!).'! 



Inter-Library Loans 



Forty-eight titles were borrowed for staff use from the Ameri- 

 can Museum of Natural History, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn 

 Public 1 ibran ( olumbia I niversit\ Cornell ! niversity Medical 

 College, Medical Society of the County of Kings, Teachers Col- 

 lege, and the Library of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. 



Twenty-six volumes were loaned to Brooklyn Museum Library, 

 Carnegie institution oi Washington Carnegie '-onion foi Ex- 

 perimental Evolution, Cold Spring Harbor, L. I., Columbia Uni- 

 versity, Cornell University Medical College, National Bank of 

 Commerce of New York, IVnnie, Davis, Marvin and Edmonds, 

 New York, Pennsylvania State College, Princeton University, and 

 Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. 



Changes in Staff 



( hi Septembt i hi ~t \1 i I tuili* (Nepali ' hii be lei w.as ap- 

 pointed library assistant, in place of Miss Edith R. Daly, resigned. 



On December ytb Mi Gladv:, Glenn XunscJ iva mack tem- 

 porary assistant in connection with bindery work. 



WW kinh I ,1m 1 I' - who 1 1 id i ,-i t d umIk likr.n \ < \ei \ moil 

 ing (except Saturday), was transferred to the department of 

 elementary instruction, as stenographer. 



Miscellaneous 



The Library was represented, as usual, at the New York Library 

 Club, Eastern College Librarians' Meeting, the Special Library 

 Association, and th New rorl Regional Cataloipu Group. 



Groups from the Maxwell Training School, and students from 

 the same school, who were in the Museum Training Course at the 

 American Museum of Natural History, visited the library and 

 were given an idea, of the work and scope of the department. 



Hxhibits ol fool periodicals Jo m; lal germane to 



the subjects, were arranged for " Spring Day " Walks, the annual 

 Spring Inspection, and for the meeting of the Contemporary Club. 



For List of donors and gifts see Appendix i. 



The statistical report follows : 



