College and Research Libraries 492 I College & Research Libraries • September 1981 documented and reflect Miller's interpreta- tion of copyright in the areas of fair use, re- serve reading, audiovisual materials, interli- brary loans, registration and deposit, unpublished materials, and copyright warn- ings and notices. If you have a good memory and your own copies of the Copyright Law and House, Sen- ate, and Conference reports, the collection will be of little use. On the other hand, if you need complete and instant documentation on fair use (107), rights of the owner (106), or other sections of the law, the compilation is useful. L. J. Taylor's Copyright for Librarians sounds appropriate for our bookshelves. What one finds, however, is that the major concern is with "fair dealings" as opposed to "fair use"; reflecting the fact that Taylor's work is concerned with the British and not the U.S. Copyright Act. There are similari- ties between the two copyright acts. The Brit- ish Act seemingly will be revised in order to accommodate the recommendations of the Whitford Committee (which we included in the publication), especially its recommenda- Library Research Guide to History Teaches sophisticated library search strategy WITHOUT hours of instruction by a teacher or librarian! " ... libraries serving history under- graduates should purchase this one. " -CHOICE LIBRARY RESEARCH GUIDE TO SOCIOLOGY just published!! $12.50, cloth; $5.95, paper (available in quantities of five or more only except for individual pre-paid orders.) Pierian Press 5000 Washtenaw Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 tion on photocopying which states that edu- cational users should be expected to pay for copying of copyrighted material. Other sections of special interest to the American librarian are the review of all of the studies-on both sides of the Atlantic- relating to effects of photocopying on journal subscription, and the concept of the Public Lending Right (loans for a fee) as it parallels the arguments for and against fees for photo- copying. For the serious copyright follower, Tay- lor's book is of interest and use, but it will be of little value for most college and university libraries in the U.S.-Richard E. Chapin, Michigan State University, East Lansing. Library & Archival Security. Quarterly. New York: Haworth Press, 1980. $28 ($6 addi- tional Canada; $15 additional elsewhere). ISSN 0169-0075. Issue examined: V .3, no.1 (Spring 1980). Journal of Library Administration. Quarterly. New York: Haworth Press, 1980. $42 per volume ($6 additional Canada; $15 addi- tional elsewhere). ISSN 0193-0826. Issue examined: V.1, no.1 (Spring 1980). Library Research: An International Journal. Quarterly. Norwood, N.J.: Ablex Publish- ing, 1980. $40. ISSN 0164-0763. Issues ex- amined: V.2, nos.2 and 3 (Summer, Fall 1980). Drexel Library Quarterly. Quarterly. Phila- delphia, Pa: School of Library and Infor- mation Science, Drexel University, 1979. $6 per issue. LC 65-9911. ISSN 0012-6160. Issues examined: V.15, nos.1 and 3. When this reviewer became editor of Col- lege & Research Libraries nineteen years ago, barely enough publishable papers were being written to fill its limited pages and those of its only scholarly competitor at that time, Li- brary Quarterly. But, my goodness, how times have changed! Today new scholarly li- brary periodicals are springing up in profu- sion, and all of them at least seem to be re- ceiving enough papers to make up wholly respectable issues. Here is a gaggle of them. Library & Archival Security is one of sev- eral recent entries into the library journal field produced by Haworth Press. It boasts a neat, serviceable format, a respectable edito- rial board, appropriate scholarly apparatus, and (if judged from the issue at hand) a good UNIPUB Makes the Effort to Offer You the World. We've added two more organizations to our network of prestigious international agencies: • The United Nations Centre for Regional Development (UNCRD) Established in 1971, this agency aims to assist developing countries in strengthening their regional planning and development capabilities. UNCRD efforts are conducted in an integrated manner and encompass training, research, information and advisory services. UNCRD practice emphasizes a partnership approach focusing on national institutions concerned with planning and development at subnational levels and thus seeks to contribute to greater self-reliance among developing countries. UNIPUB now stocks 93 titles in the agency's Working Papers Series, publications which represent interim statements on regional planning and development, in addition to its other publishing programs. • The United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) UNRISD was established in order to conduct_research into problems and policies of social development and relationships between various types of social development during different phases of economic growth. The studies of the Institute are intended to contribute to the work of the United Nations Secretariat in the field of social policy, social development planning and balanced economic and social development; regional planning institutes set up under the auspices of the United Na- tions; and national institutes in the field of economic and/or social development and planning. UNRISD's publishing program includes such books as: Quest for a Unified Approach to Development, A Development Monitoring Service at the Local Level, and Monitoring Changes in the Conditions of Women: Critical Review of PC?ssible Approaches. UNIPUB Reprint Programs In our continous effort to bring you the world's best, and recognizing the grow- ing demand for out-of-print and hard-to-find publications, we've undertaken two unique publishing programs: UNIPUB International Editions Originally designed for limited distribution or for no public distribution at all, we can now bring you such titles as Global Energy in Transition: Environmental Aspects of New and Renewable Sources for Development, Environmental Studies and Natural Resource Management: An Annotated Guide to University and Train- ing Programs in the United States, and The New International Economic Order: Selected Documents, 1976. UNIPUB Reprint Program This program is designed to offer access . to important materials after they are declared out-of-print. In addition, it makes available those titles which were previous- ly unattainable through UNIPUB. New publications in this series are listed quarterly in our Bulletin of New Publica- tions. The UNIPUB Network--Your Guide to the World UNIPUB-345 Park Avenue South-New York, NY 10010 494 I College & Research Libraries· September 1981 melange of papers by a good atelier of au- thors. A special and valuable continuing fea- ture is a register of" ... Lost or Stolen Archi- val Materials." Journal of Library Administration, also a Haworth Press product, presents a largely similar profile. Since library administration differs little from other kinds of administra- tion, this journal has an understandably heavy contingent of nonlibrarians among the authors published in this first issue. Useful abstracts precede each article. Library Research, represented here by two recent issues, sets rigor in methodology as its principal criterion for inclusion. Although that emphasis may, for the present, attract fewer practitioners to its readership than some of the theme- or function-oriented jour- nals of applied research, it seems likely to serve as part of the more valuable cumulating permanent record of library scholarship. Valuable special features are "state-of-the- research" reports and reviews of disserta- tions. Drexel Library Quarterly, of course, is not a new journal. The two recent issues noted Heritage on Microfilnt Rare and out-of-print titles and documents on 35mm silver halide microfilm. • French Books before 1601 • Scandinavian Culture • 18th Century English Literature • Victorian Fiction • Literature of Folklore • Hispanic Culture Send for catalog and title information today. ~~t}~[M ~CO'v\P?NY 70 Coolidge Hill Road Watertown, MA 02172 (617) 926-5557 here, however, constitute an examination of recent trends and the current status of the professional literature of librarianship. Dis- cussions of periodicals and newsletters, spe- cialized journals, nonprint media, mono- graph publishers, indexes and abstracts, library authors, landmark publications, pro- fessional collections, and library publishing outside the U.S. are all comprised within their pages, creating a valuable summary of library literature as it enters the 1980s. All of this frenetic scholarly activity proba- bly augurs well for librarianship. If a body of knowledge is a requisite hallmark of a mature profession, here is evidence aplenty that such a body for librarianship is taking corporeal form more rapidly now than ever before. A cautionary note, however, deserves to be sounded. It remains to be seen whether or not the field can assimilate this rapid accelera- tion in the productivity of its literature. In the last analysis someone has to write all this stuff, and someone else has to buy it. If either end of this equation surges out of balance with the other, journal publishing in librari- anship will experience a substantial shakeout of its weaker products.-David Kaser, Indi- ana University, Bloomington. Stueart, Robert D. and Eastlick, John Tay- lor. Library Management. 2d ed. Library Science Text Series. Littleton, Colo.: Li- braries Unlimited, 1981. 292p. $22.50 U.S., $27.00 elsewhere; $14.50 paper U.S., $17.50 elsewhere. LC 80-22895. ISBN 0-87287-241-6; 0-87287-243-2 pa- per. Teachers of library management will be pleased with this 292-page text. The intent of this volume is to examine the dynamics of the library as an organization-the behavior of individuals and groups within the library, the policies and programs of the library, and the relationship of the library to its staff and its clientele. The book is intended to serve the needs of practitioners as well as students. The historical development of manage- ment theory is covered very briefly and many names in the field of management are intro- duced. This brief introduction could be con- fusing to the student in beginning adminis- tration, as Robert L. Goldberg stated, "because of such compact packing of infor- mation, all of these luminaries become but L----------------------------------------------------------------------------