ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 191 News From JMRT At the ALA Annual Conference in June, the Junior Members Round Table is sponsor­ ing an exhibit booth which will feature “Rap Sessions” with spokesmen representing various causes and organizations. These “Rap Sessions” will enable people attending the convention and touring the exhibit area to meet with these representatives and talk with them. Among the groups who will have spokesmen at the JMRT booth in Dallas are the Los An­ geles County Public Library Project working with Chicanos, and the ALA Social Respon­ sibilities of Libraries Round Table. There are still time slots open for other groups who wish to have spokesmen represented at our booth. Organizations represented at the booth do not have to be directly connected to library ser­ vices. Last year at our booth, representatives from Women’s Liberation had a very success­ ful “Rap Session” with a group of interested conventioneers, and in the process collected over 3,000 signatures on a petition. Any organization or group committed to a political, cultural, or social cause and who wants to have a spokesman at our booth should con­ tact Jack Forman, JMRT Booth Chairman, Free Public Library of Woodbridge, 800 Rah­ way Ave., Woodbridge, N.J. 07095 as soon as possible. As part of their convention activities JMRT will also sponsor the JMRT Dinner, June 21. The dinner will be held at the Country Din­ ner Playhouse, where you will dine from a lavish buffet and be entertained by Neil Si­ mon’s Broadway hit, “The Star-Spangled Girl.” His romance-protest farce unravels a yarn about the haphazard adventures of two San Franciscans trying to pu t out a magazine of controversy with a Yankee-doodle doll who used to be an Olympic swimmer. After the play, more relaxation and dancing. Then, back to the hotels in the same air-conditioned com­ fort that brought you to the Playhouse. Send your $12.50 now (made payable to “JMRT Dinner” ) to JMRT Dinner, Dallas Public Li­ brary, 1954 Commerce Street, Dallas, Texas 75201. The price includes dinner, theater, danc- Irig, transportation to and from the Playhouse (from downtown hotels only), and gratuities. There will be a cash bar. • Being “Ad Hoc” until the next Georgia Li­ brary Association Conference has not kept the Georgia Library Association/Junior Members Round Table inactive. A Georgia Library As­ sociation Cönference workshop, “Up The Or­ ganization, ’ focused on ways of getting human development included in organizational objec­ tives. At the Southeastern Library Association: a program on the Right To Read movement, a tour of underground Atlanta, and manning the Publishers of Peace booth. Plans for 1971 in­ clude a program on library education “co-pro­ duced” with Georgia Library Association/Li- brary Education Division. • Sunday afternoon, June 20, at 2:00 p.m., JMRT and the ALA Membership Committee will cosponsor an orientation program to intro­ duce and orientate first-time, conference at­ tendees to the sights and sounds of an ALA conference. The officers and Executive Board of the Association are currently planning to at­ tend. For those attending their first conference, this program is a “must.” ■ ■ ACRL Membership April 30, 1971 .................................... 10,746 April 30, 1970 .................................... 10,520 April 30, 1969 .................................... 12,088 Anglo-American Cataloging Rules North American Text, C. Sumner Spalding, general editor S u p p le m e n t o f A d d itio n s a n d C hanges A v a ila b le in T h e se T h ree E d itio n s 41 Op Paper ISBN 0-8389-3119-7 (1970) $4.75 41 Op Cloth ISBN 0-8389-3011-5 (1970) $9.50 12p Supplement for your 1967 edition Paper ISBN 0-8389-5272-0 (1971) 3—$1.50 10—$4.00 25—$9.00 5O-$15.OO S u p p le m e n t includes ad d itio n s a n d c h anges to the R u le s fro m M a rc h 20, 1967-Iuly 1, 1969.