{"id":3985,"date":"1969-05-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1969-05-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1969-vol-50-no-5-putting-knowledge-to-work\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:00:23","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:00:23","slug":"may-1969-vol-50-no-5-putting-knowledge-to-work","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1969-vol-50-no-5-putting-knowledge-to-work\/","title":{"rendered":"May 1969 &#8211; VOL. 50, No. 5 &#8211; Putting Knowledge To Work"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">To work in a firm or institution                     that has a well-stocked special library, organized and directed                     by a wise and alert librarian, is a rich and fruitful experience.<\/p>\n<p> The organization that wants facts and information instead                     of guesses and opinions finds the well-organized library the                     most efficient research tool and the greatest economy in time                     and effort. It contributes to the three processes basic to                     civilization: the discovery of knowledge, the conservation                     of knowledge, and the transmission of knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>In today&#8217;s world, with its wealth of new information, its                     heightened speed, and its widened horizons, the professional                     librarian&#8217;s role is truly one of great importance. It has                     been estimated that some five hundred additional libraries                     will be needed annually in Canada over the next few years                     to meet the increased demand for school, university, business,                     technical, and many other sorts of special libraries. It is                     the librarian who makes all these of value because special                     knowledge is needed to find what is wanted amid the bewildering                     output of printed matter.<\/p>\n<p>Library service in Canada may be traced back to Marc Lescarbot&#8217;s                     lending of books at the Port Royal Habitation in 1606, to                     the opening of La Biblioth\u00e8que du Coll\u00e8ge des                     J\u00e9suites de Qu\u00e9bec in 1635, and to the donations                     of John Graves Simcoe to the Legislature of Upper Canada in                     1791. Special libraries made their debut early, designed to                     meet the needs of schools, colleges, the government, and the                     professions.<\/p>\n<p>In 1966 there were an estimated 900 public libraries in                     Canada; 75 college and university library systems in degree-granting                     institutions; 325 business, professional and technical libraries;                     265 government libraries, and more than 2,000 centralized                     school libraries.<\/p>\n<p>Miss Beryl L. Anderson of the Graduate School of Library                     Science at McGill University prepared a Directory of Special                     Libraries in Canada for the Canadian Library Association which                     was published in June 1968 and listed 640 libraries. Further                     studies by Miss Anderson show that there were 669 special                     libraries in October 1968 and that there are probably another                     250 libraries which could have qualified for inclusion but                     were not listed.<\/p>\n<h3>Special Libraries Association<\/h3>\n<p>The topic of this <em>Monthly Letter <\/em>is suggested by                     the Annual Conference of the Special Libraries Association                     in Montreal in June. This is an international organization                     of more than 7,000 professional librarians and information                     experts. It was organized in 1909 for the promotion of high                     professional standards for libraries and library personnel,                     and now has 36 local chapters, of which two are in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Miss Mildred I. Turnbull, Librarian of The Royal Bank of                     Canada Library until her retirement in 1953, was a prime mover                     in starting the Montreal Chapter in 1932, and she was president                     when the Special Libraries Association met in Montreal for                     the first time, in 1936. The Toronto Chapter was organized                     in 1940.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Putting knowledge to work&#8221; &#8211; the incisive slogan of                     the Association &#8211; sums up the aim of special librarians                     in all fields. They are not content to build stocks of books,                     but are dedicated to developing the usefulness and efficiency                     of their libraries.<\/p>\n<h3>What special libraries are<\/h3>\n<p>Special libraries are built up to supply detailed information                     respecting some limited subject field. They include libraries                     devoted to advertising, biological sciences, business, finance,                     geography, hospitals, insurance, metals, military, museums,                     publishing, science-technology, religion, social science,                     transportation, education and other subjects.<\/p>\n<p>These libraries are not static depositories of books and                     periodicals. They are alive and growing and changing with                     the times to meet new and enlarged needs.<\/p>\n<p>To quote from the Special Libraries Association pamphlet:                     &#8220;A special library is a world not only of traditional reference                     books, but of other printed materials &#8211; monographs, textbooks,                     and journals. It is also a world of near-print &#8211; documents,                     technical reports, trade catalogs, and reprints. More and                     more it is a world of non-print &#8211; photographs, drawings,                     music scores, recordings, microforms &#8211; yes, even IBM                     cards, punched tapes, magnetized discs and drums.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A special library does not need to be big in order to be                     useful, nor need the business be big in order to use a library                     of its own. There is hardly a business too small for its executive                     to require a library, even if only of a few basic books, several                     periodicals, a few filing cases of up-to-date material and                     a qualified librarian.<\/p>\n<p>The library is the centre of recorded news and information                     about the business in which its organization is engaged. It                     reaches out for information about other organizations in the                     same line, and about conditions in the country, the continent                     and the world which impinge upon that business.<\/p>\n<p>Because the special library is a service organized to make                     available all experience and knowledge that will further the                     activities of its organization, there is a key distinction                     between it and a public or university library. The unit of                     material which forms the basis of a public library is usually                     a book, pamphlet, periodical, or some other physical item;                     in the special library the unit is a particular piece of information                     no matter in what form it may be found. The special library                     shelves or files information rather than material, and it                     therefore demands special techniques of its staff.<\/p>\n<p>The extent of the willingness of the executive and department                     heads and staff to make use of this expert help, and to look                     upon their library as a living clearing house of information,                     determines the effectiveness with which it can demonstrate                     its ability to help them in their business and individual                     problems.<\/p>\n<p>One of the saddest fates that can befall a special library                     is to have it sink into being merely a collection of books.                     Miss Turnbull said in a lecture at the McGill University Library                     School: &#8220;I sometimes think that the very use of the word &#8216;library&#8217;                     obscures the true duties of a company librarian. The word                     has an unfortunate &#8216;dry-as-dust&#8217; connotation in the minds                     of many people, and creates an impression that our duty is                     the preservation of printed material only, rather than the                     utilization of all sources of information, printed, typewritten,                     photographed, or available in the minds of specialists.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>A practical working department<\/h3>\n<p>The special library that is earning its salt is not one                     set up as a catacomb of books to impress Very Important Visitors                     or as a gracious gesture to scholarship and culture. It is                     a practical department to serve all other departments with                     basic and current information quickly. It keeps at the service                     of everybody what everybody cannot keep in his own office                     for his own service.<\/p>\n<p>The more independent the special library is of other departments,                     and the closer it is to top management, the more efficiently                     will it function in making knowledge and information available                     wherever it is needed.<\/p>\n<p>A volume of the textbooks published by the Alexander Hamilton                     Institute under the title <em>Modern Business <\/em>puts this                     matter succinctly: &#8220;However extensive a business library may                     become, its essential purpose and reason for existence should                     never be lost sight of. That purpose is to serve the business                     as an information department.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The librarian&#8217;s work starts with the receipt of an inquiry.                     The ability to visualize what the inquirer really wants is                     one of the most important parts of information work. An imaginative                     grasp is needed of the kind of reply which will best help                     the inquirer.<\/p>\n<h3>Sources of information<\/h3>\n<p>Miss Turnbull believed that a capable librarian with a telephone,                     <em>a Canada Year Book<\/em>, a <em>Canadian Almanac<\/em>, the                     <em>Oxford Dictionary <\/em>and a daily newspaper would be of                     more benefit to the company than a book collection of thousands                     of volumes with no one to direct their use. Her list of titles                     would have to be extended today, but the class of books she                     singled out as most helpful, the reference books, are still                     prime aids: trade directories, yearbooks, technical dictionaries,                     gazetteers, encyclopedias, manuals, handbooks and the like.<\/p>\n<p>The librarian must also refer daily to indexes such as the                     <em>Public Affairs Information Service<\/em>, published weekly                     and cumulated annually, and a host of other &#8220;where to find                     it&#8221; books. By means of these the librarian can put a finger                     on the printed data most likely to be of service.<\/p>\n<p>In many organizations material that is filed may be more                     important than books that are shelved. Letters, clippings,                     pamphlets, trade and technical periodicals, and reports such                     as those of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, are up to date                     and show not only the present situation but trends. Happy                     indeed is the executive who has a librarian to follow the                     periodicals closely and draw to his attention quickly the                     latest analysis and information on matters in which he is                     interested.<\/p>\n<p>To scan what is received by a special library, to select                     what is useful now or may become useful, to give information                     about it to those who may be interested, and to shelve or                     file what is worth keeping so that it is readily accessible:                     that is the art of the librarian.<\/p>\n<p>One of the most important services of a company library                     is the circulation of periodicals. Every periodical will have                     its own list of regular readers, but that is only half the                     story. The librarian goes through periodicals as they are                     received, and, knowing the needs and interests of staff members,                     lists the contents in a library bulletin for general distribution.                     Items which bear particularly upon some topic known to be                     under special study by some member of the firm are sent speedily                     to the person involved. When this selective dissemination                     service becomes too extensive to be handled by the library                     personnel available, the special librarian may enlist the                     aid of the firm&#8217;s computer centre to establish a computerized                     system to aid in the process.<\/p>\n<p>No business library in Canada can operate without the material                     issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, and pamphlets                     and reports are also issued by provincial governments, societies                     and firms. This <em>Monthly Letter<\/em>, for example, is a pamphlet                     which tells in the course of a year many interesting facts                     about various aspects of Canadian cultural and economic life.<\/p>\n<p>Societies issue pamphlets at regular or irregular intervals                     to publicize their work, such as fighting disease, promoting                     conservation of natural resources, or reporting on their year&#8217;s                     work. This free literature, properly selected with the needs                     of the library&#8217;s clientele in mind, provides a fund of information.                     Financial papers and newspapers report current events, business                     changes, and much miscellaneous information about stocks,                     issues, yields and trends.<\/p>\n<p>The librarian is assisted in finding desired information                     through such publications as the <em>Business Periodicals Index<\/em>,                     issued monthly and cumulated annually. It indexes more than                     150 periodicals covering the fields of economics, business,                     management and finance. The <em>New York Times Index <\/em>is                     issued semi-monthly and annually. Each entry provides a reference                     to date, page number, and column number for a story or report,                     with a summary if the event is of importance.<\/p>\n<h3>The Royal Bank Library<\/h3>\n<p>How does The Royal Bank of Canada Library measure up to                     all these needs and in all these services? This library, whose                     librarian, Miss Miriam H. Tees, is Conference Chairman of                     the 1969 Special Libraries Association Conference, has 50,000                     volumes and receives 800 periodicals. It specializes in literature                     dealing with money and banking, international finance, and                     economic conditions in Canada, the Caribbean and Latin America.<\/p>\n<p>The library declared its purpose in a circular to staff                     on September 17, 1913: &#8220;A library has been established at                     Head Office with the object of encouraging the staff, particularly                     junior officers, to read standard books on banking, finance,                     exchange and kindred subjects.&#8221; The accompanying catalogue                     listed 398 books; the budget was $2,000; a bookcase to hold                     1,200 books cost $265.<\/p>\n<p>The library has expanded its horizon with accelerating speed.                     Instead <em>of Co-operative Credit Associations<\/em>, published                     in 1892 and listed in the catalogue fifty-five years ago,                     it now deals in such books as <em>How to Live with Your Computer<\/em>.                     The library itself is looking forward to being computerized                     in some degree in order to meet the demand for fast service.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to broadening the scope of its content so as                     to include automation, marketing, personnel policies, management                     development and techniques, the library has grown physically.                     &#8220;We have greatly expanded our service,&#8221; says the Librarian.                     &#8220;Our district offices and our branches across Canada and abroad                     are now using our library. Nearly three-quarters of our Canadian                     branches call upon us for information.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;All staff members are encouraged to get information or                     material from the library. We are very happy, too, to help                     any business executive or serious student outside the bank                     who needs information in our special subject field and cannot                     easily obtain it elsewhere.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The librarian<\/h3>\n<p>It would be futile to turn loose in a well-stocked library                     a man who has never seen more than a few score books gathered                     together. He would be too overwhelmed by the riches at his                     command to make the best use of them: another case of an ocean                     of water and not a drop to drink.<\/p>\n<p>The person best qualified to help a business man to find                     information he wants, either in an ancient book or in a newspaper                     printed yesterday, is the trained librarian. He is the liaison                     officer between the inquirer and the source of information.<\/p>\n<p>The special library does not demand so much a staff trained                     to stiff nicety in library detail as one that will sense the                     imminent demand for certain information and have it ready                     and accessible. The librarian is a well-informed, educated                     person who is professionally trained to select and maintain                     a library collection fit for its purpose, and to assist individuals                     and groups to locate and obtain these materials. He must know                     his company, its objectives, and its staff.<\/p>\n<p>Few people realize the diversity of the librarian&#8217;s activities.                     He will have an intensive knowledge of his own collection.                     He will know how to trace material, however exotic, and how                     to go about getting it from publishers, government departments,                     trade associations, other libraries, newspapers and individuals.<\/p>\n<p>His alert mind, his interest in the world, and his instinct                     for team-work all combine to make the special librarian a                     successful research worker. His patience, intuition, imagination                     and orderly manner of thought help him to report thoroughly                     and quickly and correctly on the matter referred to him, or                     to present information on his own initiative.<\/p>\n<p>The special librarian must pay particular attention to developments                     which may affect his company. As Miss Tees puts it: the librarian                     is not a recluse in an ivory tower, but a person interested                     in people and events, with a sense of responsibility as an                     integral part of a functioning organization. He needs to have                     a mind that delights in solving puzzles, intellectual curiosity                     about the world, and a temperament eager for discovery. He                     must respond enthusiastically to challenge and have the ability                     to leap mentally from subject to subject.<\/p>\n<p>The special librarian, like an archaeologist, must have                     more patience than most people, and the zeal to dig through                     succeeding layers of data to find the few pieces of information                     which are relevant to today&#8217;s wants. It helps if, in addition                     to doggedness, the librarian has a flair for looking in the                     right places.<\/p>\n<h3>Stocking a library<\/h3>\n<p>Mrs. Whitehead, wife of the great philosopher and mathematician,                     Alfred North Whitehead, was asked: &#8220;Do you buy books from                     catalogues or by seeing them?&#8221; She replied: &#8220;One goes into                     a bookshop and comes out with a book.&#8221; The special librarian                     shudders at the thought of being so casual about one of his                     most important functions. He does not become celebrated because                     of the number of books he has built up, but for his skill                     in selection, his judgment and his insight.<\/p>\n<p>One task of the librarian is that of bringing all potential                     users into touch with this wealth. The proof of the special                     library pudding is in the eating, and the bigger the appetite                     the better pleased the librarian is. Yet special libraries                     are seldom used by all those entitled to use them to the best                     advantage.<\/p>\n<p>Publications of one sort and another &#8211; mimeographed                     lists of new books with summaries of their contents, and lists                     of periodicals with mention of their special articles ( are                     compiled by the librarian to spread the library&#8217;s resources                     in view of his possible clients. Sometimes he sends along                     a pertinent book to a person he knows to be interested in                     the book&#8217;s subject. Increasingly, he is turning to methods                     of salesmanship, publicity and personal staff contacts, to                     publicize what information is available.<\/p>\n<p>The user of a library has some obligations. It will speed                     up information service if he asks himself: &#8220;What exactly am                     I looking for?&#8221; and formulates a particular instead of a foggy                     request. It will help him and the librarian if he telephones                     or calls personally instead of having his request filtered                     through a third party, with consequent loss of clarity.<\/p>\n<p>It is important for the librarian to know just how much                     the inquirer wants to know about a subject. Arthur Conan Doyle                     tells about a millionaire who gave his book dealer an order                     for a copy of all books treating any aspect of Napoleon&#8217;s                     career. He thought they would fill a case in his library.                     The first instalment was of 40,000 volumes.<\/p>\n<h3>Why use the library?<\/h3>\n<p>If the special library is everlastingly taking stock of                     itself, as every successful library is, to ascertain if it                     is performing its full function, it is only reciprocal good                     business for the executive to examine whether he is doing                     what he should to get the greatest possible benefit from the                     library. In everyday affairs he may be trying to pull out                     of thin air answers to problems which would be available quickly                     if he gave his librarian a chance to search. Thomas A. Edison                     explained his wide reading by saying that he wanted to start                     work where others had left off instead of duplicating their                     trials and errors.<\/p>\n<p>There is much said and written about the need for a business                     man or a technical worker to promote his health: it is equally                     necessary for him to cultivate his mind.<\/p>\n<p>Few men are content to think of themselves as merely tool-using                     animals, making holes in things where the blue-print indicates                     and removing material from where it is not wanted. But to                     get beyond that the intellect needs special food. Reading                     feeds the informational reservoir from which spring knowledgeable                     men.<\/p>\n<p>One hour a day given to planned, purposeful, reading often                     makes the difference between an expert and a tyro, between                     success and failure in the acquisition of the knowledge and                     understanding essential to life. He is a poor manager of his                     leisure who cannot make time for this exercise of his intellect.<\/p>\n<p>There are some technical treatises one reads because of                     the &#8220;practical&#8221; profit there may be in them: one of the great                     joys in life is to find that they are also interesting. There                     are some books one reads primarily because of the beauty of                     their language: it is a matter for rejoicing to find that                     they are also profitable. There are some, like Shakespeare                     and the Bible, one reads over and over just for love of them:                     they are the steadying tail of the technological kite now                     being carried up far out of sight.<\/p>\n<h3>Seeking self-expansion<\/h3>\n<p>There are other reasons why the business man, and particularly                     the executive, should use the library. These have nothing                     to do with facts about dollars and cents, stresses of materials                     and mixtures of chemicals. They have to do with self-expansion.<\/p>\n<p>Some men may be able to play all the keys on a computer                     and be tone-deaf culturally. Other men see computers in their                     relationship to life and the large questions of human development.                     As Friedrich Nietzsche put it, culture &#8220;distinguisheth them                     from the goatherds.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A broad scope of intellectual activity stimulates and freshens                     and adds to every other human quality, and helps to build                     a powerful personal philosophy.<\/p>\n<p>Background books need not be confined to the history of                     your product. They may deal allegorically with what you need                     as a view of the universe. The <em>Iliad <\/em>is great because                     all life is a battle; the <em>Odyssey <\/em>because all life                     is a journey; the Book of Job because all life is a riddle.<\/p>\n<p>These mitigate the urgencies of the day, and make us part                     of centuries and millenia. They extend our experience and                     help us to see the relationships between things. They give                     new views to life, breaking down the stone walls of narrow                     specialism and opening a thousand worlds to us.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[49],"class_list":["post-3985","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-49"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>May 1969 - VOL. 50, No. 5 - Putting Knowledge To Work - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1969-vol-50-no-5-putting-knowledge-to-work\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"May 1969 - VOL. 50, No. 5 - Putting Knowledge To Work - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"To work in a firm or institution that has a well-stocked special library, organized and directed by a wise and alert librarian, is a rich and fruitful experience. 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