"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1217574"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-15"@en . "1957-11"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/libsenrep/items/1.0115283/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE REPORT OF THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIAN TO THE SENATE. 42ND YEAR\nSEPTEMBER 1956 TO AUGUST I957. THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA The University of British Columbia\nThe Report\nof the University, Librarian\nto the Senate\n42nd Year\nSeptember 1956 to August 1957\nVancouver\nNovember 1957 Contents\nIntroduction: Let Us Apologize No More ........ 1\nLooking Backward 2\nFiscal Review 4\nAcquisitions and Use . 5\nIncreasing Pressures . $\nLooking Forward\nBook Funds 9\nPersonnel 12\nThe Library of the University . 15\nThe Library Building 17\nThe Senate Library Committee 1$\nStudent Library Liaison Committee 19\nTraining Professional Librarians 19\nFriends of the Library 20\nReport Upon Library Divisions 22\nAcquisitions Division 22\nReference Division 23\nCataloging Division 24\nLoan Division 25\nSerials Division 27\nUniversity Library Bindery 2$\nBiomedical Library 2$\nExtension Library 30\nAcknowledgments 31\nAppendices\nA. (1) Expenditures for Books, Periodicals,\nand Binding.\n(2) Volumes added to the Collections.\nB. New Periodical Titles 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, 1957.\nF. Professional Activities of Staff.\nG. Senate Library Committee.\nH. Council of the Friends of the Library. The Report of the University Librarian to the, Senate\n1956/1957\nLET US APOLOGIZE NO MORE, the Director of Harvard University\nLibrary admonishes his colleagues. There has been over-much\ntalk, he suggests, about the mounting cost of book collections\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094for libraries grow to meet the need of faculties, and if new\nprograms require an increase in library funds, the blame should\nnot be laid at the library's door. Rather, librarians are at\nfault if they fail to sense the rising need and do not cry out\nthat libraries can be ignored only at the gravest peril. \"Let\nus apologize no more but proudly assert that the library is a\nvital organ of the university\"; let us \"stop talking about how\nmuch we cost and ... begin emphasizing what we contribute.\"\nWithout a quality library a quality education is impossible; without a superior book collection a first-rate faculty\ncannot be obtained. Although methods and fashions in education\nchange, each generation uses the library to realize its aims.\nAs long as universities prize the goals of research, an investment in the library will guarantee returns for centuries to\ncome. In order to develop our intellectual resources, maintain free access to ideas, and insure the functioning of the untrammelled mind, we must assiduously enrich the library's\nworking collections.\nLooking Backward\nWe have compared ourselves heretofore with other institutions\nin order to measure our accomplishments against existing\nscales. It may now be more important to observe our position in\nan evolutionary process, to find where we stand in relation to\nthe past and future.\nIn the following table certain aspects of the Library's\nhistory are compressed into convenient ten-year glimpses:\nEvolutionary Development, 1915-1957 (by decades)\nA B C D E F G 7~H\nBook -, Book Undg. Grad. No.of 2 Bchlr. MstrMPh.D\nYear Funds Stock Enrollment Courses Degrees Awarded\n1915/16 | 1,3004 21,000\n1925/26 4,000^ 56,000\n1935/36 10,277 100,000\n1945/46 21,615 160,000\n1955/56 113,200 325,000\n1956/57 122,197 357,2$3\n(1) Books and journals, not including binding; from all sources.\n(2) From annual Calendar; not necessarily a definitive list.\n(3) Including academic, professional, and applied departments.\n(4) Amount appropriated.\n41\n-\n76\n41\n-\n-\n1,463\n47\n343\n131\n19\n_\n1,$$3\n160\n475\n359\n36\n-\n5,372\n250\n590\n421\n22\n-\n6,0$0\n323\n1\n,300\n1,017\n92\n11\n7,315\n3$4\n1\n,395\n1,081\n103\n19 3\nReading downward in each column reveals a dramatic development\nand indicates something of the nature of our present condition.\nThere has been a striking growth in the University's curriculum\n(column D), and library materials for day-to-day course use have\nbeen a major drain upon financial resources (A). The book\nstock prior to the mid-1940s (B) did not exceed in size that\nconsidered satisfactory for a good four year college, and this\nis reflected in the scarcity of graduate degrees conferred (G).\nExcept for recent developments in doctoral studies in some of\nthe science disciplines, there has been no real increase in\ngraduate work independent of University enrollment (C, G). In\nI925/26 and in 1956/57 the number of master's degrees awarded\nwas in almost the same ratio to the total of registered\nstudents (1.25% and 1.33%),\nThe development of graduate studies has been retarded by\na lack of library facilities. From the beginning of the University, library resources have been strongest in some of the\nnatural sciences, but beyond a few of these specializations\nadvanced work has been slow to materialize. Yet, even if we\nmaintain only a fixed ratio of advanced students to total enrollment, we shall have a large graduate school forced upon us by\nthe sheer pressure of increasing numbers. Research collections\nmust be systematically extended in fields of graduate interest\nor we shall fail miserably to cope with impending conditions.\nProductivity can be achieved only after some years of\nplanned acquisitions. We cannot in areas of serious study adopt\na development program to meet only the immediate needs of faculty\nmembers. Such a multiplicity of interests requires connective\ntissue to build the growing body of knowledge which will be\nessential to a major university. Looking Backward\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fiscal Review\nDuring the fiscal period 1956/57 the following amounts have\nbeen expended upon books, periodicals, and binding (with comparable figures for two previous years):\n1956/57* 1955/56 1954/55\nLibrary |$7,00$,00 $$3,75$.10 $73,323.6$\nMedicine 29,346.65 30,526.40 34,0$0.56\nLaw $,77$.11 $,$99.$$ $,530.69\nEducation 4,53$.04\nNon-University 16,380.50 11,915.59 13,729.65\nTotals $146,051.30 $135,098.97 $129,664.5$\n*For more detailed statistics, see Appendix A.\nOf this annual expenditure, $122,196.94 was for books and\nperiodicals, and $24,500.3o for binding. About 26% of the\ntotal funds for books and journals was spent in two special\nareas (Medicine, Law), 10% upon smaller special projects\n(Education, Canadiana, Slavonic Studies, Asian Studies, and\nHistory special), with 64% going into some forty standard\nfields (last year 29%, 7%, and 64%).\nIt will be noted that this year's expenditures exceeded\nlast year's by $10,962.33, of which increase $6,497.42 came\nfrom the University (including a special grant of $4,53$.04\nfor Education) and $4,464.91 from outside sources. There was\nan increase of only $3,$50 in the Library's formal budget for\nbooks.\nExpenditures for all Library purposes was $47.46 per\nstudent ($52.$4 last year, $55-77 the year before); and the\nratio of Library to total University costs (omitting capital\nitems) was 4.5% (5.2% in 1955/56, 5.6% in 1954/55). These\nfigures have been steadily decreasing, and although they do\nnot have absolute meaning, they suggest the position of the\nLibrary in the total fiscal picture. Chicago, Virginia, Cornell, Duke, California, and UCLA spend at least twice as much\nper student, and our neighbors, Oregon and Washington, somewhat exceed our rate.\nThe problem of gathering together in the Library budget\nall funds for library purposes which are derived from University sources has not been squarely faced. New Faculties may be initiated with operating budgets segregated from other funds\nin order to protect the existing establishment from being\npenalized by the new costs. As these undertakings become stabilized and a part of normal University activities, their\nlibrary funds should appear under the budget heading of the\nUniversity Library as a matter of course. Otherwise the influence is divisive and the Librarian is responsible for the use\nof grants over which he has no control.\nLooking Backward\u00E2\u0080\u0094Acquisitions and Use\nThe year's additions to the book stock totaled 32,2$3 volumes\n(compared with 20,946 in 1955/56), of which 14,540 were bound\njournals (9,951). This is a record rate of increase (54%) and\nis also the largest number of accessions in any one year.\n(See Appendix A-2.) Several thousand volumes of this increase\nwere received from the Vancouver Normal School when it was\nabsorbed by the University, and the material was processed\nunder conditions of extreme pressure late in the summer of 1956\nbefore the opening of the new College of Education. Other\noperations were almost stalled by this overload, but the processing divisions somehow met the emergency.\nThese net figures do not include other types of material\nreceived during the period: 33,962 recorded but uncataloged\npublications of governments and international agencies received\nin the Reference Division (31,071 in 1955/56), 2,093 maps\n(2,413), quantities of pamphlets, micro-reproductions, and a\nlarge volume of publications in Chinese, Japanese, and Slavic\nlanguages which are shelved but not yet recorded in the public\ncatalog. There were 219 new journal subscriptions placed (203),\nas listed in Appendix B. The most notable acquisitions are\nreported in Appendix C\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 The number of books borrowed at the main Loan Desk during\nthe year increased by 14,447 (13%) over the previous period,\nwhile volumes lent in the Reserve Book Room decreased again,\nthis time by 2,$01 (or -3.1%); see Appendix P. There was a\nincrease in the number of students registered, compared with\n1955/56.\nSince 1952/53, when student enrollment reached its postwar low, the relationship between number of students and volume\nof books loaned at the two main desks has been as follows:\nStudent Enrollment in Relation to Recorded Loan of Books\nAs represented by percentage of change from previous year\n(Increase unless otherwise noted)\n Loans\t\nMain Res. Bk Total\nYear Enrollment Desk Room\n1953/54 2.7%\n1954/55 7.5%\n1955/56 $.2%\n1956/57 20%\n4-year 43% 35% 32% 34%\nperiod\nWhile there has been a 34% increase in the Quantity of material\nborrowed from the Division during the last four years, the\nnumber of students has risen by 43%. Two procedural changes\naffecting the statistics kept should be noted: the loan period\nfor much Reserve Book Room material has been extended from two\nhours to a day or more, reducing the number of 2-hour transactions; and access to the bookstack has been liberalized so\nthat use of material in the stack area has doubtless increased.\nIt is likely, however, that Library use has not kept pace\nwith larger enrollments, and this may stem from longer line-ups\nat the public catalog and desks making use more difficult.\nWithout an open-shelf library for all undergraduates, we shall\nhardly know what normal use can be.\n3.$%\n26%\n13%\n$.6%\n17% _\n13^\u00C2\u00B0 ,\n5.$%\n- 7.5%\n- 0.6%\n3%\n- 3.1%\n5% 7\nInterlibrary loans totaled 465 items borrowed during the\nyear and 1,257 lent (523 and 1,17$ in 1955/56), a healthy\nbalance in our favor. Materials were secured from $7 institutions and loaned to 161. It should be observed, however, that\nwhile we borrowed about 50% of the volumes from the United\nStates, 25% from Canada outside of British Columbia, and 25%\nfrom B. C, our loans were distributed in the reverse order:\n70% to libraries in British Columbia, 20% to the rest of Canada,\nand 10% to the U. S. We are, therefore, still considerably in\ndebt to a number of institutions. As the National Bibliographic\nCentre in Ottawa and the new Union List of Scientific Serials\n(issued by the National Research Council) come into use, more\nself-sufficiency among Canadian libraries and a better credit\nbalance may ensue.\nChief debtors and creditors. Borrowed from: Vancouver\nMedical Association, 67; University of Washington, 55; McGill\nUniversity, 41; University of California, Berkeley, 22;\nNational Research Council of Canada, 16; U. S. National Library\nof Medicine, 16; Lane Medical Library, 15; University of\nOregon, 11; Iowa State, 10; etc.\nMaterials lent to: Crease Clinic, 109; Fisheries Research\nBoard, Vancouver, 7$; Vancouver Medical Association, 72;\nShaughnessy Hospital, 71; Fisheries Research Board, Nanaimo, 64;\nPacific Naval Laboratory, 56; St. Paul's Hospital, 56;\nB. C. Electric, 55; University of Saskatchewan, 42; University\nof Washington, 3$; Victoria College, 37; Science Service\nLaboratories, Lethbridge, 29; Vancouver Island Regional\nLibrary, 26; B. C Engineering, 25; Victoria Medical Society, 24;\nB. C. Forest Service, 21; University of Manitoba, 20; etc. $\nIncreasing Pressures Upon Staff\nThe utilization of the Library depends upon staff, book\ncollections, and users, in that order. The importance of staff\nin this relationship is seldom fully recognized, for library\nusers are prone to overlook what does not appear to bear upon\ntheir immediate purpose. More than a million staff hours, during\nthe last decade alone, underlie the current level of Library\nuse, and without this great backlog of disciplined effort, no\nlibrary facilities could possibly exist. In building the\ncollections, providing a maximum of access to them, and in making\nthe Library a teaching department as well as a University\nservice, staff resources are preeminent and must be steadily\nreinforced.\nStudent registration in the last four years of advancing\nenrollment has risen 43%, and loans at the main public desks 34%.\nOn other Library fronts, book funds have grown 3$% and the size\nof the book stock 34%. Of 91,700 volumes added, nearly 44,000\nhave passed through the Bindery. Some 126,000 government publications and pamphlets have been received and recorded. Close\nto 40,000 book orders have been placed, a half million catalog\ncards prepared, a million recorded loans made, and some 400 hours\nof formal instruction given. Other thousands of hours of\ndirect assistance to the public must be entered here un-detailed.\nDuring this same period, the staff has increased 19%, of\nwhich only 4% was in the professional group.\nSummer Session, 1957, with an enrollment of 3,502 (1,823\nin 1956, an increase of 92%) brought a term-time appearance to\ndesks and reading rooms. This concentrated 7-week program\nbrings students pouring into the Library and leaves little\nopportunity for staff recuperation. Short-term clerical employees (in lieu of winter student assistants) help to carry the\nheavier load. A Curriculum Laboratory for the College of Education has\nalso been established in\"the Library to cope with elementary\nand secondary text books and material relating to lesson plans.\nUsers resort to the general Library for books of subject\ncontent.\nFormal instruction of students requires more staff time\nas the size of the freshman group increases; and 4$ sections\nof 1st year English replaced the 35 of last year. With 50, 60,\nand 70 sections in prospect, this stimulus to self-education\nmay disappear from the curriculum if specific provision is not\nsoon made for it.\nThe Library Delivery Service laid down some 9,000 volumes\nat the doorstep's of faculty during the year, on the campus and\nat the Biomedical Branch. A similar number of books were\nprobably returned by the same means.\nLooking Forward\u00E2\u0080\u0094Book Funds\nThe Library's funds for books comprised 2% of the total operational budget of the University in 1956/57\u00E2\u0080\u0094and in a very real\nsense this critical factor determines the ultimate course of\nhigher education in British Columbia. Earlier paragraphs may\nseem to boast of our recent increases in book-buying power, but\nin fact the past year's University grant exceeded the previous\namount by only $3,$50 (enough to subscribe to the new journals\nand add 250 more books). With science, sociology, medicine, and\ninternational studies rapidly becoming space-bound, there is a\nmost urgent exigency to support graduate studies and research\non an unparalleled scale. The Library must be the centre of\nsuch a newly emphasized program.\nThe library costs of this more active program will be large\nin relation to the scale of our past thinking. The proposal to 10\nprovide a \"college library\" for undergraduates\u00E2\u0080\u0094with an open\nshelf collection of 40,000 volumes in a room planned for reading by young people\u00E2\u0080\u0094will cost $100,000 for books alone. To\nproceed with dispatch toward a major program of advanced\nstudies and research, the annual book fund must be increased\nover a two or three year period by not less than $100,000 a\nyear, of which half should be expected from sources in the community. These are not fanciful proposals but are part of the\nessential cost of a university of high rank, and they cannot be\navoided in western Canada, We are already well launched into\na program of this magnitude.\nUndergraduate facilities. Even in its simpler college\ndays, the University did not provide a true college library for\nits students: books on open shelves, in plenty of copies, offering a variety of material beyond bare course requirements.\nThe independent use of books has not been encouraged either by\nmaking assigned reading easy or by tempting the reader to walk\namong well stocked shelves and pick freely those books which\nmay have ripened to his taste. Only the Sedgewick Memorial\nfund has been set up to provide an opportunity of this kind.\nResearch materials. There has been greater success recent ly~Tn~^eTel^plinf^~7e\"search collections, though the field is\nbroader than we have yet had opportunity to till. The expenditure of |30,000 to $35,000 a year in the field of the Biomedical\nsciences since 1951, and of $$,000 or $9,000 annually in Law,\nhas brought quite remarkable results, and special appropriations\npromise similar success for the field of Education. Grants of\nsome $20,000 from the Rockefeller Foundation inaugurated the\ncollection for Slavonic Studies, which has since been supported\nby a fund in honour of Dr. William J. Rose, contributed by\nMr. Walter C Koerner. Two grants from the Carnegie Corporation for French-Canadian Studies, totaling $12,000, are being\naugmented by local contributions for the purchase of Canadiana:\nthe annual grant from Dr. and. Mrs. Thomas Ingledow, an initial\nfund from the Men's Canadian Club of Vancouver, and assistance\nreceived in response to applications to the Leon and Thea\nKoerner Foundation. 11\nA substantial 3-year subsidy for the acquisition of\nresearch materials in the humanities and social sciences is\nbeing made by Mr. Walter Koerner, which will have a permanent\nand telling effect upon advanced studies in these fields. Two\ngrants for the humanities from the Leon and Thea Koerner\nFoundation have also been received, and over $2,000 from a\nhundred Friends of the Library during the first year of the\norganization's history. More than $3,000 contributed to the\nmemorial fund for the late Professor of Canadian History,\nDr. Gilbert Tucker, was spent upon historical documents.\nGifts of rare and significant historical publications have\nagain been made by one of the city's most active book collectors, Dr. H. R. MacMillan, and he has also continued his longtime support of the Forestry collections. Such disparate\nfields of interest as Asian Studies and Fisheries have received\ngrants-in-aid from University friends in industry. It appears\nthat, as a beginning, about $25,000 a year is now forthcoming\nfrom non-University sources for the purchase of library\nmaterials.\nThere is a desperate need for additional funds for library\nmaterials for the Asian Studies program ($15,000 a year for\nseveral years if serious work is to be done). Large scale\nadditions must be made to collections in the fields of English\nand American literature, music and the fine arts, French\nliterature, linguistics, classics, to the closely interlocking\nfields of his ory, mediaeval and Renaissance studies, and\ncomparative religion (for which a number of large and expensive\nsets are required) and for basic sets in many areas of the\nphysical and life sciences. A minimum of $3,500 will be\nreauired next year for the acquisition of new journal titles,\nand this will not meet all of the faculty requests received.\nThese needs are urgent, and aid must come or important\nyears will be wasted. University, federal, provincial, and\nprivate funds must flow together into this great reservoir of\nlearning. 12\nLooking Forward\u00E2\u0080\u0094Personnel\nIn response to last year's comment that \"some quite radical\nchange\" in the conditions of employment of professional\nlibrarians would have to be made if a Library of high standing is to be attained, a new \"Academic-Professional\" classification was created and the salary floor raised from $3,100\nto $3,600. Although the changes have not yet been reflected\nin statistics of service, there is little doubt that both\nimmediate and long range effects will be beneficial.\nThe relationship of professional librarians to other academic personnel was reviewed by the Faculty Association in\n1954/55, and in the following year all professional staff were\nmade eligible for membership. In December 1956 the Senate\nLibrary Committee surveyed the problems involved, making a\nseries of specific recommendations to the President in January\n1957. These went before a sub-committee of the President's\nSenior Appointments Committee which passed its revisions on to\nthe President and Board of Governors. On July 1, 1957, the\nfollowing changes were made:\n(1) A new category of \"Academic-Professional Personnel\"\nwas established for Librarians in the I to III categories.\n(2) Librarians become eligible immediately upon employment to participate in the University Superannuation Plan,\ninsurance scheme, and other privileges of the faculty group.\n(3) Beginning with 1957/5$, the vacation period is extended\nfrom three weeks to a month.\n(4) The salary floor was advanced from $3,100 to $3,600,\nwith proportionate increases extended through the several\nclasses. Librarians I to III retain a salary scale.\n(5) Upon recommendation by the University Librarian, professional staff with advanced qualifications may be transferred from the Librarian II to the Librarian III classification without reference to the existing \"establishment.\"\nIt must be noted that before the new salary floor was\napproved, the model upon which it was patterned (beginning rate\nfor Instructor) had already advanced another $500, and that\nbeginning salary rates for librarians on the North American 13\ncontinent were nearer $4,200. Nevertheless, at report time\nthe new base was the highest among Canadian universities,\nthough equalled or surpassed by several public libraries.\nFor this real \"break through\" in status and pay the\nUniversity Librarian and staff express appreciation to individuals both in faculty and administration who were more than\nformally concerned about the outcome of the discussions. As\nthe level of faculty salaries rises, the income of the professional library staff must similarly increase, for if the\nLibrary is to obtain people of faculty calibre, the same kind\nof salaries will have to be paid.\nIt can be reported that important adjustments were also\nmade in the pay scales of the non-professional staff, amounting to two \"steps\" for most of the clerical group, and that the\nseriously underpaid \"Junior Clerical\" category was eliminated.\nThe scale for Library Assistants was also raised and extended.\nThe high rate of turnover in these groups, as indicated in the\nfollowing table, indicates that such attention was badly\nneeded.\nTurnover of staff. During the report year 35 persons\nleft the Library's employment, of a total of 69 staff members:\na turnover of 50% (compared with 66% last year). Of these\n4 were professional librarians, of a total of 26 (a turnover\nof 15%); 17 were Library Assistants, of 16 such positions\n(a loss of 106%); and 14 were in the Clerical group totaling\n27 (51%). The average length of service was as follows\n(omitting from this count five long-time professional members\nwith service ranging from 19 to 421 years): 14\nAverage (Mean) Service in Months\n1956/57 1955/56 1954/55 1953/54 1952/53\nAll Staff 30.3 30.6 33 35.1 27.5\nProfessional 43-3 49-2 42 35.9 23\nOther 23.6 22 2$ 34.4 32\nThe average length of service for employed professional staff\n(omitting the five mentioned) is three and a half years, while\nthe median for this group is only 15 h months. One position\nremained unfilled for eight months (Librarian II). (See\nAppendix E, list of Library Staff; Appendix F, Professional\nActivities of the staff.)\nMiss Dorothy Jefferd retired from the Library staff this\nyear, having completed forty-two and a half years in University service. In January 1915, before the opening of the\nUniversity in September, she and Mr. John Ridington began to\nunpack the 22,000 volumes and 7,000 pamphlets which were being\nshipped from Great Britain and Europe by Mr. James T. Gerould\n(an agent of the Board of Governors who had been sent to\nacquire a basic stock for the Library). From then until June\n1954, when she resigned as Head of the Cataloging Division,\nshe either cataloged or supervised the cataloging of every\nbook in the collection. She continued as a senior cataloger\nuntil the end of June 1957, a vigorous member of the University staff and a symbol of the continuum of human effort and\nskill which goes into the formation of a great academic institution.\nMore, and more experienced, personnel in all categories\nwill be required to keep the Library from being overwhelmed\nby the increasing responsibilities in all departments, and to\nprovide the more diversified service which is envisioned in\nnew building plans. 15\nThe Library of the University\nLargely because of limitations of building and staff, the\nspecial library needs of various university groups have never\nbeen adequately provided for here. With some notable exceptions,\nall faculty and students use the same library facilities, which\nare adapted as far as possible to individual needs. With the\nprospect of major additions to the Library building and of\nrecruiting more subject specialists to the Library staff, changes\nin practice may soon be possible.\nA College Library for undergraduates (chiefly first and\nsecond year students) could work a remarkable change in the use\nof library materials for teaching purposes if its potential were\nfully realized. Here would be more intimate reading rooms in\nwhich, tables and books are carefully interspersed and students\nare informally introduced to principal and auxiliary works by\nfaculty and Library cooperation. These rooms, oriented toward\nthe new Arts Building, would also draw off a large p?rt of the\nundergraduate users from other Library areas and thus provide\nspace for other specialized services.\nA Science Library could also be created in the new building,\nwith work space, abstracts and indexes, and journal files in\nclose juxtaposition, and Library personnel -with specialized\nknowledge and interest available to meet special needs. Services\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2of reference and bibliography and convenience of access and\norientation such as have been offered in the field, of Medicine\nwould be thus extended to the other sciences. This arrangement\nmight, then, like the new B.Sc. degree, belatedly recognize the\nspecial character of need and training in the fields of science.\nThe Humanities and Social Sciences likewise require library\nservice tailored to their materials and use, and effort and\nfacilities should be focused upon these, perhaps in remodeled\nspace in the north wing.\nProvision for Special Collections is also needed, to handle\nlibrary~materials requiring special care in processing and use:\nthe Howay-Reid collection of Canadiana, the University Archive, 16\nrare books, manuscripts, and collections which because of their\nnature or use must be kept together or be consulted under supervision. A branch of the Provincial Archive is also sought for\nthe campus, in order that its wealth of historical materials\ncan be brought within reach of advanced students of history.\nThe Biomedical Library is already in an advanced stage of\ndevelopment, although its use is not yet made sufficiently\navailable to the Biological Sciences and related fields. The\nFine Arts Library likewise serves mainly a single group, Architecture, with a growing use from students in the Fine Arts.\nMusic may be the most likely area of new expansion.\nEducation is partially served in the new Curriculum Laboratory, and a professional librarian with teacher training is\nexpected to be added to the Library staff to help interpret and\ndevelop general Library use in terms of the College program.\nThe particular needs of Applied. Science will be variously met by\nsome of the special facilities\" mentioned above, but further\nplanning will be required to provide a. coordinated library\nprogram for this important group. 17\nThe Library Building\nThe building itself has a restricting effect upon library use\nat the University. Much valuable space is wasted when it is at\na premium; service operations are carried on in the middle of\nstudy areas which are already disrupted by busy traffic lanes;\ngreat reading rooms are improperly situated to permit service\nto diversified groups; and physical conditions accent noise\nrather than suppress it\u00E2\u0080\u0094these inherited circumstances, when\ncrossed with mass use, make the Library's relations with users\ntenuous and difficult.\nIt seems far more likely now than it did a year, ago, however, that an annex to the building is forthcoming, and plans\nare in the making. It is imperative this time that (1) building\ndesign not dictate to library use, (2) layout provide for\nspecialized service to various University groups, and (3) strict\nattention be given to internal operations and to differing types,\nof library materials. We must not fail now to match building\nto needs or the results for Library and University may be\ndisastrous.\nBuilding plans are being visualized to serve some of the\nneeds outlined in other sections of this report, and committees\nof the Library staff are involved with architects in preliminary\nwork. Relief must be soon and certain.\nThere is joy and relief over the addition to the bookstack\nwhich was completed during the year. With the additional shelf\nspace came a hundred more study carrells, a broad stack stairway permitting two-way passage, better stack entrance and 18\ncontrol arrangements, and new Loan Desk facilities providing\nservice for both bound and unbound materials. A new reading\nroom has been created for the Biomedical Library, for the first\ntime adjacent to relevant library materials; and the whole book\ncollection has been shifted into a more orderly arrangement.\nThe Senate Library Committee\nThe Senate Library Committee is the direct means by which\nFaculty and The Senate bring their influence to bear upon\nUniversity library facilities. It is concerned both with collections and use and, under its terms of reference, is charged\nwith their development. Around the Committee table, specialists\nattempt to see the University in toto and in perspective and\nto parlay today's resources into a more ample tomorrow.\nThe Committee met five times during the year under the\nchairmanship of Dr. Ian McT. Cowan: to preview the Librarian's\nAnnual Report and authorize a letter to Senate supporting and\nemphasizing certain recommendations; to expend the Committee\nFund upon research materials; to discuss departmental library\npolicy and Library processing problems; to deliberate upon the\nstatus and salaries of professional librarians and make recommendations to the President; to review a report of the Public\nLibrary Commission upon \"Training Professional Librarians in\nWestern Canada\"; to allocate book funds to departments; to study\nthe need to expand the Library building and to recommend that an\naddition be given \"top priority by the University in considering the use of federal funds\"; and to concern itself seriously\nwith a variety of other matters. For a list of the Committee's\nmembers, and its terms of reference, see Appendix G. 19\nStudent-Library Liaison Committee\nA Library Liaison Committee appointed by the Students' Council\nmet with representatives of the Library staff to ponder means to\nreduce noise in the Library building, combat the practice of\n\"reserving\" seats, and to restrict smoking, talking, and eating\nto the basement area. A broadside was issued, and considerable\nspace in the campus newspaper was devoted to student responsibility for maintaining good study conditions.\n\"If your neighbor is making too much noise, simply tell\nhim to be quiet,\" the \"simple rules\" began. \"If you're looking\nfor a seat, don't hesitate to sit down... No one can \"reserve\"\nseats by leaving books or coats at the table space, so don't\nencourage the practice by honoring phony 'reservations.\"1\n\"Remember, it's your Library; if you want to study there, maintenance of good study conditions becomes your problem.\"\nStudents can control the conditions under which they must\nwork, and this is evidence of their concern. Their action will\nbe increasingly important as their ranks expand.\nTraining Professional Librarians\nLong-term plans may yet be realized if a recent recommendation\nof the B. C Public Library Commission becomes effective, \"that\nthe Provincial government and the University of British\nColumbia give careful consideration to the establishment of a\ngraduate library school at U. B. C. within the next three years.\"\nIn April 1956 the Commission authorized the establishment of a\njoint committee representing the Commission, the British\nColumbia Library Association, and the University \"to study the 20\n\"question of library education in western Canada ... and in\nBritish Columbia in particular,\" and its report, \"Training\nProfessional Librarians for Western Canada,\" was issued in\nMarch 1957. It has been officially presented to the Senate and\nBoard of Governors and represents, perhaps, the chief off-campus\nsupport for this proposed academic program.\nThe Report presents statistical data relating to existing\nand probable future requirements for professional librarians\nin the four western provinces and examines present facilities\nfor training them. It concludes that the establishment of a\nschool in western Canada is the only means whereby the supply\nof urgently needed personnel is likely to be provided. And it\nnames the University of British Columbia as the logical place\nfor the graduate school to function\u00E2\u0080\u0094where the largest library\nin the region is located, collections have long been developed\nwith a library school in view, provisional quarters are\nalready available in the north wing of the Library building,\nand students will have ready access to a wide variety of well\ndeveloped library services conveniently situated for their\nstudy and use.\nA favorable reception has been given to the report, but\nspecific action awaits the presentation of a full and detailed\nprogram and an assessment of the availability of University\nfunds to support it.\nFriends of the Library\nThe Friends of the Library was organized on September 7, 1956,\nto develop the library resources of the University and to\nprovide opportunity for interested persons to keep informed\nabout the Library's growth and needs and to express their own\ninterests more effectively. A hundred persons came together 21\non this occasion to hear Dr. J. N. L. Myres, Bod ley's Librarian,\nspeak on Sir Thomas Bodley's \"great store of honourable\nfriends.\" The Council of Friends, a planning and deliberative\nbody, was also created, to which group President MacKenzie\noutlined the Library's main needs: increased funds for books,\njournals, and staff; the addition of a wing to the Library\nbuilding; the establishment of a school of librarianship.\nA special committee was immediately set up to assay Library\nneeds and to report to the Friends, with the following personnel: Mr. Walter Koerner (chairman), Dr. A. E. Grauer, Mrs. Frank\nRoss, Dr. Wallace Wilson, President of the Friends, and President MacKenzie, Dean Andrew, and Mr. Harlow (secretary).\n\"If I am right,\" the chairman of the special committee\nwrote to the Librarian, \"I think that the University Library\nis the nucleus for both scholarship and independent research\nfor this University. No serious scholar of repute will be happy\nat U.B.C. if we do not establish a policy for rapid and considerable increase in library resources. This is our primary\ninterest in our Committee.\"\nAt the end of the year the Friends numbered 97, a total of\n$2,406 had been received for acquisitions of library materials,\nwith some other gifts credited indirectly to Friends' action.\nA well printed \"Announcement and Invitation\" to join the\nFriends has been distributed and membership cards for 1957\nissued. Copy for a newsletter, \"Footnotes for Friends,\" is in\nthe hands of the printer, and a fall meeting is being announced.\nFor a list of the Council of Friends, see Appendix H. 22\nReport Upon Library Divisions\nThe University Library is divided into a number of working\ndivisions in order to gather, handle, and give access to\nlibrary materials. :'The reports of their problems and accomplishments are summarized here as a first-hand account of the\nyear's work done.\nAcquisitions Division\nMore money was spent this year on books, more orders were placed,\nand far more books were handled than ever before. Serious backlogs were overcome, new procedures were established\u00E2\u0080\u0094and this\nwas without doubt the most strenuous period in the Division's\nhistory.\nThere were 14,075 orders placed in 1956/57 (9,7$0 last year),\nwith 11,542 titles and 13,291 volumes received (compared with\n9,977 and 10,995). This does not include more than 4,000\nvolumes from the Normal School collection and other \"inside\"\nsources and 14,540 volumes of bound journals; the grand total\nwas 32,283 volumes (20,946).\nAn expenditure of $121,550.95 was made, an increase of\n$8,350.23 over the previous year (see Appendix A). The new \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nfields of greatest activity were Oriental Studies, Canadiana,\nEducation, and the Humanities, because of special funds and\nemphasis.\nThe year's record load strained existing procedures, and\nstringent action was taken toward reorganization. The checking\nof book requisitions (for identification and to avoid duplication) was simplified and put under strict control. Processing\nand payments were speeded up, and books now remain very briefly\nin the Division. The method of estimating encumbrances was\nrevised. Gifts pass more regularly into processing channels\n(thanks to a new half-time staff member). Special'facilities 23\nwere set up to handle materials for the large number of new\noff-campus courses in Education. Over 9,000 volumes went\nthrough the campus delivery service, most of them with a return\nticket.\nStaff turnover continually threatens the efficiency of\noperations. The employment of student assistants for bibliographic checking is being debated, but is now unavoidable.\nMiss Eleanor Mercer, Head, seconded by Miss Priscilla Scott,\nfaces an increasing avalanche which they must have the resources\nto handle. Dr. Rothstein's skilled assistance has been important in the year's reorganization.\nReference Division\nThe Reference staff is engaged not so much in a service as in\neducation. Information in myriads of combinations lies buried\nin any large research collection, and the specialist in bibliography is the one best equipped to point out the avenues to it.\nIn support of its teaching and informational functions,\nthe Division acquires a variety of materials to supplement the\nbook and journal collections and, through interlibrary loan,\nextends the Library's resources to include material in other\nlibraries.\nAbout 40,000 items were received and recorded (of which\n33,962 were from governmental and international agencies,\n2,093 were maps, and 963 were university calendars (last year,\n36,052). Of 21,000 questions answered (last year, 17,000),\n6,900 came by telephone, half from off-campus. Besides direct\nassistance to individuals at three public desks, formal instruction was given to 4$ sections of English 100 ($8 hours), plus\nspecial lectures to classes in ten departments and Faculties.\nBibliographic guides were prepared for students in Chemical\nEngineering, Electrical Engineering, Plant Science, Commerce,\nHome Economics, and Education. Bibliographic studies relating\nto aging, Spanish voyages, Okanagan fruit industry commissions,\nthe planning of sawmills, and other areas of research were made.\nAbout 60 instructive displays were set up, including special\nshowings for the Russian fisheries group, the Friends of the\nLibrary, and the Japanese Ambassador. Countless tours were\nprovided. 24\nInterlibrary loans totaled 465 items borrowed, 1,257 lent\n(see Appendix D), involving 4,317 pieces of correspondence in\nthis business alone.\nThe annual Publications of Faculty and Staff was prepared,\nthis year's list running to 462 entries and 78 pages (compared\nwith 173 items and 20 pages in 1949/50 when it first appeared in\nseparate form). Because this heavy burden of bibliographic\nchecking and editing can no longer be borne by the Division\nalone, new arrangements for the compilation of the list are\nbeing proposed for the coming year.\nThe Fine Arts Room, with Miss Melva Dwyer in charge, and\nthe Howay-Reid' Collection of Canadiana, under Mr. Noel Owens,\nrecorded heavier use because of greater enrollment, new courses,\nand increased faculty interest. The Map Room, supervised by\nMiss Doreen Taylor through December, and by Mr. Owens after her\nresignation, has reduced its backlog of un-processed materials,\nin spite of large additions. All of these operate o'n a marginal,\npart-time basis, and there is a constant demand by faculty and\nstudents that their hours and service be extended.\nToo small a staff and too few senior members handicap performance, development, and continuity. Hectic schedules, overmuch routine, and lack of opportunity for self-development\ndiscourage ambitious people. Miss Anne M. Smith and her two\nsenior assistants, Miss Joan O'Rourke and Miss Melva Dwyer, are\nexperienced, competent and energetic, and they have been ably\nassisted by the newer members of the Division (who averaged, at\nthe end of August 1957, 12^ months of service). Two senior\nstaff resigned during the period, Miss Taylor (going to the\nB. C. Electric Company library) and Mr. Owens (to England and\nthe Continent), each with six years of solid reference experience\nCataloging Division\nThe larger the book collection the more overwhelming it would\nbecome were it not for an orderly scheme of arrangement and\nauxiliary guides to author and content. The Cataloging staff\nprovide pass keys to the Library's varied subject compartments.\nIn spite of a considerable increase in the amount of\nmaterial cataloged, compared with the previous year, the backlog\nof unprocessed volumes was larger than ever at the end of the\nperiod. 25\n1955/56 1954/55\nBooks cataloged 15,299 11,575 13,764\nSerial vols, added 14,540 12,947 13,909\nNew serial entries 182 142 124\nTotals 30,021 24,664 27,797\nBacklog 4,875 2,$79 2,832\nSeveral crises during the year cost heavily in senior\nstaff time: the sorting and processing of several thousand\nvolumes from the Normal School for use in the new Curriculum\nLaboratory and the Library; interruptions in the flow of books\ncaused by reorganization in the Acquisitions Division; and the\ndrafting of members of staff into extra-Divisional operations.\nA professional staff of major league caliber, supported by a\nnon-professional group of very high quality during the latter\npart of the period, recovered much of the lost ground. The\nre-cataloging of the Medical collection was virtually completed, a four-year project.\nThe increased output of cataloging upset the balance\nbetween professional and non-professional staff, and an\nadditional Library Assistant and clerical staff member are needed\nto cope with the higher production required. Miss Dorothy\nJefferd, Head of the Division from 1915 to 1954 and Senior Cataloger until June 30, 1957, left the Library during the year, as\nabove recorded. Under the leadership of Miss Mar.iorie Alldritt\nand her First Assistant, Mr. Basil Stuart-Stubbs, a vigorous\nand flexible organization carried off a very difficult year.\nLoan Division\nA fine research library is a monument to perseverance and skill,\nbut without a generous policy of use, careful control, and\naccurate records, it profiteth little. The Loan Division\nmaintains this flow of the book collections.\nThis was the year of the big stack addition, the great\nbook shift, and of massive enrollment. Approximately 15,000\nsquare feet of new shelf (and carrell) space, a new loan desk,\nthe complete rearrangement of the book stock, and a 20% increase in student numbers (92% in the Summer Session) set the\nstage. 26\nOver 211,000 loans were made at the two public desks:\n1956/57 1955/56 1954/55\nLoan Desk 124,407 101,240 104,122\nReserve Book Room $7,222 90,023 97,402\nTotals 211,629 200,263 201,526\nAlthough there was a 13% increase in loans at the main desk\nand a decline of 3.1% in the Reserve Book Room (the latter\nbeing explained in part by longer loan periods), the total\nincrease during the past four years of increasing enrollment\nhas been 34%. The number of unfilled requests for books which\nare already in use hs.n mounted even more rapidly.\nMore staff time is required to fetch and shelve books in\nthe larger stack area, to checK materials in a hundred more\ncarrells, and to man an additional station at the new Loan Desk\n(to separate the window for \"requests\" from the point of\ndelivery in order to minimize queues and crowds). Full-time\nocmt\u00C2\u00ABv>l of the stack portal is now maintained. Heavier use of\nthe campus delivery service is being made.\nSince 41% of the recorded loans are being made from a\nReserve collection of about 4,000 volumes, it is clear that\nthe Reserve Book Room warrants thoughtful attention. The proposal to replace the whole operation with a \"college\" library\nof some 40,000 volumes is discussed elsewhere. Meanwhile,\nevery detail has been carefully scrutinized to make management\nand use more effective.\nStack construction continued from Christmas to May, and\nthe book shift (managed by Mr. Stuart-Stubbs and Mr. Bell) was\nsqueezed in between the spring and summer terms. New arrangements at the stack entry made it possible to put into effect\na four-year old recommendation of the Senate Library Committee\nthat brief cases not be taken into the stack enclosure. The\nbook shift, perforce, replaced the annual inventory.\nA new position added in April to take care of duties\nwhieh were once performed by staff during slack periods was\nimmediately swallowed up by heavier usage. The fine line\nbetween order and confusion which often exists during hours of\nvery heavy use can be broadened only by being p.ble to deploy\nstaff at the proper time to the most critical places; an\nadditional Library Assistant is needed for this purpose as this\nreport is being written. 27\nMiss Mabel Lanning, with Mr. Inglis Bell, First Assistant,\nhave planned, reorganized, shifted, and stood up to many changes\nand pressures and, with Mrs. Frances Tucker and other staff,\nhave cast a sharp and conscientious eye upon all established\npractices.\nSerials Division\nA high proportion of learned publication appears in periodical\nform, and the Serials Division routes this vast and complex\nmaterial into channels of information.\nAt the year's end 4,416 titles were being currently received, of which 219 were new subscriptions, and 14,540 bound\nvolumes augmented the Library's collections. Most subscriptions\nare handled on a continuing basis, but 1,059 orders were placed\nfor new titles, sets, and miscellaneous issues. Over 30 series\n(half in mathematics) were contributed by faculty members.\nAppendix B lists new subscriptions, Appendix C-I the most\nnotable acquisitions.\nLoans totaled 16,936 unbound issues, compared with 17,492\nthe previous year, a good record when the handicaps and disturbances of the construction period are considered.\nDuring the year the Division experienced a metamorphosis.\nFrom December through May it was cut off from its public except\nfor a peep-hole through which requests were filled. Its reading room was converted into a bookstack, with much noise of\njack-hammers, and it was moved bodily into another area.\nThe Serials Desk now adjoins the Loan Division in the main\npublic room, adjacent to the public catalog; and unbound journals\nare open to all who have stack access (3d year and upward).\nModerate staff loss, the disruptions mentioned, the growth\nof the serials collections, and the increase in bindery output\naffected the work load. Mr. Roland Lanning's detailed'knowledge of the Library's holdings and needs, and of the serials\nmarket, continues to be invaluable in Library development, and\nhe has been assisted in the Division's operations by a well-\nknit and loyal staff. 28\nUniversity Library Bindery. For five consecutive years\nBindery productTonTH'as markedly increased, to the present\ntotal of 11,119 volumes and 1,229 in \"storage\" covers (in\n1950/51, the output was 3,417 volumes of all types; about 6,000\nwere bound in the next year; and 9,$$9, plus 1,9$2 in storage\ncovers, in 1955/56). This larger and more efficient operation\nwas inaugurated in 1951/52 with the appointment\u00E2\u0080\u00A2of a new\nHead Binder and the purchase of basic equipment, and only an\napprentice has since been added to the staff of two journeymen\nbinders and two journeywomen. With higher production there\nhas been a large decrease in per-volume cost in spite of\nhigher wages and other costs. This year a slight advance in\nthe unit cost was registered (about $.05 per volume), resulting\nfrom increased wages, but the cost is still lower than for\nany period except 1955/56.\nMr. Percy Fryer, Head Binder, has the rare qualities of\ncraftsman and manager, and he earns and enjoys the cooperative\nsupport of a competent and dependable staff.\nBiomedical Library\nThe Biomedical Library is an adaptation of University Library\nfacilities to the particular requirements of the Biological\nSciences and Medicine. By providing specialized staff,\norganization, and space, a focus upon the needs of this group\nis made.\nThe Biomedical Library became a full Division of the\nUniversity Library on April 1, 1957, a position warranted by\nits present size and function. Otherwise the year is likely\nto be remembered for improvements in physical facilities and\nfor a heavy turnover of staff.\nTemporary accommodation for the Branch at the General\nHospital, first occupied in October 1952, was not vacated\nuntil early July 1957, when handsome, functional quarters in\nthe new Faculty of Medicine building were completed. On the\ncampus, cramped conditions were also relieved when the reading room and work area were transferred to space made available by new stack construction, and the books and journals were\nmoved on to adjacent shelving. 29\nStaff changes overshadowed all other problems, involving\n6 Library Assistants and 2 temporary professional appointments. Service was seriously disrupted, and steady users of\nthe library were understandably impatient of such conditions.\nThe number of journal subscriptions paid from special\nBiomedical Library funds rose to 777 (1$ new titles), with the\ntotal medical list now comprising 1,657 titles. A careful\nreview of the list is currently being made. More than 4,200\nvolumes of books and journals in the Biomedical field were\nadded, bringing the collection within this general classification to over 29,000.\nRecorded loans at the Branch totaled 10,776 volumes\n(campus records being partial because journals are shelved in a\nsection of the main book stacks). Interlibrary loans numbered\n33 7 volumes lent, 215 borrowed (232 and 121 in 1955/56).\nA tabulation of journal use by date of publication recorded\n2,304 volumes for the current year; 4,929 for the decade,\n1946/56; 562 for the previous ten years; and 325 for the whole\nperiod up to 193 5\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nLectures to students in Medicine, Nursing, and Pharmacy\ntotaled 2$ hours. The monthly lists of new acquisitions of\ninterest to Medicine totaled 46 pages. Cooperative activities\nwere carried out in relation to the Vancouver Medical Association, the Health League of Greater-Vancouver, the Metropolitan\nHealth Library, and the Medical Library Association. A detailed\nsurvey of the Vancouver Medical Association Library was made\nby the Biomedical Librarian and published in mimeographed form.\nTwo special committees are concerned with the development\nand use of these specialized facilities, the Library Committee\nof the Faculty of Medicine (Dr. William C Gibson, Dr. J. W.\nWhitelaw, Dr. Sydney M. Friedman, chairman), and the President's Committee on the Biomedical Library' (Dr. Whitelaw, chairman) . The latter represents all medical groups contributing\nto the support of the Branch Library.\nMiss Doreen Fraser, Biomedical Librarian, has been\ncharacteristically resourceful and energetic in developing the\nservice, teaching, and research functions of this library\nprogram. It is hoped that she will be able to count upon greater\nstaff continuity in the coming year. 30\nExtension Library\nThe University Library and the Department of University Extension\njoin forces to provide a specialized readers' service to British\nColumbians not resident in the metropolitan areas. Books are\ncarefully hand-picked to meet individual needs and to supplement\nother forms of library service available in the province.\nSince the establishment of the Extension Library in 1937,\nloans have increased from 1,436 to over 20,000 volumes a year,\nand registered borrowers from 82 to over 600. As the \"mail\norder department\" of the University Library, it provides books\nfor correspondence and extension courses as well as for personal\nstudy and reading. The subscribers, a large number of whom are\nnew Canadians, require a growing proportion of scientific and\ntechnical books and request material relating to special subjects\nrather than by title.\nLoans totaled 20,533 during 1956/57, with 664 personal and\ngroup borrowers paying the two dollar fee. Theatre groups\nnumber 170 registrations and received 5,714 plays. For correspondence courses 1,512 volumes were lent. Basic subject lists\nof books were issued.\nIncreasing requests for reference assistance from outlying\nareas raise the question whether such a service can be continued\nby the small staff of the Extension Library.\nMiss Edith Stewart, Extension Librarian, has a broad knowledge of books and an acute sense of judgment and responsibility\nin applying it to the needs of an unusual clientele. She, and\nMrs. Norene Brackett, with a few hours of student assistance,\nprovide a readers' service which will be hard to match anywhere. 31\nAcknowledgments\nAs we discard an old University Calendar and take up another,\nthere is a recurring opportunity to recognize persons in and\noutside the University who have contributed- in some major way\nto the Library's present development.\nAt the top of the list is the University Library staff,\nwithout whom there would not be anything for the Librarian to\nreport; they are headed by Dr. Samuel Rothstein and Miss Anne\nM. Smith, Assistant Librarians. The President, Board of\nGovernors, Finance Committee, the administrative departments,\nthe Senate Library Committee, Deans, and a large number of\nfaculty members have given indispensable assistance throughout\nthe year. To Friends of the Library, the Council of Friends\n(and its Committee on Library Needs), and to individuals\nnamed and unnamed herein who have given money, materials, and\neffort toward the Library's growth\u00E2\u0080\u0094a personal acknowledgment\nof appreciation. The future is in our hands.\nNeal Harlow\nUniversity Librarian\nNovember 1957 APPENDIX A\n(1) Expenditures for Books, Periodicals and Binding\n(Fiscal Years, April through March)\nSource\nBooks and Periodicals\nBinding\nTotals\nBooks-Periodicals-Binding\n1955/56\n1956/57\n1955/56\n1956/57\n1955/56\n1956/57\nLibrary Budget $67,392.91\nFaculty of Medicine 26,325-90\nFaculty of Law 7,566.31\nNon-University 11,915.59\nSources\n$68,707.64\n24,346.65\n7,578.11\n20,918.54\n$16,365.19 $18,300.36\n4,199.50 5,000.00\n1,333.57 1,200.00\n$$3,75$.10\n30,525.40\n$,899.8$\n11,915.59\n$$7,00$.00\n29,346.65\n8,778.11\n20,91$.54\nTotals\n$113,200.71 #121,550.94 $21,898.26 $24,500.36 $135,093.97 $146,051.30\n(2) Volumes Added to Collections\n1955/56 1956/57\nBooks 10,995 17,743\nSerials 9 951 14,540\nTotal volumes 20,946 32,2$3\nSize of\nLibrarv\n325,000 357,494 APPENDIX B\nNew Periodical Titles Received\nActa anaethesiologica Belgica\nActa chirurgica Belgica\nActa historica scientiarum naturalium et medicinalium\nActa morphologica Neerlando-Scandinavica\nActa oto-rhino-laryngologica Belgica\nActa, rheumatologica Scandinavica\nAdministrator's notebook\nAdmission requirements of American medical colleges\nAesculape\nAkademie der Wissenschaften, Berlin. Institut fur Slawistik.\nVerOffentlichungen\nAkademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna. Philosophisch-historische\nklasse. Sitzungsberichte\nAlberta journal of educational research\nAmerican Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.\nBulletin\nAmerican Association of Colleges for Teacher Education. Guidelines for the improvement of teacher education\nAmerican Association of Colleges for Teacher Education. News\nAmerican Council of Learned Societies. Bulletin\nAmerican federationist\nAmerican Geophysical Union. Geophysical monographs\nAmerican Management Association. Research and development\nseries\nAnnales d'oculistique\nAnnee biologicme\nArchiv der elektrischen Ubertragung\nArchiv ftlr Fischereiwissenschaft\nArchiv fUr osterreichische Geschichte\nArchives des sciences\nArchives italiennes de biologie\nArchives neerlandaises de zoologie\nArithmetic teacher\nArt education\nArtist (London)\nASLIB yearbook\nAssociation for Computing Machinery. Journal\nAssociation of Medical Illustrators. Journal\nAtlantic advocate\nAudio-visual communication review\nAudio-visual instruction\nAustralian journal of dermatology\nAustralian journal of education\nAustralian journal of politics and history\nAvian diseases\nBabel\nBehavioral science\nBeitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und. Literatur Appendix B (Cont.)\nBiokhimiya\nBlood group news\nBlue jay\nBooks from the U. S. A.\nBookseller\nBritannica et Americana\nBritish catalogue of music\nBritish chemical engineering\nBritish journal of educational studies\nBritish Mycological Society. Transactions\nBulletin des bibliotheques de France\nBulletin des societes d'ophthalmologie de France\nBulletin of experimental biology and medicine (English translation)\nBusiness education forum\nBusiness education world\nByzantinoslavica\nCalifornia journal of elementary education\nCanadian commentator\nCanadian journal of animal science\nCanadian music journal\nCanadian Slavonic papers\nCentral African journal of medicine\nCeska akademie ved a urn In i v. Praze. Rozprawy\nChemical Society of London. Special publications\nCoastlines\nCollege and university bulletin\nCollege composition and communication\nColorado quarterly\nComing events in Britain\nCompensation medicine\nConference on physiology of prematurity\nCost accountant\nDanske videnskabernes selskab. Matematik-fysiske skriften\nDavidson journal of anthropology\nDental clinics of America\nDisease-a-raonth\nDocumenta de medicina geographica et tropica\nDonauraum\nEast African medical journal\nEastern Canadian anthropological series\nEcrits du Canada frangais\nEdinburgh post-graduate lectures in medicine\nEducational forum\nEducational screen and audio-visual guide\nElementary English\nElementary school science bulletin\nEnglish language teaching\nEnglish Place Name Society. Survey of English place names\nEntomologist\nEnzyklopedie der mathematischen Wissenschaften\nEsprit Appendix B (Cont.)\nExcerpta medica. Sec. XVIII. Cardiovascular diseases\nExperimental husbandry\nFolio cardiologica\nFolio haematologica\nFolklore\nFreouenz\nGeographisches Jahrbuch\nGeologisches Jahrbuch\nGerontologia\nGerman Quarterly\nGoethe\nGrade teacher /\nGrenoble Universite. Institut Fourier. Annales\nGroup for the Advancement of Psychiatry. Report and symposium\nHarvard educational review\nHellenisme contemporain\nHistorisches Jahrbuch\nHockey field\nIBM journal of research and development\nIllinois journal of mathematics\nIllustrated London news\nIndiana University. Publications. Slavic and East European\nseries\nIndustrial arts teacher\nIndustrial Relations Research Association. Proceedings\nInstructor\nInternational review of education\nItalian quarterly\nJahresberichte fttr deutsche Geschichte\nJanus\nJapanese sociological review\nJournal des traducteurs\nJournal of fluid mechanics\nJournal of neurochemistry\nJunior bookshelf\nJunior college journal\nKant-Studien\nLandscape; magazine of human geography\nLanguage learning\nLi-shih yen chiu\nLibrary resources and technical services\nLimnology and oceanography\nLiterature and psychology\nLondon. University, School of Oriental and African Studies.\nLondon oriental bibliographies\nLubrication engineering\nMD International symposia\nManagement science\nMedical history\nMedical Society of London. Transactions\nMedicinal chemistry\nMetallurgical reviews\nMinnesota journal of education Appendix B (Cont.)\nModern instructor\nMonde nouveau\nNational Art Education Association. Yearbook\nNational Business Education Quarterly\nNational Catholic Education Association. Bulletin\nNational Education Association. Department of Classroom\nTeachers. Official report\nNew leader\nNew York times (on microfilm)\nNorsk tijdsskrift f5r sprogvidenskap\nOceania linguistic monographs\nOphthalmological Society of Australia. Transactions\nOpyti (Experiments)\nPacific northwesterner\nParents' magazine\nParasitologische Schriftenreiche ^\nParis. Universite\". Institut d'etudes slaves. Collection\nhistorique\nParis review\nPeabody journal of education\nPhilips research reports\nPhysics and chemistry of solids\nPhysics in medicine and biology\nPoetry London-New York\nPolitical science\nPontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. Studies and texts\nPrace matematyczne\nProblems of communism\nProfessional geographer\nProgress in neurobiology\nPublic health engineering abstracts\nRationalist annual\nReading teacher\nRevue beige de philologie et d'histoire\nRevue de l'alcoolisme\nRevue de laryngologie, otologie, rhinologie\nRoyal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. Publications\nSt. Anthony's papers\nSt. Thomas' Hospital. Annual report\nSafety education\nScholastic coach\nSchool and community\nSchool bell\nSchool executive\nScientia paedagogica\nShenandoah\nSlavia-Orientalia\nSlavic and East-European studies\nSlavische Rundschau\nSociete beige de me'dicine tropicale. Annales\nSociety beige d'ophtalrnologie. Bulletin ,\nSociete des Chirurgiens de Paris. Bulletins et memoires\nSociete Internationale de Chirurgie. Bulletin Appendix B (Cont.)\nSociety of American Foresters. Proceedings\nSociety of Cosmetic Chemists. Journal\nSocio-economic history\nSouth African journal of laboratory and clinical medicine\nSpeech teacher\nStudia neophilologica\nTamarack review\nTeachers college journal\nTextile research journal\nTown Planning Institute, London. Journal\nUlster medical journal\nUse of English\nViltrevy\nVoprosy ichtiologii\nWest African journal of medicine\nWiener Beitrage zur englischen Philologie\nYearbook of cancer\nZeitschrift fttr Bibliothekswesen und Bibliographie\nZeitschrift fttr deutsche Philologie\nZeitschrift fttr franzosische Sprache und Literatur\nZeitschrift fttr Immunitatsforschung und experimentelle\nTherapie\nZeitschrift fttr Ostforschung\nZentralblatt fQr Bibliothekswesen APPENDIX C\nSelected List of Notable Acquisitions\nPart I: Serials\nActa chirurgica Scandinavica. V. 11-99, 1936-49.\nActa neurovegetativa. V. 1-12, 1950-55.\nActa radiologica. V. 1-20, 1921-39.\nSupplementa. \u00C2\u00A3t2-94j\nAkademiia nauk SSSR. Zoologicheskii institut. Fauna SSSR.\nN.5. #31-63, 1935-56.\nAlbrecht von Graefes Archiv fttr Ophthalmologic. V.1-151,\n1S54-1950.\nAnalysis. V. 1-7, 1933-40. (Reprint).\nAntiquaries journal. V. 29-36, 1949-56.\nArchiv fttr das Studium der neueren Sprachen. V. 111-193, 1903-56.\nArdea. V. 27-3$, 1938-50.\nBantu studies. V. 1-15, 1921-41.\nBeitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur.\nV. 1-4$, 1874-1924.\nBerichte ttber die Wissenschaftliche Biologie. V. 35-$5, 1936-53.\nBest American short stories. 1914-49.\nBibliographie scientifique francaise. V. 1-24, 1902-27.\nBibliotheca philologica classica. V. 4$-65, 1924-3$.\nBook auction records. V. 36-53, l93$/39-1955/56.\nBotanisk tidsskrift. V. 25-33, 1903-15.\nCalifornia journal of elementary education. V. 18-24, Aug. 1949-\nMay 1956.\nCalifornia journal of secondary education. V. 16-31, 1931-56.\nCost accountant. V. 24, August 1944 to date. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCurtis' botanical magazine. V. 151-161, 1925-3$.\nDermatologisches Zentralblatt. V. 1-23, 1397-1920.\nDeutsche entomologische Zeitschrift. V. 84-97, 1929-43.\nEntomological Societv of Washington. Proceedings. V. 1-30,\n1384-1926.\nEntomologist. V. 7-89, 1874-1956.\nElectrical world. V. 27-64, 1896-1914.\nGeologisches Jahrbuch. V. 64-71, 1943-56,\nGesellschaft fttr romanische Literatur. Publikationen. V. 1-50,\n1902-38.\nHandbuch der Gynakologie. V. 1-12, 1930-37.\nHandbuch der Neurologie. (Bumke-Forster). V. 1-17 and\nsupplements 1935-40.\nHarper's weekly. V. 6-40, 1862-96.\nHarvard educational review. V. 1-16, 23-26, 1931-46, 1953-56.\nHaematologica. V. 19-26, 1933-44.\nHispanic American historical review. V. 1, 1918 to date.\nInstitut fttr Geschichtsforschung. Mitteilungen. V. 8-9, 16,\n18-19, 39-61 [1887-1953]\nLiterarische Echo. V. 1-21, 1398-191$. Appendix C (Cont.)\nMedico-legal Society, London. Transactions. V. $-26, 1910-32.\nMonatshefte. V. 38, 1946 to date.\nMonthly review (London). S. 2, V. 63-93, 1310-20.\nNational Catholic Educational Association. Bulletin. V. 38,\n1941 to date.\nNavy Records Society. Publications. V. 78-94, 1938-53.\nNew York times. (Microfilm). 1953-56.\nNorthwestern University. Medical School. Institute of Neurology.\nPublications. V. 1-13, 1929-46.\nOpthalmalogica. V. 103-120, 1942-50.\nPalaeontographica. Abt. B. V. 78-101, 1933-57.\nPall Mall magazine. V. 13-33, 1897-1904.\nPeabody journal of education, V. 15-33, 1937/38-1955/56.\nPhi Delta Kappan. V. 21, Sept. 193.8 to date.\nPhysical Society of Japan. Journal. V. 1-10, 1946-55.\nPortfolio. #1-48, Jan. 1394-1907.\n.Prague. Narodni museum. Casopis. 1847-1901.\nPrairie schooner. V. 1-29, 1927-55.\nReclamation era. V. 2, 5-33, 1910, 1914-47.\nRevue beige de philologie et d'histoire. V. 5-34, 1926-56.\nRevue beige des sciences medicales. V. 1-17, 1929-46.\nRevue blanche. V. 16-30, 189$-1903.\nRevue britannioue. #1-150, 1825-50.\nRevue universelle. V. 1-30, 1920-40.\nRoyal Musical Association. Proceedings. V. 74-$2, 1947/48*1956.\nSchool executive. V. 66-74, 1946/47-1954/55.\nScience education. V. 1-29, 1916/13-1945.\nSociete Entomologique de France. Annales. V. $2-93, 1913-24.\nSoil science. V. 15-18, 1923-24. (Very rare.)\nTrematody zhivotnikh i cheloveka. V. 2-12, .194-8-56.\nTropical diseases bulletin. V. 21-39, 1924-42.\nUse of English. V. 1-7, 1949-56.\nWagner Free Institute of Sciences of Philadelphia.\nTransactions. V. 2-11, 1889-1927.\nPublications. V. 1-4, 1929-44.\nWiener Beitrage zur englischen Philologie. V. 2-46, 1835-1915.\nYale University Library gazette. V. 1-30, 1926-56.\nZeitschrift fttr celtische Philologie. V. 13-23, 1921-42.\nZeitschrift fttr Pflanzenkrankheiten. V. 1-21, 1391-1911.\nZentralblatt fttr die gesamte Neurologie. V. 12-7$, 1916-31.\nZentralblatt fttr haut-und-Geschlechtskrankheiten. V. 1-37,\n1921-31. Appendix C (Cont.)\nPart II: Books\nAdams, Arthur, ed. The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Samarang;\nunder the command of Captain Sir Edward Belcher...during\nthe years 1343-1846. London, 1850. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan. )\nBalbin, Bohuslav Alois. Epitome historica rerum Bohemicarum....\nPrague, 1673-1677. (The Walter C. Koerner Slavonic\nCollection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nBalbin, Bohuslav Alois. Historia de ducibus, ac regibus\nBohemiae.... Prague, 1735- (The Walter C. Koerner Slavonic\nCollection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nBeechey, Frederick William. Narrative of a voyage to the Pacific\nand Beering's Strait, to co-operate with the polar expeditions: performed in His Majesty's ship Blossom...in the\nyears 1825, 1826, 1827, and 1828. London, 1831. (Gift of\nDr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nBeechey, Frederick William. The zoology of Captain Beechey's\nvoyage; compiled from the collections and notes.... London,\n1839. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nBeresford, William. A voyage round the world; but more particularly to the north-west, coast of America: performed in 1785,\n1736, 1787, and 1738 in The King George and Queen Charlotte\n.... by Captain George Dixon. 2nd ed. London, 1789.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.) 0 ,\nBernard, Claude. De la physiologie generale. Paris, 1872.\nBibliographie scientifioue franchise, 1902-1927. Paris, 1902-27.\n6 v,\nBroughton, William Robert. A voyage of discovery to the North\nPacific ocean.... Performed in His Majesty's sloop\nProvidence.... London, 1804, (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nBrowne, John Ross. Etchings of a whaling cruise, with notes of a\nsojourn on the Island of Zanzibar, and a brief history of\nthe whale fishery. London, I846. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nCeske dejiny. Prague, 1912- . 13 v. (The Walter C Koerner\nSlavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nColette, Sidonie Gabrielle. Oeuvres completes. Paris, 1949-50.\n15 v. (The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nColnett, James. A voyage to the South Atlantic and round Cape\nHorn into the Pacific ocean for the purpose of extending the\nspermaceti whale fisheries.... London, 1793. (Gift of\"\nDr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nComenius, Johann Amos. Kurz-gefasste Kirchen-Historie der\nBOhmischen Brttder.... Schwabach, 1739. (The Walter C\nKoerner Slavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nComenius, Johann Amos. Veskere spisy; vydava Ustredne spolek\njednot ucitelskych na Morave. Brno, 1910-26. 4 v.\n(The Walter C. Koerner Slavonic Collection Honouring\nDr. William J. Rose.)\nCooke, Captain Edward. A voyage to the South Sea, and. round the\nworld, perform'd in the years 1708, 1709, 1710, and 1711.\nLondon, 1712. 2 v. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.) Appendix C (Cont.)\nDalrymple, Alexander. (Six charts of the Pacific northwest\ncoast.) (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nDedekind, Richard. Gesammelte mathematische Werke. Braunschweig,\n1930-32. 3 v.\nDescole, Horacio Raul. Genera et species plantarum argentinarum.\nBuenos Aires, 1943. 4 v. in 5. (U.B.C Development Fund.)\nDictionnaire de theologie catholique...sous la direction de\nA. Vacant, et E. Mangenot, continue sous celle de E. Amann\n Paris, 1923-50\". 15 v. in 30.\nEisler, Rudolf. WGrterbuch der philosophischen Begriffe,\nhistorisch-quellenmassig. 4th ed. Berlin, 1927-30. 3 v.\nEnciclopedia cattolica. Vatican City, 1949-54. 12 v.\nEnciklopedija Jugoslavije. Zagreb, 1955. 2 v. (The Walter C\nKoerner Slavonic ^Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nEspinosa y Tello, Jose. Relacion del^viage hecho por las\ngoletas Sutil y Mexicana en el and de 1792, para reconocer\nel estrecho de Fuca.... Madrid, 1802. 2 v. (Gift of\nDr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nFlaschentrSger, Bonifazius,(Ied. Physiologische Chemie; ein\nLehr-und Handbuch fttr Artze, Biologen, und Chemiker.\nBerlin, 1951-.\nFontes rerum Austriacarum. Part 2. Diplomataria et acta.\nVienna,. 1$$5-. 23 v. (The Walter C Koerner Slavonic\nCollection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nGide, Andre' Paul Guillaume. Oeuvres completes; ed. augmentle de\ntextes ine'dits etablie par L. Martin-Chauffier. Paris,\n1932-39. 15 v. (The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.)\nGoldast, Melchior. Melchioris Goldasti Heiminsfeldii De Bohemiae\nregni. Frankfurt, 1627. (The Walter C. Koerner Slavonic\nCollection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nGreat Britain. Laws, Statutes, etc., 1760-1820 (George III).\nAnno regni Georgii III regis Magnae Britanniae.... London,\n1768-1$24. 2 v*. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nGrew, Nehemiah. The anatomy of plants.... London, 16$2.\nHachisuka, Masauji. The birds of the Philippine Islands, with\nnotes on the mammal fauna. London, 1931-35. 2 v. in 3.\nHart, Julia Catharine. Tonnewonte; or the adopted son of\nAmerica. Watertown, N. Y., 1824-25. (Gift of Men's\nCanadian Club of Vancouver.)\nHolzmann, Michael. Deutsches Anonymenlexikon...bearb. von...\nMichael Holzmann und...Hanns Bohatta. Weimar, 1902-28. 7 v.\nHunter, John. Works, with notes; edited by James F. Palmer.\nLondon, 1837. 4 v.\nKruzenshtern, Ivan Fedorovich. Reise urn die Welt in den Jahren\n1803, 1804, 1805 und 1306, auf Befehl seiner Kaiserlichen\nMajestSt Alexander Des Ersten.... St. Petersburg, 1310.\n3 v. and atlas. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nKuroda, Nagamichi. Birds of the island of Java. Tokyo, 1933-36.\n, 2 v.\nLeger, Charles. Redoute' et son temps. Paris, 1945.\nLubienski, Stanislaw. Historia reformationis Polonicae....\nFreistadt, 1685. (The Walter C Koerner Slavonic Collection\nHonouring Dr. William J. Rose.) Appendix C (Cont.)\nMeares, John. Voyages made in the year 17$$ and 17$9 from\nChina to the North West Coast of America.... London, 1790.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMe'moires et observations geographiques et critiques sur la y\nsituation des pays septentrionaux de l'Asie et de l'Amerique,\nd'apres les relations les plus recentes. Lausanne, 1765.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMigne, Jacques Paul, ed. Patrologiae cursus completus. Series\nLatina. Paris, 1$44-. 1$ v.\nMontagu, Lady Mary (Pierrepont) Wortley. Letters of the Right\nHonourable Lady M\u00E2\u0080\u0094y W\u00E2\u0080\u0094y M\u00E2\u0080\u0094e: written during her travels\nin Europe, Asia and Africa.... 2nd ed. London, 1763.\n3 v. in 1. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMorskoi atlas. Moscow, 1950-53. 3 v. (The Walter C Koerner\nSlavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.)\nMttller, Gerhard Friedrich. Voyages from Asia to America...\ntranslated by Thomas Jefferys. 2nd ed. London, 1764.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nMttller, Johann Sebastian. An illustration of the sexual system\nof Linnaeus. London, 1779-$9. 2 v.\nPhillips, John Charles. A natural history of the ducks. With\nplates in color and in black and white from drawings by\nFrank W. Benson, Allan Brooks and Louis Agassiz Fuertes.\nBoston, 1922-26. v. 2 only.\nPorter, David. Journal of a cruise made to the Pacific Ocean,\nby Captain David Porter, in the United States frigate\nEssex, in the years 1812, 1313, and. 1814. 2nd ed. New\nYork, 1822. 2 v. in 1. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nPortlock, Nathaniel. A voyage round the world; but more particularly to the north-west coast of America: performed in\n1785, 1786, 17$7, and 1788, in the King George and Queen\nCharlotte, Captains Portlock and Dixon. London, 1789.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nRespublica siue Status regni Poloniae, Lituaniae, Prussiae,\nLivoniae, etc.; diuersorum autorum. Leiden, 1627.\n(The Walter C Koerner Slavonic Collection Honouring\nDr. William J. Rose.)\nRichardson, John. Wacousta; or the Prophecy. A tale of the\nCanadas. 3 v. London, 1832. (Gift of the Men's Canadian\nClub of Vancouver.)\nSeemann, Berthold Carl. Narrative of the voyage of H.M.S. Herald\nduring the years 1845-51...\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 London, 1853. 2 v. in 1.\n(Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nShillibeer, John. A narrative of the Briton's voyage, to\nPitcairn's Island. Taunton, 1317. (Gift of Dr. H. R.\nMacMillan.)\n.. Sitwell, Sacheverell. Great flower books, 1700-1900; a bibliographical record of two centuries of finely-illustrated\nflower books, by Sacheverell Sitwell and Wilfrid Blunt;\nthe bibliography edited by Patrick M. Synge. London, 1956.\nSlovnik naucny. Prague, 1860-90. 10 v. (The Walter C. Koerner\nSlavonic Collection Honouring Dr. William J. Rose.) Appendix C (Cont.)\nSolereder, Hans. Systematic anatomy of the dicotyledons; a handbook for laboratories of pure and applied botany. Translated by L. A. Boodle and F. E. Fritsch, rev. by D. H.\nScott. Oxford, 1908. 2 v.\nSvenska Sallskapet f5r Antropologi och Geografi, Stockholm. Atlas\n5ver Sverige. Stockholm, 1953-.\nThucydides. Thucvdidis de bello peloponnesiaco libri octo, cum\nadnotationibus integris Henrici Stephani, & Joannis\nHudson!. Amsterdam. 1731. (Gift of the University of\nCincinnati Library.)\nVernon, Francis V. Voyages and travels of a sea officer.\nDublin, 1791. (Gift of Dr. H. R. MacMillan.)\nWurzbach, Alfred, ritter von Tannenberg. Niederlandisches\nKttnstler-Lexikon; auf Grund archivalischer Forschungen, mit\nmehr als 3,000 Monogrammen.... Vienna and Leipzig, 1906-11.\n3 v.\nZohar. English. The Zohar, translated by Harry Sperling and\nMaurice Simon.... London, 1931-34. 5 v. APPENDIX D\nCIRCULATION STATISTICS\u00E2\u0080\u0094September 1956-Au^ust 1957\nSept.\nOct.\nNov.\nDec.\nJan.\nFeb.\nEar.\nApr.\nMay\nJune\nJuly\nAU\u00C2\u00A3.\nTotals\n1\nLoan Desk\n3,185\n15,446\n14,763\n7,745\n14,684\n16,845\n17,584\n10,686\n3,201\n2,080\n12,075\n6,113\n124,407\nReserve\nBook Room\n1,703\n11,529\n12,964\n8,098\n9,992\n9,807\n11,657\n11,557\n323\n198\n6,834\n2,560\n87,222\nReference\nRoom\n411\n1,962\n2,605\n1,150\n2,436\n2,447\n2,944\n1,165\n450\n498\n1,175\n917\n18,160\nFine Arts\nRoom\n149\n357\n738\n462\n1,058\n857\n1,252\n594\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n762\n402\n7,131\nBio-\nMedical\n1,110\n1,583\n1,815\n1,285\n1,952\n1,753\n1,766\n1,417\n812\n662\n831\n1,001\n15,987\nTotals\n6,558\n31,377\n32,885\n18,740\n30,122\n31,709\n35,203\n25,419\n4,786\n3,438\n21,677\n10,993\n252,907\nExtension Library\n20,533\nInterlibrary Loan Statistics\nVolumes borrowed\nVolumes loaned\n\"1956/57 1955/56 1954/55\n465 523 727\n1,257 1,178 1,049 APPENDIX E\nLIBRARY STAFF AS OF AUGUST 31, 1957\nADMINISTRATION\nHarlow, Neal\nRothstein, Samuel\nUniversity Librarian\nAssistant University\nLibrarian\nFugler, Ethel Secretary\nBrigden, Mrs. Roberta Clerk II\nREFERENCE DIVISION\nLanning, Mabel M.\nBell, Inglis\nTucker, Mrs. Frances\nCotterell, Elizabeth\nHodge, Mrs. Patricia\nImeson, George\nRolf e, Dorothy\nCliffe, Sharon\nGrant, Elizabeth\nKuipers, Mrs. Marian\nNiall, Margaret\nRamsey, Lois\nHead\nLibrarian III\nSenior Library Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nStackroom Attendant\nClerk II\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nAug. 1951-\nSept. 1947-\nJune 1947-\nAug. 1955-\nSmith, Anne M.\nAssistant Librarian and\nHead of Reference\nSept. 1930-\nO'Rourke, Joan\nLibrarian III\nJuly 194$-\nDwyer, Melva\nLibrarian II\nJuly 1953-\nBrearley, Mrs. Anne\nLibrarian I\nAug. 1956-\nDore, Mrs. Nancy\nLibrarian I\nSept. 1956-\nMcAlpine, Mrs. Barbara\nLibrarian I\nAug. 1957-\nMackenzie, Janet\nLibrarian I\nJuly 1956-\nVogel, Elizabeth\nLibrarian I\nSept. 1956-\nSperling, Lois\nLibrary Assistant\nJuly 1957-\nFrost, Elizabeth\nStenographer II\nJuly 1957-\nBertsch, Mrs. Anna\nClerk I\nJuly 1957-\nHandkamer, Merle\nClerk I\nJune 1956-\nCATALOGUE DIVISION\nAlldritt, Marjorie\nHead\nAug. 1951-\nStuart-Stubbs, Basil\nLibrarian III\nMay 1956-\nLittle, Mrs. Margaret\nLibrarian II\nSept. 1956-\nChamberlain, Josephine\nLibrarian I\nAug. 1957-\nDobbin, Geraldine\nLibrarian I\nJune 1956-\nTurner, Geoffrey\nLibrarian I\nJune 1956-\nWeinberg, Mrs. Florence\nLibrary Assistant\nJune 1956-\nAura, Mrs. Kaarina\nClerk I\nApril 1957-\nCobb, Carol\nClerk I\nAug. 1956-\nHahn, Gloria\nClerk I\nApril 1957-\nRose, Mrs. Bessie\nClerk I\nJan. 1957-\nTraff, Vera\nClerk I\nDec. 1956-\nCIRCULATION DIVISION\nSept. 1926-\nJune 1952-\nSept. 195 5-\nApril 1957-\nSept. 1956-\nMay 1956-\nSept. 1944-\nSept. 1956-\nJune 1957-\nOct. 1956-\nApril 1956-\nApril 1956- Appendix E (Cont.)\nACQUISITIONS DIVISION\nMercer, Eleanor\nScott, Priscilla\nJohnson, Stephen\nMarr, Joyce\nNewton, Mrs. Catherine\nWoodward, Mrs. Emily\nWesemeyer, Mrs. Beate\nMacDonald, John\nArnold, Catherine\nBottger, Hermine\nDowning, Mrs. Lurian\nForsythe, Mrs. Yvonne\nSpence, Joyce\nSERIALS DIVISION\nLanning, Roland J.\nAdams, Mrs. Alice\nBrooks, Mrs. Kathleen\nLougheed, Joan\nPiercy, Margaret\nRobertson, Mrs. Dorothy\nStoochnoff, Violet\nBindery\nFryer, Percy\nFryer, Percy Jr.\nBrewer, Mrs. Elizabeth\nLynch, Mrs. Isobel\nHarrison, Roger\nBIOMEDICAL LIBRARY\nHead\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian I\n(Acquisiti\nLibrary Assi\nLibrary Assi\nLibrary Assi\nClerk III\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nII\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nOct. 193$-\nJuly 1953-\nJuly 1957-\nons-Catalogue)\nstant April 1957-\nstant Oct. 1955-\nstant July 1957-\nSept. 1956-\nApril 1957-\nMay 1957-\nAug. 1952-\nOct. 1956-\nJuly 194$-\nSept. 1952-\nHead\nLibrarian III\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nClerk I\nForeman\nJourneyman\nJourneywoman\nJourneywoman\nApprentice\nSent. 1926-\nAug. 1952-\nSept. 1955-\nOct. 1954-\nJune 1957-\nMarch 1957-\nNov. 1955-\nDec. 1951-\nApril 1952-\nFeb. 1952-\nOct. 1953-\nMarch 1957-\nFraser,\nReeves,\nBarnes,\nRiches,\nSharpe,\nSager,\nDoreen\nMrs. Silvia\nMrs. Margaret\nEleanor\nJames\nMrs. Maureen\nHead\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nStenographer II\nJuly 1947-\nOct. 1956-\nJuly 1957-\nOct. 1952-\nMay 1957-\nSept. 1956-\nEXTENSION LIBRARY\nStewart, Edith\nBrackett, Mrs. Norene\nCURRICULUM LABORATORY\nExtension Librarian\nStenographer II\nJuly 194$-\nSept. 1951-\nCock, Eleanor\nSenior Library Assist-\nant\nNov. 1956- Appendix E (Cont.)\nRESIGNATIONS DURING PERIOD 1 Sept. 1956 - 31 Aug. 1957\nREFERENCE DIVISION\nOwens, Noel\nTaylor, Doreen\nKnowle s, Dorothy\nFennell, Margaret\nJory, Mrs. Ada\nSkinner, Valerie\nWiedersperg, Mrs, Gisela\nCATALOGUE DIVISION\nJefferd, Dorothy\nGiuriato, Mrs. Lydia\nPapafingos, Mrs. Miche-\nline\nBoyce, Hilary\nBrowne, Anne\nHellawell, Mrs. Anne\nO'Shay, Maureen\nRobinson, Doris\nCIRCULATION DIVISION\nBate, Mrs. Christine\nBlakstad, Mrs. Mary\nHall, Carol\nMawhinney, Pamela\nCochrane, Verna\nColes, Elizabeth\nPeterson, Denise\nACQUISITIONS DIVISION\nSephton, Richard\nHowell, Mrs. Nancy\nBangert, Adolf\nMabee, Mrs. Patricia\nSkakun, Mrs. Alexandra\nSERIALS DIVISION\nDearing, Enid\nKatarinich, Serge\nMurphy, Mrs. Colleen\nBindery\nColmer, James\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian II\nLibrarian I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nStenographer II\nStenographer II\nLibrarian II\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nClerk\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nLibrary Assistant\nClerk III\nClerk I\nClerk I\nClerk I\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nJourneyman\nJuly\nJuly\nJuly\nJan.\nJune\nAug.-\nNov.\n1951-\n1951-\n1953-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0June\n1956-\n-Nov.\n1956-\nAug. 1957\nDec.1956\nOct. 1956\n1957\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Aug. 1957\n1956\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0June 1957\nJan. 1915-June 1957\nJune 1950-Oct. 1956\nOct. 1956-July 1957\nJan.-March 1957\nMay 1952-Jan. 1957\nAug.-Dec. 1956\nMay-Sept. 1956\nJune 1956-Jan. 1957\nDec. 1956-July 1957\nSept. 1954-Sept.1956\nSept. 1954-Sept .1956\nOct. 1956-Mar. 1957\nFeb.-Sept. 1956\nSept. 1956-June 1957\nJune-Oct. 1956\nAug. 1956-June 1957\nSept. 1954-Sept.1956\nSept. 1956-April 1957\nMay-Sept. 1956\nSept. 1956-May 1957\nFeb. 1956-Aug. 1957\nNov. 1955-Feb. 1957\nApr. 1955-June 1957\nSept. 1952-Feb. 1957 Appendix E (Cont.)\nBIOMEDICAL LIBRARY\nAvison, Margaret\nBrown, Mrs. Rosemary\nBrundrett, Eleanor\nPratt, Mrs. Maureen\nTimberley, Darien\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nLibrary Assistant\nMarch-April 1957\nJan. 1956-June 1957\nFeb. 4-2$, 1957\nOct. 1956-Jan. 1957\nJuly-Sept. 1956 APPENDIX F\nProfessional Activities\nof\nTheUniversity Library Staff\nADAMS, Mrs. Alice. Member: P.N.L.A.\nALLDRITT, Marjorie. Member: B.C.L.A.; P.N.L.A. (Chairman-\nelect, Cataloging Division); C.L.A. Attended: B.C.L.A.\nConference, C.L.A. Conference.\nBELL, Inglis F. Member: B.C.L.A. (Councillor; Library Development Committee; Special Activities Committee); C.L.A.\n(Membership Committee); University of Toronto Library\nSchool Alumni Association (President); Bibliographical\nSociety of Canada. Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference;\nC.L.A. Conference. Lectures and Papers: Twenty lectures\nto U.B.C students on theTTIbTiograpby of English literature. Editor, B.C.L.A. Bulletin; Canadian editor.\nModern Humanities Research Association's Annual Bibliography of English Language and Literature.\nBREARLEY, Mrs. Anne. Member: (British) Library Association.\nCHAMBERLAIN, Josephine. Member: C.L.A.\nDOBBIN, Geraldine F. Member: C.L.A.\nDORE, Mrs. Nancy. Member: B.C.L.A. (Recruiting Committee).\nLectures and Papers: Five lectures to U.B.C. students in\nEnglish lOOl\nDWYER, Melva J. Member: B.C.L.A. (Salaries, Staff and. Tenure\nCommittee; Personnel Administration Committee); C.L.A.;\nP.N.L.A, Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A. Conference. Lecture's and Papers: Fourteen lectures to\nU.B.C. students\"in English lOO; eight lectures to students\nin Architecture, Home Economics, Commerce and Planning;\nreading list of periodicals in Home Economics (mimeographed) .\nFRASER, M. Doreen E. Member: President's Committee on the\nBio-Medical Branch Library (Secretary); U.B.C. Faculty of\nMedicine Library Committee (Secretary); C.L.A.; Medical\nLibrary Association (Chairman, Sub-Committee on Curriculum of the Standards Committee; President, Pacific\nNorthwest Regional Group); P.N.L.A. Attended: C.L.A.\nConference (speaker at Reference Section Meeting);\nMedical Library Association. Lectures and Papers: Appendix F (Cont.)\nTwenty-eight lectures to University classes. Public-\nations:\"Vancouver Medical Association Library Survey,\nJuly-September, 1956\" (Vancouver, Vancouver Medical\nAssociation, 1956). Library consultant to Metropolitan\nHealth Committee; Assistant Librarian, Anglican\nTheological College; survey of B. C. Health Sciences libraries in progress.\nHARLOW, Neal. Member: A.L.A. (Council; A.L.A.-C.L.A. Liaison\nCommittee) ;\"\"C.L.A. (A.L.A. Councilor; Microfilm Committee)\nB-C.L.A. (A.L.A. Councilor); P.N.L.A.; Bibliographical\nSociety of Canada (Council); Bibliographical Society of\nAmerica; B.C. Department of Education, Certification\nBoard for Professional Librarians; Vancouver Community\nArts Council (Board); Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation\n(Secretary, Projects Committee); Friends of the Library,\nU.B.C (Secretary); member of many University committees.\nAttended: C.L.A. Conference; A.L.A. Midwinter Conference;\nP.N.L.A. Conference; B.C.L.A. Conference. Publications:\n\"Academic Library Finance\" (C.L.A. Occasional papers,\n12:3-12, October 1956); \"The Canada Council and Canadian\nLibraries\" (B.C.L.A. Bulletin, 20:2-3, October 1956);\n\"Improving Faculty-Library Relations, the Administrator's\nView\" (P.N.L.A. Quarterly, 21:24-26, October 1956);\n\"Climate for the' Arts\" (Vancouver Community Arts Council,\nSummer Calendar, 1957: 3,5).\nJEFFERD, Dorothy. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A.; P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\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.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A. Conference.\nMcALPINE, Mrs. Barbara. Member: C.L.A.; A.L.A. Attended:\nC.L.A. Conference.\nMACKENZIE, Janet. Member: C.L.A. Attended: C.L.A. Conference.\nLectures and Papers: One lecture to U.TLC students in\nEnglish 100.\nMERCER, Eleanor B. Member: B.C.L.A. (Councillor); C.L.A.\n(Budget and. Finance Committee; Chairman, Conference Meeting\non College and University Libraries); P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A. Conference. Appendix F (Cont.)\nO'ROURKE, Joan. Member: B.C.L.A. (Public Relations Committee);\nC.L.A.; P.N.L'.A.\" Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A.\nConference. Lectures and Papers: Twenty-seven lectures\nto U.B.C. students\" in EngHsEjTOo\"; bibliography on aging\nprepared for Conference on Aging.\nOWENS, Noel Arthur Scott. Member: B.C.L.A.; C.L.A. Attended:\nB.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A. Conference. Lectures and\nPapers: Two lectures to U.B.C. students in English 100.\nROTHSTEIN, Samuel. Member: B.C.L.A. (Chairman, Special Activities Committee); 'C'E.A. (Chairman, Library Education\nCommittee; Councillor, Cataloguing Section; Councillor,\nUniversity Salaries Committee); P.N.L.A.; A.L.A.;\nUniversity Archives Committee (Chairman); University Convocation Founders History Committee; University Convocation Executive Council; College of Education Curriculum\nLaboratory Committee; University Committee on Mass\nCommunications; University Committee on Adult Education;\nB.C. Public Library Commission's Committee on Library\nEducation (Secretary); Bibliographical Society of Canada.\nAttended: B.C.L.A. Conference (Chairman, Special Activities\nPanel); C.L.A. Conference (Chairman, Library Education\nMeeting). Lectures and Papers: East Fraser Valley\nTeachers Conference (\"What the University Library Expects\nHigh School Students to Know About Libraries\");\nB.C. Teachers Federation Conference (\"Training Teacher\nLibrarians at the University of British Columbia\");\naddress to U.B.C students (\"The University Library\").\nPublications: \"Selecting a Library School\" (Canadian\nLibrary Association Bulletin, 13 (April, 1957), 201-02;\n\"Why, Where, and How: The Work of the B.C.L.A. Snecial\nActivities Committee\" (B.C.L.A. Bulletin, 20 (April, 1957),\n16-17; \"Training Teacher^IXbrarians at the University of\nBritish Columbia\" (B.C.L.A. Bulletin, 20 (April, 1957),\n18-19; \"How to Write the History of Your Organization\"\n(mimeographed). Co-author, \"Training Professional\nLibrarians for Western Canada\" (Victoria, Public Library\nCommission, 1957); Instructor, Education 390, U.B.C.\nSummer School.\nSCOTT, Priscilla R. Member: B.C.L.A. (Public Relations Committee); C.L.A.; TMN.L.A. Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference;\nC.L.A. Conference.\nSMITH, Anne M. Member: B.C.L.A. (Special Activities Committee);\nC.L.A. (Chairman, Reference Section); P.N.L.A. (Jubilee\nCommittee); A.L.A. Attended: C.L.A. Conference (Chairman,\nReference Section Meeting). Lectures and Papers:\nThirty-eight lectures to'U.B.C students in English, Plant\nScience, Agriculture, Chemical Engineering, Electrical Appendix F (Cont.)\nEngineering, Commerce, Home Economics, Education.\nPublications: \"Qualifications for an Ideal Reference\nLibrarian\" (\"Canadian Library Association Bulletin, 13\n(April, 1957), 216)] bibliographical guides for students\nin Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Home\nEconomics, Plant Science, Commerce and Education\n(mimeographed); \"Royal Commissions and Commissions of\nInquiry on the Okanagan Fruit Industry\" (mimeographed).\nSTEWART, Edith. Member: B.C.L.A. Publications: editor,\n\"University Extension Library Supplements\"(annotated book\nlists); compiler, \"Books Available in the Extension\nLibrary on Biography\" (multilithed).\nSTUART-STUBBS, Basil. Member: C.L.A. (University Library\nStatistics Committee'); A.L.A. (Membership Committee).\nTAYLOR, Doreen. Member: B.C.L.A. (Membership Committee);\nC.L.A.; P.N.L.A. Lectures and Papers: Nine lectures to\nU.B.C. students in English 100'.\nTURNER, George Godfrey. Member: B.C.L.A. (associate editor,\nB.C.L.A. Bulletin); C.TTaTJ P.N.L.A.: A.L.A.; Beta Phi Mu\n(Library Science Honorary Fraternity); Law Society of\nBritish Columbia. Attended: B.C.L.A. Conference; C.L.A.\nConference (Panel on Librarians). Publications:\n\"The Nature of the Professions\" (Feliciter, 2 (March, 1957),\n12-15); \"Librarianship as a Profession\"' (Proceedings of\nthe Twelfth Annual Conference of the Canadian Library\nAssociation, Ottawa, 1957. pp. 27-28). Consultant to\nLibrary of Parliament on Law Library Classification.\nVOGEL, Betty. Member: C.L.A. APPENDIX G\nSenate Library Committee\nArts and Science\nApplied Science\nAgriculture\nLaw\nPharmacy\nGraduate Studies\nMedicine\nForestry\nCommerce and Business\nAdministration\nEducation\nAppointed by President\nEx-officio\n- (Dr. I. McT. Cowan (Chairman)\n(Dr. H. B. Hawthorn\n(Dr. M. F. McGregor\nDr. G, V. Parkinson\nDr. W. J. Anderson\n- Dr. G. D. Kennedy\n- Mr. F. A. Morrison\n- Dr. K. C. McTaggart\n- Dr. S. M. Friedman\n- Dean G. S. Allen\n- Mr. R. M. Bain\n- Dr. J. Katz\n- (Dr. B. A. Dune11\n(Dr. A. D. Moore\n(Dr. R. E. Watters\nChancellor Sherwood Lett\nPresident N. A. M. MacKenzie\nDean G. C. Andrew\nMr. Neal Harlow (Vice-Chairman)\nMr. C. B. Wood\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 of\nBritish Columbia and to provide opportunity for persons\ninterested in the Library, and for its benefactors, to\nexpress their interests more effectively.\nCouncil\nThe following persons are members of the Council of the\nFriends of the Library:\nDr. Wallace Wilson\nDr. Ethel Wilson\nMr. Leon J. Ladner\nMr. Aubrey Roberts\nDr. Ethlyn Trapp\nDr. H. R. MacMillan\nDr. Harold Foley\nHon. Mr. Justice J. V. Clyne\nMr. Reginald Tupper\nMrs. Frank Ross\nDr. A. E. Grauer\nWalter Koerner\nE. T. Rogers\nGeneral Sir Ouvry Roberts\nDr. Leon Koerner\nMr.\nMrs\nMr. Kenneth Caple\nDr. W. Kaye Lamb\nDr. Luther Evans\nDr. Leslie Dunlap\nMr. Lester McLennan\nDr. N. A. M. MacKenzie\nDean Geoffrey Andrew\nMr. Arthur Sager\nDr. Ian McT. Cowan\nDean Gordon Shrum\nDean F. W. Soward\nDean S. N. F. Chant\n*Mr. E. S. Robinson\nMr. Neal Harlow\nDr. Samuel Rothstein\nOrganization\nThe Council is the governing body of the organization.\nThe executive of the Council consists of a President,\nVice-President, Secretary-Treasurer, and the President of the University.\nThe membership fee is five dollars and upward a year,\nand the funds are used for the purchase of Library\nmaterials.\nDeceased October 25, 1957."@en . "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"@en . "Periodicals"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "Z736.B74 A4"@en . "Z736_B74_A4_1957"@en . "10.14288/1.0115283"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "[Vancouver : University of British Columbia]"@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia. Library"@en . "The Report of the University Librarian to the Senate"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .