CHAPTER VI Thrall Library - Continuity, Cramped Quarters, and Conservatism Following the departure of Fred A. Rockwell, Helen Ludlow was appointed Director. 'In her Annual Report, after more than one year in her position, she outlined the Library's strengths and weaknesses as she saw them. She reported that space was "entirely inadequate" and "badly arranged." She wished for modern steel stacks, adequate storage space, a children's room with a separate entrance and exhibit space. 72 The Library's strengths as she outlined them were its good reference collection, a book collection adequate for the community's needs, a well-rounded periodical collection, efficient methods of circulation, a good children's Department and a friendly helpful staff. 73 By 1949 Grace Holbert, who would shortly become Grace Bennett, was appointed Thrall Library's sixth director. She would remain for about ten years. The Library circulated 110,870 items by 1950. Phonograph records, popular nationwide, were becoming a big part of the circulating collection. 74 By 1956 the record collection at Thrall numbered 500 titles, and patrons were encouraged to submit their suggestions for new titles to the