ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 139 News From the Field A C Q U I S I T I O N S • The American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass., recently acquired th e only known copy of the first novel published in A m e ric a , Samuel Richardson’s P A M E L A , printed by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia in 1742 and 1743. The first English edition was published in 1740. Simmons College in Boston, the former owner; Goodspeed’s Book Shop, which handled the transaction; and generous friends of the Society, m ade this acquisition possible. • The most extensive known collection of editions of the works of Anthony Ashley Cooper, third Earl of Shaftesbury, 1671-1713 has been given to th e Miam i U niversity li­ brary by William E. Alderman, dean emeritus of the college of arts and sciences. Repre­ sented among th e Shaftesbury titles are six­ teen of the seventeen authenticated editions of th e Characteristics. The contemporary tooled leather bindings of the 17th and 18th century volumes have been restored. Critical and biographical studies, and photocopies of ma­ terials from other collections round out the gift. A W A R D S , G R A N T S • The National Science F oundation has awarded a grant of $60,723 for eighteen months to three university libraries for the purpose of initiating a cooperative project in the area of library systems development. The three university libraries are Columbia Uni­ versity, The University of Chicago, and Stan­ ford University. Each of th e libraries is at present engaged in major library systems analyses and in the application of computer technology to the improvement of essential library operations and services under grants from the federal government. Grants to Chi­ cago and Columbia are from the National Science Foundation and Stanford’s from the U.S. Office of Education. The prim ary ob­ jectives of the NSF grant are: ( 1 ) to facili­ tate exchange of working data, information and ideas among the participating institutions; (2 ) to provide the means for developing systems of general applicability; (3 ) to provide more systematic liaison with agencies working on the national level; (4 ) to improve communica­ tions of research results between participants of this cooperative program and the library community generally. • The Council on Library Resources has m ade a grant of $33,537 to the Library of Congress for a pilot project to develop procedures for automated controls for single sheet maps in the collections of th e geography and map division. The procedures to be developed will utilize computer technology by recording such de­ scriptive information as the full map title, call number, and dimensions of the map sheet, on magnetic tape. The structure of th e form at to be used will be the library’s MARC II format. Initially, the project for machine-readable cata­ loging data for single-sheet maps will be con­ cerned w ith current acquisitions only—some thirty-five to forty thousand maps a year. In developing automated procedures, the geogra­ phy and m ap division will coordinate its efforts w ith governmental, public and research libraries which have m ap collections, so that the system and techniques may be useful to other map libraries as well as to the Library of Congress. The project will b e administered in the geography and map division’s proc­ essing section, headed by J. Douglas Hill, in cooperation w ith the library’s information systems office. David K. Carrington, formerly librarian for th e office of geography at the D epartm ent of the Interior, has joined the geography and m ap division staff at the Library of Congress to serve as coordinator for th e project. Mrs. Viola Scandrett, computer systems analyst in the information systems of­ fice, is providing technical assistance. B U I L D I N G S • Construction of a five-story, $1.6 million annex to the library of the University of Cali­ fornia began in Irvine early in April. The structure will be in a twin, east wing of the ex­ isting library and will more than double its book capacity. L uther Evans delivered th e address in site dedication ceremonies on April 5. During the ceremonies, Adolph A. Kroch presented a first edition of Oliver Goldsmith’s “Vicar of Wakefield: A Tale,” published in 1766. The volume is the library’s 200,000th. Friends of the UCI library sponsored th e ceremonies. • The dedication of the $3.3 million addi­ tion to th e M. D. Anderson memorial library at the University of Houston took place on April 9-10. A symposium entitled “The His­ tory of Scholarship and Learning” included as speakers Leslie W . D unlap, director of libraries at the University of Iowa—“Trans­ mission of the Classics to th e Modern W orld”; Frederick R. Goff, chief of th e rare book divi­ sion of the Library of Congress—“The Legacy of G utenberg”; and Richard D. Altick, pro­ fessor of English at Ohio State University— “T he Emergence of Popular Reading and 140 TIME & MONEY w h e n o r d e r in g SERIAL BINDINGS Send today for brochure describing THE AUTNO-O-MATCIBIO™M ATIC CODED CARD SYSTEM FOR ORDERING AND RECORD-KEEPING E xclusively by B I N O - O - M A T I C ™ EASY B IN D IN G SYSTEM 1703 Lister • Kansas City, Mo. 64127 Save Scholarly Activity in th e 18th and 19th Centuries.” A symposium entitled “The International N ature of Scholarship” presented German Arciniegas, Columbian Ambassador to Vene­ zuela, speaking on “The Development of Schol­ arship in L atin America”; and Luther H. Evans, director of legal and international col­ lections for Columbia University, speaking on “International Scholarship in Current Perspec­ tive.” Dedicatory ceremonies began a t 2 p.m. Douglas M. Knight, president of Duke Uni­ versity, gave th e dedicatory address. Tours of the library and a reception in th e special col­ lections room followed the dedicatory cere­ mony. The evening was concluded w ith a dinner honoring major donors to library col­ lections. F E L L O W S H IP S , S C H O L A R S H IP S • The school of library science, Syracuse University, had been awarded nine Title II-B fellowships by th e U.S. Office of Education. The grant of $56,160 will cover tuition, sti­ pends, dependency and travel allowances for fellows studying for the Master of Science in library science degree at Syracuse University. Fellowships will b e awarded on a competi­ tive basis. Fellows will receive a stipend of $2,200 for th e academic year, September through June, 1969, and an additional $450 for the six week summer session. Travel and dependency allowances will b e provided where applicable. • Fellowships and research assistantships in th e school of library science, State University College at Geneseo (N .Y .) will b e sup­ ported by a grant from th e U.S. Office of Education on the basis of th e H igher E duca­ tion Act, Title II-B. Fellowships will provide to successful applicants sums of $5,000 to cover tuition, living allowance, travel and institu­ tional support for th e 1968-69 academic year. • U nder a grant for education in librarian- ship m ade by th e Office of Education, U.S. Office of Education on the basis of th e Higher Education Act of 1965, Title II, P art B (P.L. 89-329), fifteen fellowships will be awarded by Case W estern Reserve Un i­ versity for th e academic year 1968-69 to qualified applicants who intend to pursue a course of study leading to the degree of D oc­ tor of Philosophy w ith major concentration in th e field of library education. Each fellowship carries free tuition, a stipend of $5,000 for the academic year, and an additional $1,020 for th e 1969 summer session, reimbursement for related travel expenses, and a $600 allowance for each dependent for th e academic year, 141 with an additional $120 for the summer ses­ sion. The fellowships are available for full-time study only and require residence for the aca­ demic year. Applicants for admission to th e program must be professional librarians with appropri­ ate undergraduate preparation; the MS in LS degree from an accredited library school; sig­ nificant professional experience. Applicants must fulfill all other admission requirements of the university, must have demonstrated excellence in academic studies and show ex­ ceptional professional promise. Inquiries con­ cerning the fellowship program may be ad­ dressed directly to the Office of the Dean, School of Library Science, Case W estern Re­ serve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. Application papers must be filed by June 1. • The departm ent of library education at Oklahoma State University announces the establishment of the Robert T. M otter library science scholarship in th e amount of $1,000. The scholarship was created by th e Motter Rookbinding Company in memory of its found­ er, Robert T. Motter. Candidacy for the scholarship is open to men and women who have at least junior standing; graduate students are encouraged to apply. The award will be made for study in the library education pro­ gram at Oklahoma State University, and the recipient will be chosen on the basis of “proven scholastic ability plus aptitude and potential for growth in the profession of librarianship.” The deadline for applications is July 1. Appli­ cation forms will be sent to those who request them although a personal interview in Still­ water is required. Inquiries may be addressed to Dr. Roscoe Rouse, Head, D epartm ent of Library Education, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma 74074. M E E T IN G S List in these columns meetings, seminars, conferences, institutes, workshops and th e like which may b e of interest to academic research or special librarians. Copy as submitted may be edited, and should b e informational in char­ acter. Direct copy to CRL, 50 E . Huron St., Chicago, I11. 60611, to arrive at least seven weeks in advance of the month in which res­ ervations close. May 17-18: Annual spring m eeting of Tri State Chapter of ACRL, at Case W estern Re­ serve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Location of meetings and housing arrangements will be announced at a later date. May 23-25: The University of Maryland School of Library and Information Services High John Project announces a conference/ workshop to be held at th e University’s Center of Adult Education on the College Park cam­ pus. In concentrating on Library Service to the Unserved: Influencing Change in Education and Practice, the discussion will center upon “Librariapathy” and confront the issues re­ lating to the “non-user,” the “disadvantaged,” th e “culturally different” and upon both prag­ matic and educational/research dimensions. The Institute fee for th e two and one half day session is $75 exclusive of hotel and meal charges. Registration for the sessions will be limited. Inquiries m ay b e addressed to High John Project Conference, School of Library and Information Services, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, Tel. 301-454-3016. June 2-7: Special Libraries Association Conference in Los Angeles. Theme will be Special Libraries, Partners in Research for Tomorrow’s World. June 3-14: D epartm ent of library science of W ayne State University, in cooperation with the U.S. Office of Education institute on “Pro­ gram Planning and Budgeting for Libraries,” at the McGregor Memorial Conference Center of the Division of Urban Extension. Instruction will be offered through lecture- demonstrations and in workshops at which 142 Here's good new s for m a n y of oυr subscribers: W ith th e fir s t issue o f V o lu m e 5 , M a rc h 1 9 6 8 , C H O IC E b e g a n a n a d d itio n a l service lo n g re q u e ste d b y su b scrib e rs — C H O IC E R e vie w s-o n -C a rd s. If yo u w e re n o t a m o n g th e se rvice ’ s c h a r te r su bscrib e rs, y o u m a y w a n t to co n sid e r it n o w . C H O IC E R e vie w s-o n -C a rd s can b r in g to y o u r a c q u is itio n s system a new co nve n ie n ce as v e rs a tile as yo u w a n t to m a k e it. C a rd s m a k e it e asy to s e p a ra te a n d d is tr ib u te re vie w s s im u lta n e o u s ly to o th e r lib r a r ia n s a n d fa c u lty — no m o re te a r in g up co p ie s o r w a itin g fo re v e r f o r c ir c u la tin g co p ie s to re tu rn . C a rd s can save c le ric a l steps in o r d e r in g a n d ch e ckin g h o ld in g s (a m p le sp ace f o r n o ta tio n s on b o th fr o n t a n d b a c k o f each c a r d ) . They a re a c a ta lo g in g a id , a n d th e y a re e asy to lo c a te in y o u r d e s id e ra ta file . You can p r o b a b ly th in k o f d oze n s o f o th e r uses in y o u r o w n system. DESCRIPTION OF CARD REVIEWS As each r e g u la r issue o f C H O IC E goe s to press, a ll re vie w s in th e issue a re re p r in te d s e p a ra te ly on 3 x 5 ca rd s . Each is id e n tifie d b y su b je c t h e a d in g a n d issue d a te . C o lla te d in th e o r d e r fo llo w e d in th e m a g a z in e , th e y a re b o x e d a n d m a ile d to yo u via F o u rth Class m a il, S p e c ia l H a n d lin g . DELIVERY OF CARDS F o u rth C lass, S p e c ia l H a n d lin g m eans y o u r b o x o f c a rd s is c a r r ie d fr o m o u r p o s t o ffic e to y o u rs w ith r e g u la r First C lass m a il, b u t d e liv e re d a c c o rd in g to y o u r lo c a l P arcel Post d e liv e ry sch e d u le . You s h o u ld receive c a rd s a t a b o u t th e sam e tim e as y o u r r e g u la r issue b y S e co nd C lass m a il. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO REVIEW S-ON-CARDS C a rd s a re a v a ila b le o n ly b y y e a r ly s u b s c rip tio n a t a cost o f $ 8 0 p e r y e a r . A ll s u b s c rip tio n s b e g in in M a rc h a n d run th r o u g h th e fo llo w in g F e b ru a ry . You m ust m a in ta in a r e g u la r s u b s c rip tio n to C H O IC E to re ceive ca rd s . HO W TO ORDER S u b s c rip tio n s to R e v ie w s -o n -C a rd s s h o u ld be o r d e r e d fr o m S u b s c rip tio n D e p a rtm e n t, A m e ric a n L ib r a r y A s s o c ia tio n , 5 0 E. H u ro n S tre e t, C h ic a g o , Illin o is 6 0 6 1 1 . They a re n o t a v a ila b le th r o u g h a g e n cie s. A n o r d e r fo r m is p r o v id e d b e lo w f o r y o u r c o n ­ ve nie n ce. A ll s u b s c rip tio n s o r d e r e d n o w w ill be b a c k d a te d to M a r c h 1 9 6 8 , a n d yo u w ill re ceive a ll b a c k issues to th a t d a te . For a d d it io n a l in f o r m a tio n a b o u t th e c a r d se rvice , p le a s e w r ite C H O IC E E d ito r ia l O ffic e s , 1 00 R ive r­ v ie w C e n te r, M id d le t o w n , C o n n e c tic u t 0 6 4 5 7 . TO: Subscription Department American Library Association 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, I II. 60611 In s titu tio n : ______________________________________________________________________ Please co n s id e r this m y o r d e r f o r a 1 -y e a r s u b s c rip tio n to Address: ____________________________________________________________________ C H O IC E R e v ie w s-o n -C a rd s a t (Street) $ 8 0 p e r y e a r t o run fro m M a rc h 1 9 6 8 th ro u g h F e b ru a ry 1969. (C ity) (State) (Zip ) A u th o r iz e d b y : __________________________________________________________________________ (Sig nature) (Title) 143 participants will learn by working on problems of their own institution’s budget. Registration will be limited to forty participants from state libraries, large public libraries and academic libraries, all being either administrators or business managers and all having experience in and responsibility for budgeting. June 10-21: School of library and informa­ tion services, University of Maryland, Institute on the Automation of Bibliographical Services, funded by the U.S. Office of Education under the Higher Education Act Title II-B. The Institute, for a limited number of participants already involved in or planning for automa­ tion, will be offered with the cooperation of the Library of Congress Project MARC, the University of Maryland, and the Computer Science Center. Director of the Institute will be David Batty, head of the departm ent of information retrieval studies in the College of Librarianship, Wales. June 17-21: Samford University, Birming­ ham, Ala., Seventh Institute of Genealogy. Registration and tuition is $30 for the week (plus $15 additional if academic credit is desired). Housing will be available on campus for $2 per night. June 20-22: The Thirteenth Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materi­ als will be held at the University of Kansas. The principal topic for discussion will be the Collec­ tion of Retrospective Materials from Latin America, considered from th e points of view of libraries of varying sizes for study and research purposes. Progress m ade in the past year on matters concerning th e booktrade and acquisi­ tions, bibliography, exchange of publications, official publications, and photoduplication of Latin American materials will be discussed. Meetings of Seminar Committees will take place on Thursday morning, June 20. The first general session to be held Thursday afternoon will initiate the committee and progress re­ ports which will continue at the Friday morn­ ing session. Institutional membership in the Thirteenth Seminar is $15 payable to the “University of Kansas: Thirteenth SALALM,” and checks should be sent to: L. E. James Helyar, Assistant Director of Libraries, Uni­ versity of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Preprint working papers are included in the membership fee, and are available only through payment of the institutional member­ ship. They will be distributed at th e time of the meeting and to those registered b u t not attending. The registration fee for additional participants from the member institution is $7.50, and includes preprint working papers. Additional sets of working papers can be subscribed to in advance for $5 each. The Final Report and Working Papers will subse­ quently be published by the Pan American Union. Further information on participation in and local arrangements for the thirteenth sem­ inar can be procured from Mr. Helyar a t the University of Kansas; and on the program and working papers from Mrs. Marietta Daniels Shepard, Associate Librarian, Pan American Union, Washington, D.C. 20006. June 23-29: ALA Conference, Kansas City, Mo. Those planning to attend are urged to register in advance. For their convenience, an advance registration form has been in­ cluded in the April issue of th e A L A Bulletin. It should be filled out completely and then returned, with check or money order payable to the American Library Association, 50 East Huron Street, Chicago, Illinois 60611. This form must b e mailed no later than May 31. Those who pre-register will pick up their complete annual conference kits and programs at a special preregistration desk in Kansas City. The desk will be located in th e foyer of the Music Hall of the Municipal Auditorium —13th Street entrance. June 30-July 13: The New York State Historical Association seminars on American Culture. Two courses presented the first week are of particular interest to librarians and archivists: The Administration of Historical OTTO HARRASSOW ITZ Library Agency WIESBADEN • GERMANY D irect service on all G erm an language books a n d periodicals * Orders a n d inquiries are in v ite d on both new a n d out-of-print m aterial * F arm ington Plan agent fo r W est and East G erm any * Please request in fo rm a tio n a bout our bla n ket order service German agent OTTO HARRASSOWITZ 144 Announcing California Library R ep rin t Series As production costs rise, and as the number o f books published each year in­ creases, it becomes more difficult to keep slower selling titles in print for adequate periods. Yet many o f these titles—usually those o f a specialized nature—are o f enduring value to libraries, scholars, students, or to the pro­ fessions. With the advent of microfilm and reprint firms, and other reproduc­ tion services, many o f these specialized books are becoming accessible, but not always in a convenient format or at a price acceptable to those requiring the materials. Recognizing this need, the University o f California Press is launching a new series o f small-edition, cloth reprints that will reproduce the original work in its entirety, and in a format as close to the original as possible. The first group bearing the California Library Reprint Series imprint comprises seven titles. Book Selection and Censorship A Study o f School and Public Libraries in California Marjorie Fiske “The Fiske Study is a welcome one, and more of them are needed.”—The Nation This book received the Association of College and Research Libraries Library Award, 1959. C L R S 1 $6.50 W orking Class Suburb A Study o f A uto W orkers in Suburbia Bennett M. Berger “Planners will find this a unique and stimu­ lating book in many ways, a kind of seminar in community sociology.”— Journal o f the American Institute o f Planners C L R S 2 $6.50 Black Robes in Lower California Peter Masten Dunne, S.J. This book covers the entire Jesuit period in Baja California History (1679-1768). "Father Dunne has succeeded through use of a vivid, realistic, and vigorous prose style in writing a true history.”— Pacific Historical Review C L R S 3 $11.50 clrs 7 $7.50 A du lt Education in Transition A Study of Institutional Insecurity Burton R. Clark “By almost any criteria this is a first-rate cas study.”—American Journal o f Sociology CLRS 4 $6.75 Tim e, Tense, and the Verb A Study in Theoretical and A pplied Linguistics William E. Bull “There is no major feature of Spanish syntax more puzzling than the use of tenses, and Pro fessor Bull’s work will be indispensable to all who seek an ultimate solution of its problems.” — Hispania clrs 5 $5.75 Tim e in Literature Hans Meyerhoff A genuine contribution to library criticism dealing with the question of “time” in the modern world, in contemporary literature and in the fields of science and philosophy. clrs 6 $6.75 The Nationalist Revival in France Eugen Weber “The author has done a remarkable piece of work.”— International Review o f Social History e ­ Suggestions for future reprints are welcomed and should be addressed to the University of Cali­ fornia Press Library Department. U N I V E R S I T Y O F C A L I F O R N I A P R E S S • B e r k e le y 9 4 7 2 0 145 Manuscripts, and Archives and Conservation of Library and Archival Materials. In th e Manu­ script course, Philip P. Mason, W ayne State University, will focus attention on th e prob­ lems of operating a small historical collection or archives, covering such subjects as organiz­ ing and processing historical records; literary property rights and copyright laws; appraisal of manuscripts for insurance and income tax purposes; and the recruitment of manuscript curators. Paul N. Banks, conservator of The Newberry Library in Chicago, will head the Conservation course. He will discuss environ­ ment in which books or documents live; guide­ lines for identifying problems and maintaining standards for work including simple and fine binding; restoration, and treatment and repair of paper. Mrs. Carolyn Horton, author of Cleaning and Preserving Bindings and Related Materials, will give a special guest lecture, as well as an evening talk on a related subject. For further information write Seminars on American Culture, Cooperstown, N.Y. 13326. July 8-26: University of Oklahoma school of library science Institute for Training in Librarianship on Problems in Administration and Organization of Multi-Media Resources, on the campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman. Request application forms from Mrs. Evelyn Clement, Director, Institute on Administration and Organization of Multi- Media Resources, University of Oklahoma, School of Library Science, Norman, Oklahoma 73069. Forms should be completed and re­ turned to the Director by May 1. July 23-25: 2d session ICSU/UNESCO Central Committee to Study Feasibility of W orld Science Information System. Aug. 5-30: The Georgia Department of Archives and History in cooperation with the Emory University Division of Librarianship will hold its second Archives Institute. The institute is designed for those presently em­ ployed or preparing for employment in the fields of archives, manuscripts, records man­ agement, or special libraries; or advanced stu­ dents in history or related disciplines. Appli­ cants should hold a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Enrollment will be limited to ten. The Institute will be under the direction of Carroll Hart, state archivist and director of the Georgia department of archives and history, and will be held in the new Archives and Records Building, Atlanta. Participants may register on a non-credit We install libraries for colleges. Complete or à la carte. Order an entire new library from us, or any part of a library if you‘re expanding. W e‘re America‘s complete library source. Write Dept. CRL-51. 56 Earl Street, Newark, New Jersey 07114 Newark • Williamsport • Los Angeles • Brantford, Ontario 146 basis or receive six quarter hours academic credit. For non-credit registrants the fee is $50; for credit awarded by the Emory Uni­ versity graduate school, th e fee is $275. Dor­ mitory housing will be available on the Emory University campus. For further information contact Miss Carroll Hart, Director and State Archivist, Georgia D epartm ent of Archives and History, Atlanta, Georgia 30334. Aug. 5-10: 4th Congress of the International Federation for Information Processing (IF IP ), Edinburgh. Aug. 11-23: Second Annual University of Maryland Library Administrators Development Program. Senior administrative personnel of large public, research, academic libraries and school library systems will study organization and administration under the direction of man­ agement consultants, professors of business and public administration and library scholars. The program will be held at the University of Mary­ land’s Donaldson Brown Center, Port Deposit (M d .), and will be directed by John Rizzo of the school of government and business adm in­ istration, George Washington University. Aug. 18-25: 34th Conference of IFLA, Frankfurt/M ain. Aug. 19-23: University of Pittsburgh’s grad­ uate school of library and information sciences summer institute to train teachers in the use of modern equipment in libraries. Director of the institute will be Jay E. Daily, assisted by George Sinkankas. Se p t. 2-7: Third IATUL Seminar on the Application of International Library Methods and Techniques at th e Delft Technological University library under the direction of L. J. van der Wolk. Number of participants is lim­ ited to 25. Fee will be 400 guilders. Please direct all correspondence to Miss T. Hall, c/o Library Technological University, 101 Doelen- straat, D ELFT, The Netherlands. Sept. 9-18: 34th FID Conference and In­ ternational Congress on Scientific Information, Moscow. Sept. 19-24: Frankfort Book Fair. Se p t . 22-25: 42nd Annual Conference of As- lib, Canterbury. Oct. 4-5: Indiana Chapter of the Special Libraries Association and the Purdue Univer­ sity libraries two-day meeting at Purdue Uni­ versity on “Automation in the Library.” Mrs. Theodora Andrews, pharmacy librarian at Pur­ due University, is chairman in charge of meet­ ing plans. Oct. 20-24: American Society for Informa­ tion Science, formerly American Documenta­ tion Institute, 31st annual meeting in Colum­ bus, Ohio. Papers are invited on all facets of methods and mechanisms to improve the op­ erations of information systems. The technical sessions chairman, David M. Leston, Jr., Bat- telle Memorial Institute, should be notified of intent to submit papers, by March 1. Nov. 1968: The Washington University school of medicine is planning to present its fifth Symposium on Machine Methods in Libraries in November, 1968, if enough people are interested. It will be a 3-day meeting and registration will be $35. Speakers will discuss automation at the libraries of th e UN, The Royal Society of Medicine, The Upstate Med­ ical Center’s Biomedical Network, The New York Medical Center, The University of Louis­ ville medical school, and other institutions, as well as the work of the Washington University school of medicine library. Those who might be interested in attending the Symposium should communicate with Dr. Estelle Brodman, Librarian and Professor of Medical History, School of Medicine Library, W ashington Uni­ versity, St. Louis, Missouri 63110. M I S C E L L A N Y • The Committee to Investigate Copy­ right Problems, 2233 Wisconsin Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20007, has just completed the first factual report on the amount of and the kinds of copyrighted materials copied by U.S. libraries. The study was supported by the U.S. Office of Education, Bureau of Research. Copyright law gives the author the exclusive right “to print, reprint, publish, copy and sell” his copyrighted work. The court-devel­ oped exception to this exclusive right is “fair use.” Current library copying practices are based on the belief that these practices are sanctioned under law. The study examines w hat th e courts have actually decided. The study is timely and of particular sig­ nificance because of pending copyright legisla­ tion—HR 2412/S 597 passed by the House of Representatives April 12, 1967, and S 2216, the Senate-passed bill which proposes a Na­ tional Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works. T he report is available at a cost of $10.00 per copy. Remittance should accompany purchase order. • The first planning conference on auto­ m ated indexing for archives and manuscripts was held under the auspices of the National Archives and Records Service of the General Services Administration on March 25. The conference was supported by funds granted by the Council on Library Resources and was a t­ tended by representatives of nine repositories of archives or personal papers—Cornell Uni­ versity, the Library of Congress, Minnesota 147 This is the long awaited International Encyclopedia o f the Social Sciences. The first reference work of its kind in over thirty years, it brings the full scope of modem social science to your library. The original Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences was published by The Macmillan C o m p an y in 1937. In ste a d of m erely “bringing it up-to-date,” we felt that a totally new encyclopedia was called for— one which would reflect the far-reaching progress being made by current social science. Now, after an investment of more than seven years and two million dollars, the International Encyclopedia o f the Social Sciences is ready. This monumental work covers the full range of contemporary social science: an­ thropology, economics, geography, his­ tory, law, political science, psychiatry, sociology — and statistics, the tool of the social scientist. Every article is written with unusual clarity. But sophisticated concepts have not been oversimplified. And the ency­ clopedia is liberally cross-referenced and indexed to be of maximum use to students, social scientists — and laymen in other fields. The authority of the work is unques­ tionable. The list of over 1,600 contribu­ tors — as well as the editorial board — reads like a virtual “Who’s Who” of dis­ tinguished social scientists throughout the world. No viewpoint of any importance has been overlooked. Send for our free prospectus today. It includes a complete list of editors and contributors (with their affiliations), a de­ tailed index of all 17 volumes, and the story of how this unique encyclopedia was created. Use the coupon below. International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Collier-M acmillan Library Services, Dept. C R L -5 -6 8 866 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 □ Please s e n d _________set(s) of the I n te r n a ­ tional Encyclopedia o f the Social Sciences. Bill me at $495.00 per set. □ Send a free copy of your prospectus. □ Have a representative call with more in­ formation. Name___________________________________Title Name of School Address City State Zip 148 Historical Society, Ohio Historical Society, the Smithsonian Institution, Syracuse University, Wayne State University, the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, and the host institution, the National Archives. The purpose of the con­ ference was to discuss the computer programs and information formats that will be required by each of the institutions to implement a common computerized system for indexing or creating finding aids to historical source ma­ terials. The program, dubbed SPINDEX for Selective Permutation Indexing, is being writ­ ten in the National Archives by a staff sup­ ported by the grant from the Council. I t is designated to meet the requirements of the major manuscript repositories in the country. The ten co-operating institutions (the Universi­ ty of Alaska representative could not attend the meeting) have agreed to advise the Na­ tional Archives staff on a desired format. When the National Archives staff has devised a draft program, the cooperating institutions will test it in order to assess its applicability to local procedures. When the program has been writ­ ten, tested and proven feasible, it will be described in a publication about the project. The program will then be available to any archives or manuscript repository that wishes to use it. FOR THE RUSSIAN BOOK SECTION Reference and Source M a te ria l • Russian Literature: Classics, Contemporary • Linguistics and Literary Criticism • English-Russian and Russian-English Dictionaries • Russian Language Records, Folk Songs and Dramatic Readings • Children’s Literature • Books on Art • Books on Science • Textbooks on mathematics, geography, natural sciences, history, etc. • Socio-Economic Literature • Russian Atlases and Maps • Soviet Magazines and Newspapers Inquire about our out-of-print books and back issue magazines. W rite fo r Catalogs & Prices Phone 212 CH 2-4500 FOUR CONTINENT BOOK CORP. DEPT.7 2 7 156 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW YORK. N. Y. 10010 • Six members have been appointed to the first Advisory Committee for the Library Tech- ician Program at the Wilson Campus of Chicago City College. They are: Sister Mary Chrysantha, librarian, Felician College library; Alex Ladenson, acting librarian, Chi­ cago public library; Miriam Peterson, director, division of libraries, Chicago Board of Edu­ cation; Anne C. Roess, supervisor, library serv­ ices, Institute of Gas Technology; Fritz Veit, director of libraries, Wilson Campus and Chi­ cago State College; and Helen Yast, librarian, American Hospital Association. • The British National Bibliography has awarded a contract to Indata Limited to set up a computer system to produce regularly on magnetic tape full bibliographic records of the current output of British publishers. The system design will be compatible with the U.S. Library of Congress Project MARC. The BNB MARC Record will follow the agreed U.S. MARC II file structure with appropriate additions for British usage. Local institutions could take this tape, add local data and use it in their own systems. The BNB MARC project was made possible by a grant from the Office for Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) of the Department of Education and Science. The OSTI grant covers a period of one year and Indata systems analysis and pro­ gramming are expected to be completed in about six months, followed by a running-in period to test the acceptability of the system. All British publications will be recorded by the BNB on paper tape and forwarded to Indata for validation and creation of a weekly MARC catalog. In addition to the magnetic tape record, Indata will provide diagnostic listings of errors, amendments, and deletions affecting the weekly input or the permanent BNB catalog. The system will also be designed to print a BNB index, in coded standard book- number sequence, and a title index, in alpha­ betical sequence, of all BNB records added to the catalog each week. P U B L IC A T IO N S • A supplement to Continuing Education for Librarians, a listing for 1968-69 of work­ shops, conferences, seminars and short courses in librarianship has been compiled and pro­ duced by the Office for Library Education of ALA. Twenty institutes are listed in the sup­ plement. As in the original listing, information is arranged by place, by subject, and by date. Each entry includes the title of the meeting, the place, sponsoring agency, director or in­ structors, tuition and registration charges, dead­ line for registration, and the source for further information. The supplement, like the original listing, is intended for use by librarians, teach­ ers, information scientists and personnel offi- 149 cers. It is available w ithout charge from Con­ tinuing E ducatio n for L ibrarians, A m erican L i­ brary Association, 50 E ast H uron Street, C hi­ cago, Illinois 60611. • T he U niversity of N orth Carolina library a t C hapel Hill has issued a com puter- produced record of its serial an d periodical holdings. Published in th e form of a six-hun­ dred-page volume, w ith double-colum n offset printing, th e record lists an d indicates holdings for approxim ately thirty -fo u r thousand period­ icals and other serials h eld by th e m ain library and departm ental libraries at UNC. Copies have been distributed to libraries in N orth Carolina and to selected libraries elsewhere. O ther libraries m ay purchase copies ($ 1 0 ) from th e A ccounting D epartm ent, University of N orth Carolina Library, Chapel Hill, N orth Carolina 27514. • A new section of th e first English F u ll E dition of th e Universal D ecim al Classification ( U D C ) has just been published—U D C 77: Photography. I t covers th e classification of all docum ents in th e photographic field from th e scientific, technical, and artistic points of view. T h e E nglish version of U D C is being prep ared and published as BS 1000 by th e British Stand­ ards Institution at th e original joint request of th e British Society for International Bibliog­ raphy (B SIB ) and th e Association of Special Libraries and Inform ation Bureaux (A S L IB ), b o th now am algam ated u n d e r Aslib. T h e prior­ ity program now in h an d is designed to com ­ plete th e publication of th e entire E nglish F ull E dition by th e end of 1969. Copies of BS 1000 (7 7 ) may b e obtained from th e BSI Sales O f­ fice, 101/113 Pentonville Road, London, N .l. Price 2 0 /-e a c h (postage 1/-ex tra to non-sub­ scribers ). • Sam ple Catalog Cards continues a tra ­ dition of publishing w hich dates from 1937. T he 4 th edition has been p repared to illustrate th e changes in form and content of catalog cards w hich result from th e publication of th e Anglo-Am erican Cataloging Rules. Copies may b e obtained from th e School of L ibrary Serv­ ice, 516 B utler L ibrary, Colum bia U niver­ sity, New York, N ew York 10027 for $3 each, postpaid. Orders aggregating less than $10 m ust be accom panied by paym ent w ith checks or money orders m ade payable to Colum bia U ni­ versity. LED CONFERENCE PROGRAM Training L ibrary Technical Assistants will b e th e them e of the program m eeting of the Library E ducation Division on June 26 in Kan­ sas City. I t will b e preceded b y th e L E D busi­ ness m eeting, w hich will begin a 10 a.m. Both m eetings will be h eld in th e M usic Hall of th e M unicipal A uditorium during th e ALA 1968 Annual Conference. Rose L. Vormelker of th e school of library science, K ent State U niversity (O h io ), and president of L E D , will preside a t th e busi­ ness meeting. D orothy F. Deininger, of th e graduate school of library service, R utgers— th e State University, N ew Brunswick, N.J., will preside at th e program meeting. “E m erging Patterns of T echnician Em ploy­ m ent W ith Im plications for Libraries” will be discussed by W alter J. Brooking, program spe­ cialist, technical education, U.S. Office of E d u ­ cation. “C anadian T raining Program s for Library Technicians” will b e th e topic of a talk by John M. M arshall, assistant professor, school of library science, U niversity of Toronto. John Sherrod, director of th e N ational Agri­ cultural L ibrary, will speak on “L ibrary T ech­ nicians in th e U.S. Civil Service.” “Junior College Programs for L ibrary T ech­ nicians,” will be th e subject of Mrs. M ayrelee F. Newm an, director, instructional resources, E l Centro College, Dallas. Joseph F. Schubert, librarian, Ohio State L ibrary, Columbus, will discuss “Guidelines for T echnical Assistant Training Programs—T he L E D Interdivisional C om m ittee on Training Program s for Supportive L ibrary Staff.” “ Greater Achievements through Greater Membership” W rite for FREE Membership Promotion M aterials Membership Promotion American Library Association 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, III. 6061X 150 Registration for Library Equipm ent Institute —CHARGING SYSTEMS— Co-sponsored by L ib rary A dm inistration Division— Inform ation Science an d A utom ation Division C ontinental an d P resid en t H otels—Kansas City, M issouri—June 21-22, 1968 E nclosed find registration fee of $20.00. F ee includes luncheon on F rid a y and Saturday, b u t no o th er meals or housing. A rrange lodging by using th e card in th e Jan u ary 1968 issue of th e ALA Bulletin. L E A V E BLANK Name A m t....................................... Position Ck. # ...................................... & D ate ................................... Address C onf........................................ R c p t...................................... City State Zip R eturn com pleted form w ith your check to L A D /IS A D In stitu te, A m erican L ibrary Association, 50 E. H uron St., Chicago, I 11. 60611. For information about programs, see CRL News, April 1968, pages 94-97. Preconference Registration Forms THE ANTIQUARIAN BOOK TRADE IN THE TW ENTIETH CENTURY June 20-22, 1968—Kansas City, Missouri Please complete and return this form by 24 May with your payment. Make checks or money orders payable to the American Library Association. Deadline for refunds is 15 June. Receipt will be mailed. Name ........................................................................................... Position ...................................................................................... Organization .................................................................................. Street ............................................................................................ C i t y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S t a t e ...........................Zip C o d e ..................... I am enclosing a check for .................... ($40.00 per person, to cover the registration fee, dinner on Thursday, luncheon and dinner on Friday, and transportation between the Dixon Hotel and Linda H all.) Registration will be limited. Hotel accommodations are available through th e ALA Housing Bureau on the form provided in the ALA Bulletin, January, 1968. Additional forms available from the ACRL Executive Secretary. 151 Conference on Library Services to Vocational-Technical Education Programs in Junior Colleges June 19-22, 1968 Chase-Park Plaza Hotel, St. Louis, Missouri The registration fee, $35.00, includes dinner on Thursday, lunch on Friday, and tour. Please complete and return this form by May 15, w ith your payment. Make checks or money orders payable to the American Library Association. Registration will be limited. Deadline for advance registration is May 15; deadline for refunds is June 15. NAME ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I am enclosing a check for: (PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE) POSITION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ ........................................Registration, Meals, Tour ADDRESS ................................................................................. My choice for small group discussions is: (indicate first, second, third choice) .....................Materials ........................Personnel ...........................Communication Are you planning to attend the annual conference of the American Library Association at Kansas City, June 23-29? Yes □ No □ . Are you interested in active participation in JCLS? Yes □ No □ . If interested, check □ committee work □ holding office. NON-WESTERN MATERIALS FOR UNDERGRADUATE COLLECTIONS June 20-22, 1968 University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Please complete and return this form by May 24 with your payment. Make checks or money orders payable to the American Library Association. Deadline for refunds is June 15. Receipt will be mailed. NAME .......................................................................................... Print or Type POSITION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ORGANIZATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . STREET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C I T Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S T A T E ...........................ZIP C O D E ......................... 1 am enclosing a check tor: ....................... $45.00 (includes registration, dinner on Thursday and Friday, lunch on Satur­ day, and all bus transportation) Please indicate your first and second choice of working sessions you wish to attend for each of the following periods: Friday, June 21, 2:00 p.m. Saturday, June 22, 8:30 a.m. ..........South and South East Asia.......................Middle East and North Africa (Arab W orld) ..........East Asia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sub-Saharan Africa Mail the completed forms and your check to Executive Secretary, Association of College and Research Libraries, 50 East Huron Street, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Above Registrations do not include housing. Even if we end up in the Alps. I f we don’t have the Like we did last year to micro­ film 11th and 12th century o u t-o f-p rin t boo k m anuscripts in m onastic scriptoria. you’re loo k in g for, But suppose you need “The we’ll fin d it, Twenty-two Musical Srutis of the H indus.” Or “The Doty- film it, Doten Family in America.” Or “Glavnyia Techeniia Russkoi clear copyright, Istoricheskoi Mysli.” Nice pay royalties sounding nam es. Nice until you try to find them. and send it to you Usually, we ju st have to go dow nstairs to our vaults for 4¢ a page. where we keep over 50,000 titles. But w hether we go to Tim buktu or w hether the original is worth $10 or $10,000, the cost for your copy is the same. A penny-and-a-third a page for 35mm positive microfilm. Four cents a page for a paperbound xerographic copy. Six cents a page for a copy in a foreign language. This service often costs less than an interlibrary loan. And you get to keep the book. W rite for University Microfilms’ out-of-print book cata­ logs. Tell us what fields you're interested in. Why should you look for things when we’ve already found them. University Microfilms, A Xerox Company 300 N. Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103. 313-761-4700 XEROX