific Northwest; an interpretation of the\nCarnovsky Report\", British Columbia Library Quarterly\n23:14-16, October, 1959; review of Canada\"! edited by\nGladys Engel Lang, P.N.L.A. Quarterly 24:103-4, October,\n1959; review of The Side Door, by Dora Hood, Papers of\nthe Bibliographical Society of America 53:279-280,\nOctober, 1959; \"Libraries and Librarianship in British\nColumbia, 1959\/60\", British Columbia Library Quarterly\n23:13-16, April, I960; review of The Library as a\nCommunity Information Center . .. edited by Rose' Phelps\nand Janet Phillips, The Library Quarterly 30:l6l-62,\nApril, I960.\nSCOTT, Priscilla R. Member: B.CL.A. (Social Committee);\nC.L.A. (Membership Committee). Book Review Editor,\nBritish Columbia Library Quarterly.\nSELBY, Mrs. Joan. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; A.L.A.\nPublications: Book reviews in Canadian Literature,\nCanadian Forum, and the BritisE Columbia Library\nQuarterly.\nSELTH, Geoffrey. Member: B.CL.A. (Publications Committee)).\nP.N.L.A.; (British) Library Association; Library\nAssociation of Australia. Lectures and papers: Five\nlectures to students in English .100. Publications:\n\"Our Cooperation Record: Dismal; B.C.L.A. Fall Meeting\",\nB.C.L.A. Reporter 2:3-6, December, 1959; \"Directory of\nCanadian Biography\", B.C.L.A. Reporter 3:8-9, June,\nI960; \"Canadian Libraries and Librarianship: Reply\",\nAustralian Library Journal 9:41-42, January, i960.\nAssistant Editor, B.C.L.A7 Reporter.\nSMITH, Anne M. Member: B.C.L.A. (Representative, Canadian\nNational Commission for UNESCO Conference); C.L.A.\n(Chairman, Committee on Liaison with Asian Libraries;\nCertification Committee); P.N.L.A.; A.L.A. (Subscription\nBooks Bulletin Committee); U.B.C. Institute of Economic\nand Social Research (Council); U.B.C. School of Social\nWork (Council); President's Committee on Education Week.\nAttended.: B.C.L.A. Conference; P.N.L.A. Conference and\nWorkshop; A.L.A. Midwinter Conference; Canadian National\nCommission for UNESCO Conference (Chairman, Library\nSection meeting). Lectures and Papers: One lecture to\nstudents in Agriculture 100; four lectures to students Appendix F (cont.)\nin Chemical Engineering; one lecture to students in\nCommerce; two lectures to students in Education; two\nlectures to students in Electrical Engineering; one\nlecture to students in Nursing; one lecture to students\nin Sociology (Union College); ten lectures to students\nin English 100; two lectures to students in Mechanical\nEngineering, publications: Reference Guide to Mechanical\nEngineering Literature (\"I\"959; mimeographed); Reference\nGuide to Electrical Engineering Literature (Rev. ed.,\nI960; mimeographed); \"Encyclopedia Canadiana\", Booklist\nand Subscription Books Bulletin 56:393-404, March 1, i960.\nEditor and compiler, publications of the Faculty and Staff,\nUniversity of British\"~15orumbia, 1958-59 (Vancouver, I960).\nSTEWART, Edith. Member: B.C.L.A. Publications: Bi-monthly\nannotated lists of current general reading (multilithed).\nSTUART-STUBBS, Basil. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A. (University\nLibrary Statistics Committee); P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.,\nBibliographical Society of Canada. Attended: Pacific\nNorthwest History Conference. Publications: \"Brief\nAdventure; a Review\", British Columbia Library Quarterly\n24:37-39, July, i960. Circulation Manager, Canadian'\nLiterature.\nTURNER, George Godfrey. Member; B.C.L.A. (Chairman, Publications Committee); C.L.A. (Canadian Copyright Committee;\nLibrarians Committee); P.N.L.A. (Publications Committee);\nA.L.A.; American Association of Law Libraries; Beta Phi\nMu (Library Science Honorary Fraternity). Attended:\nB.C.L.A. Conference (parliamentarian). Lectures and\nPapers: Ten lectures to students in English 200.\nPublications: \"The Evolution of an Idea\", Feliciter\n5:20-21, February-March, i960. Editor, British\nColumbia Library Quarterly.\nTURNER, Mrs. Marjorie. Member: B.CL.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.;\nA.L.A. Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference.\nV0GEL, Betty. Member: B.C.L.A. Publications: Review of\nThe Warm Land, by Elizabeth Norcross, British Columbia\nLibrary Quarterly 23:37-38, April, i960. Cataloguer,\nAnglican Theological College Library.\nWILSON, Maureen. Member: B.CL.A.; (British) Library\nAssociation; Ontario Library Association. Attended:\nB.C.L.A. Conference. Lectures and Papers: One lecture\nto students in English 100 APPENDIX G\nSenate Library Committee\n 1959\/1960\t\nArts and Science\nApplied Science\nAgriculture\nCommerce\nEducation\nForestry\nGraduate Studies\nLaw\nMedicine\nPharmacy\nAppointed by President\nEx-officio\n\\Dr. Peter Remnant\n|Dr. Marion B. Smith\n*Dr. John Norris\nMr. S. L. Lipson\nDr. John J. R. Campbell\nMr. W. 0. Perkett\nDr. J. Katz\nDr. R. W. Wellwood\nDr. I. McT. Cowan, Chairman\nMr. E. C. E. Todd\nDr. W. C\u00bb Gibson\nMr. Finlay A. Morrison\nDr. M. F. McGregor\nDr. G. W. Marquis\n(Dr. F. A. Kaempffer\nChancellor A. E. Grauer\nPresident N. A. M. MacKenzie\nDean G. C Andrew\nMr. Neal Harlow (Vice-chairman)\nMr. J. E. A. Parnall\nTerms of Reference:\nThe Library Committee shall advise and assist the\nLibrarian in:\nFormulating a library policy in relation to the\ndevelopment of resources for instruction and research,\nAdvising in the allocation of book funds to the\nfields of instruction and research.\nDeveloping a general program of library service for\nall the interests of the University.\nKeeping the Librarian informed concerning the library\nneeds of instructional and research staffs, and\nassisting the Librarian in interpreting the Library\nto the University. APPENDIX H\nThe Friends of the Library\nof the University of British Columbia\nPurpose\nTo develop the Library resources of the University and to\nprovide opportunity for persons interested in the University\nLibrary to keep informed about its growth and needs and to\nexpress their own interests more effectively.\nCouncil\nThe following persons are members of the Council of the\nFriends of the Library:\nMr. Kenneth Caple, President\nDr. Wallace Wilson\nDr. Ethel Wilson\nMr. Leon J. Ladner, Q.C\nDr. Ethlyn Trapp\nDr. H. R. MacMillan\nMrs. Frank Ross\nMr. Walter C Koerner\nMr. Harold S. Foley\nDr. Reginald H. Tupper, Q.C.\nDr. Leon J. Koerner\nHon. J. V. Clyne\nDr. A. E. Grauer\nHon. Mr. Justice J. 0. Wilson\nMrs. E. T. Rogers\nGeneral Sir Ouvry L. Roberts\nDr. W. Kaye Lamb\nDr. Luther Evans\nDr. Leslie Dunlap\nMr. Lester McLennan\nMr. Willard Ireland\nMr. Peter Grossman\nDr. N. A. M. MacKenzie\nDean Geoffrey Andrew\nMr. Aubrey F. Roberts\nMr. Arthur H. Sager\nDr. Ian McT. Cowan\nDean Gordon Shrum\nDean F. H. Soward\nDean S. N. F. Chant\nDr. Samuel Rothstein\nMr. Neal Harlow, Secretary\nWays and Means Committee:\nMr. Walter C Koerner, Honorary Chairman\nDr. H. L. Purdy, Chairman\nOrganization\nThe Council will be the governing body of the organization.\nThe Executive of the Council will consist of a President,\nVice-President, Secretary-Treasurer, and the President\nof the University.\nThe membership fee will be five dollars and upward a year\nthe funds to be used for the purchase of Library materials,\nSpecial meetings and publications for the group will be\nprovided, and reports upon needs and accomplishments.\nOther activities will be determined by the advice of the\nCouncil.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Periodicals","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Z736.B74 A4","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."},{"label":"Identifier","value":"Z736_B74_A4_1960","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"IsShownAt","value":"10.14288\/1.0115285","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Alternative titles in chronological order: Report of the Library Department for the University years 1920-21 and 1921-22
Report of the Library Department for the University year 1922-23
Report of the Librarian to the Senate
Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Ninth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Tenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Eleventh Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Twelfth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Thirteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Fourteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Fifteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Sixteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Seventeenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Eighteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Nineteenth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Twentieth Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Twenty-first Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Twenty-second Report of the Library Committee to the Senate
Twenty-third Report on the University Library to the Senate
Report of the University Librarian to the Senate
The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate
The Report of the University Librarian to Senate
Annual Report of the University Librarian to the Senate of the University of British Columbia
The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate of the University of British Columbia
The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate of the University
Report of the University Librarian to the Senate","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"[Vancouver : The University of British Columbia]","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from University of British Columbia Library: http:\/\/www.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1960-11-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1960-11-30 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Subject":[{"label":"Subject","value":"University of British Columbia. Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:subject"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The topic of the resource.; Typically, the subject will be represented using keywords, key phrases, or classification codes. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title","value":"The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}