|  | University of Virginia record February 1, 1916 |  | 

THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY.
| John Shelton Patton | Librarian | 
| Mary Louise Dinwiddie | Assistant Librarian | 
| Lilie Estelle Dinwiddie | In Charge of Circulation | 
| Henry Trautmann | Assistant in the Library | 
| Catherine Rebecca Lipop | Law Librarian | 
| Walter Wyatt, Jr. | Assistant Law Librarian | 
| Virginia Esther Huntley | In Charge of Circulation, Medical Library | 
| Richard Lee Morton | In Charge of Circulation, Medical Library | 
The various libraries of the University are placed as follows: The general 
library, the medical, the chemical, and the Isabel Mercein Tunstall Library of 
Poetry, in the Rotunda; the astronomical, in the Leander McCormick Observatory; 
the biological and botanical, in the Biological Laboratory; the engineering, 
in the Mechanical Laboratory; the geological in the Lewis Brooks Museum of 
Natural History; the law, in Minor Hall; the mathematical and the Hertz classical, 
in Cabell Hall; and the physical, in the Rouss Physical Laboratory.
The general library is for the use of the corps of instruction and administration 
of the University and the students in all departments of the institution. 
The collection contains more than ninety thousand volumes, and includes the 
standard books of history, literature, and science, and is particularly rich in 
materials for the study of social and economic achievements and tendencies. 
The reference section is well supplied with encyclopedias and other sources of 
information.
The general, the medical and the chemical libraries are open daily, Sunday 
excepted, from 9 A. M. to 4 P. M., and from 7:30 to 10:30 P. M.; the Law Library 
from 9 A. M. to 2 P. M., from 3 to 5 P. M., and from 7 to 10 P. M.
Books in the general library may be lent only to the following persons: 
(1) officers and students of the University; (2) persons whose former official 
connection with the University entitles them to consideration; and (3) other 
persons recommended by an officer of the University. The last named must 
make a deposit of five dollars and must pay, for each year or fraction thereof, 
a fee of one dollar. The deposit will be returned on request, less any penalties 
that may have been incurred by the detention or injury of books. No professor, 
officer, or student may borrow books for the use of others.
No book may be taken from the library until it has been charged at the 
desk. Two weeks is the maximum period for which books may be lent, and 
the date on which the loan expires is stamped in the book. The loan may be 

applied for the book.
Books in the reference collection are not to be removed from the library, 
but may be freely consulted. All bound magazines are classed as reference 
books.
Books in current general use in connection with any course of instruction 
may be temporarily placed on the reference shelves and made subject to the 
above rule.
Books which are especially valuable or peculiarly liable to injury, are not 
available for circulation.
The latest numbers of current periodicals are withheld from circulation.
|  | University of Virginia record February 1, 1916 |  | 

