College and Research Libraries


148 I College & Research Libraries • March 1980 

cited with lean analysis and synthesis of the 
data where appropriate. Advances, on the 
other hand, apparently gives more latitude 
to its reviewers. The very concept of what a 
review should be varies from chapter to 
chapter. 

While it is true that most of the Advances 
reviews !\tick to descriptions of trends found 
in a hundred or so references, George W. 
Whitbeck and his associates went to the 
other extreme in the section "Funding Sup-
port for Research in Librarianship." De-
spairing of getting much help from pub-
lished literature, the reviewers designed 
their own questionnaire study, on which 
they based their conclusions. They cite only 
six references. 

Perhaps the best use of the freedom en-
joyed by contributors to Advances is seen in 
Abraham Bookstein and Karl Kocher's expli-
cation of operations research (OR) as applied 
to libraries. It not only describes pertinent 
literature but also weaves the analysis into 
the clearest primer on OR to come down 
the pike so far. 

Similarly, Carmel Maguire has produced 
the same effect by a different route, that of 
historical and documentary description of 
the background and current state of Austra-
lian librarianship. The present reviewer, 
who has spent some time in Australia, found 
this summary comprehensive, well con-
densed, lucid, and enlightening. 

Although not exactly scintillating 
throughout, Advances provides many cases 
of challenging reading in the arid land of 
what Cassata has described as "pretentious 
and heavy handed" STOA prose. A good 
example of this is found in Charles W. 
Evans' review of "The Evolution of Parapro-
fessional Library Employees." The reaction 
of one paraprofessional staff member of the 
University of Oregon Library, Rebecca S. 
Bragg, administrative assistant, interlibrary 
loan service, confirms the lively character of 
the chapter whether or not one agrees with 
her generalization-Bragg found that the 
review "clearly defines and explains the his-
tory of the paranoia that most professional 
librarians have regarding paraprofessionals: 
that upgrading paraprofessionals would 
downgrade professionals." 

In contrast to the systematic master plan 
of ARIST, the apparently eclectic policy of 

Advances has produced a more timely and 
lively volume, perhaps at the expense of 
comprehensive coverage of the field over a 
period of years. 

In the matter of indexing, Advances does 
not come off well. Not only has the author 
index been dropped this year but the sub-
ject index also consists of a virtually useless 
four pages which add little to the table of 
contents. The current ARIST, in contrast, 
devotes forty-seven pages to a true author 
and subject index plus a nine-page KWOC 
index to the whole set. Whereas Advances 
has never published a detailed cumulated 
index, ARIST did so in 1976. 

Following is an abbreviated contents list 
of this excellent aid to updating one's 
awareness of the state of affairs in the im-
portant areas reviewed: "Intellectual Free-
dom in Librarianship" (David K. Berning-
hausen); "User Fees" (Thomas J. Waldhart 
and Trudi Bel}ardo); "Paraprofessional Li-
brary Employees" (Charles W. Evans); 
"Measuring Library Effectiveness" (Rose-
mary Ruhig Du Mont and Paul F. Du 
Mont); "Operations Research in Libraries" 
(Abraham Bookstein and Karl Kocher); 
"Funding for Research in Librarianship" 
(George W. Whitbeck, Jean Major, and 
Herbert S. White); "Medical Librarianship" 
(Donald D. Hendricks); and "Australian Li-
brary Service" (Carmel Maguire).-Perry D. 
Morrison, University of Oregon, Eugene. 

Stoffie, Carla, and Karter, Simon. Materials 
& Methods for History Research. Library 
Edition. Bibliographical Instruction Se-
ries. New York: Libraryworks, >1979. 75, 
101p. $14.95 (plus $1 postage and han-
dling). LC 79-306. ISBN 0-918212-07-3. 
Available from: Neal-Schuman Publishers, 
64 University Pl., New York, NY 10003. 
(Workbook available for $4.95 each, 
minimum order five copies.) 
Materials & Methods for History Re-

search is the first publication in the Mate-
rials and Methods bibliographic instruction 
series. It is "designed to familiarize history 
students with the basic types of information 
sources available in the discipline, to intro-
duce important examples of each type and 
to prepare students to use those information 
sources efficiently and effectively." The au-
thors attempt to accomplish these goals by 



How to develo~ a 
successful collection 

development program? 
Two books from 

Oryx Press help you find 
the answer. 

Shaping Library Collec-
tions for the 1980's is the 
proceedings of the Fourth In-
ternational Conference on 
Approval Plans and Collection 
Development. Librarians, 
publishers and booksellers 
will find helpful information on 
blanket orders, library eco-
nomics, management per-
spective, and an historical 
overview of approval plans. 
Edited by Peter Spyers-Duran 
and Thomas Mann, Jr. ISBN 
0-912700-58-0. 1980. $16.50(t). 

Practical Approval Plan 
Management is a func-
tional approach to establish-
ing and operating an approval 
plan with an emphasis on 
practical management and 
problem-solving. The authors 
present a "how-to" approach 
to collection development, 
profiling, bids and contracts, 
vendors, public relations, and 
fiscal management. By 
Jennifer S. Cargill and Brian 
Alley. ISBN 0-912700-52-1. 
1980. $12.95. 

ORYXPRESS 
2214 North Central at Encanto 
Phoenix, Arizona 85004 • (602) 254-6156 



150 I College & Research Libraries • March 1980 

utilizing a laboratory-manual format. They 
examine a comprehensive variety of tools 
including guides to the literature, hand-
books, yearbooks, atlases, subject dic-
tionaries, indexes and abstracts, bibliog-
raphies, scholarly journals, newspapers, 
government documents, book reviews, and 
a chapter on research paper mechanics and 
methodology. 

Each ca,tegory is presented in a uniform 
arrangement. Stoffle and Karter list the ob-
jectives they seek to impart, provide an 
overview of up to two pages on the defini-
tion, purpose, and variety of each type of 
tool, and list annotated sources as examples. 
Several related titles are also noted with full 
bibliographical citations in the appendix. 
The sources used were chosen on the basis 
of three criteria: they are all in English; 
they are usually available in medium-size 
college libraries; and they are significant 
examples of titles with which history stu-
dents should become familiar . 

The purposes and uses of each type of 

tool are reinforced in assignment sections 
that were designed to ensure immediate 
feedback. The questions are simple and 
precise and require the students to get the 
books in hand. As the authors have noted, 
there are no trick questions to hinder learn-
ing. Twenty separate sets of questions and 
answers are provided that permit indi-
vidualized instruction and discourage stu-
dent cooperation. 

Other features of the instructor's manual 
edition include a "Checklist of Titles Used 
in Assignments" to facilitate checking the 
holdings of the teacher's library against the 
titles used in the assignment, an instructor's 
checklist, a schedule of due dates for the as-
signments, and many other helpful sugges-
tions on how the book has been ~sed at the 
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater library. 

This workbook can be used in a variety of 
ways other than in the three-credit history 
methods course for which it was originally 
designed. The authors have suggested non-
credit study or continuing education pro-

PUBLICATIONS FROM THE UNITED NATIONS 

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A compact reference book on the United Nations and its family of organizations describing 
the structure and activities of the United Nations and the 17 intergovernmental agencies 
related to it, concentrating on their work during the 12 years up to 1977/1978. It forms a 
companion volume to the eighth edition of EVERYMAN'S UNITED NATIONS, published in 
March 1968, which gives a more detailed account of the activities and evolution of the United 
Nations during its first 20 years, 1945-1965. Together, the two volumes constitute a basic 
history of the Organization. 
Sales No. E.79.1.5 Paper $ 7.95 

UNITED NATIONS JURIDICAL YEARBOOK 1977 
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Sales No. E.79.XVII.13 $20.00 

FIRST UNITED NATIONS REGIONAL CARTOGRAPHIC CONFERENCE FOR THE 
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grams, history courses with a research 
focus, one- or two-credit historical biblio-
graphical courses, graduate library courses, 
and independent or general study courses as 
appropriate settings. 

Materials & Methods for History Re-
search is a solid contribution to the litera-
ture of library instruction. It is comprehen-
sive in scope, excellent in design and execu-
tion, and easy to use. Furthermore, it ex-
poses students to a large number of sources 
and clearly relates the materials to the 
method. The authors are to be commended 
for their work.-Daniel F. Ring, Oakland 
University, Rochester, Michigan. 

SPINDEX Users Conference. Proceedings of 
a Meeting Held at Cornell University, 
Ithaca, New York, March 31 and April 1, 
1978. Edited by H. Thomas Hickerson. 
Ithaca, N.Y.: Dept. of Manuscripts and 
University Archives, Cornell University 
Libraries, 1979. 125p. $5. LC 79-53690. 
(Available from: Office of Budget and Ac-
counting, 234 Olin Library, Cornell Uni-
versity Libraries, Ithaca, NY 14853.) 
Among the reasons for libraries to partici-

pate actively in OCLC, RLIN, and other 
automated data bases is the desire of reduc-
ing cataloging costs while simultaneously 
making new acquisitions more quickly ac-
cessible. Compared to libraries, however, 
archives have seemed to respond much 
more slowly to the challenge of providing 
improved access through automation. Due 
more to a lack of resources than to a lack of 
initiative, as well as the problem that costs 
cannot be shared given the uniqueness of 
archival and manuscript material, some re-
positories have nevertheless tried to de-
velop alternatives to a ~anual system. 

Of the systems developed to date, SPIN-
DEX (Selective Permutation Indexing) is 
the best known. Designed originally in the 
mid-1960s at the National Archives and 
Records Service (NARS) to facilitate intel-
lectual control over archival holdings, it was 
to serve also as a possible foundation for a 
national data base of information. As with 
earlier systems, the latest version, SPIN-
DEX III, is available from NARS. In addi-
tion to producing finding aids, SPINDEX 
III has the capacity for being hierarchical in 

Recent Publications I 151 

nature with up to eight distinct levels for 
input. Thus a repository may choose to 
identify a collection only by using the first 
level, or if a collection warrants more detail, 
it can provide item description at the last 
level. 

In the spring of 1978, a SPINDEX Users 
Conference convened at Cornell University 
to exchange information about the system. 
So that the information could be dissemi-
nated more broadly, an edited version of 
the proceedings was prepared for publica-
tion. In addition to appendixes, this volume 
contains the presentations of representatives 
from seven different organizations. The pa-
pers are arranged in the order in which 
they were given at the six major sessions of 
the meeting. The topics range in scope from 
current applications and the future to tech-
nical aspects of SPINDEX use and design-
ing tag structures. 

The volume will prove of particular inter-
est to individuals who are considering the 
possible adoption of SPINDEX at their in-
stitutions. According to the comments made 
at the Cornell conference, this system ap-
pears to have a high degree of flexibility. It 
has been applied not only to certain collec-
tions in the Cornell University Archives and 
the South Carolina Department of Archives 
and History but also in private organizations 
such as the Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter-Day Saints and, on a limited scale, in 
businesses. Further the form of material 
placed in the system so far includes archival 
records, photographs, maps, and select pub-
lications. SPINDEX also allows for subject 
access through the use of locally prepared 
thesauri that institutions can develop to 
meet their respective needs and programs. 

Despite the informational nature of the 
volume, it suffers from unevenness in cer-
tain areas. Instead of the comparatively 
large amount of space given to the history of 
Public Utility Districts in the Pacific 
Northwest that appeared in one of the pa-
pers, a brief history of SPINDEX, in an in-
troduction to the volume, would be more 
beneficial to potential users and other in-
terested parties. 

Admittedly, these proceedings resulted 
from a gathering of users who were familiar 
with the intricacies of SPINDEX. In pub-