ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 156 rently numbers well over 2,000 printed books, manuscripts, drawings, legal documents, auto­ graphed letters, and ephemera. The particular copies described in the catalog were exhibited in the Department of Archives and Special Collec­ tions of the John Davis Williams Library, Uni­ versity of Mississippi, from August 6 to Septem­ ber 12, 1980. Copies may be ordered for $5 from the Department of Archives and Special Collec­ tions, University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677. Calendar May 23—Preservation: Spring meeting of the Iowa Historical Materials Preservation Society, Liv­ ing History Farms, Des Moines. Topics for dis­ cussion will include institutional disaster plan­ ning and the National Register of Historic Places. Contact: Jonnifer Ellsworth, Program Committee, Iowa Historical Materials Preserva­ tion Conference, 732 Dearborn St., Iowa Citv, IA 52240; (319) 353-4073. 29—Archives: Workshop for college and universi­ ty archivists, Albany, New York, will present an overview of archival methodology in college and university archives. For further informa­ tion, contact: Lucille Whalen, School of Li­ brary and Information Science, State Universi­ ty of New York at Albany, Albany, NY 12222; (518) 455-6157. 29—Interlibrary Loan: NELINET will sponsor a meeting on interlibrary loan in New England at Northeastern University, Boston. A major focus will be future enhancements of the OCLC Interlibrary Loan subsystem. Contact: Frances McNamara, NELINET, 385 Elliot St., New­ ton, MA 02164; (617) 969-0400. June 1-12—Politics: Eighth annual Washington sum­ mer session on the Library and the Political Process, sponsored by the School of Library and Information Science, Catholic University of America, Washington. The curriculum empha­ sizes the study of the governmental process with regard to the enactment of library legisla­ tion and appropriations and the effect of mass media, public opinion, and interest groups on such legislation. Fee: $360, no later than May 25. Contact: School of Library and Information Science, Catholic University of America, Washington, DC 20064; (202) 635-5085. 10—Religious Literature: “Trends in Religious Library Materials,” a workshop offered by the Graduate Library School of the University of Rhode Island. Fee: $35. Contact: Graduate Li­ brary School, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881; (401) 792-2947. 17-19—Data Processing: National Educational Computing Conference, North Texas State University, Denton. Contact: James L. Poirot, North Texas State University, P.O. Box 13886, Denton, TX 76203; (817) 788-2767. 24- 26—Data Processing: “Data Processing Spe­ cifications and Contracting,” a regional work­ shop sponsored by ALA s Library and Informa­ tion Technology Association, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Embarcadero Center, San Francisco. Fee: $95 for LITA members, $110 for ALA but non-LITA members, $125 for non-ALA mem­ bers, and $25 for library school students (space available basis). Contact: LITA/ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611: (312) 944-6780. 25- 26—Telecommunications: “The Office in the Home: The Support Role of the Library,” a preconference sponsored by ALA s Library and Information Technology Association, Hyatt Hotel Union Square. The institute will explore the near future in which most services will be delivered to the home via telecommunications. Fee: $95 for LITA members, $110 for ALA but non-LITA members, $125 for non-ALA mem­ bers, and $25 for library school students (space available basis). Contact: LITA/ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611; (312) 944-6780. 26— Business Literature: “Information Sources in Business and Economics,” a basic course on sources, systems, services, and techniques, Hotel Bellevue, San Francisco. Fee: $85. Con­ tact: AJ Seminars, 11205 Farmland Dr., Rock­ ville, MD 20852; (301) 881-4996. 26-27—Technical Assistants: Annual meeting, Council on Library/Media Technical Assistants, San Francisco. Contact: Raymond Roney, Learning Resources, University of the District of Columbia, 4200 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20008. July 12-25—Administration: “Executive Development Program for Library Administrators,” Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Two sessions: July 12-18 and July 19-25. Contact: Harry F. Brooks, Institute of Business and Educational Services, School of Business Administration, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056; (513) 529-2132. 13- 24—Federal Libraries: Ninth Institute on Federal Library Resources, sponsored by the School of Library and Information Science, Catholic University of America. The curriculum emphasizes the study of major concepts and services and the mechanisms that promote the 157 utilization of federal library resources. Fee: $375, no later than July 2. Contact: School of Library and Information Science, Catholic Uni­ versity of America, Washington, DC 20064; (202) 635-5085. 22-24—Statistics: “Statistics for Professional Li­ brarians,” an institute offered by the Rosary College Graduate School of Library Science, River Forest, Illinois. Fee: $120. Contact: Ros­ ary College, GSLS, River Forest, IL 60305; (312) 366-2490. 27-August 7— Networking: Institute on Library Networking, sponsored by the School of Li­ brary and Information Science, Catholic Uni­ versity of America. Fee: $375, no later than June 26. Contact: School of Library and In­ formation Science, Catholic U niversity of America, Washington, DC 20064; (202) 635- 5085. August 3 - 14— O nline S earching: “ Intensive Online Workshop for Faculty Educators.” Fee: $400. Contact: School of Library and Information Sci­ ence, Catholic University of America, Washing­ ton, DC 20064; (202) 635-5085. 4- 5—Audio-Visual: "Planning and Producing Au­ dio-Visual Programs, an institute sponsored by the Graduate Library School of the University of Rhode Island and the Community College of Rhode Island. Fee: $60. Contact: Graduate Li­ brary School, U niversity of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881; (401) 792-2947. 10- 13—Canadian-American Lxbrarianship: Con­ ference of th e Canadian-Am erican Library Association, Fogler Library, U niversity of Maine. Contact: Tom Patterson, Head of Refer­ ence at Fogler Library, University of Maine at Orono, Orono, ME 04469; (207) 581-2136. S ep tem b er 11—AACR2: Workshop sponsored by the Uni­ versity of Kentucky College of Library Science, Hyatt Regency, Lexington. Contact: Nancy S. Little, Office for Continuing Education, Col­ lege of Library Science, University of Ken­ tucky, Lexington, KY 40506; (606) 258-8877. 18-19—Women in Administration: “Women in Library M anagement: T heories, Skills and Values,” Wisconsin Center, Madison, Wiscon­ sin. Fee: $65. Contact: Darlene Weingand, U niversity of W isconsin-E xtension, Com­ munication Programs/Library & Information Science, Room 220, Lowell Hall, 610 Langdon St., Madison, WI 53706; (608) 262-3566. 26—American Printing History Association: Sixth annual conference, Columbia University, New York. Topic will be: “Printer’s Marks: Revival and Survival of Fine Commercial Printing.” Contact: Alice Schreyer, Program Chairman, c/o APHA, P.O. Box 4922, Grand Central Sta­ tion, New York, NY 10163. Classified Advertising Deadlines: Orders for regular classified advertisements must each the ACRL office on or before the second of the month pre­ eding publication of the issue (e.g., September 2 for the October sue). Late jo b listings will be accepted on a space-available basis fter the second of the month. Rates: Classified advertisements are $2.25 per line for ACRL embers, $2.80 for others. Late job notices are $7.00 per line for embers, $8.50 per line for others. Organizations submitting ads ill be charged according to their membership status. Telephone: All telephone orders should be confirmed by a writ­ n order mailed to ACRL headquarters as soon as possible. Orders hould be accompanied by a typewritten copy of the ad to be used proofreading. Guidelines: For ads which list an application deadline, that date ust be no s∞ n e r than the last day of the month in which the otice appears (e.g., October 31 for the October issue). All job an­ ouncements must include a salary figure. Job announcements will e edited to exclude discriminatory references. Applicants should e aware that the terms faculty rank and status vary in meaning mong institutions. JOBLINE: Call (312) 944 -67 95 for late-breaking jo b ads for cademic and research library positions. A prerecorded summary f positions listed with the service is revised weekly; each Friday a ew tape includes all ads received by 1:00 p.m. the previous day. ach listing subm itted will be carried on the recording for two eeks. The charge for each two-week listing is $25 for ACRL embers and $30 for non-members. Fast Job Listing Service: A special newsletter for those actively eeking positions. The service lists jo b postings received at ACRL eadquarters four weeks before they appear in C&RL News, as well s ads which, because of narrow application deadlines, will not ap­ ear in C&RL News. The cost of a six-month subscription is $5 for CRL members and $10 for non-members. Contact: Kathy Van Voorst, Adm inistrative Secretary, ACRL, merican Library Association, 50 E. Huron S t, Chicago, IL 60611; 312) 944-6780. FOR SALE NCYCLOPEDIA. Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften nd Künste (Ersch und Gruber Encyclopädie) Leipzig, 1818-89. st sec., vols. 1-89; 2nd sec., vols. 1-31; 3rd sec., vols. 1-25. riginal edition, good condition. $150 plus cost of transportation. ontact Dr. Robert F. Cayton, College Librarian, Marietta College awes Library, Marietta, OH 45750. OREIGN MICROFORMS. Any foreign microform from anywhere in e world at the foreign list price. Free searching. Monographs and erials. IMDS, 1995 Broadway, NY, NY 10023, (212) 873-2100. ARV BROADBENT, Box 6, Beltsville, MD 20705. Government ublications. Standing, subscription, single, or search orders. No repayment. No foreign surcharge. (301) 937-8846. EARCH SERVICE. E x-librarians locate titles or subject, plus 50 ,000 indexed stock. PAB 291 7 A tla ntic, A tla ntic City, NJ 8401. Phone 609/344-1943. POSITIONS OPEN CQUISITIONS LIBRARIAN. University of Arizona Library. Re­ ponsible for collection development in science-technology, psy­ hology, health related professions, etc. ALA-accredited degree or quivalent, relevant background in science, either through course ork or library experience, excellent bibliographic skills, knowledge f the book trade. Knowledge of one or more foreign languages de­ irable. Salary range is $14 ,400 -$2 0,0 00 dependent upon experi­ nce. Faculty status, 12-month appointments, 22 days vacation, ringe benefits. Send inquiries and resumes by June 15, 1981, to . David Laird, University Librarian, University of Arizona Library, ucson, AZ 85721. An equal-opportunity/affirm ative-act¡on em ­ loyer. r c is a m m w te s in m n n b b a a o n E w m s h a p A A ( E u 1 O C D F th s M p p S 1 0 A s c e w o s e f W T p