I worked as librarian for 41 years. Half of my working lifehad closely associated with Dr. Chiang Fu-tsung. I started mylibrary career in the Library of the National Planning Board in1944. In 1945. I was transferred to the National CentralLibrary. Both of them were located in Chungking and underthe directorship of Dr. Chiang. After the end of the War withJapan, I was sent by Dr. Chiang to Nanking to help reopen thenational headquarters of the National Central Library. In 1948,I was directed again by him to escort the first instalment of theLibrary's rare books incorporated with other national collections to be moved to Taiwan. I quit my job in the Libraryand became Chief Librarian of the Yang Ming Shan InstituteLibrary in 1949 while Dr. Chiang was in Europe. The TaiwanProvincial Government, on the recommendation of Dr. Chiang,appointed me as Director of the Taiwan Provincial Library inTaipei in 1955. But I was very sorry to leave Taiwan againsthis will to take up my position in the Orientalia Section of theNational Library of Australia in Canberra in 1964. Throughoutmy working life, even after I left Taiwan, Dr. Chiang was alwaysvery kind to me, treating me as one of his family members.