College and Research Libraries Post-Professional Education and Training THE POST-PROFESSIONAL education of librarians was treated in an illuminat- ing paper by Helen Frances Pierce, li- brarian, J u n i o r College Library, Modesto, Calif., before the Junior College Libraries Subsection at the San Francisco meeting. Her paper will be published in the A.L.A. Bulletin. It complements the foregoing papers. Miss Pierce pointed out that in recent years increasing provision has been made by the professions to assist the practitioner in growing. T h e r e has also been, as was shown by a summary of what has been attempted, a considerable stirring in the library field. But the efforts and pro- grams on the graduate level thus f a r are deficient in one or more of the following respects: ( I ) relatively f e w librarians have been reached; ( 2 ) the supply of capable teachers is not equal to the demand; ( 3 ) problems of content versus methodology and technique have been only partially solved; and ( 4 ) there is not agreement upon the amount of specialization in a single field that is desirable. Miss Pierce is convinced that librarians must overcome the complacency that has characterized them in the past and that each must ferret out such knowledge and methods as will increase his professional stature, unless librarians are content to be merely mediators or handmaidens to the learned scholars. A . F . K . Conference of Eastern College Librarians (Continued from page 12) usual feature of the organization is some twenty regional alumni groups distributed over the country. These alumni members have proved particularly useful in discover- ing and procuring local imprints for the Y a l e library. Advocate A.C.R.L. Membership A t the suggestion of Charles C . W i l - liamson, dean of the School of Library Service, Columbia University, the ques- tion of the future status and conduct of the Conference of Eastern College L i - brarians was opened for discussion by W i l - lard P . Lewis,, librarian of Pennsylvania State College. T h e conference has always been an informal organization, without officers or dues, meeting under the aus- pices of Columbia University. M r . Lewis pointed out the advantages of a closer affiliation with the A . L . A . and the A . C . R . L . T h e sentiment of the group did not favor any change in the informal character of the conference but adopted a resolution, offered by Henry Bartlett V a n Hoesen, librarian, Brown University L i - brary, supporting individual membership in the A . C . R . L . D EC EMBER, 1939 39