TY - JOUR AB - IN his admirable survey of library methods and problems in Great Britain, read—unfortunately by proxy—at the St. Louis meeting of the American Library Association, which the author of this paper had the pleasure of hearing, Mr. Bond, in writing of open access, was courageous enough to say that the system in question was the system of the future. It is true that he put that future a long way off, but it is none the less creditable to Mr. Bond's fairness and foresight that he recognises and admits that some time the system of shelf access—perhaps a better term than open access—is bound to prevail, and become the rule rather than the exception in the library administration of this country. One has therefore a shrewd suspicion that much of the fierceness with which the system and the personalities of those who have adopted and approved it, have been assailed, is due to an uneasy feeling on the part of its opponents that time is on the other side, and that they can at best only put the clock back, not stop it. VL - 7 IS - 6 SN - 0307-4803 DO - 10.1108/eb008874 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008874 PY - 1904 Y1 - 1904/01/01 TI - The Library World Volume 7 Issue 6 T2 - New Library World PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 140 EP - 168 Y2 - 2024/09/26 ER -