ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries In this issue: Drucker to Address ACRL at San F ra n c isc o .........................................105 Inside W ash in g to n ............................. 108 News From the Field . . . 109 Additional ACRL Nominees for Of­ fices, 1975/76 117 Additional ACRL Section Nominat­ ing C o m m itte e s............................. 117 P e o p l e ...............................................125 Classified Advertising 129 ISSN 0010-0870 COLLEGE & RESEARCH LIBRARIES n e w s NO. 4 APRIL 1975 Drucker to Address ACRL at San Francisco Peter Drucker, noted author and manage­ ment consultant, will address the Association of College and Research Libraries at its principal program meeting at the 1975 ALA Annual Conference in San Francisco. Management and governance are among the most critical issues facing academic libraries to­ day. Can academic libraries be governed in such a way as to provide an adequate working environment and adequate rewards for those who work in them and, at the same time, to re­ spond adequately to the needs of their users? The problems posed by this question are complex. They reflect the tensions generated by the pressure for full faculty status for aca­ demic librarians, the movement toward union­ ism, demands for more accountability from agencies outside the library, stable or declining budgets, and the increasing willingness of li­ brary administrators to embrace new manage­ ment techniques developed primarily by and for business and industry. Drucker, well known as a consultant for busi­ ness and industry, will turn his attention at the San Francisco conference to The Management of Public Service Institutions. The issues he will address are crucial to all types of libraries, making this a major program event for the en­ tire ALA conference. Drucker’s paper will be presented Monday, June 30, at 2:00 p.m., and will be followed by a question and answer period. ACRL’s mem­ bership meeting will follow the program. Peter Drucker Collective Bargaining ACRL’s Academic Status Committee will sponsor a preconference in San Francisco at the San Francisco Hilton, June 27 and 28, on Col­ lective Bargaining in Higher Education: Its Implications for Governance and Faculty Status for Librarians. The program is part of the com­ mittee’s continuing effort to provide informa­ tion and materials that will help librarians in understanding and evaluating status and gov­ ernance issues. Because many students of the academic scene view collective bargaining as a critically important and rapidly growing phenomenon in News Issue (B ) of College & Research Libraries, vol. 36, no. 2 106 Dr. Kenneth E. Young governance in higher education, it is imperative that librarians be acquainted with the charac­ teristics of this phenomenon and with alterna­ tive ways of dealing with it. Donald Wollett, director of employee rela­ tions for the State of New York and formerly professor at the School of Law at the Universi­ ty of California, Davis, will describe the nature of collective bargaining and its relationship to governance in higher education. A survey of ex­ perience in academic collective bargaining will be provided by Dr. Kenneth Mortimer, profes­ sor at the Center for the Study of Higher E du­ cation at Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Jean Kennelly, assistant professor of li­ brary science at the University of Washington, will report on the current status of academic li­ brarians’ involvement in collective bargaining; and Gwendolyn Cruzat, assistant professor of library science at the University of Michigan, will discuss issues and strategies for academic librarians. Preconference participants will also hear pre­ sentations made by representatives of collective bargaining agents (AAUP, AFT, N EA ), by ad­ vocates of an unaffiliated local unit, and by ad­ vocates of no collective bargaining. Registrations will be accepted until June 1 and only upon payment of the fee, which is $35.00 for ALA personal members and $40.00 for nonmembers. Additional information and registration materials may be obtained from Beverly P. Lynch, Executive Secretary, ACRL, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. L egislation The Law and Political Science Section of ACRL will present a program on Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m.-12;00 noon, on Libraries and the Legislative Process. Eileen D. Cooke, director of the ALA Washington Office, will de­ scribe the role and function of the American Li­ brary Association in its dealings with the U.S. Congress. Roger H. McDonough, New Jersey state librarian, will cover activities of the state library in securing an effective legislative li­ brary program at the state level. Clarence R. Walters, Contra Costa County (California) li­ brarian, will present the ingredients of a suc­ cessful library program in relation to local leg­ islative bodies. Dan F. Henke, law librarian at Hastings College of the Law, University of California, and chairman of the Law and Politi­ cal Science Section, will serve as moderator of the program. Accreditation Dr. Kenneth E. Young, president of the Council on Postsecondary Accreditation, will speak at a program meeting of the ACRL Col­ lege Libraries Section, Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-4:00 p.m. Young will discuss Academic Libraries and the Accreditation Process: how the accrediting associations view and use the standards written by professional organizations in their evaluations of institutions. E ighteenth-Century E nglish Books The sixteenth annual preconference of the ACRL Rare Books and Manuscripts Section will be held in San Francisco, at the Hyatt House on Union Square, June 25-28. The theme is Eighteenth-Century English Books Considered by Librarians and Booksellers, Bib­ liographers, and Collectors. The keynote address of the preconference will be delivered by William B. Todd, profes- News items for inclusion in C&RL News should be sent to Mary Frances Collins, Assistant Director of Libraries for Technical Services, University Library ULB-35A, State University of New York at Albany, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12222. Adver­ tising (including classified ads) should be sent to Leona Swiech, Advertising Office, American Li­ brary Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. Production and circulation matters are han­ dled by ALA Central Production Unit, at the above address. News editor: Mary Frances Collins, Assistant Di­ rector of Libraries for Technical Services, State University of New York at Albany, Albany. As­ sociate News editor: Anne Dowling, Assistant Li­ brarian, Acquisitions Department, Library, State University of New York at Albany. Editor: Rich­ ard D. Johnson, Milne Library, State University College, Oneonta, New York 13820. President, ACRL: H. W illiam Axford. Executive Secretary, ACRL: Beverly P. Lynch. College & Research Libraries is published by the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, 17 times yearly—6 bimonthly journal issues and II monthly (combining July-August) News issues—at 1201-05 Bluff St., Fulton, MO 65251. Subscription, $15.00 a year, or to members of the division, $7.50, included in dues. Second-class postage paid at Fulton, Missouri 65251. © American Library Association 1975. A ll material in this journal subject to copyright by the Ameri­ can Library Association may be photocopied for the noncommercial purpose of scientific or educa­ tional advancement. 107 sor of English at the University of Texas at Austin and editor of the papers of the Biblio­ graphical Society of America. John W. Jolliffe, the keeper of catalogs at the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, and director of Project LOC, and William J. Cameron, dean of the School of Library and Information Science at the University of Western Ontario and director of the HPB Project, will discuss the eighteenth- century short-title catalog. G. Thomas Tanselle, professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Donald D. Eddy, associate professor of English and librarian of the Department of Rare Books at Cornell University, will examine the prob­ lems of bibliographical description. Patricia Hernlund, professor of English at Wayne State University, will address the problems of editing manuscript ledgers; and Donald F. Bond, pro­ fessor emeritus of English at the University of Chicago, will address the problems of editing periodical essays. Eighteenth-century English books will also be considered from the point of view of the bookseller—Robert J. Barry, Jr., of C. A. Stonehill’s, New Haven, Connecticut, and pres­ ident of A.B.A.A.; from the point of view of the collector—William P. Barlow, Jr., collector of the works printed by John Baskerville; and bookseller—Robert J. Barry, Jr., of C. A. from the point of view of the librarian—Alex­ andra Mason, assistant director of libraries and special collections librarian at the Spencer Research Library of the University of Kansas. The preconference summary will be provided by Herman W. Liebert, librarian emeritus of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Li­ brary at Yale University. Preconference participants will visit the Uni­ versity of California at Berkeley, to tour the Bancroft Library, to dine at the Faculty Club, and to hear a talk on music bibliography pre­ sented by Vincent H. Duckies, professor and music librarian at Berkeley. The Berkeley Cam­ pus Musicians will entertain using instruments from the collection. Participants will also visit local bookshops and special collections in San Francisco. Registrations will be accepted until June 1 and only upon payment of the fee, which is $90.00 for ALA personal members and $100.00 for nonmembers. Additional information and registration materials may be obtained from Beverly P. Lynch, Executive Secretary, ACRL, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. Papers of Public Officials The Rare Books and Manuscripts Section will also present two program meetings during the conference week, on Sunday, June 29. At 2:00 p.m., the RBMS Committee on Manu­ scripts Collections will sponsor a discussion on the Ownership of the Papers of Public Officials. Appraising At 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section will present a program on Gifts and Appraisals for Libraries. Lee Ash, li­ brary consultant, will preside over a panel which will comprise dealers, appraisers, collec­ tors, and donors. Two-Year College Libraries The ACRL Community and Junior College Libraries Section will focus its attention on problems facing two-year colleges. The confer- ence-within-a-conference, called It’s Problem­ atical, will be held on Sunday, June 29, 8:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Dr. John E. Tirrell, vice-presi­ dent for governmental affairs for the American Association of Community and Junior Colleges, will examine the problems of government fund­ ing. Jo Ellen Flagg, chairman of the CJCLS Instruction and Use Committee, will discuss the problem of library instruction in two-year col­ leges. Hal C. Stone, dean of education at Los Angeles City College and a past chairman of the Community and Junior College Libraries Section, will present his observations on educa­ tion overseas. The problem of library curricu­ lum and development will be addressed by panelists from a variety of community and jun­ ior colleges. Advanced registration is required. The fee of $12.00 includes lunch and must be prepaid. Registrations will be accepted until June 12. For registration materials, contact Iole Matteu- cig, Director of Library Services, City College of San Francisco, 50 Phelan Ave., San Fran­ cisco, CA 94112. University Libraries The ACRL University Libraries Section’s program will be held on Tuesday, July 1, 2:00- 4:00 p.m. It will feature a panel discussion con­ cerning Library Service to the Graduate Com­ munity. Communication ACRL’s Education and Behavioral Sciences Section will offer a program emphasizing the psychology of communication. Dr. William J. Paisley and Dr. Matilda Butler-Paisley, both of the Department of Communications at Stanford University, will discuss Communication: Inter- Continued on page 113 ANSI Report Available American National Standard Technical Report Number (Z39.23-1974) is now available from Ms. Marie Hogsett, ANSI, 1430 Broadway, New York, NY 10018. 113 of library literature known as Kentucky Micro­ forms: Library Series has been resumed. Origi­ nally published by the University of Kentucky Press, the series will be published on 4 x 6 microfiche in the future by the General Micro­ film Company, 100 Inman St., Cambridge, MA 02139. Libraries which had standing orders for the old series should notify General Microfilms of their interest in receiving future titles. In the future the series will include impor­ tant unpublished or out-of-print monographs in the general field of librarianship and bibliog­ raphy. In addition, it will include titles in these fields selected from General Microfilm’s con­ tinuing series of state documents. A list of titles in print is available upon application to General Microfilm. • The University of New Mexico General Library announces the publication of two new bibliographies in its Sources series: A Navajo Reading Bibliography, compiled by James M. Kari. (Sources, no.2) Albuquer­ que: University of New Mexico General Li­ brary, July 1974. 40p. $1.50 prepaid. A Current Bibliography on Chicanos, 1960- 1973, Selected and Annotated, compiled by Helena Quintana. (Sources, no.3) Albuquer­ que: University of New Mexico General Li­ brary, June 1974. 44p. $1.50 prepaid. Orders should be sent to: UNM Bookstore, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131. • The Case Memorial Library announced recently th at a directory to the archives of the foundation titled The Archives of the Case Me­ morial Library has just been printed by the li­ brary and is available for $2.00 a copy. I t can be ordered from the Case Memorial Library, Hartford Seminary Foundation, 55 Elizabeth St., Hartford, CT 06105. It contains a brief his­ tory of the H artford Seminary Foundation; de­ scribes the Alumni Alcove and papers relating to church and mission fields here and abroad; lists sermons of eminent ministers (1705- ), letters of prominent ministers and American authors (1739- ), diaries, journals, and tape recordings; describes the nature of seventeen important manuscript collections; and explains the arrangement, the policy for use, and the availability of the materials. • The Sciences-Engineering Library of the University of California, Santa Barbara has re­ cently announced its publication of: Chemistry Literature Guide by Arthur Antony. Price $3.00; and General Biological Sciences Includ­ ing Biochemistry and Biophysics by Virginia R. Weiser. Price $2.00. Both publications may be ordered from The Librarian’s Office, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106. ■ ■ San Francisco Continued from page 107 sections in the Library System and Library Ser­ vice. The program will be held on Monday, June 30, 2:00 4:00 p.m. Requirements for a T otal E ducational System At the EBSS business meeting on Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m .-12:00 noon, Karl M. Pear­ son, Jr., project head at System Development Corporation, will discuss his study of informa­ tion requirements in education, based on a sur­ vey of education information resources and a market analysis of information users. Art Research M ethods On Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-6:00 p.m., the ACRL Art Section will hold a workshop on Bibliographical Research Methods: Iconogra­ phy, Signs, Symbols, and Symbolism; Western Art from Early Christian Times to the E nd of the Eighteenth Century. The program will con­ sist of three slide-illustrated lectures, each fol­ lowed by a question and answer period. Dr. Sara Jane Pearman, slide librarian at the Cleve­ land Museum of Art, will lecture on “Biblio­ graphical Sources for the Study of Christian Iconography.” Dr. W alter S. Gibson, chairman of the Departm ent of Art at Case W estern Re­ serve University, will lecture on “Bibliographi­ cal Sources for the Study of Humanistic and Secular Themes in Art.” Dr. Luraine G. Tan- sey, art consultant at San Jose City College, will lecture on “Computerized Retrieval of Iconographical Information.” Dr. Gibson will serve as moderator of the discussion. Art Reference T ools The Art Section will also sponsor a program meeting on primary source materials and art reference collections. The program will be held at Stanford University, Tuesday, July 1, 9:00 a.m .-3:00 p.m. The program will include a slide-illustrated lecture on Art Reference Tools and Art Historians of the Past, by Dr. Susan V. Lenkey, art historian and rare book librarian at Stanford. Program participants may then choose to tour ( a ) the Art and Architecture Library in the N athan Cummings Art Building, where the newly appointed art librarian will discuss the scope and objectives of the collec- Join ACRL! For reduced rates at conferences! 114 tion, the services offered to faculty and stu­ dents, and the art bibliographical teaching ac­ tivities; or (b ) the Bender Room in the Special Collections Division, where Dr. Lenkey will display and discuss the rare primary sources in art and archaeology and the treasures of Stan­ ford’s special collections. Advanced registration is required. The fee of $7.00 includes transportation and lunch, and must be prepaid. Registration is limited to fifty- two persons. To register, send a check and a self-addressed stamped envelope to Mary Ashe, Head, Art and Music Department, San Francis­ co Public Library, Civic Center, San Francisco, CA 94102. Please indicate your choice of tours. E ast Asian Art Bibliography The Asian and African Section of ACRL, in joint sponsorship with the Art Section, will hold a program meeting at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum in Golden Gate Park. The program, which will include tours of the Asian or African sections of the museum, will feature a talk on Problems of East Asian Art Bibliog­ raphy, by Dr. James Cahill, professor of the history of art at the University of California, Berkeley. The program will be held on Thurs­ day, July 3, 9:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m. Advanced registration is required. The fee of $7.00 includes transportation and a buffet lunch at a nearby Manchurian restaurant and must be prepaid. Tickets will be available at the central ticket desk during the ALA confer­ ence week and must be purchased before W ed­ nesday, July 2. D ay at D avis ACRL’s Agriculture and Biological Sciences Section will sponsor an all-day tour of the re­ search libraries and facilities at the University of California, Davis. The program will include a demonstration of the CAIN on-line service and a choice of tours at (a ) the Food Protec­ tion and Toxicology Center and the Enology Laboratories, or (b ) the California Primate Re­ search Center and the Bee Biology Research Facility. The luncheon speaker will be Dr. Richard A. Farley, director of the National Ag­ ricultural Library and a past chairman of ABSS. Dr. Farley will review the current role of NAL in the biological-agricultural world. The ABSS Eunice Rockwell Oberly Memorial Award will be presented following the luncheon. In the SPECIAL OFFER still in effect: New members may join ACRL and ALA for $35.00 only! afternoon, Dr. Bernard Kreissman, university librarian at Davis, will serve as host for cock­ tails. The program will be held on Tuesday, July 1, 8:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Advanced registration is required. The fee of $10.00 includes transportation, coffee, and lunch at the Faculty Club. Registrations will be accepted until May 20 and must be prepaid. Registration is limited to forty-five persons and is transferable but not refundable. For registra­ tion materials, contact Jane Kimball, Head, Ref­ erence Department, University Library, Univer­ sity of California, Davis, CA 95616. Anthropology and the L ibrary ACRL’s Anthropology Section will sponsor a round table discussion on Anthropology and the Library, on Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m .- 12:00 noon. The discussion will feature a panel comprised of anthropologists, librarians, book trade personnel, and museum personnel. Slavic and E ast E uropean Studies The Slavic and East European Section will present its program at Stanford University on Ethnic Studies: Problems and Solutions. The program will include tours of the Stanford Li­ braries and a panel discussion among librarians and Stanford faculty members. The discussion will include an outline of the objectives and strengths of the Hoover and Main Library col­ lections, faculty views on faculty-library rela­ tions, operational aspects of the Slavic collec­ tions, and cooperation potentials among Slavic librarians. Dr. Wojciech Zalewski, curator of Russian and East European materials at Stan­ ford, will serve as moderator during the discus­ sion. The date and time of the program will be announced later. T ours Anthropology Section, tour of the Robert H. Lowie Museum of Anthropology, Kroeber Hall, University of California, Berkeley, Wednesday, July 2, 2:30-3:30 p.m. and 4:00-5:00 p.m. Each tour is limited to thirty persons. To register, send name and address to Robert E. Pfeiffer, Head, Graduate Social Science Libraries, Uni­ versity of California, Berkeley, CA 94720. Anthropology Section, open house and infor­ mal tours of the Anthropology Library, Kroeber Hall, University of California, Berkeley, Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-5:00 p.m. No registra­ tion is required. Art Section, tour and wine-tasting party at the Wine Museum of San Francisco, 633 Beach Street, Tuesday, July 1, 8:00-10:00 p.m. Regis­ tration is limited to 150 persons. To register, send your name and address to Mary Ashe, Head, Art and Music Department, San Francis­ co Public Library, Civic Center, San Francisco, CA 94102. Admission will be by tickets only. 115 Community and Junior College Libraries Section, tour to Skyline College and De Anza College, Tuesday, July 1, 8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Registration fee of $8.00 includes transportation and lunch and must be prepaid. To register, send check and your name and address to Iole Matteucig, Director of Library Services, City College of San Francisco, 50 Phelan Ave., San Francisco, CA 94112. Registrations will be ac­ cepted until June 12. ACRL Program and Membership Meeting The Management of Public Service Institutions, Peter Drucker Monday, June 30, program meeting at 2:00 p.m., membership meeting follows until 6:00 p.m. Academic Status Preconference Collective Bargaining in Higher Education: Its Implications for Governance and Faculty Status for Librarians Friday, June 17, 8:30 a.m.—Saturday, June 28, 1:00 p.m. San Francisco, San Francisco Hilton. Advanced registration required. Lim­ ited to 300 persons. Rare Books and Manuscripts Preconference Eighteenth-Century English Books Considered by Librarians and Booksellers, Bibliogra­ phers and Collectors Wednesday, June 25, 7:00 p.m.—Saturday, June 28, 2:00 p.m., San Francisco, Hyatt House on Union Square. Advanced registra­ tion required. Agriculture and Biological Sciences Section Day at Davis: all-day tour of the research li­ braries and facilities at the University of California, Davis Tuesday, July 2, 8:00 a,m.-6:30 p.m. Ad­ vanced registration required. Limited to forty-five persons. Anthropology Section Anthropology and the Library: round table dis­ cussion Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 noon Tour of the Robert H. Lowie Museum of An­ thropology, Kroeber Hall, University of Cali­ fornia, Berkeley Wednesday, July 2, 2:30-3:30 p.m. and 4:00-5:00 p.m. Advanced registration re­ quired. Limited to thirty persons each tour. Open House at the Anthropology Library, Kroeber Hall, University of California, Berke­ ley Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-5:00 p.m. Art Section Bibliographical Research Methods: Iconogra­ phy, Signs, Symbols and Symbolism; West­ ern Art from Early Christian Times to the End of the Eighteenth Century. Dr. Walter S. Gibson, Dr. Sara Jane Pearman, and Dr. Luraine G. Tansey. Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-6:00 p.m. Art Reference Tools and Art Historians of the Past, Dr. Susan V. Lenkey, and Tours of Stanford University Libraries: Art and Architecture Library or Bender Room, Spe­ cial Collections Division. Tuesday, July 1, 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Ad­ vanced registration required. Limited to fifty-two persons. Tour and wine-tasting party at the Wine Mu­ seum of San Francisco Tuesday, July 1, 8:00-10:00 p.m. Advanced registration required. Limited to 150 persons. Asian and African Section and Art Section Problems of East Asian Art Bibliography, Dr. James Cahill and Tours of the M. H. de Young Memorial Mu­ seum: Asian and African sections Thursday, July 3, 9:00 a.m .-l:00 p.m. Ad­ vanced registration required. College Libraries Section Academic Libraries and the Accreditation Pro­ cess, Dr. Kenneth E. Young Wednesday, July 2, 2:00-4:00 p.m. Community and Junior College Libraries Section I t’s Problematical: conference-within-a-confer- ence on community and junior college library problems Sunday, June 29, 8:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Ad­ vanced registration required. Tour to Skyline College and De Anza College Tuesday, July 1, 8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Ad­ vanced registration required. Education and Behavioral Sciences Section Communication: Intersections in the Library System and Library Service, Dr. William J. Paisley and Dr. Matilda Butler-Paisley Monday, June 30, 2:00-4:00 p.m. Survey of Educational Information Systems Re- Support ACRL! Become a member! 6 reasons why you should b e using MicroVo REEL-CARTR Pal x pending MT IDGE STORAGE 1 . The new MicroVox offers a low cost 5. Its book cover design allows for the storage method for handling either maximum use of the depth of your 2 . 12-16mm or 8-35mm reels or shelving, thus handling more reels of cartridges of microfilm. cartridges in less space. Identification is made easy through Covers are 9x9x4¼ ” wide and made 3. the use of a label holder on the spine 6. from bookcloth over binders board with label stock provided. with specially wrapped chipboard trays securely mounted to the cover. The storage of film in MicroVox on Vacuum formed inserts are adhered your existing shelving avoids the within the trays to provide the 4. need fo r expe n sive m ic ro film separations for 16mm or 35mm cabinets. cartridges or reels. The inconvience of two locations, one fo r film and the other for hardcopy, is eliminated. 117 quirements, Karl M. Pearson, Jr. Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 noon Law and Political Science Section Libraries and the Legislative Process, Eileen D. Cooke, Roger H. McDonough, and Clarence R. Walters Thursday, July 3, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 noon Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Ownership of the Papers of Public Officials Sunday, June 29, 2:00-4:00 p.m. Gifts and Appraisals for Libraries, panel dis­ cussion Sunday, June 29, 4:30-6:00 p.m. Slavic and E ast E uropean Section Ethnic Studies: Problems and Solutions: panel discussion Tour of Stanford University Libraries. Date and time to be announced. University Libraries Section Library Service to the Graduate Community: panel discussion Tuesday, July 1, 2:00-4:00 p.m. Undergraduate Librarians Discussion Group Wednesday, July 2, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 noon University Extension Librarians Discussion Group Wednesday, July 2, 4:30-6:00 p.m. W estern E uropean Language Specialists Discussion Group Promoting the Use of Humanities Collections in the Western European Languages Sunday, June 29, 2:00-4:00 p.m. ■ ■ ADDITIONAL ACRL NOMINEES FOR OFFICES, 1975/76 ANTHROPOLOGY SECTION Vice-Chairman/Chairman-Elect Robert E. Pfeiffer, Head, Graduate Social Science Libraries, University of California, Berkeley, California Thein Swe, Social Science Bibliographer, Northwestern University Library, Evanston, Il­ linois M ember-at-Large David L. Perkins, Head Bibliographic Li­ brarian, California State University, Northridge, Northridge, California Patricia Ann White, Reference Librarian, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich­ igan LAW AND POLITICAL SCIENCE SECTION M ember-at-Large Signe M. Larson, Chief, Research Services, U.S. Department of Interior Library, Washing­ ton, D.C. ■■ ADDITIONAL ACRL SECTION NOMINATING COMMITTEES ACRL’s section nominating committees are seeking candidates for nomination for election to section offices. Persons interested in making recommendations or in being considered for nomination should contact a member of the ap­ propriate committee. Additional section nomi­ nating committees were listed in the November 1974 issue of C&R L News. Agriculture and Biological Sciences Section Nominating Committee Chairman, Irene S. Farkas-Conn, Systems Li­ brarian, Chicago State University, 6800 S. Stewart Ave., Chicago, IL 60621; T. H. Milby, Science Librarian, University of Oklahoma, 401 W. Brooks, Norman, OK 73069; Dorothy S. Overman, Audiovisual Librarian, Hospital Li­ brary, U.S. Veterans Administration, 915 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63106. Anthropology Section Nominating Committee Chairman, Robert E. Pfeiffer, Head, Gradu­ ate Social Science Libraries, University of Cali­ fornia, Berkeley, CA 94720; David L. Perkins, Head Bibliographic Librarian, California State University, Northridge, CA 18111 Nordhoff S t, Northridge, CA 91324. Law and Political Science Section Nominating Committee Chairman, Paul J. Steere, c /o Foreign Service Desk, U.S.I.S., 1776 Pennsylvania Ave., Wash­ ington, DC; Ralph W. Teague, Jr., Librarian, Pacific Northwest Bibliographic Center, Univer­ sity of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195. ■ ■ ACRL Membership February 28, 1975 .............. ............ 14,331 February 28, 1974 .............. ............ 13,897 February 28, 1973 .............. ............ 13,038