College and Research Libraries Buildings and Architecture THE FOLLOWING statement of archi-tectural and engineering features for a new library building at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was prepared by John E. Burchard, director of libraries, as part of a series of standards to be used in the selection of an architect. It was sub- mitted at the instance of Ralph E. Ells- worth. Architectural and Engineering Considera- tions What follows is in no sense an attempt to define the style of architecture which shall be followed in designing the building nor to circumscribe the architect in his contribution any more than is necessary to avoid failures in the building which would be regarded as intolerable. a. Site The site selected is between the and . This site is still open to discussion provided an alternative can be suggested which is more centrally located and sus- ceptible of suitable architectural treatment and the provision of the desired amenity. Insofar as the site conditions the further discussion, it is assumed that the foregoing site has been accepted. b. Entrances The principal public entrance should be at or near grade level and should not require the mounting of monumental or long stairs to reach the first floor, which brings the pub- lic at once face to face with the working library. All entrances should be reconciled to con- verge on a common reception desk so that controls can be readily exercised. c. Faqades The river fagade and the fagade facing the back are both important. The one confronts the public, the other will be an element in an important interior court in the developed institute plot. The fagades must be such as to (1) Be appropriate to the environmental buildings, and (2) Afford a dignified and beautiful memo- rial to a distinguished friend of M . I . T . When this is said, however, it must also be pointed out that this must be accomplished without waste either of money or of internal amenity. It is not essential for the achieve- ment of purpose (1) that the fagade be a replica or even a close similitude of the flank- ing buildings. Admittedly, not to make it so will require greater architectural skill, but it is possible. Again, it is not essential to the achievement of purpose (2) that a monumental style be adopted. Indeed, no nonstructural columns, cornices, or other pure embellishments will be tolerated if in any way they either (1) Force the building budget to relinquish important elements of the program, or (2) Sacrifice to the occupants and users of the interior any important light or view. d.. Interiors It shall be characteristic of all the public interiors that they have dignity, amenity, and repose, and of all the working spaces that they be pleasant and efficient places in which to work. The following general considerations apply to all rooms: (1) Monumentality is not only not desired but will be refused. There are to be no enor- mous rooms. (2) Flexibility in all areas is a sine qua non. This implies that interior decoration involving any complicated moldings, engaged columns or pilasters, and the like, is prima facie unaccept- able. The charm of the building shall be ob- tained by scale, proportion, color, skilful use of materials, interesting circulation, and spe- cialized decorative treatments of a sort which can later be sacrificed without major con- struction difficulties. (3) Those rooms on the river $ide shall ex- ploit the view to the utmost. e. Building Materials Materials shall be of the semi-permanent fire-resistant type characteristic of all the major institute buildings. They need not be 78 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES the same materials, if this assists the designer in creating a more satisfactory building. This applies especially to corridor floors and to any other portion in which the traditional in- stitute materials would be unsatisfactory for this type of building. f. Exits, etc. These shall, of course, comply with the building laws. g. Vertical Circulation At a minimum, elevators will be required for the internal use of the staff in transport- ing heavy material from floor to floor. Eleva- tors may also be the only possible solution to public and staff vertical circulation; but the modern escalator has so many attractive fea- tures, provided it is economically possible, and the elevator without operators has so many disadvantages, that the escalator should not be rejected as a solution of the problem with- out careful consideration. Attention is also drawn to the specific re- quirement of such vertical circulation as book lifts, elevators, and the like, which are dis- cussed under the stack. h. Engineering (1) The structural design shall be such as to permit full flexibility, not only for minor changes such as might occur in the humanities reading room, but for much more consequen- tial changes in the whole plan of library ad- ministration. (2) The building shall be completely air- conditioned. It will not be satisfactory to limit this facility to the stacks. (3) Provision shall be made adjacent to the accessions department for the fumigating and cleansing of all accessions. Only by provi- sion of such services can we expect to keep the library clean and reduce our losses. (4) Serious attention shall be paid to all acoustical problems, with respect to suppres- sion of noise transmitted from one area to another, with respect to maintenance of ap- propriate low level within each area, and with respect to hearing in any lecture room, audi- torium, or seminar. (5) Serious attention shall be paid to develop- ment of the most modern intercommunication system for all library purposes, including intercommunication with the branches. (6) The principle of flexibility shall apply to the artificial lighting system; that is, in all areas where the possibility of future re- arrangement of space has been provided for (and this should include most of the build- ing), the space should have built-in lighting on a unit basis, or the possibility of obtaining unit lighting easily, so that areas may have equivalent light, no matter how divided. All reading and work areas must be uni- formly endowed with the best illumination that can be devised with present techniques, and the light sources should be designed with this in view rather than with the objective of using these sources as elements of room deco- ration. These requirements do not necessarily im- ply that the lighting solutions for all work and reading tasks must be identical. Natural lighting is desirable within the limits imposed by solar conditions, particular- ly where a pleasant outlook is possible. A menity This building shall be as efficient in its func- tioning as the best that modern technology and thought can produce in the year 1946 or 1947 and shall acquire this efficiency with no loss of beauty. It shall be the build- ing, of all buildings now at the institute, which the student or staff member shall find most pleasant to enter and to occupy. T o accomplish this end, it shall take advan- tage of thinking as imaginative in its solu- tion of an architectural problem as that which characterizes the thinking of "the institute staffs in the sciences. J A N U A R Y , 1946 79 Since the June General meeting of the Asso- ciation of Research Libraries there has been a change in the pos- sibilities for the purchase of European books. The library mission proposed at that meeting was not approved by the State Department. During the summer Luther H . Evans, Li- brarian of Congress, wrote suggesting that the Library of Congress would be willing to have its agents purchase European books for American libraries provided that there was a carefully planned program of coop- erative acquisition. A meeting was held in Washington on September 19 at which, among others, there were present Dr. Evans and Verner W a r - ren Clapp from the Library of Congress, Harry M . Lydenberg, Keyes D. Metcalf and Carl M . White from the Advisory Commit- tee of the A.R.L., Thomas P. Fleming from the Joint Committee on Importations, Carl H . Milam, and Paul North Rice, Executive Secretary of the A.R.L. It was agreed that Dr. Evans would write to the A.L.A. Board on Resources of American Libraries, the Joint Committee on Importations, and the Association of Research Libraries, asking that each organization appoint someone to serve on an executive committee to work out foreign purchases with the Library of Con- gress. Dr. Evans has asked each of the four national learned councils to appoint a repre- sentative to serve in an advisory capacity. This committee will make definite pro- posals to the membership of the A.R.L. as well as to other libraries that might be in- terested. It will submit a classification cov- ering books which may be secured and will ask cooperating libraries to signify which class of books they are most anxious to se- cure and to agree as to how much money they are willing to advance to the project. More than a million books, most of them in municipal libraries, were destroyed by fire in German raids on England, the (British) Library Association reveals. Some 54,000 children's books went up in flames, and thou- sands of special collections housed in the libraries are gone forever. Of the 1,145,500 books destroyed, 982,000 were in city libra- ries; 155,813 belonged to university libraries; and the rest were in county libraries. Less than a quarter have been replaced, most of them in the big libraries hardest hit in the News from blitz. The Library of the University Col- lege of London, on the top floor of London's only skyscraper, lost 100,000 books and nearly all its special collections. The North Central Association Commis- sion on Colleges and Universities requested special reports from the libraries of eighty- six institutions, at the meeting of the board of review in March 1944, in an effort to study and offer suggestions for improvement of library standards. The activities that followed the special reports are described in the North Central Association Quarterly (vol. 20, July 1945, p. 19-20). Minutes of the twenty-third meeting of the Association of Research Libraries, held at the New York Public Library on June 21-22, 1945, have been lithoprinted by Ed- wards Bros., Ann Arbor, Mich. T h e Junior College Accounting Manual by Henry G. Badger (American Association of Junior Colleges and American Council on Education, 1945) may be of interest to junior college librarians. It establishes a model plan of accounting, statistics, and re- porting for junior colleges. The library as a unit is included. The University of East Maine has received some three hundred volumes from the library of Dr. Max Far- rand, of Bar Harbor. These include the Mississippi Valley Historical Review, a com- plete set of the publications of the Hunting- ton Library, of which he was director from 1927 to 1941, and those volumes of Dr. Far- rand's writings which were not already in the university library. The books reflect Dr. Farrand's lifelong interest in American his- tory and his scholarly editing of the records of the Federal Convention. T h e First Report of the Curator, 1942- 1945, Collection of Regional History, Cornell University, contains an interesting description of the materials acquired to date. Whitney R. Cross, the curator, indicates the purpose of the collection and suggests the types of scholarly research possible with the available sources. The Archives Division of the Pennsylvania 80 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES the Field State Library, the Pennsylvania State Mu- seum, and the Pennsylvania Historical Commission have been removed from the Department of Public Instruction and incor- porated into a new independent governmental unit entitled the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. The Pennsylvania State Library retains control of the three ad- ministrative divisions, namely, the general library, the law library, and the extension library. All state colleges South in South Carolina are being surveyed for the legislature by a group from Peabody Col- lege. Clemson College Library and the University of South Carolina Library were self- and faculty-surveyed during the sum- mer. Plans have been prepared for new library buildings at Furman University and Coker College. Annexes have been planned at Lime- stone College and Wofford College. The Southern Lutheran Theological Sem- inary Library has received a gift of one thousand dollars from President Monroe, of Lenoir-Rhyne College, as first instalment of a memorial to his son. Furman University received twenty-five thousand dollars in 1944 from the General Education Board for reclassification of the collection and purchase of new books. Robert P. Tristam Coffin and Robert Mol- loy were visiting speakers at the eighth an- nual library festival at Coker College on Oct. 9-11, 1945. Limestone College celebrated its centen- nial commemoration on Nov. 4-5, 1945- M a c a l e s t e r Col- Middle West lege Library, St. Paul, has received nearly one thousand volumes on American hymnology, the greatest collection of such materials in the United States, according to an announcement made by President Charles J . Turck. The collection is the gift of Ar- thur Billings Hunt, of the class of 1911 and founder of the Hunt library of first editions. The donation to the college, a duplicate of his set of American hymnals, will be housed in a special music room in the college library. Dr. Hunt has held various positions of promi- nence in the American music world and has been conferred the degree of doctor of music by two higher institutions. Recently he re- turned from the European theatre of war where he served as a captain in the United States Army and director of music for the European theatre of operations. The University of Iowa library has planned a "heritage library," designed to aid students, and especially freshmen, to become acquainted with the backgrounds and criti- cal issues of their own times. The library will be arranged chronologically around eight periods: Early Man, Greek and Roman, Christian and Medieval, Reformation and Renaissance, Age of Shakespeare, Industrial Revolution, Age of Nationalism, and Con- temporary. The library will present the facts and ideas of human achievement in dramatic form through its collection of mod- els, maps, pictures, books, posters, phono- graph records, slides, and motion pictures. The Pacific North- West west Library Asso- ciation held a round table, Sept. 5 and 6, 1945, at Seattle in which the board of directors, chairmen of sections and committees, and representatives of li- braries cooperating in the Pacific Northwest Bibliographic Center participated. The meeting was largely devoted to Director Ralph T . Esterquest's report on the work of the center and discussion of its plans for the future. Library responsibility for the de- velopment of special collections was empha- sized. W . Kaye Lamb, librarian of the University of British Columbia, is the new president of the association; William H. Carlson, librarian of Oregon State College, is second vice president; and Winona Adams, cataloger of Montana State College Library, is treasurer. The library of the University of Califor- nia at Los Angeles received an unusual shipment of material from Germany sent by a member of their faculty who is serving in the Army. It consists of about one hun- dred pieces of Nazi propaganda, ranging from a treatise called "Practical Anti- Semitism" to a sumptuous picture book il- lustrating almost every day in Hitler's life since his rise to power in 1933- The col- JANUARY, 1946 81 lection is of important research value to scholars. The Library has recently formed a stu- dent library committee to serve as a liaison between the library administration and the student body. In addition to conducting li- brary tours, it is publishing a leaflet guide to library procedure. Lawrence C. Powell, U.C.L.A. librarian, has issued a twenty-seven-page, mimeo- graphed "Staff Handbook," which serves as an introduction to the library and its libra- rians' association. It was prepared by a staff committee on standards and professional affairs and includes material relating to the organization and policies of the library, the responsibilities and privileges of the staff members, and the university and national and regional library association. The late Robie L. Reid bequeathed to the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, his extensive library of Canadiana. This collection will supplement the Howay collec- tion, as its emphasis is different and its field broader. Besides its wealth of local British Columbia items and numerous rare Canadian periodicals, the Reid collection is strong in material on the Maritimes, on Louis Riel, and on Canadian fiction and poetry. The Stanford University Library has re- ceived the Burma collection, consisting of 133 volumes, of the late Lt. Col. John L. Christian, and a collection of writings of minor American poets, comprising 1932 vol- umes, collected by the late Professor Hoyt Hopewell Hudson. The Charlotte Ashley Felton Memorial Library has acquired a collection of the writings of Aldous Huxley, 1916-43, and has published a bibliography of the collection. A seventh library was added to the group of libraries in the Oregon State System of Higher Education on July I, 1945, when the North Pacific Dental College was incorpo- rated into the system as the Dental School of the University of Oregon. The library has some 4500 volumes at present. Mrs. Phyllis Rossi is the librarian. Under a two-year grant Mills College Li- brary will engage in an experimental project in the acquisition and wider use of ephemeral material relating to problems of current in- terest. The aim of the project is to find means of circulating and immediately using, instead of shelving for future record, the flood of pamphlet material which comes daily into every library. The material will be widely distributed on the campus through enlarged residence hall libraries. L. Quincy Mum- Personnel ford, formerly ex- ecutive assistant at the New York Public Library, has been ap- pointed assistant director of the Cleveland Public Library. Margaret L. Fayer has been appointed acting librarian at Middlebury College, Mid- dlebury, Vt. Mrs. Fayer, who for the past two years has been acting editor at Middle- bury College, has had previous library ex- perience in California, Lansing, Mich., and New York City. Helen Cramton Graham has been ap- pointed acting librarian at Norwich Univer- sity, Northfield, Vt. Before her marriage Mrs. Graham was librarian at Norwich University from 1910 to 1922. Edward G. Freehafer, until recently assist- ant librarian at Brown University, returned to the New York Public Library on Dec. I, J945> as executive assistant in the reference department. Charles F. McCombs, chief bibliographer, assumed the duties of execu- tive assistant until M r . Freehafer's return. John R. Russell, librarian of the Univer- sity of Rochester, and Wharton Miller, director of libraries at Syracuse University, have been appointed by the Regents of the State of New York to be members of the five-man library council of the state. They succeed Paul M . Paine, librarian of the Syracuse Public Library, and Otto Kinkeldey, librarian at Cornell University. Mary E. Wheatley, formerly head cata- loger at Lehigh University Library, has been appointed librarian of the Beaver College Library. Margaret K. Spangler has been appointed circulation librarian in the library of Penn- sylvania State College. Robert Grazier has been appointed serials librarian in the library of Pennsylvania State College. Ralph A. Fritz resigned as librarian at the Kansas State Teachers College, Pitts- burg, to accept an appointment as director of library education at the State Teachers College, Kutztown, Pa., effective Sept. 1, 1945. Dr. Fritz taught in the department 82 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES of education at Pittsburg from 1928 to 1943, when he became librarian and professor of education. Dorothy Spencer, reference librarian at Fort Hays State College, Hays, Kan., who was on a year's leave of absence at the Uni- versity of Michigan Library School where she received the degree of M.A. in July 1945, resumed her duties at Fort Hays on September 1. Dr. Jesse H. Shera, formerly chief of the Preparations Department, University of Chi- cago Library, has been appointed chief of the readers' service. Helen T . Fisher became cataloger in the library of Washburn Municipal University, Topeka, Kan., on Aug. 15, 1945. Miss Fisher was previously head of the catalog department of the University of New Mex- ico Library. Sarita Robinson, superintendent of the Cataloging Department at the University of Iowa Libraries since 1932, resigned to be- come editor of Readers' Guide on Nov. I, 1 9 4 5 . Norma Cass, head of the Reference De- partment, University of Kentucky, is teach- ing courses in reference, bibliography, and documents at the University of Illinois Li- brary School during the academic year 1945-46. Guy R. Lyle, director of libraries, Louisi- ana State University, was on leave of absence during August 1945, to serve as consultant in the preparation of plans for a $1,500,000 library building for the colleges of agriculture and home economics at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. Frances Lander Spain has been appointed librarian and head of the library science de- partment at Winthrop College, S.C. F. W . Simpson has been appointed libra- rian at Furman University, S.C. Mary E. Timberlake, formerly librarian at Lander College, has been appointed assist- ant reference librarian at the University of South Carolina. Katherine Dusenberry has been appointed cataloger at Winthrop College. Jane Flener has been appointed assistant librarian at Furman University, S.C. Ida J . Dacus has retired from Winthrop College. Eva Wrigley has retired from Furman University. Wilma Smith was appointed an assistant in reference with direct responsibility for serial publications and government docu- ments at the University of Redlands, Calif., on Aug. 1, 1945. Maud Ditmars, interim assistant in ref- erence at the University of Redlands, be- came librarian of Westminster College, Salt Lake City, on Oct. I, 1945. Frances L. Yocom, associate librarian and cataloger at Fisk University for a number of years, became assistant librarian at Hum- boldt State College, Areata, Calif., in July I 9 4 5 - Margaret Markley has joined the staff of the University of Oregon Library as super- visor of reserves and museum librarian. Lucy M . Lewis, director of libraries emeritus in the Oregon State System of Higher Education, received the honorary degree of doctor of library science from Oregon State College on June 10, 1945. Miss Lewis served as director of libraries from the time the state-supported institu- tions of higher education of Oregon were unified in 1932 until her retirement on Jan. h 1945. Siri Andrews, associate professor, Univer- sity of Washington School of Librarianship, has resigned to accept a position as children's book editor with Henry Holt. Her position at the university will be filled by Elizabeth A. Groves, who returns to her alma mater from San Jose State Teachers' College, San Jose, Calif. Mary Manning Cook has returned to the staff of Mills College, Oakland, Calif., as reference assistant, after a year's leave of absence at the School of Librarianship at the University of California. Helen Blasdale has been appointed assistant librarian and assistant professor of bibliog- raphy at Mills College. Margaret Lyon, instructor in the Depart- ment of Music at Mills College, has been placed in charge of the music library. Pearle Quinn, former acting instructor in history at Stanford University and research assistant in the Hoover war libraries, is joining the staff of the Mills College Library as consultant in international relations. Wanda Brockman, formerly union cata- loger for the University of Oregon Libraries, joined the staff of the Reference Department of the Seattle Public Library on Aug. 15, 1945. JANUARY, 1946 83 \ Arthur Baldwin, a reference assistant in the Seattle Public Library, has left for a year's graduate study at Columbia Univer- sity. Obituaries Gladys R . C r a n m e r , for twenty-five years a librarian at the Pennsylvania State Col- lege Library, died on Aug. 24, 1945. Miss C r a n m e r served eight years in the Syra- cuse, N . Y . , Public Library catalog depart- ment before going to the Pennsylvania State College in 1921, where she was successively in charge of gifts and exchanges, reference librarian, assistant librarian, acting librarian for the year 1930-31, and thereafter as- sistant librarian and senior assistant li- brarian until her death. She made notable contributions at the Pennsylvania State College Library in the fields of library instruction and reference work and her con- tribution to the development of the Penn- sylvania State College Collection is of importance to the library field. Miss C r a n m e r was active in professional meet- ings. She was secretary of the College and Reference Section of the Pennsylvania Li- brary Association in 1932-33 and was secretary of the Pennsylvania Library As- sociation during the year before her death. M a t t h e w H a l e Douglass, librarian emeritus of the University of Oregon, died O c t . 3, 1945. M r . Douglass was librarian f r o m 1908 until 1942. D u r i n g his long administration the library was increased f r o m 15,531 books in 1908 to 333,961 books in 1942. A m o n g M r . Douglass' many ac- complishments are the planning of the new library building and the organization of the Friends of the L i b r a r y group. H e was a member of the American Library Associa- tion and Pacific N o r t h w e s t Library As- sociation, and since his retirement in 1942 held an honorary life membership in the latter organization. J o h n Ridington,, retired librarian of the University of British Columbia, died at 78, in April 1945. H e had been librarian f r o m the beginnings of the University of British Columbia Library until his retirement in 1940. 1 84 / COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Appointments to Positions Charles F. Gosnell Dr. Charles F. Gosnell, who became State Librarian of New York on September first, comes to his new position with a variety of experience. During his undergraduate train- ing period he was an assistant in the Univer- sity of Rochester, working with the late Donald B. Gilchrist. At the same time, he also served as a special correspondent for the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. . Dr. Gosnell was a member of the staff of the New York Public Library from 1931 to 1937. He earned both his bachelor's and master's degrees in the School of Library Service, Columbia University. At the New York Public Library he was especially in- terested in staff affairs and edited a revival of the library paper, Library Lions. From 1937 until his present appointment, Dr. Gosnell has been associated with Queens College—assistant librarian, 1937-41, asso- ciate librarian, 1941-45, and librarian and associate professor, 1945. Since 1943 he has been an associate in the School of Library Service, Columbia University. He has been especially concerned with such problems as book selection, faculty approach to the li- C H A R L E S F . G O S N E L L JANUARY, 1946 brary, and staff welfare problems. His doc- toral dissertation at New York University in 1943 was entitled "The Rate of Obsoles- cence in College Library Book Collections." As chairman of the Queens College dele- gation to the Legislative Conference of the City Colleges, Dr. Gosnell was able to help obtain state legislation extending mandatory salary increments for library assistants in the city colleges of New York. Through the Institute of International Education, he was a special consultant at the Department of Bibliography, Centro de Estudios His- toricos, in Madrid in 1934. He has been chairman of a committee which has devel- oped plans for a new library building for Queens College. He has been a very active member in local, regional, and national li- brary organizations and is a frequent con- tributor to professional journals. Mortimer Taube Mortimer Taube, appointed assistant direc- tor for operations of the Acquisitions Depart- ment, Library of Congress, attended Rutgers University, the University of Chicago, H a r - vard University, and the University of Cali- M O R T I M E R T A U B E 85 fornia. From the last-named institution he received his Ph.D. degree in philosophy in J935 and his certificate from the school of librarianship in 1936. He has taught philosophy at the University of California and is the author of a book entitled Causation, Freedom, and Determin- ism (London, 1936). His articles have appeared in the Journal of Philosophy, Phi- losophy of Science, South Atlantic Quarterly, Library Quarterly, College and Research' Libraries', and Association of American Col- leges Bulletin. Dr. Taube has had varied experience in library work—as head of the circulation de- partment of the library of Mills College, as cataloger of the Rutgers University Library, and, from 1940 to 1944, as head of the ac- quisitions work for the rapidly growing col- lections of Duke University. Dr. Taube was first appointed to the serv- ice of the Library of Congress in January 1944 and, until his present appointment, had been assistant chief of the general reference and bibliography division. In addition to his professional work as a librarian, Dr. Taube has maintained his in- terest in philosophic studies and the history of ideas. He is an active reviewer for the new United States Quarterly Book List of the Library of Congress. Harry C. Bauer Harry C. Bauer has been appointed assist- ant librarian of the University of Washing- ton Library, Seattle, succeeding William H . Carlson, now director of libraries for the Oregon State System of Higher Education. M r . Bauer, a graduate of the St. Louis Library School, attended the University of Missouri from 1921 to 1923. Later he transferred to Washington University in St. Louis, v where he took the A.B. degree in 1927 and the M.S. degree in physics in 1929. He was elected to Sigma Xi. His first professional appointment in li- brary work came in 1929 when he was ap- pointed an assistant in the applied science department of the St. Louis Public Library. In 1931 he was appointed chief of the circu- lation department of the University of Mis- souri Library. He remained with the university until March 1934, when he joined the staff of the Tennessee Valley Authority to organize and administer its technical H A R R Y C . B A U E R library system. While with the T.V.A., M r . Bauer collaborated with Mrs. Lucile Keck and Mrs. I. E. Dority in editing the second edition of Public Administration Libraries: a Manual of Practice, published by Public Administration Service in 1941. He also served on the board of directors of the Spe- cial Libraries Association from 1940 until April 1942 when he was commissioned a cap- tain in the U.S. Army Air Corps. Leaving the T.V.A. in 1942 to join the Army, M r . Bauer, after completing the courses of the officers training school at Miami Beach, Fla., and the combat intelli- gence school at Harrisburg, Pa., was assigned to the 98th Bombardment Group and sent to the Middle East. In May 1943 he was promoted to major. He returned to the states with his group in April 1945. During its combat history the 98th Bombardment Group participated in fourteen campaigns and was twice cited by the President of the United States. M a j o r Bauer was awarded the Bronze Star, the Air Medal, and the Purple Heart. N. Orwin Rush N. Orwin Rush, since 1936 the librarian of Colby College, has been appointed to the 86 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES N . O R W I N R U S H K E N N E T H J . B O Y E R position of librarian of Clark University, at Worcester, Mass. M r . Rush received his B.A. degree from Friends University in 1931, and his B.S. and M.S. degrees from the School of Library Service, Columbia University, in 1932 and 1940 respectively. From 1932 until he went to Colby, M r . Rush was on the staff of the New York Public Library, finally becoming assistant in charge of the main reading room. At Colby College M r . Rush completed the recataloging and reclassification of the entire collection, changing from the Dewey to the Library of Congress system. An outstanding feature of the development of Colby College during his librarianship was the rapid growth and expansion of the special collections. Another achievement was the institution of a publishing program, making it possible to disseminate information concerning the spe- cial holdings of the library. M r . Rush was also chairman 'of a library building commit- tee which has completed the plans for a new library. M r . Rush has been active in local and national library organizations and served as president of the Maine Library Association, I939"4Ii as a member of the A.L.A. Friends of Libraries Committee, 1942-45, and as a member of the A . L A . Library Administra- tion Committee. He was editor of the Maine Library Association Bulletin, 1942-45, and has contributed many articles to profes- sional and educational journals. His Bib- liography of the Published IVritings of Rufus M. Jones was issued in 1941. Kenneth J. Boyer The new librarian of Bowdoin College, Kenneth J . Boyer, had his first experience as an assistant in the New York Public Li- brary in 1924. A graduate of the University of Rochester and of the New York State Library School, M r . Boyer was librarian of Westfield Athenaeum, Westfield, Mass., for two years, 1925 to 1927. Here he worked on plans for the equipment of the new build- ing and assisted in moving the collections into the new quarters. He went to Bowdoin College as assistant librarian in 1927. Very soon afterward he established a reserve book system and in- stalled a new charging system. He was instrumental in organizing a separate subject catalog, with the cards arranged in inverse chronological order. Among other accom- plishments, he compiled a handbook of in- struction for the use of student assistants and started a bulletin containing news notes and a classified list of accessions, which is JANUARY, 1946 87 made available to faculty members and stu- dents. He has always been interested in the welfare of students and to that end has had better lighting facilities installed, has had additional seating capacity provided, and has permitted smoking in the browsing room. At present he is working with the faculty library committee on plans for an addition to the library building at Bowdoin. He has written several articles and reviews. Donald Forrester Cameron Donald Forrester Cameron, the new li- brarian of Rutgers University, was born in D O N A L D F O R R E S T E R C A M E R O N Glasgow, Scotland. A graduate of Union College, he received his master's degree from Princeton in 1925. From 1925 to 1927 he was an instructor in English at Union College. Before becoming an instructor at Rutgers in 1929, he spent the preceding two years as a graduate student at Princeton University. At the time of his appointment to the librarianship at Rutgers, M r . Cameron was an associate professor. He had also served as editor of the Rutgers University Press since 1943. For a time before M r . Osborn retired as librarian, M r . Cameron was on the Rutgers staff as associate librarian. For a long period he had been interested in the development of the university library. He was a member of the library advisory board of the university and one of the founders of the Associated Friends of the Rutgers Uni- versity Library. He is a member of the American Library Association, the Biblio- graphical Society of America, and the New Jersey Library Association. Joseph H. Brewer Dr. Joseph Hillyer Brewer, recently ap- pointed visiting librarian at Queens College, has had a varied background in the fields of education and publishing. He received his J O S E P H H I L L Y E R B R E W E R B.A. from Dartmouth in 1920, B.A. from Oxford University in 1922 and M.A. in 1933, and LL.D. from Olivet College in 1944. While at Oxford in 1921-22, Dr. Brewer served as one of the editors of the Oxford Fortnightly Review, later joining the staff of the London Spectator as private secretary to the editor, the late J . St. Loe Strachey. After spending the better part of two years at the Spectator, he returned to the United States in 1925 and joined the new publishing firm of Payson and Clarke. Later, with Edward K. Warren and George Palmer Putnam, he took over control of Payson and Clarke, changing its name to Brewer, W a r - 88 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ren, and Putnam. When the depression struck the book trade Dr. Brewer and his partners sold out to Harcourt, Brace and Company. In 1934 Dr. Brewer, who had long been interested in the problems of higher educa- tion in America, assumed the presidency of Olivet College, a one-hundred-year-old co- educational college in Michigan, where he remained until he resigned in 1944. Here he had an opportunity to work out some of the theories of education that he had been elaborating, and during the ten years of his incumbency the whole educational program of the college was revised on the basis of an adaptation to the needs of a small American college of the Oxford tutorial methods and honor school curricula and examinations. Olivet was one of the first of the small col- leges to introduce a resident artist to the campus and has done especially fine work in music. During the summers of 1936 to 1941, Olivet sponsored a series of writers conferences which included such authors as Ford Madox Ford, Katherine Anne Porter, Allen Tate, Carl Sandburg, Paul Engle, Glenway Wescott, Sherwood Anderson, and W . H . Auden. While at Olivet, Dr. Brewer became in- terested in the concept of the library as the educational center of the college. With the encouragement of Dr. William Warner Bishop, he has spent the past year in resi- dence at the School of Library Service, Co- lumbia University. Arthur B. Berthold Arthur B. Berthold, the new chief of the Preparations Department of the University of Chicago Library, is well known in the fields of cataloging, classification, and bib- liography. A recipient of degrees from Colgate, Co- lumbia (B.S., School of Library Service), and Chicago (M.A., Graduate Library School), M r . Berthold held a variety of li- brary and bibliographical positions before he became associate director and bibliographer of the Philadelphia Bibliographical Center in 1936. Here he remained for six years, playing a prominent part in establishing pro- A R T H U R B . B E R T H O L D cedures and organizing the records of the center. In 1942 he went to the Division of Special Information of the Library of Con- gress, where he was engaged in bibliographi- cal work connected with the war effort. The following year he became a member of the staff of the Office of Strategic Services, where he remained until his recent appointment to the position in the University of Chicago Library. M r . Berthold is the author of several monographs and numerous articles and re- views in professional and other journals. He was one of the contributors to Robert B. D o w n s ' s Union Catalogs in the United States. His wide knowledge of languages, especially the Slavic, has been applied in considerable translating of books and articles. In 1939 he was a delegate of the American Library Association to the Fifteenth Conference of the International Federation for Documen- tation, held in Zurich. M r . Berthold pre- sented a paper on the union catalog situation in the United States at this conference. He has also been active in the work of other professional organizations. JANUARY, 1946 89