ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 17 P u b lic a tio n s NOTICES • AACR 2 Implementation Studies in ARL Li­ b ra ries, SPEC Kit # 6 8 (117 pages, O cto b er, 1980), focuses on methodologies developed to ex­ am ine the effects of th e new code on catalog management practices and workload. The kit is available to ARL members and SPEC subscribers for $7.50 and to others for $15 (plus $2 handling ch arg e), p re p a y m e n t r e q u ir e d , from S P E C , OMS/ARL, 1527 New H am pshire Ave., N .W ., Washington, DC 20036. • Affirmative Action Programs, SPEC Kit #67 (87 pages, Septem ber 1980), contains affirmative action plan docum ents from Association of Re­ search Libraries m em ber institutions and policy statem ents on affirmative action and equal em ­ ployment opportunity from several universities. It replaces ARL Kit # 4 (January 1974) on affirma­ tive action. See the above entry for price and ordering information. • A R ibliography f o r M edieval and Renais­ sance Musical Manuscript Research, by Peter Jef- ferey (68 pages, August 1980), is a list of secon- darv materials at the Alcuin Librarv and the Hill Monastic M anuscript Library, St. John’s Abbey and University, Collegeville, Minnesota. The bib­ liography is not annotated, but it contains a help­ ful index. This booklet is available for $3 from the M onastic M anuscript Library, St. Jo h n ’s U ni­ versity, Collegeville, MN 56321. • The Canadian MARC Communication For­ mat: Authorities is the latest in a series of stan­ d ard form ats for m ac h in e -re a d a b le cataloging data. Published by the National Library of Cana­ da, th e CAN/MARC A u th o rities form at has a unique capability to handle bilingual information. It is available in an updatable binder format from th e C anadian G overnm ent P ublishing C e n tre , Supply and Services Canada, Hull, Quebec, K1A OS9, Canada. The price is $17.50 in Canada, $21 elsewhere. Subscriptions to the supplementation service are $6 in Canada, $7.20 elsewhere. • A Collector s Choice: The John J. W alsdorf Collection o f William Morris in Private Press and Limited Edition (62 pages, 1980) has been pub­ lished by the George Washington University Li­ brary. It is a catalog of the exhibition held in the Special Collections Division at GWU Library in w inter 1979-80. The library plans to bring the collection back for exhibit in February, 1981, to coincide w ith th e ALA M idw inter M eeting in W ash in g to n . C o p ies of th e catalo g may be obtained for $5 from David S. Zeidberg, Curator, Special Collections Division, George Washington University Library, Washington, DC 20052. • D eclining Enrolm ent, by M arita Moll (34 pages, July 1980), has appeared as the Canadian Teachers’ Federation Bibliographies in Education Series num ber 72. This annotated bibliography covers two years of Canadian and American liter­ ature dealing with the topic. Copies are available from th e C anadian T e a c h e rs’ F e d e ra tio n , 110 Argyle Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, K2P 1B4, Canada. • The Directory o f Michigan Academic Librar­ ies, 1 9 8 0 -1 9 8 1 , p u b lis h e d by th e M ichigan C hapter of ACRL (27 pages, 1980), supersedes the first edition published in 1977. Its primary arrangem ent is by academic institution, which is followed by a name index keyed to appropriate in s titu tio n e n try n u m b e rs . C o p ies may be obtained from Joy Pastucha, Michigan Library Association, 226 W. W ashtenaw , Lansing, MI 48933. • Financial Aspects o f Library and Informa­ tion Services: A Ribliography, by Alan Cooper (117 pages, 1980), has been publish ed by the C entre for Library and Information Management, D epartm ent of Library and Information Studies, Loughborough University, England. Cost: £10. The C entre has also recently published The Re­ legation and Storage o f Materials in Academic Libraries: A Literature Review, by L. Gilder, et al., (78 pages, 1980). Cost £5. To order, contact CLAIM Publications, Loughborough University, Leies L E U 3TU, United Kingdom. • The First Annual Ribliography o f Articles and M onographs on Serials (25 pages, August 1980) has been completed by the Library School Education Com m ittee of the ALA Resources and Technical Services Division, Serials Section. The bibliography is fully annotated and arranged by thirteen major topics. Copies may be obtained for $3 (if prepaid, $2.50) from RTSD/ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. • F oundation F undam entals: A G u ide f o r G rantseekers, by Carol M. Kurzig (148 pages, 1980), has been p u b lish ed by the Foundation Center. It explains the “most effective process for identifying, researching and applying to founda­ tions for grants.” Copies are available for $4.95 from the Foundation C enter, 888 Seventh Ave., New York, NY 10106. • A Guide to Current Catholic Diocesan News­ papers in Microform, compiled by Harry M. Cul- kin (23 pages, 1979), is a directory of locations and av ailability of m icroform e d itio n s of 140 Catholic newspapers currently published in U e United States. The cost is $3 prepaid from Harry M. Culkin, Cathedral College, 7225 Douglaston Parkway, Douglaston, NY 11362. • The Library o f Congress Filing Rules (1980 edition) will be adopted simultaneously this year with AACR 2. The rules will be applied in the add-on card catalogs that are begun in 1981, as well as in the printed book catalogs containing 18 AACR 2 catalog records. Copies may be obtained For $5 from the Cataloging Distribution Service, Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20541. • L ibrary Resources f o r College Scholars: Transactions of a Conference Held at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia, Febru­ ary 14-15, 1980, edited by Robert E. Danford (55 pages, 1980), docum ents the conference which was held to discuss research in liberal arts colleges, collection developm ent policies and practices, and their relationship to information re­ trieval systems. Copies may be obtained at no charge from the Cataloging D epartm ent, Uni­ versity Library, Washington & Lee University, Lexington, VA 24450, by sending a self-addressed mailing label and 19¢ postage for each request. • Music in Harvard Libraries: A Catalogue of Early Printed Music and Books on Music in the Houghton Library and the Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library, by David A. Wood (306 pages, 1980), has been published by the Houghton Library and Harvard’s Department of Music. The illustrated volume lists 1,626 music works published before 1801, including scores, part-books, theoretical and historical writings, periodical publications, and dance manuals. Price: $50. Orders may be sent to Harvard University Press, 79 Carden St., Cambridge, MA 02138. • Three new selected bibliographies are avail­ able from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service: C orrectional S ta ff D evelopment and Training, White-Collar Crime, and Volunteers in Criminal Justice. All three publications are free from NCJRS, an information center sponsored by the National Institute of Justice, a research center within the U.S. D epartm ent of Justice. Write: NCJRS, Department F, Box 6000, Rockville, MD 20850. • Readings in Planning Theory: Results of a Reading List Survey, by Richard E. Klosterman (15 pages, October 1980), has been published as Council of Planning L ibrarians Bibliography, num ber 34. For those in terested in planning theory and plannning education this booklet pro­ vides an accurate reflection of the field’s current perceptions of the appropriate material for gradu­ ate courses in planning theory. It is available for $6 from CPL Bibliographies, 1313 E. 60th St., Chicago, IL 60637. • Religious Archives: An Introduction, by Au­ gust R. Suelflow (1980), is a manual designed to provide practical information on administering a religious archives. It is available from the Society of American Archivists, 330 S. Wells, Suite 810, Chicago, IL 60606. The price is $5 to SAA mem­ bers, $7 to others. A postage and handling charge will be added to non-prepaid orders. • Research about Nineteenth-Century Children and Books, edited by Selma Richardson (142 pages, 1980), has been published as Monograph 17 of the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library Science. The volume makes available the papers presented at a 1979 symposium on re­ search in children’s literature held at the Uni­ versity of Illinois. The price is $8. Send orders to the Graduate School of Library Science, Publica­ tions Office, 249 Armory Bldg., University of Illi­ nois, Champaign, IL 61820. • Restoration and Early Eighteenth-Century English Literature, 1660-1740: A Selected Bib­ liography of Resource Materials, compiled by Roger D. Lund (42 pages, 1980), has appeared as the first in a series of Selected Bibliographies in Language and Literature published by the Mod­ ern Language Association of America. The book­ let lists current periodicals, bibliographies, con­ cordances, and other materials under fourteen separate headings as well as individual authors. Copies are available for $3.75 from MLA, 62 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10011. • Russian/Soviet Literature: Selected Resources at UC-B, compiled by Rudolf Lednicky and Ver­ onica Wakeman (111 pages, 1980), has been pub­ lished by the General Library at the University of California-Berkeley. It is a selective list of 833 ti­ tles under 25 subject headings concerned pri­ marily with Russian language materials. Copies may be obtained from the Reference and Collec­ tion Development Department, General Library, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720. • Simple Repair and Preservation Techniques for Collection Curators, Librarians and Archiv­ ists, by Jean Gunner (12 pages, 1980), is available for $2 from the H unt In stitu te for Biological D ocum entation, C arnegie-M ellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. The institute has also re­ cently published A Selection of Late 18th and Early 19th Century Indian Botanical Paintings (1980), which may be ordered from the same address for $8. • The proceedings of the two-day symposium on The Supreme Court Davis Decision: Implica­ tions for Higher Education and Physically Dis­ abled Students, edited by Betsy Schrauder and Jeannine Villing (153 pages, 1980), has been pub­ lished by Wayne State University. The sympo­ sium, held on the WSU campus in November, 1979, dealt with the rights of the handicapped under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Copies may be ordered for $4, prepaid, from Educational Resources for Students with Disabilities, 450 Mackenzie Hall, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202. • A Users Guide to the Library of Congress Shelflist Reference System, by Nancy Olson (25 pages, 1980), is available for $5 from the Histori­ cal Documents Institute, 1911 Fort Myer Drive, Arlington, VA 22209. A U D IO V IS U A L NOTICE • How to Use the ERIC System, a program of fifty-nine 2x2 inch slides in 35mm format, with a 19 12½ m inute narrative on cassette, script, and slide index, has been produced by the UCLA Education and Psychology Library in conjunction with the UCLA Office of Instructional Services. It has been designed as a self-help program for users unfamiliar with the ERIC system. The pro­ gram may be purchased for $35 from the UCLA Library Accounting Office, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90024. RECEIVED (Selected items will be reviewed in future issues of College & Research Libraries.) • A major survey of Parliam entary Librar- ianship in the English-Speaking, World is now available from Oryx Press (1980, $21.95). Philip Laundy describ es and com pares the libraries serving the legislatures of the United States, Un­ ited Kingdom, New Zealand, and the national and state legislatures of Australia and Canada. Part II of this study is an examination of the spe­ cialized research function required of these librar­ ies. • King Research has published Alternatives for Future Library Catalogs (June 1980), the final report of the Library Catalog Cost Project that King conducted for the Association of Research Libraries. This report is available from King Re­ search, Inc., 6000 Executive Blvd., Rockville, MD 20852. • The Am erican Bibiographical C en ter has published a comprehensive bibliography on index­ ing and abstracting. Indexing and Abstracting: An International Bibliography by Hans Wellisch (ABC-Clio Press, 1980, $22.75), encompassing more than 100 years of publications on this sub­ je c t, was p u b lish e d in co o p eratio n w ith th e American Society of Indexers and the Society of Indexers in England. • The inaugural volum e in R. R. Bowker s Information Management Series is Fee-Based In­ formation Services: A Study of a Growing Indus­ try by Lorig Maranjian and Richard Boss (1980, $24.95). Topics include: results of a 1979 survey of various information services; an overview of fee-based services; marketing of fee-based ser­ vices; information-gathering techniques; profiles of major fee-based information services; econom­ ics; and an analysis of the future of this field. • Video in the 80s: Emerging Uses fo r Tele­ vision in Business, Education, M edicine, and Government by Paula Dranov, et al. (Knowledge Industries Publications, 1980, $34.95) analyses the various trends affecting the non-broadcast video market. Video in the 80s presents the re­ sults of a market study of over 5,000 organiza­ tions. • The second e d ito n of a B ibliograph ic Guide to Educational Research by Dorothea M. Berry, published by Scarecrow Press (1980, $11), “contains 772 entries describing materials essen­ tial or useful for research in the field of educa­ tion. Emphasis is on basic sources and on recent­ ly p u b lish ed works re p re s e n ta tiv e of various aspects of the field. • Special Librarianship: A New Reader by Eugene B. Jackson (Scarecrow, 1980, $27.50) is an anthology of seventy readings directed at the new professional in special librarianship. This volume is a revision and expansion of Harold Sharp’s Readings in Special Librarianship (Scarecrow, 1963). • “The effects of shrinking energy resources, 20 changing patterns of energy consumption, and new developments in communications technology on the structure and operations of research librar­ ies” is the theme of 1980: Prologue to the Future: the Minutes o f the Ninety-Sixth Meeting, an edited transcript of the 96th ARL Membership Meeting, held May 15-16, 1980, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Copies are available (prepaid) for $5 to ARL m em bers and $7.50 to non-m em bers from the Association of Research Libraries, 1527 New Hampshire Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. • Archivists and Machine-Readable Records (Society of American Archivists, 1980, $7 for SAA mem bers, $10 for non-members) presents the papers prepared for the Conference on Archival Management of Machine-Readable Records held in Ann Arbor, Michigan, during February 7-10, 1979. SAA is also making available a 42-page guide to the W.P.A. Historical Records Survey materials for each state. The WPA Historical Rec­ ords Survey: A Guide to the Unpublished Inven­ tories, Indexes, and Transcripts was compiled by Loretta L. Hefner and is available from the Soci­ ety ($4 for SAA members; $6 for non-members). • The first issue of Haworth Press’ quarterly Journal of Library Administration (Vol. 1, No. 1, Spring 1980) contains articles on job satisfaction, marketing the library, staff developm ent, and managing not-for-profit enterprises. A subscrip­ tion to Journal o f Library Administration is $42. • Com parable Worth: Issues and A lterna­ tives offers an analysis of the concept of equal pay for jobs of comparable worth, a theory now being advocated as a means of enforcing equal employ­ ment opportunity laws. The book includes dis­ cussions of the theory, the practical impact of its adoption in this country, a detailed review of its legal basis, and the approach other nations have taken to this issue. Comparable Worth, edited by Robert E. Livernash, was published by the Equal Em ploym ent Advisory Council in November, 1980, in conjunction with a one-day symposium in Washington, D.C., featuring a panel discussion on the basic issues of this topic. • Essays in Public Finance and Financial Management: State and Local P erspectives, edited by John E. Peterson and Catherine L. Spain (Chatham House, 1980, $8.95), “cuts across the entire spectrum of state-local finance topics. ” • Publication No. 11 in Pierian P ress’ Li­ brary Orientation Series is Library Instruction and Faculty Development: Growth Opportunities in the Academic Community (1980, $10), a series of essays which grew out of the Twenty-Third Midwest Academic Librarians’ Conference held in May, 1978, at Ball State University. The goal of the conference was “to bring together the most authoritative and the most representative opin­ ions in the faculty developm ent and library in­ struction movements for the purpose of establish­ ing a much-needed dialog between librarians and professors.” • The L ibrary and Inform ation Technology Association sponsored two Closing the Catalog In­ stitutes in November, 1978, and February, 1979. The purpose of the institutes was to examine the nature of the influences causing libraries to con­ sider the closing of their catalogs and the desira­ bility of the alternatives. D. Kaye Gapen and Bonnie Juergens have compiled and edited the proceedings of these institutes. Closing the Cata­ log: Proceedings o f the 1978 and 1979 Library & Information Technology Association Institutes is available from Oryx Press (1980, $18.50). A tte n tio n E m p lo y e rs Would you like to fill job openings with highly qualified staff—at top sp eed ? The ACRL telephone JO BLIN E, instituted Sep­ tem ber 1, announces your available positions to a wide audience of library and information professionals. The prerecorded tape is revised weekly; all job listings received by 1:00 p.m. Thursday will be incorporated into the new Friday tape. Each listing is included on the JOBLINE for two weeks. To list a position, send a completed JOB­ L IN E form (available from ACRL) and a check for $25 (ACRL members) or $30 (non- ACRL members) pavable to ACRL JOBLINE, to: ACRL JO B L IN E , ACRL/ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. For more in­ formation about this service, call ACRL at (312) 944-6780. Only equal opportunity em ­ ployment listings will be accepted. C a le n d a r J a n u a ry 31—Placement: “Job G etting Strategies for the L/MTA,” Midwinter Meeting of the Council on Library/M edia Technical Assistants, Learning Resources Division, University of the District of Columbia. A presentation will be made by David Dowell, assistant university librarian at Duke U niversity. Contact: Ravmond Ronev, Learning Resources, University of the District of Columbia, 4200 C onnecticut Ave., N .W ., Washington, DC 20008; (202) 282-7536. F e b r u a r y 1— Higher Education: “H igher Education Act Library Programs: An E ndangered Species?” Workshop sponsored by the ALA Washington Office and intended to spearhead a drive for more adequate funding of the Higher Educa­ tion Act lib ra ry p ro g ram s. C o n tact: ALA Washington Office, 110 Maryland Ave., N .E ., Box 54, W ashington, DC 20002; (202) 547- 4440. 20- 21— OCLC: “OCLC: Introduction for Non- OCLC U sers,” workshop, School of Library and Inform ation Science, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Contact: See Janu­ ary 20 entry. 21- 22— Science Fiction: “Assessing Science Fic­ tion,” the J. Lloyd Eaton Conference on Scien­ ce Fiction and Fantasy Literature, sponsored by the University of California, Riverside, Li­ brary and D epartm ent of Literatures and Lan­ guages. Keynote speaker will be Leslie Fied­ ler. Contact: George Slusser, Eaton Confer­ ence, University Library, P.O. Box 5900, Uni­ versity of California, Riverside, CA 92517. 21-26—Art Libraries: Ninth Annual Conference of the Art Libraries Society of North America, Sir Francis Drake Hotel, San Francisco. The conference will be followed by the College Art Association Annual Conference. Contact: Pam­ ela J. Parry, Executive Secretary, ARLIS/NA, 143 Bowling Green Place, Iowa City, IA 52240; (319) 351-2078. 27— Women in L ibrary M anagement: “Even the Odds: W om en in L ibrary M anagem ent, a seminar to be held on board the Queen Mary in Long Beach, California, featuring speakers from the library, management, and psychology fields. Sponsored by the Library of California State University, Long Beach. Fee: $25, due by F eb ru ary 1. Contact : “Even the O d d s,” CSULB U niversity Library, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90840; (213) 498-4029 or 498-4367. M a rc h 11-13— Networking: Third Annual Conference of SALIS (Substance Abuse Librarians and In­ form ation Specialists), B erkeley, California. C o n tact: A ndrea M itchell, Social R esearch Group, University of California, 1816 Scenic, Berkeley, CA 94709; (415) 642-5208. 25— C hildren’s L iteratu re: workshop, School of 21