(Relayed from the Dome, Brighton)
IT has been claimed by some educationalists that the finest acquisition any man can bring away with him from his school and college training is the power really to find his way easily and intelligently about a good library. Indeed, one of the first attributes of scholarship is to be able to seize upon and apply the knowledge of the past: but this power to find your way about books is a necessity, equally, for the less pretentious scholar, too. 'By a man's library you shall know him,'is true in a large measure: but it is perhaps even more true that you shall know a student by his way of using his (or any other) library.