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March 1962 Vol. 23, No. 2 A 7» /(> '-> CO r L^f' 7 PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES, A DIVISION OF THE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
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Page 1: College and Research Libraries - CORE

March 1962 Vol. 23, No. 2

A 7» /(> '->

CO r L ^ f ' 7

PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES, A DIVISION OF THE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

Page 2: College and Research Libraries - CORE

Solve your want list problems this practical U - M w a y

FREE CATALOGUE

T h e O - P book problem has been solved. If you want to secure a reproduction of any book extant, it can be done through University Microfi lms microf i lm-xerography process, at reasonable cost. Send title, author, and publisher if known.

Thousands of Titles now on film

This marvelous development means that the huge literary re-sources of old English and American and foreign language books now on films at U-M are available in book form. The U-M vaults also include microfilms of not-so-old titles where limited demand discouraged new printed editions.

Resources constantly expanding

The microfilming of "modern" books is a continuing program of the O-P book department. Thousands of titles have been filmed at the request of many librarians. Books you need may now be available. Send for this catalogue. It also gives complete in-formation on how to secure titles not yet listed.

i U N I V E R S I T Y M I C R O F I L M S , INC. M 3 1 3 N. F I R S T S T R E E T , A N N A R B O R , M I C H I G A N

Page 3: College and Research Libraries - CORE

G. K . H A L L & C O . P U B L I C A T I O N S

Dictionary Catalog of the

HISTORY of the AMERICAS Collection of

THE N E W YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY

REFERENCE DEPARTMENT

PRODUCTION of this important catalog has just been com-pleted and several copies are now available for immediate

shipment. Dr. Gerald McDonald, Chief, American History and Genealogy Division of The New York Public Library, has given us the following description of the collection and its catalog:

T h e catalog o f T h e N e w Y o r k Publ ic Library's American History

R o o m covers both N o r t h and South America . It represents a large,

well rounded research collection which reflects the development o f

the new world from earliest t imes to the present. T h e American His-

tory R o o m has over 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 volumes, but the catalog also lists —

under author and subject — thousands o f books which are shelved

elsewhere in the Library. Especially important are the analytics. For

over fifty years the Library has been developing a unique reference

aid through indexing important articles found in scholarly journals .

T h e catalog (as is the Library) is particularly strong in American

Indian material, in pamphlets relating to political history, and in

works — old and new — which deal with discovery, exploration and

settlement.

The 554,000 cards in this catalog are reproduced by offset with 21 entries per 10" x 14" page. Acid-free paper with-out ground wood is used. There are 28 volumes of about 1000 pages each, oversewn, with Class A Library Binding, stamped in gold.

This is a limited edition and it is suggested that you place your order as soon as possible to assure availability.

/iatit^

PRICE ( U . S.) $1280.00 (Outside U. S.) . .$1408.00

Arrangements may be made to spread payment over a period of 3 years.

G. K. HALL & CO. 97 OLIVER STREET

BOSTON 10, MASSACHUSETTS

Free catalog of publications on request

Page 4: College and Research Libraries - CORE

NEW REFERENCE W O R K S

Research Catalogue of the AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY This classed catalogue is divided into 2 parts: General and Regional. In addition to books and pamphlets, it contains references to articles and government documents pertaining to geography. The collection of geographical periodicals is exceptionally strong. Available as a complete set of 15 volumes or in 8 individual sections. Prepublication Price, complete set: $690.00. After July SI, 1962: $865.00.

Index to ART PERIODICALS Compiled in Ryerson Library, The Art Institute of Chicago

Begun in 1907, this Index constitutes one of the finest reference tools in the field of art. It is strong in foreign periodicals, and contains references to articles which have appeared in 325 magazines of the 19th and 20th centuries. 11 volumes. Prepublication Price: $590.00. After July 31, 1962: $740.00.

Dictionary Catalogue of the YALE FORESTRY LIBRARY This Catalogue makes available a wealth of information on all aspects of the science of Forestry and the history of American Forestry. Both American and foreign materials are well represented. Unique features include analytics of periodical articles which appeared during the years 1900-1940. 12 volumes. Prepublication Price: $610.00. After July 31, 1962: $765.00.

Dictionary and Auction Catalogues of the Library of the AMERICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY The Dictionary Catalogue contains detailed analytics of books, periodical articles and pamphlets covering every facet of numismatics. The Auction Catalogue is arranged by dealer, and has entries for collector or collections when known. Available separately or in a complete set of 7 volumes. Prepublication Price, complete set: $370.00. After July 31, 1962: $465.00.

Dictionary Catalog of the SCHOMBURG COLLECTION OF NEGRO LITERATURE AND HISTORY The New York Public Library

This dictionary catalog, covering a variety of special materials devoted to Negro life and history, is an invaluable aid to a comprehensive study of Negroes. Of particular interest are the histories of ancient African Kingdoms and material on Portuguese Africa and Madagascar. 9 volumes. Prepublication Price: $485.00. After July 31, 1962: $605.00.

10% additional on shipments outside the U.S. • Prospectus on request

G . K . H A L L & C O . , 97 Oliver Street, Boston 10, Massachusetts

Page 5: College and Research Libraries - CORE

College and Research Libraries Maurice F. Tauber, Editor Mrs. Mary Falvey, ACRL

Publications Officer

Editor ia l Staff: RALPH E. ELLS-WORTH, buildings; JENS N Y H O L M , methods; JOHN C. RATHER, news; LAWRENCE S . THOMPSON, per-sonnel; R O B E R T B . DOWNS, re-sources. CARLYLE J . FRAREY, CLARENCE GORCHELS, EUCENE P . SHEEHY, assistants to the editor.

College and Research Libraries, the official journal of the Asso-ciation of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, is published bimonthly—Janu-ary, March, May, July, Septem-ber, November—at 1407 Sher-wood Avenue, Richmond 20, Virginia.

Subscription to CRL is included in membership dues to ACRL of $6 or more. Other subscrip-tions are $5 a year; single cop-ies, $1.25.

Production and Advertising and Circulation office: 50 East Huron Street , Chicago 11, I l l inois . Change of address and orders for subscriptions should be ad-dressed to College and Research Libraries, at the above address, at least three weeks before the publication date of the effective issue. Manuscripts of articles and cop-ies of books submitted for re-view should be addressed to Richard Harwell, College and Research Libraries editor, Bow-doin College Library, Brunswick, Maine.

Inclusion of an article or ad-vertisement in CRL does not constitute official endorsement by ACRL or ALA. Indexed in Library Literature. Abstracted in Library Science A bstracts'. Second-class postage paid at Richmond, Virginia, and at ad-ditional mailing offices.

Contents

C O M P A C T S H E L V I N G , by Keyes D. Me tealf 1 0 3

A C R L L E G I S L A T I O N IN 1 9 6 1 , by Edmon Low 1 1 2

O N E T H O U S A N D 1 9 6 1 B O O K S F O R T H E C O L L E G E

L I B R A R Y , by Robert C. Jones 1 1 5

R E P O R T ON F A R M I N G T O N P L A N P R O G R A M , by Robert

D. Downs 143

N E W P E R I O D I C A L S O F 1 9 6 1 — P A R T I I , by Geraldine

Kaufman Maurer 146

N E W S F R O M T H E F I E L D 1 5 5

P E R S O N N E L 1 6 0

A P P O I N T M E N T S 1 6 0

R E T I R E M E N T S 1 6 4

N E C R O L O G Y 1 6 4

F O R E I G N L I B R A R I E S 1 6 4

A C R L B O A R D O F D I R E C T O R S M E E T I N G 1 9 6 2 1 6 5

N E W E D I T O R AND E D I T O R I A L B O A R D O F C R L 1 6 9

N O M I N E E S F O R A C R L O F F I C E R S 1 9 6 2 / 6 3 1 7 2

R E V I E W A R T I C L E S

" M O S T L Y M E A R N S , " Richard Harwell 1 7 4

S C I E N C E L I T E R A T U R E , J err old Orne 1 7 4

C I R C U L A T I O N S Y S T E M S , Warren B. Kuhn 1 7 6

March 1962 Volume 23 Number 2

Page 6: College and Research Libraries - CORE

UNIVERSITY OF

Spring 1962

February

Just published THE METAL PLUTONIUM edited by A. S. Coffinberry and W. N. Miner Illustrated. $9.50 THE PROPER WIT OF POETRY by George Williamson. $4.00 PAIN: ITS MODES AND FUNCTIONS by F. J. J. Buytendijk $3.95 AMERICAN LIFE: DREAM AND REALITY by W. Lloyd Warner. Revised Edition. $6.50s THE PEOPLE OF ARITAMA by Gerardo and Alicia Reichel-Dolmatoff. Illus. IN PRAISE OF ADAM $ 8 , 5 ° S

Poems by Reuel Denney $3.50

TRADITION AND ENLIGHTENMENT IN THE TUSCAN ACADEMIES by Eric W. Cochrane. $6.00s

THE WEALTH OF THE GENTRY 1540-1660 by Alan Simpson. $5.00

CHAN KOM A Maya Vil lage by Robert Redfield and Alfonso Villa Rojas.

$7.50s STRUCTURE AND SENTIMENT by Rodney Needham. $3.50s

A REFERENCE GUIDE TO ENGLISH STUDIES by Donald F. Bond. $5.00s

March NATO The Entangling Alliance by Robert E. Osgood. $7.50

CONGRESS AND THE COURT by Walter F. Murphy. $6.95

MOVING-FIELD RADIATION THERAPY by F. Wachsmann and G. Barth. Adapted by L. H. Lanzl and J. W. J. Carpender. Illus.

$10.95 THE MOON A Russian View edited by A. V. Markov. Illustrated.

April LIVING WITH THE ATOM by Ritchie Colder. Illustrated.

IRRADIATION OF MICE AND MEN by John F. Loutit. Illustrated.

$8.00

$5.95

$5.00

NEW PHOENIX BOOKS February

WHAT HAPPENS IN LITERATURE by Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr. P77 $1.25

LEARNING TO LOOK by Joshua C. Taylor. P78 $1.95

LEARNING TO LISTEN by Grosvenor W. Cooper. P79 $1.50

THE COLONIAL CRAFTSMAN by Carl Bridenbaugh. P80 $1.75

EXPERIENCE AND PREDICTION by Hans Reichenbach. P81 $1.95

AMERICAN LIFE - DREAM AND REALITY by W. Lloyd Warner. Revised edition.

P82 $1.95

A REFERENCE GUIDE TO ENGLISH STUDIES by Donald F. Bond. P83 $1.95

AN INTRODUCTION TO LEGAL REASONING by Edward H. Levi. P84 $1.50

CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN AFRICAN CULTURES edited by William R. Bascom and Melville J. Herskovits. P85 $1.95

CHAN KOM: A Maya Vil lage (Abridged) by Robert Redfield and Alfonso Villa Rojas.

P86 $1.50 A VILLAGE THAT CHOSE PROGRESS Chan Kom Revisited by Robert Redfield. P87 $1.25

METHOD AND THEORY IN AMERICAN ARCHEOLOGY by Gordon R. Willey and Philip Phillips.

P88 $1.50 IN PRAISE OF ADAM Poems by Reuel Denney. P89 $1.50

Page 7: College and Research Libraries - CORE

THE PAPERS OF JAMES MADISON Volumes I and II

Sponsored by The University of Chicago and The University of Virginia

The complete edition will consist of some twenty volumes.

William T. Hutchinson, editor repre-senting the University of Chicago; Wil-liam M. E. Rachal, editor representing the University of Virginia. April. Each, $10.00 A discount of 10% will be offered subscrib-ers to all volumes.

SEEDS OF SOUTHERN CHANGE The Life of Will Alexander by Wilma Dykeman and James Stofcely. Illus.

$5.95 BLACK NATIONALISM The Search for an Identity by E. U. Essien-Udom. Illustrated. THE ILLUSION OF NEUTRALITY by Robert A. Divine.

$7.95

$6.50

THE COLLECTED PAPERS OF ENRICO FERMI Volume I: Italy, 1921-38 $12.50

ASTRONOMICAL TECHNIQUES edited by William A. Hiltner. Illus. $12.50s

BIOCHEMISTRY OF INTRACELLULAR PARASITISM by James W. Moulder. Illustrated. $6.00

STIPENDS AND SPOUSES by James A. Davis and others $5.00s

THE SMALL GROUP An Analysis of Research Concepts and Operations by Robert T. Golembiewski $6.00s

FRENCH IN THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Five Years' Experience by Harold D. Dunkel and Roger A. Pillet.

$3.75s May

THE ECONOMICS OF TRADE UNIONS by Albert Rees. A volume in the Cambridge Economic Handbook Series. $3.50

JURISPRUDENCE Realism in Theory and Practice by Karl N. Llewellyn. $8.95

RENDER UNTO CAESAR The Flag-Salute Controversy by David R. Manwaring. $5.50s

READINGS IN CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY edited by Philip L. Wagner and Marvin W. Mikesell. $8.50s

THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS AND THE EARLY CHURCH by Lucetta Mowry. $6.95

WRITTEN ON BAMBOO AND SILK The Beginnings of Chinese Books and Inscriptions by T. H. Tsien. $7.50s

CALCIPHYLAXIS by Hans Selye Illustrated. $0.00

June BILLY BUDD, SAILOR by Harrison Hay ford and Merton M. Sealts, Jr.

$0.00 THE AMATEUR DEMOCRAT Club Politics in Three Cities by James Q. Wilson. $6.95

ON CANCER AND HORMONES Essays in Experimental Biology $0.00

THE COMING OF THE AGE OF STEEL by T. A. Wertime. Illustrated. $6.95

A TEXTBOOK OF ISRAELI HEBREW With an Introduction to the Classical Language by Haiim B. Rosen. $10.00s

JOHN DEWEY A Centennial Bibliography by Milton Halsey Thomas. Revised edition.

$0.00 SEVEN QUESTIONS ABOUT THE PROFESSION OF LIBRARIANSHIP edited by Howard W. Winger and Philip H. Ennis. ' $3.75s

INDIVIDUALIZING INSTRUCTION edited by Fred T. Tyler. 61st Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, Par t I. $4.50 EDUCATION FOR THE PROFESSIONS edited by G. Lester Anderson. 61st Yearbook of the N a t i o n a l Soc ie ty f o r the S tudy of Education, Part I I . $4.50s

MEDINET HABU Volume VI by the Epigraphic Survey; George R. Hughes, Field Director. Oriental Institute Publications.

$25.00 PTOLEMAIS: CITY OF THE LIBYAN PENTAPOLIS by Carl H. Kraeling. Oriental Institute Publi-cations. $15.00

s short discount

For complete catalogue write to

UNIVERSITY OF

5750 Ellis Avenue Chicago 37, Illinois

IN CANADA: The University of Toronto Press, Toronto 5, Ontario

Page 8: College and Research Libraries - CORE

v ! / .

Now there are three sizes of Gaylord Princeton Files... a King size has just been added. Keeps magazines, booklets and pamphlets neat and orderly... in vertical position. Each size holds about 15 issues. Made of one piece sheet metal in handsome gray or desert sand finish, with or without felted base.

on Princeton Files, by Gaylord.

Gaylord Bros., Inc. LIBRARY SUPPLIES fyft SYRACUSE, N. Y. STOCKTON, CALIF.

Page 9: College and Research Libraries - CORE

THE COLUMBIA REFERENCE SHELF Widely used.. . best in the field... backed up by the distinguished reputation of one of the world's great universities THE COLUMBIA-LIPPINCOTT GAZETTEER OF THE WORLD Second Printing with Supplement. Leon E. Seltzer, Editor. An indispensable au-thority since its 1952 publication, the Gazetteer is now printed with a 36-page Supplement identifying the new nations and major political-geographical devel-opments since 1952, and including 1960 U. S. census figures. The Gazetteer itself contains over 130,000 articles. Thumb-indexed; 2,182 pages, 8 x 11%"

Late March, $65.00 GRANGER'S INDEX TO POETRY Fifth Edition. William F. Bernhardt, Editor. New, revised edition of the inval-uable "poetry locator." This edition in-dexes title, first line and author of all the poems collected in 574 important anthol-ogies of poetry published through June 30, 1960. With complete information on

all anthologies indexed; greatly expanded cross-references. Early March, $50.00 YEARBOOK OF THE UNITED NATIONS 1960 Largest, most vital edition yet published of the U. N.'s unique annual record, with a documented report on U. N. work during 1960, plus a resume of the Gen-eral Assembly's Spring '61 session. In-cludes the first complete summary of the Congo crisis from the U. N. viewpoint.

Just Published, $15.00 THE NEW AMERICAN GUIDE TO COLLEGES Gene R. Hawes. Revised, enlarged, and still the only book in its field with many of the vital basics on 2,000 U. S. colleges and universities, including admission pol-icy, freshman failure rate, financial aid, sports, etc. Plus the popular "College Discovery Index." Late April, $5.95

THE COLUMBIA ENCYCLOPEDIA With a 1959 Supplement "The best one-volume encyclopedia in English." — Los Angeles Times 2,348 pages; 70,000 articles; illustrated. $35.00

(Supplement alone, $2.00)

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY P R E S S & 2960 Broadway, New York 27, N. Y.

Page 10: College and Research Libraries - CORE

SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY DALLAS, TEXAS

With an ultimate capacity of 400,000 volumes, the Science Information Center of Southern Methodist University is destined to become one of the most comprehensive collections of technical data ever assembled.

GLOBE-WERN/CKE SALUTES

I t serves as a primary center for scientific research, not only for the University, but for industrial scientists and engineers in the region as well. The attractive and efficient circulation desk and free-standing book stacks were supplied by Globe-Wernicke.

I f you're considering a new library, or modernizing an existing one, Globe-Wernicke can help you solve planning and layout problems.

Write today for complete information, Dept. S-3.

... makes business a pleasure THE GLOBE-WERNICKE CO. . CINCINNATI 12, OHIO / QLOBE-WERNICKE INDUSTRIES, INC.

Page 11: College and Research Libraries - CORE

new... revolutionary

only from MICRO PHOTO INC**

Duplicates books as originally printed and bound I

Twice the bulk—twice the shelf space is necessary with folded pages of other methods — makes volumes bulky and unwieldy.

duopage* gives you page-for-page exact reproduction!

r r . \

I I B M l f e i [ m l

m N E W

] duopage 1

I l i f e ^ • L H H i

I s ' .......... . 1

I H H K ; :

V ' I

Offered for the first time—a long-needed service for duplicating material printed on both sides of a page— without the disadvantages of ordinary one-sided elec-trostatic reproduction methods.

Page-for-page exact reproduction by D U O P A G E * means that page numbers are no longer partly hidden in bindings. If page numbers appeared in the outer margins of the original book—that's where they are on DUOPAGE* reproductions.

The traditional order of pagination is maintained, too, with the DUOPAGE* method—page one on the right-hand leaf, page two on the reverse of page one, etc.

D U O P A G E * reproductions are made on quality rag paper, and volumes are supplied bound or un-bound. Write Micro Photo Inc. to find out how to re-place volumes in your l ibrary with D U O P A G E *

Seventh Edi t ion o f " N e w s p a p e r s on M i c r o f i l m , " 1961-1962 n o w a v a i l a b l e . W r i t e f o r y o u r copy .

development of Micro Photo Inc.

MICRO PHOTO INC. 1 7 0 0 S h a w A v e n u e • C l e v e l a n d 1 2 , O h i o

Page 12: College and Research Libraries - CORE

m | | £ j miit^^m i r* l1

EHj Wgq f f S H H

' f l H H ^ H HBBp , • H I • • u I H i m H

• B f i .

..JJP

D stacks and a

full line of quality steel bookstacks and accessories are built by

"We simply had to find a way to organize and store all of our books . . . and do it without adding extra space. These Hamilton COMPO bookstacks actually gave us al-most twice as much book storage capacity—in the same floor space! Our books are more accessible, easier to service—everyone seems happy with our new COMPO in-stallation. Why don't you look into them for your library?"

Books stack like this on a C O M P O extending shelf . . . slide out on silent ball bearings. Twice as many books are accessible.

OF T W O RIVERS

WRITE T O D A Y for full details on COMPO stacks.

HAMILTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, TWO RIVERS, WISCONSIN

Page 13: College and Research Libraries - CORE

Compact Shelving BY KEYES D. METCALF

TH E T E R M "compact shelving" will be considered here in its broadest sense

as any method of shelving that increases the number of volumes which can be shelved per square foot of floor space. The subject has been discussed compre-hensively by Fremont Rider in his vol-ume entitled Compact Book Storage, published by the Hadham Press of New York in 1949, as well as in two articles by Robert H. Muller, now associate di-rector of libraries of the University of Michigan. The first of Muller's articles, comprising pages 79-93 of the Proceed-ings of the 1954 ACRL Building Plans Institute, appeared in ACRL Mono-graph No. 11, published in the spring of 1954; the other was printed in the July 1954 number of College and Research Libraries, pages 300-312. These three items are recommended reading for any-one facing a shortage of storage space. This article attempts to supplement rather than to replace them.

It is not easy to define precisely what a "volume" is or to determine the av-erage thickness of the volumes in a li-brary. Here, in order to simplify matters, two formulas will be taken as a base; they are arbitrary and debatable, and are by no means satisfactory for all institutions, but they make it possible to compare book capacities of different arrange-ments.

The first of these formulas is that six volumes equals the average capacity of shelving per linear foot if the collection is classified and space is provided throughout for growth. This is a com-monly accepted, conservative formula for a college, university, or research library. If a standard section is 3 feet wide and 7i/c> feet high, with seven shelves, it can then hold 125 volumes. The figure will

Dr. Melcalf is Librarian Emeritus, Harvard College Library.

vary, of course, from library to library, and from subject to subject within the same library; bound volumes of periodi-cals, for example, ordinarily take more space than monographs. It should be noted also that seven shelves of quarto or folio volumes cannot be provided in a section, but six volumes per linear foot is a figure conservative enough to make up for the extra space occupied by the approximately ten per cent of the ordi-nary collection that is oversize. The esti-mate should be adjusted if any consid-erable portion of the collection is made up of newspapers.

Experience indicates that 125 volumes per standard section is as good an esti-mate as can be made, as a basis for cal-culations of stack capacity, if space for reasonable growth is provided. Many variables can modify the figure in any specific instance, and it should be added that total volume capacity is a matter of great importance; possible means of in-serting one additional volume or even half-volume per linear foot of shelf should be studied, and adopted unless disadvantages outweigh benefits. One extra volume per linear foot beyond the six provided by the formula, will increase capacity by 16 2/3 per cent, which pro-vides space for an additional 167,000 volumes in a one-million-volume stack. The construction cost for shelving that many volumes today may amount to $250,000.

The second formula that will be used here provides that fifteen volumes can be housed per square foot of stack floor space. The author will deal with this

Page 14: College and Research Libraries - CORE

further elsewhere; this figure is possible and reasonable with ranges placed 4'6" on centers, if there is careful planning, and if the average capacity per section is taken as 125 volumes according to the first formula.

There are three basic approaches to-wards increasing storage capacity per square foot of floor space. Each has its advantages and disadvantages. The total cost of housing any given number of vol-umes may be reduced under some cir-cumstances, if not all, by any one of the three, and savings in space and costs may be even greater if a combination of two methods is used, or even of all three. The problem, always, is whether or not these savings make up for the inconveniences that result.

These three basic methods can be char-acterized as: (1) methods of shelving more books in the existing sections; (2) methods of devoting a larger percentage of the available floor space to regular shelving; and (3) methods of increasing the capacity of a given floor space by us-ing special kinds of shelving.

The first two methods have been in use for many years throughout the world. The third, with minor exceptions, has been developed during recent years un-der the pressure of high building con-struction costs.

M E T H O D S O F S H E L V I N G M O R E B O O K S

I N T H E E X I S T I N G S E C T I O N S

There are five subspecies to be consid-ered under this major heading. The first of these is:

Less space may be left for growth. This obvious procedure has been used every-where, from the earliest times. It may take either of two quite different forms.

In the first of these forms, books are arranged chronologically by date of re-ceipt and shelves are filled to capacity one after another as the collection grows. This has been the traditional plan in many large libraries, and often in small ones; it facilitates the use of each linear

Mr. Metcalf is engaged in preparing a book on the planning of college, uni-versity, and research library buildings. "Alternatives to a New Library Build-ing" is the preliminary version of a chap-ter from that volume which CRL is pleased to publish here as the third of a series of excerpts from it.

Mr. Metcalf invites suggestions and comments for consideration for use in the final version of his work.

The research for his book and the zvriting of it is being done by Mr. Met-calf as the director of a special project sponsored by a grant from the Council on Library Resources (CRL, XI (I960), 136).

foot of shelving to full capacity; once shelved, a volume need never be shifted. The chronological scheme is not an es-sential feature of fixed-location shelving, but it is the obvious procedure. The ar-bitrary figure of six volumes per linear foot that has been accepted as a formula will fill a stack to no more than two-thirds or three-quarters of the capacity obtainable if each shelf is completely filled. Under this system, if the first formula's 125 volumes was correct, a standard section will hold 168 volumes or more.

Alternatively, though fixed locations are not to be adopted, more than two-thirds or three-quarters of each shelf may be filled. If seven volumes are shelved per linear foot, the shelves will be only seven-eighths filled, but capacity will be increased to 147 volumes per section. There will still be room for a fourteen per cent increase in the bulk of the total collection, before every shelf is completely filled. Experience has shown, however, that whenever shelves are filled on the average to eighty per cent capacity or more, a library begins to suffer from slower service. Constant shifting of books is required because of unequal growth; individual shelves and sections overflow, and space has to be found for expansion

104 C O L L E G E A N D R E S E A R C H L I B R A R I E S

Page 15: College and Research Libraries - CORE

of entire subject classifications that are growing more rapidly than the collection as a whole. Bindings will be damaged by moving and pulling books from shelves filled too full.

It should be added that institutions all too rarely provide additional shelf space as it is needed; often they delay until books have to be piled in the stack aisles and window ledges, which inevitably damages the books and impairs service. For this reason it is strongly recom-mended that, in estimating stack capac-ity, the conservative figure of 125 vol-umes per section be used. It is time to plan for more space as soon as a library stack is two-thirds filled or, at the most, three-fourths, assuming, of course, that a classified arrangement of books will be continued.

If a chronological arrangement is adopted, the only way to use the stacks is through consultation of the catalog; the advantages of classified collections must be forgone. While still possible to permit open access—to allow the reader to determine the arbitrary location num-bers from the catalog and go to the shelves to obtain the books he wants— the reader would be acting simply as a stack attendant, and an untrained one at that; the disadvantages of open access would result, without any of the mani-fold advantages it normally offers. There is yet another consideration. Many read-ers ask for several books at once, on the same or related subjects. Since these books would, normally, not have been acquired at the same time, the attendant, or the reader in a fixed-location stack may have to go to widely separated areas for them, taking more time than would be required under a subject classification system. This is one of the reasons for slow service in many libraries that do not shelve their books by subject.

T o be weighted against these consid-erations, the great advantage of chrono-logical arrangement is saving in space. In a building for one million volumes, the

space required for books in chronlogi-cal order is at the most only three quar-ters that which a classified plan will need, if reasonable provision is made for growth. This might well save more than $335,000 in construction costs. Most American scholars and librarians, how-ever, are convinced that open access and subject arrangement are of vital impor-tance, and that the cost is not unreason-able.

2. Books may be shelved by size. If books are shelved by size, and the system divides them into six or more groups (e.g., books less than 6 inches high, those between 6 and 7, 7 and 8, 8 and 9, 9 and 11, and those over 11), it should be possi-ble to place eight or nine shelves per sec-tion, in a stack of the standard 7'6" height in the clear. If the average is eight-and-one-half, compared with seven shelves on the average for regular shelv-ing, the linear footage available has been increased by approximately twenty per cent. Rider calculated the figure at ap-proximately twenty-five per cent, which would bring the average capacity per sec-tion up to at least 155 volumes; if com-bined with the chronological arrange-ment described above, the figure will rise further to 200, a total increase of sixty per cent.

The reference department of the New York Public Library is now shelving new acquisitions in its main stack chronologi-cally as received, and by size. This has also been the arrangement for many of Harvard's books in the New England De-posit Library; other libraries following this procedure include the Midwest In-ter-Library Center, the Hampshire Li-brary Center, and many of the reference and research libraries of the United Kingdom, on the Continent, and else-where. It often comes as a shock to an American librarian to discover the preva-lence abroad of shelving by size; foreign-ers are often equally surprised to find that great American libraries shelve their books by subject.

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3. Fore-edge shelving. A third means of increasing the capacity of a given shelf area is to shelve books on their fore edges as well as by size. This plan was adopted in parts of the Wesleyan University Li-brary by Fremont Rider, and is discussed in pages 56-64 of his Compact Book Storage. It has also been adopted to some extent for infrequently used material at Yale University, and elsewhere. A method of saving still more space was also proposed by Rider—who not only placed the books on fore edges but also cut down their margins with a power-driven paper knife, and boxed them in inexpensive cardboard containers for protection, and to provide a good surface on which to inscribe call numbers.

It is estimated that fore-edge shelving, if used in conjunction with arrangement by size, will increase by at least fifty per cent the section capacity made possible by the chronological plan alone. It may bring capacity up to 250 volumes per section, an increase of one hundred per cent over the standard plan, and provide for 30 volumes per square foot of floor space, instead of 15. The procedure has all the disadvantages that have been noted above; in addition, many librarians ob-serve that books are injured and bindings weakened when books are shelved on their fore edges. If they are also cut down to reduce size, the procedure may be likened to cutting off one's toes in order to wear smaller shoes. In fairness to Rider it should be reported that his books were placed on their backs when boxed, so there was less danger of weakening the bindings. T o double the capacity per square foot by shelving books chronologi-cally, and by size, on their fore edges may save more than $650,000 in construc-tion of a million-volume book stack, if construction costs approximate $20 per square foot.

4. Shelving trvo- or three-deep. Books can be shelved two-deep (one row be-hind another) on shelves twelve inches wide, or three-deep on eighteen-inch

shelves. Many libraries, because of lack of space have occasionally resorted to the two-deep plan, temporarily at least. The inconvenience is extremely serious. When President Eliot proposed cooperative stor-age for the Boston area, which came into being forty years later as the New Eng-land Deposit Library, he suggested that the "dead books" be shelved three-deep, which is even worse—two or perhaps four times as unsatisfactory as two-deep. The procedure will, however, increase capacity materially. Two-deep shelving, where books are on twelve-inch shelving, with no change in aisle width, could bring the total up to 400 volumes per section, or 50 per square foot, assuming that the arrangement is also chronologi-cal and by size. If the three-deep plan were adopted and the distance between range centers were increased from 4'6" to 5'6V, as would be desirable, if not necessary, capacity would rise to 600 vol-umes per section and, in spite of the re-duced number of ranges, more than 60 volumes could be housed per square foot.

5. Higher sections. There is one fur-ther method of increasing capacity per square foot of floor space, without aban-doning standard shelving; this is to in-crease the height of the shelf sections. It can be done, of course, only if the stack area has ceilings higher than 7'6" in the clear. (Space "in the clear" is the space from finished floor to finished ceiling.) If, as in many multitier stacks, there is an 8'6" ceiling (which is lower than ceilings in most areas of modern libraries used for both book storage and readers), the capacity theoretically will be increased by more than eleven per cent. This does not call for giving up a classified arrange-ment with open access, but it places the top shelf out of reach of all but the tall-est readers, unless footstools are used. In warehouse buildings where shelves are closed to the public the disadvantage is much slighter. The New England De-posit Library has 8'4" ceilings through-out.

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Five methods have been described by which, without changing standard stack installations, the capacity of a given area can be increased. As has been noted, vari-ous combinations of these methods are possible, so the total number of plans that might be adopted is considerably greater than five. Any such method will make construction considerably cheaper. Each institution must carefully consider its service methods and requirements be-fore deciding to adopt any of these pro-cedures, and, in addition, compare them with procedures of a somewhat different nature, described below.

M E T H O D S O F D E V O T I N G A L A R G E R P E R -

C E N T A G E O F T H E A V A I L A B L E F L O O R

S P A C E T O R E G U L A R S H E L V I N G

1. Shallower Shelves. If the width of shelves is decreased without changing aisle widths, it is possible to install more ranges in a given floor area, thereby in-creasing capacity per square foot. A large portion of all the shelving now being in-stalled in college, university, and research libraries has ranges of at least twenty inches from front to back, often with even wider finished end panels. Indeed, in many cases, the shelving is on a base twenty-two inches from front to back, with end panels of at least that width; sometimes the width runs as high as twenty-four inches. The theoretical justi-fication for these wide ranges is to in-crease stability, and to provide bottom shelves from which oversize books will not project into the aisles.

It should be remembered that a large proportion of all books in a college and research library measure not more than seven inches from spine to fore edge. If shelves are made only seven inches deep, with a two-inch space between those on one side and those on the other of each double-faced section, the total depth of the section will be sixteen inches instead of the twenty or more now prevalent. One of these seven-inch shelves with two

inches of space behind it is large enough for a nine-inch book unless another vol-ume exceeding the seven-inch size hap-pens to be immediately behind it, or un-less there is cross-bracing in the two-inch gap between. More space is used for aisles than for shelves, and a decrease from twenty to sixteen inches in range depth increases capacity per square foot by 8 per cent. It is possible also, of course, to use narrower shelves in conjunction with chronological and size arrangements. Further, it should be noted that shallow shelves cost less than deep ones.

On the other hand, it has been esti-mated by Rider that some 6 per cent of the books in a library measure more than nine inches from spine to fore edge. Some of the volumes that make up this 6 per cent are too large for any regular shelving, so special provision will always have to be made for some portion of the collection. It is recommended that in de-signing a stack, the planners seriously consider installing ranges no more than eighteen inches deep, rather than the wider sizes now so frequently used.

2. Narrower aisles. The standard width of aisles in research libraries varies from 30 to 36 inches; in housing infrequently used books, particularly in closed-access stacks, the width may well be reduced considerably. When shallower shelving has also been adopted, ranges have been installed on 40-inch centers instead of 54-inch, which increases capacity by 35 per cent. On this basis, without resorting to any of the other procedures that have been considered, capacity per square foot will become approximately twenty vol-umes instead of fifteen.

In Dublin, Trinity College uses a col-onnade under its famous Long Room as a stack area, with ranges 40 inches on centers; the arrangement is by size there, with the result that more than 30 vol-umes per square foot are housed. In the New England Deposit Library, with shelving 44 inches on centers, capacity

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has been increased by 23 per cent over standard shelving in addition to the gains resulting from arrangement by size; the aisles there are 26 inches wide. Much of the Newberry Library stack has ranges 48 inches on centers. Widener Library is an open-access, heavily-used stack, where books are classified by subject, with ranges 50 inches on centers.

3. Lengthening ranges and holding down the width of cross-aisles. There have been assertions that no range in an open-access stack should be more than five sections, or 15 feet long. This may be valid for a public library with open access, or even an undergraduate collec-tion (though it could well be disputed), but it is hard to understand why this should be accepted as a rule for research library stacks open only to faculty mem-bers and advanced students. Indeed, short ranges only too often complicate shelv-ing arrangements. If the ranges are prop-erly labelled, and if floor plans are pro-vided with class marks clearly indicated on them, long ranges may be more satis-factory than short ones because they may simplify traffic patterns and shelving plans. Ranges that extend 33 feet pro-vide 10 per cent more shelving in the same square footage than two 15-foot ranges separated by a 3-foot cross aisle. A range 36 feet long will provide 20 per cent more shelving than two 15-foot ranges with a 6-foot cross aisle between.

Can libraries afford short ranges in a bookstack costing $1,250,000, particu-larly since they make it easier for stack users to lose their way? Does anyone in a large stack experience real inconven-ience because of long ranges, if the ranges are well labeled? These are questions to be considered and answered on the basis of local conditions, but, obviously, shal-lower shelving, narrower aisles, and longer ranges can increase square foot capacity materially, without any sacrifice of the advantages of classification and open access.

M E T H O D S O F I N C R E A S I N G T H E C A P A C I T Y

O F A G I V E N F L O O R S P A C E B Y U S I N G

S P E C I A L K I N D S O F S H E L V I N G

Several special kinds of shelving can be used with the normal classified ar-rangement of books, or with one or more of the plans considered above. Not all combinations are practicable, however. Books cannot be shelved two- or three-deep in any of the three kinds of special shelving described below; in effect, these special shelving devices are a means of achieving the savings in space that two-and three-deep shelving provides, with-out most of the disadvantages entailed by two- or three-deep crowding on regu-lar shelves. It should also be noted that special shelving is ordinarily designed for almost minimal aisle widths and shelf depths, hence further economies along these lines are impracticable. The height of ranges cannot safely be increased be-yond the standard 7'6", because special shelving does not lend itself to use with footstools.

1. Hinged shelving. Hinged shelving used at the Midwest Inter-Library Cen-ter makes possible an increase in capacity per square foot of as much as 75 per cent over the standard 125 volumes per sec-tion; to this can be added savings that result from shelving by size, if that pro-cedure is also adopted. Hinged shelves, designed by that great innovator, Angus MacDonald, were accepted at the Mid-west Inter-Library Center before they had been completely perfected. They are not as satisfactory as they might have been if a rush order could have been avoided. These shelves consist of double-faced sections hung on each side of standard sections; each range therefore has three-deep shelving on both sides. Since the hinged sections are nearly 3 feet long, and deep enough to accommodate books on both sides, aisles had to be some 40 inches wide. This shelving is not now on the market.

A second type of hinged shelving,

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made available by the Art Metal Manu-facturing Company of Jamestown, New York, consists of swing units occupying a little less than half the length of the reg-ular sections. These units are hung at both ends of each section; they swing out into the stack aisles and expose to view the regular shelves behind them. The swing units are offered in single or double-faced shelving. The latter, like the installation at the Midwest Inter-Li-brary Center, makes it possible to shelve books three-deep on both sides of each range, and provide access to books on inside rows without handling the books on the outer row. Since the Art Metal units are only half as long as those de-signed by MacDonald, the aisles need not be widened disproportionately.

2. Drawer-type shelving. Drawer-type shelving, when first introduced by the Hamilton Company of Two Rivers, Wis-consin, was called "Compo." The W. R. Ames Company of San Francisco now of-fers "Stor-More" book units, and shelv-ing of this kind is also produced by Clif-ford Brown, of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, who designed the original "Compo" stack. The Ames units consist of "double-headed" drawers, approximately 6 feet in length, which can be pulled out into the aisle on either side. T h e drawers are de-signed to bridge alternate aisles in a stack area, making use of existing stack columns, but they can also be used in a free-standing arrangement.

The Hamilton "Compo" units are single-headed drawers in varying lengths from 3 to 4 feet, and in widths varying from 18 to 26 inches. Like an adjustable shelf, each drawer can be adjusted ver-tically on one-inch centers. If used to re-place the 40-inch sections in the multi-tier stack of the Widener Library at Har-vard, they would be wider than those re-placing 36-inch shelves that are to be found in most libraries; this would re-duce the capacity per square foot, but make it possible to accommodate rela-tively large volumes. They can be in-

stalled in place of shelving in old multi-tier stacks, or as free-standing stacks in new construction, if the floors are de-signed to support the extra weight.

Drawer-type shelving makes it desir-able or, in many cases, necessary to in-crease the width of stack aisles, which reduces to some extent the saving they offer; but, as Muller has shown, they in-crease capacity per square foot by some 90 to 110 per cent over standard shelving. It should be added that Muller's figures referred to capacity increases obtained by special shelving in bays 23 feet square, and might be modified considerably in a bay size specially adapted for the par-ticular type of shelving installed in it. Costs of construction and of steel for shelving vary considerably from time to time and from place to place.

3. "Compactus." The third special type of shelving has gone under the name of "Compactus." It originated in Switzer-land but has been manufactured in Eng-land, Norway, the Soviet Union, Sweden, and elsewhere. It has been used on a fairly large scale in Australia, and an adaptation of it can be found in the Na-tional Library at Calcutta, where B. S. Kesavan has used it in the basement and in other portions of the old viceroy's mansion, in space that would otherwise be very hard to use advantageously for li-brary purposes. An adaptation was used in the Treasure Room at Harvard dur-ing the 1930's; and was removed because books occasionally fell and were dam-aged while ranges were being shifted.

Regular "Compactus" is made up of more or less standard stack ranges mounted on rails with ball-bearing wheels. These ranges can be pushed tightly together; rubber baffles are de-sirable to prevent damage from collisions when they are moved. Each bay or sec-tion of the stack can be almost filled with ranges, leaving only one aisle parallel to each ten or more ranges. The shelving is heavy, so when used in large blocks a motor must be installed to move the

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ranges and open up an aisle through which one can reach the desired shelf. The weight is sufficient to require extra-strong floor construction; motor, rails, and other necessary equipment are ex-pensive. Safety devices are required to prevent a user from being crushed if someone inadvertently starts the motor. Supporting columns seem to get in the way even more than in the case of stand-ard shelving, and prevent use of as large a part of the total floor space as might be expected.

Still, it is obvious that this type of shelving makes possible a greater book capacity per square foot than any other method yet devised. In ordinary shelving, with ranges 55 inches on centers, two-thirds of the space is given over to aisles, and only one-third consists of shelving. With very narrow aisles, as at Trinity College in Dublin (ranges 40 inches on centers, with 24-inch aisles), the percent-age of space devoted to shelving rises only to 40. With hinged or drawer-type shelving, it may approximate 66 per cent. "Compactus," however, makes it possible to fill 80 per cent of the total space with shelving, leaving only 20 per cent for aisles between ranges and for cross aisles, which are of particular importance in this instance.

Against the advantages of special types of shelving the following drawbacks must be assessed:

1. Books are not as readily available to the reader as they would be on stand-ard shelving. Hinged shelves must be swung out into the aisle; drawers must be pulled out. The manufacturers deny that this is a problem, pointing to installa-tions in reading rooms and open-access stacks as evidence.

2. In swinging out sections or pulling out drawers, there is always some danger of books falling and becoming damaged. The extent of this danger depends on the design, and is greater with hinged shelv-ing than with drawers.

3. All types of special shelving have moving parts and, unless it is as well made as the Rolls-Royce engine, any-thing with moving parts may sooner or later come to grief. Design and quality of construction are vital considerations. As noted, the Midwest Inter-Library Cen-ter has encountered difficulties that can be blamed on too hasty a job of design and production. Rollers and other mov-ing parts in drawers, if well made, should be capable of standing heavy use for many years.

4. Inevitably, in view of moving parts and heavier construction, the cost per linear foot of shelf is much greater for any of these types of special shelving than for standard ranges. Costs of shelving will not be discussed here, but it can be noted that Muller found that the addi-tional cost of special shelving cancels out a large share, but not all, of the advan-tages resulting from increasing the capac-ity per square foot. As he points out, the cost per square foot of construction of the building in which a stack is to be in-stalled is of prime importance here.

S U M M A R Y

Two major questions need to be an-swered in reaching a decision on whether or not to use any method of compact shelving.

1. Is the inconvenience that will result great enough to outweigh the saving in space that will be achieved? Capacity can be increased by leaving less space for growth or, if the classified arrangement is abandoned, filling each shelf completely. Shelves or aisles or both may be nar-rowed. Capacity also can be increased by installing moving shelves of one kind or another. If a combination of methods is used, both savings and disadvantages are compounded. It should not be for-gotten that most of the world's great li-braries outside the United States arrange their books by size and use narrow shelves and aisles; that moving shelves are in use at the Midwest Inter-Library Center, the

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University of Wisconsin, and the New York Public Library's warehouse, as well as in many smaller libraries of all kinds. It is suggested that anyone considering the use of such shelving consult libraries that have had experience with it.

2. What is the actual monetary saving that can be anticipated from adoption of any specific plan? Few persons would consider installation of expensive mov-ing shelves in a stack built in a Nissen hut, where construction costs come to perhaps $1.50 per square foot, much less than the special stack will cost. In Wall Street, on the other hand, ground space alone may be worth hundreds of dollars per square foot, and it ought to be pos-sible to save large sums by compact storage; a book may have to be heavily used to earn a place on standard shelves there. Most college and university librar-ies fall somewhere between these two extremes.

It is desirable once more to call atten-tion to Muller's figures, which may not now apply to any specific library, but in-dicate clearly the considerations to be weighed. They demonstrate, in particu-lar, that special shelving costs more per linear foot of storage space than standard library shelving, and much more than commercial shelving of the sort used by the New England Deposit Library. ("Commercial shelving" is metal shelving

that can be adjusted vertically only with a wrench for the nuts and bolts that hold it together; it is available from many manufacturers, and costs perhaps half as much as the bracket shelving now stand-ard in libraries.)

Many mistakes have been made. There are libraries that could have used one or more of the methods of compact storage to advantage, but have failed to do so. Others have used one or more of these methods with unfortunate results.

It is not easy to estimate costs accu-rately; and it is difficult indeed to weigh costs against convenience. What is the dollar value of open access and classified collections? Also, special circumstances may complicate a situation. When a li-brary is full and there is no possibility of constructing an addition or a new building, compact shelving of one kind or another may be the only practicable solution, but it is suggested that mov-able shelving be regarded as a last resort, and that the library first consider whether portions of its collections might be placed in a stack with narrower shelves and aisles, shelved by size, or perhaps trans-ferred to a cooperative storage building like the Midwest Inter-Library Center or the New England Deposit Library. An article of this sort can provide no one with an answer; it can only indicate the questions that should be asked.

Midwest Academic Librarians Conference The seventh Midwest Academic Li-

brarians Conference will be held on Friday and Saturday, May 11 and 12, at Saint Paul, Minnesota. The conference will be cosponsored by the College of Saint Catherine, the College of Saint Thomas, and Macalester College. Friday daytime meetings will start with a panel discussion, "Academic Librarians and their Professional Associations," followed by group discussions.

At the evening dinner meeting Rev-erend Terrence J . Murphy will discuss

"Legal Aspects of Book Censorship and Their Relationship to Academic Libra-rians."

On Saturday, "New Cataloging Rules and Their Impact of Readers' Services" and "Circulation Controls and Under-graduate Morality in the Use of Li-braries" will be topics for group discus-sions. Mark Gormley, ACRL executive secretary; Katharine M. Stokes, MALC; and Frank L. Schick, Library Services Branch, U. S. Office of Education, will speak at luncheon.

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ACRL Legislation in 1961

By EDMON LOW

TH E ACRL B O A R D of Directors at the Montreal Conference in 1960 voted

to promote legislation in the forthcom-ing session of Congress for federal aid to college and university libraries. There were several reasons for this action, among which were the declining percent-age, since the end of World War II, of total institutional incomes being devoted to the libraries; the rapidly rising cost of library materials, especially of serials; the constantly increasing load of avail-able printed materials from presses here and abroad; the greater demands being made on libraries by expanded programs of graduate offerings and by contract re-search; and the emergence of many jun-ior colleges, in an effort to meet the de-mand for expanded facilities in the field of higher education, whose libraries were almost nonexistent or greatly in need of encouragement which such aid could give.

As president of ACRL at this time, the writer, under this directive from the board and in cooperation with the Fed-eral Relations Committee and the ALA Washington Office, began to investigate the possibility of such legislation—what was needed, whether it should be a bill by itself or a part of an existing bill, and above all what, in the light of the exist-ing temper of Congress, would stand a reasonable chance of passage. Various leaders in each House were consulted, as well as certain members of committee staffs who are often quite conversant with attitudes of key people in Congress. We were hampered initially by the fact that, when we started work on this, the

Mr. Low is Librarian, Oklahoma State University, and past president of ACRL.

national election had not been held, and so we did not know which party would prevail nor who the chairmen or mem-bers of some committees would be.

As a result of this investigation, it seemed best to limit the bill to aid only in acquisition of materials. The Con-gressmen seemed particularly allergic to assistance for increasing salaries or hiring additional personnel, but almost every-body seemed to be for books. Also it was thought best to make it an amendment to an existing bill rather than to at-tempt to run the whole gamut with a separate bill. Consequently the draft which is appended was offered as an amendment to the National Defense Edu-cation Act, which was up for extension and appeared to offer the best possibility for approval.

The difficulties at first were consider-able—the American Council on Educa-tion refused to endorse it, saying they could not "fragmentize" their program by supporting legislation for "part" of an institution; the Office of Education could take no stand until a new com-missioner was appointed and the wishes of the Administration were known; and it was not in the program or budget sub-mitted by the outgoing Administration. Nevertheless, it came surprisingly close to succeeding. It was approved first by the Senate Subcommittee on Education and later by the full Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, and re-

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ported to the Senate for action. It would almost surely have passed the Senate if it had come to a vote; such vote was de-layed pending House action. The House Committee on Education and Labor, after lengthy hearings on the bill and various proposed amendments, trans-mitted it to the House Rules Committee without recommendation on most of the amendments, including this one, but with the general understanding that in the Conference Committee the amend-ments approved by the Senate would be accepted by the House. As is now well known, the Rules Committee refused to report the bill for House action and, in a compromise in the closing days of the session, the present Act stripped of all amendments was renewed for two years. The failure of the Rules Committee to report had nothing to do with our amend-ment—it simply went down in the fierce battling over other issues.

The progress made, which almost re-sulted in passage, surprised many around Washington and even the ones actively working for it. It usually requires a few years to build up sufficient interest and backing to achieve success—witness the decade of work on the Library Service Act. The credit for this progress was due primarily to the prestige of the Ameri-can Library Association on the "Hill" and to the tremendous personal popu-larity of Germaine Krettek, director of the Washington Office, with key mem-bers of both houses of Congress. Without this, we could never have gotten off the ground.

Text of the Amendment is appended. It will be noted that it provides for matching grants, that aid is available to all libraries regardless of size, and in both public and private institutions, that a floor is provided (Section 1022) for small libraries so that reasonable grants can be made regardless of past expenditures, and that some help is provided in Sec-tion 1022-2-iii which may be used for additional personnel to process added

acquisitions. We wish the program could have been larger but it appeared to be the best which could be had under the circumstances. ACRL and the ALA Com-mittee on Legislation are now consider-ing what should be attempted in 1962 and it does appear likely, in the light of the 1961 experience and the generally favorable attitude in Congress toward our program, that some legislation of this kind will be enacted within the next few years.

L I B R A R Y A M E N D M E N T T O N D E A

S.2345 (Report No. 652) a bill to ex-tend and improve the National Defense Education Act of 1958 was favorably re-ported by the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare on July 31, 1961. Included in the bill is a new Title X, which reads, in part, as follows:

T I T L E X — S T R E N G T H E N I N G S C H O O L L I B R A R Y

R E S O U R C E S N E E D E D F O R T E A C H I N G AND

L E A R N I N G

Part C—Library Grants to Institutions of Higher Education

A P P R O P R I A T I O N S A U T H O R I Z E D

Sec. 1021. There are hereby authorized to be appropriated $10,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 50, 1962, and for each of the three succeeding fiscal years, to enable the Commissioner to make grants to insti-tutions of higher education to assist and en-courage such institutions in the acquisition for library purposes of books (not including textbooks), periodicals, documents, and other related materials (including necessary bind-ing)-

G R A N T C O N D I T I O N S

Sec. 1022. From the sums appropriated pursuant to section 1021 for any fiscal year, the Commissioner may, upon application therefor, make a grant for the purposes set forth in such section to any institution of higher education—

(1) in an amount not exceeding 25 per centum of the amount expended by such institution during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1961, for books, periodicals, docu-ments, and other related materials (includ-

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ing necessary binding) for library purposes, or not less than—

(A) $1,000 if it provides a two-year educational program which is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor's de-gree;

(B) $2,500 if it provides an educa-tional program for which it awards a bachelor's degree or a more advanced degree; or

(C) $5,000 if it provides an educa-tional program for which it awards both bachelors' and advanced degrees; and (2) if such institution furnishes proof

satisfactory to the Commissioner— (i) that it will expend, during the

fiscal year for which the grant is re-quested, for all library purposes an amount not less than the amount it ex-pended for such purposes during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1961,

(ii) that it will expend, during the fiscal year for which the grant is re-quested, for library purposes for books, periodicals, documents, and other re-lated materials (including necessary bind-ing) an amount not less than the amount it expended for such materials during

the fiscal year ending June 30, 1961, and (iii) that it will expend for library

purposes during the fiscal year for which the grant is requested, in addition to the amount required under clauses (i) and (ii) above, an amount not less than the amount of such grant, and that at least 50 per centum of such expenditure will be for library purposes for books, peri-odicals, documents, and other related materials (including necessary binding).

L I M I T A T I O N

Sec. 1023. No grant shall be made under this part for books, periodicals, documents, or other related materials to be used primar-ily in connection with any part of the pro-gram of a divinity school, theological semi-nary, or other institution, or a department or branch of an institution, whose program is for the education of students to prepare them to become ministers of religion or to enter upon some other religious vocation.

No vote was taken on the bill before adjournment, but action is possible in the 2nd Session (1962).

Workshop on Library Binding The R T S D Bookbinding Committee

has planned a preconference Workshop on Library Binding to be held at Miami on Saturday, June 16. Three sessions are arranged as follows:

9:30 A.M.-11:30 A.M. "Development of Performance Standards for Library Binding," speakers—Frazer Poole, ALA Library Technology Project; William J . Barrow, W. J . Barrow Re-search Laboratory; Jean Karl, ALA-Children's Book Council Joint Com-mittee on Binding.

2:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M. A panel discussion on mending, repair and pamphlet binding, with demonstrations of the latest methods and materials.

8:00 P.M.-9:30 P.M. "The Library Bind-ing Situation Today": From a Com-

mercial Binder's Viewpoint—Mrs. C. W. Gross, Joseph Ruzicka, Inc.; From a Librarian's Viewpoint—Jer-rold Orne, University of North Caro-lina; From the Viewpoint of a Li-brary Operating its Own Bindery— Kenneth Allen, University of Wash-ington

There will be exhibits by binders and library suppliers. Advance registration is strongly urged because only 200 partici-pants can be accommodated. The regis-tration fee is $2.00. Send your check to Lilly Carter, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

A separate publication, containing the papers presented at the workshop will be edited by Frazer Poole and be sent free of charge to the registrants.

114 C O L L E G E A N D R E S E A R C H L I B R A R I E S

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One Thousand 1961 Books For the Undergraduate College Library

By R O B E R T C. JONES

TH I S L I S T of books for 1961 follows similar lists compiled for 1958 and

1959 by Robert T . Jordan, and the list I did for 1960. It does not include re-vised editions (except extensive revisions), annuals, or volumes within a set; paper-backs as such are not included, nor is fic-tion. A separate list of revisions, series, etc., would be useful, as much to get the old volumes off the shelves as to get the new ones on. The books are general in nature and no particular subject area is stressed; this is the responsibility of each college, and depends upon curriculum, faculty, student and community needs.

It is interesting to note that there were proportionately more desirable books in the area of the social sciences, a welcome change from the undue em-phasis on science in the past two years. 1961 was a year for revisions and addi-tional volumes, and, in leaving them out, it was difficult to select 1000 books which were considered desirable for the under-graduate college library; it would be re-grettable if everyone agreed that all those I have selected are worth while.

Many welcome changes are forthcom-ing in central book processing, automa-tion for quicker delivery from publish-ers and dealers, books with LC cards included, and better reviewing services. It is hoped that the 'new Shaw' project will be underway by next year and that it will provide more frequent and com-prehensive listings of both basic and current books. Librarians should take advantage of every service which will

Dr. Jones is Director of Library Services at American River Junior College, Sacra-mento, California.

• eliminate routines and allow more time to get people and books together.

000 G E N E R A L W O R K S

P I E R C E , J O H N . Symbols, signals, and noise: the nature and process of communication. New York, Harper. 006/61-10215/6.50

T A U B E , M O R T I M E R . Computers and common sense. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 006/ 61-17079/3.75

G E R S T E N B E R G E R , D O N N A L . T h e American novel, twentieth-century criticism. Denver, Alan Swallow. 016.813/61-9356/4.75

A M E R I C A N H I S T O R I C A L ASSOCIATION. Guide to historical literature. New York, Macmillan. 016.9/61-7602/16.50

W H I T E , C A R L M. T h e origins of the Ameri-can Library School. New York, Scarecrow Pr. 020.711/61-8717/5.00

R U T G E R S U N I V . G R A D U A T E SCHOOL OF L I B R A R Y

SERVICE. Studies in library administrative problems. New Brunswick, N.J . , Rutgers Univ. Pr. 025.082/60-7275/5.00

U . S . N A T I O N A L H I S T O R I C A L PUBLICATIONS

C O M M I S S I O N . A guide to archives and man-uscripts in the U.S. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 025.171/61-6878/12.50

T A U B E R , M A U R I C E F . Classification systems. New Brunswick, N.J. , Graduate School of Library Service, Rutgers. 025.4/60-16773/ 8.00

KIRKWOOD, L E I L A H . Charging systems. New Brunswick, N.J . , Graduate School of Li-brary Service, Rutgers. 025.6/60-16771/ 8.00

M A R S H A L L , J O H N D . An American library his-

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tory reader. Hamden, Conn., Shoe String Pr. 027.073/61-15684/9.00

L Y L E , G U Y R . T h e administration of the col-lege library. 3d ed. New York, H. W . Wil-son. 027.7/61-11121/7.00

B A U E R , H A R R Y C. Seasoned to taste. Seattle, Univ. of Washington Pr. 028.081/61-15462/ 4.75

C A P E S , M A R Y . Communication or conflict; conferences. New York, Association Pr. 060/60-12717/4.00

C A M P B E L L , L A U R E N C E R . How to report and write the news. Englewood Cliffs, N.J . , Prentice-Hall. 070.43"l/61-6604/10.60

SULLIVAN, H A R O L D W . Tr ia l by newspaper. Hyannis, Mass., Patriot Pr. 070.431/61-1524/5.00

SHEDD, F R E D E R I C K R . Political content of labor union periodicals. Ann Arbor, Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. 070.44/60-64375/ 3.50

B Y E R L Y , K E N N E T H R . Community journalism. Philadelphia, Chilton. 070.48/61-7188/6.50

W E I S B E R G E R , B E R N A R D A., T h e American newspaperman. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 071.3/61-8647/4.50

H U T T , A L L E N . Newspaper design. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 072/60-52188/8.00

T A G O R E , S I R R A B I N D R A N A T H . Towards univer-sal man. New York, Taplinger (dist.). 081/61-2916/6.00

100 P H I L O S O P H Y & P S Y C H O L O G Y

M O R R I S , H E R B E R T , , ed. Freedom and respon-sibility. Stanford, Calif., Stanford Univ. Pr. 108.2/61-8469/11.50

B O A S , G E O R G E . T h e limits of reason. New York, Harper. 111/61-5255/3.75

KINGSTON, F R E D E R I C K T . French existential-ism; a Christian critique. Toronto, Univ. of Toronto Pr. 111.1/61-925/3.75

S H E R B U R N E , D O N A L D W. A Whiteheadian aesthetic. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 111.85/61-7081/5.00

ARMSTRONG, D A V I D M . Perception and the physical world. New York, Humanities Pr. 121/61-19955/5.00

H O R O W I T Z , IRVING L . Philosophy, science, and the sociology of knowledge. Springfield, 111., Charles C. Thomas. 121/60-15850/ 7.75

R E I D , L O U I S A . Ways of knowledge and ex-perience. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 121/61-3330/6.40

H A L L , E V E R E T T W . Our knowledge of fact

and value. Chapel Hill, N.C., Univ. of North Carolina Pr. 121.8/60-16130/5.00

B R I N T O N , C L A R E N C E C., ed. T h e fate of man. New York, Braziller. 128.3/61-8477/7.50

H O U N T R A S , P E T E R T., ed. Mental hygiene. Columbus, Ohio, Merrill. 131.308/61-9211/ 8.00

R O G E R S , C A R L R . On becoming a person; a therapist's view of psychotherapy. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 131.322/61-4718/4.75

SNYDER, W I L L I A M U. T h e psychotherapy re-lationship. New York, Macmillan. 131.322/ 61-5231/7.50

W A T T S , A L A N W . Psychotherapy, east and west. New York, Pantheon. 131.322/61-10029/4.50

SCHEIN, EDGAR H. Coercive persuasion. New-York, Norton. 131.333/61-7483/6.75

L A I R D , D O N A L D A. T ired feelings and how to master them. New York, McGraw-Hill. 131.336/60-16917/4.50

F R E U D , SIGMUND. T h e e g o a n d t h e i d . N e w

York, Norton. 131.341/61-5935/3.75 LORAND, SANDOR. Adolescents; psychoanalytic

approach to problems and therapy. New York, Hoeber. 131.342/61-6722/8.50

STORR, A N T H O N Y . T h e integrity of the per-sonality. New York, Atheneum. 131.342/ 61-6376/4.00

E Y S E N C K , H A N S J . Handbook of abnormal psychology, an experimental approach. New York, Basic Books. 132/61-7077/18.00

SZASZ, T H O M A S S . T h e myth of mental ill-ness. New York, Harper, Hoeber (dist.). 132.1/61-9714/7.50

C A T T E L , R A Y M O N D B. T h e meaning and measurement of neuroticism and anxiety. New York, Ronald Pr. 132.15/61-6147/ 12.00

S H U L M A N , IRVING. T h e roots of fury. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 132.6/61-5981/4.95

W A I T E , A R T H U R E. T h e book of ceremonial magic. New Hyde Park, N.Y., Univ. Books 133/61-9320/10.00

T Y R R E L L , G E O R G E . Science and psychical phe-nomena: Apparitions. New York, Univ. Books. 133.07/61-8701/7.50

N O T R E D A M E , M I C H E L DE. Nostradamus: life and literature. New York, Exposition Pr. 133.3/61-15635/10.00

BOUISSON, M A U R I C E . Magic. New York, Dut-ton. 133.409/60-12111/5.00

H E Y W O O D , R O S A L I N D , Beyond the reach of sense. New York, Dutton. 133.81/61-9472/ 3.95

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B E R G , J A N . T h e changing nature of man. New York, Norton. 136/61-5623/4.50

V I N C E N T , E L I Z A B E T H . Human psychological development. New York, Ronald Pr. 136/ 61-8416/6.50

Hsu, FRANCIS L. K., ed. Psychological anthro-pology. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. 136.45/ 61-15062/10.60

SYMONDS, P E R C I V A L M . From adolescent to adult. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 136.52/61-5468/8.75

M C C A N D L E S S , B O Y D R . Children and adoles-cents; behavior and development. New York, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 136.7/ 61-9360/6.50

P E C K , R O B E R T F., T h e psychology of charac-ter development. New York, Wiley. 136.73/60-14715/6.50

A N D R Y , R O B E R T G. Delinquency and parental pathology. Springfield, 111., Charles C. Thomas. 136.762/60-52251/5.50

B E N N E T T , I V Y . Delinquent and neurotic chil-dren. New York, Basic Books. 136.763/60-15815/10.00

A L L P O R T , GORDON W. Pattern and growth in personality. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 137/61-15283/7.50

R A B I N , A L B E R T I., ed. Projective techniques with children. New York, Grune and Strat-ton. 137.84/60-7253/11.75

S H E R M A N , M U R R A Y H. A Rorschach reader. New York, International Univ. Pr. 137.842/

60-15823/7.50 M I L M E D , B E L L A K. Kant and current philo-

sophical issues. New York, New York Univ. Pr. 142.3/61-8058/5.00

M O O R E , EDWARD C . American pragmatism. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 144.3/61-5244/5.00

P O P K I N , R I C H A R D H. T h e history of scepti-cism from Erasmus to Descartes. New York, Humanities Pr. 149.73/61-4644/6.00

C A L V I N , A L L E N D., ed. Psychology. Boston, Allyn and Bacon. 150/61-12395/7.95

R U S S E L L , C L A I R E . Human behaviour, a new approach. Boston, Little, Brown. 150/61-12812/6.50

B I D E R M A N , A L B E R T D . T h e manipulation of human behavior. New York, Wiley. 150.1/ 61-5669/7.95

A R B U C K L E , DUGALD S . Counseling. Boston, Allyn and Bacon. 150.13/61-12064/6.00

D U V A L L , SYLVANUE M . T h e art and skill of getting along with people. New York, Prentice-Hall. 150.13/61-13946/4.95

M O O R E , R O B E R T E. T h e human side of suc-cessful communication. Englewood Cliffs, N.J . , Prentice-Hall. 150.13/11-13530/4.95

PIGORS, P A U L J O H N . Case method in human relations. New York, McGraw-Hill. 150.13/ 60-15761/8.75

F I S K E , D O N A L D W. Functions of varied ex-perience. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. 150.82/61-17207/10.60

SOVIET PSYCHOLOGY; a symposium. New York, Philosophical Library. 150.947/61-12625/3.75

J E N K I N S , J A M E S J . , ed. Studies in individual differences. New York, Appleton. 151/61-9248/8.50

B R A I N , S I R W A L T E R . Some reflections on gen-ius, and other essays. Philadelphia, Lippin-cott. 151.1/61-1552/6.00

SOLOMON, H E R B E R T , ed. Studies in item anal-ysis and prediction. Stanford, Calif., Stan-ford Univ. Pr. 151.26/60-15885/8.75

H A M L Y N , D. W . Sensation and perception. New York, Humanities Pr. 152/61-3850/ 5.00

R E I S S , S A M U E L . T h e basis of scientific think-ing. New York, Philosophical Library. 153/ 61-10612/4.75

H A R V E Y , O. J . Conceptual systems and per-sonality organization. New York, Wiley. 153.1/61-15400/7.50

M E R E D I T H , P A T R I C K . Learning, remembering and knowing. New York, Association Pr. 154.4/61-14176/3.50

S M I T H , H E N R Y P . Psychology in teaching reading. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. , Prentice-Hall. 154.4/61-8230/10.00

FURLONG, E. J . Imagination. New York, Mac-millan. 155/61-6512/3.25

T A Y L O R , J A C K W I L S O N . H O W to create new ideas. Englewood Cliffs, N.J . , Prentice-Hall. 155.3/61-12003/5.65

HONKAVAAKA, S Y L V I . T h e psychology of ex-pression. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. 158.8/61-1493/4.50

L U R I L A , ALEKSANDR R . T h e role of speech in the regulation of normal and abnormal behaviour. New York, Pergamon Pr. 158.8/ 60-9965/8.50

C O L E M A N , J A M E S C. Personality dynamics and effective behavior. Chicago, Scott, Foresman. 159/60-5331/5.50

LAZARUS, R I C H A R D S. Adjustment and per-sonality. New York, McGraw-Hill. 159.3/ 60-14614/6.95

B R O W N , JUDSON S. T h e motivation of be-

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havior. New York, McGraw-Hill. 159.4/ 60-14612/7.50

H A L L , J O H N F. Psychology of motivation. Philadelphia, Lippincott. 159.4/60-10947/ 6.50

T O M A N , W A L T E R . An introduction to psy-choanalytic theory of motivation. New York, Pergamon Pr. 159.4/60-14191/9.00

YOUNG, P A U L T . Motivation and emotions. New York, Wiley. 159.4/61-11495/10.75

D O P P , JOSEPH. Formal logic. New York, Jos. F. Wagner. 160/61-3109/5.00

S I M M O N S , EDWARD D. T h e scientific art of logic. Milwaukee, Wis., Bruce. 160/61-12989/4.80

B O C H E N S K I , INNOCENTIUS M. A history of formal logic. Notre Dame, Ind., Univ. of Notre Dame Pr. 160.9/58-14183/20.00

D A Y , JOHN P. Inductive probability. New York, Humanities Pr. 161/61-3851/8.00

K Y B U R G , H E N R Y E L Y , J R . Probability and the logic of rational belief. Middletown, Conn., Wesleyan Univ. Pr. 164/61-11615/10.00

BLANSHARD, BRAND. Reason and goodness. New York, Macmillan. 170/61-3548/7.75

M O R R I S , B E R T R A M . Philosophical aspects of culture. Yellow Springs, Ohio, Antioch Pr. 170/60-15086/7.00

SINGER, M A R C U S G. Generalization in ethics. New York, Knopf. 170/61-10824/6.00

D E W E Y , R O B E R T E . Problems of ethics; a book of readings. New York, Macmillan. 170.82/61-5086/6.00

C L A R K E , J O H N R . T h e importance of being imperfect. New York, McKay. 171.3/61-6982/3.50

K A U F M A N N , W A L T E R A., ed. Philosophic clas-sics. 2 v. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. , Prentice-Hall. 180.82/61-6609/18.50

G O K H A L E , B A L K R I S H N A G . Indian thought through the ages. New York, Asia Pub. 181.4/61-4646/5.50

P A T A N J A L I . Yoga; union with the ultimate. New York, Ungar. 181.45/60-53365/8.50

B E T T O N I , E F R E M . Duns Scotus; the basic principles of his philosophy. Washington, D. C., Catholic Univ. of America Pr. 189.4/ 61-3767/4.75

CASSIRER, E R N S T . Rousseau, Kant, Goethe. Hamden, Conn., Archon. 190/61-4985/3.00

K R O N E R , R I C H A R D . Speculation and revela-tion in modern philosophy. Philadelphia, Westminster Pr. 190/61-5222/6.50

ARMSTRONG, D A V I D M. Berkeley's theory of

vision. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. 192/61-34415/4.50

R U S S E L L , BERTRAND. Basic writings. New York, Simon and Schuster. 192/61-3396/10.00

CASSIRER, E R N S T . T h e logic of the humani-ties. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 193/61-6311/4.50

R I G N E Y , FRANCIS J . T h e real Bohemia; a so-ciological and psychological study of the "Beats." New York, Basic Books. 197.946/ 61-7487/5.00

200 R E L I G I O N

S C H E L E R , M A X F. On the eternal in man. New York, Harper. 201/61-7349/10.00

W O L F S O N , H A R R Y A. Religious philosophy. Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Pr. of Har-vard Univ. Pr. 201/61-16696/6.00

B U R K E , K E N N E T H . T h e rhetoric of religion; studies in logology. Boston, Beacon Pr. 201.4/61-7249/6.95

BENSON, P U R N E L L H. Religion in contempo-rary culture. New York, Harper. 208.1/60-7021/8.00

B A C H , M A R C U S . Strange sects and curious cults. New York, Dodd, Mead. 209/61-7167/4.50

COULSON, C H A R L E S A. Science, technology, and the Christian. Nashville, Tenn. , Ab-ingdon Pr. 215/61-826/2.50

B I B L E . ENGLISH. T h e New English Bible. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 220.52/61-16025/4.95

C R O W N F I E L D , F R E D E R I C C . A historical ap-proach to the New Testament. New York, Harper. 225.6/60-15344/5.50

C O N N O L L Y , J A M E S M. T h e voices of France; a survey of contemporary theology in France. New York, Macmillan. 230.2/61-6686/5.50

W A L G R A V E , J . H. Newman the theologian. New York, Sheed and Ward. 230.2/60-16895/8.50

T U R N E R , D E A N . Lonely God, lonely man. New York, Philosophical Library. 248.4/ 60-13663/3.75

C U R T I S , D O N A L D . Your thoughts can change your life. Englewood Cliffs, N.J . , Prentice-Hall. 248.489/61-13994/4.95

ODEGARD, P E T E R H. Religion and politics. New York, Oceana. 261.7/60-10209/5.00

B E R G E R , P E T E R L. T h e precarious vision. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 261.8/61-12493/3.95

C A M E R O N , R I C H A R D M. Methodism and so-

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ciety in historical perspective. Nashville, Tenn. , Abingdon Pr. 261.8/61-8407/5.00

L E A , H E N R Y C. T h e Inquisition of the Mid-dle Ages. New York, Macmillan. 272.6/61-10024/10.00

B U R L E I G H , J O H N H . S. A church history of Scotland. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 274.1/60-50629/6.75

B R O W N , R O B E R T M. T h e spirit of Protestant-ism. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 284/61-8367/4.50

D U N N , D A V I D . A history of the Evangelical and Reformed Church. Philadelphia, Christian Education Pr. 285.7/61-6039/ 5.95

W I L S O N , B R Y A N R . Sects and society. Berke-ley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 289/61-65000/5.75

J A M E S , E D W I N O . Prehistoric religion; a study in prehistoric archaeology. New York, Barnes and Noble. 290/61-3103/6.50

K R A E M E R , H E N D R I K . World cultures and world religions. Philadelphia, Westminster Pr. 290/60-12261/6.50

E L I A D E , M I R C E A . Myths, dreams, and mys-teries. New York, Harper. 291.13/60-15616/ 5.00

J A M E S , E D W I N O. T h e cult of the mother-goddess; an archaeological and documen-tary study. New York, Barnes and Noble. 291.211/61-3056/6.00

E L I A D E , M I R C A E . Images and symbols; studies in religious symbolism. New York, Sheed and Ward. 291.37/61-7290/3.50

M U K E R J E E , R A D H A K A M A L . T h e symbolic life of man. New York, W. S. Heinman. 291.37/ 60-52160/8.00

FONTENROSE, J O S E P H E . T h e cult and myth of Pyrros at Delphi. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 292.213/61-62773/2.50

B E C K E R , E R N E S T . Zen; a rational critique. New York, Norton. 294.32/61-7474/4.00

Ross, N A N C Y W. T h e world of Zen. New York, Random House. 294.329/60-12155/ 10.00

B I N D E R , LEONARD. Religion and politics in Pakistan. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali-fornia Pr. 297.095/61-7537/7.50

F O R R E S T , E A R L E R . T h e snake dance of the Hopi Indians. Los Angeles, Westernlore Pr. 299.7/61-15835/5.75

K E E L E R , C L Y D E E . Apples of immortality from the Cuna tree of life. New York, Ex-position Pr. 299.8/61-16072/3.50

300 SOCIAL S T U D I E S

M O R E N O , J A C O B L . T h e sociometry reader. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 300.18/ 59-12185/9.50

O R C U T T , G U Y H. Microanalysis of socio-economic systems. New York, Harper. 300.18/61-6279/8.00

B R A M S O N , L E O N . T h e political context of sociology. Princeton, N.J . , Princeton Univ. Pr. 301/61-7407/4.00

C H I N O Y , E L Y . Society; an introduction to so-ciology. New York, Random House. 301/ 61-9671/6.50

L I P S E T , S E Y M O U R , ed. Sociology. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. , Prentice-Hall. 301.082/61-14742/7.50'

PARSONS, T A L C O T T , ed. Theories of society. 2v. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 301.082 /61-9171/25.00

H O M A N S , G E O R G E C. Social behavior; its ele-mentary forms. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World. 301.15/60-14855/7.50

T A N N E N B A U M , R O B E R T . Leadership and or-ganization. New York, McGraw-Hill. 301.15 /60-14804/7.50

L A N T I S , M A R G A R E T . Eskimo childhood and interpersonal relationship. Seattle, Univ. of Washington Pr. 301.150/60-16656/4.75

M O N T G O M E R Y , BERNARD. T h e path to leader-ship. New York, Putnam. 301.155/61-9230/ 4.50

M E R T O N , R O B E R T K. Contemporary social problems. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World. 301.246/61-12038/6.95

W A G N E R , P H I L I P L. T h e human use of the earth. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 301.3/60-7092/6.00

T H E O D O R S O N , G E O R G E A., ed. Studies in hu-man ecology, Evanston, 111., Row, Peter-son. 301.3082/61-2934/8.50

P E T E R S E N , W I L L I A M . Population. New York, Macmillan. 301.32/61-6163/7.95

SAUVY, A L F R E D . Fertility and survival. New York, Criterion. 301.32/61-7192/7.50

W E S T O F F , C H A R L E S F. Family growth in met-ropolitan America. Princeton, N.J . , Prince-ton Univ. Pr. 301.32/61-7403/10.00

Z I M M E R M A N , A N T H O N Y F. Catholic viewpoint on overpopulation. Garden City, N.Y., Hanover House. 301.32/61-12609/3.50

C A M P , W E S L E Y D. Marriage and the family in France since the Revolution. New York, Bookman Associates. 301.329/61-8606/7.50

M U M F O R D , L E W I S . T h e city in history. New

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York, Harcourt, Brace 8c World. 301.36/ 61-7689/11.50

BARNES, R U T H . Pleasure was my business. New York, Lyle Stuart. 301.424/60-6348/ 4.95

E L L I S , A L B E R T . T h e encyclopedia of sexual behavior. 2v. New York, Hawthorne. 301.424/61-6710/30.00

I N S T I T U T FRANCAIS D'OPINION P U B L I Q U E . P a t -

terns of sex and love. New York, Crown. 301.424/61-8947/4.00

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LIFE. T h e epic of man. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. , Prentice-Hall. 901.91/61-17388/13.50

PIGGOTT, S T U A R T , ed. T h e dawn of civiliza-tion. New York, McGraw-Hill. 901.91/61-11703/28.50

H E L T O N , T I N S L E Y , ed. T h e Renaissance; a reconsideration of the theories and inter-pretations of the age. Madison, Wis., Univ. of Wisconsin Pr. 901.93/61-5903/4.00

D U Q U E S N E U N I V . A L U M N I ASSN. Modern myths and popular fancies. Pittsburgh, Du-quesne Univ. Pr. 901.94/60-53384/2.95

STARR, C H E S T E R G. and others. History of the world. 2v. Chicago, Rand McNally. 909/ 60-5001/15.00

B L O O M , SOLOMON F. Europe and America. New York, Harper. 909.7/61-8982/10.72

D E A N , V E R A M . Builders of emerging nations. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 909.82/61-8086/5.00

J A S P E R S , K A R L . T h e future of mankind. Chi-cago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 909.82/60-7237/ 5.95

N E W S W E E K . T h e five worlds of our lives. New York, Hammond. 909.82/60-13943/ 12.95

O ' C O N O R , J O H N F . Cold war and liberation. New York, Vantage Pr. 909.82/60-53337/ 7.50

L A R O U S S E encyclopedia of geography. New York, Prometheus Pr. 910/61-14332/17.50

V A N A L S T Y N E , R I C H A R D W . T h e rising Amer-ican empire. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 911.73/60-52215/6.00

LIFE. Pictorial atlas of the world. New York, Time, Inc. 912/61-7/30.00

CHARLES-PICARD, G I L B E R T . Daily life in Car-thage at the time of Hannibal. New York, Macmillan. 913.397/61-8264/4.00

M O N G A I T , ALEKSANDRE. Archaeology in the U.S.S.R. New York, W. S. Heinman. 913.47 /60-37241/10.00

Classics in Western civilization. New York, Philosophical Library. 914/61-683/6.00

GRIGSON, G E O F F R E Y . English excursions. Hollywood-by-the-Sea, Fla., Transatlantic Arts. 914.2/61-3595/7.50

T I M E S , LONDON. L I T E R A R Y S U P P L E M E N T . T h e

British imagination. New York, Atheneum. 914.2/61-12783/4.50

SUSINI , E U G E N E . Austria. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 914.36/61-65166/12.50

T A N N E N B A U M , EDWARD R . T h e new France. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 914.4/61-8076/5.00

F R I S O N - R O C H E , R O G E R . Mont Blanc and the seven valleys. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 914.449/61-4042/9.50

B E M E L M A N S , L U D W I G . Italian holiday. Bos-ton, Houghton Mifflin. 914.5/61-6675/5.00

H U R L I M A N N , M A R T I N . Florence. New York, Viking. 914.551/61-12697/6.95

L U C A S - D U B R E T O N , J E A N . Daily life in Flor-ence in the time of the Medici. New York, Macmillan. 914.551/61 -8190/4.50

K E L L E R , H A R A L D . Umbria, the heart of Italy. New York, Viking. 914.565/61-10423/12.50

N E T T I S , J O S E P H . A Spanish summer. New York, Ziff-Davis. 914.6/60-10525/12.50

B L I N O F F , M A R T H E , ed. Life and thought in old Russia. Philadelphia, Univ. of Penn-sylvania Pr. 914.7/61-11415/5.95

CHERNIAVSKY, M I C H A E L . Tsar and people; studies in Russian myths. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 914.7/61-14431/6.00

I N K E L E S , A L E X . Soviet society. Boston, Hough-ton Mifflin. 914.7/61-4573/7.50

M C G R A W - H I L L . Encyclopedia of Russia and the Soviet Union. New York, McGraw-Hill. 914.7/61-18169/23.50

H U R L I M A N N , M A R T I N . Journey through the Orient. New York, Viking. 915/60-8515/ 15.00

ESKELUND, K A R L . T h e red mandarins; travels in Red China. New York, Taplinger. 915.1/60-13010/5.50

T O Y N B E E , ARNOLD J . Between Oxus and Jumna. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 915.4/ 61-65118/5.00

C R O W D E R , M I C H A E L . Pagans and politicians. New York, International Pub. 916.6/59-3473/6.25

E H R E N F E L S , O M A R . T h e light continent. New York, Taplinger. 916.76/61-3453/6.95

R E M I N G T O N , F R E D E R I C . Frederic Remington's own West. New York, Dial Pr. 916.8/60-13432/7.50

LIVINGSTONE, D A V I D . Private journals, 1851-1853. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 916.89/61-451/5.00

H U N T E R , G E O R G E . Canada in colour. New York, W. S. Heinman. 917.1/60-1672/4.50

JOHNSON, T H E O D O R E E. Mexico. New York, T ime, Inc. 917.2/61-17802/2.95

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IVRUTCH, J O S E P H W O O D . T h e forgotten pe-ninsula. New York, W. Sloane Associates. 917.22/61-8174/5.00

A M E R I C A N STUDIES ASSN. American perspec-tives. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. 917.3/61-8841/4.75

A M O R Y , CLEVELAND. Who killed society? New York, Harper. 917.3/60-15314/6.50

H A N D L I N , O S C A R . American principles and issues. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 917.3/61-10827/6.00

H O L I D A Y . American panorama, east of the Mississippi. Garden City, N.Y., Double-day. 917.3/61-5877/5.00

M E L B O , IRVING R . Our country's national parks. 2v. Indianapolis, Ind., Bobbs-Mer-rill. 917.3/61-1676/8.00

P E Y R E , H E N R I M. Observations. Carbondale, 111., Southern Illinois Univ. Pr. 917.3/61-8218/5.00

Alaska book. Chicago, J . G. Ferguson. 917.98/60-4299/12.95

S I T W E L L , SACHEVERELL. Golden wall and mir-ador; travels and observations in Peru. Cleveland, World Pub. 918.5/61-12015/ 7.50

B U R D I C K , E U G E N E . T h e blue of Capricorn. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 919/61-14728/ 4.95

Hawaii book. Chicago, J . G. Ferguson. 919.69/61-1785/9.95

T O D D , A L D E N L . Abandoned: the story of the Greely Arctic expedition, 1881-1884. New York, McGraw-Hill. 919.8/60-15689/ 5.95

N O V E C K , S I M O N , ed. Great Jewish personali-ties in modern times. New York, B'nai B'rith, Taplinger (dist.). 920.056/60-16480/ 4.95

SWANBERG, W. A. Citizen Hearst. New York, Scribners. 920.5/61-7220/7.50

A S Q U I T H , L A D Y C Y N T H I A . Married to Tolstoy. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 920.7/61-7607/ 5.00

R A D I N , EDWARD D . Lizzie Borden; the untold story. New York, Simon and Schuster. 920.7/61-9597/4.50

SCHWEITZER, A L B E R T . Pilgrimage to human-ity. New York, Philosophic Library. 922.443/61-15250/3.75

G R E E N , V I V I A N H . T h e young Mr. Wesley; a study of John Wesley and Oxford. New York, St. Martin's. 992.742/61-10197/8.00

W A L L A C E , IRVING. T h e twenty-seventh wife.

New York, Simon and Schuster. 922.8373/ 61-9599/5.95

ACHESON, D E A N . Sketches from life of men I have known. New York, Harper. 923.2/ 61-9701/4.00

K R U G , M A R K M . Aneurin Bevan, cautious rebel. New York, Yoseloff. 923.242/61-6923/5.00

L L O Y D G E O R G E , R I C H A R D L . My father, Lloyd George. New York, Crown. 923.242/61-10305/4.00

K E L L E N , KONRAD. Khrushchev. New York, Praeger. 923.247/61-10511/5.00

P H I L L I P S , J O H N . Kwame Nkrumah and the future of Africa. New York, Praeger. 923.266/61-5235/5.50

S E I D L E R , M U R R A Y B. Norman Thomas; re-spectable rebel. Syracuse, N.Y., Syracuse Univ. Pr. 923.273/61-13115/5.50

T H O M S O N , D A L E C. Alexander Mackenzie. New York, Macmillan. 923.271/61-291/8.00

EVENING STAR, W A S H I N G T O N , D . C . T h e n e w

frontiersmen; profiles of the men around Kennedy. Washington, D.C., Public Af-fairs Pr. 923.273/61-11685/4.50

L I E B L I N G , A B B O T T J O S E P H . T h e Earl of Lou-isiana. New York, Simon and Schuster. 923.273/61-7017/3.95

R E E S , G O R O N W Y . T h e multimillionaires; six studies in wealth. New York, Macmillan. 923.3/61-8757/3.50

W A L L S T R E E T J O U R N A L . T h e new millionaires and how they made their fortunes. New York, Random House. 923.373/61-10742/ 4.95

W E L L M A N , P A U L I. A dynasty of western out-laws. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 923.417/61-6526/4.95

M A N N H E I M , H E R M A N N . Pioneers in criminol-ogy. Chicago, Quadrangle Books. 923.6/60-14892/7.50

V O N FRANKENBERG, R I C H A R D A. Porsche, the man and his cars. Cambridge, Mass., Bent-ley. 926.292/61-16133/7.50

V O N H A G E N , V I C T O R W. T h e ancient sun kingdoms of the Americas: Aztec, Maya, Inca. Cleveland, World Pub. 927.01/60-6695/12.50

F A R R , F I N I S . Frank Lloyd Wright, a biogra-phy. New York, Scribners. 927.2/61-13363/ 5.95

HARDING, B E R T I T A . Concerto, the glowing story of Clara Schumann. Indianapolis, Ind., Bobbs-Merrill. 927.8/61-7896/5.00

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J E L L I N E K , G E O R G E . Callas; portrait of a prima donna. New York, Ziff-Davis. 927.8/60-10526/5.00

S E R O F F , V I C T O R I. Renata Tebaldi. New York, Appleton. 927.8/61-7590/4.00

B I L L Q U I S T , F R I T I O F . Garbo, a biography. New York, Putman. 927.92/60-16682/4.50

M C C A G E , J O H N . Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 927.92/61-7658/4.50

R E I S S , FRANCOISE. Nijinsky. New York, Pit-man. 927.928/61-2326/7.50

J O N E S , R O B E R T T . Golf is my game. Garden City, New York, Doubleday. 927.963/60-13386/4.50

SHORER, M A R K . Sinclair Lewis. New York, McGraw-Hill. 928.1/61-12961 /10.00

W I L L I A M S , E T H E L W . Know your ancestors; a guide to geneological research. Rutland, Vt., Tutt le . 929.107/60-15252/4.50

Q U A I F E , M I L O M . T h e history of the United States flag. New York, Harper. 929.909/61-6428/4.95

L E O N , H A R R Y J . T h e Jews of ancient Rome. Philadelphia, Jewish Pub. Society of Amer-ica. 937/60-9793/5.50

VACANO, O T T O W. T h e Etruscans in the an-cient world. New York, St. Martin's. 937.5/ 60-16881/6.50

H U G H E S , H E N R Y S. Contemporary Europe: a history. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. , Prentice-Hall. 940.5/61-8227/10.00

FERGUSSON, BERNARD. T h e watery maze. New York, H o l t , R i n e h a r t and W i n s t o n . 940.541/61-5301/7.50

B A R N E T T , C O R R E L L I . T h e desert generals. New York, Viking. 940.542/61-7279/6.00

C O L L I E R , R I C H A R D H . T h e sands of Dunkirk. New York, Popular Library. 940.542/61-12472/4.50

V A U G H A N - T H O M A S , W Y N F O R D . Anzio. New York, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 940.5421/61-5210/5.00

W E B S T E R , S I R C H A R L E S . T h e strategic air of-fensive against Germany, 1939-1945. New York, British Information Serv. 940.544/ 61-65443/30.80

EGGERS, R E I N H O L D . Colditz; the German side of the story. New York, Norton. 940.547/ 61-8782/3.95

K O E B N E R , R I C H A R D . Empire. New York, Cam-bridge Univ. Pr. 942/61-65769/8.50

O S B O R N E , J O H N . Britain. New York, Time, Inc. 942.0084/61-11152/2.95

D I L L , M A R S H A L L . Germany, a modern history.

Ann Arbor, Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. 943/60-13891/8.75

M A U R I O S , ANDRE. An illustrated history of France. New York, Viking. 944/60-11172/ 20.00

G O D F R E Y , E D W I N D. T h e government of France. New York, Crowell. 944.082/61-15525/2.95

PERNAU, A L E X I S . T h e French Revolution. New York, Putman. 944.04/60-13673/5.00

L A P O N C E , J . A. T h e government of the Fifth Republic. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali-fornia Pr. 944.082/60-14656/6.50

HORIZON. T h e Horizon book of the Renais-sance. New York, American Heritage, Dou-bleday (dist.). 945.05/61-11489/17.50

P A Y N E , S T A N L E Y G. Falange; a history of Spanish fascism. Stanford, Calif., Stanford Univ. Pr. 946.081/61-12391/6.00

ARMSTRONG, J O H N A . T h e politics of totali-tarianism. New York, Random House. 947.084/61-6242/7.50

CONQUEST, R O B E R T . Power and policy in the U.S.S.R. New York, St. Martin's. 947.084/ 61-15941/7.95

SCHUMAN, FREDERICK L . Government in the Soviet Union. New York, Crowell. 947.084/ 61-15528/2.95

SCHWARTZ, H A R R Y . T h e red phoenix; Russia since World War II. New York, Praeger. 947.084/61-11062/6.00

L E S S N E R , E R W I N C. T h e Danube. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 949.6/61-7657/5.95

H E P P E L L , M U R I E L . Yugoslavia. New York,

Praeger. 949.7/61-6385/5.95 LONDON U N I V . Historical writing on the peo-

ples of Asia. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 950.072/61-4093/8.00

L A B I N , SUZANNE. T h e anthill; the human condition in Communist China. New York, Praeger. 951.05/60-15061/6.75

F U T R E L L , R O B E R T F . T h e United States Air Force in Korea, 1950-1953. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce. 951.9042/61-16831/12.50

G L U B B , S I R J O H N B A G O T . War in the desert. New York, Norton. 953.8/61-123/6.25

S P E A R , T H O M A S G. India, a modern history. Ann Arbor, Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. 954/61-10988/10.00

H I T T I , P H I L I P K. T h e Near East in history. Princeton, N.J. , Van Nostrand. 956/61-1098/10.00

A H M E D , J A M A L M O H A M M E D . T h e intellectual

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origins of Egyptian nationalism. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 9 6 2 / 6 0 - 5 2 1 6 1 / 5 . 0 0

M O O R E H E A D , A L A N . T h e White Nile. New York, Harper. 9 6 2 / 6 1 - 6 1 9 7 / 5 . 9 5

KUP, A. P. A history of Sierra Leone, 1400-1787. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. 9 6 6 . 4 / 6 1 - 1 0 7 5 / 3 . 7 5

R E U S C H , R I C H A R D . History of East Africa. New York, Ungar. 9 6 7 . 6 / 6 1 - 4 0 2 8 / 4 . 5 0

A P T E R , D A V I D E. T h e political kingdom in Uganda. Princeton, N.J . , Princeton Univ. P r . 9 6 7 . 6 1 / 6 1 - 6 2 8 4 / 1 0 . 0 0

SCOTT, S I R R O B E R T . Limuria. New York, Ox-ford Univ. Pr. 9 6 9 / 6 1 - 4 0 4 3 / 5 . 6 0

A M E R I C A N H E R I T A G E eds. American Heritage book of Indians. New York, Simon and Schuster. 9 7 0 . 1 / 6 1 - 1 4 8 7 1 / 1 5 . 0 0

D R I V E R , H A R O L D E. Indians of North Amer-ica. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 9 7 0 . 1 /

6 1 - 5 6 0 4 / 1 0 . 9 5

G R I N N E L L , G E O R G E B. Pawnee, Blackfoot, and Cheyenne; history and folklore of the plains. New York, Scribners. 9 7 0 . 1 / 6 1 -

7 2 1 7 / 4 . 9 5

INTERUNIVERSITY S U M M E R R E S E A R C H S E M I N A R ,

Univ. of New Mexico. Perspectives in American Indian culture change. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 9 7 0 . 1 / 6 0 - 1 4 3 5 8 / 1 0 . 0 0

K R O E B E R , T H E O D O R A . Ishi in two worlds. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 9 7 0 . 3 / 6 1 - 7 5 3 0 / 5 . 9 5

M A T H E W S , J O H N J . T h e Osages. Norman, Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma Pr. 9 7 0 . 3 / 6 1 -

9 0 0 6 / 7 . 9 5

W R I T E R S ' P R O G R A M , Montana. T h e Assini-boines. Norman, Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma P r . 9 7 0 . 3 / 6 1 - 6 5 0 2 / 5 . 0 0

N E W C O M B , W I L L I A M W . T h e Indians of Texas. Austin, Tex . , Univ. of Texas Pr. 9 7 0 . 4 6 4 / 6 0 - 1 4 3 1 2 / 5 . 7 5

C O L T O N , H A R O L D S. Black sand: prehistory in northern Arizona. Albuquerque, N.M., Univ. of New Mexico Pr. 9 7 0 . 4 7 9 / 6 0 -

1 1 6 2 0 / 4 . 0 0

D E N I G , E D W I N T . Five Indian tribes of the upper Missouri. Norman, Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma Pr. 9 7 0 . 4 8 / 6 0 - 9 0 0 5 / 4 . 0 0

H A G A N , W I L L I A M T . American Indians, Chi-cago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 9 7 0 . 5 / 6 1 - 1 5 5 5 /

4 . 5 0

SPRATLING, W I L L I A M . More human than di-vine. New York, W . S . Heinman. 9 7 0 . 6 5 7 /

6 1 - 1 3 6 1 / 9 . 0 0

DOCKSTADER, F R E D E R I C K J . Indian art in

America. Greenwich, Conn., New York Graphic Society. 970.67/60-8921/25.00

R I C H , E D W I N E . Hudson's Bay Company. 3v. New York, Macmillan. 971.011/61-1394/ 35.00

H U B E R M A N , L E O . Cuba; anatomy of a revolu-tion. 2d ed. New York, Monthly Review Pr. 972.910/61-3092/3.50

W I L S O N , E V E R E T T B. Vanishing Americana. New York, A. S. Barnes. 973.084/61-9621/ 7.50

O ' G O R M A N , EDMUNDO. T h e invention of America. Bloomington, Ind., Indiana Univ. Pr. 973.1/61-8084/5.00

M E A D O W S , D E N N I E . Five remarkable English-men. New York, Devin-Adair. 973.2/61-17792/5.00

C A T T O N , B R U C E . T h e centennial history of the Civil War: v.l T h e Coming Fury. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 973.7/61-12502/7.50

H A R W E L L , R I C H A R D B., ed. T h e war they fought. New York, Longmans. 973.78/60-15883/6.95

M I C H E N E R , J A M E S A. Report of the county chairman. New York, Random House. 973.921/61-10872/3.95

W H I T E , T H E O D O R E H. T h e making of the President, 1960. New York, Atheneum. 973.921/61-9259/6.95

T A N Z E R , L E S T E R , ed. T h e Kennedy circle. Washington, D.C., Luce. 973.922/61-14134/ 4.95

LOVELAND, C Y R U S C. California trail herd: the 1850 Missouri-to-California journal. Los Gatos, Calif., Talisman Pr. 978/61-10538/6.00

H O L L O N , W I L L I A M E. T h e Southwest: old and new. New York, Knopf. 979/61-9232/ 7.50

B R O W N E , J O H N R . Illustrated mining adven-tures; California and Nevada. Balboa Is-land, Calif., Paisano Pr. 979.404/61-16103/ 5.50

P O R T E R , C H A R L E S O . T h e struggle for democ-racy in Latin America. New York, Macmil-lan. 980.03/61-5491/4.50

S T E I N , W I L L I A M W . Hualcan: life in the highlands of Peru. Ithaca, New York, Cor-nell Univ. Pr. 980.452/61-11633/6.00

B A U D I N , L O U I S . A socialist empire; the Incas of Peru. Princeton, N.J. , Van Nostrand. 985.01/61-3532/8.00

C A W K E L L , M. B . R . T h e Falkland Islands. New York, St. Martin's. 997.11/61-2440/4.50

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Report on Farmington Plan Program Report to Council on Library Resources on grant received by the Association of Research Libraries for its Farmington Plan Program " I M M E D I A T E L Y PRIOR to receipt, in July J- 1959, of the Council on Library Re-sources' second grant for the support of certain Farmington Plan studies and ac-tivities, there was a complete reorganiza-tion of the FP Committee. As reconsti-tuted, the general committee has respon-sibility for the over-all development and implementation of the Farmington Plan, but delegates the actual field operations for the most part to seven regional sub-committees covering the worlds: Western Europe, Middle East, Far East, South Asia, Slavic and East Europe, Africa, and Latin America. The reorganized commit-tee was able to make more effective use of the council's grant than would other-wise have been possible.

Several specific investigations were in-cluded in the request for the council grant, and these were satisfactorily com-pleted by the terminal date. The studies in at least two instances were preparatory to possible extension of the Farmington Plan into new areas.

The first study to be finished (Jerrold Orne, Report on the CIA Library Acqui-sitions Program, 1959) was a survey of the relationship of the Farmington Plan to the Central Intelligence Agency's pro-curement program. The investigation was made for the committee by Jerrold Orne, Library of the University of North Carolina. On the basis of Dr. Orne's find-ings, it was the consensus that, though the CIA and FP overlap to a certain ex-tent, the scope and purposes of the two agencies are entirely different and both should be continued.

A second investigation was under-taken by Dale Barker, associate director, Georgia Institute of Technology Library,

to determine the degree of completeness with which U.S. libraries are covering current foreign periodicals in the social sciences. The assumption was made that the periodical literature of the world in chemistry, physics, biology, and other major sciences is adequately represented in American libraries, but that holdings are much less complete in the humani-ties and social sciences. Based upon checking the UNESCO World List of Social Science Periodicals, Mr. Barker found that more than 95 per cent of the titles in this field are now known to be available in the United States. (Dale L. Barker, Foreign Social Science Peri-odicals Received in American Libraries, [Urbana, 111., Farmington Plan Commit-tee of Association of Research Libraries, I960].) It was concluded, therefore, that periodical publications should continue to be excluded from Farmington Plan operations, other than for the limited program for new periodicals already functioning.

A third study came to different con-clusions. This was concerned with the holdings of American research libraries in the area of foreign government pub-lications. The survey was done for the committee by Donald Wisdom, assistant head of government publication section, serial division, Library of Congress, with Paul Berry, chief of the serial division, serving as adviser. Optimistically, it was hoped that the findings would be such as to make it unnecessary for the Farm-ington Plan to become involved with government publications, a huge and ex-ceedingly complex field. The survey re-port, however, concluded that "Current holdings of foreign government publica-

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tions in American research libraries are inadequate, and there is a universal de-pendence on the Library of Congress for the comprehensive collecting of foreign government publications." (Donald F. Wisdom, Foreign Government Publica-tions in American Research Libraries; a survey prepared for the Farmington Plan Committee of the Association of Research Libraries, 1961.)

An important question of policy was raised by the Wisdom study. Should the research libraries of the country continue to rely primarily upon the Library of Congress or should an effort be made to bring into the United States at least two copies of all foreign government publica-tions? The latter would mean develop-ment of a national plan of collecting, dividing responsibility among research libraries, as is now being done for Farm-ington Plan materials. Even the Library of Congress holdings in certain areas have serious lacunae. Some of the libraries which have accepted national assign-ments under the Farmington Plan are going beyond monographic publications to collect periodicals, newspapers, and government publications. This points to-ward a possible solution, since the larg-est gaps in holdings of foreign govern-ment publications are for the countries assigned on a national, rather than on a subject basis. The cooperating li-braries, accordingly, have been asked to adopt as standard procedure the collect-ing of government publications for the areas assigned to them.

V I S I T S T O D E A L E R S

Another item included in the Farm-ington Plan budget submitted to the council was a series of visits to prospec-tive Farmington Plan dealers in South America—an area poorly represented in the program to date. These visits were made by the chairman of the commit-tee, Robert B. Downs, in January and February 1960. The countries included were Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay,

Peru, and Uruguay. Contacts were es-tablished with a number of well-quali-fied dealers, some of whom are now being used by Farmington Plan participants. (Robert B. Downs, Survey of Prospective Farmington Plan Dealers for South America, 1960.)

M E E T I N G S O F C O M M I T T E E S

One of the most profitable uses of the council funds was to finance meetings of members of the area subcommittees, or to send representatives of the committees to attend meetings of related associations and groups interested in the procure-ment of foreign publications. Particu-larly active were the Slavic and East Eu-ropean Committee, working with the Joint Committee on Slavic Studies; the African Committee, working with the African Studies Association; and the Latin American Committee, cooperating with the Seminar on Latin American Ac-quisitions. The South Asian Commitee worked closely with the Association for Asian Studies, and the Near Eastern Committee with the Social Science Re-search Council. The area committees were thereby substantially aided in de-veloping plans for the selection, acquisi-tion, and distribution of materials for their respective regions.

D I S S E M I N A T I O N O F I N F O R M A T I O N

T o make the Farmington Plan more widely known and understood, the chief of the Farmington Plan Office, Edwin E. Williams of the Harvard University Li-brary, prepared a descriptive brochure entitled What Is The Farmington Plan? (Edwin E. Williams, What Is the Farm-ington Plan? rev. by the Farmington Plan Committee of the Association of Re-search Libraries, Cambridge, Mass.: Har-vard Univ. Print. Off., 1959.) An edi-tion of 5,000 copies, produced by the Har-vard Printing Office, has been distributed to members of learned societies, univer-sity faculties, publishers, bookdealers, li-

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brarians, and others who should be in-formed of the program.

Dealers and librarians frequently have expressed a need for a revised Farming-ton Plan Handbook. The 1953 edition is out of date in many respects. Edwin Wil-liams, who edited the first edition, has prepared a revision incorporating the changes of the past eight years. (Edwin E. Williams, Farmington Plan Hand-book, rev. to 1961 and abridged, Ithaca, N.Y.: Association of Research Libraries, 1961.) This second edition is now avail-able.

F U T U R E O F F A R M I N G T O N P L A N

Financed in part from council funds, the Farmington Plan Committee and the ARL Advisory Committee held a joint meeting on March 24, 1961, at Colum-bia University. The recent progress and current activities of the general and area committees of the Farmington Plan were reviewed. Growing out of the reports presented by the committees and the en-suing discussion, it was agreed that the

Farmington Plan should be more widely publicized among foundation officials, in influential government circles, among scholarly societies, and similar groups, in order to broaden the base of support from the federal government, the foundations, and the universities. L^o attain maximum effectiveness, it was further agreed, the Farmington Plan should be administered as a division of a national Association of Research Libraries office, with a perma-nent full-time staff, rather than, as at present, carried on by voluntary effort.

Without question, the Farmington Plan program has made extraordinary progress since the first Council on Library Resources grant was received in 1957, and the advances can be credited in large degree to the stimulus of the two grants. Without the solid basis of the surveys, studies, and analyses of the Plan, over a period of several years, followed by ex-tended discussions, the ARL would not be prepared, as it now is, to move for-ward on a broad front with this major experiment in library cooperation.— Robert B. Downs.

Rare Book Conference at Miami Plans for the third Rare Book Confer-

ence are well under way. The date is June 15th and 16th, 1962, the place is the beautiful modern campus of the Uni-versity of Miami at Coral Gables. Most of the meetings will be held at the new library, which is not even completely built as yet, but will be ready for us on June 15th according to Archie McNeal and C. Lewis Morgan, Jr., the Local Ar-rangements Chairman.

Topic of the conference will be Book Illustration. Speakers will be William Bostick (Detroit Institute of Arts), Her-bert Cahoon (Pierpont Morgan Library), Budd Gambee (University of Michigan), Lucien Goldschmidt (New York City), Mrs. Georgia Haugh (William L. Cle-

ments Library), Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt (H. P. Kraus), Harry Shaw New-man (Philadelphia), and Lawrence Thompson (University of Kentucky Li-braries). There will be lectures on Early Woodcuts, Baroque Books, Modern Book Illustration and Design, American and Latin American Book Illustration, Au-thors as Illustrators, The Cartographer's Art, and others.

Fee for the conference, including rooms at the recently completed and newly furnished dormitories, as well as meals for two days, will be approximately $30.00-$35.00. There will be available some rooms for couples. Rooms at nearby University Motel are available, but their cost is in addition to the fee.

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New Periodicals of 1961-Part II

By GERALDINE KAUFMAN MAURER

OF T H E PERIODICALS beginning publication in 1961, which have been received at the

Library of Congress, those listed below were selected in the hope that they might prove helpful or of interest to acquisitions librar-ians. T h e topics can be approached from the point of view of reference, instructional aids, practical help for patrons, or recreation.

ABSTRACTS, B I B L I O G R A P H Y . T h e Australian National Bibliography, issued by the Na-tional Library of Australia, supersedes Books Published in Australia. T h e listings will be those acquired by the National Library, by copyright or otherwise; those published in Australia or, if published abroad, those deal-ing with an Australian subject or by Aus-tralians. T h e bibliography will contain also the official monographs listed in Australian Government Publications. There will be an annual cumulation under the same title. Fichero Bibliografico Hispanoamericano is a list chiefly of current books, arranged by the Dewey scheme; each entry is completely cata-loged, including notes; one additional item not seen on most catalog cards is the price. This preliminary issue contains works from 12 countries; it includes translations into Spanish. T h e International Guide to Classi-cal Studies and International Guide to Medieval Studies are in several sections and parts: Current Articles and Minor Contribu-tions; Subject-Index; Review-Index; Index of Authors, Editors, Translators; Index of Reviewers. T h e journals indexed are those published during the current year; annuals, commemorative issues, conference reports, etc., are not indexed. List of Periodicals in the Field of Nuclear Energy will give infor-mation on periodicals so that an intelligent selection can be made by those interested; it is not intended to be comprehensive. Mem-ber states of the International Atomic Energy Agency are cooperating in this project. New American Periodicals will cover, substantially, what this feature in C R L tries to do, differ-

Alrs. Maurer is Head of the Serials Section, Descriptive Cataloging Division, Library of Congress.

ing in at least two major respects: it is limited as indicated by title; it will give advance in-formation on projected periodicals (this column is limited to receipts in the Library of Congress, and is more or less selective). Pakistan Scientific Literature: Current Bib-liography is arranged, in the main, alpha-betically by journal title, and under journal, by authors as they appear in contents. T h e authors are numbered consecutively and these numbers are used in the alphabetically-arranged author and subject index. T h e first issue covers, chiefly, 1960 publications, the second issue will list 1961 publications plus any 1960 omissions. An answer to the enthu-siasm evoked by a national survey, The Periodical Monitor and Abstract Service; Electronics and Instrumentation Section, will enable scientists and engineers quickly to determine which articles to read, which to eliminate, which merely to scan, in their cur-rent literature. T h e abstracts are numbered consecutively (an aid in the subject and au-thor indexes) under the periodical titles which are alphabetical. There is a listing of new books by subject; of meetings by date; of periodicals monitored (but not necessarily abstracted). T h e charm of the illustrations should be mentioned—many librarians will wonder why the second issue omits the "pic-ture of the librarian." T h e January issue of British Medical Abstracts contains abstracts from Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, British Medical Journal, The Lancet, The Practitioner, and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.

BUSINESS. The Chart Book, covering over eight hundred items on the American Stock Exchange, contains charts for each stock, arranged alphabetically. According to the

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chart explanation, a great deal of informa-tion can be extracted from the individual charts, e.g.: weekly high, low, and closing; earnings per share, fiscal year end, type of business; weekly volume; date of latest re-port; current assets, liabilities, and funded debt by millions of dollars; number of com-mon and preferred shares by thousands. T h e Annals of the Hitotsubashi Academy are be-ing published in five specialized journals, the Hitotsubashi Journal of Commerce and Man-agement being one of the group. T h e arti-cles in the first issue by faculty members are on interest, accounting, budget in decentral-ized management, etc. Because sportswear has become a booming business demanding its own publication for retailers, McCall Corporation has begun Sportswear Mer-chandiser to explain sportswear merchandis-ing techniques and to give advance market news for the small specialty shop, and up to the large department store. T h e articles in the first issue of Studi e Ricerche are studies on sampling, sampling on population, on banking, on agriculture in Finland, on the Italian paper market. T h e latter part of the issue is devoted to news notes on business in various countries ("Esperienze Segnalate," "Informazioni sul Settore") and reviews of publications. The Shipper-Motor Carrier Executive will tackle problems of motor carrier transportation. T h e June issue is de-voted largely to freight loss, damage, and liability, with two articles on concealed dam-age. It also contains items on new products and highlights of conferences of the National Association of Shipper-Motor Carriers. It will be the business of T ir DM; Transpor-tation & Distribution Management to nar-row the costly gap between technology of design and manufacture, and technology of distribution; it will concern itself with pro-curement of raw materials, down to putting the finished product in the customer's hand. Special features are an annotated book list and "Transport Legislation in Congress" in tabular form. T h e American Society of Traf-fic and Transportation (membership to which is attained through written examination and submission of research paper) is publishing Transportation Journal as an aid in under-standing, and as a stimulus in appraising, t r a n s p o r t a t i o n problems and pract ices . Among the contributions in the initial issue are articles on freight bills of ca. 150 A.D.,

the U. S. merchant marine dilemma, pro-posed changes in transport regulation; signed book reviews are included. In our modern technological society, economic and politi-cal changes have created new problems in industrial relations; hoping to make real contribution to these critical fields, the In-stitute of Industrial Relations, University of California, has started Industrial Relations. Contributions in the first issue, by econo-mists, are directed to the theme " T h e Em-ployer Challenge and the Union Response." T h e next topic will be "Work and Leisure in Modern Society," by sociologists; the third topic is "Industrial Relations and World Trade , " with contributors from labor and industry. With Erik Bergaust as editor-in-chief, and with eleven other international, experienced journalists especially interested in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO Journal comes into being. Items of interest to decision makers, management, and businessmen will be included: trends in industry, new developments in science and technology, contract announcements, inter-NATO military news, etc. As an out-growth of requests, the Bureau of Industrial Relations, University of Michigan, will pub-lish in Management of Personnel Quarterly original articles prepared by Michigan fac-ulty or by prominent business leaders for University of Michigan audiences. T h e initial number has articles on the meaning of lead-ership, on discipline, on responses to one's orders, on arbitration, and book reviews.

COUNTRIES . Africa Quarterly, from the In-dian Council for Africa, is following the trend of new journals issued to disseminate information about Africa, and thus to pro-mote understanding of that continent. T h e first issue includes " T h e African Synthesis," by Dr. U. R . Ehrenfels, "Indians in East Africa," by Dr. Amba Prasad, an article on Nigerian art, a section on the council and a seminar it held on Africa, on the Monckton Commission's report, and book reviews, some signed. T h e new College of Business Man-agement at Achimota, Ghana, is starting The Journal of Management Studies. T h e June issue includes articles on Ghana com-pany law and management, on the adminis-trative problems attached to the resettlement of the population of a fishing village, on local government service, training of Ghanai-ans as administrators and accountants, and

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signed book reviews. Modern Woman is best explained by adding its subtitle, Africa's Leading Illustrated Women's Magazine. It contains articles on nutrition, African wom-anhood, women in industry, fashion, etc. Through its University College Review, the College at Addis Ababa, hopes to improve the welfare of Ethiopia and the Ethiopian community and the African continent, as well as to focus international attention on Ethiopia. Contributors to the first issue are international in scope; the contributions are chiefly about Ethiopia: its independence, national libraries, orthopedic surgery in Addis Ababa, early travelers, coffee, the Uni-versity College. Signed book reviews are in-cluded. T h e staff of The Journal of British Studies conceives "Brit ish" in the widest possible sense, "studies" as relating to all knowledge pertaining to or drawing upon history; it sets as limits "analysis, synthesis, interpretation and exploratory exegesis." Contributors will be chiefly from the United States, but none will be barred. T h e first issue contains articles on King John Lack-land, Thomas More, John Milton, the Treaty of Dover, Sir Lewis Namier, West Africa, English Conservatism. T h e journal is spon-sored by the Conference on British Studies at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. A highly illustrated magazine from Britain (filed with the U.S. Dept. of Justice under required registration) is Viewpoint. T h e first two issues are varied in range of contents but all pertain to England. T o keep the true Bulgarian culture alive, to make it known, and to give to the new generations—captives of the Soviets—the true historical back-ground, is the purpose of Bulgarian Review published by the "Foyer Bulgare." T h e first two issues contain articles on Bulgarian his-tory and literature, the church, memoirs, book reviews. India View has a twofold pur-pose: to give a detailed summary "of current home news to all Indian students and stu-dents of Ind ia ' s af fa irs , and to he lp strengthen bonds of friendship between In-dia and the United States." Socialist Con-gressman; a Journal of Congress Socialist Opinion is being issued to explain and in-terpret the thinking and policies of the In-dian National Congress in respect to estab-lishing a socialist society in India. T h e first issue contains articles on Kashmir, China's border diplomacy, Jallianwala Bagh Day,

Pantje, and foreign aid. Most previous pub-lications on Korea in English were done by foreigners trying to depict or interpret Korea to other foreigners; now, as Korea increas-ingly plays a part in world politics, it has seemed best for the natives of that country themselves to portray it. T h e first issue of Korea Journal, illustrated, contains articles on Korean politics, democracy, and eco-nomics, General Park, art, education, and book reviews.

CURRENT EVENTS. A new news magazine is being launched in Montreal, Canada Month, with illustrations, especially portraits of peo-ple in the news.

DEFENSE. Civil Defense Magazine intends to disseminate information on the vital subject of nonmilitary defense in nuclear warfare. T h e first issue has articles on practical aspects (shelter, food) and on more technical aspects (cheaper methods of getting material for atomic bombs).

ECONOMICS. T h e Department of Commerce, Osmania University in India, is publishing Applied Economic Papers, the initial issue of which contains articles on phases of Indian economy (land reforms, metallurgical indus-tries, profits and wage sharing). Signed book reviews are included. Desarrollo Econdmico contains technical articles on economics (e.g., how to analyze economic growth); the relationship between distribution of income and the degree of development in underde-veloped countries; land tenure in Argen-tina; agricultural development in Uruguay; etc. Signed book reviews are included. T h e newly founded Hong Kong Economic Asso-ciation has begun Hong Kong Economic Papers to present problems in economics, foreign and local. T h e June issue con-tains lectures before the association, as well as articles on trade between Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland, oil legislation in In-donesia, and the First Conference on Income and Wealth in Asia.

EDUCATION. T h e Journal of American In-dian Education, under an editorial board composed of authorities on that subject, will present articles from anyone who has infor-mation to impart on any facet of the educa-tion of Indians, any kind of school, any level of instruction. T h e contributors to the first issue are actively engaged in education or guidance, or in direct work with Indian af-fairs. It includes book reviews. Overseas; the

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Magazine of Educational Exchange will be devoted to educational exchange programs and the importance of education in interna-tional development, to draw world attention to these matters, and to report new pro-grams. T h e first issue contains articles by Dean Rusk, Henry Cabot Lodge, Albert G. Sims, Andre Maurois, James M. Davis, and others. Signed book reviews are included.

J O U R N A L I S M . Stirred by a sense of duty, the Graduate School of Journalism, Colum-bia University, is launching Columbia Jour-nalism Review to study and judge journal-ism, to strengthen its good features, to bring to light its weaknesses. All methods of relay-ing news to the public will be under scrutiny.

LAW. Although the Natural Resources Journal will not be limited to resources problems, it will nevertheless be largely de-voted to this vital area. A general section contains articles on peaceful purposes of nu-clear explosions, oil and gas leases, water in California, resources management, etc.; an-other section contains articles on laws in New Mexia>—criminal code, annulment of marriages, real property statutes. Signed book reviews will be included. A comple-ment to the Bulletin of the Copyright Society is the new Publishing, Entertain-ment, Advertising, and Allied Fields Law Quarterly. In addition to original articles, it will contain reprints, practical as well as technical, thus appealing to the lawyer and the businessman. T h e first issue has articles on titles litigations; food, drug, and cosmetic advertising; the right to shield a "reliable source"; protection for "uncopyrightables"; tax discrimination against artists. Under the directorship of Dr. Agricol de Bianchetti in Buenos Aires, Revista de Derecho Deportivo is in two sections, "Doctrina" and "Legisla-cion." T h e first part contains articles on foot-ball, sports in education, sports associations, sports as a political-criminal problem; the second part has the statutes and bylaws of the Federation Internationale de Football Association.

L I T E R A T U R E . T h e newly founded Assam Academy for Cultural Relations has begun The Assam Quarterly in which to publish cultural articles on Assam and its literature, including translations. T h e authors of the poems and stories in Chrysalis Review are not limited to any geographic area or field, although several are teachers of English. T h e

linguist (Okyeame) is the recognized channel of communication in Ghana between tribe and chief; Okyeame is to be a channel of communication for Ghanaian writers, and the first issue contains poetry, prose, drama, and illustrations. It is in English; one article contains folk songs in Ghanaian languages, with a discussion and English translation. There are book reviews. T h e publication of Drama Survey has been made possible through a grant from the McKnight Foun-dation. T h e Spring issue contains a wide variety of articles, from those on Shaw and Shakespeare to an article on dramas which show revolt against the image of authority; there is also a contribution from Sir Tyrone Guthrie. Signed book reviews are included. Under the direction of Pedro Aurelio Fiori and Daniel R . Sobico comes Cuadernos de Poesia, whose initial issue contains poems by the directors only. Most of the contributors to the first issue of Elizabeth; a Magazine of Modern Elizabethan and Metaphysical Po-etry have had poems published elsewhere.

HISTORY, RELIGION. Resulting from the Mos-cow Document of November 1960, from resolutions of the Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, and within the plan of the Government of the DDR, Unsere Zeit comes from East Germany to depict the social his-tory of postwar Germany, especially the zone under Russian influence. Included are book reviews and indexes of pertinent periodicals, both German and Russian, arranged by broad subjects. T h e History of Religions will be "devoted to the study of historical reli-gious phenomena. One of its primary aims is the integration of the results of the several disciplines of the science of religion; its articles will have a synthetical character in order to acquaint the reader with the prog-ress being made in the general area of the history of religions (Religionswissenschaft)." Biographical notes on the contributors are included. T h e Society for the Scientific Study of Religion intends the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion to serve as a forum for those who study religious attitudes and activities. T h e October issue has papers on a symposium, "Theory and Methodology in the Scientific Study of Rel igion;" several articles from an empirical approach; contri-butions to "Bibliographical Focus: Ernst Troeltsch;" and signed book reviews.

MEDICINE, PSYCHOLOGY. With Elinor Ulman

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as editor (and founder) the Bulletin of Art Therapy is a pioneer in the new field of using painting and sculpturing in psychiatric treatment. The plan is to include at least one article on theory to arouse discussion and creative thinking; notices about meet-ings, exhibitions, etc.; about articles in other periodicals; and book reviews. The Journal of Humanistic Psychology will publish arti-cles "of theoretical and applied research, original contributions, papers, articles and studies in values, autonomy, being, self, love, creativity, identity, growth, psychological health, organism, self-actualization, basic need-gratification and related concepts."

MUSIC. Bravo, Magazine of the Lively Arts will be a serious, lighthearted, enthusiastic magazine about music, about those who make it, about those for whom it is made. The first issue contains articles on the Pierre Salingers, new pianists, Virgil Thomson, American singers in Europe, caricatures by Mrs. Koussevitsky, etc. The Hungarian Acad-emy of Sciences (Magyar Tudomanyos Aka-demia) is beginning Studia Musicologica, which will contain articles on Hungarian musicology, on music history, on Hungarian collections of manuscripts of foreign com-posers, and general notes concerning con-gresses and meetings. Articles may be in English, French, German or Russian; the first issue has no articles in the last-mentioned language. This initial issue has articles on Mozart, on J . G. Albrechtsberger, Ferenc Erkel, and on music in Hungary in the Mid-dle Ages.

PRINTING. Graphic Technology aims "at dealing with the developments in all meth-ods of printing illustration, the materials and apparatus used, the best ways of using them, and why. Our interest will cover not only photographic and chemical materials, but also paper and ink in their technical and functional aspects."

RECREATION. The newly formed American Boxwood Society is issuing The Boxwood Bulletin to share problems and exchange experiences of growing buxus. Marina Man-agement will devote itself to waterfront facilities with the accompanying merchandis-ing problems, believing that the growth of marinas will resemble that of motels. It con-tains notes on new products—food, drink, boat equipment and accessories. "Show will be the definitive magazine of the performing

arts, and our view of those arts will be broad." Exploration will be devoted to in-quiries into new areas, and new inquiries into old areas; it will attempt to spread knowledge of man to man in an interesting way. "Great Religions," "Cities of the East," signed book reviews and a profile page are to be regular features. In addition to these, the first issue has illustrated articles on Maori carving, Albania, the Dinkas, on Vinoba Bhave, geology, Lapland, etc.

SOCIAL SCIENCES. T h e Bole tin Uruguay o de Sociologia will air the current sociological problems of the day, but especially those of Latin America and Uruguay. The first issue is in sections (Uruguay, Latinoam^rica, In-ternational, Bibliograffa) which are divided (save the last section) into Informaci6n, Doctrina. The Informaci6n has news items about meetings, congresses, institutions. The Doctrina contains articles from scholars on an international basis: Isaac Gan6n, Aldo Solari, Alfredo Povina, Alfonso Trujillo Fer-rari, Pitirim A. Sorokin. As a continuation of Ciencias Sociales, published 1950-56, the Department of Social Affairs of Pan Ameri-can Union has begun Revista Interamericana de Ciencias Sociales. It will disclose trends in social disciplines, particularly those which apply to Latin America. The first issue has, among others, an extensive contribution, "Los Lenguajes Indigenas de America Lat-ina"; signed book reviews are included. The second issue is devoted to the theme "La Agricultura y el Desarrollo de la Civilizaci6n en Mesoam^rica."

SCIENCE. A new journal, The Australian Scientist, from New South Wales brings news of scientific development in Australia; it hopes to stimulate interest in that field among Australians. Because enzymology has emerged as a fundamental science, and a strong interest in biological enzymology has developed, scientists have felt the need for a journal and Enzymologia Biologica et Clinica hopes to fill that need. The articles in the first issue are: "Anomalie de l'Aldolase H^patique dans l'lntolerance au Fructose"; "Localization of Dehydrogenases and Glyco-gen Metabolizing Enzymes in Muscle Tissue of the Desert Locust"; "Uber Enzyme der Glykolyse in Leukozyten von Kindern"; "Serum Ornithine Transcarbamylase Activity in Normal Individuals." Although originally only of interest to physical scientists, the

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concepts of transmission of information are now appealing to biological scientists in studying how organisms handle information; and in return, physicists are becoming inter-ested in the procedures by which organisms cope with communication and control. Kybernetik will publish both theoretical and experimental articles in this exchange. T h e Crop Science Society of America has begun Crop Science as a vehicle for unpublished papers on research in field crops including genetics, cytology, physiology, ecology, and breeding; articles which formerly might have appeared in the overburdened Agronomy Journal. Articles in the first issue are accom-panied by bibliographies and summaries; some are illustrated. T h e last page is devoted to signed book reviews. T h e articles in the first issue of Radiation Botany are in Eng-lish, prefaced by summaries in English, French, and German, and are the reports of research performed chiefly in the United States and Great Britain. T h e journal will report, mainly, effects of ionizing radiation on plants or plant structure. Signed book reviews are included. Important and current technical chemical literature from the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and Asia will be translated in International Chemical Engi-neering. A list by country of the journals received is included. Represented also are items dealing with information retrieval, "based on the concept-coordination system of information storage and retrieval." Phyto-chemistry will publish articles on pure and applied research in basic metabolic processes of plants. T h e technical illustrated articles are preceded by abstracts; they may be in English, French, or German. Still another chemical journal Zeitschrift filr Chemie, has been undertaken, this one from the Eastern Zone of Germany, under the auspices of the Chemische Gesellschaft in der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik. This publication contains technical articles, short report arti-cles, and signed book reviews. Geofisica In-ternational will contain original articles on geophysics in Spanish and in one of the fol-lowing: English, French, German, or Rus-

sian. Thus, Spanish will be promoted as a medium of scientific expression, and at the same time contributions by Spanish scientists will be circulated. T h e first issue is a lengthy article, in Spanish and English, "Pene-Con-temporaneous Tectonics along the Mexican Pacific Ocean Coast," by F. Mooser and M. Maldonado-Koerdell. Nordisk Tidskrift for Informationsbehandling will contain articles on numerical analysis, data-processing, and computer-technical problems in English, French, or German, with contributions chiefly from the five Scandinavian countries. Articles in a Scandinavian language will have a summary in English. T h e editor and pub-lisher of The System Analyzer; a Bulletin for Those Concerned with Digital Differential Analyzers and Their Applications, George F. Forbes, has also written most of the contribu-tions in the first issue. In addition to illus-trated technical articles, there are book re-views and a bibliography. T h e Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins Univer-sity, "requires a synthesizing agent to pre-serve the over-all pattern of its activities, not only for the benefit of its own staff, but also for the benefit of scientific and engineering colleagues throughout the world." T h e agent is the APL Technical Digest. T h e initial issue of Beitrage aus der Plasmaphysik contains four original technical articles by work-ers in German research institutes: "Zur the-oretischen Begriindung des 'Minimumprin-zips' fur die Spannung einer Gasentladung und einige weitere Folgerungen"; "Beitrag zum Problem der Entscheidbarkeit der Giiltigkeit eines Prinzips extremalen Energie-verbrauchs beim Stromdurchgang durch einen Leiter"; "Die positive Saule der Argon-Niederdruck-Entladung im tjbergangsbereich I " ; "Die Berechnung von Energieverteilun-gen relativistischer Elektronen aus ihrer Syn-chrotonstrahlung. Anwendungen auf den Krebsnebel." Physica Status Solidi will pub-lish results of original research conducted in solid-state physics. Articles are chiefly in Ger-man, a few in English; most are preceded by summaries in both the German and English languages.

Periodicals APL Technical Digest. Applied Physics L a b o r a -

tory, T h e J o h n s Hopkins University, 8621 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. v. 1, no. 1, S e p t e m b e r / O c t o b e r 1961. B i m o n t h l y . $2.00.

Africa Quarterly. T h e Manager , Indian Counci l for Africa, 1 -W5, Curzon R o a d Barracks, New Delhi , India , v. 1, no. 1, A p r i l / J u n e 1961. Quarter ly . $5.00.

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Applied Economic Papers. Professor V. V. Rama-nadham, General Editor, Applied Economic Papers, Osmania University, Hyderabad-7, In-dia. v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. Semiannual . $2.25.

The Assam Quarterly. Assam Academy, Old Law College Building, Dighali Pukhuri , Gauhati , Assam, India, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Rs.8.

Australian National Bibliography. Government Print ing Office, Canberra, A.C.T. , Australia, no. 1, J a n u a r y 1961. Monthly. 60s. for complete service.

The Australian Scientist. T a s m a n Productions, 9-23 Upward Street, Leichhardt , N.S.W., Aus-tralia. v. 1, no. 1, February 1961. Monthly. Overseas rates on request.

Beitrdge aus der Plasmaphysik. Deutscher Buch-Export und - Import G m b H , Leipzig C I , Post-schliessfach 276, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1960/61. Quarterly. D M . 11 , - each number.

Boletin Uruguayo de Sociologia. Junca l 1395, Piso 2, Escritorio 5, Montevideo, Uruguay, v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Quarterly. 50^ each issue.

The Boxwood Bulletin. American Boxwood So-ciety, Boyce, Va. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Quarterly. $6.00.

Bravo, Magazine of the Lively Arts. Bravo Pub-lishing Company, Inc., 44 East 53d Street, New York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, 1961. 4 numbers a year. $3.00.

British Medical Abstracts. Medical Publications Ltd. , 58 Parker Street, London, W.C.2, Eng-land. v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Monthly. 15s.

Bulgarian Review. Caixa Postal 3968, R i o de Janeiro , Brazil, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Quar-terly. $8.00.

Bulletin of Art Therapy. 634 A Street S.E., Washington 3, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, Fal l 1961. Quarterly. $3.00.

Canada Month. P. O. B o x 202, Montreal 3, Que-bec, Canada, v. 1, no. 1, Forerunner issue, 1961. $3.25.

The Chart Book. Pactolian, 50 Cheshire Road, Bethpage, L.I . , N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, August 1961. Monthly (soon to be weekly) $36.00.

Chrysalis Review. Herrmann-Eatmon Publica-tions, 95 Campus Circle, San Francisco, Calif , v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Quarterly? $3.00.

Civil Defense Magazine. Circulation Dept. , Civil Defense Magazine, Post Office B o x 1087, Bloomington, Ind. v. 1, no. 1, May-June 1961. Bimonthly. $3.00.

Columbia Journalism Review. Room 504, J o u r -nalism Building, Columbia University, New York 27, N.Y. Pilot issue, Fall 1961. 4 numbers a year. $5.00.

Crop Science. Crop Science Society of America, 2702 Monroe Street, Madison 5, Wis. v. 1, no. 1, January-February 1961. B imonthly . $12.00.

Cuadernos de Poesia. Congreso 4561, Buenos

Aires, Argentina, no. 1, Autumn 1961. Fre-quency not given. p l 5 . - m / n .

Desarrollo Economico. Inst i tuto de Desarrollo Econ6mico y Social, Sarmiento 1179, Buenos Aires, Argentina, v. 1, no. 1, A p r i l / J u n e 1961. Quarterly? $5.00.

Drama Survey. P .O. B o x 4068, University Sta-tion, Minneapolis 14, Minn. v. 1, no. 1, May 1961. 3 numbers a year. $2.50.

Elizabeth; a Magazine of Modern Elizabethan and Metaphysical Poetry. T h e Elizabeth Press, 103 Van Etten Blvd., New Rochel le , N.Y. no. 1, March 1961. Semiannual . 50^ per issue.

Enzymologia Biologica et Clinica. S. Karger AG, 25, Arnold Bocklin-Strasse, Basel, Switzerland, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Frequency not given. $13.50 each volume.

Exploration. Circulation Manager, Explorat ion, 625 Ulster Chambers, 168 Regent Street, Lon-don, W l , England, v. 1, no. 1, May 1961. Quarterly. $2.50.

Fichero Bibliografico Hispanoamericano. R . R . Bowker Company, P. O. B o x 3269, Grand Central Station, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 0, October 1961. Quarterly. $5.00.

Geofisica Internacional. Inst i tuto de Geofisica, Universidad Nacional Aut6noma de Mexico, T o r r e de Ciencias, 3er. Piso, Mexico 20, D.F., Mexico, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Quarterly. p5.00 (moneda mexicana).

Graphic Technology. Shand Moran Ltd. , 58 Frith Street, London W l , England, v. 1, no. 1, M a y / J u n e 1961. Bimonthly. £ 1 15s.

History of Religions. University of Chicago Press, Chicago 3 7 , 1 1 1 . v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1961. Semiannual. $5.00.

Hitotsubashi Journal of Commerce and Man-agement. Hitotsubashi University Press, Hito-tsubashi University, Kunitachi , Tokyo, J a p a n , v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. Frequency not given. $1.50 each issue.

Hong Kong Economic Papers. Hong Kong Uni-versity Press, Hong Kong (Oxford University Press, Amen House, Warwick Square, Lon-don, E.C.4, agent for all countries except in Asia east of Burma) no. 1, J u n e 1961. Semi-annual? $1.60 each issue.

India View. Overseas News Reports , B o x 7553, B e n j a m i n Franklin Station, Washington 4, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, September 15, 1961. Weekly. $9.00.

Industrial Relations. Institute of Industrial Re -lations, 201 California Hall , University of Cali-fornia, Berkeley 4, Calif, v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. 3 numbers a year. $3.50.

International Chemical Engineering. American Inst i tute of Chemical Engineers, 345 East 47th Street, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Quarterly. $15.00.

International Guide to Classical Studies. Ameri-

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can B ib l iographic Service, Darien, Conn. v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Quarter ly . Price not given.

International Guide to Medieval Studies. Ameri-can B ib l iographic Service, Dar ien , Conn. v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Quarter ly . Price not given.

Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Pro-fessor J a m e s Dittes, Secretary, T h e Society for the Scientific Study of Re l ig ion , 409 Prospect Street , New Haven 11, Conn. v. 1, no. 1, Octo-ber 1961. Semiannual . $5.00.

Journal of American Indian Education. College of Educat ion , Arizona State University, T e m p e , Ariz. v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Frequency not given. Pr ice not given.

The Journal of British Studies. Managing Edi-tor, George B . Cooper, D e p a r t m e n t of History, T r i n i t y College, Hart ford 6, Conn. no. 1, No-vember 1961. Semiannual . $3.00.

Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 2637 Marshal l Drive, P a l o Alto , Calif , v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1961. Semiannual . $5.00.

The Journal of Management Studies. College of Business Management , Achimota , Accra, R e -publ i c of G h a n a , v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Semi-annual . 3 / 6 each issue.

Korea Journal. Korean Nat ional Commission for U N E S C O , P. O. B o x , Central 64, Seoul, Korea, v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly . $2.40.

Kybernetik. Springer-Verlag, Ber l in-Wilmersdorf , Heidelberger Platz 3, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, J a n u a r y 1961. I rregular . D M . 12,80 each issue.

List of Periodicals in the field of Nuclear En-ergy. T h e Director , Division of Scientific and T e c h n i c a l In format ion , In ternat iona l Atomic Energy Agency, Kaerntnerr ing 11, V ienna 1, Austria , no. 1, 1961. Irregular . Free?

Management of Personnel Quarterly. Circula-tion Manager , B u r e a u of Industr ial Re la -tions, 354 Business Adminis trat ion, T h e Uni -versity of Michigan, A n n Arbor , Mich. v. 1, no. 1, A u t u m n 1961. $4.50.

Marina Management. M a r i n a M a n a g e m e n t As-sociates, 43 West Front Street, R e d B a n k , N . J . v. 1, no. 1, November 1961. Monthly . $6.00.

Modern Woman; Africa's Leading Illustrated Women's Magazine. Presbyterian Press, Accra, G h a n a , v. 1, no. 1, J a n u a r y 1961. Frequency not given. Is. each issue.

NATO Journal. R e m s e n - W h i t n e y Publ ishing Corporat ion, Engineers Bui ld ing , Manhasset , N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly . $ 1 2 . 0 0 .

Natural Resources Journal. University of New Mexico School of Law, 1915 R o m a N.E. , Al-b u q u e r q u e , N . M . v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. Semiannual . $5.00.

New American Periodicals. 160 F i f th Avenue, New York 10, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, November 1961. Monthly . $5.00.

Nordisk Tidskrift for Informationsbehandling. Regnecentra len , G l . Carlsbergvej 2, Koben-

havn Valby, Denmark , v. 1, no. 1, J a n u a r y 1961. Quarter ly . $3.00.

Okyeame. G h a n a Society of Wri ters , P . O. B o x M.15, Accra, Ghana , v. 1, no. 1, J a n u a r y 1961. Quarterly. Price not given.

Overseas; the Magazine of Educational Ex-change. Inst i tute of In ternat iona l Educat ion , Inc. , 800 Second Avenue, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly , Septem-ber-May. $2.00.

Pakistan Scientific Literature: Current Bibliog-raphy. Pakistan Nat ional Scientific and T e c h -nical Documenta t ion Centre , Karachi , Paki-stan. v. 1, no. 1, 1st q u a r t e r 1961. Quarter ly . Free (first issue).

The Periodical Monitor and Abstract Service; Electronics and Instrumentation Section. 15 North Eucl id Avenue, Pasadena, Calif , v. 1, no. 1, J u l y 1961. Monthly . $25.00.

Physica Status Solidi. Deutscher B u c h - E x p o r t und Impor t G m b H . , Leipzig CI, Postschliess-fach 276, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Monthly . D M . 6 , - each issue.

Phytochemistry. Pergamon Press, Headington Hi l l Hal l , Oxford, England, v. 1, no. 1, Octo-ber 1961. Frequency not given. $20.00.

Publishing, Entertainment, Advertising, and Allied Fields Law Quarterly. Cal laghan & Company, 165 North Archer Avenue, Munde-lein, 111. v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. $20.00.

Radiation Botany. Pergamon Press, Inc. , 122 East 55th Street, New York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Frequency not given. $20.00.

Revista de Derecho Deportivo. Dr . Agricol de B ianchet t i , Paraguay 1307, piso 4 ° , ofic. 44, Buenos Aires, Argentina, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Quarterly. £ 4 0 0 , — m / n .

Revista Interamericana de Ciencias Sociales. Pan American U n i o n , Division de Ventas y Pro-moci6n , Washington 6, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Frequency not given. 50^ each issue.

The Shipper-Motor Carrier Executive. Seitz Pub-lishing Co., Inc. , I l l West Osborn R o a d , Suite 215, P h o e n i x 13, Ariz. v. 1, no. 1, J u n e 1961. Monthly . $5.00.

Show; the Magazine of the Performing Arts. Hart ford Publicat ions, Inc. , 140 East 57th Street , New York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Monthly . $10.00.

Socialist Congressmen; a Journal of Congress So-cialist Opinion. H. D. Malaviya, 93, J o r Bag , New Delhi -3 , India , v. 1, no. 1, Apri l 13, 1961. Frequency not given. Rs.6.

Sportswear Merchandiser. McCal l Corporat ion, 230 Park Avenue, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, S e p t e m b e r / O c t o b e r 1961. B imonth ly . $4.50.

Studi e Ricerche. Centro I ta l iano Studi e Ricer-che, V ia Nicolo Paganini , 7, R o m e , Italy, v. 1, no. 1, Apri l 1961. Quarterly. Z6000.

Studia Musicologica. Kul tura , Hungar ian T r a d -

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ing Company for Books and Newspapers, Budapest 62, P. O. B o x 147, Hungary, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Semiannual . 110 forints each vol-ume.

The System Analyzer; a Bulletin for Those Con-cerned with Digital Differential Analyzers and Their Applications. George F. Forbes, 13745 Eldr idge Avenue, Sylmar, Cal i f , v. 1, no. 1, Fal l 1961. Semiannual . $2.25 each issue.

T ir D M; Transportation ir Distribution Man-agement. Traff ic Service Corporat ion, 815 Washington Bui ld ing , W a s h i n g t o n 5, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Month ly . $3.00.

Transportation Journal. A m e r i c a n Society of Traffic and T r a n s p o r t a t i o n , Inc. , 22 West Madison Street , Chicago 2, 111. v. 1, no . 1, Fa l l 1961. Quarter ly . $10.00.

University College Review. Review, Mrs . M . E . Stanley, Secretary, B o x 399, Addis A b a b a , E th iopia , v. 1, no. 1, Spr ing 1961. Frequency not given. 60$ each issue.

Unsere Zeit. Deutsches Inst i tut fur Zeitgeschichte, Hessische Strasse 11/12 , B e r l i n N 4, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Quarter ly . D M . 8 , - .

Viewpoint. Hercules House, Hercules R o a d , London , S .E . I , England. Dis tr ibuted by Br i t i sh In format ion Services, 45 Rockefe l ler Plaza, New York 20, N.Y. no. 1, 1961. 4 n u m b e r s a year? $5.00.

Zeitschrift fur Chemie. V E B Deutscher Ver lag fi ir Grundstoffindustrie, Karl -Heine-Strasse 27, Leipzig W 31, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Monthly . D M . 9 , - each quar ter .

Book Selection Publication Launched The establishment of a publication to

provide a book selection service for col-lege and university libraries was an-nounced jointly by the American Library Association and the Council on Library Resources. The publication will be issued every two weeks and will contain about 16 pages of editorial matter plus adver-tising.

T h e service, called a "Current College-Level Book-Selection Service," would up-date the widely used Charles B. Shaw publication, A List of Books for College Libraries. Though supported initially by a grant from the Council on Library Re-sources, the publication is expected to become self supporting. It would be un-der the direction of the Association of College and Research Libraries, a divi-sion of the A.L.A.

The periodical will be produced by the recently developed Listomatic se-quential camera which would compose information concerning book selections directly from typed cards.

The periodical's staff will consist of a managing editor, associate editor, biblio-graphic assistant and two clerk-typists in addition to reviewers, all subject experts involved in undergraduate instruction.

An estimated 10,000 to 15,000 titles per year will be considered and 2,000 to

3,000 titles will be reported. The publi-cation is to be directed primarily to un-dergraduate college libraries with book funds of $30,000 or less.

The objective of the service is to pro-vide a reference and advisory guide to inform librarians, faculty, students, schol-ars, and the general public of the more important current publications on any subject. T h e publication, supported ini-tially by a $150,000 grant, is expected to review simultaneously with the publica-tion date of the books or as soon there-after as feasible. Coverage will include publications in English, wherever pub-lished, of potential desirability on all college campuses. Representative publi-cations needed for understanding of the world would be included in addition to the 'best' publications. Coverage of other languages will be considered later.

In addition to using experts for re-views, authoritativeness would be sought through the cooperation of learned groups such as the American Council of Learned Societies, Social Science Re-search Council, and the National Re-search Council. Religious and other special interest groups would be allowed to contribute titles and annotations for the publications of particular interest to their group.

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News from the Field Publications

A C O M P R E H E N S I V E B I B L I O G R A P H Y of Mexi-can books, published during 1957-60, is avail-able under the title Mexico Bibliografico. It lists 4,332 works issued by 212 publishers. Books of all types are covered, including translations in science, economics, history, political science, children's books, and fiction. Mexico Bibliografico was compiled by Jose-fina Berroa with assistance from the Insti-tuto del Libro Mexicano, and financial aid from the R. R. Bowker Company. Outside Mexico and Cuba copies may be obtained from R. R. Bowker Company, 62 West 45th Street, New York 36, N.Y., at $12 each net postpaid.

British Technology Index, a cumulative in-dex to British technical journals, began pub-lication in January 1962. Initially 400 titles will be analyzed. The publication will ap-pear monthly and will be cumulated an-nually. The publisher is the Library Associ-ation, Chaucer House, Malet Place, London, W.C. 1; price: 15 guineas ($50).

Christian Periodical Index, volume 1, 1956-1960, is available from the Buffalo Bible Institute Book Store, 910 Union Road, Buf-falo, N.Y.; list price, $12.50; special offer to previous subscribers, $10.95. The 5-year cum-ulation is produced by the Christian Librari-ans' Fellowship.

The Farmington Plan Handbook, Revised to 1961 and Abridged, by Edwin E. Williams, has been released by the Association of Re-search Libraries (copies sold by Office of the Executive Secretary, Association of Research Libraries, Cornell University Library, Ith-aca, N.Y.). "This volume does not supplant the original edition of 1953 for historical purposes," writes Mr. Williams. In general the procedure has been to tie this edition to the 1953 publication by not repeating cer-tain information, but carrying it forward. The new edition contains a section on the Vosper-Talmadge survey. Part VI of the work is a list of "Countries, Agents, and Ad-visers." There is a bibliographical supple-ment on the plan, covering the years 1953-1961.

Specialized Science Information Service in the United States: A Directory of Selected Specialized Information Services in the Physi-cal and Biological Sciences has been issued by the National Science Foundation (November, 1961, 528p.). The statements about each service includes the name, scope, user quali-fications, collection, information services, and publications. It should be of exceptional help to reference librarians.

T H E F I R S T E N G L I S H EDITION of Punch-Card Methods in Research and Documentation, with Special Reference to Biology (based on the second revised German edition by Martin Scheele) has been provided by J . E. Holms-trom (New York, Interscience Publishers, 1961, 274p„ $9.50). Punched-card methods (machine, needle, visual), general rules and experience in applying punched card meth-ods, and practical examples of applications are discussed in the volume. Illustrations ac-company the text.

T H E SECOND EDITION of Reference Service, by S. R. Ranganathan, has been published by Asia Publishing House (1961, Taplinger Publishing Co., 119 West 57th Street, New York 19, N.Y., 433p., $7.75).

K. A. L O D E W Y C K S , librarian of the Univer-sity of Melbourne, has issued Essentials in Library Planning (1961, 136p.). This is a detailed analysis of the plans, layouts, areas, needs of various groups, ventilation, light-ing, and practically all other aspects of the library building. Mr. Lodewycks spent some time in the United States and has been involved with construction of the new library at the University of Melbourne.

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F K E N T U C K Y P R E S S h a s

published Research Opportunities in Ameri-can Cultural History, edited by John Francis McDermott (Lexington, Ky., 1961, 205p. $6.00). Among the contributors are Lester Cappon, Howard H. Peckham, Thomas D. Clark, Theodore C. Blegen, Richard M. Dor-son, John T. Flanagan, David Kaser, David Mead, E. P. Richardson, and Philip D. Jor-dan.

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The First Century at the University of Washington, 1861-1961, by Charles M. Gates has been issued by the University of Wash-ington Press (1961, 252p., $7.50). This illus-trated, attractively printed book contains a number of references to the library in the de-velopment of the educational and research programs at the University.

T H E SEVENTEENTH EDITION of the useful A History of Architecture, by Sir Banister Fletcher (revised by R . A. Cordingley) has been published by Charles Scribner's Sons (New York, 1961, 1366p., $16.75). Illustrations in the volume have been increased from 549 to 652, art paper has been used for the whole work, and the chapters on Renais-sance architecture has been considerably ex-panded by fuller treatment of Baroque archi-tecture. Entirely rewritten are chapters on Belgian and Dutch, Chinese, Indian, Japa-nese, and Muslim architecture.

T H E 1962 ISSUE of The Bowker Annual of Library ancl Book Trade Information has appeared. Formerly the American Library ir Book Trade Annual, this volume, like its predecessors, contains a large amount of in-formation and statistical data of various types of libraries, publishing and the book trade, librarians, associations, and committees. There are also available an activities index, the 1961 library buying guide, and a general index. (R. R . Bowker, 62 West 45th St., New York 36, $6.95).

P U B L I C A T I O N of two major library refer-ence works was announced December 15 by J . W. Edwards, Publisher, Inc. of Ann Arbor,

Michigan. T h e two are the National Union Catalog, 1952 to 1955 Imprints, and the Union List of Microfilms, Cumulation 1949-1959.

T h e National Union Catalog publication was sponsored by the ALA Committee on Re-sources of American Libraries, and was com-piled by the Union Catalog Division of the Library of Congress. This catalog is an ex-tension of the National Union Catalog, 1952 to 1956. It doubles the number of mono-graphic titles listed in the Library of Con-gress catalogs for this period. T h e thirty volumes have a total of 26,000 pages and are library bound in buckram. T h e total price for the set is $420.00.

T h e Union List of Microfilms, Cumula-tion 1949 to 1959 is the last such reference to be compiled by the Philadelphia Biblio-graphical Center and the Union Library Catalogue. It lists more than 52,000 micro-films reported by 200 libraries in the United States and Canada. Long runs of scientific periodicals, as well as music manuscripts and medical monographs are listed for the first time. T h e two volumes totaling over 1400 pages are bound in buckram and priced at $35.00 for the set.

Who's Who, 1962 edition, will be published and distributed in the United States by St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York City. It was previously published in this country by T h e Macmillan Co., also of New York. St Martin's has taken over the standing orders from Macmillan, so those libraries which have been receiving Who's Who need not reorder. T h e 1962 edition will be published and distributed on March 21.

Miscellaneous T w o R E C E N T CRANTS by the Council on Li-

brary Resources, Inc., were: T o the Society of American Archivists,

$42,000 for a study of state archival agen-cies and programs, with a view to setting standards and pointing the way to improve-ment. T h e study, to be completed by June 1963, will be made by Ernest Posner, 1815 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va.

T o the Association of State Institutions of Higher Education in Colorado, $5,000 to de-termine whether it is feasible to establish a cooperative technical processing program and

transmit interlibrary loans directly from one state academic library to another by special courier system. T h e study will be made by LeMoyne W. Anderson, librarian at Colo-rado State University, Fort Collins.

A CONFERENCE, "Information Retrieval in Action," sponsored by the Center for Docu-mentation and Communication Research of the School of Library Science, Western Re-serve University, will be held in Cleveland, Ohio, April 18-20, 1962. T h e purpose will be to review research development and op-

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erational activities related to machine litera-ture searching systems using the GE 225 gen-eral-purpose computer. Registration fee for the conference is $10. Further details, and a conference program when available, may be obtained by writing to the Center at West-ern Reserve University, 10831 Magnolia Drive, Cleveland 6.

T H E A R C H I V E S O F A M E R I C A N A R T h a s a n e w

home in New York. T h e new location of the Archives is in the American Federation of Arts Building at 41 East 65th Street, New York 21.

Dartmouth College Library Bulletin for December 1961 is devoted entirely to critical and biographical materials relating to Wal-lace Stevens. Copies will be sent gratis to academic and public libraries that ask for them. Address the Dartmouth College Li-brary, Hanover, N.H.

T H E I L L I N O I S C O M M I T T E E ON H U M A N

R I G H T S in Higher Education has issued a re-vised "Statement of Policy Relative to Fair Practices in Higher Education" which is available free, in single copies, from its secre-tary, Mrs. A. B. Counselbaum, 343 South Dearborn Street, Chicago 4, Illinois. T h e statement deals with such matters as admis-sions, scholarships, grants, loans, curriculum, extra-curricular activities and student or-ganization, housing, staff and student em-ployment and student placement.

T H E 1 9 6 1 ANNUAL M E E T I N G of the Medical Library Association will be held in Chicago from June 4-8, 1962. Convention chairman is Donald Washburn, 222 E. Superior Ct„ Chicago 11.

T H E N A T I O N A L M I C R O F I L M ASSOCIATION

will hold its 11th annual convention April 25-27, 1962 at the Mayflower Hotel, Washing-ton, D.C. More than 75 microfilm equipment manufacturers, dealers, and service com-panies will exhibit systems and equipment.

T H E M E D I C A L L I B R A R Y ASSOCIATION i s o f -

fering a scholarship of $150 for each of the following courses in medical librarianship to be given during the 1962 Summer session. Students who complete the courses will be eligible for MLA Grade I certification.

Columbia University, School of Library Service, New York City: Medical Lit-

erature and Librarianship, July 3 to Aug. 11.

Emory University, School of Library Sci-ence, Atlanta: Medical Librarianship, June 18 to July 27.

University of Southern California, School of Library Science, Los Angeles: Bib-liography of the Biomedical and Physical Sciences, June 25 to Aug. 3.

Applications for the scholarships should be sent to the dean of the library school in each case.

N A T I O N A L L I B R A R Y O F M E D I C I N E ' S electronic information storage and retrieval system will be developed by the General Electric Co. under contract with the Public Health Serv-ice. T h e computer-based system will be known as M E D L A R S (Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System), and will en-able the library to broaden and accelerate its services to medical education, research and practice.

W A S H I N G T O N , D.C., AREA university librari-ans took part in an informal half-day confer-ence on reserve book procedures at George-town University Library in mid-January. T h e conference was welcomed by the librarian of Georgetown University, Joseph E. Jeffs, and was chaired by the assistant librarian, Sam Waters. Librarians participating in conference included Mrs. C. Manning, from American University, James P. Johnson, from Howard University, Sal Costabile, from Georgetown University, and Mrs. Katherine A. Cima, from the University of Maryland.

T H E L O U I S I A N A S T A T E L I B R A R Y is offering two $2,000 scholarships for the 1962-63 aca-demic year, for graduate study leading to a master's degree in Library Science. An-nouncement of these grants, which are in-cluded in this library's state plan and made possible through funds available under the Library Services Act, is made by Dr. Essae M. Culver, state librarian. Upon completion of their degrees, recipients will be expected to work for at least two years in a Louisiana public library which serves rural areas in the State. Application papers must be filed by April 15, 1962.

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Acquisitions, Gifts, Collections T H E M A T T H E W S L I B R A R Y , Arizona State

University at Tempe, has received the law library collection of William E. Brooks, Ar-izona legislator and lawyer, from his sister, Mrs. Carolina A. Edwards, Colton, Califor-nia.

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F C A L I F O R N I A L I B R A R Y ,

Los Angeles, recently acquired a major col-lection of books by and about Captain James Cook (1728-1779). Included in the collection, gathered by Sir Maurice Holmes during the past 35 years, are materials on Cook's voyages and his standing in the history of explora-tion and advancement of geographical knowl-edge.

J O I N T U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R I E S at Nashville, serving Peabody and Scarritt Colleges and Vanderbilt University, has received gifts of nearly $10,000 to establish a collection of southern literature in memory of Edwin Mims, professor of English at Vanderbilt University for fifty years.

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y OF P E N N S Y L V A N I A will re-ceive the literary papers of William C. Len-gel, editor and author. Mr. Lengel's initial gift to the university consists of original manuscripts of novels and short stories, first editions of some of his books, unpublished correspondence with Theodore Dreiser, and personally inscribed photographs of prom-inent people.

B A K E R L I B R A R Y of the Harvard Business School has received a collection relating to the beginnings of the scientific management movement. T h e donor is J . Christian Barth of Philadelphia, son of Carl G. Barth, who was one of the first to put into effect the teachings of Frederick W. Taylor. T h e col-lection includes historical materials, draw-ings, and notebooks of forms and blueprints drawn up by the Barths (father and son) for the companies for which they served as con-sultants, glass slides, a unique assemblage of slide rules, and some fifty printed volumes, many of them inscribed by the authors.

U N I V E R S I T Y OF M A R Y L A N D L I B R A R I E S h a s

acquired the papers of Millard E. Tydings (1890-1961). Tydings served in Congress as Representative from 1923 to 1927, and as Senator from 1927 to 1951. His correspon-

dence relates primarily to the Maryland Senatorial campaign of 1950. Also included are political questionnaires, records of cam-paign contributions, election returns, radio scripts, scrapbooks of clippings and other materials covering a wide range of political subjects.

T H E M U S E U M O F C O M P A R A T I V E Z O O L O G Y

L I B R A R Y at Harvard University has purchased the Austin Collection of Japanese ornitho-logical literature which includes a few Chi-nese and Korean books and some on general natural history from these countries. T h e acquisition makes the library's holdings of Japanese bird books the most complete in the western world.

A M A J O R S H I P M E N T of rare manuscripts on microfilm has been received by the Library of Judaica and Hebraica at New York Uni-versity's Washington Square Center, from the Oriental Library of the Hungarian Acad-emy of Sciences. T h e new material brings to more than 15,000 the number of valuable historical documents on microfilm acquired in Russia and Hungary for the NYU library by Professor Abraham I. Katsh, curator of the library. These items have not previously been available to scholars in the western world.

T h e microfilm received recently from Budapest contained the second half of the David Kaufmann collection, of which the first half arrived at NYU last July. T h e col-lection includes manuscripts pertaining to the Bible, codices, commentaries on Hebrew literature; documents relating to Talmudic scholarship and religious laws; works on liturgy, mathematics, astronomy, medicine, theology, and philosophy; and historical articles. Some date as far back as the year 1021.

ADDITIONS to the holdings of the Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, Missouri, included papers donated by Dillon S. Myer, Joseph M. Jones, and N. T . Veatch, Kansas City engineer who was associated with former President Truman in the county road build-ing program. Among many photographs ac-quired were several hundred relating to the early career of Mr. Truman and his Jackson County background, and current photo-

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graphs of the visits of Vice President John-son, General Eisenhower, and others.

E U G E N E G. G O T T S C H A L K of Bronxville, New York, has given to the University of Wyo-ming Library an extensive collection of the works of Mari Sandoz. T h e Gottschalk col-lection includes: first editions, all auto-graphed, of Old Jules (1935); Sloqum House (1937); Capital City (1939); Crazy Horse (1942); The Tom-Walker (1947); Cheyenne Autumn (1953); Winter Thunder (1954); The Buffalo Hunters (1954); Miss Morissa (1955); The Horsecatcher (1956); The Cat-tlemen (1958); Hostiles and Friendlies (1959); Son of the Gamblin' Man (1960); Love Song to the Plains (1961); and These Were the Sioux (1961). In addition to the above vol-umes there are forty-four articles written by Miss Sandoz which have appeared in such publications as: Saturday Evening Post, American Heritage, Prairie Schooner, North American Review, Ladies Home Journal,

Atlantic Monthly, and The Family Weekly. There are thirty-two reviews either by or about Miss Sandoz's works appearing in The Saturday Review, New York Times, Wash-ington Post, New York Herald Tribune, New York Sun, New York World-Telegram, Nebraska History and the Westerners Brand Book. T h e collection is completed by several letters by Miss Sandoz on historical topics, three working maps used in Old Jules and Capital City; and copies of talks, awards re-ceived and programs given by Miss Sandoz.

Y A L E U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y has recently re-ceived from Hans P. Kraus, New York rare book dealer, the late Robert Sterling Clark's collection of books on horsemanship. T h e gift comprises 800 books and 600 pamphlets dealing with all aspects of equitation, includ-ing riding, breeding, training, and care of horses in many countries of the world. It will enrich Yale's collection of sporting books.

Buildings T H E R E C E N T L Y OPENED new science library

of Southern Methodist University, Dallas, is an almost windowless 3-story and basement structure. T h e million dollar building, gift of three local industrialists, houses collec-tions in the sciences, engineering, and mathe-matics. Services to industry in the region are emphasized and cooperative arrangements with nearby special libraries are under con-sideration.

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F D E L A W A R E will begin construction of a new library in the spring of 1962. Costing $3,127,000, and having 110,000 square feet of floor space, the building will provide for storage of 600,000 volumes, and study space for 1,000 students. Two-thirds of the seating will be individual study carrels in the bookstack. T h e new building will be completed and occupied by September 1963.

Mobile Libraries—a la Camel H a r r y Norris , a lec turer at the L o n d o n

School of O r i e n t a l and Afr i can studies, has traveled across M a u r i t a n i a by j e e p a n d camel , in a ba t t l e against t ime, to find the camel -borne l ibrar ies that the n o m a d s carry f rom one c a m p i n g site to another . Every year m a n y pages of irre-p laceable manuscr ipts b e c o m e dilapi-dated b e y o n d recogni t ion , and records of his tor ical events, throwing l ight on the anc ient c ivi l izat ion of the Sahara , are lost forever.

Norr is reports that af ter copying hun-dreds of pages, his stock of film ran out

a n d he took notes by hand. V a l u a b l e in-format ion in these books, es t imated by a local scholar to total at least 2 ,000 books o n al l subjects , could still be saved if p r o m p t act ion is taken to photograph them. A m o n g these is a twelfth century c o m m e n t a r y on the K o r a n by the noted M i d d l e East scholar, A b u H i l a l Al-Askari . M r . Norr is believes it to be an or iginal in the author ' s own handwri t ing . I ts brown pages, part ly eaten by termites, are now stiff and crumbl ing , and M r . Norr is fears than in a n o t h e r few years l i t t le may be left of it.

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Personnel

T. N. McMullan

T . N. M C M U L L A N ' S appointment as direc-tor of libraries at Louisiana State University, announced December 16, disproves such old

adages as " T h e grass is greener," and "A prophet is not with-out honor." His three d e g r e e s a r e f r o m L.S.U. His entire profess ional career has been spent in the service of the in-stitution the librar-ies of which he now heads. His ability to discharge the respon-sibilities of the posi-tion to which he has

been appointed has been demonstrated in two separate periods in which he has served as acting director.

Born in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1909, Mr. McMullan received his Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in engineering and his Bachelor of Science in Library Sci-ence degree from L.S.U. in 1931, 1932, and 1934, respectively. During his college years, he worked as a student assistant in the uni-versity library. Following completion of his work for a library science degree, he was ap-pointed to the staff as head of circulation. This position, with constantly increasing re-sponsibilities, he continued to hold—with time out for Military service, 1941-45—until he became acting director, 1954-55, associate director with special responsibility for public service, 1955-61, and again since September, 1961, acting director. It was largely during his first period as acting director that the programing and planning of L.S.U.'s new library building were accomplished. This valuable experience he is now putting to use as he works with the library building com-mittees for the two new libraries presently in planning period at the Alexandria and the New Orleans campuses of the university.

Mr. McMullan's professional activities in-clude membership and committee work in the usual professional organizations. He has served as president of the Louisiana Library Association and is currently chairman-elect

of the Library Section, Louisiana College Conference. His faculty activities include membership in the American Association of University Professors, in which he is serving a second year as vice-president, and on the Policies Committee, Faculty Council.

His off-campus and nonlibrary interests are centered largely in the Kiwanis Club, for which he has served as Key Club advisor to the Baton Rouge £ligh School, and the Re-serve Officers Association of the United States, of which he has been president of the Louisiana chapter. His military service in-cluded one year overseas in AFPAC, General McArthur's headquarters. He is now retired with the rank of lieutenant colonel.

A warm and friendly person himself, one of Mac's chief assets is a charming family, consisting of a married daughter, two sons, the older of which is now in college, and two grandchildren, plus a librarian wife, who teaches the required course in the Use of Books and Libraries at L.S.U., and is, there-fore, in a key position from which to give him the benefit of the sage advice and criti-cism of a very large segment of his library public. As one who can speak for another very important, but much smaller, segment of that public, the Library School faculty and student body, I am happy to have the privilege of introducing to CRL readers the new director of libraries at Louisiana State University, Theodore N. McMullan, or, as he is known affectionately to his staff, Mr. Mac.—Florr inel l F. Morton.

C A R L M . W H I T E , former director of the Columbia University Libraries and professor in the School of Library Service, has accepted a position with the Ford Foundation. His first assignment will be to assist in the de-velopment of the National Library of Ni-geria in Lagos. His many accomplishments as director of libraries (1943-1953) and the growth of the collections and services during his term are well demonstrated in library literature.

With an outstanding record of service as director of the Ankara Library School, which was supported by the Ford Foundation, Dr. White now joins the Foundation staff as pro-

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gram specialist in library development. His many friends on the library staff wish him the best of everything in this new and im-portant venture.—Richard H. Logsdon.

H E R B E R T G O L D H O R resigned his position as chief librarian of the Evansville Public Li-brary on January 31 to return to the Uni-

versity of Illinois Li-brary School as as-sociate director. Prior to coming to Evans-ville in 1952, he had been associate pro-fessor of the faculty of the same library school. As associate director Dr. Goldhor will have special re-sponsibility for teach-ing courses and train-ing students in the field of public library

administration, in addition to his administra-tive duties.

In his ten years as chief librarian at Evans-ville, he has seen the book stock of the library increase from 245,596 volumes to 304,682, while the circulation jumped from 614,000 in 1952 to more than 1,150,000 in 1961. While these figures are impressive, they do not reveal the full extent of his accom-plishments. Believing fervently that the worth of a book is in its use, and that the reader should be the center of all library activities, he sought continuously to streamline library policies and procedures to achieve these ends. Building on the solid foundations laid by his two predecessors, Ethel McCollough and Arnold Rosaaen, Dr. Goldhor effected a re-organization of the central library into two major divisions—Adult Information Depart-ment and Technical Services Department— as well as a Young Adult Room for readers of high school and post-high school years. Since the Evansville Public Library has the responsibility of servicing all of Vanderburgh County, a modern bookmobile was acquired to reach outlying areas. Land for a much-needed branch to serve Evansville's rapidly growing east side was acquired recently, and a branch library building is now in the plan-ning stage. Meanwhile, this part of the city is being served by a modern booketeria in one of the shopping centers.

In addition to his work at the Evansville Public Library, Dr. Goldhor was instru-mental in organizing the Tri-State Librar-ians—a grass-roots organization of librarians and friends of libraries in southwestern In-diana, southeastern Illinois and western Ken-tucky. In 1961, arrangements were made for handling of book orders for the T e l l City, Indiana, Public Library. This led to the exploration of the possibility of a regional processing center to serve all the libraries which use Library Service Act funds in the seven counties around Evansville. With all this Dr. Goldhor has found time to write a number of articles for publication in pro-fessional journals, and to work with Joseph L. Wheeler in writing a book on public li-brary administration, scheduled for publica-tion in 1962.

In his ten years at the Evansville Public Library Dr. Goldhor established a high standard of performance for his successor to emulate. His decision to leave Evansville was made only after an inward struggle, and with the conviction that a greater challenge awaits him at I l l inois .—Thomas S. Harding.

H E N R Y B I R N B A U M has resigned from his position as chief circulation librarian at Brooklyn college to accept the position of li-brarian at Pace Col-lege in the City of New York.

Swiss by birth, Mr. Birnbaum became a U.S. citizen in 1941. After early experi-ence in business, he entered the army and served in Military I n t e l l i g e n c e from 1941 to 1945. For the next year he was a representative in the Library of Congress Mission in Germany. For the next two years he was a research analyst for the war crimes trials in Nuremberg. He was graduated magna cum laude in International Relations from the University of Colorado in August, 1952. He is a member of Pi Gamma Mu (Social Science honorary), Delta Phi Alpha (German Language honorary), and Phi Beta Kappa.

Herbert Goldhor

Henry Birnbaum

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Mr. Birnbaum received his M.S.L.S. de-gree from Columbia University School of Li-brary Science in 1954. He began his work at Brooklyn College before he had finished his professional training at Columbia. He was employed as a Fellow in the acquisition de-partment in 1953. On completion of his Co-lumbia work, he became an assistant in the catalog department; and in 1957 was ap-pointed chief of the circulation department. Special assignments included editing the Brooklyn College staff bibliography. When the time came to move from the old library to the new, Mr. Birnbaum was in sole charge in planning and organizing the shift. He was deputy chairman of the library depart-ment during the summer of 1960, and was in charge of the performance budget for Brooklyn College Library.

In the circulation department he became interested in developing a refinement in the department's I B M transaction-card system. T h e system had been adopted some years ago, but there had never been a location file. His effort to discover how a location file could be created and maintained by I B M machines was successful, and he was com-missioned by I B M to write a manual. This was entitled General Information Manual, IBM Circulation Control at Brooklyn Col-lege Library, 1960. T h e Manual has received wide distribution, and I B M and the library have received hundreds of requests for it, from librarians throughout the world.

In 1960 Mr. Birnbaum initiated the estab-lishment of a Circulation Service Discussion Group within the Library Administration

Division of ALA, and was elected its chair-man.—H. G. Bousfield.

P A R K E R W O R L E Y on September 1st assumed the librarianship of the Rutgers Univer-sity Library in Camden, N.J . He came to the Rutgers library system from Trenton State College where he was readers' ad-viser since 1958. Pre-vious to that time he was librarian at Thie l College and assistant librarian at Ursinus. During 1948 and 1949 he served an internship in the Library of Congress.

Mr. Worley grad-uated from the Uni-versity of Oklahoma in 1947. One year later he received his bachelor's degree in Library Service, and after serving for five years as librarian at Thie l College, he came to the Graduate School of Library Service in 1958. During the time he was in the library school at Rutgers, he also worked as an assistant in the university library in the periodical de-partment.

He has been associated with Trenton State College since 1958, and in 1961 was awarded a master's degree in History at Rutgers Uni-versity.

He served four years in the Navy and is an active member of the Naval Reserve.

Appointments C H A R L E S B E Y M E R , formerly a staff member

of the Cornell University Library, Ithaca, N.Y., is now assistant head, acquisitions de-partment, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind.

D A V I D B I S H O P , formerly reference librarian, Los Angeles County Medical Association, is now librarian I I in the Biomedical Library, University of California, Los Angeles.

C A R E Y S. B L I S S , formerly assistant curator of rare books, T h e Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, San Marino, Calif., has been appointed curator of rare books.

M R S . O L G A B O R O S is catalog librarian, Con-

trol Library, Washington University Librar-ies, St. Louis, Mo.

M I C H A E L B R O O K , formerly reading room superintendent at the Southampton, Eng-land, University Library, has joined the staff of the Minnesota Historical Society Li-brary, St. Paul, as assistant reference librar-ian.

C H A R L E S A. B R O P H Y , JR., has been ap-pointed head librarian at Batelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, Ohio. For the past ten years, Mr. Brophy has played a key role in developing Batelle's Slavic library, which contains one of the nation's largest collec-

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tions of technical and scientific publications from the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, Poland, and other Slavic countries. Mr. Brophy's de-gree in library science is from University of Illinois. He is a member of the American Documentation Institute.

D A V I D W. B R U N T O N , formerly head librar-ian, Elmhurst College, Elmhurst, 111., is now director of the cooperative processing center, Nevada State Library, Carson City.

M R S . C A R O L Y N F . B U C K N A L L is librarian I I

in the catalog division, University of Wash-ington, Seattle.

M A R Y L E E B U N D Y is assistant to the direc-tor of libraries and library-research consult-ant at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y.

M R S . M A U D E C L A Y is a cataloger in the University of California Agriculture Library, Riverside.

E I L E E N A . C O N L E Y , formerly humanities librarian, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind., is now engineering librarian there.

R O B E R T C. E N N E N is assistant director, technical services division, University of Notre Dame Library, Notre Dame, Ind.

M E L B A F A U C E T T , formerly a staff member of the Creighton University Library, Omaha, Neb., is now head of Business and Economics Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind.

M R S . P A T R I C I A G E B H A R D is a cataloger in the University of California Library, Santa Barbara.

ISAAC G O L D B E R G , formerly a staff member of the Library of Congress, is now librarian I I in the Engineering and Mathematical Sciences Library, University of California, Los Angeles.

F . R I D L E N H A R R E L L , formerly a staff mem-ber of the University of Michigan Library, Ann Arbor, is now head of the Social Science Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind.

N O L A A N N IVERSON, formerly adult assist-ant, Kansas City, Mo., Public Library, is now assistant cataloger, Idaho State College Li-brary, Pocatello.

M A R I A K E S Z L E R is assistant librarian in the Social Science Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind.

FRANCIS D. L A Z E N B Y , formerly librarian, Mediaeval Institute and Graduate-Research Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre

Dame, Ind., is now assistant director of the humanities division.

F R A N K L U C A S H is reference librarian, Cen-tral Library, Washington University Librar-ies, St. Louis.

P H I L I P J A M E S M C N I F F has been appointed Archibald Cary Coolidge bibliographer, a new position in the Harvard University Li-braries. He will continue to serve as associate librarian for resources and acquisitions in the Harvard College Library.

L E S T E R M A T T I S O N , formerly assistant to the director, has been appointed assistant pro-fessor and chief circulation librarian, Uni-versity of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

W I L L I A M A. P A R R I S H , who is presently cura-tor of prints, T h e Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, San Marino, Calif., has received the further appointment of ad-ministrator of exhibitions.

A N I T A M. P R O F F I T T , formerly the Base li-brarian at Pease Air Force Base, New Hamp-shire, was recently appointed to the staff of the reference branch of the U.S. Air Force.

JOHN CARSON R A T H E R , formerly specialist for college and research libraries, Library Services Branch of the Office of Education, has been appointed assistant chief of the descriptive cataloging division, Library of Congress.

J E S S I E R ICHARDSON; formerly of the refer-ence department, is now principal librarian of the Bio-Medical Library, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

M R S . T O M O M I R E V O Y R is senior library as-sistant in the technical information service, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.

E U G E N E N. S A L M O N , head circulation li-brarian, University of Oregon, Eugene, has been granted a leave of absence to accept a special assignment as head of Technical In-formation Services, American Library As-sociation's Library Technology Project, Chi-cago.

W I L L I A M J. SCHNEIDER has joined the Minnesota Historical Society Library, St. Paul, as an assistant librarian.

M R S . V I R G I N I A S E C R E S T is catalog librarian, Central Library, Washington University Li-braries, St. Louis.

G E O R G E E. S E R E I K O , formerly a staff mem-ber of the Western Reserve Historical So-ciety Library, Cleveland, is now assistant di-rector, social studies division, University of Notre Dame Library, Notre Dame, Ind.

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M A R I L Y N L . T H O M P S O N , formerly with U.S. Army Libraries in Germany, is now senior librarian in the Physics-Mathematics-Statistics Library, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.

L E D E L L E W E T T E N G F . L , until recently Base librarian at Ent Air Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colorado, has joined the staff of the U.S. Air Force Academy Library as catalog-ing librarian.

R I C H M O N D D . W I L L I A M S has been named director of the Eleutherian Mills Historical Library. He had been associate director since May 1961 of Longwood Library, later given the present name.

F R A N K Q . H E L M S has joined the staff of the

University of Delaware Libraries as agricul-ture librarian. Mr. Helms was formerly a reference librarian at Rutgers University Li-brary.

R I C H A R D L . SNYDER on February 15 be-came associate director of libraries, Massa-chusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Mr. Snyder was formerly science librarian at M I T .

J O H N M. STEADMAN, formerly a Recognized Scholar at Oxford University, has been ap-pointed to the research staff of the Hunting-ton Library, San Marino, Calif. Dr. Steadman received his B.A. and M.A. at Emory Uni-versity and his Ph.D. at Princeton.

Retirements T H E L M A B R A C K E T T , librarian of the Uni-

versity of New Hampshire, Durham, since 1942, retired on December 31, 1961. She was state librarian of New Hampshire for ten years before 1942. During her administration of the university library, all professional li-brarians on the staff were granted faculty status.

C H A R L E S W. D A V I D , director of the Eleu-therian Mills Historical Library, Wilming-ton, Del., retired at the end of 1961. Dr. David was director of the Longwood Library, Kennett Square, Pa., from 1955 until that

organization merged with the library of the Hagley Museum and was renamed the Eleu-therian Mills Historical Library. He was director of libraries at the University of Pennsylvania from 1940 until 1955.

M R S . G L A D Y S N O L L M A N has retired as prin-cipal librarian of the Bio-Medical Library, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, after twenty-five years of service.

T H E O D O O R W. L. S C H E L T E M A , cataloger in the subject cataloging division, Library of Congress, retired December 8, 1961 after thirty-three years of service.

Necrology H U G O H E S P E N , editor of the National

Union Catalog since 1947, and a staff mem-ber in the union catalog division, Library of Congress, for thirty-four years, died Decem-ber 11, 1961.

E L E A N O R F. L E W I S , head of the reference department of Northwestern University Li-

brary at the time of her retirement in 1948, died December 5, 1961 in Panama City, Florida.

R O B E R T O L I V E R SCHAD, curator of rare books and secretary to the Board of Trustees, T h e Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, died in Pasadena, December 25, 1961.

Foreign M A R T I N C R E M E R has retired as director of

the Westdeutsche Bibliothek, Marburg. J O S E F R E S T , director of the Universitats-

bibliothek, Freiburg im Breisgau, W. Ger-many, died April 9, 1961 at the age of sev-enty-seven.

N A S S E R S H A R I F Y , formerly deputy director of the Library of Parliament of Iran, is now director-general of the National Library of Iran.

T A K A O SUZUKI has been appointed direc-tor of the National Diet Library, Tokyo.

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ACRL Board of Directors Midwinter Meeting 1962

B R I E F O F M I N U T E S

January 29 Present: President Ralph E. Ellsworth;

Vice President and President-elect, Katharine M. Stokes; Past President, Edmon Low; Di-rectors-at-large, Jack E. Brown, Neal R . Har-low, Flora B. Ludington, Lucile M. Morsch; Directors on ALA Council, J . Richard Blanchard, Helen M. Brown, Dorothy M. Drake, James Humphry, I I I , Ralph H. Hopp, Newton F. McKeon, Jr . , Russell Shank, Mrs. Margaret K. Spangler; Chairmen of Sections, Mrs. Frances J . Brewer, Esther M. Hile, Helen Wahoski, James O. Wallace, Irene Zimmerman; Vice Chairmen of Sections, Virginia Clark, Ervin Eatenson, David Kaser, Jay K. Lucker; Past Chairmen of Sections, George S. Bonn, Ralph W. McComb, Fritz Veit; A C R L Executive Secretary, Mark M. Gormley. Committee chairmen present were Dale M. Bentz, Lorena A. Garloch, Gus A. Harrer; editors, William V. Jackson, Maurice F. Tauber ; guest, Frank A. Lundy.

T h e first session of the A C R L Board of Directors at ALA's Midwinter Meeting was devoted entirely to a full and frank discus-sion of the future role of A C R L in ALA and with A R L . President Ellsworth made an in-troductory statement preparatory to the dis-cussion outlining his views of the relation-ship of A C R L to ALA and A R L . He felt that ACRL's relationship to ALA in the present organizational structure was not sat-isfactory. He described ALA's structure as undesirable for the reason that it tends to inevitably glorify and exaggerate the role of the type-of-activity divisions at the ex-pense of the type-of-library divisions.

Dr. Ellsworth did not advocate ACRL's secession from ALA but suggested that if ALA were organized on a federation of li-brary associations basis, A C R L would be in a better position to support a broader and more effective program. As for ACRL's rela-tionship with the now corporate and enlarged ARL, he felt there would be no problems or conflicts which could not be resolved through cooperation.

On a call for discussion many board mem-bers expressed their opinions on the issues raised. T h e consensus of the group was sum-marized by Dr. Ellsworth. It was decided that A C R L should continue to work within the ALA structure, but that it should present its views more forcefully within ALA and develop more aggressive statements of pro-gram.

Dr. Ellsworth closed the meeting with a recommendation that the president's term of office be longer than a year, preferably two. Further discussion of this point brought a suggestion that instead of extending the president's term of office, a program com-mittee or planning committee should be appointed to lay out a long-range program, with the president-elect serving as chairman and remaining on the committee for a three-year term. It was agreed that this would pro-vide better continuity of program.

January 30

Present: President, Ralph E. Ellsworth; Vice President and President-elect, Katharine M. Stokes; Past President, Edmon Low; Di-rectors-at-large, Jack E. Brown, Flora B. Ludington, Lucile M. Morsch; Directors on ALA Council, Newton F. McKeon, Jr . , J . Richard Blanchard, Helen M. Brown, Ralph H. Hopp, James Humphry, I I I , Dorothy M. Drake, Russell Shank, Mrs. Margaret K. Spangler; Chairmen of Sections, Mrs. Frances J . Brewer, Esther M. Hile, Helen Wahoski, James O. Wallace, Irene Zimmerman; Vice Chairmen of Sections, Charles M. Adams, Virginia Clark, H. Richard Archer, Jay K. Lucker, Ervin Eatenson, David Kaser; Past Chairmen of Sections, George S. Bonn, Fritz Veit, Ralph W. McComb; A C R L Executive Secretary, Mark M. Gormley. Committee chairmen present were Dale M. Bentz, Lorena A. Garloch, Gustave A. Harrer, Felix E. Hirsch; editor, William V. Jackson; two guests from India sat in on the meeting.

At the second session of the Board of Di-rectors, President Ellsworth called attention to a resolution formulated by A R L on the

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matter of the proposed revised accrediting standards of the American Association of Law Schools. He felt that it would be wise for A C R L to take a positive position on this topic and asked for authority to compose a similar resolution in the name of A C R L . A motion was moved, seconded, and carried permitting the president to draft this state-ment. (The statement will appear in a later issue of CRL.)

Miss Ludington announced that Charles B. Shaw of Swarthmore College died the previous day. She was requested by President Ellsworth to prepare a statement of tribute in the name of ACRL, a copy to be trans-mitted to Mrs. Shaw as well as to the presi-dent of Swarthmore. T h e statement reads as follows:

T h e Association of College and Research Li -braries notes with sadness the passing of Charles B . Shaw, for many years the distin-guished l ibrar ian of Swarthmore College. T h e List of Books for College Libraries edited by Mr. Shaw thirty years ago was a substant ial contr ibut ion to many college l ibraries. As a teacher and consultant he was an inspirat ion to many members of our profession.

A report of the nominations for the 1962 division and section elections was presented by Mr. Gormley. A complete list of the nominees appears elsewhere in this issue.

Mr. Low, A C R L past president and repre-sentative to ALA's PEBCO, gave an informa-tive but rather pessimistic report on the budget for the coming year. He distributed to the board members an excerpt from PEBCO's report to the ALA Executive Board. T h e report listed eleven programs deserving of emphasis, one of which is Publications (in-cluding divisional periodicals). Priorities were not yet assigned, but will be later in the light of funds available. Mr. Low com-mented that he believed that funds for ACRL's official journal and chief program, College and Research Libraries, were in dan-ger of erosion, and said he would like a statement from the Board of Directors in-dicating the priority they would like him to assign to their journal in comparison to other suggested A R C L programs, at the forth-coming P E B C O meeting at Miami Beach. Mr. McComb moved that the A C R L Board of Directors pass a resolution on to P E B C O designating College and Research Libraries

as our major program, expressing its concern about the threat of declining support, and urging that every effort be made to correct this situation. T h e motion was seconded and carried.

Mr. Gormley presented to the board a revised statement of A C R L responsibility for their approval. T h e statement as revised would include responsibility for materials: " T h e identification and evaluation of book and nonbook materials useful in college, uni-versity, and research libraries; the identifica-tion of principles and establishment of criteria involved in their selection and use; the stimulation of the production of such materials; and the responsibility for activi-ties related to the bibliography, compilation, publication, study, and review of professional literature in its area of responsibility." In-corporation of this additional phraseology in the official statement of responsibility would make valid ACRL's administration of the "New Shaw List" project. A motion was made, seconded, and carried for approval of the revised statement.

Since section and committee reports had been submitted in writing in advance of the Midwinter sessions and distributed to board members for information, President Ells-worth invited discussion of any special prob-lems of the sections and committees,

Mrs. Brewer, chairman of the Rare Books Section, commented that there are some members of the section who feel that it is not necessary or desirable to have a precon-ference institute of the section every year, but rather every other year. President Ells-worth ruled that it is up to the sections to coordinate their preconference plans with over-all ALA conference plans.

Mr. Wallace, chairman of the Junior Col-lege Libraries Section stated that the section was in close association with the American Association of Junior Colleges and requested that the section be officially authorized to represent A C R L in dealings with AAJC. A motion was seconded and carried.

Brief reports from the Publications Com-mittee and the Committee on Organization, which had not been received in time for duplication and distribution to the board, were read by Mr. Gormley. President Ells-worth commented that the same procedure of submitting written reports in advance would be followed in connection with the

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annual conference. He announced that Dr. Robert A. Miller of Indiana University would be our speaker at the A C R L Membership Meeting at Miami Beach.

Budgeting procedures were covered by Mr. Gormley. All requests from sections and committees are to be prepared and forwarded to headquarters by March 26. He reported also on the problems of providing member-ship lists to the various sections and sub-sections, but was hopeful that the eventual installation of automatic equipment at head-quarters would improve this situation.

Of great interest to the Board of Directors was President Ellsworth's report of progress on the project that the Council on Library Resources recently funded to establish a cur-rent college-level book selection service. Can-didates are being considered to fill the posi-tions of editor and assistant editor. An editorial board and advisory committee will be appointed as well. Suggestions of potential candidates were invited.

Dr. Ellsworth announced the appointment of Jack E. Brown to the chairmanship of the newly created President's Committee on A C R L Program. Other members of the com-mittee are Neal Harlow, James Humphrey, III , and Lucile Morsch.

President Ellsworth gave mention to a postal bill passed by the House of Represen-tatives which would give the Attorney Gen-eral permission to define Russian propaganda and keep it out of the mails. A R L is actively engaged with this problem and is taking ap-propriate action. Dr. Ellsworth said that he was delegated by A R L to get in touch with the Assistant Attorney General and see if he thinks library associations can do anything about it. Dr. Ellsworth thought A C R L ought to have a standby council to take action for this board if and when it seems appropriate and wise to do so.

T h e Chairman-elect of ACRL's Rare Books Section, H. Richard Archer, reported that the Rare Book Manual he is editing will be published sometime this year as ACRL Monograph No. 26.

D R . T A U B E R R E P O R T S

I have the honor of submitting my last report as editor of College and Research Li-braries. I have been associated with the jour-nal since 1944, serving as managing editor for

the period, 1946-48, and as editor since April 1948. During the fourteen years as editor, College and Research Libraries has expanded from a purely subscription publication to a membership journal, and has grown from a quarterly to a bimonthly. It has a national and international reputation of some merit, and this has been a direct result of the ex-pert and full cooperation that the editor has had from his editorial board and from the several executive secretaries who have served during this period. T h e journal had an excel-lent start under the editorship of A. F. Kuhl-man, and continued to thrive under Carl M. White (with E. W. McDiarmid and Ernest J . Reece as successive managing editors). T h e long term that I have spent with the journal has been related directly to my belief that this was a useful way to serve A C R L and the li-brary profession in general. It has been most satisfying to know that CRL is used con-stantly by librarians as a source of informa-tion in their practical work.

During the period from February to Sep-tember 1961, I was away, traveling in several parts of the world, and spending six months in Australia working with the Australian li-brarians in the examination of the present state of resources in the libraries of the coun-try. Through the joint activities of Richard B. Harwell, Ronald V. Glens, and Eugene Sheehy of the editorial staff, as well as my secretary at Columbia University, Mrs. Dona Drangel, the work of the journal proceeded without serious difficulty. Publication of the several issues appearing during my absence had been generally planned prior to my de-parture, and the individuals above, as well as other members of the staff, performed most effectively.

Since I have been back on the job at Co-lumbia University I have found that time seems to be slipping by so fast that I am not able to give the hours that are necessary to increased loads in teaching, research, and writing. It was apparent this should be my last period of appointment as editor. I am most grateful for this continued confidence in me on the part of the Board of Directors.

I have never been too much concerned with the economics of publishing CRL, al-though I have been affected by the budgetary actions of ALA. In the budget of ALA it is indicated that CRL receives a "subsidy." If this is the best term to use for the designa-

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tion of supplementary funds to a journal, which, if it had continued as a subscription publication would have more than likely paid its own way, this is all right. T h e point that I wish to make here is that the A C R L Board must stay behind CRL as one of its basic projects, and support its publication as fully as necessary. It would be a serious omission in this report if I did not pay tribute to Co-lumbia University, and especially the School of Library Service, for the many kinds of additional support that have been forthcom-ing during the long stay of the journal at Morningside Heights.

We have tried to follow a policy of pub-lishing new materials or imaginative rework-ings of old data. Sometimes we have pub-lished items which have been criticized by some of our sharp and wise colleagues. T h e many types of readers of CRL make it im-portant to cover a variety of fields and to treat problems on several levels. We have taken some pride in our ability to introduce new writers to librarianship, and to encour-age contributions from younger members of the profession. We have tried to single out individuals who have been working on proj-ects and prod them for articles for CRL. I am sure that these are things that any editor does, but I want to pay tribute to the many writers here and abroad who have provided the copy that makes a journal successful. There is no such thing as a good journal without good copy. T h e editorial staff mem-bers have had no small part to play in the selection of material, and to the three who have been with me from the very start of my editorship—Robert B. Downs, Ralph E. Ellsworth, and Jens Nyholm—and to the several others who have been on the staff, including John Berthel, Carlyle J . Frarey, Clarence Gorchels, Byron Hopkins, John C. Rather, Lawrence S. Thompson, and Walter W. Wright, I wish to express my deep grati-tude. Although not listed on the masthead as

editors, thanks should go to Constance Win-chell for her feature on reference books, and to Carolyn Ulrich, Wyllis E. Wright, Edna Mae Brown, and Geraldine Kaufman Maurer, for their contributions on new periodicals. N. Orwin Rush, Arthur T . Hamlin, and Richard B. Harwell have been most helpful from their posts as executive secretaries of ACRL. There have been about fifteen peo-ple who have served at ALA headquarters as liaison personnel, but the several publica-tions officers—Cynthia Saidel (Mrs. Irv Spigelman), Samray Smith, Floyd Cammack, Peter Demery, Ronald V. Glens—had fuller responsibilities with CRL. Individuals who have assisted with special work should be commended for their continuous help. These include C. Donald Cook, S. G. Gribble, and Richard Schimmelpfeng. T o all of these, I express my thanks for the countless actions that have been of direct assistance in the editing of CRL. Through a long period Elaine Mitchell has served as secretary to the executive secretary at A C R L headquar-ters, and in this capacity has been of con-stant assistance to the editor.

I have high hopes for CRL. T h e new edi-tor comes to his position not only experi-enced in the handling of CRL, but he has a long and wide experience in editing and publishing generally, as well as a full grasp of the national activities of A C R L and other library organizations. Richard Harwell brings so many talents to the post of editor of CRL that I am sure that he and his practically new editorial board will make the journal an even more useful and wanted publication than it has been. Mark Gormley and Mrs. Mary Falvey have to fit into the program of the journal with both industry and enthusi-asm.

I offer my best wishes to the new editor and his staff, the executive secretary, and the Board of Directors of ACRL.—Maurice F. Tauber.

Please Add Us to Your Mailing List College, university, and research libraries,

publishers of books on librarianship, and on college, university, and research libraries and librarians, are asked to add CRL to their mailing lists for news releases, news letters

and other publications. These mailings should be addressed to College and Research Libraries, American Library Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago. Such mailings to the editor of CRL should be discontinued.

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New Editor and Editorial Board of CRL

Richard Harwell, librarian of Bowdoin College, will succeed Maurice F. Tauber as editor of CRL, beginning with the May issue of the magazine. At the same time there will be a complete change in the editorial board. The new editorial board will consist of Maurice F. Tauber, Melvil Dewey professor, School of Li-brary Service, Columbia University, New York; Miss Flora B. Ludington, librar-ian, Mount Holyoke College, South Had-ley, Massachusetts; Peter W. Demery, acting acquisitions librarian, University of Washington Library, Seattle; David Kaser, director, Joint University Librar-ies, Nashville, Tennessee; W. P. Kellam, director of libraries, The University of Georgia, Athens; Eli M. Oboler, librar-ian, Idaho State College, Pocatello; Ben-jamin B. Richards, chairman, division of library education and service, Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia.

Mr. Harwell brings to his new duties more than twenty years of varied edi-torial experience and a close familiarity with the problems of CRL and of ACRL. Prior to undertaking his present duties at Bowdoin College he had been execu-tive secretary of ACRL, from January 1957 through the summer of 1961. He is author of thirty-odd books and pam-phlets, more than a score of articles in general magazines and scholarly journals, and of close to six hundred reviews. His most recent major publication is Lee, a one-volume condensation of Douglas Southall Freeman's four-volume R. E. Lee. In addition to publications in the field of Civil War history, he has pub-lished several bibliographies and a dozen items directly related to librarianship. He is presently a regular reviewer for the Chicago Tribune's Magazine of Books and an occasional reviewer for the Sat-urday Review.

During his time as executive secretary

of ACRL he served also as associate ex-ecutive director of ALA. He is currently a member of ACRL's advisory committee on the Burmese projects, its advisory com-mittee on the Metcalf project concerning library buildings, and its grants commit-tee, and is chairman of the nominating committee of its Rare Books Section.

Dr. Tauber joins the editorial board of CRL after fourteen years as editor of the magazine. Even prior to his assump-tion of the editorship he was closely associated with it in various other capac-ities. He is widely known for his distin-guished work as a professor in Columbia University's School of Library Service, and equally well known for his many contributions to library literature, par-ticularly for his coauthorship with Dr. Louis Round Wilson of The University Library and his volume on Technical Services in Libraries. He has been an adviser to major research libraries all over the world in their cataloging and other problems in the area of technical services, and is considered a leading au-thority in that area of library work. He has participated in many surveys of col-lege, university, public, and research li-braries and spent a major portion of 1961 surveying the libraries of Australia.

Miss Ludington was president of ALA in 1953 and 1954, and is currently a mem-ber of its publishing committee. She is a member of the ACRL board of direc-tors, and has been active at various times on many of its committees and many committees of ALA. She has contributed widely to library periodicals and other educational publications. She is the au-thor of Books and Libraries, Tools of the Academic World, one of the three pam-phlets distributed by the National Book Committee and ALA in connection with the first observance of National Librarv Week in 1957. She was the recipient of

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ALA's Lippincott Award in 1957. In ad-dition to being prominent in college li-brary work she has had foreign service in librarianship in India, Japan, and Tur-key and also has traveled widely in Africa.

Previous experience with CRL is the primary asset that Mr. Demery brings to his work as a member of the editorial board of the magazine. He worked as ACRL publications officer from 1958 to 1960. He is a past editor of the Washing-ton Libraries and for some time served as a reviewer of Near Eastern books for the Library Journal.

Dr. Kaser is the author of Messrs. Carey & Lea of Philadelphia: A Study in the History of the Booktrade, Directory of the St. Louis Book and Printing Trades to 1850 and coauthor (with Jane Kaser) of Washington University Manuscripts: A Descriptive Guide. Presently in press is his The Cost Book of Carey & Lea, 1825-1838. He has contributed nearly a score of articles to various library and bibliographical journals. He is a former editor of Missouri Library Association Quarterly and is assistant editor of Li-brary Resources ir Technical Services. He is chairman of the Acquisitions Sec-tion of ALA's Resources and Technical Services Division, and chairman-elect of ACRL's University Libraries Section. He is a member of the regional advisory board of the Bibliographical Society of America.

Long experience with library publica-tions has marked the career of Mr. Kel-lam. He was editor of the Southeastern Librarian from 1952 to 1961, and is now editor of the Miscellanea series published by the University of Georgia Library. He is a former member of ACRL's Publica-tions Committee and has been prominent in ACRL and ALA activities for many years.

Wide editorial experience also high-lights the career of Mr. Oboler. He is editor of the PNLA Quarterly and of the LPRT Newsletter. He has twice served as the editor of Idaho Librarian, from

1950-54 and in 1957-58. He has served as a reviewer for the Library Journal since 1953, and has contributed articles to that magazine, the ALA Bulletin, and Im-proving College and University Teach-ing. He was editor and co-compiler of the ACRL monograph College and Univer-sity Library Accreditation Standards— 1957. He was a member of ACRL Stand-ards Committee from 1954-56 and a co-compiler of the ACRL annual statistics report of college and university libraries in 1958 and 1959. He has conducted a regular newspaper column since 1952, first in the Intermountain, and since 1960 in the Idaho State Journal, Poca-tello. He has conducted a weekly radio broadcast, "Books and You," since 1949. He has been widely active in state, re-gional, and national library association work.

Mr. Richards is a former chairman of ACRL's College Libraries Section and has served on its grants committee. He is the editor of California Gold Rush Mer-chant; The Journal of Stephen Chapin Davis and of several other publications. From 1952 through 1958 he was editor of The Stepladder, a quarterly journal of poetry. He has contributed reviews to the Library Quarterly.

B A N Q U E T F O R D R . T A U B E R

Social highlight of the ACRL Mid-winter season was the banquet on Tues-day evening for retiring CRL editor Dr. Maurice F. Tauber. Thirty people who have been associated with Professor Tau-ber during the fourteen years of his stew-ardship gathered for good food, remi-niscences, and the presentation of an illuminated citation to Dr. Tauber. The citation read:

T o Maurice F. Tauber, the Association of College and Research Libraries presents this token as evidence, insufficient but sin-cere, of its appreciation of his fourteen years of service as editor of College and Research libraries. His editorship has been marked by constant increase in the stature

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of the magazine just as his career as a li-brarian has been marked by constant achievement toward his goal of the fullest possible service to academic—nay to a l l— librarianship. Both he and the magazine truly illustrate his ambition to help li-brarians in their work.

C h i c a g o , 3 0 J a n u a r y 1 9 6 2

Members of ACRL and of the ALA headquarters staff who were present to honor Dr. and Mrs. Tauber were David H. Clift, C. Donald Cook, Robert B.

Downs, Ralph E. Ellsworth, Mary Fal-vey, Carlyle J . Frarey, Ronald V. Glens, Mark M. Gormley, Richard Harwell, David Kaser, Richard Logsdon, Milton Lord, Edmon Low, Flora B. Ludington, Elaine C. Mitchell, Lucile M. Morsch, Florrinell F. Morton, Jens Nyholm, Ben-jamin E. Powell, Benjamin B. Richards, Alfreda Rogowski, Robert W. Severance, Ralph Shaw, Samray Smith, Frances Lan-der Spain, Grace T . Stevenson, Kathar-ine M. Stokes, Eileen Thornton, Robert Vosper, and Wyllis E. Wright.

Training Programs The Indiana University Libraries an-

nounce the continuation of their program designed to give intensive instruction to prospective rare book librarians. The fa-cilities and collections of the Lilly Li-brary will be used as a training center. Two Fellows will be selected for a study program intended to familiarize them with bibliographical methods, the anti-quarian book trade, and the organization and management of rare book and spe-cial collection departments or libraries.

The School of Librarianship of the University of California announces that it will have available for students enter-ing in the fall of 1962 nine part-time re-search assistantships. Research assistants may be enrolled in either the first year or the advanced program of the school. Applications for admission may be ob-tained by addressing the Dean, School of Librarianship, University of Cali-fornia, Berkeley 4.

In cooperation with the University of North Carolina Library, the School of Library Science offers several library as-sistantships each year to students ad-mitted to the M.S. in L.S. degree pro-gram. T o be eligible, applicants must be admitted to the School of Library Sci-ence and to the Graduate School of the

University of North Carolina. Awards are made to those who can qualify for li-brary assignments and whose credentials suggest special professional potential. Ap-plications for either a July 1 or Septem-ber 15 award must be filed by February 15. Announcement of appointments will be made April 1. Information and appli-cation blanks may be secured from Jean Freeman, Admissions Officer, School of Library Science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Library work-study scholarships of-fered by The University of Michigan provide an opportunity for well-qualified students to acquire intensive work ex-perience in a department of the univer-sity library. T o be eligible, applicants must have gained admission to the Ho-race H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies as degree candidates in library science. The appointment is for the pe-riod from June 15, 1962 through June 14, 1963 and may be once renewed. Appli-cations should be made not later than April 1. Announcement of the awards will be made about May 1. Inquiries and requests for application blanks should be directed to the Office of the Director, University Library, The Uni-versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.

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Nominees for ACRL

P R E S I D E N T

Katharine M. Stokes, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo

V I C E P R E S I D E N T A N D P R E S I D E N T - E L E C T

Neal R. Harlow, Graduate School of Library Service, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J .

Ralph H. Parker, University of Missouri, Columbia

D I R E C T O R S - A T - L A R G E ( 1 9 6 2 - 6 5 )

Andrew H. Eaton, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Edward C. Heintz, Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio.

D I R E C T O R S O N A L A C O U N C I L ( 1 9 6 2 - 6 6 )

Joe W. Kraus, Kansas State University, Manhattan Robert L. Talmadge, Tulane University, New Orleans, La.

C O L L E G E L I B R A R I E S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : Charles M. Adams, Woman's College, University of North Carolina Greensboro

V I C E C H A I R M A N AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Eli M. Oboler, Idaho State College, Pocatello Margaret Enid Knox, University of Florida, Gainesville

S E C R E T A R Y :

Helen Bliss, Eastern Oregon College, La Grande William R. Brandt, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis.

J U N I O R C O L L E G E L I B R A R I E S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : Virginia Clark, Wright Junior College Library, Chicago, 111. V I C E C H A I R M A N AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Leon F. Fordham, Daytona Beach Junior College, Daytona Beach, Fla. Norman E. Tanis, Henry Ford Community College, Dearborn, Mich.

S E C R E T A R Y :

Phyllis L. Brown, Laredo Junior College, Laredo, Tex. Mrs. Ethlyn Greenwood, Bay Path Junior College, Longmeadow, Mass.

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Officers, 1962/63

R A R E B O O K S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : H. Richard Archer, Chapin Library, Williams College, Williamstown, Mass

V I C E C H A I R M A N AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Ben C. Bowman, University of Vermont, Burlington Edwin Wolf, II, Library Company of Philadelphia

S E C R E T A R Y :

Thomas M. Simkins, Jr., Duke University Library, Durham, N.C. Howard A. Sullivan, Wayne State University Library, Detroit, Mich.

S U B J E C T S P E C I A L I S T S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : Jay K. Lucker, Department of Science 8c Technology, Princeton Univer-sity Library, Princeton, N .J .

V I C E C H A I R M A N AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Wrayton E. Gardner, St. Louis University Library, St. Louis, Mo. Gordon Stevenson, Art and Music Department, Kansas City Public Library,

Kansas City, Mo.

T E A C H E R E D U C A T I O N L I B R A R I E S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : Ervin Eatenson, Science-Technology Library, San Jose State College, San Jose, Calif.

SECRETARY AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Felix E. Hirsch, Trenton State College, Trenton, N.J. Reta E. King, Nebraska State Teachers College, Chadron

U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R I E S S E C T I O N

C H A I R M A N : David Kaser, Joint University Libraries, Nashville, Tenn. V I C E C H A I R M A N AND C H A I R M A N - E L E C T :

Dale M. Bentz, University of Iowa, Iowa City Ralph H. Hopp, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

S E C R E T A R Y : ( 1 9 6 2 - 6 5 )

Lorena A. Garloch, University of Pittsburgh Natalie N. Nicholson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge

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Review Articles

"Mostly Mearns" Largely Lincoln. By David Chambers Mearns.

New York: St Martin's Press, [1961] xi, 227 p. $6.00.

Largely Lincoln is "Mostly Mearns." T h a t means it is a combination of good humor, sound scholarship, and a feeling for the tell-ing incident or appropriate anecdote that adds up to a delightful book. It is a good representation in book form of the genial master of manuscripts at the Library of Con-gress, a happy reminder of a warmly erudite personality for all who know him and a wonderful introduction to him for those unfortunate librarians who have not yet had the pleasure of hearing him tell in person such stories as they will here find in print.

Dave Mearns is a much more serious scholar than he looks, but it is his sparkling puckishness that is reflected in the warmth of his face, the warmth of a greeting in his office, the warmth with which he helps one scholar after another at the Library of Con-gress, which is also so well reflected in this volume. Readers can turn to his other works to measure his stature as a historian (of the Library of Congress as well as of President Lincoln); let them turn to this book for his-tory with hilarity and librarianship with laughter.

In Largely Lincoln nine of the essays are about the wartime president. All of these are entertaining, and most of them develop, gently and amusingly, little known points in Lincoln's life that verify the claim of Earl Schenck Miers' introduction that: "Much of what is revealed will come as a delightful surprise, rewarding the reader with insight into Lincoln and his age."

T h e other six essays are equally delightful and equally rewarding. His story of D. P. Gardner, "the New England Soap Man," is

worthy of the late James Thurber; and his account of the seventh annual convocation (1907) of the Boston Authors' Club is as rollicking an excursion into a by-way of American literary history as is likely to be found. Every essay can easily be a favorite—• mine or yours—but no bookman, so-called, self-styled or real, can afford to miss the one called "A Neglected Bookman: Calvin Cool-idge." It is a gem.

This is a happy book and one to recom-mend to all lovers of books. But I do have one cavil with the author: He is such a good historian, such a lover of books, such a scholar himself, why does he bang the worn-out drum that librarians are enemies of books, are neither readers nor scholars? I wish he could be as proud as the library pro-fession is proud for him, that it is librarian-ship that led Dave Mearns down the paths of scholarship to the point that he himself disproves his charges against librarians. Let him stand up and be counted as the fine li-brarian he is .—Richard Harwell, Bowdoin College Library.

Science Literature Collecting Science Literature for General

Reading; Papers presented at an institute conducted by the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library Science, No-vember 6-9, 1960. Champaign, 111.: Illini Bookstore, 1961. 186p. Paper, $2.00.

This collection of papers of the seventh Allerton Park Institute is apt to be the most timely and popular topic of the annual series. At all age levels and in a broad range

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of cultural groups, the varied aspects of sci-ence are today eagerly read about and dis-cussed. For many a beleaguered librarian this volume will provide comfort and guid-ance, wise counsel, and useful clues to po-tentially important new directions. Readers will find different papers of greater interest, depending upon their primary field of serv-ice; however, certain of the papers are of wide application and will have enduring usefulness.

T h e first paper, "Classics in Science," by Robert B. Downs, provides in a simple dozen pages a synthesis of the early record of scientific theory, ingeniously tying to-gether in historical perspective the printed landmark works described. In his usual thor-ough manner, he enumerates the thirty-three classics in a bibliography following his narrative.

T w o short papers follow, the first by a scientist who works on an international plane and the second by an early well-known popularizer of science. T h e paper of Fred-eric Seitz seeks to orient us to the place of science in our world, in our particular so-ciety, and in our own time. With a brief nod to the future, the author suggests no appar-ent goals for libraries in the grim future. T h e other paper, by Watson Davis, develops a life-long thesis of its author. Mr. Davis has for decades been a one-man factory for the promotion of universal diffusion of pop-ular science. His suggestions here do not fail to demonstrate his indefatigable drive. Briefly, he renews his well-known claims for "auxiliary publication" as a device for avoid-ing full and costly publication in science, and proposes "an inclusive scientific news-paper potentially capable for circulation to every scientist and engineer . . . in the na-tion". There is little in these two papers to relate them to the tasks of libraries.

Another small group of papers follows

dealing with the special problems of creat-ing and serving interest in science in chil-dren specifically, young people (broadly de-fined as from the sixth grade to senility), and a very brief report of some effective promotion by the use of audio-visual meth-ods. T h e first and second of these chapters are particularly allied to public and school library practice; the last apparently de-pended largely for its effectiveness upon a filmstrip, which, unfortunately, could not be demonstrated to the reader with the text.

T h e next two long papers, one by Joseph C. Shipman and the other by George S. Bonn, are alone worth the cost of the whole volume. Each will probably remain a classic in library literature.

Joe Shipman, librarian of the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, reviews "Publishing of Scientific Materials" from the earliest rec-ords to modern times, introducing repre-sentative measures of publication in the sev-eral fields of science and in various areas of the world. One startling fact reported is that, " T h e Russian totals of scientific books represented more than one-third of all the books printed in the U.S.S.R., while copies of American scientific and technical books represented only about 3 per cent of all the books produced in this country." This is only a fragment of the vivid picture of mod-ern science literature provided by Mr. Ship-man as a setting for the exhaustive treat-ment of " T h e Aids of Selection" presented by Mr. Bonn, the chief of the science and technology division of the New York Public Library. He opens his paper with an enu-meration of six cardinal criteria for selec-tion and then proceeds to list, in a series of appendices, general and specialized tools, book-reviewing journals, and other useful types of aids. T h e net result of this scrupu-lously detailed and thoughtfully discussed bibliographical effort is an impression of a

M A R C H 1 9 6 2 1 7 5

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rare combination of Helen Haines and R. R . Hawkins, with some traces of Besterman. All frivolity aside, these papers provide sub-stance for future planning.

T h e remaining papers touch on special-ized types of public and peripheral types of material. In William S. Budington's "Prob-lems of Selection in Science" one can read-ily sense the particular public of a John Crerar type of library. " T h e Components of the Science Collection" reflects accurately in its enumeration of types of materials the long experience of Irene Strieby in special libraries and their needs. T h e brief sketch of "Science Fiction as Literature" is lesser fillip, the frosting on the cake, bringing this collection to its conclusion, succinctly out-lined by Harold Lancour with his customary Gallic humor. T h e conclusion, that "Science belongs in every library", and "Librarians will need, in the immediate years ahead, to inform themselves as never before about the world of science," is not itself news or a great contribution. A considerable contri-bution has been made, however, in adding to library literature an up-to-date, authori-tive handbook to enable those less knowl-edgeable in the sciences to cope with the needs of our changing public .— Jerrold Orne, University of North Carolina.

Circulation Systems Study of Circulation Control Systems. George

Fry 8c Associates, Inc. (Library Technology Project Publications, number 1) Chicago: Library Technology Project of the Ameri-can Library Association, 1961. 138p. $2.50.

This attractively designed workbook is the end result of a long-awaited and com-prehensively carried out study of circulation systems by a private management group in cooperation with an advisory committee of librarians. It is also the first publication to appear under the aegis of the Library Tech-nology Project. T h e final product contains three manuals with tear-away worksheets for comparing systems in use, plus a truly im-pressive amount of statistical data.

George Fry & Associates, management con-sultants, were commissioned for this detailed analysis of circulation in the field by the Council on Library Resources in coopera-tion with the Library Technology Project of the American Library Association and the Special Libraries Association. Limited in scope to only the operations of borrower registration, charging and discharging of books, handling overdues and reserves, and circulation statistics, the study also involved sending some 4,585 questionnaires to varied libraries. Three hundred and thirty-one of these went to college and university librar-ies. These questionnaire results are tabu-lated in the study. During the actual study, seventy-three public libraries were visited, along with nineteen college and university libraries and twelve special libraries.

Actually, the report, conceived as a "guide in hand" for administrators instituting or revising present circulation systems, is di-vided roughly into two halves. T h e first covers the procedures under which the study was conducted, together with a review of current circulation control practices and recommendations as to modifications and improvement. T h e second (and larger half) consists of the three manuals, complete with indented, numbered tabs, provided proce-dural and cost information on the leading circulation control systems and their varia-tions for public, college and university, and special libraries. T h e practical core of each manual is a number of blank work sheets, with accompanying explanatory samples, in-tended to be filled out when studying one's own needs with a view to estimating costs, modification, or consideration of a new sys-tem. T h e entire report is bound in plastic spiral so that these work sheets, one to be used for studying each charging point in the library, may be easily removed.

Both the Council on Library Resources and L T P are to be commended for their foresight in initiating this project and in providing the wealth of comparative infor-mation brought forth. This reviewer was in-trigued by probable uses of the work sheets, although broad use and reports of resulting savings and modifications will necessarily first have to be evaluated for full practical evidence. Nevertheless, it is reassuring to see the potentials of management analysis ap-

176 C O L L E G E A N D R E S E A R C H L I B R A R I E S

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plied to this traditional, and ofttimes neg-lected, problem area of libraries.

Specifically, the statistical Exhibit 1V-B will be of immediate interest to circulation personnel with its provision of a percentile chart on "Elemental Times for College and University Library Circulation Systems," as will be the other exhibits on equipment and material costs. Such gatherings of cost data have been needed for years. Also, in Chap-ter 5 of the report, "Future Mechanization," the administrator can speculate on an "ideal" circulation system of the future.

One disappointing note is found, how-ever. Despite the excellence of charts, graphs, and data, the findings reported in the nar-rative portion of the study will be found somewhat elementary by the experienced circulation librarian or administrator alert to public service functions. In fairness it must be said that the Fry organization had to begin this study as a complete stranger to the field. Their representatives, to become familiar with nomenclature and work meth-ods, visited fifty libraries, interviewing, film-ing operations, and conducting preliminary

time and motion studies. However, despite the desirability of a fresh viewpoint, there is room here to wonder whether such a study done by experienced librarians, paid and on leave, might not have accomplished similar results without such time lost in preparation and familiarization.

While this study should be of solid as-sistance in system revision and improve-ment, and while it reports concisely on twenty-eight charging systems now in use, it is regretted that one or two newer circula-tion modifications in the field were also not reported on. Reference is made to the Book-amatic modification now in operation at the Princeton University Library, which signifi-cantly reduces the high costs of Bookamatic reported in the Fry study, and in the earlier Diebolcl study. This modification eliminates both the costly, little-used Bookamatic mul-tiple form and plastic book card, and by means of a plastic campus identification card and a redesigned imprinter, permits im-printing of any library's regular bookcards. —Warren B. Kuhn, Princeton University Library.

Two Outstanding Bibliographies And Art References

Edward Lear on My Shelves Including: Biography of Lear; Published Works; Diaries; List of Original Drawings and Water Colors; List of Lithographs, Engravings and Woodcuts. 455 pages; 453 beautiful illustrations. 1933 Price only $45.00 net

John Leech on My Shelves Including a Short Biography; Bibliography of Illustrated Books; Leechiana; Original Drawings and Sketches; List of Etchings and Woodcuts; List of Refer-ence Books. 313 pages; 303 beautiful illustrations. 1930 Price only $45.00 net

Both by William B. Osgood Field Privately printed at the Bremer Press, Munich, each limited to 155 Signed Copies. Both volumes are uniform, measuring 914" wide by 131/2" tall, bound in blue boards, cloth backs and individually slipcased.

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Classified Advertisements BOOKS

OUT-OF-PRINT-BOOKS located without obligation. Any subject. Lowest prices. Book Mark, 51Z Walnut, Mt. Clemens, Mich.

STANLEY GILMAN, American History, Newspaper History and Out of Print Books. Box 131, Cooper Station, New York 3, N. Y.

BUSINESS METHODS INDEX, monthly international coverage, books, pamphlets, articles, films, etc., over 25,000 entries an-nually. Sample, $1.50. Box 453, Ottawa, Canada.

C E N T E R F O R RUSSIAN L I T E R A T U R E . Art, Science, Fiction, Philosophy, Economics. Translations into English. Other spoken lan-guages in USSR. Also records, children's books, arts 8c crafts, classics. Russian language study courses, dictionaries for students, etc. Mail orders filled. Free Catalogs. Phone CH 2-4500. F O U R C O N T I N E N T BOOK CORP., 156 F I F T H AVE., N. Y. 10, N. Y.

B U I L D I N G SPECIAL COLLECTIONS is one of our specialties. Foreign books and periodicals, current and out of print. Albert J . Phiebig, Box 352, White Plains, N.Y.

OUT-OF-PRINT COLONIAL BOOK SERVICE—Specialists in supplying the out-of-print books as listed in all library indices (Granger poetry; Essay and General Literature; Shaw; Standard; Fiction; Biography; Lamont; Speech; etc.) Catalogues on request. Want lists invited. 23 East 4th St., New York 3, N. Y.

POSITIONS WANTED HEAD L I B R A R I A N : Liberal Arts college library. Man, 57, M.S.L.S., Ph.D. (languages). Long experience as college librarian and pro-fessor. Extensive travel. South or East pre-ferred. Write Box 615, ACRL, 50 E. Huron Street, Chicago 11, 111.

FAMILY MAN. 46. 11 years college library experience: administration, cataloging, refer-ence. B.S. (Social Sc., English) M.A.L.S., M.A. (English). Seeks college library administra-tion, or in large library reference or subject area. Write Box 614 ACRL, 50 E. Huron Street, Chicago 11, 111.

PERIODICALS PERIODICALS—se t s , files, n u m b e r s -bought, sold, exchanged. Microcard reprints of rare files. Catalogues 8c buying lists. J . S. Canner Inc. Dept. ACRL., Boston 20, Mass.

MISCELLANEOUS A Y O R K S H I R E ( E N G L A N D ) L A W SCHOOL is extending its studies to include research and teaching in American law. Gifts of such law books and State or Federal Reports or other similar material as may be required to establish an adequate library would be most welcome. It is hoped that friends in the United States may assist in this project with gifts of books or money. Write to Box 234, c/o Dawsons, 129, Cannon St., London E.C.4, England.

POSITIONS OPEN

U N I V E R S I T Y OF NEW BRUNSWICK. Bonar Law-Bennett Library. Applications are invited from new graduates or experi-enced librarians for cataloguing position. Fifth year library science degree required. Initial salary depends on experience; range $4,300-$5,000; $5,000-$5,700. Five day week, months' holiday, Blue Cross, hospital insur-ance, pension. Apply with photo to Dr. Gertrude E. Gunn, Librarian, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Bruns-wick. Canada.

PERIODICALS AND O R D E R L I B R A R -IAN, Hamilton College. Usual requirements, fringe benefits and salary, starting June 1, 1962. Write: The Librarian, Hamilton Col-lege, Clinton, N.Y.

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W E S T VIRGINIA WESLEYAN College. Reference Librarian to have charge of all public services (General Reference, General Studies, Special Services). Challenging op-portunity for a scholar trained in research and bibliography capable of working with curriculum revision. Position involves teach-ing of Library Science classes and some cir-culation work. Position open. College and M.L.S. degrees required, experience preferred. Faculty status, 5-day, 37i/2 hour week, one month vacation, T I A A hospitalization and disability insurance, Social Security. Salary $5.800-$6,800, depending on qualifications. Write Helen Stockert, Librarian, West Vir-ginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W. Va.

ASSISTANT C O L L E G E L I B R A R I A N in Charge of Reference, Circulation and Serials in new building housing Audio-Visual as a part of library services. Graduate library school degree required. Starting salary $5833. Apply to Edward C. Werner, Head Librarian, New Mexico College, Silver City, N. M.

SERIALS CATALOGER. Position open in large scholarly library. Some knowledge of one or more foreign languages necessary. Fringe benefits. For further information ap-ply: T h e Johns Hopkins University Library, Baltimore 18, Md.

R O C K F O R D C O L L E G E L I B R A R Y has new position for general assistant with emphasis on readers' services. Library degree required. Salary: $5,200 to $5,800, depending on quali-fications. One month vacation, T.I.A.A., Blue Cross and Blue Shield paid. Small liberal arts college located in city of 130,000. Con-genial staff, pleasant working conditions. New campus now under construction. Op-portunity to develop expanded services to undergraduate students in coeducational col-lege. Open Sept. 1, 1962. Apply to Miss Mary Jane Carr, Librarian, Rockford College Li-brary, Rockford, 111.

W E S T VIRGINIA WESLEYAN College. Cataloguer. Immediate employment. Under-graduate, liberal arts college, located in beau-tiful small city in central West Virginia. 52,000 book collection, 70 faculty, 1,250 stu-dents. College and M.L.S. degrees required, some experience preferred. Clerical assistants. Faculty status. 5-day, 37i/2 hour week, one month vacation. T I A A , hospitalization and disability insurance, Social Security. Salary $5,800-$6,800, depending on training, ex-perience, and personal qualifications. Write Helen Stockert, Librarian, West Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W. Va.

ST. THOMAS M O R E COLLEGE, Univer-sity of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, requires Li-brarian competent to build a specialized col-lection for a Catholic Arts college. (Present collection 6,000 volumes. New facilities in 1964 with a capacity of 23,500 volumes.) Master of Arts degree preferred. College lo-cated on campus and closely federated with the university. Salary, $6,000 to $8,000, de-pending on qualifications. Social security fringe benefits. Position open July I, 1962.

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The Ethnic Folkways Library—the most e x t e n s i v e r e c o r d e d c o l l e c t i o n o f a u t h e n t i c f o l k m u s i c a r o u n d t h e w o r l d , c o n t a i n i n g d o c u m e n t a r y r e c o r d i n g s o f t r a d i t i o n a l m u s i c o n e v e r y c o n t i n e n t a n d i n a l m o s t e v e r y i n h a b i t e d l a n d .

For complete catalogue write:

Folkways Records 1 2 1 W . 4 7 T H S T R E E T

N E W YORK 36, N . Y .

(.Library and School Discounts)

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Model A — T h e Most Versati le a n d Widely Used Model—for S t a n d a r d A m e r i c a n Microf i lm Especia l ly designed for standard 3 5 m m rollfilm, aperture cards, microfiches, mounted stripfilm, and film jackets . Zoom control enlarges 12 to 20 times. $139.95

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Model 35—Only for 3 5 m m S y s t e m s U s i n g S m a l l e r Magni f i cat ions F o r special low reduction 35mm systems. Zoom control en-larges 10 to 15 times. Aperture 30x42mm. $145.95

For s t a n d a r d A m e r i c a n 3 5 m m rollfilm a n d sheetf i lm s y s t e m s , order Model A above for best results .

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Page 97: College and Research Libraries - CORE

Herbert Lang & Cie Agents for Libraries

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Careful Service Swiss and European Continental

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Every Library should have at least one good

GLOBE of the W O R L D W e suggest the 24 -diameter

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in Navigator or Cosmopolite mounting as illustrated.

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Cosmopolite T h e distinguished Cosmopolite period-style cradle stand of hand-rubbed solid walnut will be a prized acquisition to any library. Overall height with globe is 42 inches, width 3 4 inches. A distance and time measuring strip is mounted on the horizon ring. Signs of the zodiac also appear on the ring. A flexible plastic scale for measuring degrees and miles, as well as a plastic "dust cover , " are included with the globe. T h e globe rotates at a touch for easy viewing. G 2 4 P L 6 1 in solid walnut Cosmopolite

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Navigator T h e Navigator stand is of blond hardwood. A dis-tance and time measuring strip is mounted on the horizon ring. T h e shelf beneath the globe is a con-venient rest for atlases. Overall height of globe in Navigator mounting is 47 inches. T h e globe rotates freely at a touch and permits any point to be brought into view. This stand may be had in mahogany or walnut finish which adds 1 5 % to the price.

G 2 4 P L 1 5 in blond finished hard wood

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Page 99: College and Research Libraries - CORE

Books for A d v a n c e d Students and Researchers

PRINCIPLES of SELF-ORGANIZATION (1961 Illinois Symposium) International Tracts in Computer Science and Technology and Their Application, Vol. 9 Editors:

Heinz Von Foerster and George W. Zopf, Jr., University of Illinois

A n invaluable source of data on the problems of artificial intelligence, mechanization of thought, automation of perception, etc., which contributes to the clarification of issues, definitions, assump-tions and techniques connected with the matter of self-organization. Partial Contents Some self-organizing parameters in three-person groups, by A. Rapoport; Toward the cybernetic factory, by S. Beer; Many-valued logics and re-liable automata, by J. Cowan; Principles of the self-organizing system, by R. W. Ashby; Orderly function with disorderly structure, by R. W. Sperry. 526 pp. $15.00

VISTAS IN ASTRONOMY, Vols. 4 and 5 Editor: Arthur Beer, The Observatories,

University of Cambridge

These volumes offer articles by internationally-famous authors and provide a complete survey of contemporary astronomy and its allied sciences, with emphasis on active research, new techniques and methods and interaction with theoretical de-velopments. Partial Contents Vol. IV—An eighth-century meridian line, by A. Beer; Artificial satellites, by Sir Harrie S. W. Massey; Dynamical effects in the motion of earth sputniks, by L. I. Sedov. Vol. V—The magnetic fields in planetary nebulae, by G. A. Gurzadian; On the evolution of close binary stars, by F. B. Wood. Vol. IV, 208 pp., illustrated $12.00 Vol. V, 248 pp., illustrated, in press $12.50

ADVENTURES IN RADIOISOTOPE RESEARCH George de Hevesy

A collection of the work of George de Hevesy, world-famous Swedish scientist, Nobel laureate and winner of the Atoms for Peace Award. Partial Contents

INORGANIC AND PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY—Analytical applications; Activation analysis; Electrochemistry; Interchange studies; Self-diffusion. LIFE SCIENCE—Application of radioactive tracers occurring in nature; Skeleton studies; Phosphatides; Fatty acids; Permeability studies; Botanical studies. 1038 pp. 2-vol. set $30.00

CLAYS AND CLAY MINERALS, Vol. 9 Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference on Clays and Clay Minerals, Purdue University, I960 Editor: Ada Swineford, University of Kansas International Series of Monographs in Earth Sciences Vol. XI

Two symposia were featured at the Conference—"Engineering Aspects of Physico-Chemical Properties of Clays" and "Clay-Organic Complexes." The papers included in this volume con-tribute to the solution of problems involving clays, review the status of knowledge on specific topics in these areas and formulate the problems remaining to be solved. Partial Contents The influence of physico-chemical factors upon the mechanical properties of clays, by I. Th. Rosenqvist; Adsorbed water on clay: a review, by R. Torrence Martin; The structural status of clay systems, by L. A. G. Aylmore and J. P. Quirk; Clay minerals in rocks of the lower part of the Oquirrh formation, Utah, by E. W. Tooker. Interlamellar reactions of clays and other sub-stances, by Douglas M. C. Macewan; Adsorbtion by organo-clay complexes, by Rodney Tetten-horst, Carl W. Beck and George Brunton; Viscosimetric constants of suspensions of clay-polymer complexes, by H. v. H. Van Der Watt and G. B. Bodman. approx. 1,000 pp. $15.00

PERGAMON PRESS, INC. Dept. CR3, 122 E. 55th St., New York 22, N. Y.

Oxford London Paris

Page 100: College and Research Libraries - CORE

>

M t e u r i k

M

The Most "Comfortable99 Reader This is the Microcard Mark V I I Reader, combining the craftsmanship and precision engineering of Microcard readers with a host of new com-fort innovations for the user. For example, the Mark V I I is equipped with a "comfort-control" setting which allows a balancing of reader light with existing room light, minimizing eye strain and reading fatigue. T h e Mark V I I contains a built-in blower displacing 100 cubic feet of air per minute. Coupled with the double heat-absorbing glass in the optical system and a new condenser lens, it assures cool, comfortable operation, even when used for long periods of time.

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Page 101: College and Research Libraries - CORE

HISTORIAE NATURALIS CLASSICA

Ediderunt

J. Cramer et H. K. Swann

A Series of Facsimile Reprints of Rare and Important Works in the Biological Sciences

NOW READY!

Volume 10: Lamarck, J . B. Philosophic Zoologique. 2 vols, in one. Paris 1809. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $28.70

Volume 11: Diesing, K. M. Systema Helminthum. 2 vols, in one. Wien. 1850-51. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $46.90

Volume 12: Jan, G. and Sordelli, F. Iconographie Generale des Ophidiens. 4to. 300 plates. Milan 1860-81 clothbound. $47.60

Volume 13: Hagen, H. A. Bibliotheca Entomologica. 2 volumes in one. Leipzig. 1962-63 clothbound. $39.20

Volume 14: Engelmann, W. Bibliotheca Historico-Naturalis. (1700-1846) . Leipzig 1846 (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $28.70

*

Volume 16: Hedwig, J . Species Muscorum. With an Introduction by P. A. Flor-schuetz (Bot. Mus., Utrecht). Leipzig 1801. (Reprint 1961)

clothbound. $19.60

Volume 17: Hirn, K. E. Monographic und Iconographie der Oedogoniaceen. Folio, 396 pp., 64 plates. 1900 (Later Starting Point Books of Botanical Nomenclature) (Reprint 1960) clothbound. $39.20

Volume 20: Hooke, R. Micrographia. 38 plates. 1665. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $26.60

Volume 21: Arber, A. Monocotyledons. With introduction by Mrs. Arber, Jr. and W. T. Stearn. 1925. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $11.90

ASK FOR COMPLETE LIST.

S T E C M T - H A F I R SERVICE AGENCY, Inc. 31 East 10th Street, New York 3, N. Y.

S e r i a l s Department U n i v e r s i t y of Illinois Library U r b a n a . m . I *

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