ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 225 Personnel PROFILES Donald R. Hunt, former associate director of libraries at Oregon State University, became director of the library at California State Uni­ versity, San Jose, April 1, 1972. He followed Dr. Stuart Bailie who is now teaching in the San Jose School of Librarianship. Preceding his appointment as director at San Jose, H unt held a wide variety of positions at the Oregon State University library. Each po­ sition offered him the opportunity to study the operation of a specific department in a major university library. At various times he served as head of reference, head of public service and associate director. He was involved with the automation of Oregon State acquisition system and of their financial accounting system. He also played a major role in the planning of an addition to Oregon State University library building. Hunt has also been extensively involved in state, regional, and national professional or­ ganizations. Among other appointments, he has served as a member of the Pacific Northwest Library Association executive board and as a member of the American Library Association Membership Committee for Oregon. While at Oregon, he served in several capacities as a member of the Oregon State University Chap­ ter of AUP. Stanley McE lderry, dean of the School of Library Science at the University of Texas, has been appointed director of The University of Chicago library. Mc­ Elderry will head the University’s campus­ wide library system, which contains more than three million holdings. The system includes the new Jo­ seph Regenstein Li­ brary, the William Rainey Harper Me­ morial Library, the li­ braries of the Law and Divinity School, School of Social Ser­ Stanley McElderry vice Administration, the Department of Art, and the science li­ braries. He succeeds D. Gale Johnson, pro­ fessor and chairman of the Department of Eco­ nomics, who has served as acting director since Herman Fussier returned to full-time research and teaching as a professor in the University’s Graduate Library School last July. Fussier had been director since 1948. McElderry, 53, has been at the University of Texas since 1968. Prior to coming to Texas, he served as coordinator of library services for the California State Colleges, visiting lecturer at the School of Library Science at the Uni­ versity of Southern California, and librarian of the San Fernando Valley State College. He also served as circulation librarian at the Uni­ versity of Minnesota and assistant director of the library of the University of Oklahoma. McElderry did graduate work a t the Uni­ versity of Chicago from 1947 to 1950 and again during 1955 and 1956. He received his degrees from the University of Southern Cali­ fornia. He is the author of the Report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Library Development and Coordination of the University of Texas System and co-author of The Implications of Modern Technology for the Small College L i­ brary, as well as other publications in the field. During the time McElderry was at Chicago in the late 1940s he served as assistant to the director of the library, developing under Fuss- ler’s guidance a functional organization for the system. At Texas, he has been a professor in the Graduate School of Library Science and chairman of a committee to coordinate library development for the six campuses of that university. He also has served in a variety of capacities for the American Library Association, the Tex­ as Library Association, and the California Li­ brary Association. He was a member of the Chancellor’s Library Development Committee for the California State Colleges and the Higher Education Library Committee for the Coordinating Council for Higher Education in California, as well as similar other special com­ mittees in California and Texas. APPOINTMENTS Louise C. Baroudi is now technical services librarian at Norwich University, Northfield, Ver­ mont. E lizabeth Butler has accepted an appoint­ ment as assistant university librarian at the University of California, San Diego. Richard W ayne Cruce has been appointed assistant university librarian at the Robert W. Woodruff Library for Advanced Studies, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. Arlene T. D owell is joining the Iowa State University library, Ames, faculty as assistant professor and assistant head of the catalog de­ partment. David R. Dowell has been named instruc­ tor and head of the Office of Administrative Services a t the Iowa State University library, Ames. 226 6 library texts reader series in Library a n d Information Science 1 Reader in Library Services and the Computer Edited by Louis Kaplan. In the age of the computer what demands are being made of librarians, and to what extent are librarians responding to these new demands for service; what news services are feasible; how does a library staff organize itself in order to enter upon computerization? The emphasis is on the computerized library as seen from the management and administrative point of view: 239 pp. payment with order $8.95 it billed $9.95 Reader in American Library History Edited by Michael H. Harris. This volume is intended to contribute to the reader’s understanding of the historical development of libraries and librarianship in America from the colonial period to the early twentieth century. An examination of American library history shows how the role of the library has been defined and redefined through the years, and will illuminate those social needs that stimulated the rise and encouraged the support of libraries over the past 300 years. Contributors include Jesse H. Shera, Kenneth Brough, Howard Clayton, David Mearns, Samuel Rothstein and David C. Weber. 242 pp. payment with order $9.95 if billed $10.95 Reader in Cataloging & Descriptive Classification Edited by Ann F. Painter. This particular collection of readings has been assembled with one major objective— to bring to the majority of students some idea of what descriptive cataloging and classification are all about; not the how-to but, rather, the why. These readings are intended to either supplement a basic course in the organization of materials and information (more traditionally labelled cataloging and classification) or to serve as primary readings for seminars in the principles and theory of both. 320 pp. payment with order $9.95 if billed $11.95 4 Reader in Library Administration Edited by Paul Wasserman and Mary Lee Bundy. Designed to provide insight into the organizational dynamics of libraries, this volume includes essays by specialists in library administration as well as by management experts in other fields such as Edward Litchfield, Peter Drucker, Amitai Etzioni, and Herbert Simon. Reader in Library Administration focutes upon administrative processes rather than upon techniques and is not intended to provide solutions or formulae. 403 pp. payment with order $9.95 if billed $10.95 Reader in Research Methods for Librarianship Edited by Mary Lee Bundy and Paul Wasserman. This volume is concerned not only with the design and conduct of research but also with the philosophical and social implications of research on librarianship. It includes varied academic treatments of research, illustrative examples of research theories and field accounts as well as samples of actual research instruments. Contributors include David Riesman, C. Wright Mills, Arthur Vidich, Peter Blau, and William Foote Whyte. 363 pp. payment with order $10.95 if billed $11.95 Reader in the Academic Library Edited by Michael M. Reynolds. The emphasis of the book is to illustrate problems representative of the nature of higher education and of library administration, as opposed to describing operational innovations or giving histories of particular libraries. Among the librarians whose articles appear in the book are Stephen A. McCarthy, Andrew H. Horn, Robert B. Downs, Maurice Tauber, Jessie H. Shera, and Herman H. Fussier; among those from other fields are Clark Kerr, John D. Millett, Edward C. Benfield, Charles E. Bidwell, Peter Sammartino and Ben Euwema. 379 pp. payment with order $9.95 if billed $10.95 2 3 5 6 227 Yasuko F ukumi is now cataloger at the Uni­ versity of Massachusetts library, Amherst. Dean Gattone has received appointment as librarian I and head of the circulation de­ partment, undergraduate library, McKeldin Li­ brary, University of Maryland, College Park. Dr. R. Ross H empstead has been named librarian II at the undergraduate library, Mc­ Keldin Library, University of Maryland, College Park, and will be in charge of nonprint media. James H inz has been named to the position of humanities librarian in the Swarthmore Col­ lege library, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. Miriam H irsch has joined the staff of the Brain Information Service in the Biomedical Library at University of California, Los An­ geles. Linda Jaye has accepted a position in the Map Library at University of California, Los Angeles. D iane Kennedy has been appointed head of the serials department of the University Re­ search Library at University of California, Los Angeles. Leonard E. Klein is now reference librarian at the Harvard Law School library. Margaret McKinley is the new head of the continuations cataloging section of the tech­ nical services department in the University of California library, Los Angeles. Barbara Manchak has been appointed li­ brarian II and assistant head of the undergrad­ uate library, McKeldin Library, University of Maryland, College Park. Jean Ann Martinson has assumed the po­ sition of head of the serials department in the Medical Library at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville. Nathan Mendeloff has joined the staff of the McKeldin Library, University of Maryland, College Park, as associate librarian II in the' catalog department. E ric Robert Nitschke has accepted an ap­ pointment as reference librarian for the Robert W. Woodruff Library for Advanced Studies, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. Kathryn M. Olschner has joined the Med­ ical Library staff as head of public services at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville. Patricia E. Renfro has been appointed to the reference staff at the University of Pennsyl­ vania, Philadelphia. Christy Robbins has accepted an appoint­ ment in the systems department of the Uni­ versity of California library, Los Angeles. Archie Rugh is the newly appointed hu­ manities librarian at the Wichita State Univer­ sity library. Marion D. Sandifer, recently appointed as assistant professor on the staff of the John W. Brister Library of Memphis State University, has been appointed head of the catalog de­ partment. Penelope Schwind had joined the staff of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, as catalog revisor. Sara Anne Scribner has assumed the posi­ tion of librarian, Asa Griggs Candler Library, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia. Margot Stevens has been appointed by the California State Library to serve as senior li­ brarian for the Technical Information Project at University of California, Los Angeles. Robert S. Taylor has been named dean of the Syracuse University School of Library Sci­ ence. Roberta B. Thornton is now cataloger at the University of Massachusetts library, Am­ herst. Athlene Vincent is now at Philander Smith College in Little Rock, Arkansas, as associate librarian. Rebecca W hitaker is now an education li­ brarian on the staff of Western Michigan Uni­ versity libraries, Kalamazoo. Patricia Yarnell has joined the staff of the technical services department of the Univer­ sity of California library, Los Angeles. RETIREMENTS H aig Ajamian, assistant professor and chief, social science division, City University of New York has retired after thirty-five years with the library. Janet Bell, curator of the Hawaiian Collec­ tion at the University of Hawaii library re­ tired after thirty-seven years of continuous ser­ vice to the university. She was honored by a Hawaii State House Resolution commending her work. She also received the 1971 Willard Wilson Award for Distinguished Service to the university. In June, the University of Hawaii Board of Regents conferred upon her the title Emeritus Associate Library Specialist and H a­ waiian Curator. Irma L. (Swank) Brielmaier, senior as­ sistant librarian, Cataloging Department, Penn­ sylvania State University, retired on June 1, 1972. E dmon Low, professor of library science at the University of Michigan, has retired. The Regents of the university conferred upon him the title Professor Emeritus at their June meet­ ing. Professor Low joined the faculty of the School of Library Science at the University of Michigan on a full-time basis in 1967 follow­ ing his retirement at age sixty-five from the B U S IN E S S • COM M ERCE • ECO NO M ICS S p e c ia lists in O u t-o f-P rin t B o o k s in th e S o c ia l S c ie n c e s W an t L ists S e a r ch ed C o lle c tio n s F u lfille d — C a ta lo g s Issu ed HIVE OF INDUSTRY, BOOKSELLERS B o x 6 0 2 E a sto n , P e n n a . 1 8 0 4 2 Reprints OF IMPORTANT JOURNALS IN Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology (American Psychopathological Association) Vols. 1-38. Boston; Albany 1906/07-1943 Clothbound s e t............ $798.00 Paperbound s e t .......... 645.00 This journal publishes a broad spectrum of papers embracing three main areas of psychol­ ogy: behavioral pathology; per­ sonality development and dy­ namics; and social interaction and group process. “ Belongs in large academic libraries and in many public libraries where research is important.” —Katz, Magazines for Libraries Psychological Monographs. General and Applied (American Psychological Association) Vols. 1-52. Princeton; etc. 1895-1940 Clothbound s e t ........$1,434.00 Paperbound set . . . . . 1,230.00 Vol. 53, No. 2 (Whole No. 239), 1941. Goldstein and Scheerer. Abstract and Concrete Be­ havior. An Experimental Study with Special Tests Paperbound ..................... 3.50 Psychological Monographs makes available longer re­ searches, treatises, and collec­ tions of laboratory studies submitted to the American Psychological Association. The length of these studies usually excluded them from other journals, but the depth and detail of their findings make them essential for advanced study in psychology. Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol Vol. 1-27. New Haven; New Brunswick 1940-1966 (Partly in the original edition) Unbound s e t ............... $588.00 This journal is a repository for reports of new research and discussion on all aspects of alcohol and alcohol problems, including alcoholism. Each issue features original articles as well as abstracts of the cur­ rent literature in this area of study. Prices of individual volumes of all these journals available upon request. Please address all orders and inquiries to Paul Negri. PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION American Journal of Education (Barnard) Vols. 1-32. (All published). Hartford, Conn. 1855-(1882)? (Including index to years 1855- 1881) Clothbound s e t ............$995.00 Paperbound s e t .......... 900.00 Devoted to the history of edu­ cation, this remarkable journal is primarily a collection of monographs by renowned edu­ cators such as Horace Mann, Francis Bowen, and Edward Everett. “ Barnard’s American Journal of Education is unique. However financially pinched, no aca­ demic library can afford to neglect its reappearance.” —Choice, February 1971 Harvard Educational Review (Harvard University Graduate School of Education. Alumni Association. Harvard Teachers Association) Vols. 1-35. Cambridge, Mass. 1931-1965 (Party in the original edition) Clothbound s e t........... $609.00 Paperbound s e t ......... 505.00 “ The intellectual teacher’s magazine, certainly the basic journal for anyone remotely connected with the education and supervision of teachers__ The tone is scholarly, always critical, always challenging, and rarely dull. A major journal for all medium to large libraries where education and its many facets are important.” —Katz, Magazines for Libraries Quarterly Journal of Speech (National Association of Teachers of Speech) Vols. 1-25. Chicago 1915-1939 Clothbound s e t............$620.00 Paperbound s e t .......... 520.00 Vols. 34, 35, 38, 40-43, 45, 46 (Partly in the original edition) Per volume, paperbound 16.50 Considered the most authorita­ tive publication in its field, this journal includes articles in the various fields of Speech, in­ cluding rhetoric and public address, interpretation, theater and dramatics, speech correc­ tion and audiology, parliamen­ tary procedure, speech education, radio and television. F A RO v M J a OH i N l S a ON b RE l P e RINT ® CORPORATION New York and London / 111 Fifth Avenue / New York, N.Y. 10003 230 directorship of Oklahoma State University li­ brary. Lucille H. Pendell, who has served Gal- laudet College, Kendall Green, Washington, D.C., as librarian for twenty-five years, re­ tired from th a t position at the end of June. J. T roy Petrie, associate professor and chief, Humanities Division has retired after twenty- nine years at the City College of New York li­ brary. Dorothy M. Schullian, the first curator and principal developer of the History of Sci­ ence Collections in the Cornell University li­ braries, retired at the end of June, An estab­ lished authority on the history of medicine when she came to Cornell in 1961, Ms. Schul­ lian has guided Cornell’s efforts in the history of science from a nucleus of books in the his­ tory of embryology and anatomy into one of the world’s most comprehensive collections in the history of sciences w ith more than 25,000 listings. The collections were the first of their kind among university libraries. J. Ronald Todd retired from the library of the University of Washington on June 30 after a long and distinguished career with the Uni­ versity Libraries. After a long period of ser­ vice as reference assistant, curator of the N orth­ west Collection and assistant chief reference librarian, he became chief reference librarian in 1952. He was later made first special as­ sistant to the director for Collection Develop­ ment and subsequently Collection Develop­ ment officer. During this latter period, he led in the reorganization of the libraries method of developing its collection and in preparing the basic and supplementary statements on the Libraries Collection Development Policy. Alfred Trump, director of the library at South Dakota University since 1952, retired June 30 of this year. Robert H. W hitford, chief, Engineering Library, after forty-seven years w ith th e City College Library of the City University of New York has retired. Dr. W hitford is, in addition, a graduate of the City College and holds the rank of professor in the library departm ent at the time of his retirement. ■ ■ you can't beat Checkpoint CHECKPOINT now protects over 8 million books and journals in over 125 school, college, university, special and public libraries in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and Britain. That's more than all other systems combined. Why the overwhelming preference for CHECKPOINT? Many reasons … among them: 1. CHECKPOINT performs as promised … documented inventories prove book losses from accidental carry-out and deliberate pilferage are reduced by almost 90 percent. 2. CHECKPOINT protects your entire collection … no more closed stacks or restricted reserves. With CHECKPOINT you can relax. 3. CHECKPOINT offers you a nationwide service organization. 4. CHECKPOINT is reliable … the only system that cannot be defeated by shielding or magnetic cancellation. Quite literally, you simply can't beat a CHECKPOINT system. Let us take you to inspect a nearby installation. Or ask us to send additional information. No obligation, of course. 236 Now Available from Johnson Reprint NEW TITLES IN REPRINTS IN GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL SCIENCE William Anderson FEDERALISM A N D INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS Chicago, 1946. x, 192 p. ISBN 0-384-01436-4 cloth $11.50 Donald Marquand Dozer ARE WE GOOD NEIGHBORS? Three Decades of Inter- American Relations, 1930-1960. With a New Introduction by the Author. 1972. xi, 456 p. ISBN 0-384-12515-8 cloth $21.00 Reprint of the Gainesville, 1959 ed. William Archibald Dunning A HISTORY OF POLITICAL THEORIES, ANCIENT A N D MEDIEVAL New York, London, 1902. xxv, 360 p. A HISTORY OF POLITICAL THEORIES, FROM LUTHER TO MONTESQUIEU New York, London, 1905. x, 459 p. A HISTORY OF POLITICAL THEORIES, FROM ROUSSEAU TO SPENCER New York. 1920, ix, 446 p. ISBN 0-384-13340-1 clothbound set in 3 volumes $55.00 Walter Evans Edge A JERSEYMAN’S JOURNAL Fifty Years of American Business and Politics. 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ISBN 0-384-32905-5 cloth $9.50 William Howard Taft THE PRESIDENCY: ITS DUTIES, ITS POWERS, ITS OPPORTUNITIES A N D ITS LIMITATIONS New York, 1916. vi, 145 p. ISBN 0-384-59440-9 cloth $11.00 Under the general editorship of Richard H. Leach, of Duke University, this distinctive series includes major theoretical and applied studies relating to basic concepts in government and political science. Encompassing a wide range of issues, these classic works offer an abundance of valuable historical data and scholarly analyses. In many cases, eminent specialists have provided new introductions as a means of placing the works within the perspective of modern scholarship. In addition to the above, several other titles were published in the series in 1972. Please write for detailed brochure. Individuals ordering books for their own use may deduct 20% from the list price on prepaid orders. Johnson Reprint Corporation will pay postage and handling. 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