ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries College & Research Lib a r i e s news No.7,July/Augudt 1972 ACRL News Issue (A) and (B) of College & Research Libraries, Vol. 33, No. 4 Annual Report of the President, 1971-72 Among the chief concerns of ACRL members during the past year were academic status, greater autonomy for divisions within the struc­ ture of ALA, and the editorship of CHOICE. For the past two or three years the ACRL Committee on Academic Status has been de­ veloping “Standards for Faculty Status for Col­ lege and University Librarians”; membership adopted the statement last June at Dallas. The board of directors had previously approved the statement in principle and authorized the com­ mittee to use the document as a negotiating in­ strument with representatives of the Associa­ tion of American Colleges and the American Association of University Professors. The three organizations (AAC, AAUP and ACRL) set up a joint committee on College Library Problems which has prepared a “Joint Statement on the Faculty Status of Librarians.” The statement was reviewed during the Chicago Conference by our Committee on Academic Status which reported its recommendations to the board. For the past several years ACRL members have been expressing concern about the limited clout the division carries within the ALA struc­ ture; some have suggested complete withdraw­ al from ALA and the setting up of an indepen­ dent organization; others have opted for re­ maining but believe there should be more power and greater autonomy for the divisions. The officers of ACRL and of the American As­ sociation of School Librarians met in Dallas and again during the Chicago Midwinter Meeting in January to talk about the problem and to “feel” each other out. The conversations have resulted in an interdivisional committee com­ posed of representatives from AASL, ACRL and the American Library Trustee Association, under the chairmanship of Anne C. Edmonds, past president of ACRL. The committee met during the Chicago Conference to map strategy and develop a program which the divisions, hopefully, will be able to support when and if the reorganization of ALA structure is consid­ ered. The dismissal of Peter Doiron, editor of CHOICE, last July 29 caused no small amount of uneasiness among ACRL members from that date until now. For several months, at least un­ til Midwinter, officers and staff devoted most of their time to reading and replying to letters and other forms of communication related to this matter. On January 11, 1972 Mr. Doiron submitted a Request for Action to the ALA Staff Committee on Mediation, Arbitration and Inquiry (SCMAI). Since they were named as principals in Mr. Doiron’s dismissal, the execu­ tive director of ALA and the executive secre­ tary of ACRL removed themselves from SCMAI as this case was considered. With Mrs. Ruth Frame, executive secretary of the Library Administration Division, as chairman, SCMAI College & Research Libraries is published by the Association of. College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, 17 times yearly—6 bim onthly journal issues and II monthly, com bining July- August, News issues at 1201-05 Bluff St., Fulton, Mo. 65251. Subscription, $10.00 a year or, . t o members of the division, $5.00, included in dues. Circulation and advertising office: American Library Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, III. 60611. Second-class postage paid at Fulton, Missouri 65251. News ed ito r: Michael Herbîson, Library, University of Colorado, C olorado Springs Center, C olorado Springs, Colorado 80907. Editor: Richard M. Dougherty, School of Library Science, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y. 13210. President, ACRL: Russell Shank. 178 appointed a fact-finding subcommittee com­ posed of Robert Donahugh, Gerald Shields and Myrl Ricking, chairman. The subcommittee has written its report and upon the recommenda­ tion of SCMAI it was published in the June 1972 issue of American Libraries. The fact­ finding subcommittee recommended among other things, that the ALA Executive Board grant a formal hearing to Mr. Doiron. Mean­ while, with Don Thomas doubling as executive secretary and editor, and with the very able and devoted cooperation of the four assistant editors, CHOICE has met its publication dead­ lines and seems not to have suffered in quality. As a direct result of their frustrations over matters of money—the decision by COPES to use $50,000 which CHOICE had earmarked for development of the journal, the refusal to finance an Office for Academic Status, the threat to treat money-making journals within ALA in the same manner as subsidized jour­ nals, the ACRL membership at the Dallas Con­ ference overwhelmingly approved a resolution suggesting that personal members of ACRL be assessed $5.00 and institutional members be as­ sessed $10.00 above their regular dues for the support of the proposed Office for Academic Status. A committee composed of the chairmen- elect of the five ACRL sections was appointed to investigate the feasibility of levying addition­ al fees on ACRL members; the committee re­ ported at the Midwinter Meeting and it was de­ cided that the total membership should be giv­ en an opportunity to express its reactions to a matter of this gravity. Consequently, a ballot was prepared for publication in the May issue of CRL News and a poll of membership was conducted. ACRL approved the “Guidelines for Two Year College Library Learning Resource Cen­ ters” and made provision for them to be re­ viewed annually. Under this provision a revi­ sion of the guidelines worked out with repre­ sentatives of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology was brought to the ACRL Board at the Chicago Meeting. A subsection on Anthropology has been es­ tablished in the Subject Specialists Section and an Ad Hoc Committee on Bibliographic In­ struction formed. The latter is planning to op­ erate a clearinghouse on library instructional programs. The Committee on Cooperation with Educa­ tional and Professional Organizations became dissatisfied with their former practice of having lunch with a few representatives of other or­ ganizations and decided that they would like to become more greatly involved with social is­ sues. Accordingly, the committee has rewritten its statement of purpose and has taken steps to assist the libraries of some of the predominately Negro colleges, a move similar to that of the ARL Committee which cooperates with the Ne­ gro Research Libraries Subcommittee of the C.OSATI Library Panel. The 1972 Program Planning Committee with advice from the ACRL Audiovisual Committee arranged a program entitled “The Educational Dynamics of Media” as our contribution to the Chicago Conference. Two sections and six of the subsections of ACRL planned and made ar­ rangements for program meetings at Chicago. The Junior College Libraries Section sponsored a preconference on “Developing Services for the Total Community” at the University of Il­ linois, Champaign, June 23 and June 24 and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section (note the new name) held a preconference at the Drake Hotel, Chicago, June 22-24, entitled “MidWestern Scholarly Resources: the Out­ ward Reach of the Midwest to the Scholarly World.” With it all, we look forward to 1973 and Las Vegas. The ACRL Board approved a University Libraries Section preconference on library networks and also a preconference on “People in the World of Special Collections” to be held in Los Angeles sponsored by the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section. As this ACRL president leaves office there are many persons to whom thanks are due—the other officers, many committee chairmen and members, numerous Association members, and the devoted office staff at Headquarters. A spe­ cial note of thanks is reserved for two col­ leagues, however, Russell Shank, director of li­ braries, the Smithsonian Institution and J. Don­ ald Thomas. Russ becomes ACRL president at the close of the Chicago Conference; I hope that I shall be, at the least, half as helpful to him as he has been to me this past year. Don left Headquarters and the post of ACRL Execu­ tive Secretary on May 31 to go east and direct the new undergraduate library at the University of Maryland. I am sure that all of ACRL’s 11,000 members ioin me in best wishes to both. Joseph H. Reason President, ACRL ■ ■ 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 ACRL Membership May 31, 1972 ..................................... 11,313 May 31, 1971 ..................................... 11,073 May 31, 1970 ..................................... 10,965