33
HD ILLIN I S UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Large-scale Digitization Project, 2007.

HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

HDILLIN I SUNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN

PRODUCTION NOTE

University of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign Library

Large-scale Digitization Project, 2007.

Page 2: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,
Page 3: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY NOV 24 G

k/ + Senate Committee on the Library- LIBRA~ )Report for 1963-64

To the Members of the University Senate:

Your Committee on the Library submits the following report forthe year ending June 30, 1964o The Library's progress in all signifi-cant aspects of its operations during this period was substantial. Itscollections for research and study grew rapidly, there was increased useof its resources by students, faculty, and staff, and physical facilitieswere improved. These and other phases of the Library's activities arediscussed in detail belowo

GROWTH OF LIBRARY

At the end of the fiscal year, June 30, 1964, the Library held

3,473,345 volumes cataloged or otherwise prepared for use in Urbana, and274,526 in the two Chicago divisions, a total of 3,747,871 volumes, or anet increase of 109,982 volumes for the year. The total cost of materialspurchased on the three campuses was approximately $1,008,000, to whichshould be added extensive collections of books, journals, pamphlets, maps,music scores, manuscripts, and other items received by gift and exchange.Descriptions of some of the noteworthy groups of books and other materialsacquired during the year follow,

NOTABLE ACQUISITIONS

Nickell Collection of Eighteenth-Century English Literature

The outstanding purchase of the year was the Lloyd F. Nickellcollection of eighteenth-ocentury English literature, This extraordinarycollection of approximately 2,000 volumes, all in prime condition, wasbrought together by the late Lloyd F. Nickell, University alumnus (A.B.1909, A.M, 1911, Ph.D. 1913), from 1930 to 1948, while residing in Englandas chairman and managing director of the Monsanto Chemical Company. Withexpert advice from leading English scholars and antiquarian book dealers,and by collecting during a period when many rare titles were still available,Dr, Nickell was able to build up a comprehensive assemblage in originaleditions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenthcentury as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope,Oliver Goldsmith, Samuel Johnson, James Boswell, Thomas Chatterton, JosephAddision, Tobias Smollett, Horace Walpole, William Congreve, William Cowper,Thomas Gray, and Matthew Prior,

The Nickell library added to thh George Sherburn collection (about3,000 volumes notable for the works of Alexander Pope, Sir Richard Steele,and Henry Fielding, and eighteenth-century periodicals), acquired in 1952,the Henry Clinton Hutchins Defoe collection, purchased in 1962, and system-atic development of this period otherwise in recent years has given Illinoisone of the several first-rate collections of eighteenth-century Englishliterature in the United States,

Page 4: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-2-

Early English Literature

During this four-hundredth anniversary of Shakespeare's birth,the Library acquired a unique item valuable for Shakespearean research,the Ralph Crane scribal copy of Sir Henry Manwayring's A Briefe Abstract,Exposition and Demonstration of All Termes, Parts and Things Belonging,oa Shippe, and the Practick of NavigatoionIý26 Crane is believedto be one of the principal scriveners to the King's Men (Shakespeare'scompany), and it has been shown fairly conclusively that his transcriptslie behind at least four, perhaps five, of the first printed collectionof Shakespeare's plays0 Professor Gwynne Evans comments that "TheManwayring manuscript, unknown until now, is especially important because,to my knowledge, it is the only substantial prose transcript by Crane nowextant and will thus give the student of Shakespeare's text a uniqueopportunity to study Crane's habits in dealing with an author's prose."

A number of titles were added to the Library's distinguishedholdings of early schoolbooks and grammars. Of special note are threefifteenth-century works: the first printing of Antonius Mancinellus'grammatical treatise Thesaurus (Rome, 1h90), and two apparently uniqueschoolbooks, both printed in Leipzig: Puerilia super Donatum (c.1887) andGrammatellus pro Juvenum Eruditione curm Glosa AlmanacaT17q-O). For thesixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there were added Alfonso de Zamora'sIntroductiones Artis Grammatice Hebraice (1526), the first edition of thefirst Hebrew language grammar printed in Spain; the second known copy ofthe first edition of J. G. d'Abadie's A New French Grammar (Oxford, 1676),a work designed to teach French to Englishmen; Richard Fancklin's Orthotonia,seu, Tractatus de Tonis in Lingua Graecanica (London, 1633), one of fiveknown copies; Richard Whittington's Grammatices Prime Partis (Southwark,c.130); and the first collected edition of six grammatical works by HanserdKnollys, Grammaticae Latinae, Graecae, & Hebraicae...Compendium (London,1665).

Other noteworthy pieces of interest for the study of early Englishliterature include: (1) the first edition in English of Seneca's tragedyHercules Furens (London, 1661); (2) two rare plays in first editions, RobertChamberlain's The Swaggering Damsell (London, 16LO), and a Stuart play TheHistory of the Two Maids of More-Clacke (London, 1609); (3) the first Englishedition of the book reputed to be the source from which the Order of theCommunion was drawn, A Simple and Religious Consultation, by Hermann vonWied, Archbishop of Cologne • London, 1i: ~Hm 17 TTThe first edition of ThomasMorton's A Treatise of the Threefolde State of Man (London, 1596); (5) thefirst edition of John Wyclif's first printe work, Dialogorum Libri Quattuor(Basel, 125), by the English reformer and Bible translator; (6F S-75culumCrape-Gownorum (London, 1682), a derivative attack on the Tory clergy byJohn Phillips, nephew and proteg6 of John Milton; (7) Thomas Lupset's ACompendious and A Very Fruteful Treatyse Teachynge the Waye of Dyenge ?ell(London, 15UIT, an exceel~nt'example of early English humanistic prose;(8) an early plea for historical and literary research in England, TheLaboryouse Journey & Searche..,for Englandes Antiquities, by John Leaendand John Bale iTLodonT~^ 5 (9-TRichard Brathwaite's attack on thecavaliers and bishops, The Devills White Boyes (London, 164h); and (10)Sir Thomas Browne's Hydriotaphia, Urne-Buriall...Together with the Garden

Page 5: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-3-

of Cyrus (London, 1658), tracing burial customs and the history of horti-clture in various eras and in various countries.

Eighteenth-Century English Literature

In addition to the superb Nickell collection, the Library purchaseda number of important pieces significant for eighteenth-century Englishstudies, including a rare complete set of first editions of the nine volumesof Laurence Sterne's The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman(London, 1760-61); Joseph Spence's Anecdotes, Observations, and Characters,of Books and Men (London, 1820), three volumes extra-illustrated by theinsertion of some forty portraits of Alexander Pope and 190 portraits ofeminent historical characters; the five-volume Johnsoniana; or, Supplementto Boswell: Being Anecdotes and Sayings of Dr. Johnson, collected by Piozzi,Hawkins, and others (136); a Thomas GrayOde (Cambridge, 1769); WilliamTaylor's Scots Poems (Edinburgh, 1787), a rare volume of Scottish poetry;and The Nor~tirn Atalantis; or, York Sp (London, 1713), an early example ofEnglish prose fiction.

Incunabula

Twenty books printed before 1501 were acquired in the course ofthe year, bringing the Library's total holdings of incunabula to 909 titles.The oldest and perhaps the most important volume in the new group is therare first printing of Petrarch's Historia Griseldis (Cologne, c.1469), aLatin version of the romance of Griselda, paraphrased from Boccaccio'sItalian version, and the source of the "Clerk's Tale" in Chaucer's CanterburyTales. Another exceptional volume is Sebastian Brant's Stultifera Navis(Basel, 1497), a famous satire on the fools and follies of the world, withthe Dtirer illustrations printed from the original blocks.

History of Science

A number of significant works relating to the history of sciencewere added. Noteworthy are: a first edition of Rembert Dodoen's PurgantiumAliarumque eo Facientium, tum et Radicum...ac Deleteriarum Herbarum Historiae(Antwerp, 137s), by the first Belgian botanist to attain world renown; thefirst edition of William Barlow's Magneticall Advertisements...Concerningthe Nature and Properties of the Load-Stone-London, 1616), a rare workpresenting a wealth of information bout the activities of the instrumentmakers and theorists of the period; Henry Coggeshall's The Art of PracticalMeasuring Easily Performed (London, 1690), a unique copy of the thirdedition of a rare work; John Harris' Lexicon Technicum (London, 1708-10),the first technical lexicon to be printed in any language, including in thesecond volume a first printing of Sir Isaac Newton's Latin paper on thenature of acids with his own English translation; and Michael Servetus'Christianismi Restitutio, the rare 1790 Nuremberg reprint of the book whichcontained the first printed reference to the circulation of the blood.

Early Exploration and Americana

The Library also continued to add to its notable collection ofgeographical works and atlases issued during the period of early explorations.Among titles of special interest received during the report year were Imagen

Page 6: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-4-

-del Mundo (Alcala, 1626), the first edition of Lorenzo Ferrer Maldonado'stext-Ubo on navigation, astronomy, and cosmography, which includes adescription of America; Bartolomeo Crescentio's Nautica Mediterranea(Rome, 1607), a comprehensive work on Mediterranean navigation and onnautical instruments, written by a Roman engineer who served as commanderof the papal galleys; the 1578 Cologne edition of Ptolemy's TabulaeGeographicaeo with maps engraved by Gerardus Mercator; Simon Grynaeus andJohann Huttich's Novus Orbis Regionum ac Insularum Veteribus Incognitarumuna cum Tabula Cosmographica (Basel, 1a5), an early compilation of voyages

to thenewly discovered land of America, Africa, and the East; Peter Martyr'sLivro Primo della Historia de l'Indie Occidentali (Venice, 1534), an accountof the first thirty years oT American discovery, incorporating Martyr'sDecades, a work by Oviedo printed at Toledo in 1526, and an anonymous work,La Conquista del Peru (Seville, 1534); Hugo Favolius' Theatri Orbis TerrarumEchiridion (iAnwerp, 1585), including two maps relating to America; an-Matthaeus Seutter's Atlas Minor Praecipua Orbis Terrarum Imperia (Augsburg,c.1744), including three maps of American interest.

Even more directly in the Americana field are the first editionof A Complete Historical, Chronological, and Geographical American Atlas(PhTladelphia: H. C. Carey and I. Lea, 1'T2), the first atlas to use thediscoveries of Lewis and Clark and of Long; and three Illinois items:Karl Gottfried Page's Darstellung der Bfrgerlichen VerhKltnisse in denFreistaaten von Nordamerika (Bautzen, c.130), a scarce book by a seaman-handicraftsman containing notes on a number of Illinois towns; Gustaf E. M,Unonius' Minnen fran en Sjuttonarig Vistelse i Nordvestra Amerika (Upsala,1861-62), describing te years of the author's residence in Chicago; anda manuscript diary of Charles Pierson, a farmer who lived near Lima, Ohio,and in Champaign County, Illinois, during the period 1857 to 1864.

Ecuadorean Anthropology

In support of the Anthropology Department's choice of Ecuadoras an area of specialization, arrangements were made for the purchase ofthe library of the Instituto Ecuatoriano de Antrcpologia y Geografia inQuito. The collection of approximately 600 items, some of great rarity,ranges in date from 1881 to 1963; it includes original copies of unpublishedanthropological studies, and Ecuadorean publications unavailable in thebook trade.

Art, Architecture, and Music

The Art Department's interest in collecting master drawings wassupported by the acquisition of volumes of Drucke der Mar6es Gesellschaftfor van Gogh, Rubens, and Cezanne, and of Sir AnthEoie van Dyc~TT ItenischesSkizzenbuch (Vienna, 1940). For the study of miniatures, there was addedPietro Toesca's Monumenti e Studi per la Storia della Miniatura Italiana(Milan, 1930),-based onhe c-~deETo-lToTUTfco Hoep. Two titles acquiredon the subject of symbolism were Joseph Braun's Das Christliche AltargerEtin Seinen Sein und in Seiner Entwicklung (Munich7T9 , ,~an harbonneau-Ltssay's La IMsU-i'ieuse E-mblmatique Ide Jsus-Christ. La Bestiaire duChrist (Bruges, 19O0)3 A most importait tit-e in archiecture is the firstedition (Turin, 1737) of Architettura Civile of Guarino Guarini, Italianarchitect and mathematician,

Page 7: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

Growing resources for the study of musicology were enriched byJean Rousseau's Trait6 de la Viole (Paris, 1687), on the history and tech-nique of the viola de gamba; the Johannes Wolf edition of the works of JacobObrecht; and a number of early imprints from the library of Dr. Paul Nettl,Professor of Musicology, Emeritus, Indiana University.

Area Study Reso2ces

Impressive progress can be reported again in the development of theLibrary's Slavic collection. The Slavic Section processed a total of 22,090volumes during the year (not including 1,024 microform texts), bringing theLibrary's Slavic and East European holdings to 52,205 cataloged volumes;materials awaiting cataloging will raise the total holdings to 90,539volumes, plus about 2,000 items of uncataloged microtext material.

The Library participated for a second year in the federally-supportedprogram, known as Public Law 480, under which all current Indian and Pakistanipublications of possible research interest are acquired and cataloged coopera-tively. In January, the Library began to receive the publications of Indonesiaon the same basis.

Farmington Plan

Also in the foreign field, the Library continued its active partic-ipation in the "Farmington Plan," a cooperative program sponsored by theAssociation of Research Libraries for the acquisition by libraries in theUnited States of all books of research value published abroad. Among themajor subject assignments for which Illinois is responsible are business andcommerce, public finance, Italian and French languages, French and Spanishliterature, general literature, general technology and engineering, libraryscience, general bibliography, and all publications originating in Brazil.The year's receipts at Illinois under the Farmington Plan numbered l,864volumes, bringing to 44,712 volumes the total received since the programwas inaugurated in 1948.

Gifts

University alumni presented a number of interesting and usefulindividual items and collections. Ernest Ingold '09 added fourteen volumesfor the Ingold Shakespeare Collection, his own Tales of a Peddler (SanFrancisco, 1942), the first edition of William Culen Bryant's The So ofthe Sower (N.Y., 1871), the 1865 Boston edition of Tennyson's Enoch Trdenand the first separate edition of Longfellow's Skeleton in Armor (Boston,1877).

Harlan H. Horner '01 presented 1,182 volumes, many related toLincoln and his period, designated for the Lincoln Room.

From the estate of Marion D. Pratt, M.A. '29 came some 1,400volumes as well as pamphlets, notes, prints, and photographs, and substantialruns of periodicals, a collection rich in American history and biography,with special emphasis on Lincoln and the Civil War.

From Mary T. Worthen '26 was received a number of works publishedin the eighteenth century, and from Dr. Wayne C. Temple '49 came twenty-nineitems of interest for historical studies.

Page 8: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

From the estate of Milo S. Ketchum, late Dean of the College ofEngineering, were received 223 volumes of engineering journals; and fromMrs, H. Heaton Baily came 288 volumes on art, architecture, and landscapegardening,

Four albums of photographs of H. G, Wells, his family, and hisfriends were given by Frank Wells, his younger son, to be added to theWells Collection The albums are a pictorial record of Wells' early marriedlife; they contain manuscripts, programs, sketches, and newspaper clippingspas well as photographs.

Several funds to buy books in selected subject areas were received:contributions of $588 as a memorial to Roy N, Fargo, to purchase books onmedical history; a memorial fund of $390 to Elsie 0, Anderson, to purchasebooks in the field of nature study; a grant of $1,000 from the Board ofTrade of the City of Chicago, to purchase publications in the field of grainmarketing and policy; and an unrestricted bequest of $700 from Guy Zears ofWashington, D.C.

Gifts from other alumni, faculty members, and friends of theUniversity were numerous. They are listed in an appendix to the presentreport.

Exchanges

As of June 15, 196h1 the Library maintained exchange relationswith 3,092 institutions in the United States and foreign countries, Tothese universities, learned societies, academies, observatories, museums,and similar organizations around the world were sent 42,075 copies ofUniversity of Illinois publications, issued by the University Press, theAgricultural and Engineering Experiment Stations, and other divisions, inexchange for their publications. The arrangement of new exchanges andexpansion of existing exchange agreements led to the acquisition of worth-while publications, mainly periodicals, in various fields of interest.

Periodicals

'"riodical files acquired through purchase or exchange includedsome noteworthy additions. Two are in the field of church music: Caecilien-vereinsorgan (Regensburg), 1866-1920, 1930; and Monatschrift fUr Gottesdienstund Kirchliche Kunst (Gyttingen), 1896-19 1 . In the fine arts are LeSurr alrii.e a{ Service de la Revolution (Paris), 1930-33, a complete fileof one of the rarest periodicals of the Surrealist movement; Venedig imAchtzehnten Jahrhundert (Munich), 1920, containing reproductions of drawingsand water col s byn^ Tpolo, Canaletto, Guardi, Piranesi, and Longhe; andDie Zwiebelfisch (Manich), 1909-33, at first devoted to bookmaking and

otypoj i7Tater to literary, theatrical•, musical, and social criticismand satire, In history and political science there were acquired theRecords of Fort St. George (Madras), 1908-, reproducing the records of theEast nd~i JiTEany, in several groupings, from 1670 to 176~; the Decisbesdo Governo da Republica dos Estados Unidos do Brasil (Rio de Janeiro ,TH3~30910, containing the decisions of the Provisional Government and the

Page 9: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-7-

United States of Brazil; and 0 Direito; Revista Mensal de Legislagao, Doutrinae Jurisprudencia, 1873-1913.

In microtext form, files of a number of American and foreign peri-odicals and newspapers were procured, among them:

Bengal Hurkaru, 1822-661'Echo de Paris, 1900-22

La Presse, 1906-22Charleston Courier, 1823-73Chicago Defender, 1937-55Christian Science Monitor, 1908-63Gazette of the United States, 1814-29St. Louis Globe Democrat, 1i95-19$1The States, 1-57-1961The Worker, 1929-62

PREPARATION OF MATERIALS

The technical departments of the Library--Acquisition, Catalog, andSerials Departments and their divisions, such as Binding, Documents, andPhotographic Reproduction--are responsible for the procurement, organization,and preparation for use of all types of library materials. A summary of theiractivities for the year follows.

Acquisition Department

Much of the work of the Acquisition Department has been reportedin preceding sections under GROWTH OF THE LIBRARY.

The total number of publications received by the Acquisition De-partment and forwarded to be incorporated in the Library's classified andcataloged collections came to 89,185 items. The total is limited to mono-graphic materials. The Department also distributed numerous pamphlets andephemera directly to departmental libraries and reading rooms.

Of the 89,185 items forwarded for standard cataloging, 73,451 wereacquired by purchase and 15,734 by gift and exchange. By categories ofmaterials, the total comprised 70,230 volumes, 5,756 music scores, 10,092maps, 267 manuscripts, 1,953 photographic reproductions, and 887 soundrecordings.

A division of the Department, Documents, responsible for procuringall types of official documentary publications, maintained checking recordsfor 15,556 serial titles currently received, added f,21o serial volumes tothe catalog records, and forwarded 3,614 monographs for processing by theCatalog Department. About 3,000 minor documents were incorporated into theuncataloged but organized collection of such material, and 1,10 items wereprocured for office collections on the campus.

Another active section was the Photographic Reproduction Division,which produced 222,172 Xerox prints for individual faculty and student use,

Page 10: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-8-

for Library purposes and to fill mail orders; 73,184 microfilm exposures;2Q,200 multilith reproductions; and smaller quantities of enlargementprints, glossy prints, photostats, etc.--representing a substantial increaseoverall in the work of the Division.

Catalog Department

The work of classifying and cataloging the publications acquiredby the University Library is shared by the Catalog Department, which processesmonographic works, and the Serials Department, which processes serial publi-cations.

During the year, 46,006 new titles were cataloged. The totalnumber of titles processed (i.e., new titles, analytical titles, and oldtitles cataloged and/or reclassified) reached 5h,224, an increase of 3.3percent. The new titles classified and cataloged during the year represented105,810 books and pamphlets, 9,294 microtexts, 73 manuscripts, 4,945 musicscores and parts, 10,943 maps, and 1,097 sound recordings.

The number of new catalog cards added to the general card catalogtotaled 200,543, an increase of 15.3 percent over the previous year.

Serials Department

The total of different serial titles, other than newspapers, beingreceived at the end of the year reached 49,412, or 3,044 more than a yearago. Adding duplicate copies, the total number of serials currently beingchecked in comes to 58,745g Of the 49,412 basic total, 16,869 representperiodical titles and 32,543 are continuations issued less than three timesa year.

The number of newspapers currently received, either as publishedor in microfilm form, increased from 683 to 704.

The Serials Cataloging Division cataloged 2,763 serial titles, andprocessed a total of 56,053 serial items, including 3,772 microtexts, added14,819 periodical volumes after binding, and its Records Division added22,819 continuation volumes.

The Binding Division processed 34,354 books and pamphlets boundcommercially. The Marking and Repair Section marked and lettered all newaccessions and new bindings, a total of 85,273 items, repaired about 3,000books, bound 7,878 pamphlets, provided loose-leaf or "pad" binding for2,785 publications, and mounted 227 maps.

Under the heading of special projects carried on by the SerialsDepartment, the following should be noted: (1) beginning April 1, 1964,the Library was designated as a selective depository for Canadian govern-ment publications in exchange for University of Illinois Press books sentto the National Library of Canada; most of the publications received areserial in nature; (2) in January 1964, standing orders for all publicationsof forty-four American university presses were established, a project whichconcerns both the Acquisition and Serials Departments, since both monographic

Page 11: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-9-

and serial publications are included; (3) the Serials Department workedclosely with the Law Library in the purchase and cataloging of foreignlaW serials, as part of the special program under way to develop foreignlaw materials.

USE OF THE LIBRARY

Total recorded use of library materials increased by 45,643 on theUrbana campus in 1963-6o, to reach a new high of 1,467,873, approximatelythree percent over the previous year. Total general circulation was 81,355and reserve book circulation 635,238. Student general circulation was656,831 and faculty circulation totaled 119,642. These figures representa forty-five percent increase over five years ago and a ninety percentincrease over totals recorded ten years ago,

Eighteen of the Library's public service divisions reported in-creases in use, ranging up to twenty-six percent. In terms of formallyrecorded circulation, the busiest places in the Library system were, inorder, with circulation figures ranging from 246,185 to 44,374, GeneralCirculation, Commerce, Music, Undergraduate, Education, Biology, Engineer-ing, Agriculture, Architecture, and Reference. The first five of theseunits reported circulation of more than 100,000 each.

Statistics of use, however, represent only a part of the servicesperformed by the Library. Much use is by direct, unrecorded consultationof open-shelf collections and through reference and research assistancegiven in person, by telephone, and by mail in all public service divisions.Indicative of this fact is that turnstile readings of 319,590 in the Educa-tion Library, 474,301 in the Undergraduate Library, and 273,786 in theCommerce Library were about three times the recorded use of those libraries,and probably a more accurate reflection of the actual use of the collections.

Hours of Opening

The various units of the public service departments maintainedschedules ranging from 100 hours per week in the Undergraduate Library tothirty-eight hours in the Rare Book Room. Six units--Law, Chemistry, Circu-lation, Reference, Commerce, and Education--were open from eighty to ninety-three hours weekly. Hours were added, in response to demands, to theschedules of the Undergraduate, Agriculture, Mathematics, and Music Librar-ies.

Reference Service

The public service departments are continually called upon forassistance of a reference and research nature. Few statistical recordsare kept of questions asked, letters answers, and bibliographies and in-dexes compiled, but such services require a substantial amount of stafftime in most divisions, and are helpful and often invaluable to the recip-ients. The chief responsibility for aid to readers naturally falls uponthe Reference Department, which reported increased demands for various typesof services rendered by it; one of its activities, the Information Desk inthe public catalog area answered a record number of 10,205 questions, mainlyof an informational nature.

Page 12: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-10-

Interlibrary Loans

Both the Library's borrowing from and lending to other institutionsincreased. A total of 1,664 titles were obtained on interlibrary loan, inoriginal form or in photoreproduction, chiefly for the use of facultymembers and doctoral candidates. The heaviest demands on the service camefrom, in order, History, English, Physical Education, and French. Theinstitutions from which loans were most frequently obtained were, again inorder, the Library of Congress, University of Chicago, Harvard, MidwestInter-Library Center, State University of Iowa, University of Michigan,Illinois State Historical Society, Princeton, and the University ofOklahoma.

Loans to other libraries totaled 5,183 titles, with loans goingto all fifty states, the District of Columbia, nine provinces of Canada,Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Requests from European countries weremet by photographic reproductions. The chief borrowing institutions were,in order, Illinois State University, University of Wisconsin (Madison),Southern Illinois University, Northern Illinois University, University ofCalifornia (Berkeley) State University of Iowa, Indiana University, Uni-versity of Wisconsin (Milwaukee), and University of Michigan.

The circulation of books for extramural courses, 4,268, was adecline from the previous year, despite the increase in the number ofextramural courses, because a majority of instructors were using librarymaterials at the extramural centers throughout the state.

Protection of Library Collections

In an effort to reduce book losses, turnstiles were installedduring the past year in the Undergraduate, Commerce, and Engineering Li-braries, and at the General Circulation Desk. The Commerce Library is theonly division to have completed an inventory after a year's operation withturnstiles; there a two-thirds drop in book losses--from more than 1,000to 375--has resulted.

losses by other library units were substantial and indicate theseriousness of the problem throughout the library system. Hardest hit wereLibrary Science, Education, Music, Journalism, Chemistry, Reference, PhysicalEducation, Physics, Home Economics, and University High School, with lossesrunning up to approximately 500 volumes.

In the President's Faculty Letter for October 31, 1963, an appealwas made to each faculty member to take a ew minutes in each of his classesto point out the seriousness of the problem and to urge upon all studentsthe restraint and consideration of the rights of others that open accessto books requires.

There was some indication that the ready availability of Xeroxcopies has reduced the number of mutilations and thefts, though the evidenceis still inconclusive.

Page 13: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-11-

Extension of Services

Orientation tours, lectures, exhibits, displays, new book lists,periodical lists, and library handbooks were used by the public servicedepartments to make the Library and its resourses better known.

The Journalism and Communications Library, for example, providedeight tours for graduate students and new faculty members, and the librariangave a series of lectures each semester to advanced reporting and advertis-ing classes. The Library also prepared and distributed widely a quarterlyannotated bibliography of acquisitions.

Ten major exhibitions were shown in the General Library exhibitarea in the course of the year. Of unusual interest were "The Negro inAmerican Culture," commemorating the centennial of the Emancipation Procla-mation, "National Atlases," "Twentieth Century American Book Illustration,""Important Books in the History of Science," "University Archives," and"Modern Czech Books."

Acquisition and Processing of Materials

The procuring and processing of library materials are the primaryresponsibility of the technical divisions, but the public service staff isalso closely involved in the same procedures. Departmental librariansregularly checked new book lists, book reviewing periodicals, publishers'announcements, second-hand book catalogs, and subject bibliographies tosupplement materials recommended for purchase by faculty members.

A considerable amount of processing of library materials waslikewise carried on by the public service units, including the maintenanceof serial and catalog records, and in some instances specialized or limitedclassification and cataloging was done.

The University Archives prepared a classification guide for Uni-versity records and organized for use 609 cubic feet of archival material,of which 413 cubic feet were correspondence files from the President'soffice.

Other divisions carried on similar activities: the Rare BookRoom processed 412 uncataloged books printed before 1701; the Music Librarycataloged 450 sets of orchestra and band music, twenty sets of choral music,and 100 scores; the Home Economics Library classified, cataloged and labeled142 slides to increase its total collection of slides to 2,608; the Archi-tecture Library cataloged 4,000 slides and photographs, requiring thetyping and filing of about 10,000 catalog cards; City Planning cataloged308 slides and added 652 publications to its vertical files; and the MapLibrary briefly cataloged 816 map titles,

Quarters and Equipment

A number of improvements in quarters and equipment have beencompleted or are in progress. The Ceramics Library was moved from the

Page 14: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-12-

Ceramics office to room 212 of the Ceramics Building, where it has moreadequate space and has been placed under Library supervision. The IlliniUnion Browsing Room was moved in June 1964 to the Wedgewood Lounge, whichprovides larger and more attractive reading quarters. A room for newserials in the Engineering Library was relighted, painted, refloored, andsteel shelving installed. A listening room in the University High SchoolLibrary was completed and proved to be a valuable addition,

With the completion of the Seventh Addition to the Library latein the year, numerous shifts and rearrangements of space were pending, togo into effect in 1964-665 Approved and in progress were air conditioningof the General Library Building, modernization of lighting for the secondunit of the Bookstacks, and modernization of lighting in all library unitsoutside the General Library.

New Program

The appointment of a full-time archivist and additions to theUniversity Archives staff made possible a significant advance in the archi-val program. This division was charged with the immediate purpose of makingavailable as quickly as possible those materials most pertinent to the writ-ing of a centennial history of the University. The long-range goal, however,was to establish a growing body of archival material, selected and arrangedin accordance with good archival practice, and made available to any researchworker with a legitimate interest in the University's primary records.

MEDICAL LIBRARY

The Library of Medical Sciences added 5,615 volumes during theyear to bring its total holdings to 159,789 volumes, ranking it among lead-ing American university medical libraries. Current periodical subscriptionsnumbered 2,156, with the addition of eighty-seven new subscriptions. Becauseof heavy demands, emphasis was placed on the purchase of up-to-date publica-tions, including in some instances multiple copies. In view of plans forestablishing a computer center on the Medical Center campus, the Library'sresources in mathematics and applicable technology were strengthened.

A gift of $1,000 from the William Allen Pusey Rund was used forthe purchase of pertinent monographs and periodical publications indermatology, plus several items of importance for the history of medicine.

At the request of the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education,to assess the strength of library holdings of pharmacy literature, two listswere checked: (1) a comprehensive bibliography of reference books andmonographs, published in the American Journal of Pharmacy in 1963, of whichthe Library holds 76 percent; and (2) a "WorldTist of Pharmacy Periodicals,"printed in the American Journal of Hospital Pharmacy in 1963, includingmany titles no longer in existence and in unusual languages; of the scientifictitles listed, the library has more than fifty percent. Checking of anotherbibliographical work, Ash's Serial Publications Containing Medical Classics,revealed that the Library held 686 percent of the ,013 references listed

Page 15: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-13.

The year's recorded circulation, 128,664, showed steady andcontinuous growth in library use, representing an increase of ten percentover the previous year's figure and 17.6 percent over that for 1961-62.The increase was due chiefly to borrowing by faculty members and graduatestudents, probably attributable to the increasing number of research projectson the campus. Heavy use was also made of the Library's photocopying service,which reproduced more than 50,000 Xerox prints of pages from books and peri-odicals.

Groups coming to the Library for orientation lectures or toursconducted by staff members included students and new faculty members in theCollege of Nursing, School of Social Work, Occupational Therapy, dietitiansfrom Cook County Hospital, and registrants in Nursing Workshops. Newstudents in the College of Pharmacy were introduced to the Library duringtheir orientation week. Freshmen in the College of Dentistry were givena talk on the organization of library materials and their use, followed bytwo class sessions devoted to on-the-scene orientation.

On technical aspects, progress continued to be made toward complet-ing the Library's cataloging of serial publications; about 2,000 titlesremained before serial cataloging would be completely up to date. Throughthe Medical Library Association Exchange, more than 4,000 duplicate itemswere distributed to member libraries; and thirty cartons of duplicate journalswere shipped to the United States Book Exchange, Washington, D.C., for distri-bution to foreign libraries.

The Library staff continued to participate in the training ofmedical librarians, American and foreign. The course in "Medical Literatureand Reference Work," usually offered in Urbana, was given on the MedicalCenter campus, June 1l-July 16, 1964, under Clara Louise Meckel, Circulation-Reference Librarian, with an enrollment of twenty students. Foreign visitorscame to the Library from Malaya, Yugoslavia, Japan, Uruguay, Argentina,Panama, Mexico, Lebanon, Australia, and Thailand, for observation, in severalinstances for extended periods.

CHICAGO UNDERGRADUATE DIVISION LIBRARY

For the Chicago Undergraduate Division Library staff, the past yearwas a period of preparation for the changes ahead, when the new library build-ing at Chicago Circle will be occupied and the Division becomes a four-yearinstead of a two-year institution. Planning for the furnishings and equip-ment to be used in the new building began in late fall and demanded muchof the Librarian's time for the next six months.

Looking to the future growth of the collections, decisions weremade to adopt the Library of Congress classification, in order to increasethe efficiency and reduce the cost of book processing operations, and toset up a divided library catalog, one section for author and title cards,the other for subject cards.

Also with important implications for the future is the likelihoodthat the Library will soon convert to automated operation, By the end of the

Page 16: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-14-

year all computer programs for the acquisitions system had been writtenand tested. During the year ahead much of the work of automating the li-brary will be started on a trial basis, to permit a study of comparativecosts between an automated system and a manual system.

An increase in book funds made it possible to purchase a largerproportion of titles recommended by the teaching departments. Also, theLibrary was able to acquire a number of important and much needed backfiles, such as the microfilm edition of the New York Times, 1900-12; theMississippi Valley Historical Review, 1914-37 RFAm can Historical Review,1895-1927; 1PMI, 18U-98; and Scripa Mathematica, 1935-~O, completingpresent holdings. Other purchases of special interest included the severalfinancial services of Standard & Poor and the Commerce Clearing House.

A major gift of more than 5,000 items in geology and paleontologycame to the Library from Professor Marvin J. Weller of the University ofChicago. Included are a number of valuable monographs and extensive,generally complete runs of such serial publications as the Canadian GeologicaSurvey Memoirs, Geological Society of America Memoirs, and the Journal ofGeology--4 al f which add very substntially to the Library's geologicalresources.

At the end of the year, the Library contained 114,737 volumes,a net gain of 5,654 volumes. Other materials in the collection included7,326 pamphlets, 15,312 microreproductions, 33,423 maps, 2,301 sound record-ings, and 45,337 government publications. Periodical titles currentlyreceived numbered 1,177.

The circulation of books totaled 65,4hl (compared to 60,489 theprevious year), divided between 54,391 general and 11,050 reserve book cir-culation. The Reference Department reported 10,142 reference questionsreceived and answered.

During the spring of 1964, arrangements were made with the Uni-versity Library at Urbana for expediting interlibrary loans and undercertain conditions for the direct loan of materials to Chicago Undergrad-uate Division students. These agreements will assist the CUD Library toprovide better service while its own collections are developing greateradequacyo

PERSONNEL

At the end of the report year, there were 322 full-time equivalentprofessional and nonacademic positions on the Urbana and two Chicago campuses:278 at Urbana, 16 at the Library of Medical Sciences, and 28 at the ChicagoUndergraduate Division Library. Of the total, 160 were classified as ac-ademic and 162 as nonacademic. In addition, an average of 240 to 250 studentassistants were employed on a part-time basis on the three campuses.

The operations of the Library system continued to be handicappedby the national shortage of professional librarians, causing frequent andprolonged vacancies in academic positions. There was also a high rate ofstaff turnover in the nonacademic and student assistant groups.

Page 17: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-15-

The professional, clerical, and student staff representedmany nationalities--Belgian, British, Chinese, East Indian, Egyptian,French, German, Latvian, Lithuanian, New Zealander, Polish, LatinAmerican, Scandinavian, Canadian, Ukranian, and others. Onthe academicstaff, 23 American library schools were represented, the largest numbersfrom Illinois, Columbia, Denver, Ottawa, Western Reserve, California(Berkeley), Chicago, Indiana, Minnesota, Peabody, Rosary, and Wisconsin.

A number of changes occurred in administrative personnel: FrazerPoole was appointed Librarian, Chicago Undergraduate Division, succeedingEdward Heiliger; Maynard Brichford became University Archivist, a newposition; Paul Spence replaced Eunice Toussaint as History and PoliticalScience Librarian; Mrs. Audrey Iversen replaced Edith Jones as ClassicsLibrarian; Charles Churchwell replaced William Nash as Bockstacks Librarian;Mrs. Patricia Yamamoto replaced Miartha Landis as Illini Union BrowsingRoom Librarian; and Mrs. Bertha Coddington replaced John Kennedy as CommerceLibrarian. Robert Oram, though continuing as Circulation Librarian, wasnamed Assistant Director for Public Service Departments.

In addition to their regular duties, Library staff members wereactive in various professional organizations, holding numerous offices orcommittee assignments in the major library associations of the country,among them the American Library Association and its divisions, SpecialLibraries Association, Music Library Association, Illinois Library Associa-tion, American Association of Law Libraries, Society of American Archivists,and others. Lucien White is current President of the Illinois LibraryAssociation. The staff also participated in University and community organ-izations, such as Phi Beta Kappa, Community Development Council, ChampaignPublic Library Board of Directors, University Theatre Board, UniversityFaculty Club, American Association of University Professors, Campus FolksongClub, Champaign County Historical Society, History of Science Society, andthe Illini Union Faculty-Staff Social Committee,

Contributions to professional and general literature by membersof the Library staff through books, articles, reviews, and bibliographieswere numerous. The titles are partially recorded in the Graduate College'sannual list, Publications of the Faculty.

There are appended to this report several tables showing theallocation of book funds, the size, growth, and the recorded use of theLibrary.

J. W. Jensen, ChairmanH. P. BroquistJ. B. CasagrandeR. T. FisherR. J. MaurerP. M. MitchellReport prepared by R. B. Downs,

Dean of Library Administration

Page 18: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

%I"lH

E~q

1)U) 43

0) 0

O + P

a (V Oqo a

S 4

d

0

>

CCCoco co

CO 0% CY

r\-

rci

~ 0

A §

\0 PCO

H

0\ c1H No

Co

&N 0

0 O\

0 %oM

0%gl B \

0 r aOCT 0 9 0°:-9

oS 0 CO 0 m US

0\

trl (1

r.-1

0%

aN

10

I0

ooN

co

a

.40

Co

0-

0

43

0

4)

COli

0 |w

0)to

0*

4)

0) 0

C t)

O H9

O00

Page 19: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

C

riI

5 V

14S H IoiJO 44

43

009

,p §0 to6M

o a)4

*0 4) 4

ILI 0 C5

a.

0 4

4 ~pon

00 CM 0\- O cr\ Cm H C rj IAm'Q 01% %0 \4\ 0 Hm4Aco r( o Co\oo0 O'o CncC

*' \0 0f0< Cr) Cn o0 1p ct -j c m

H0 -I CM (ntI\O r-CO O Q 0H CmIA IA IA I^ IA A X e\ IA I \HH H H r H- H- H, r-I HHr- rH HH r

(%J \OQc0 p C H.IAm I^ CNI\AH f S>S 9 (C rJ\(AO CN %-0 * 0 NO MnA Hf H\ 00 O N 0 Cr tr\ O 0U

X 0A 0 r F^I C O CMO N ON HMO 0'\-ONo s 0 H CM .1 V C Q P- '0\ \0 0\ t-.

t^ 9\ ff^ \ 0\ 48 ^ <R» ^ 0» 1 ^ ^

IO d O O hE**- \ OC0l0C c U\4o -\ cu0 \ (Noc S OS O

H H ( r4 ri t

IO^Ot--E* HH H'o nV\- J H

Oq Z.QZO-. \O 0 0 4 % \0 \\ 0 ^ O

\D\0 \. \0 \-O \,O . \. V0 -,0 \0 \C CM 8 0

Ocj cn Co Im^-~~0 t- O\ E- I^0-\00sO O\OS EM ,* -r 00 mA 00E.S \O

It O o oo cO\r co 0COH 0 (

CMI CMl rv0 0 C o 1 C3 t

\ CM CM Cm

8% ot ft 4% ot 4% 4 ft ft rN fNj Ht ( ^ Cm M MC

00Rtr\ CM t. -- r 1 rm H- CM 0\ b\\O

rHI CMl CM c C m -g

^ t~tft~tS t - t' c^ OM c^ V ^ 1

'IrNNE OO! O1-

44444 4444 4444f

i

Page 20: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE III

ENROLLMENT IN THE UNIVERSITY AND

USE OF THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY,

1954-5 to 1963-64*

Enrollment TotalYear Undergrad. Graduate Total Recorded Use

195-55 15,395 3,W0h 18,839 808,035

1955-6 16,534 3,571 20,105 829,130

1956-57 17,386 3,842 21,228 874,395

1957-58 16,743 4,260 21,003 978,462

1958-59 16,884 4,698 21,552 1,023,621

1959-60 17,416 4,965 22,381 1,107,597

1960-61 19,019 5,262 24,281 1,201,042

1961-62 19,566 5,539 25,105 1,296,939

1962-63 20,221 6,084 26,305 1,422,230

1963-64 21,236 6,604 27,840 1,467,873

*Urbana campus only; summer session excluded.

Page 21: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE IV

RECORDED USE OF THE LIBRARY IN URBANA AND CHICAGOFOR THE YEAR ENDING JUNE 30, 1964

General Circulation Students Faculty Others Total

General LibraryCirculation Desk 165,356 31,021 9,041 205,418Circulation Desk (Use Here) 40,767 -- --- .40,767Undergraduate Library 36,527 2,260 1,405 40,192Browsing Room 9,428 4,811 1,833 16,072Departmental Libraries in

General Library 121,342 17,718 7,019 146,079Departmental Libraries in

Other Buildings 283,411 63,832 19,564 366,807

Total General Circulation 656,831 119,642 38,862 815,335

Reserve Materials Total

General LibraryUndergraduate Library 77,282Reference Room 46,374Departmental Libraries in

General Library 287,932Departmental Libraries in

Other Buildings 223,650

Total Recorded Reserve Use 635,238

Interlibrary loans to institutions outside of Champaign-Urbana 5,183

Interlibrary loans from other institutions for use of graduatestudents and faculty on Urbana campus 1,491

Photographic reproductions obtained for members of faculty andgraduate students in lieu of volume 173

Extramural extension circulation 4,547

Microfilm $,906

TOTAL RECORDED USE IN URBANA 1,467,873

Page 22: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE IV (Continued)

CHIpAGO CAMPUSES

Students Faculty Others Total

Undergraduate DivisionGeneral Circulation 49,391 5,000 54,391Reserve

Room Use 8,105Overnight 2,945

Interlibrary Loans 24Interlibrary Borrowings 63

Total 65,528

Students Faculty & Others Total

Medical SciencesGeneral Circulation 15,639 57,766 73,h05ReserveRoom Use 37,t71Overnight 16,8W)

Interlibrary Loans (8l1)*Interlibrary Borrowings 502Photographic reproductions

In lieu of borrowings 351In lieu of loans 91

Total 128,669

TOTAL ALL CAMPUSES 1,662,065

*Recorded in General Circulation--not included in total.

Page 23: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE V

THE VOLUMES AND SEATING CAPACITY IN THE

VARIOUS PUBLIC SERVICE DEPARTMENTS AS OF JUNE 30, 1964*

SeatingLibrary Unit Capacity Volumes

URBANAGeneral Library Building

Browsing RoomClassicsCommerce and SociologyEducation, Philosophy, and PsychologyEnglishGeneral Reading and Reference RoomHistory and Political ScienceLibrary ScienceLincoln RoomMap and GeographyModern LanguageNewspaper Library and Business ArchivesPhysical EducationRare Book RoomUndergraduate

Other Libraries on CampulsAgricultureArchitectureBiologyCeramicsChemistryCity Planning and Landscape ArchitectureEngineeringGeological SurveyGeologyHome EconomicsIllini Union Browsing RoomIllinois Historical SurveyJournalismLabor and Industrial RelationsLawMathematicsMusicNatural History SurveyObservatoryPhysicsUniversity High SchoolVeterinary Medicine

1720

190222105512729241262O0

114340

6723

1231075

11833128250

47510529202

854675

2,53434,07815,54021,69416,00018,5009,340

13,9396,000

14,78714,00030,6939,953

83,73925,210

45,99424,04971,3283,867

28,05315,20891,31.37,85921,3347,3561,8913,7007,5834,005

160,89927,10079,87322,o0102,303

11,3319,468

13,0o44

Page 24: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE V (Continued)

SeatingLibrary Unit Capacity Volumes

CHICAGOMedical SciencesUndergraduate Division

240351

159,789114,737

*Excludes extensive holdings of non-book materials, such as the 259,938maps and aerial photographs in the Map Library; in the Architecture andArt Library, 43,132 cataloged slides, 29,529 photographs, etc.; ip theMusic Library, 136,284 pieces of choral and orchestral music, 13,900phonograph discs; in the History and Political Science Library, approx-imately 137,195 U.N. Documents; etc.

**Excludes numerous office collections of 100 to 1,000 volumes each.

Page 25: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE VI

DEPARTMENTAL ALLOCATIONS

For the fiscal year 1963-66, the Board of Trustees made appropria-tions of $847,300 for the increase of the University Library as followstGeneral Library in Urbana, $729,800; Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmacy,$52,500; Undergraduate Division, Chicago, $65,000. Of the General Library'sassignment $136,000 were nonrecurring funds made available during the year totake care of urgent book and binding needs which could not be met from theregular funds. The total book funds appropriated for the Urbana campus were$130,000 larger than the 1962-63 total. During the year, the University ofIllinois Foundation made available $613.95 for special purchases. Additionalpurchases totalling $190,839,l4 were made from Graduate College, departmentaland other funds.

A schedule of assignments for the purchase of books for 1963-66follows, The individual assignments are often approximately repeated fromyear to year, although the amount for any one purpose or department hasfrequently been changed by the Committee when making assignments. The Com-mittee again authorized the Dean to make necessary minor changes or adjust-ments among these assignments during the year.

GENERAL

General and borderline booksReference books and bibliographiesGeneral continuations (chiefly annuals and works issued

in parts over several years)Blanket orders (monographs published by American university

presses)Periodical subscriptions (omitting Law)Binding (chiefly current volumes of serials; including Law)Express, freight, and postageAdministrative offices not connected with colleges or schools

(President's office, Military, etc.)Browsing Room (Main Library)Farmington PlanFor the general building up of resources for research

(a) Sets and completion of sets(b) General research (individual books and pamphlets;

MSS.; etc.)(c) Photographic reproductions(d) Newspaper microfilm

AfricaAsiaLatin AmericaMapsReplacements (lost or worn-out books)Reserve for outstanding ordersUndergraduate LibraryIllini Union Browsing RoomCredits

Total, GENERAL

$ 8,5755,000

18,700

5,000119,20085,0003,010

3001,80020,000

25,000

82,46520,00017,0001,0006,7501,5002,8002,000

18,3955,6001,250

450$450,795

Page 26: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE VI (Continued)

AGRICULTUREj COLLEGE OF

Agriculture $ 4,95;Home Economics 2 060

Total, AGRICULTURE ,6

COMMERCE, COLLEGE OF 12,000

EDUCATION, COLLEGE OF

Education 5,550University High School Library 2 600

Total, EDUCATION 8150

AVIATION, INSTITUTE OF 100

ENGINEERING2 COLLEGE OF

Ceramics 2,250Engineering 12,850Physics 5 300

Total, ENGINEERING

FINE AND APPLIED ARTS, COLLEGE OF

Architecture 4,800Art 5,500City Planning and Landscape Architecture 3,600Music 7,500Music Records 3 0!0

Total, FINE AND APPLIED ARTS ,4

JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATIONS, COLLEGE OF 3,650

LAW, COLLEGE OF 85,000

LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, INSTITUTE OF 2,000

LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES, COLLEGE OF

Anthropology 4,100Astronomy 600Biology 13,000Chemistry 8,000Classics 3,300Comparative Literature 1,000English h,275French 1,600Geography 3,000

Page 27: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

TABLE VI (Continued)

LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES, COLLEGE OF (Continuec)

GeologyGermanHistoryLanguage RecordsLinguisticsMathematicsModern LanguagesPhilosophyPolitical SciencePortuguesePsychologyScandinavianSlavicSociologySpanish and ItalianSpeech

Total, LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES

LIBRARY SCIENCE, GRADUATE SCHOOL OF

Library ScienceBook SelectionVisual Aids

Total, LIBRARY SCIENCE

NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY

PHYSICAL EDUCATION. COLLEGE OF

SOCIAL WORK, SCHOOL OF

VETERINARY MEDICINE, COLLEGE OF

Total, REGULAR ASSIGNMENTS

$ 8,4004,o5.o5,700

1002,0004,000$50

2,$002,800

8003,900

80020,0002,5004,6501,200

102,325

3,9001,275

5005,675

2,000

2,400

800

$3,4700

$729,800

Page 28: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

APPENDIX

GIFTS

Following is a list of individuals from whom the University Libraryreceived gifts of books, pamphlets, periodicals, or other material in 1963-64:

From alumni and students: Edward M. Anderson; James C. Andrews; GrantV. Athanas; Gerald R. Bacus; Kerry J. Bamond; Walter E, Barton; Mrs. MildredJ. Brannon; Charles G. Burroughs; Nilay Chaudhuri; Shih-heng Chia; James B.Childs; Colombian Student Group: Miguel Alvarez, Augusto Arias, AlvaroBarrera, Alvaro Lega, Jairo N. Rojas, David Saponar, Herando Solano, HernanYepes; Tom Davis; Mohamed M. El-Hadi; Franklin C. Ellis, Jr.; Charles F.Fishback; John A. Fondersmith; Robert S. Fuller; Mark Eo Graham; Harlan HeHorner; Russell S. Hyde; Ernest Ingold; Madoko Kon; Jerry W. Koppman; JosephLevin; James F. Mclnerney; Bir B. Malik; Richard W. Merel; Thomas L. Nurse;Frederick A. Petersen; Mrs. Arthur J. Quigley (Josephine A, Meissner); HelenS. Stumbaugh; Lewis R. Sutin; Wayne C. Temple; George S. Ward; Fred So Wells;Mary T. Worthen.

From faculty and staff: Roger Adams; John K. Aikin; Beulah M. Armstrong;John C. Bailar, Jr.; H. Heaton Baily Estate; Lyle E. Bamber; M Dale Baughman;John F. Bell; Wilma Bennett; Jacques Berger; George H, A. Berkhofer; James A.Bier; Eleanor Blum; Carl A. Brandly; Charles K. Brightbill; Do AlexanderBrown; Paul T. Bryant; John F. Cairns; Stewart S. Cairns; William Go Carnes;Marlyn E. Clark; Leonard Coburn; Walter L. Creese; Thomas K. Cureton, Jr.;Edward H. Davidson; Natalie H. Davis; Don U. Deere; Charles C. DeLong; RobertF. Delzell; Phillip E. DeTurk; Robert I, Dickey; Cecil V, Donovan; RobertB. Downs; Ralph T. Fisher, Jr.; John T. Flanagan; Robben W. Fleming; CharlesE. Flynn; Junius L. Forsberg; Arthur L. Friedberg; Guy Go Garrison; JohnB. Gilpin; Herbert Goldhor; Marcus S. Goldman; William I. Goodman; Do W.Gotshalk; Carla Gottlieb; Robert Graham; Edmond E. Granirer; Paul M. Green;Robert W. Harbeson; Marvyn R. Harris; Corinne Hattan Estate; Kenneth B.Henderson; David D, Henry; Marvin To Herrick; Franz E. Hohn; Nick Holonyak,Jr.; Whitney C. Huntington; Icko Iben; Chester 0. Jackson; Robert Do Katz;Willis C. Kauffman; Walter V. Kaulfers; Walter M. Keith; Donald L. Kemmerer;Milo S. Ketchum Estate; Robert L. Koepke; Philip Kolb; P. Gerald Kruger;Alan K. Laing; Ralph L. Langenheim, Jr.; David Lazarus; Robert B. Lees;Norman D. Levine; Driver B, Lindsay; D. Philip Locklin; M. Alice Lohrer;Rajindar S. Luthar; Mary A, McKee; William P. McLure; Murray B. McPherson;Merten J. Mandeville; Frederic E, Mansfield, Jr.; Edith M. Marshall; CarlS. Marvel; Dwight C. Miller; Richard D. Millican; Vern G. Milum; P. MeMitchell; Walter J. Moore; Lloyd Morey; 0. Hobart Mowrer; Cecil A, Moyer;Richard Murphy; William A. Neiswanger, Jr.; T. Ernest Newland; Z. JohnOrdal; Richards C, Osborn; Thomas Page; Thomas E, Parks; Marguerite J%Pease; Echo D. Pepper; J. William Peters; Theodore Peterson; Edwin I.Pilchard, Jr.; Robert E, Pingry; Dragan Plamenac; Loring H, Provine;Dronnadula V. Reddy; Margaret Runkel; Joseph A, Russell; Albert JoRutledge; Allen V. Sapora; Marilyn Satterlee; Victor E, Shelford; GroverE, Shipton; Dnytro M. Shtohryn; G, Frederick Smith; Hobart M. Smith; JaniceM. Smith; Henri Stegemeier; Frederic R, Steggerda; Lawrence M, Stolurow;Edward H. Storey; Frederick G, Straub; Donald E, Strout; Ross P. Strout;Joseph W, Swain; Sherlock Swann, Jr.; Charles M. Thompson Estate; Thomas

Page 29: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-2-

HI Thornburn; Antonio Tovar; Arnold H. Trotier; Fred H. Turner; PrestonH. Tuttle; Frances 0. Van Duyne; Carl Vestling; Karl Weber; Allen S.Welier; Louis Be Wetmore; George W. White; Charles A, Williams; Tracy A.Wilimore,

From other individuals and organizations (selected list): AcademiaSinica; Acciaierie e Ferriere Lombarde Falck; Advertising Research Foundation,Inc.; Aerospace Industries Association of America, Inc.; Aerospace ResearchLaboratories; Agricultural Research Council; The Aluminum Association;American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Associationof Colleges for Teacher Education; American Association of UniversityProfessors; American Cancer Society; American Concrete Institute; AmericanDairy Association; American Federation of Labor and Congress of IndustrialOrganizations; American Foundation for the Blind, Inc.; The AmericanHistorical Company, Inc.; The American Humane Association; American Insti-tute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc.; American Iron and Steel Insti-tute; American Library Association; American Medical Association; AmericanPetroleum Institute; American Public Works Association; American Recreation-Society; The American Society of International Law; American TechnicalSociety; American Telephone and Telegraph Company; American Ukrainian YouthAssociation, Inc.; American Corporation; Americans for Democratic Action;Paul M. Angle; La Asociaci6n Latino Americana de Derecho Aeronautico; Associa-tion des Dipl8m6s de Polytechnique; Association of American Railroads; Associa-tion of American Railroads; Association of College Unions; Australia. Depart-ment of Lands; Australian Council for Educational Research; Automotive SafetyFoundation; Frank A. Bailey; Banco Central de la Republica Argentina; Bankof America; Bank of Finland; Bank of Israel; Terence J, Barnes; BerkeleyPublic Library; Dr. Arthur L. Bloom; Boeing Scientific Research Laboratories;Bollingen Foundation; Bolsa de Comercio de Buenos Airos; Book of the MonthClub, Inc.; Brazilian Consulate; Brazilian Government Trade Bureau; HaroldF. Breimyer; Breitkopf & HErtel; British Commonwealth Geological LiaisonOffice; British Guiana Geological Survey Department; British InformationServices; British Institute of Management; British Internal CombustionEngine; Dr. Deton J, Brooks, Jr.; William C. Brown Company Publishers;Burlington Lines; Calvin K. Kazanjian Economics Foundation, Inc.; S. M.Campbell; Carl Sandburg Association; Carnegie Corporation of New York; TheCarolina Charter Tercentenary Commission; Charles Scribner's Sons; TheChesapeake and Ohio Railway Co.; Chicago. Art Institute; Committee onFederal Tax Policy; The Committee on the College and World Affairs; Commu-nist Party of the Soviet Union; Community Renewal Program, Chicago; Commu-nity Welfare Council of Buffalo and Erie County, New York; Council onEconomic Progress; Consolidated Edison Company of N.Y., Inc.; ConsulateGeneral of the Republic of Iraq; Cook County Department of Public Aid;Council of Higher Educational Institutions in New York City; Earnest SevierCox; Curriculum Advisory Service, Inc.; Jose Roca Cuxart; The David SeaburySchool of Psychology; J. R. Day; Denoyer-Geppert Co.; Denver University;Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission; John R. Dewson;Marchus Diamant, M.D.; Distillation Products Industries; Douglas AircraftCompany, Inc.; Douglas Fir Playwood Association; Drilling Research, Inc.;H. W. Duncan; E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Company, Inc.; Philip C. Duschnes;East African Railways and Harbours; East European Research Institute; EdisonElectric Institute; Editions du Centre National de La Recherche Scientifique;Education and Training Consultants; Educational Facilities Laboratories, Inc.;Encyclopaedia Britannica Press; Eno Foundation for Highway Traffic Control;The Federal Ministry for All-German Affairs; Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Page 30: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

-3-

Foaeral Reserve Bank of Kansas City; Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia;Fels Research Institute for the Study of Human Development; Mrs. RobertFerber; The Filson Club Press; Financial Executives Research Foundation,Inc.; The First National Bank of Chicago; First National City Bank; Flanleyand Woodward,Inc.; Flint Community Junior College; Follett Publishing Company;Foothill College; Ford Foundation; The Foreign Area Fellowship Program; RechaFreier; French Embassy Press and Information Division; John E. Frey; Fry(George) and Associates, Inc., Chicago; Naomi Fukuda; The Fulton PublishingCompany; Fund for Public Information; The Fund for the Advancement of Educa-tion; Garden Club of America; General Electric Company; Georgetown UniversityLibrary; German Information Center; Oliver Gillebo; John T. Gillespie; GirlScouts of America; C. M. Goethe; Nathan Goldstein II; Grolier Incorporated;Jeanne M. Gullett; Pedro Guzman Hijo; Allen W. Hagenbach; G. K. Hall & Co.;M. J. Harriday; Harvard Economic Research Center; Health Insurance Institute;Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, Jr.; Ignacio Helguera; S. K..Heninger, Jr.;Hans Hinrichs; Holliday House, Inc.; Andr. Fred Hdst & S~n; Houghton MifflinCompany; Household Finance Corporation; Human Relations Aids; Human RelationsArea Files; Humble Oil & Refining Co.; Hurty-Peck Library of Beverage Literature;-IBM Space Guidance Center; Illinois Association of Insurance Agents; IllinoisBell Telephone Co.; Illinois Forest Industries Committee; Illinois SupremeCourt; Indiana University. Audio-Visual Department; Indiana University, LilyLibrary; Indiana State Board of Health; Industrial Union of Marine and Ship-building Workers of America; Information Service of India; Herbert S. Ingham;Institute for the Study of the USSR; Institute of Human Development; Instituteof Human Relations; Institute of Life Insurance; Interamerican University;International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers;International Documentation Centre AB; International Materials Conference;International Minerals & Chemical Corporation; International Telephone andTelegraph, Corp.; International Training Centre for Aerial Survey; Inter-national Typographical Union; Interstate Oil Compact Commission; InvestmentCompany Institute; Irish Tourist Board; Italian Information Center; James JoJelinek; F. B. Jenkins; Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago; JewishPublication Society of America; John Howard Association; The Johnson Founda-tion; Joint Committee of the States to Study Alcoholic Beverage Laws; Juntade Investigaces do Ultramar; Mrs. R. H. Kingman; C. F. Kleinknecht; Korea.Committee of National History; Korean Information Office; Vasyl Kosarenko-Kosarevytch; Edouard Krakowski; The Lakeside Press; Virginia Langenheim;Lead Industries Association, Inc.; League of Women Voters of the U.S.;Livraria J. Leite; Liberia La Paz; David Lidman; Dr. Sven Linner; Harry J.Lipkin; The Lithuanian Veterans Association "Ramove", Inc.; Little, Brownand Company; Liveright Publishing Corporation; John Locke; Lucy Lomax;Loomis Museum Association; Los Angeles Harbor Junior College; LouisianaPolytechnic Institute. School of Business Administration; Wilma Lux; LyricOpera of Chicago; D. W. MacDannald; Eoin McKiernan; Alan L. McLeod; The Mac-millan Company; Eric Mann; Manufacturing Chemists' Association; Herbert A.May; Melmont Publishers, Inc.; Meta Publishing Company; Dr. Dallas K. Meyer;Midwest Inter-Library Center; Marion A. Milczewski; Missouri Botanical Garden;Missouri Geological Survey and Water Resources; Modern China Project; Mrs.J. K. Moffett; James 0O Monroe, Jr.; "Moral Re-armament"; Morgan GuarantyTrust Company of New York; Elizabeth M. Moys; NAIRO Commission on SchoolIntegration; National Advertising Company; National Aid to Visually Handi-capped; National Association of Teachers' Agencies; National Board of FireUnderwriters; National Broadcasting Company, Inc.; National Building ResearchInstitute; The National Council for the Social Studies; National Education

Page 31: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

Association; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc.; National LifeInsurance Company; National Music Camp; National Project in AgriculturalCommunications; National Society for Crippled Children and Adults; The NewAmerican Library of World Literature, Inc.; New Orleans Mid-Winter SportsAssociation; New York Labor News Co.; New York World's Fair 1964-1965Corporation; New Zealand. Department of Statistics; The Newcomen Societyin North America; Dr. Paul Niehans; North American Aviation, Inc.; NorthCountry Library System; Northern Ireland Information Service; John M.Novak; Edwin Albert Novotny; M. Yonus Nusraty; A. J. Nystrom & Co.; OakPark Village Clerk; Oakland County Planning Commission; Oregon State Bar;The Oriole Press; E. J. Ortman; Overseas Companies of Portugal; PacificNorthwest Library Association; Albert E. Palmerlee; Pan American CoffeeBureau; Panepirotic Federation of America; Parents' Magazine Press; EdwinB. Parker; Paula K. Lazrus Library of Intergroup Relations; PennsylvaniaAcademy; Pergamon Press Limited; The National Institute of Health; PersonnelPress, Inc.; Harry N. Peterson; Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity; PhilosophicalResearch Society; Pierpont Morgan Library, New York; The Pittsburgh & LakeErie Railroad Company; Mrs. Fred Potter; Private Libraries Association,London; Public Affairs Committee, Inc.; Radio Free Europe; The RandCorporation; Ernest J. Reece; Republic Street Corporation; Robert OwenLehman Foundation; Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences; The RockefellerFoundation; The Romanian Orthodox Episcopate of America; Leighton A.Rosenthal; Royal Danish Consulate General; Royal Norwegian ConsulateGeneral; San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District; Saskatchewan Re-search Council; Scarsdale Public Library; W. Schwann; The Scottish Councilfor Research in Education; Seattle, Mayor's Office; Servicio InformativoEspaflol; George Sherburn (estate); Philip D. Shore; Mrs. George E. Simmons;Harry E. Simpson; Alfred P. Sloan, Jr.; Mrs. Mildred F. Smith; The Societyfor Physical Research; Society for Visual Education; Society of TechnicalWriters and Publishers, Inc.; Lorenzo Sosso; The Southern Fellowships Fund;Southern Regional Education Board; Special Libraries Association; SpencerInternational Press; The Sperry and Hutchinson Co.; Ettie Stetthleimer (estate);John Winchester Stuart; Walter M. Swan; Raymond C. Swank; Mr. anda4irs.Benjamin Symon; Tamiment Institute Library; Maurice F. Tauber; Tele~YsionInformation Office; B. Tomlinson; Dr. Jorge Villacr6s Moscoso; Louis L.Williams; George R. Wren.

Gifts to Chicago Medical Sciences Library

From faculty, staff, alumni, and students: Dr. A. G. Anderson; Dr.0. T. Bailey; Dean G. A. Bennett; Dr. Carroll L. Birch; Dr. H. A. Bliss; Dr.Helen Bonbrest; Dr. C. D. Brown; Helen 0. Bruck; Dr. W. J. Ro Camp; Prof.Emily Cardew; Dr. W. H. Cole; Offices of the Colleges of Dentistry, Medicine,Nursing and Pharmacy; Departments of Oral Pathology, Orthodontics, Psychiatryand Surgery; Dr. Clyde Doughty; Dr. H. F. Dowling; Dr. J. W. Fischer; Mrs.Carol Fraser; Dr. H. H. Friederici; Dr. Philip Goland; I. M. Grais; Dr.N. G. Grand; Mrs. Dorothy Greenhill; Dr. F. W. Hark;; E. T. Hoppe; Dr. J. H.Kiefer; Dr. E. R. Kirch; Catherine Kolitsch; Dr. S. H. Kraines; Dr. C. A.Krakower; Dr. D. M. Laskin; Dr. S. A. Leader; Dr. F. L. Lederer; Dr. L. B,Lefkowitz; Dr. H. A. Levy; Dr. W. H. Levy; Dr. D. L. McElroy; Dr. L. J.Meduna; Dr. G. E. Miller; Elizabeth M. Morgan; Dr. M. V. Novak; Dr. J. T.Reynolds; Dr. S. R. M. Reynolds; Mrs. Helen Ritter; Dr. S. R. Rosenthal;Dr. Adolph Rostenberg; Dr. Max Samter; Dean Isaac Schour; Dr. Kurt Stern;

Page 32: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

Dr. Oscar Sugar; Dr. K. S. Suresh; Wilma Troxel; Dr. G. A. Vance; Vice-President's Office; Dean G. L. Webster; Dr. C. C. Wiggishoff.

From other individuals, institutions, and organizations: AbbottLaboratories; American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation;American Association of Hospital Consultants; American Association ofOrthodontists; American Cancer Society--Illinois Division Inc.; AmericanDental Association; American Equilibration Society; American MedicalAssociation; American Occupational Therapy Association; Arctic AeromedicalLaboratory; Argonne National Laboratory--Library Services Department;Associated Hospital Service of New York; Dr. W. E. Barton; Dr. DonaldBauer; British Empire Cancer Campaign; Brookhaven National Laboratory;California Department of Public Health; Central Connecticut State College;Chicago Board of Health; Ciba Pharmaceutical Products; Cleveland Medical Li-brary Association; Commission on Drug Safety; Commonwealth Fund; Dr. W. L.Donnellan; Educational Testing Service; Ethicon Inc.; Excerpta Medica Foundation;Group Health Insurance Inc.; Dr. Oscar Hawkinson; Henrotin Hospital MedicalLibrary; Charlotte S. Holt; Illinois Department of Registration and Educa-tion; Illinois Youth Commission; International Academy of Oral Pathology;International Business Machines Corporation; International Medical CongressLtd.; Kaiser Foundation; Kenny Rehabilitation Institute; Kettering Laboratoryof Applied Physiology; Laryngoscope; Lutheran Deaconess Hospital Library;Major Hospital Atlas; Medical Research Council of Ireland; Miami HeartInstitute; Midwest Inter-Library Center; National Library of Medicine;National Research Council; National Science Foundation; National Societyfor Crippled Children and Adults; National Tuberculosis Association; NationalVitamin Foundation; New York State Department of Mental Health; Prof. PaulNiehans; Pan American Sanitary Bureau- R. C. Pucinski; Dr. M. Roburn; RocheLaboratories; Rockefeller Foundation; Ross Laboratories; Society of MedicalPsychoanalysts; Dr. Phebe K. Thompson; U.S. Army--Surgeon General; U.S. CivilService Commission; U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare; U.S.National Cancer Institute; U.S. National Institute of Allergy and InfectiousDiseases; U.S. National Institute of General Medical Sciences; U.S. NationalInstitutes of Health; U.S. Quartermaster Food and Container Institute forthe Armed Forces; U.S. School of Aerospace Medicine; University of AlabamaMedical Center; University of Texas M. D. Anderson Hospital; VeteransAdministration Hospital--St. Louis; Wayne State University College ofPharmacy; Wayne State University Medical Library; Wellcome Trust--London;World Health Organization.

Gifts to Chicago Undergraduate Division Library

From faculty and staff: Robert J. Adelsperger; Walter B. Asch; RuthM. Ballard; Janice M. Crews; Don S. Culbertson; Leonard J. Currie; HerbertJ. Curtis; Russell E. Davis; Lloyd C, Engelbrecht; Carl Frommherz; GordonL. Goodman; William D. Grampp; Arnold J. Hartoch; Ray Ketchmark; Marie E.Lein; Harold B. McEldowney; Roy B. Perkins; Canio Radice; Marie Rapp; GilesRobertson; Jose Sanchez; Madelaine Shalabi; John Steiner; Frederick W. Trezise;Eugene B. Vest; Samuel A. Weiss; Allen S. Weller; Elizabeth Wright.

From other individuals and organizations: Alanar Book processingCenter; American Medical Association; Architectural Woodwork Institute;Richard S. Barnes; Barrow Research Laboratory; Bell Telephone Laboratories;Rita Benton; J. W. Bingaman; Leon L, Beratan; Building Construction Employers

Page 33: HD ILLIN I S · editions of the works of such celebrated literary lights of the eighteenth century as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Alexander Pope, Oliver Goldsmith,

Association of Chicago, Inc.; Chicago Public Library; California RedwoodAssociation; William G. B. Carson; Chicago Tribune Newspaper; China Publish-ingi Company, Taiwan; Christian Science Committee for Publication; StephenG, Cohn; Coloradoo Mineral Resources Board; Columbia University, Schoolof Architecture; Community Renewal Program, Chicago; Consulate General ofIreland, Chicago; Delmar Records; Chicago. Department of Urbana Renewal;Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Crafts in America; Eda P. Emerson; AnnaP. Fridstein; William P. Froom; Aline Goldstone; Harmon H. Goldstone; RussellGroves; Clifford M. Hardin; Illinois. Secretary of State; Institute forPhilosophical and Historical Studies, Inc.; Institute of InternationalEducation; James F. Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation; Japanese Embassy,Washington, D.C.; Jewish Publication Society of American; Don Kent; JuliusKlein; B'nai B'rith, Department of Adult Jewish Education; Ludowici-CeladonCompany; Princeton University, School of Architecture;'Mrs. Herbert A. May;Alex Moeller; C. S. Mott Foundation; Harriet Mundy; National Cotton Councilof America; Netherlands Information Service; Oak Park Public Library; ManuelE. Pacheco; Jack Reilly; Eloise Requa; Danish Consulate General, Chicago;Kenneth H. Schroeder; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; Social Sciences ResearchCouncil; Arthur E. Sowers; Syracuse University Library; Joseph M. Thomas;U.S. Department of Commerce, Chicago Field Office; Office of Civil Defense,Washington, D.C.; University of Florida; Waldorf School Association; GordonWilliams.