The Library World Volume 32 Issue 8
Abstract
We learn from various sources that the Cambridge Conference arrangements are well in hand. It is many years since the Library Association gathered in body at either Oxford or Cambridge and the event should therefore be of universal interest. On one point it has a special interest, for the President will be Mr. Jast, the first municipal librarian to hold our highest office for many years past; and no one will do otherwise than rejoice at the somewhat tardy honour thus to be paid him. Cambridge itself is making first‐class history in that it is about to build a new University Library, the elevation of which—and it is a most imposing one—has been published in The Observer and probably elsewhere. Moreover, the university city with its colleges, halls, libraries and quite glamorous history from the literary point of view, offers librarians more than most people the ideal place of meeting.
Citation
(1930), "The Library World Volume 32 Issue 8", New Library World, Vol. 32 No. 8, pp. 200-224. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009132
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1930, MCB UP Limited