ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries Septem ber 1984 / 423 News fro m the fi e l d Acquisitions • T he A ntique A utom obile C lub of A m erica Li- b rary and Research C enter, Hershey, Pennsylva­ nia, has recently purchased th e Russell E. Stadt M arm on lite ra tu re collection. C om piled by hobby­ ist Russell E. Stadt, of G ran d Rapids, this collec­ tion pertains solely to th e revolutionary M arm on autom obile invented by H o w ard M arm on in 1902. This was a technically advanced m achine w hich incorporated autom otive engineering devices not found in other makes of cars until 20 years later. T h e collection includes catalogs, p h o to g rap h s, owners m anuals, parts books, factory service le t­ te rs, b lu e p rin ts , m a g a z in e a rtic le s, a d v e rtis e ­ m ents, and color chip samples. • Arizona State University Libraries, T em pe, have acquired a substantial collection of m aterials on and by W illiam b urroughs, the A m erican ex­ p erim ental novelist of th e 1950s and 1960s. These archives contain four feet of m anuscripts dating from 1938, including source m aterials and several drafts of B urroughs’s m ajor works. Also included are tw o volumes of dream notes and three feet of clippings and other m aterials assembled by B ur­ roughs, m uch of it du rin g th e Beat H otel period w ith Byron Gysin in Paris. • C ornell U niversity L ib raries, Ith a c a , New York, have received a gift of m aterials produced by a n d a b o u t various groups an d individuals th a t spearheaded student activism in the Ith ac a area be­ tw een 1966 and 1972. T he donor is L aw rence E. K ram er, C ornell Class of 1970 an d c u rre n tly a freelance w riter in New York City. T he collection contains 200 pages of inform ation th a t the FBI and other F ederal agencies collected about th e donor as p a rt of their surveillance of cam pus dissidents, as well as m any leaflets, new sletters, an d discussion papers distributed by C ornell-based a n tiw a r and New L eft organizations. • E astern M ichigan University L ib rary , Ypsi- lan ti, has been given a collection of books and other m a te r ia l s by a n d a b o u t A ld o u s H u x ley (1894-1963). The donor is D avid K. Maxfield, a re - tired university lib rarian living in Ann Arbor. Sev­ eral items are autographed by Huxley, including a letter to Maxfield concerning th e novel, T im e M ust H ave a Stop. In addition to over 100 books, there is a com plete file of Huxley’s syndicated co n trib u ­ tions to the H earst new spapers clipped from the Chicago H erald and E xam iner, and te a r sheets of articles by and ab o u t Huxley. • Kansas State University Libraries, M anhat- ta n , have acquired th e F red and Jean n ette H iggin­ son Collection of R obert Graves books. Higginson, th e bibliographer of Graves, has assembled nearly 600 works by and ab o u t th e English poet and a u ­ th o r of I, Claudius th a t add to th e nearly 300 books already acquired by th e Libraries. O th er KSU acquisitions include: an extensive collection of L incolniana from th e p rivate library of Rex A nderson; n early 900 books on p o u ltry , ranging from scientific publications to children’s stories; over 200 books, several “little m agazines,’’ and correspondence of D onald von Ruysdael D ren - ner, w ho operated the p rivate Z auberberg Press from 1946 to 1966 in Coffeyville, Kansas; and sev­ eral h u n d red p rivate press printings of poetry, cal­ endars, avant garde publications, catalogs, and books about p rivate presses. • N o rth P ark College a n d T heological Semi- n ary , Chicago, has received a m ajor portion of the lib rary of th e late W alter Johnson, noted scholar an d teacher of Scandinavian literatu re, who died in F eb ru ary 1983. T he collection is rich in m a te ri­ als on Strindberg and other Swedish w riters, as well as N orw egian, Icelandic, D anish and Finnish poetry, literatu re and history. T he collection ex­ ceeds 1,000 volumes. • T he O hio State University Libraries, Colum - bus, have acquired a collection of th e papers of B ernard A. B ergm an (1894-1980), m anaging edi­ to r of the N ew Yorker in 1931-1933 w ho later was associated w ith a num ber of P hiladelphia new spa­ p e rs , in c lu d in g th e P h ila d e lp h ia B u lle tin in 1961-1980. The papers, prim arily gathered for an autobiography th a t was never com pleted, include unpublished accounts of his experiences w ith his f e a tu r e c o lu m n fo r th e H e a rs t n e w s p a p e rs in 1933-1935 and w ith the N ew Yorker, th e text of several addresses, an d b riefer sketches of m any w riters and journalists w ith w hom he h ad been as­ sociated. • T he San Jacinto Museum of History, L a Porte, Texas, has received a gift of 46 historical m a n u ­ scripts and docum ents from Mr. and Mrs. Jam es L. B ritton, of H ouston, covering im p o rta n t events in th e struggle for possession of Texas in th e early 19th century. Among th e high points in th e collection are several items concerning th e Texas Revolution, including an 1836 letter from Secretary of W a r Thom as Rusk ordering Colonel James M organ to arrest four Anglo-Texans felt to be spies, and the p rin ted broadside of W illiam Travis’s last letter Only Meckler Publishing offers complete coverage of SMALL COMPUTERS IN LIBRARIES (SCIL) is a monthly news letter that offers every librarian the guidance for evaluating micro­ computers and associated peripherals. SCIL also keeps librarians informed about reference services for computers, user groups, and materials for more effective microcomputer operations. P ricing: Available monthly @ $24.00 Editor: Allan Pratt T he M 300 and PC REPORT is a monthly newsletter providing information on developments, trends, forecasting, and use of the M300 and IBM PC as a technical processing, library management, and collection access tool. Also, every issue contains practical re­ ports on installations, integration, and effective use. Finally, reports are provided on new programs from library supply agencies w rit­ ten for use on the IBM PC as well as pre written software available for library applications. P ricing: Available monthly @ $29.00 Editor: Nancy J. Melin LIBRARY SOFTWARE REVIEW is the only magazine exclusively designed to provide the library user with information required to make intelligent software evaluation, procurement, integration, and installation decisions. Its coverage is inclusive of both pre­ written software as well as software in development for micros, minis, and library oriented mainframe computers. In addition to articles and reviews of software, each issue offers reviews on soft­ ware books, periodicals, and other materials pertaining to com­ puter software with relevance to libraries. P ricing: Available bi-monthly @ $69.50 Editor: Nancy J. Melin W h y You Sh o u ld Attend microcomputers and software for you and your library. Library Software Conference & ExpositionThe Hyatt Regency, Columbus, Ohio, October 2-4, 1984 Here is an opportunity to participate in a unique national gathering designed solely to identify, describe, and present software applications for library and educational co m m u ­nities.Now, Meckler Publishing, in con ju nction with its magazine, LIBRARY SOFTW ARE REVIEW, provides this distinguished forum for library software managers, media department directors, com puter department representatives, technical service officials, and other individuals w hose responsibil­ities require know ledge o f available software and associated products. Conference Agenda (Panel Presentations)• Local Area Networks • Sources for information about • Software Copyright Issues software• Public Access Bulletin Boards • Public Dom ain Software• Com puter Literacy • Product Reviews• Gateway Software • Telecommunications• Tools and procedures for • Field trip to O C L Cselecting and purchasing • Online: Mainframe vs. microsoftware Featured Speakers (P a r tia l lis tin g ) Patrick Dewey A dm in istra tive L ibra rian, Maywood Public Library (IL) and author, PU B LIC ACCESS MICROCOM PUTERS IN LIBRARIES: A H A N D B O O K FOR LIBRARIANSHal W. Hall Special Formats Librarian, Texas A & M UniversityMartin Kesselman Editor, "Online Update, ” WILSON LIBRARY BULLETIN and Reference Librarian, New York UniversityChuck Lynd Information Specialist, LIN C Resources (Columbus, OH) David MacDonald Head, Systems Office: University o f M ichigan LibrariesNancy Jean Melin Conference Coordinator and Editor, LIBRAR Y SOFTWARE REVIE W and MJOO and P C REPORTGail Persky New York University LibrariesPaul Peters Assistant University Librarian fo r Systems, Columbia UniversityAllan Pratt Editor, SMALL COMPUTERS IN LIBRARIES: Professor, Graduate School in Librarianship, University o f Arizona James E. Rush President, Jam es E. Rush Associates Michele Sinesky Computerized Education, (Trenton, NJ)Tom Surprenant Associate Editor, LIBRARY H I TECH: Associate Professor, Graduate School o f Library and Information Science, University o f Rhode IslandKen Thomas M300 Project M anager, O C L C , Inc.Daniel Toohey Attorney; Dow, Lohnes & Albertson (DC) R e g is t r a t io n I n fo r m a t io n : $175.00 or $95.00 per day. Room rates: single, $68.00; double, $75.00 426 / C&RL News from the Alamo. ♦ T he University of Illinois, U rb an a, has re- cieved a gift of 200 hardcover science fiction, fan ­ tasy, and mystery titles from Steven Jaffe, of Sko­ kie, Illinois. The books are all first editions in excel­ le n t co n d itio n and w ill be housed as a special collection in the Rare Book Room. Among the a u ­ thors represented are Isaac Asimov, Robert Silver- berg, Clifford Simak, and E dgar Rice Burroughs. Illinois’s Asian D epartm ental L ibrary has been given a large collection of current Korean language publications by the Korean Research Foundation in Seoul. Through a m atching fund agreem ent, the Foundation’s gift is valued at $15,000. • The University of Southern C alifornia, Los Angeles, has been given the papers and m em orabi­ lia of the late Ernst M atray, a leading figure of the Austrian and G erm an theater from 1910 to 1936, w hen he moved to California to work in Holly­ wood as a choreographer. The gift includes m any of M a tra y ’s o rig in a l d ra w in g s an d th e a tr ic a l sketches, as well as playbills and correspondence. • TheU niversity of W aterloo, O ntario, L ibrary has acquired a collection of 35,000 issues of w om ­ en’s periodicals published in England from 1893 to 1977. The collection is m ade up of the publisher’s archive or file copies of various titles w hich were produced prim arily by A m algam ated Press and its p aren t com pany, the Periodical Publishing Com ­ pany. The Press was established in 1891 by Alfred H arm sw orth for the sole purpose of publishing w om en’s magazines directed at the expanding m id­ dle class m arket of wom en w anting guidance in home m anagem ent and enjoyable reading. One of the longest runs is Woman ’s World: A H om e Jour­ nal fo r the Everyday Lady, w hich appeared regu­ larly from 1903 to 1958. • The University of W yoming Libraries, Lara- mie, acquired their 100,000th m ap last April. T i­ tled Territory o f W yom ing, the m ap depicts the T erritory as it existed in 1876. The m ap was en­ graved and printed by Julius Bien for the General L and Office of the U.S. D epartm ent of the In te­ rior. A public ceremony dedicating the acquisition was held on June 13 in the Documents and Maps D epartm ent of Coe Library. • W heaton College’s Billy G raham Center Ar- chives, W heaton, Illinois, have received the p er­ sonal papers of Charles W. Colson, form er special counsel to President Nixon. The collection includes Colson’s files relating to his trial, m anuscripts of his books Born Again and Life Sentence, adm inistra­ tive memos of the Prison Fellowship staff, and m a­ terials from the prom otion of the film, Born Again. Of special interest are W hite House files th a t Col­ son took w ith him when he left the W hite House staff; the same restrictions apply to these papers as those on the Nixon adm inistration files in the N a­ tional Archives. Restrictions on the Colson collec­ tion will be lifted as restrictions on the N ational Ar­ chives m aterials are lifted. Grants • The Academy of N atural Sciences of Philadel- phia L ibrary has received a grant of more than $130,000 from the U.S. D epartm ent of Education for the cataloging and conservation of its photo­ graphic collection. The goal of the project is to cat­ alog 20,000 images at the item level in a database m anagem ent m icrocom puter program . The collec­ tion includes motion pictures, lantern slides, ste­ reographs, albums, and portraits of 19th and 20th- century figures in n atu ral history. • Brown University L ibrary, Providence, has been aw arded a $114,339 grant by the National E ndow m ent for the H um anities in support of its bibliography of E uropean books about America printed between 1493 and 1776. The first tw o vol­ umes of the six-volume series, entitled European A m ericana: A C hronological G uide to W orks Printed in Europe Relating to the Americas, were published in 1980 and 1982 and tw o more volumes are currently in press. W hen com pleted, the series will include some 33,000 separate entries, more th a n three times the listings for the same period in the preceding series edited by Joseph Sabin. • C ornell University L ibraries, Ith a c a , New York, have received an HEA Title II-C grant in the am ount of $99,734 to begin preparation of an orni­ thology online catalog. The project will add all m anual catalog records of ornithology m aterials at Cornell to the RLIN database, including m aterials in sets, in reports of scientific expeditions, and in related zoological fields. • T h e F enw ay L ib rary C onsortium has been Statistics will be compiled for 1983-84 The ACRL Board of Directors has approved funding for the com pilation of statistical data for the approxim ately 100 university libraries in the U.S. and C anada which do not belong to th e Association of R esearch L ib raries. This study will up d ate A C R L University Library Statistics 1981-82 and A C R L University L i­ brary Statistics 1978-79. T he q u e stio n n a ire , m odeled on th e form used by ARL for its A R L Statistics, will be sent to library directors in late September. The insti­ tutions participating in the survey will be those in the Carnegie Classifications of Doctorate- G ranting Universities I and II. Questions about the project should be directed to Sandy W hite- ley, ACRL/ALA, 50 E. H uron St., Chicago, IL 60611-2795. Copies of the earlier titles in the series are still available from ACRL (prepaid only) as follows: 1978-79 volum e, $5 for m em bers, $7.50 for non-members; 1981—82 volume, $12 for m em ­ bers, $15 for non-members. Septem ber 1984 / 427 ­ e s t ­ , e ­ d s ­ y g e s y ­ ­ ­ e ­ ­ - ­ e ­ e e n n a aw arded a grant of $15,050 for an autom ation fea sibility study. The project is funded through th M assachusetts Board of L ib rary Comm issioner w ith LSCA Title III funds. The grant will suppor a self-study to analyze and evaluate the Consorti u m ’s autom ation needs, establish long-range goals and develop a strategy for im plem entation. Th Consortium is composed of 12 academ ic and re search libraries in Massachusetts. • The H arw ood F oundation L ibrary, Taos, an New Mexico H ighlands University L ibrary, La Vegas, have received a $10,000 Interlibrary Coop erative G ran t from the New Mexico State L ibrar to develop at H arw ood the capability of providin academ ic support to higher education in Taos. Th funds will be used to develop orientation m aterial for students and to work w ith Highlands Universit staff to coordinate the acquisition and loan of m a terials. A user’s guide will also be developed to de scribe the H arw ood policies, collections, and ser vices, and an instructor’s guide describing thes services will be distributed to the faculty of H igh lands and N orthern New Mexico C om m unity Col lege. • The In d ian a Newspaper Project, a coopera tive effort of the Indiana State L ibrary, the In d i ana Historical Society, the Indiana Cooperativ L ibrary Services Authority, and the Indiana Uni versity Libraries, has been funded by a grant by th N ational E n d o w m en t for the H um anities. Th Project received $175,000 to create an online unio list of new spaper holdings w ithin the state, w ith a additional $54,000 available for the project on m atching basis. • Oglala Lakota College, Kyle, South D akota, Overseas library exchanges D uring the 1984-85 academ ic year the G en­ eral D irectorate of Libraries of the French M in­ istry of Education will send a professional li­ b r a r i a n to w o rk in th e O h io U n iv e rsitv Libraries, Athens, as p a rt of an exchange pro ­ gram u n d e r th e sponsorship of th e F ran co - American Commission under the F ulbright Ac­ cords. T h e A m eric an exchange lib r a r ia n , Michel S. P erdreau, archives librarian at Ohio University, returned recently from his seven- m onth assignment at the Bibliotheque de D ocu­ m en tatio n In te rn a tio n a le C o n tem p o rain e at N anterre, on the campus of Université Paris X. The United States-United Kingdom E duca­ tional Commission has arranged for two F u l­ bright Fellowship exchanges in 1985. Andrea Singer, In d ia n a U niversity, will sw itch jobs w ith Susan Telfer from the University of Sur­ rey; and Dale Reed from Stanford University’s Hoover Institution will trad e places w ith Alis­ ta ir Tough, University of W arwick. has received a $46,835 grant from the N ational Historical Publications and Records Commission to establish and adm inister an archives and records m anagem ent program for the Oglala Sioux tribe. • Rutgers University’s Institute of Jazz Studies, New Brunswick, New Jersey, has been aw arded a grant of $133,807 by the N ational E ndow m ent of the H um anities for a tw o-year project th a t will in ­ clude the preservation, cataloging and indexing of the Institute’s rare and unique sound recordings and the physical protection of their extensive clip­ ping files. The grant will fund the transfer of a p ­ proxim ately 800 sound recordings to archival q u al­ ity a u d io ta p e u sin g s ta t e - o f - t h e - a r t so u n d re sto ra tio n e q u ip m e n t. T he 4,000 jazz p e rfo r­ mances will then be cataloged online and distrib­ uted through the IJS Jazz Register and Indexes. • The University of A lberta, Edm onton, has re- ceived a $25,000 grant from C an ad a’s Social Sci­ ences a n d H u m a n itie s R esearch C o u n cil a n d $5,000 from the Clifford E. Lee Foundation to help fund the acquisition of the C urw en Press’s own in-house collection of all the books, posters, a n d e p h e m e ra p r in te d by th e B ritish firm in 1919-1956. The collection will strengthen the li­ b r a r y ’s 2 0 th -c e n tu ry fine p r in tin g c o lle c tio n , w h ich is h ig h lig h te d by m ajo r holdings of th e G rabhorn Press and C anadian private presses. • The University of Arizona’s C enter for Crea- tive Photography, Tucson, has been aw arded a $10,000 com m unity support grant by the Tucson C om m unity Cable C orporation for the purchase of video equipm ent allowing the C enter to make p u b ­ lic access program s on photographers and photog­ raphy. The program s will include interviews w ith visiting and local photographers. • The University of California, Riverside, Li- brary has been aw arded $103,357 to participate w ith four other research libraries in a joint catalog­ ing project. This aw ard is p a rt of a joint $608,522 HEA Title II-C grant. The project is being coordi­ nated by the Indiana University Libraries in coop­ eration w ith Riverside, the University of Arizona, the University of D elaw are, and the University of Utah. The purpose of the project is to create full cataloging records in m achine-readable form for 25,200 books selected from the W ing Short-Title Catalog of E nglish-language books p rin ted be­ tw een 1641 and 1700. The records will be created through O C LC . • T he U niversity of O regon, E ugene, has re- ceived a $56,000 grant from the N ational E ndow ­ m ent for the H um anities to improve its Research Collection for Conservative and L ibertarian Stud­ ies. The grant will be used to arrange the collec­ tions and upgrade the inventories of the already- processed m aterials, w hich include m ore th an 50 groups of papers and files from the conservative and libertarian thinkers of the 1940s through the 1960s. • The University of Pittsburgh Library has re- ceived a $36,268 grant from the National Histori­ cal Publications and Records Commission to make preservation copies of cellulose nitrate negatives in the Archives of Industrial Society. The negatives document the urban and industrial history of Pitts­ burgh in the 1920s and 1930s. • The University of Texas at Austin’s Benson L atin American Collection has been aw arded a $184,944 HEA Title II-C grant to underw rite a project to catalog 10,000 m onographs on L atin America and add the entries to the OCLC d ata­ base. • T h e U n iv e rsity of W isconsin G eology- G eophysics L ib ra ry , M adison, has received a $10,000 grant from the Lewis G. Weeks Bequest Fund, administered by the D epartm ent of Geology and Geophysics, for the purchase of African geo­ logical survey publications and other titles on the geology of Africa. • The West Texas Union List Project has been aw arded a grant of $34,366 by the Texas State Li­ brary and Archives Commission. The project will be a cooperative effort of Texas Tech University Li­ b ra ry , th e L ubbock C ity -C o u n ty L ib rary , the Texas Tech University Law Library, and the Uni­ versity of Texas of the Perm ian Basin. The Union List will facilitate increased sharing of serials re­ sources and cooperative development of serials col­ lections in West Texas. Carol M. Kelley, Texas Tech University Library, will serve as project di­ rector for the grant. • W illiam s College L ib ra ry , W illiam stow n, Massachusetts, has received a grant of $25,000 from the M organ G u aran ty T rust Com pany of New York to purchase 1,500 music recordings and 300 scores and to recatalog the music collection on OCLC. News notes • The Columbia University Teachers College Library, New York, was able to supply the In tern a­ tional Rescue Comm ittee w ith the only known cop­ ies of 16 Dari-language textbooks, urgently needed for the schooling of Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Photocopies of the books were rushed to the Com­ mittee, whose headquarters are in Peshawar, Paki­ stan, w here they will be reproduced for use in camps housing about 3 million refugees, half of whom are children under 14. The texts, which are suitable for grades one through six, were w ritten by Afghan educators who received technical assist­ ance from Teachers College in a Curriculum and Textbook Project sponsored from 1966 to 1977 by the Agency for International Development. • The State University of New York at Albany Friends of the Libraries won a Friends of Libraries Thurston A. Atkins (left), professor, and David M ent (right), head o f Special Collections at Teachers College/Columbia University, exhibit the library’s collection o f Dari-language textbooks. 428 / C&RL News Septem ber 1984 / 429 U .S.A . a w a rd fo r c re a tiv e p ro g ra m m in g an d m em bership development. Anne Roberts, associ­ ate librarian and liaison to the SUNY Friends, ac­ cepted the aw ard during a ceremony at the ALA Conference in Dallas. In the past year the Friends group has held a series of noontim e talks highlight­ ing faculty explorations in their research, author receptions, and overnight outings and bus trips. The group has been cited as a model for academic Friends organizations. ■ ■ P E O P L E Profiles Linda Beaupré has been nam ed associate direc­ tor of General Libraries at the University of Texas at Austin. H er appointm ent is a prom otion from as­ sociate director of public services, a position she has held since 1980. Beaupré joined the UT Austin staff as head li­ b rarian of the Reference Services D epartm ent in 1978 and served as acting assistant director for p u b ­ lic services from 1979 to 1980. Previously she held the positions of associate university librarian for public services at the M offitt U ndergraduate L i­ b r a r y , U n iv ersity of C a lifo rn ia , B erkeley, in 1977-1978, w here she h ad started as a reference li­ b rarian in 1972; and supervisor of Microform Col­ lections at the University of Michigan G raduate L i­ b rary in 1967-1969. Beaupré served on the College ‹b Research L i­ braries N ew s E ditorial Board from 1980-1984 and as chair of the RASD N om inating Com m ittee. She has also worked on the ALA Instruction in the Use of Libraries Com m ittee, the RASD Publications C om m ittee, and on w h at is now the LAMA L i­ b rary O rganization an d M anagem ent Section’s C om parative L ibrary O rganization Com m ittee. C urrently a m em ber of the E ditorial Board for the Journal o f Academ ic Librarianship, she holds an MLS from the University of Michigan. Alan Benenfeld, coordinator of physical sci­ ences and technology libraries at UCLA since 1976, has been nam ed dean and director of libraries at N ortheastern University, Boston, effective Novem­ ber 15. Benenfeld received his m aster’s degree in m a n ­ agem ent from N ortheastern in 1975. Prior to his graduation there he received an engineering degree from NYU in 1961 and an MLS from Rutgers in 1965. He was a research assistant in m etallurgy at Cornell University from 1962 to 1964. In 1965 he moved to M IT w here he was first assistant engi­ neering librarian, then a research staff m em ber in the Electronic Systems L aboratory, and finally as a systems analyst and senior inform ation scientist. Benenfeld was technical program chairm an for th e ASIS A naheim conference in 1980 and co- chairm an of the ASIS conference technical pro ­ gram in 1975. He was president of the Rutgers Stu­ dent C hapter of ASIS and of the New England C hapter in 1969. tie has served on numerous ALA committees, in­ cluding the ACRL Science and Technology Sec­ tion’s Conference Program Planning C om m ittee for Dallas, the RASD Standards and Guidelines C om m ittee and Publications C om m ittee, and the LITA E ditorial Board. Michael K. Buckland has been appointed assis­ ta n t vice-president for library plans and policies for the University of California, effective July 1. He has been acting assistant vice-president since Au­ gust 1983, w hile concurrently serving as dean of the School of L ibrary and Inform ation Studies at UC-Berkeley. He resigned as dean in August. Buckland was head of the L ibrary Research Unit of the University of Lancaster, England, before moving to the U.S. in 1972 to become assistant di­ rector of libraries for technical services at Purdue University, Indiana. He joined UC as dean in 1976. Buckland holds degrees from Oxford University and Sheffield University. His publications include two books and several reports and articles on li­ brary problem s, m anagem ent, and education. David H. Eyman has been nam ed head librarian of Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York, effective July 2. Eym an has been director of li­ b raries a t J u n ia ta C ollege, H u n tin g d o n , since 1978. Eym an has earned a m aster’s degree in history