ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 115 News from the Field A C Q U I S I T I O N S • The Sun Oil Company has officially desig­ nated the E leutherian Mills Historical Li­ brary as the depository for its business ar­ chives. The first segment of Sun’s historical records to be processed covers the period 1889-1963, and has been delivered to the library in ninety-two file drawers. The Library specializes in American busi­ ness, economic, industrial, and technological history, with emphasis on the middle-Atlantic states, and is administered by the Eleutherian Mills-Hagley Foundation. Mr. du Pont, president of the Foundation’s board of trustees, stated that the Sun Oil Com­ pany records will “help … carry on the long- range goals of the Foundation to preserve ma­ terials for the study of the American free en­ terprise system.… ” Among those at the ceremony were Joseph R. Layton, vice-president for finance, Sun Oil Company; William W. Weston, director of corporate public relations, Sun Oil Company; R. Anderson Pew, secretary-treasurer, Sun Oil Company of Pennsylvania; Dr. Walter J. Hea- cock, general director of the Eleutherian Mills- Hagley Foundation; and Dr. Richmond D. Wil­ liams, library director. Commenting on the research value of the Sun Oil Company collection, Dr. Richmond D. Williams, library director, said, “This first seg­ ment of archives covers all the important events, developments and innovations of the company through 1947. Included are documents relative to the Peoples Natural Gas Company of Pitts­ burgh prior to 1903; the use of tankers to bring oil to Marcus Hook from Texas; improvements in lubricants and motor fuels; the development of pipelines; the Houdry catalytic process; inno­ vations in marketing; and exploration for new sources of crude oil. The relationship between the development of the company and the man­ agement skills of the Pew family is evident throughout this segment of deposited records. Represented in the collection are the activities of such Sun Oil Company executives as J. N. Pew (d. 1912), Arthur E. Pew, Sr. (d. 1916), Joseph N. Pew, Jr. (d. 1963), J. Howard Pew (d. 1971), J. Edgar Pew (d. 1946), Arthur E. Pew, Jr. (d. 1965). • Northwestern University has announced in Vienna, Austria that final arrangements have been made in its efforts to acquire one of the world’s most important music collections—the Moldenhauer Archive. The announcement came on the first day of the weeklong Fifth International Webern Fes­ tival and Congress held in Vienna and was made by Northwestern’s music librarian Don­ ald Roberts, who was invited to give a paper at the congress. Along with the archive an­ nouncement Northwestern also extended an in­ vitation to the Webern Society to hold its Sixth International Webern Festival and Con­ gress at Northwestern University’s Evanston campus, in celebration of acquiring the Mol- denhauer Archive. Described as “the most valuable and com­ prehensive private collection of original music autograph manuscripts and source material in the world,” it contains virtually the complete works of Austrian composer Anton von Webern (1883-1945), including notes, letters, original manuscripts, sketches, notebooks, books, per­ sonal belongings, portraits, and other memora­ bilia. As a result of his long association with Webern’s family, Hans Moldenhauer, the great­ est living authority on the Austrian composer, was able to acquire much of the surviving manuscript material left by W ebern. It is this material that forms the nucleus of the Molden- hauer Archive. Many of Webern’s precursors, contemporaries, and followers, such as De­ bussy, Mahler, Richard Strauss, Berg, Bartók, Schoenberg, and Stravinsky, among others are represented in the Archive. The complete Moldenhauer Archive consists of two main sections; (1 ) the autograph mu­ sic manuscripts, letters, and documents of composers from the seventeenth to the nine­ teenth centuries, and (2) the twentieth cen­ tury collection. As a systematic collection of twentieth century autograph music material, the Moldenhauer Archive has no rival among the private collections of Europe and America. Moldenhauer, attending the Webern Con­ gress in Vienna, said that he was “extremely elated” at the announcement because “it ful­ fills my life-long dream of having these works properly housed at a prestigious university. The governing philosophy of my collecting ac­ tivity has been that of building a research col­ lection—music history from primary sources. Collecting these materials has given me much satisfaction but my joy is now complete know­ ing that the music world will be greatly en­ riched with the scholarship that can now take place to make this collection truly come alive.” • The literary estate of the German-Ameri­ can writer Oskar Maria Graf, 1894-1967, has been acquired by the University of New Hampshire library. Graf participated in the 116 Bavarian revolution of 1918/19 and lived in Munich until 1933 when he publicly protested against the Nazi regime. For the remainder of his life he lived in exile, first in Austria, then in Czechoslovakia, and from 1938 until his death in the United States completed a suc­ cessful career as a poet and writer. Graf wrote over forty books including nov­ els, poetry, short stories, essays, and criticism. A number of manuscripts, especially short sto­ ries, longer essays, fragments of novels, apho­ risms, and correspondence are still unpub­ lished. Among the manuscripts of Graf’s pub­ lished works is also that of his famous auto­ biographical novel, W ir sind Gefangene (1927; English Prisoners All, 1928 and 1943). Graf’s correspondents include such figures as Hein­ rich Boell, Herman Broch, Alfred Doeblin, Al­ bert Einstein, Bill Edgerton, Hanns Eisler, Lion Feuchtwanger, Varian M. Fry, Hermann Hesse, Theodor Heuss, Heinrich Mann, Klaus Mann, Thomas Mann, Nelly Sachs, Dorothy Thomp­ son, and Sergej Tretjakow. Besides the author’s own works, the New Hampshire collection contains many diverse materials ranging from personal documents to a huge amount of literature on the author. Among the latter there are more than 1,000 newspaper clippings with reviews and articles and much longer critical writings on Graf in­ cluding theses and dissertations. In addition, one finds photographs, records, and tapes of the poet’s own voice and a television movie in which the author appears. Graf’s personal li­ brary of a few thousand books reflecting his interest in modern European literature and politics is also part of the collection. A more detailed description of Graf’s literary estate was published by the Literaturwissen­ schaftliches Jahrbuch X I (Berlin, 1971, p.369- 86), and a comprehensive bibliography on the author based on the New Hampshire University library collection is presently being prepared. • The Oklahoma State University library recently celebrated the addition of the mil­ lionth volume to its collection. The book so honored was a bound collection of original manuscripts of the late Will Rogers, donated by his son, Will Rogers, Jr., in a ceremony on February 24. The manuscripts, none of which have ever been published before, were bound in a leather volume embossed in gold. The donor spoke at the presentation ceremony on the subject, “My Father As a Literary Figure.” He told of the vast collection of writings which his father left, including his “Daily Telegram,” “The Weekly Article,” and scripts he wrote for radio, stage, and speeches that he delivered. It is not commonly known that Will Rogers was a prolific writer, but the Oklahoma State University Press will issue a collection of the writings of the humorist in a set of four­ teen volumes, the first volume to appear in the near future. • F isk University library special collections and archives, Nashville, Tennessee, has ac­ quired the papers (1947-1964) of Dr. Robert Burgette Johnson, sociologist and son of the late Dr. Charles Spurgeon Johnson, eminent sociologist and first black president of Fisk University. The collection consists of corre­ spondence, interviews, writings, lectures, and organizational materials of such groups as the National Conference on Christians and Jews and the Institute on Ethics. The papers were presented to the university in a formal ceremony by Dr. Alex Rosen, a lifelong friend of Dr. Johnson. Also on hand for the presentation were Patricia Johnson Clif­ ford and Charles S. Johnson, Jr., sister and brother of the late Dr. Robert B. Johnson. F E L L O W S H I P S / S C H O L A R S H IP S • The Council on Library Resources is again offering a limited number of fellowships and internships to mid-career librarians of the United States and Canada who have demon­ strated a strong potential for leadership in the profession. The purpose of the grants is to en­ able successful candidates to improve their competence in the substantive, administrative, and/or technical aspects of their profession. A few candidates may find an internship experi­ ence in a particular institution the most profit­ able use of the fellowship opportunity. The awards are intended to cover costs dur­ ing a period of continuous leave, which may range in time from a minimum of three months up to nine months. They do not cover salaries but are for such items as travel, per -diem for living expenses while in travel status, supplies, and equipment incident to a fellow’s program. It is expected that his salary while on leave of absence will be paid by his parent institution. In reviewing applications the committee will place emphasis on the thought and care given to the development of the proposed program of study, investigation, training, or internship as well as on the candidate’s professional quali­ fications. The fellowships are not intended to support work toward an advanced degree in librarianship, although course work which com­ plements a candidate’s program and is outside the normal professional curriculum may be considered. Interested librarians may receive an applica­ tion form by writing to The Fellowship Com­ mittee, Council on Library Resources, One D u­ pont Circle, Suite 620, Washington, DC 20036. Completed applications must be received no 117 later than November 1, 1972. The awards will be announced on or about April 1, 1973. Suc­ cessful candidates must complete their fellow­ ships prior to October 1, 1974. • The School of Library and Information Services, University of Maryland, has re­ ceived a grant of $8,000 from the Office of Ed­ ucation, Leadership Training Institute. With support from this grant, the University of Mary­ land Library Administrators Development Pro­ gram is inviting applications for full fellow­ ships to cover the costs of attendance at the sixth annual program from July 16-28, 1972. Under the terms of the grant, up to sixteen individuals will be selected as recipients of full fellowships. The grants will be restricted to in­ dividuals who meet the following criteria: mem­ bers of such minority groups as Negroes, American Indians, Spanish-surnamed Ameri­ cans and Orientals ( or such other minority group members as are identified in the formal application). Applicants are to be selected on the basis of their promise for assuming leadership roles in librarianship in the several types of library— public, academic, special, and school. A pri­ mary purpose is to offer advanced training so as to stimulate further development in leader­ ship training through the application of skills and ideas gained by the participants in educa­ tionally extending these concepts to other mi­ nority group members in librarianship. The sixth annual Library Administrators De­ velopment Program will be held at the Uni­ versity of Maryland’s Donaldson Brown Cen­ ter, Port Deposit, Maryland. Dr. John Rizzo, Professor of Management at Western Michigan University, serves as the director. As in the past five summers, participants are drawn from senior administrative personnel in librar­ ies of large size. The faculty is made up of well-known scholars, educators, management consultants, and lecturers drawn from univer­ sities, government, and consulting fields. Seminar sessions concentrate on the principal administrative issues which senior managers encounter. Leadership, motivation, communica­ tion, personnel policy, decision-making, prob­ lem-solving, financial planning and control, performance appraisal, the impact of technol­ ogy, and the planning of change are among the issues considered in lecture, case analysis, group discussion, and seminar. Those interested in further information and applications under the terms of this grant pro­ gram are invited to address inquiries to Mrs. Effie T. Knight, Administrative Assistant, Li­ brary Administrators Development Program, School of Library and Information Services, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. • The University of Oregon, School of Librarianship, in cooperation with Lane Com­ munity College is offering a 1972-73 fellow­ ship program for training beginning librarians to work in community colleges. The fellowships are funded by the U.S. Of­ fice of Education of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The purpose of the program is to increase the number of librarians who have specific training for the vocational, general, and remedial efforts of community colleges. Beginning with the 1972 summer quarter, the five fellowship awardees will pursue a course of study in the University of Oregon School of Librarianship and College of Educa­ tion in the fundamentals of librarianship, com­ munity college programs, and education of the disadvantaged. Their studies will include a 120-hour internship at LCC, which has facili­ ties for serving the needs of the disadvantaged through its technical-vocational and basic edu­ cation curriculum and through its new multi- media Learning Resources Center. To be eligible for the fellowships, candidates must be accepted in the program leading to the master of library science degree at the uni­ versity’s School of Librarianship. Each fellow­ ship carries full tuition and fees and a twelve- month stipend of $2,400 with allowances for dependents. Further information and application blanks may be obtained from Perry Morrison, Dean of the School of Librarianship, University of Oregon, Eugene. G R A N T S • A grant of $71,000 has been made to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in continued support of the Model Library pro­ gram. The grant is from the Council on Li­ brary Resources, Washington, D.C., and is in addition to the original $150,000 grant for the program made by the Council in October 1969. The Model Library program is a part of MIT’s Project Intrex, an experimental computer-based catalog and text access system under the direc­ tion of Professor Carl F. J. Overhage of the School of Engineering. It serves both as a tra­ ditional engineering library and as the experi­ mental model library for Project Intrex. Since October 1969 the Model Library has worked to develop new library services for “transitional libraries,” in which services based on the new technology are provided concur­ rently with traditional ones. These new ser­ vices include Library Pathfinders, single-sheet guides to published information in specific subject areas, which were developed by the Model Library to lead library users through complex traditional information systems. Al- 118 though originally designed for use in the Bark­ er Engineering library, they have proven to be an effective tool in other institutions and are now used in research libraries in the United States and abroad. The Model Library’s new audiovisual pro­ grams, developed to instruct library users in a variety of reference sources, are now in use in research libraries in the U.S., Canada, and Eu­ rope as well as in the Barker Engineering li­ brary. Since libraries of the future will depend increasingly on text in microform, the Model Library program has also been measuring users’ preferences between hard copy and microfiche copy of various library materials. The new grant will permit the Model Li­ brary to advance these existing programs while beginning new ones. New programs planned for completion this year include a study of electronic calculators within a research engineering library. Elec­ tronic calculators will be installed in the Bark­ er Engineering library and user reaction moni­ tored to define the need for such equipment. Besults will be reported to the library com­ munity. The Model Library also hopes to develop means of providing increased user access to nonprint media by designing a special area to house easy-to-use, individualized projection and listening equipment. Substantial research information in the form of sound-films, car­ tridge loop film, and videotapes will form the nucleus of this area’s collection. Traditional library orientation methods— classroom lectures and library tours—require large amounts of staff time and have often failed to provide information to library users at the time they actually need it. A new pro­ gram designed for on-demand use will respond to these problems, as an adjunct to Pathfinders and audiovisual point-of-use programs, by pro­ viding a good generalized introduction to re­ search libraries. • Award of a $28,000 grant to North Texas State University at Denton to plan a research and demonstration information ser­ vices project has been announced by Burton E. Lamkin, Associate Commissioner for Li­ braries and Educational Technology in HEW’s Office of Education. The study is designated to develop a new concept of providing community information services in Olney, Texas. First phase of the proposed three-year project is covered under the initial grant. During the first two years, emphasis would be placed on the description and documentation of present facilities and li­ brary programs, community structure and atti­ tudes, and the planning and policy develop­ ment of a community learning center. The third 119 year would be used to evaluate the new center, including an assessment of service patterns and effectiveness within the community. Principal investigator for the study is Dr. James A. Kitchens, assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, North Texas State University. M E E T IN G S April 30-May 3: The annual Clinic on Li­ brary Applications of Data Processing will be conducted by the Graduate School of Library Science, University of Illinois, from Sunday, April 30, to Wednesday, May 3, 1972: The theme of the Clinic will be “On-Line Systems Applied to Library Automation.” Further in­ formation may be obtained from Mr. Leonard Sigler, Division of University Extension, 111 Illini Hall, Champaign, IL 61820. May 4: The ninth Annual National Infor­ mation Retrieval Colloquium will be held in Philadelphia on May 4, 1972, at the Penn Center Holiday Inn. The $25.00 registration fee includes luncheon. Additional information and registration forms may be obtained from Susan Nickleach, Research for Better Schools, 1700 Market St., Philadelphia, PA 19103. Further details are in the March News. May 4-5: Exploring problems and current practices of library orientation and instruction will be the central theme of the Second An­ nual Conference on Library Orientation for Academic Libraries to be held May 4-5, 1972, at Eastern Michigan University. Librarians, ad­ ministrators, faculty, and students who are con­ cerned with these vital and challenging prob­ lems are invited to participate. Registration will be limited to seventy-five persons. For further information please contact Sul H. Lee, Associate Director of the Library, East­ ern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI 48197. May 4-6: The Council on Library Tech­ nology will hold its sixth annual conference May 4-6, 1972, at the Hotel Radisson, Den­ ver, Colorado. The theme of this year’s con­ ference will be “The LTA and Employment— How to Fulfill the Promise.” A fee of $30.00 will be charged for the en­ tire conference. A preregistration fee of $25.00 will be accepted until April 10. Hotel accom­ modations should be made directly to Hotel Radisson, 1790 Grant St., Denver, CO 80203. For registration and further information write Mrs. Noel R. Grego, Program Chairman, COLT, Chicago State University Library, Rm. 311 C, 6800 S. Stewart Ave., Chicago, IL 60621. More information can be found in the February issue of the News. May 5-6: The New England College Li­ brarians, the New England Technical Services Librarians, and the New England Chapter of the American Society for Information Science will join in cosponsoring a “Conference on the Role and Function of the Library in an Era of Expanding Educational Technology.” The con­ ference will be held in Amherst, Massachusetts on May 5 and 6, 1972, and will be cohosted by Robert Taylor, director of the Library Cen­ ter at Hampshire College and Merle Boylan, university librarian at the University of Massa­ chusetts. For information regarding accommodations, write to Mrs. Pat Graves, University Library, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01002 and see the March News. May 6: St. John’s University will celebrate International Book Year 1972 with a one-day conference which will be held at the univer­ sity’s Jamaica Campus on Saturday, May 6, from 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. in St. Albert Hall. An $8.00 registration fee includes the con­ ference and luncheon, and reservations can be made by making checks payable to St. John’s University and mailing them to Public Rela­ tions, St. John’s University, Grand Central and Utopia Parkways, Jamaica, NY 11432. Other information is in the March News. May 6: The Academic Section of the Min­ nesota Library Association will hold its Spring Conference at the Student Center of Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota on Saturday, May 6. May 12-14: On May 12, 13, and 14, 1972, the Library Association of Alberta and the Al­ berta School Library Council will hold a joint annual conference at the MacDonald Hotel in Edmonton. The Library Association of Alberta will hold a workshop on May 12, 1972, to which all school librarians are cordially in­ vited. The general theme for the Saturday confer­ ence is “changing social patterns and the role of libraries in the future.” The two distin­ guished speakers are Dr. B. Y. Card, Univer­ sity of Alberta, and Dr. John Corey, Assistant Director of New York Public Libraries. Kildare Dobbs, noted Canadian author, will be the banquet speaker. Other activities proposed for Saturday are a television presentation, a panel discussion, and small group sessions. The an­ nual meetings of both organizations will be held on Sunday, May 14, 1972. This is the first time that the Library Asso­ ciation of Alberta and the School Library Council have held a joint conference and it should provide an excellent opportunity for librarians from all areas to meet and share ideas. 120 May 18-20: The Midwest Academic Li­ brarians Conference will meet May 18, 19, 20, 1972, at Northwestern University and the Uni­ versity of Chicago. Included is a visit to the Regenstein Library at the University of Chi­ cago. Convention chairman is Donald E. Thompson, Wabash College Library, Craw­ fordsville, IN 47933. May 19-21: The First Mid-year Regional Conference of the American Society for In­ formation Science (ASIS), to be held May 19- 21, 1972, at the Kennedy Memorial Union on the University of Dayton campus, Dayton, Ohio will focus on the theme of “Cost Reduction in Information Systems.” Conference chairman Harold B. Thompson (U.S. Air Force Mate­ rials Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base) expects several hundred information sci­ ence specialists and users of information sys­ tems to attend the meeting. According to Technical Program Chairman Frank Slater (University of Pittsburgh), the program will consist of contributed papers and discussion periods divided into three broad areas: input cost reduction; cost reduction in systems; and general cost effectiveness and benefits. Papers submitted cover the spectrum of cost elements in information systems, rang­ ing from specific subjects such as computer- based photocomposition to general topics such as consumer research and capital investment. There will be some “devil’s advocate” papers questioning the feasibility of reducing costs at the input end of the system. A highlight of the conference will be a three-hour “mini-tutorial” entitled “Building Block Analysis of Real Costs,” to be offered on Sunday morning, May 21, by Douglas S. Price, deputy director of the ERIC Processing and Reference Facility, Bethesda, Maryland. Mr. Price is the author of Collecting and Reporting Real Costs of Information Systems, prepared for a tutorial session sponsored by the ASIS Special Interest Group on Costs, Budgeting, and Economics at the 1971 ASIS Annual Meet­ ing in Denver. A full schedule of papers is planned for the two-day conference which begins at noon Fri­ day, May 19, and ends at noon Sunday, May 21. To supplement the papers and discussion periods, social hours are also planned at which “rap sessions” can be held between program participants and attendees. In keeping with the cost-reduction theme, the official total conference fees (including room, meals, registration, and transportation to and from the airport if needed) have been kept to a minimum, as follows: Cost per Person ASIS Member in single room $47.00 ASIS Member sharing double room 43.50 Local ASIS Member (without room) 33.50 ASIS Student Member (as above, less $10) Nonmember (as above, plus $5) The Mid-Year Regional Conference, al­ though national in scope, is sponsored by a group of seven Midwest ASIS chapters. It is designed to complement, rather than compete with, the 1972 Annual Meeting to be held in Washington, D.C., October 23-26. Further in­ formation on the conference, including regis­ tration forms, may be obtained by contacting Robert McAfee, Jr., ASIS, 1140 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20036 (Phone: 202/659-3644). June 11-14: The University of Massachu­ setts, Amherst, will be the site of the Seven­ teenth Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials, June 11-14, 1972. Special attention will be given at the confer­ ence to the education and training of librarians for work in Latin American collections. In addition a series of workshops will take up matters relating to gifts and exchanges, gov­ ernment publications, the book trade, acquir­ ing current serials from Latin America, a Latin American acquisitions clearinghouse, library service to Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking minorities in the United States, financial sup­ port for library service to area studies pro­ 121 grams, and the problems associated with selec­ tion and acquisition of Latin American, and Spanish and Portuguese language materials in libraries that lack the services of an area specialist. The Seminars on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials have been spon­ sored since 1956 by the Organization of Ameri­ can States as an activity of its Inter-American Program of Library and Bibliographic Develop­ ment and carried on informally by libraries and institutions interested in the procurement of Latin American materials. In order to give the program of SALALM a firmer basis for exis­ tence and for carrying out its desired activities, SALALM was incorporated as a professional association in January 1968. The 1972 seminar will be the first to be con­ vened in New England. Recent conferences were held in San Juan, Puerto Rico (1969), at the University of Toronto (1970), and in Puebla, Mexico (1971). Registration in the seventeenth seminar is $15.00 for members of SALALM and $25.00 for nonmembers. Preprint working papers are included in the registration fee, and are avail­ able only by registering in advance. Librarians and professors from Latin America and the Caribbean may attend the seminar without pay­ ing the registration fee and will receive the working papers. Students from all countries will be admitted as observers without charge but must register and pay a fee of $7.50 if they wish sets of the working papers. Com­ plete details and registration forms for the seventeenth SALALM will be distributed soon. The conference coordinator is Mrs. Pauline P. Collins, Latin American Librarian, The Li­ brary, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01002. Information on the content of the program and working papers may be procured from Mr. Glenn Read, Jr., Latin American Li­ brarian, 110 Olin Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850. For other information, refer to the Executive Secretary, Mrs. Marietta Daniels Shepard, Or­ ganization of American States, Washington, DC 20006. June 19-23: The American Theological Li­ brary Association will hold its 26th annual conference, June 19-23, 1972, on the campus of Waterloo Lutheran University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Host librarian, to whom in­ quiries about the conference may be directed, is Erich R. W. Schultz of Waterloo Lutheran University. Details may be found in the Jan­ uary News. July 16-28: The School of Library and In­ formation Services, University of Maryland, is planning the sixth annual Library Administra­ tors Development Program to be held July 16-28, 1972. Dr. John Rizzo, professor of man­ agement at Western Michigan University, will serve as the director. The two-week resident program will again be held at the University of Maryland’s Don­ aldson Brown Center, Port Deposit, Maryland, a serene twenty-acre estate overlooking the Sus­ quehanna River and offering a variety of recre­ ational facilities and an informal atmosphere conducive to study, reflection, and discussion. Those interested in further information are in­ vited to address inquiries to Mrs. Effie T. Knight, Administrative Assistant, Library Ad­ ministrators Development Program, School of Library and Information Services, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. More complete details are also to be found in the February News. July 16-Aug. 11: The University of Den­ ver, Department of History and the Graduate School of Librarianship, in cooperation with the State Archives of Colorado, will conduct its Eleventh Annual Institute for Archival Studies and Related Fields, July 16-August 11, 1972. Contact Prof. D. C. Renze, Attn. Depart­ ment of History, Institute of Archival Studies, 1530 Sherman St., Denver, CO 80203 for fur­ ther information and application forms. Also see the March News for complete information. July 17: “The Media Development Chain” will be the theme of this years conference of the Audio-Visual Education Forum in Kansas City, Missouri, July 17, according to conference chairman W. Daniel Cogan, Audiovisual Ser­ vices, Central Missouri State College. The A-V Education Forum, a one-day pro­ gram for educators, media specialists, and oth­ ers interested in instructional technology, is de­ signed to stimulate thinking about the expand­ ed use of modern communications media in providing quality education. Registration for the A-V Education Forum, which includes a luncheon and access to ex­ hibits during the three days, is $12.50 if paid in advance, or $17.50 at the door. Additional details on the conference program, including advance registration forms and hotel reserva­ tions forms may be obtained by writing to A-V Education Forum, National Audio-Visual Asso­ ciation, 3150 Spring St., Fairfax, VA 22030. The April News contains further details. July 24-26: Keynoting the 7th Annual Ed­ ucational Media and Technology Conference sponsored by the University of Wisconsin— Stout at Menomonie, will be Dr. Lee Sherman Dreyfus, Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin—Stevens Point, and Dr. Robert N. Hurst, Department of Biological Science, 122 Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana. Dreyfus is chairman of the Governor’s Commission on Cable Television and has been involved in the development of educational television on a na­ tional basis. Hurst has been deeply involved in the Postlethwait Auto-Tutorial Approach to In­ dividualizing Instruction at Purdue. Contact Dr. David P. Barnard, Dean of Learning Resources, University of Wisconsin— Stout, Menomonie, W I 54751, for additional information concerning the conference and reg­ istration. Jack I. Morehouse, administrative as­ sistant, is in charge of reservations for exhibit space. M I S C E L L A N Y • An American Library Association com­ mittee that investigated the resignation of a director of a county library in Missouri last year has stated in its report just issued that the library board “acted unethically,” “followed unfair employment procedures,” “acted capri­ ciously and not in the best interests of the county,” and “presented to the public incom­ plete and thereby misleading information” about the librarian and her work. The case was the resignation of Ann Webb, director of the St. Charles County Library, who resigned at the demand of the County Library Board. The American Library Asso­ ciation’s Staff Committee on Mediation, Arbi­ tration and Inquiry presented its report to the ALA Executive Board, following several months of inquiry by an ALA fact-finding team and the committee. The seven summary conclusions of the ALA Staff Committee on Mediation, Arbitration and Inquiry are: 1. Miss Ann Webb was compelled to resign as the director of the St. Charles County Library; and she was not provided with notice, written statement of reasons for dismissal, nor an opportunity for any hearing or appeal. 2. The St. Charles County Library Board acted unethically in demanding Miss W ebb’s resignation without giving Miss Webb concrete, written information re­ garding their reasons for considering her to be unsatisfactory to them, and an ade­ quate opportunity to respond. 3. The board acted unethically in threaten­ ing Miss Webb with unsatisfactory refer­ ences if she did not resign immediately and promising her satisfactory references if she resigned immediately. This action was grossly unfair to Miss Webb and to other libraries. 4. The board followed unfair employment procedures in not honoring the contract which had been made in good faith by 123 Miss Webb and the previous county library board. 5. The board acted capriciously and not in the best interests of the county in de­ manding the immediate resignation of its director (at its first meeting) without careful review of the policies of the pre­ vious library board and the administration and records of the library, and without orienting themselves on the operations, problems, and programs of the library. This precipitate action of demanding the librarian’s immediate resignation gave the board and the staff grave difficulties in planning future operations and in retain­ ing the public’s confidence in the library. 6. The library board’s public inferences, that Miss Webb was terminated for fiscal mismanagement and administrative in­ competence, were misleading and repre­ sent poor practices on the part of the board in meeting its responsibilities to the public. The board’s repudiation of Miss Webb was largely a repudiation of the policies established by the previous library board and followed by the library director. In forcing the director to bear the brunt of their dissatisfaction with the previously established library policies ( and with some inadequate state and county reporting arid record-keeping mechanisms) the new library board pre­ sented to the public incomplete and thereby misleading information about Miss Webb, her ability, and her work. 7. The phrase (in the Missouri County li­ brary law 182.060)—“The librarian serves at the pleasure of the board”—should not be used to indicate that the position of library director is one of political patron­ age. The board’s statement to Miss Webb that she was “politically unacceptable” and her forced resignation constitute an application of the law which cannot be construed as being in the best public interest. The report also includes six general recom­ mendations which the ALA committee believes will assist all Missouri county libraries. These six general recommendations are: 1. That all public libraries have annual audits. 2. That standardized procedures for county library fiscal records and reporting be de­ veloped. 3. That guidelines for (library equipment and furnishings) bidding, procurement, and inventory be developed. 4. That the Missouri State Library request clarification from the state attorney gen­ eral regarding the legality of a county library board’s agreement to the setting B.U.P BLANKET coverage of all Western European countries, all languages, all subjects and all types of public­ ations, including those that are not readily available through trade chan­ nels. ORDER either the books themselves sent on approval, returnable for full credit; or bibliographical forms for the titles selected; or bibliographies with oursuggestions clearly marked. PROGRAMS are arranged to fit all your needs and any special wishes you have can be accommodated. We w ill be glad to - send you a brochure with more information - prepare a quotation (w ithout obligation) based on your needs. SWETS & ZEITLINGER East Coast office Box 517, BERWYN, Pa. 19312 Telephone: 2,5 644-4944 W est Coast office Box 1761, SANTA CRUZ, Cal. 95060 Telephone: 408-426-2,98 124 THE UNITED STATES HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS INSTITUTE announces the first in a new series o f dual media reference collections for the expanding academic library Proceedings of the U.S. Congres 1 … 7 includ 8 ing: 9 th - e 1 Ann 9 als o 6 f Co 4 ngress (1789- 1824), the Register of Debates (1824-1837), the Congressional Globe (1833-1873), and the Con­ gressional Record (1873-1964), Together, they present the only official narra­ tive of the first 175 years in the history of the Legislative Branch of the U.S. Government. s available for the first time in one convenient DUAL-MEDIA reference set 477 reels of 35 mm microfilm containing the complete text of speeches, debates, votes, trials, Presidential messages, and all Appen­ dices. 101 casebound full-size reprint volumes con­ taining Indexes to all 220 regular and special sessions, Indexes to the Appendices, and the Histories of Bills and Resolutions. N ow you can buy this complete set o f both microfilm and index vol­ umes for just slightly more than one major micropublisher charges for the microfilm runs alone. 125 The Dual-Media Concept … saves m oney and space without sacrificing research effectiveness A s viewed by Evan Farber, author of Classified List of Periodicals for the College Library (Faxon, 1957 & 1970) and a member of the Institute's Editorial Advisory Board, “Because The Congressional Record and its pre­ decessors contain so much information about the activities of Congress, including the votes and near-verbatim reporting of debates, it is an essen­ tial resource for all courses relating to American government and should, therefore, be available in every academic library. On the other hand, its very comprehensiveness not only creates a space problem for most libraries, but also results in dis­ proportionately high acquisitions costs for new libraries attempting to acquire complete backfile runs. Microfilm offers a partial solution in that it is less expensive initially and saves valuable shelf space. One of the major obstacles to its acceptance how­ ever, has been the fact that students and other researchers find that searching for references in microform indexes is inconvenient, time consum­ ing, and ultimately discouraging to effective research. “Having the Proceedings of Congress available then, in the Dual-Media Edition, with the proceed­ ings and appendices on microfilm and the Ses­ sional Indexes and Histories of Bills and Resolu­ tions in printed form (the Record is almost use­ less without its Indexes), means that libraries can now offer the wealth of this resource plus the convenience of the Indexes in book format, yet use a minimum of space and money.” THE UNITED STATES HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS INSTITUTE … has been founded in Washington, D.C. to repub­ lish complete collections of basic out-of-print histori­ cal reference materials in “Dual-Media Editions.” Initially, special emphasis will be placed on those basic serials which have been recommended for new or expanding academic libraries which are building collections in the fields of U.S. History and Govern­ ment. These “Dual-Media Editions” will be reproduced in optimum combinations of microfilm and book for­ mats to provide maximum gains in serials reference capacity at minimum cost. EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD This distinguished and representative Editorial A d­ visory Board has been organized to assist the Institute in its planning and program evaluation activities. Dual-media sets for each Congress and Session are also available, as are single microfilm reels and index volumes. Send for our detailed catalog listing individual units. A ll items are sold “on approval” and may be returned for credit within sixty days after delivery. USE THIS CONVENIENT PRICE SCHEDULE A S YOUR ORDER FORM FOR DUAL-MEDIA SETS. 127 of a lower tax rate than that which has been voted, and the legality of the use of library operational tax funds for library building purchase or construction. 5. That consideration be given to changing the Missouri library laws (Sec. 182,050) to having election by the county of the fifth county library board trustee rather than having the appointment of the coun­ ty school superintendent or a school su­ perintendent to this position. The election of one trustee by the county voters would assure a five-member board, and would assure the membership of a fifth trustee who chose to serve in that capacity. 6. That guidelines for employment agree­ ments and procedures re county library directors be prepared and adopted, and that they be included in library policy manuals. The ALA committee gathered documents, publications, and records regarding the case. The fact-finding team came to St. Charles in late October 1971 and interviewed and con­ ferred with persons and groups concerned with the library’s operations and services and with Miss Webb’s termination. The full report is published in the March 1972 issue of Ameri­ can Libraries, the journal of the ALA. The re­ port has been received by Miss Webb, the St. Charles County Library Board, the St. Charles County Friends of Libraries, the Missouri Li­ brary Association, and the Missouri State Li­ brary. • The Commissioner of the U.S. Court of Claims rendered his opinion in the case of Williams & Wilkins Co. v. the United States (the National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health) on February 16, 1972. That opinion contained a recommended conclusion of law to the effect that the plain­ tiff (Williams & Wilkins Co.) is “entitled to recover reasonable and entire compensation for infringement of copyright.… ” The opinion of the Commissioner is being analyzed in depth by counsel for the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, and by counsel for the American Li­ brary Association. Association counsel advised that exception will be taken to the opinion and that every effort will be made to dissuade the Court of Claims from accepting the Commis­ sioner’s recommended conclusion of law. The American Library Association is cur­ rently evaluating the implications of the deci­ sion for the library and educational communi­ ties. Steps are being taken to determine its im­ pact on interlibrary loan, photocopying in libraries, consortia, and technological uses and applications of copyrighted materials. The decision is also being evaluated to de­ termine its effect on the position of the Asso­ ciation in respect to copyright revision. As these studies and analyses are completed, findings and conclusions will be disseminated through American Libraries, the A L A Wash­ ington Newsletter, and other Association media. • The EAA Air Museum F oundation is readying a new aviation research library for service to various organizations in the aviation community, according to executive director Paul H. Poberezny. The Foundation library will function both as an aviation historical research facility for the Experimental Aircraft Association and other aviation organizations, and as a project agency available to government and private organiza­ tions for funded research. Librarianship tasks of benefit to other libraries, such as subject indexing of many aviation periodicals not pre­ viously indexed, will also be performed. Although the present library collection con­ sists mainly of donated periodicals, books, and engineering reports, a sound core of valuable source materials exists. A comprehensive and unique collection will be acquired. Library director Philip F. Peterson, a gradu­ ate of the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee School of Library and Information Science, ex­ pressed the hope that other libraries and or­ ganizations will contribute relevant materials to the new library. He also indicated that com­ ments and suggestions for the new library will be welcomed. • At its meeting at the Library of Congress February 17 and 18, the National Commis­ sion on Libraries and Information Science passed three resolutions dealing with library funding, priority in planning, and the need for financial support of information resources in government programs. One resolution approved by the Commission said that “If, as is possible under various legal challenges to the (funding) system, the cur­ rent method of funding public schools is changed, library funding must change, too.” This resolution referred to various state su­ preme court decisions, especially in California and Minnesota, which said that the “local prop­ erty tax is not the proper base for public school funding.” In a strongly worded statement, the Com­ mission called upon public libraries and pub­ licly supported information facilities to watch the development in funding public schools and “to be sure that the target of national equality of access to information to all citizens is a pri­ ority, not an afterthought.” In addition, a reso­ lution was passed stating that the Commission will give “first priority in its planning effort to providing new and improved services that will 128 be helpful to all libraries in the country and their users, at every level of society.” In the third resolution, the Commission called upon government agencies to recognize the “need for appropriate documentation, bib­ liographical, and other information resources” in federal programs. The statement went on to say that “provision for the financial support of these functions be included in executive orders and other implementing directives.” • The Social Responsibilities Round Ta­ ble of the American Library Association is searching for a permanent home for its ar­ chives. The SRRT Action Council has author­ ized its Clearinghouse Secretary to publicize its interest in finding a depository able to pro­ vide space and occasional reference service in the records deposited. Full access would need to be assured to SRRT members who may oc­ casionally wish to research these older records. Organized in 1969, at the Atlantic City con­ ference of ALA, SRRT has accumulated al­ most four file drawers of correspondence and documents. They reflect its efforts to democra­ tize the parent organization, and to develop action programs on the major social issues of concern to librarians. Clearinghouse Secretary Miriam Crawford, university archivist at the Samuel Paley Li­ brary, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, reports that Action Council would be particularly receptive to a library school with archival facilities that was favorably disposed to social change. P U B L IC A T IO N S • As the number of states enacting legisla­ tion covering public employee negotiation rights nears thirty, the reality of the unionized educator approaches. Contracts are now en­ forced at the university, college, and commu­ nity college levels as the result of collective bargaining. The AAUP, NEA, and AFT are in agreement that faculties should be organized and have the right to strike. At the same time, these organizations are contesting one another for the privilege of representing the faculty. Whether you are on the “management” or “labor” side of the bargaining table it is time to prepare yourself. Iowa State University library offers as the first number in a bibliographic series a bibli­ ography covering collective bargaining in high­ er education. The references have been chosen to provide information on the collective bar­ gaining process as it affects the faculty. Collec­ tive bargaining as used in this bibliography in­ cludes the formalized bargaining process and less highly structured situations such as “meet and confer” meetings and salary and merit negotiations. This bibliography fills a gap in the literature of labor negotiations. Collective bargaining and its relation to the public sector and the public employee have had their bibliographies, but higher education and its academic employees have not been adequately covered until now. This important compilation should be of value not only to administrators and faculty, but to all interested observers of the higher education scene. Checks or money orders for $3.00 should be made payable to Iowa State University, The Library, Attn: Photoduplication Center, Ames, IA 50010. • The following publications are now avail­ able from the Council on Library Technology: 1971 Directory of Institutions Offering or Planning Programs for the Training of Library Technical Assistants. Ed. by Noel R. Grego. Council on Library Technology, 1971. $4.75 ($6.00 outside U.S.A.)—Directory lists 134 institutions with LTA programs with addresses, program directors, course offerings. Other infor­ mation includes faculty, distribution of students, salaries, graduation. LTAs—Their Training, Their Teachers: Pro­ ceedings of the Second Annual Central Region Workshop of the Council on Library Tech­ nology, February 1971. Ed. by Richard L. Taylor. Council on Library Technology, 1971. $3.50 ($4.75 outside U.S.A.)—Proceedings of the second annual Central Region of COLT considers the preparation of library technical assistants, approaches to teaching, LTAs ap­ praisal of their training. Bibliographies are in­ cluded. Publications may be obtained from Council on Library Technology, Felician College Li­ brary, 3800 Peterson Ave., Chicago, IL 60659. • The need to share increasing amounts of information of every sort has become a funda­ mental aspect of our culture. To help meet this need, the International Organization for Stan­ dardization ( ISO) has published a new standard entitled Directories of Libraries, Information and Documentation Centres. Available from the American National Stan­ dards Institute, 1430 Broadway, New York, NY 10018, at $2.80 a copy, ISO International Stan­ dard 2146-1972 (E ) is designed to assist in compiling directories of libraries as well as various types of information and documentation centers. The standard outlines the most practi­ cal format for reference works that give infor­ mation as to the name and address, size of collections, subjects covered, staff services, and other pertinent data relating to such facilities. • The Indiana University library staff in co­ operation with the Program in Afro-American 129 Studies has completed a supplement to their publication, Focus: Black American Bibli­ ography Series. It covers 140 typewritten pages, with an alphabetical listing by last name of author, first name, title, city, publisher, and date, pages 1-123; from 123-26 we list Micro­ forms; from 127-37 Xeroxed University Micro­ films items; and Recent Additions, p. 137-40. Call numbers are included in all cases. The Indiana University Bookstore, Mail Order Department, Indiana Memorial Union Building, Bloomington, IN 47401, has again offered to handle the sale of the Supplement, which will be priced at $2.50, and which covers our acqui­ sitions in Black Afro-American for 1969-Nov. 1971. • The problems and developments in Ameri­ can university library administration are con­ sidered by Dean Edward G. Holley of the University of North Carolina graduate library school in a newly released publication of the Texas A & M University library. Dean Holley, then director of libraries at the University of Houston, opened the Texas A & M University Library Lectures for 1971-72 with a paper presented at Texas A & M October 15, 1971. This paper is newly published as the Texas A & M University Library Miscellaneous Publi­ cation Number 3 ($1.00 from the University Library at College Station, TX 77843). Tribute to Dr. Holley’s leadership in Texas library circles is paid by director of libraries John B. Smith in a brief introduction to the fifteen-page publication. Dr. Holley’s study of problems and develop­ ments in American university libraries, par­ ticularly the public, urban universities, was made possible by a Council on Library Re­ sources fellowship held in the spring of 1971. He visited campuses across the nation during this time. Dean Holley’s examination of the problems faced by university libraries with particular attention given to their governance concludes on a note of optimism “about the future of academic libraries and the academic librarian.” • The School of Library and Information Science, SUNY, Geneseo, New York has an­ nounced the availability of the Proceedings of the “Conference on the Recruitment of Minori­ ties,” held in Dallas, Texas during the precon­ ference period of ALA. The publication. Parity Now! Recruitment of Minorities, sells for $4.50 plus postage, and includes papers by Armando Rodriguez, Assistant Commissioner, Officer of Education; Burton Lamkin, Associate Commis­ sioner, Bureau of Libraries and Educational technology. Office of Education, and Arthur A. Fletcher, former Assistant Secretary of Labor. Also, there is a summary of the panel dis­ cussion on “How Are Other ‘Professions’ Re­ cruiting Minorities?” The summary of the conference is by Miles M. Jackson of the State University of New York at Geneseo and Bob Clayton, Coordinator, College Placement Ser­ vices of Atlanta, Georgia. Copies for late March shipment may be purchased by writing to College Bookstore, State University College of Arts and Science, Geneseo, NY 14454. • A bibliography of pre-1950 Quaker books in the Scattergood School Library of West Branch, Iowa is now available. Their collection consists of a fairly significant collection of nineteenth-century publications with a few eighteenth-century imprints. A copy can be obtained for $1.00 from Nancy Patton Van Zant, Scattergood School Library, West Branch, lA 52358. • The Scholar and the Book Collector, an address given by James D. Hart to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Albert M. Bender Collection of the Mills College library, has been published by the Grabhorn-Hoyem Press. Copies are for sale ($5.00) from the Mills College Library, Oakland, GA 94613. • What to Do Before the Censor Comes— and After has been revised and reissued as a special supplement to the March 1972 issue of the Newsletter on Intellectual Freedom. The eight-page primer on handling intellectual free­ dom controversies in the library contains the 1972 revision of How Libraries Can Resist Censorship, the Library Bill of Rights, the School Library Bill of Rights, the Statement on Labeling, and the Resolution on Challenged Materials. Also included is the new What the American Library Association Can Do for You to Help Combat Censorship, and the Associ­ ation’s Program of Action for Mediation, Arbi­ tration, and Inquiry. Reprints are available for 100 per copy, $2.00 per 25, $3.00 per 50, and $5.00 per 100, from the Office for Intellectual Freedom, American Library Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. Prepayment for all orders of $2.00 or less is requested. ■ ■ BUSINESS • COMMERCE • ECONOMICS Specialists in Out-of-Print Books in the Social Sciences Want Lists Searched Collections Fulfilled— Catalogs Issued HIVE OF INDUSTRY, BOOKSELLERS Box 602 Easton, Penna. 18042 130 “ Nonprint media is no longer viewed as solely an en­ richment of print, but rather as a basic aspect of com­ munication among a one world population confronted with numerous languages, customs, slang, idioms, writing skills, and unprecedented demands for speed in exchange of concepts, emotions, and expectations.” – PEARCE S. GROVE and EVELYN CLEMENT, editors of BIBLIOGRAPHIC CONTROL of nonprint m edia The first volume to present the best of current think­ ing on systems and standards for the control of audiovisual material With reports and discussions of re­ search activity and current prac­ tices in the United States, Canada and Great Britain by representatives of professional or­ ganizations and national centers in library, audiovisual, and informa­ tion science fields. at $15.00 from AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION 50 East Huron Street Chicago, Illinois 60611