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The Library World Volume 46 Issue 2

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 August 1943

21

Abstract

“BEFORE the leaves of Autumn fall” we were assured by Mr. Churchill that there might be heavy fighting. They have not fallen yet, although with September, beautiful as it often is, we know the Summer is over and our minds must be occupied most immediately with the war. Libraries may seem to some, even librarians, secondary in this maelstrom but, even if they are, that secondariness is really so important that at this month everyone looks to his own work to see in what ways it may be geared up more fully for its own special contribution. Immediate planning concerns such matters as winter service hours, staffing, the growing wear and tear on stocks, the inadequacy of new book supply, the growing shabbiness of our buildings and our continuing inability to carry on the extension work which was so prominent a feature of many libraries. Frankly, in most towns we are giving a book service, not doing the library work, personal and bibliographical, which every librarian desires to give. To do what is within our limits to the best advantage is, then, the immediate problem.

Citation

(1943), "The Library World Volume 46 Issue 2", New Library World, Vol. 46 No. 2, pp. 17-36. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009266

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1943, MCB UP Limited

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