College and Research Libraries


476 I College & Research Libraries • September 1979 

Library, Columbia University, New York, 
NY 10027.) 
The fourth catalog to the oral history col-

lection of Columbia University, this latest 
edition is a· handsome, comprehensive guide 
to the most prestigious oral history collec-
tion in the world. 

Oral history in the modern sense, both as 
term and concept, dates from May 18, 1948, 
when Allan Nevins of Columbia conducted 
his first interview with New York City 
banker and civic leader George McAneny. 
When Nevins retired a decade later, the 
Oral History Research Office had gathered 
more than 100,000 pages of memoirs , and 
an oral history movement was gaining mo-
mentum. Today oral history groups are at 
work in every state and on every continent. 

· The four guides to the Columbia collec-
tion published in the last nineteen years 
clearly document the development of this 
pioneering program in the field. The first 
edition, a slim booklet of about 120 pages, 
appeared in 1960. Four years later , a 
somewhat larger and more attractive guide 
gave impetus to the growing interest in oral 
history throughout the United States and 
abroad. Bolstered by later supplements, this 
second version continued in use until 1973, 
when a third edition , coedited by Elizabeth 
B. Mason and Louis M. Starr , directors, 
marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of the 
program at Columbia. With an assist from 
computerization, that 460-page volume , or-
ganizing the collection into a single al-
phabet, with supplemental indexes, de-
scribed memoirs totaling 364,650 pages. 

The 1979 edition , according to coeditor 
Starr, "quadruples what the first had to of-
fer." A comparison with its most recent 
predecessor attests simultaneously to the 
sustained vitality of the Columbia program 
and the refinement of the collection guide. 
New memoirs and projects appear, of 
course . Changes of access since 1973 are 
carefully noted. To their credit, the editors 
have not been content merely to record 
additions and changes. This fourth version is 
a dictionary catalog presenting persons, 
projects, and topics of interest in a single 
alphabet. Topical cross-references also ap-
pear for the first time. The two-column 
page, another change, presents entries set 
in Times Roman with headings in Gill ' s 

Perpetua. The effect is one of clarity and 
felicity. Indeed, the entire volume reflects 
the consummate skill of Warren Chappell, 
its designer. 

Essential to any guide are the directions 
for its use. Here Louis Starr's lively intro-
duction to the edition; a short background 
essay that follows, "Coming to Terms: Oral 
History"; and ten pages of captioned photo-
graphs lead the user on to "How to Use the 
Catalogue," appropriately-though perhaps 
unnecessarily-presented in the question-
answer pattern of the oral history interview. 
Convenient lists of subject headings, special 
projects, and abbreviations complete the 
twenty-seven-page prefatory section. 

Among the new projects reported in the 
latest guide is one of special interest to li-
brarians . Gerald Gottlieb , Pierpont Morgan 
Library, has conducted a series of inter-
views with significant figures in the world of 
rare books. Initiated in 1973, this section of 
the Rare Books Project now numbers 669 
pages of transcript and is continuing. A later 
development of the same project, an explo-
ration of the American antiquarian book 
trade between the two world wars, got 
under way just last year. Interviewees have 
included dealers , collectors, and librarians 
associated with the trade between 1920 and 
1945. 

Despite the cost of this fourth edition of 
The Oral History Collection of Columbia 
University , all libraries and other organiza-
tions serving researchers and those in-
terested in oral history projects will want to 
ad.d this volume to their reference 
collections.-Martha Chambers, State Uni-
versity of New York, College at Oneonta. 

Soltow, Martha Jane, and Sokkar, Jo Ann 
Stehberger. Industrial Relations and Per-
sonnel Management: Selected Information 
Sources. With the editorial assistance of 
Nancy Barkey. Metuchen, N .J.: Scare-
crow, 1979. 286p. $11. LC 78-31795. 
ISBN 0-8108-1203-7. 
Aimed at filling the needs of a wide audi-

ence of librarians , faculty, students, and 
"practitioners" for a sourcebook covering all 
aspects of the employer-employee relation-
ship, Industrial Relations and Personnel 
Management scores a bull' s-eye . The au-
thors, one who is librarian for the School of 



Labor and Industrial Relations at Michigan 
State University and the other who is indus-
trial relations librarian at the Graduate 
School of Business Administration, Univer-
sity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, include refer-
ences that they believe will be most useful 
to this audience. This knowledgeable pre-
selection has resulted in a manageable vol-
ume with succinct, descriptive annotations 
that does indeed lead the way to the entire 
field. 

With the editorial assistance of Nancy 
Barkey, they have produced a specialized 
bibliography devised for efficient use. Ar-
ranged by broad topic and divided into two 
sections, .. General Sources" and .. Special 
Interest Areas," it contains an extensive 
subject index with some entries listed under 
more than one heading. Personal name and 
title indexes increase accessibility. There 
are two appendixes, a listing of selected 
publications of the Bureau of Labor Statis-
tics from 1973 and the Rand D monograph 
series of the Department of Labor from 
1964. Emphasis is given to U.S. references. 
When foreign sources are cited, information 
is given on more than one country; thus 
sources should be available in most large 
university libraries.-Barbara R. Healy, 
University of Rochester, Rochester, New 
York. 

Clinic on Library Applications of Data Pro-
cessing, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign, 1978. Problems and Failures 
in Library Automation. F. Wilfrid Lan-
caster, editor. Urbana-Champaign: Uni-
versity of Illinois Graduate School of 
Library Science, 1979. 109p. $9. LC 78-
31801. ISBN 0-87845-050-5. (Available 
from: Publications Office, Graduate 
School of Library Science, 249 Armory 
Building, Champaign, IL 61820.) 
This little volume collects the papers 

presented at the 1978 Clinic on Library Ap-
plications of Data Processing. It varies from 
its predecessors in that it attempts to deal 
with problems and failures rather than with 
successes. A refreshing idea, but one not 
easily realized. The anatomy of this 
difficulty, to discuss failure, or even prob-
lems, is described most succinctly by Es-
telle Brodman in her paper, "Reactions to 
Failures in Library Automation." She points 

Recent Publications I 4 77 

out that the disparity between the literature 
of failure and the number of known or sus-
pected disasters in library automation 
suggests an overwhelming reluctance or 
even a constitutional inability on the part of 
most of us to document our misadventures 
in automation. Painful as such revelation 
might be, she cautions, we cannot further 
knowledge by avoiding truth. 

With two or three notable exceptions, 
most of the papers in this volume are in-
teresting but contribute little to a willing-
ness to understand the growing mountain of 
ill-conceived, misdirected, and abandoned 
automation projects strewn all over ' the li-
brary landscape. 

William and Lavonne Axford's paper, 
"The Anatomy of Failure in Library Appli-
cations of Computer Technology," is a glar-
ing exception. The Axfords have described a 
project undertaken by five community col-
lege libraries in Arizona in the late sixties. 
The disaster that followed, which is traced 
with a great deal of care, is not unique. In 
their opening paragraph, the Axfords write: 
"The basic causes of failure are as relevant 
today as they were then because they are 
rooted in the minds of those responsible for 
them: librarians, computer specialists, and 
institutional executives." This is worth read-
ing. 

John C. Kountz treats us to an exception-
ally well written, tongue-in-cheek recitation 
of the agonies and pitfalls of trying to do 
business through a government agency, in 
this case the State of California. His paper, 
.. Problems of Government Bureaucracy 
when Contracting for Turnkey Computer 
Systems," is a delightful recitation of a 
five-year struggle to acquire an "off-the-
shelf' circulation system. An excellent 
paper. 

The outstanding contribution to this col-
lection, however, is the introductory survey 
~ 'What Hath Technology Wrought?" by 
Allen Veaner. In it Veaner treats us to a 
thoughtful and penetrating look at ourselves 
as we grapple not just with library automa-
tion but also with a gnawing sense that the 
technology of librarianship that sufficed yes-
terday will no longer serve. We are a pro-
fession in ferment and the computer is on1y 
a manifestation of that change. He ends on 
a note of optimism, of hope, of certainty