226 TECHNICAL COMMUNICATIONS REPORTS-LIBRARY PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES Light-Pen Technology at the University of South Carolina-The South Carolina Circulation System For some years at the University of South Carolina studies have been under- way to perfect a computer-based circula- tion system, and every avenue of input has been explored. About three years ago the new light-pen inventory control sys- tem which was being developed for use in the retail trade became known to the library. This device, using a light-readable label about one inch square in size, seemed to be a far better input device for an inventory control system utilizing identification cards and books than the traditional punched card. Mter as much research as could be done in such a new field, the library staff examined light-pen systems marketed by NCR, Checkpoint- Plessey, and the Monarch Marking Sys- tem, a subsidiary of Pitney-Bowes. All of these systems were similar in technology but the hardware and interest of the com- panies varied. Monarch and Plessey were very inter- ested and willing to cooperate with li- braries. Plessey (through Checkpoint) has developed and is marketing a library circulation system. At Carolina the deci- sion was made to develop an in-house batch system using the Monarch light-pen and its technology coupled to a Digital Equipment Corporation PDPll/ 10, 16K, dual Dectape system. The basis for the functioning of the sys- tem is the light-pen stations at the circu- lation desk where the books are charged and discharged by running the light-pen rapidly over the light-readable label on the patron's ID card and the label in the front inside cover of the book. One quick pass over the ID card sets the system, followed by a pass over each book label in succession. At present the library has three light-pen stations and anticipates adding a fourth, which will be sufficient for meeting all of the main library's needs for the foreseeable future. The light-pen control boxes were con- structed on campus. They turn the system on, and have message lights, trouble li:ghts, and charge points up to five differ- ent due dates. Any number of light-pen stations can be attached. A Hazeltine 2000 CRT is used to show all transactions on the screen as they oc- cur and to serve as the system console. A Decwriter, used as a line printer, in- sures a backup system and gives a print- out of transactions. The Decwriter was se- lected because its thirty cps speed is adequate, it is highly reliable, and the price is right. The PDPll is used as a batch con- troller. It does not convert the label data to human-readable data; this is done at the central computer center. Each night after the circulation desk closes, a tele- phone link is made to the university's central computer and the day's scanned data are pumped into the big computer. While the system is batch design, it in- corporates the features of an on-line sys- tem without the high cost. If a patron in- quires about an item, a glance at the up- dated patron report and/ or an inquiry in- to the current activity file through the sys- tem console can answer questions on the location of all books in the system. Unlike some systems, this one has not required that the lfbrary change its hours of opera- tion or data input. When the library opens in the morning, all reports are distributed. The library gets its in-process, or charge, file, in clear text without borrower information for use by patrons to see which books are charged out. Complete circulation files with bor- rower information are furnished to the circulation staff on COM fiche. A total of 10,335 charge records is on each four-by- six-inch fiche. The record includes patron name, status, and social security number, call number of the book, item number, date checked out, date due, author, and title. In addition, there is a field for charg- ing to graduate carrels within the library. Notices are periodically written for over- due books and there is an indication in the charge file showing how many notices have been sent. Personal reserves or holds can be placed on a book by simply keying the book number into the CRT. When a book is returned, a message light on the con- troller lights so that the staff member will know that the book has a hold on it. Sim- ilar procedures will put a "hold" on any borrower whom the library needs to reach. The printouts are generally by call number; however, it is possible to get lists of all books by borrower, or in other for- mats. Statistics are obtainable in almost any configuration, including number of books checked out to different categories of borrowers, by individual title, etc. The total cost for the hardware in this system was $38,381.04. Maintenance con- tracts, telephone charges, and miscellane- ous operational costs add up to about $357.04 monthly. Labels cost $1.70 per thousand. The total cost of the system amortized over a five-year period is no more than $975.00 per month. Mter that the only continuing costs will be mainte- nance contracts and labels. Additional light-pen stations can be added in the same building for about $1,200 each. Light-pen stations can be added in branch libraries for about $2,400 each. Not in- cluded in the cost figures is central com- puter time, which is held to a minimum by the batch features and software devel- opment. At the University of South Carolina computer services are not charged to the individual department but are treated as a campus-wide service. All of the COM fiche is produced on the campus. The entire project was developed and put into operation between April 1973 Technical Communications 227 and January 1974. The first books were officially charged out on January 15, 1974 and the system has been in continuous operation since then. Needless to say, problems of a special nature had to be solved, for example, issuing ID cards with light-readable labels to 20,000 students in two days, acquiring labels which are permanent for the books, constructing the control boxes which are unique, and solv- ing the usual telephone and computer difficulties. Suffice it to say, the entire proj- ect was planned and became operational in less than eight months without employ- ing additional staff. Although the system is still being refined, the performance has been spectacular.-Kenneth F. Toombs, Di1'ecto1' of Librm·ies, Unive1'sity of South Cm·olina. Public Access Cable TV Information Center at New York Public Library The New York Public Library (NYPL), recognizing public access cable television as an important social tool, has assembled in the Mid-Manhattan library one of the most extensive collections, and possibly the first, on the subject. Noncommercial public access television has been charac- terized as a people-oriented television sys- tem that can respond to and reflect socie- ty in terms of culture, language, history, experience, and race. The collection is designed for readers seeking information on all aspects of pub- He access cable TV, both practical and theoretical, with a significant portion de- voted to television as a community tool. The Mid-Manhattan collection includes books, pamphlets, periodicals, and micro- forms. Related materials are also collected to document television activities of pro- gramming intentions similar to public ac- cess TV. It is hoped that the Mid-Manhat- tan project will provide a prototype for other libraries beginning collections of public access cable TV. The collection's book materials empha- size three main areas of interest: program- ming and the audience, the educational potential of public access television, and legislative controls. Pamphlet materials in- "' :I: '" : ~ i '" ,, :I! ,II '" ;II ,, ill i! 228 J oumal of Library Automation Vol. 7 I 3 September 197 4 elude information on ethnic involvement, women's groups, conferences and conven- tions, library activities in video, bibliogra- phies, and other current topics, and are accessible through a vertical file index. The subject headings in the file reflect the "rule of probable associ:ation" whereby the first meaningful word (after the as- sumed word television) is used. If the reader knows what he wants, aided by cross-reference system, he can easily iden- tify the proper subject file. The collection also includes periodical indexes leading to a wide variety of journal articles on different aspects of video. The ERIC (Educational Resources Information Cen- ter) microfiche series is available from 1971 to date and includes much published and unpublished research. A special feature of the collection is the card file which lists hard-to-find informa- tion concerning organizations, associa- tions, and periodicals in the field. Such commercial groups as video cassette man- ufacturers as well as alternative groups making tapes can all be located in the file. Contact: Richard Hecht, History and Social Science Department, Mid-Manhat- tan Library, 8 E. 40th St., New York, NY 10018. REPORTS ON REGIONAL PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES SAL/NET-Satellite Libmry Information Network This project is designed to experiment in the extension of library services to sparsely populated regions of the Rocky Mountain and northern plains states. The project has been awarded "designated user" status on the Communications Tech- nology Satellite to be launched by NASA in late 1975. SALINET is one of the first attempts to experiment in delivering li- brary services via satellite. A group meeting in Denver described plans to use the world's most powerful communications satellite as an extension of local library resources for residents of twelve mountain and plains states. The national space agency, the multi- state Federation of Rocky Mountain States, and several library oriented groups and agencies serving the area will pool their expertise and resources in the pro- gram, vvhich will begin planning late this year. The library information and develop- ment program is a new passenger on the educational satellite which will demon- strate new means of helping to teach resi- dents of far-flung portions of the Rocky Mountain states and assist them in their information needs during a hvo-year peri- od beginning next fall. Four interests are represented in the li- brary oriented project, which bears the acronym of SALINET -Satellite Library Information Network. The University of Denver Graduate School of Librarianship, the University of Kansas Libraries, the Wyoming State Library, and Natrona County (Wyoming) Library are the prin- cipals in the consortium. Each institution is responsible for certain portions of the library program, which will benefit both libraries and their patrons in the mountain and plains states. Dr. Margaret Knox Goggin, dean of the DU Graduate School of Librarianship, is principal investigator on the library pro- gram. Her co-workers representing other members of the consortium include Ken- neth E. Dowlin, director of Natrona County Library, Casper, Wyoming; Wil- liam Williams, Wyoming state librarian; and Robert Malinowsky, assistant director for public service, education, and statistics at the University of Kansas Libraries. Also taking part in the SALINET pro- gram are the Bibliographical Center for Research, Rocky Mountain Region, Inc.; the Federation of Rocky Mountain States; and the Mountain-Plains Library Associa- tion. These groups will assist with pro- gramming, broadcast, and engineering re- quirements, utilization, and research. The proposed program will utilize fifty- six satellite ground stations which will be in place as part of the Federation of Rocky Mountain States' satellite technolo- gy demonstrations. Twenty participating libraries in the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas will 230 1 ournal of Library Automation Vol. 7 I 3 September 197 4 the student as "physician" has selected in managing the case. The Learning Center offers this and other kinds of audiovisual programs de- signed to enhance textbook and classroom learning. Computers, video cassettes, slide projectors, and models enable the student to experience close up and at his or her own speed areas of medicine that often cannot he presented as well in lectures or textbooks. In addition to the audiovisual materials, the Learning Center provides students with periodicals, lecture notes, and refer- ence texts. Students can watch dissections, see ex- amples of blood cell abnormalities, hear the sounds of healthy and defective heart- beats, and examine oversize plastic mod- els of the brain, the heart, and other parts of the human anatomy. And, with the computer learning pro- grams, the students can participate in a case and make choices to guide its out- come. Medical students learning about iron metabolism last year were split into two groups by their instructor so that half at- tended traditional classroom lectures and half learned the unit from the computer. Final examinations showed no difference between the two groups, according to their teacher, Dr. James McArthur, for- merly associate professor of medicine. The students preferred human teachers in small group tutorial sections for this unit, McArthur said, but generally they were in favor of computer instruction. McArthur, now assistant director of the Health Sciences Learning Resources Cen- ter at the University of Washington in Seattle, said that the crowd of students usually found at the Learning Center is an indication of its success. ANNOUNCEMENTS Resolution WHEREAS, the American Library As- sociation is the chief advocate for librari- ans and laymen seeking to provide citizens of the United States with the highest quality library and information service, and WHEREAS, a major effort will be re- quired of this Association and of all sup- porters of libraries in the next few years as the country's leaders determine long- range national positions in such matters as copyright, intellectual freedom, federal support of libraries, and a national plan for libraries and information services, and WHEREAS, the effectiveness of this effort will depend on the concerted effort of all those concerned with library service, including library users, citizens groups, government officials and librarians them- selves from all aspects and ranks of the profession; THEREFORE LET IT BE RESOLVED that all the committees, chapters and di- visions of the American Library Associa- tion take definite steps to increase mutual efforts within the Association and with other associations seeking ways to strength- en the common effort toward the provision of quality library service to all people. AND LET IT BE FURTHER RE- SOLVED that chapter councilors, division officers, the Legislation Assembly and chairpersons of committees and round tables, affiliated organizations and related groups transmit this resolution to mem- bers of their respective units. Adopted by the ALA Legislation Com- mittee on July 9, 1974. ISAD P1·esident Receives Awar.d Frederick G. Kilgour, director of the Ohio College Library Center, received the Margaret Mann Citation for 1974, on July 9 at the Program Meeting of the Re- sources and Technical Services Division of the American Library Association, dur- ing the Annual Conference of ALA in New York City, the week of July 7-13, 197 4. The award recognizes outstanding professional achievement in the areas of cataloging or classification. Mr. Kilgour received his A.B. from Har- vard and studied Library Service at Co- lumbia while working at the Harvard Col- lege Library. He worked at the Office of Strategic Services in Washington, D.C. and later became deputy director of the 232 Journal of Library Automation Vol. 7 I 3 September 197 4 loo, Ontario) and Edwin Buchinski Uni- versite d'Ottawa): Canadian MARC, Canadian Cataloging Task Group, union lists of serials, prospects for cooperation, unique cataloging problems (e.g., dual language requirements) , large serial data bases. Registration will be $70.00 to members of either ALA or ASIS, $85.00 to non- members, and $20.00 to library school students. Registration includes one lunch, a reception, and a copy of the MARC serials manual. For hotel reservation infor- mation and a registration blank, write to Donald P. Hammer, ISAD, American Li- brary Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chi- cago, IL 60611. Washington University School of Medicine Library-Book Catalog The Washington University School of Medicine Library, St. Louis, announces the publication of its Catalog of Books 1970-1973, containing all entries for mon- ographs cataloged at this library from Jan- uary 1, 1970 to December 31, 1973. The first part, the Register, consists of the complete citations arranged in the order cataloged. The second part consists of three alphabetical indexes to the Register -name, title and series, and subject in- dexes. The catalog is on thirty microfiche, 24x reduction, and the price is $15.00. Orders can be filled or additional information ob- tained from Doris Bole£, assistant librarian for technical and informational services. Proceedings of Info1·matics/ UCLA Symposium Available on Tapes High fidelity recordings of proceedings from the annual data processing symposi- um held March 27-29, 1974, at the Uni- versity of California, Los Angeles, are now available on cassette tapes. The subject of this year's conference, cosponsored by Informatics Inc., Los Angeles, and UCLA, was "Information Systems and Networks: The New World of Information Retrieval Available to Your Organization through Computer Networks." The complete program, recorded by Convention Seminar Cassettes, North Hoi- lywood, can be ordered by session or in total for review whenever convenient. Cassettes one and two cover Session One, The Evolution of Interactive Information Systems; cassettes three and four include Session Two, Data Bases; cassettes five and six, Session Three, On-line Informa- tion Retrieval Systems; cassettes seven and eight, Session Four, Cost Effective- ness of Information Retrieval Systems and Networks; and cassettes nine and ten, Ses- sion Five, Information Networks in the 1980s. Each set of two cassettes covering one session is priced at $10.95. The entire se- ries can be purchased for $49.95 in an easy-to-store cassette album file. Prices in- clude postage and handling. To order, contact Convention Seminar Cassettes, 13356 Sherman Way, North Hollywood, CA 91605; Tel: (213) 765-2777. Nonprint Media Institute A Nonprint Media Institute will be held in Galveston, Texas on October 15, 1974, Southwestern Library Association's annual conference registration day. The one-day institute, sponsored by SWLA, will feature morning speakers, including Pearce Grove discussing progress in re- solving differences among three catalog- ing standards for nonprint media, and Vivian Schrader, head of the A V section of Library of Congress, reporting on the progress of LC's nonprint cataloging stan- dards. Afternoon informal discussion fo- rums will focus on technical service han- dling of art prints, microforms, films, kits, phonorecords, and audiotape. The Nonprint Media Institute is open to members and nonmembers of SWLA, but is limited to 150 registrants. Registra- tion fee is $20.00. For registration, hotel reservations, and transportation informa- tion, write: Ann Adams, Head Cataloger, Houston Public Library, 500 McKinney, Houston, TX 77002. International Standm·ds for Cataloging: An Institute on ISBD, ISSN, NSDP and Chapter 6, AACR The seventh annual institute of the Li- 234 Journal of Library Automation Vol. 7/3 September 1974 Zurkowski, President, Information Indus- try Association, 4720 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, MD 20014; Tel: (301) 654- 4150. COMMERCIAL SERVICES AND DEVELOPMENTS 10,000 Computer Program Abstracts in NCPAS Data Base The National Computer Program Ab- stract Service ( N CP AS) , a clearinghouse for computer program abstracts, has cate- gorized over 10,000 abstracts into 142 subject areas in its latest newsletter. These abstracts of simulation models, applica- tion and computational programs, and in- formation retrieval systems are derived from business, government, industry, mili- tary, and universities. All fields of knowl- edge are included and are grouped into the following general categories: biosci- ences, medical sciences, business, manu- facturing, management, education, li- braries, environment, ecology, nature, gov- ernment (federal, state, local), urban af- fairs, legal, humanities, specific industries, publfc utilities, military, science, and en- gineering. This service should be of value to a present or potential user of computer pro- grams, a vendor with a program to sell, or a professor developing programs in the academic community. Programs can be listed in the data base free of charge. The service is problem oriented. The program abstract information is disseminated in two forms: ( 1) a Program Index Newsletter which includes a de- tailed index of the available subjects and the number of abstracts available for each subject (updated quarterly) -the news- letter cost is $10.00 per year ( $5.00 addi- tional for foreign airmail) ; and ( 2) a Sub;ect Abstract Report which includes all the abstracts available in the NCP AS data base on a particular subject identi'fied in the Progmm Index Newsletter-the ab- stract report cost is $10.00 for the Rrst 200 abstracts and $5.00 for up to each ad- ditional 200 abstracts ( $5.00 additional for foreign airmail). For additional information contact: NCPAS, P.O. Box 3783, Washington, DC 20007. Communications by Telephone A lfghtweight communications system about the size of a suitcase is now being introduced that can take the travel-and the cost-out of meetings. The new solid state system is the Darome Edu-Com, a portable self-con- tained communications unit with four microphones, that uses regular telephone lines. Edu-Com enables groups of people in different places across the country to confer together as easily as if they were all in the same room. The cost of a one- hour meeting with participants located coast-to-coast is a few hundred dollars. Manufactured by Darome, Inc., of Har- vard, Illinois, makers of modular sound systems equipment, the Edu-Com unit plugs into an inexpensive, standard tele- phone coupler, a device supplied by the telephone company. The number of locations that can be in- cluded in a Darome Edu-Com conference is practically unlimited. To participate, each location need only be equipped with a Darome unit and a telephone coupler. Then, rather than having just one meeting at a time, it is possible to hold any num- ber of meetings in any number of places at the same time. Before an Edu-Com session begins, the organizer of the meeting telephones a spe- cial conference call telephone operator and gives the names, locations, and tele- phone numbers of the groups to be reached and the time of the meeting. Charges begin only when all locations have been tied together by the operator and the conference is ready to start. The rate for the Darome Edu-Com meetings is much lower than for direct dialing the places individually. The rate is equal to the cost of calling only the farthest city participating in the conference. For example, a one-hour meeting that originates in Chicago and includes groups of people who participate in New York, Newark, Huntington, Greensboro, Atlanta, Orlando, Detroit, Denver, and San Diego would cost $280. 236 Journal of Library Automation Vol. 7/3 September 1974 the Wall Street Journal and Banon's mag- azine. Anthony A. Barnett, senior vice-presi- dent of Bunker Ramo, said test installa- tions in five stockbrokerage firms over the past month "have allowed us to shake down the system and prepare for nation- wide marketing." Mr. Barnett said fifty of the news re- trieval systems were sold before formal in- troduction. "We're encouraged by the marketing prospects among stockbroker- age firms and financial institutions but be- lieve the market among corporations may have even greater potential," he added. The news retrieval system permits in- stantaneous recall of stories on 6,000 com- panies listed on the New York and Ameri- can stock exchanges and traded over-the- counter. Users also are able to retrieve news of twenty-five industry groups, fif- teen government agencies, and several general categories. Mr. Barnett said that at the outset customers will be able to re- call from the ffie any story that has ap- peared in the last three months. DJ News-Recall was developed as a joint venture by Bunker Ramo and Dow Jones, which publishes the Wall Stmet Joumal, Barron's, and the Dow Jones News Service. The joint venture, Dow Jones-Bunker Ramo News Retrieval Ser- vice Inc., in turn will market the data base to distributors for resale. Bunker Ramo's Information Systems division is the charter distributor for DJ News-Re- call. Mr. Barnett said the basic charge for DJ News-Recall to users of Bunker Ra- mo's System 7 will be $175 a month per office ·plus $25 for each video terminal having access to the news retrieval ser- vice. On-Line Access to the COMPENDEX Data Base Engineering Index, Inc., announces the availability of its computer-readable data base, COMPENDEX, through on-line ac- cess. Two organizations are currently pro- viding this di'rect mode of bibliographic search: Lockheed Information Systems and System Development Corporation. Using the latest in data communications services, users requiring access to the COMPENDEX files may interact with the system via their own in-house terminal, thus providing the convenience and speed of "on-demand" searches. COMPENDEX is the machine-readable version of Ei's Monthly and provides ab- stracts/bibliographic citations covering worldwide developments in all fields of engineering. Both S.D.C. and Lockheed, utilizing the most modern system technology, af- ford the user the opportunity to maintain an actual "dialog" with major bases. This is done without imposing an overly com- plicated or difficult command language on those addressing the system. On-line access now adds a new dimen- sion to those requiring searches of the Ei data base. For further information inter- ested individuals and organizations may contact: Lockheed Information Service, 3251 Hanover St., Palo Alto, CA 94304; Tel: ( 415) 493-44ll (East Coast Office: Lockheed-405 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10017; Tel: (212) 697-7171), or S.D.C. Search Service, System Devel- opment Corporation, 2500 Colorado Ave., Santa Monica, CA 90406; Tel: (213) 393-94ll (East Coast Office: S.D.C.- 5827 Columbia Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041; Tel: ( 703) 820-2220) . STANDARDS The ISAD Committee on Technical Standards for Library Automation Invites Your Participation in the Standards Game Editor's Note: Use of the following guidelines and forms is described in the mticle by John Kountz in the June 1974 issue of JOLA. The TESLA Reactor Ballot will also appear in sub- sequent issues of Technical Communica- tions for mader use, and the TESLA Standards Sc01'eboard will be presented as cumulated results warrant its publi- cation. To use, photocopy or otherwise duplicate the forms presented in JOLA- TC, fill out these copies, and mail them be added to complete a twelve-state test bed representing all categories of libraries. With the involvement of all these points, half of which will be in two-way communication with other points via the satellite, the library information project hopes to accomplish three primary goals: 1. Improving individual and organiza- tion capacities for getting informa- tion. 2. Demonstrating and testing cost ef- fectiveness in using technological ad- vances to disseminate information. 3. Developing user "markets" for in- formation utilizing satellite distribu- tion. The program will try to help individual users of information and community-level groups such as governmental agencies, businesses, and other organizations. On a regional level, bibliographic informa- tion will be transmitted to libraries in a "compressed data format." With such a fonnat, a library in a remote area of North Dakota may have access to most needed information about resources avail- able from large and specialized centers, such as the Denver Public Library's spe- cial conservation library or Western his- tory collection. The proposed satellite information pro- gram will also be used to train librarians, both at a professional and paraprofession- al level. The in-service program will be aimed at helping librarians to better assist their patrons in getting information. All these major aspects-public infor- mation programming at the individual level, technology dissemination at the community level, compressed bibliograph- ical data transmission, and in-service train- ing-will be accomplished in a total of fifty hours per year of programming, re- ports Dr. William E. Rapp, vice-president of the Federation of Rocky Mountain States. The limited time available for this pro- gramming in coordination with other pro- grams planned for the satellite project place a premium on solid advance prep- aration of material to be transmitted, and speed of transmission, he notes. For example, the transmission of the Technical Communications 229 compressed bibliographical data would be in two- to three-minute segments at the end of other programming. Technology dissemination, a community-level pro- gram, would be handled in a total of fifteen hours of satellfte use a year-an average of fifteen to twenty minutes per week. The largest segment of time, for in- service training of librarians, is twenty hours per year-which breaks down to less than half an hour a week on the aver- age. But if the available time on the satellite is used to its full potential, Dean Goggin belfeves the population of the entire Rocky Mountain and plains region will benefit tremendously. The combined re- sources of major libraries and two major universities could be shared instantly with communities and residents of the region. NEW HORIZONS Cu1'e by Compute1'-A Learning Expe1'ience It has been a long day for the physi- cian, and at 10:30 p.m. he is getting ready to go horne and have his first meal since breakfast. But the phone rings and the caller from University of Minnesota Hospital tells him that an infant has just been brought in from outstate Minnesota for diagnosis. The baby's hometown phy- sician has noted that the baby hasn't eaten well for several days and he can't decide what's wrong. The case apparently isn't urgent, so the physician can either go for a bite to eat and return later or go straight to the hospital to look at the baby. This is the first of a series of choices presented to medical students in this imaginary case history. It's offered as a computerized learning program for medi- cal and health sciences students at the University of Minnesota's Learning Cen- ter. For a student playing the part of the physician in this case, each choice he or she makes presents new difficulties in the case--which call for more choices. Ulti- mately, the imaginary infant either dies or survives, depending on what options I I ' I I I. Office of Intelligence Collection at the Department of State fn Washington. He was librarian at the Yale Medical Library and then associate librarian for research and development of the Yale University Library. He has been active in library and library-related organizations since the be- ginning of. his career and has served on many committees. He was managing edi- tor of the Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine; and has written numerous arti- cles for professional journals. His profes- sional interests are computerization of li- braries and information retrieval. The text of the citation reads in part: " ... awarded in 1974 to Frederick G. Kilgour for his success in organizing and putting into operation the first practical centralized computer bibli:ographical cen- ter. He has been the principal inR.uence behind an emerging trend toward cooper- ation in technical services. . . . As director of the Ohio College Library Center he has made the Library of Congress MARC data base a practical and useful product, stimu- lating i'nterest throughout the country and the profession .... His tireless efforts rep- resent an outstanding contribution to the technical improvements of cataloging and classification and the introduction of new techniques of recognized importance." Institute on Automated Serials Contml The Information Science and Automa- tion Division (ISAD) of the American Library Association and the American So- ciety for Information Science will co- sponsor a preconference institute on "Au- tomated Serials Control: National and In- ternational Considerations." The institute will be held on October 11 and 12, 1974 in Atlanta, Georgia immediately be- fore the ASIS annual conference, which begins on October 13. The institute and the conference will both be held in the Atlanta Regency Hyatt House. The purposes of the institute will be: ( 1) to present in-depth discussions on the new and dramatic developments in fhe serials field and their implications for the library and the library systems develop- ment communities; .and ( 2) to provide a Technical Communications 231 survey of the progress made to date in automated serials systems. Formal presentations by acknowledged experts actively involved in the field will be provided, and ample opportunity will be available for informal discussion be- tween the participants and a panel of concerned professionals. The panel will represent various views related to current and future developments as well as the national and international consequences. Among other things, the program will include the following: Elaine Wood (LC MARC Development Office) : MARC Serials Format and Serials Processing at LC-a tutorial. In addition, this session will include discussion on na- tional and international standards, and will emphasize the difference between MARC serial and MARC monograph formats. Joseph Howard (LC Serials Record Di- vision) : Cataloging Considerations. The proposed changes to the cataloging rules -ISBD, AACR, various points concerning entry and other unique cataloging problems. Henriette A vram and Lucia Rather (LC MARC Development Office): Inter- national Considerations. Prospects for in- ternational exchange of data, mechanisms for exchange, problems posed by differing practices and conventions, international developments in machine-readable cata- loging. Paul Fasana (New York Public Li- brary) : Impact of National Developments and of Automation on Library Services. General consideration of automation's im- pact on library services with emphasis on serials control. Recommendations concern- ing national developments. Linda Crismond (University of South- ern California): Review of Serials Systems and System Considerations. Acquisitions, cataloging, check-in, claiming, etc. Prob- lems posed by holdings notations, vola- tility of data, linking entries, etc. Lois Upham (University of Minne- sota): CONSER (Consolidated Serials Project). Joseph Price (NSDP): International Serials Data System and NSDP. Cynthia Pugsley (University of Water- brary Institutes Planning Committee will be held October 18-19, 1974, at Rickey's Hyatt House Hotel, Palo Alto, California. Paul W. Winkler, principal descriptive cataloger, Library of Congress, will speak on the application of the International Standard Bibliographic Description to monographs and on related topics. The establi:shment of bibliographic control of serials through International Standard Serial Numbers, Chapter 6 of the Anglo- Ame1'ican Cataloging Rules, and the Na- tional Serials Data Program will be pre- sented by Richard Anable, coordinator, CONSER Project. The program is de- signed to be of particular interest to tech- nical services librarians, serials librarians, bibliographers, and administrators. Registration for the two-day meeting is limited; the fee is $20.00 and includes two luncheons. Further information, in- cluding a list of hotel accommodations, will be mailed to applicants. Registrants of the 1972 and 1973 insti- tutes will automatically receive registra- tion forms. Others may obtain forms by writing Joseph E. Ryus, 2858 Oxford Ave., Richmond, CA 94806, or by tele- phoning him during weekday hours at the University of California, Berkeley, ( 415) 642-4144. All registration forms will be mailed early in September. The Library Institutes Planning Com- mittee is a nonprofit organization com- posed of eight librarians from county, spe- cial, and university libraries in Northern California. Previous institutes have fea- tured Ralph Ellsworth, J. McRee Elrod, Seymour Lubetzky, Ellsworth Mason, Daniel Melcher, John C. Rather, Joseph A. Rosenthal, and Paul W. Winkler. Info1'mation Industry Associations Expanded Micropublishing and Data Base Programs Major policy steps have been taken by the Information Industry Association ( IIA), making the work of the associa- tirm more understandable and more rele- vant to information industry companies. It changed the title of the Government Micropublishing Committee to Micropub- lishing and it directed the establishment Technical Communications 233 of a Data Base Committee. "Regardless of the media information companies and other publishers currently use in delivering information," IIA presi'- dent, Paul G. Zurkowski, said, "Competi- tion and rising costs are forcing them into consideration of alternative methods. IIA member companies will be able to focus their energies most effectively on the in- dustry-wide problems through these new committees." Micropublishing Committee chairman, Henry Powell, Bell & Howell, Bethesda, at a recent meeting of the committee spelled out several areas of concern to micropublishers which will be the subject of committee action: 1. How can micropublishers protect their investment from unfair com- petition of unscrupulous competitors who misappropriate the micropub- lishers' work product and market es- sentially "reprinted" versions of the original microfilm. 2. Library Relations. Joint library-in- dustry steps toward mutual under- standing and cooperation. 3. Z-39 Standards Committee recom- mended standards covering what micropublishers can say about their products. What is a volume equiva- lent in microform? What information should be included on each mfcro- fiche and where on the header or title section of the microfilm prod- uct? 4. A program to educate users as to the operational benefits of micropub- lished materials. The Data Base Committee is being formed with the participation of both data base creating companies and those offer- ing public access to various data bases. The area of interest to this committee will embrace the status of data bases under existing proprietary rights laws, communi- cations capabilities and rates as controlled by the FCC, unfair competition legisla- tion pending in Congress, and such other problems as those created for the industry by university computer centers marketing access to similar data bases, but without full cost recovery. For further information contact Paul G. Simply by pressing the lever on one of the Edu-Com microphones and speaking into it, anyone in any of those cities will be heard in the meeting i'n every other city as if he were right there in the room. In addition, an automatic slide projec- tor can also be plugged into the unit. Dur- ing a presentation, the speaker can change the slides simultaneously in all the loca- tions equipped with slides. A cassette player-recorder can be plugged into the Darome Edu-Com unit, either to provide the program or record the session. vVhen used alone, the Darome Edu- Com can also serve as a public address system for a single meeting. For further information, contact Da- rome, Inc., 711 E. Diggins St., Harvard, IL 60033. Automated News Clipping, Indexing and Retrieval System (ANCIRS) Image Systems, Inc. of Culver City, California, has developed an automated system for the indexing and retrieval of news clippings. While ANCIRS (pro- nounced answers) is geared for use in the newspaper library, terminals located at re- mote sites provide access to the system for business, industry, education, and law en- forcement and other government agencies. The microfiche terminals, whfch are controlled by a minicomputer, are each capable of storing 325,000 clippings and 1 million lines of index and search terms. ANCIRS has a capacity in excess of 1.25 million listings. Access to a page of index Hstings or to the full text of any clipping requires less than four seconds. Paper copy of any or all of the selected clippings can be produced at the terminal at the touch of a button. Multiple terminals can share the same minicomputer. A unique off-line/ on-line indexing sys- tem generates subject term lists from story headlines and other key words, names, and places in the story as selected by the indexer. When indexing a story, the index- er keys in the first letters of the subject terms to be assigned. This causes the terms currently in use to be displayed at the terminal, allowing the indexer to auto- matically assign the appropriate terms to the story being indexed. If the term is Technical Communications 235 not already in use it may be entered by completing the typing of the term. After new terms have been entered and old terms assigned, a magnetic tape is produced for the off-line program. The off-line program prepares three lists for computer output to microfiche: 1. Headlines permuted by the key words in each headline interleaved with subject terms selected from the stories. 2. A category list by classification and subclass. 3. Each story headline in date order. To perform a search, the user keys i'n the first few letters of the search term. This causes the appropriate portion of list one to be displayed. Each item on the page has a line number. Keying the line number ( s) selects the desired term ( s) and causes the most recent clipping to be displayed. If the selected term is too gen- eral, i.e., a category heading, the appro- priate portion of Hst two is automatically displayed so that a more precise selection may be made. The selection in this in- stance is also made by entering the line number(s) of the desired term(s). These selections may be combined logically with other selections to further narrow the search. Once the terms have been selected and the most recent story i's displayed it is then possible to page back through pre- vious related stories. The hard copy of any story can be requested at any time and is produced by the unit in ten sec- onds. ANCIRS' low cost makes it the ideal tool for researchers and decision makers who must have at their fingertips com- plete facts on world, national, and local events. MACHINE-READABLE DATA BASES News Retrieval Service Bunker Ramo Corporation and Dow Jones & Co. Inc. announced the start of DJ News-Recall, a computerized news re- trieval service based on stories appearing on the Dow Jones News Service and in to the TESLA chairman, Mr. John C. Kountz, Associate for Librmy Automa- tion, Of/ice of The Chancellor, The Cali- fornia State University and Colleges, 5670 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90036. THE PROCEDURE This procedure is geared to handle both reactive (originating from the outside) and initiative (originating from within ALA) standards proposals to provide rec- ommendations to ALA's representatives on existing, recognized standards organiza- tions. To enter the procedure for an initia- tive standards proposal you must complete an "Initiative Standards Proposal" using the outline which follows: Initiative Standard Proposal Outline- The following outline and forms are de- signed to facilitate review by both the ISAD Committee on Technical Standards for Library Automation (TESLA) and the membership of initiative standards re- quirements and to expedite the handling of the Initiative Standard Proposal through the procedure. Since the outline will be used for the review process, it is to be followed ex- plicitly. Where an initiative standard re- quirement does not require the use of a specific outline entry, the entry heading is to be used followed by the words "not applicable" (e.g., where no standards exist which relate to the proposal, this is indi- cated by: VI. Existing Standards. Not Ap- plicable). Note that the parenthetical statements following most of the outline entry de- scriptions relate to the ANSI Standards Proposal section headings to facilitate the translation from this outline to the ANSI format. All Initiative Standards Proposals are to be typed, double spaced on 8%" x 11" white paper (typing on one side only). Each page is to be numbered consecu- tively in the upper right-hand corner. The initiator's last name followed by the key word from the title is to appear one line below each page number. I. Title of Initiative Standard Pro- posal (Title). Technical Communications 237 II. Initiator Information (Forward). A. Name B. Title C. Organization D. Address E. City, State, Zip F. Telephone: Area Code, Num- ber, Extension III. Technical area. Describe the area of library technology as under- stood by initiator. Be as precise as possible since in large measure the information given here will help determine which ALA offi- cial representative might best handle this proposal once it has been reviewed and which ALA organizational component might best be engaged in the review process. IV. Purpose. State the purpose of Standard Proposal (Scope and Qualifications) . V. Description. Briefly describe the Standard Proposal (Specification of the Standard). VI. Relationship of other standards. If existing standards have been identified which relate to, or are felt to influence, this Standard Proposal, cite them here (Ex- pository Remarks). VII. Background. Describe the re- search or historical review per- formed relating to this Standard Proposal (if applicable, provide a bibliography) and your find- ings (Justification). VIII. Specifications. Specify the Stan- dard Proposal using record lay- outs, mechanical drawings, and such related documentation aids as required in addition to text ex- position where applicable (Spec- ification of the Standard). Kindly note that the outline is designed to enable Standards Proposals to be writ- ten following a generalized format which will facilitate their review. In addition, the outline permits the presentation of background and descriptive information which, while important during any evalu- 238 Journal of Libmry Automation Vol. 7 I 3 September 197 4 ation, is a prerequisite to the development of a standard. The Reactor Ballot is to be used by members to voice their recommendations relative to Initiative Standards Proposals. The Reactor Ballot permits both "for" and "against" votes to be explained, permitting the capture of additional information · which is necessary to document and com- municate formal Standards Proposals to standards organizations outside of the American Library Association. TESlA REACTOR BALLOT Reactor Information Name Title Organization Address CitY State ___ Zip __ Telephone Identification Number For Standard Requirement For Against Reason for Position: (Use Additional Pages if Required} As you, the members, use the outline to present your Standards Proposals, TESLA will publish them in ]OLA-TC and solicit membership reaction via the Reactor Ballot. Throughout the process TESLA will insure that Standards Pro- posals are drawn to the attention of the applicable American Library Association division or committee. Thus, internal re- view usually will proceed concurrently with membership review. From the review and the Reactor Ballot TESLA will pre- pare a "majority recommendation" and a "minority report" on each Standards Pro- posal. The majority recommendation and "minority report" so developed will then be transmitted to the originator, and to the official American Library Association representative on the appropriate stan- dards organization where it should prove a source of guidance as official votes are cast. In addition, the status of each Stan- dards Proposal will be reported by TESLA in JOLA-TC via the Standards Scoreboard. The committee (TESLA) it- self will be nonpartisan with regard to the proposals handled by it. However, the committee does reserve the right to reject proposals which after review are not found to relate to library automation. AN INVITATION FROM TESLA During the formative period of TESLA the list of potential standards areas for li- brary automation, below, was developed. You are invited to review the list below and voice your opinion of any or all areas indicated by means of the Reactor Ballot. Or, if you have a requirement for a stan- dard not included in this list, use the Initiative Standard Proposal outline to col- lect and present your thoughts. Potential Technical Standards Areas- 1. Codes for library and library network, including network hierarchy structures. 2. Documentation for systems design, de- velopment, implementation, operation, and postimplementation review. 3. Minimum display requirements for li- brary CRTs, keyboards for terminals, and machine-readable character or code set to be used as label printed in book. 4. Patron or user badge physical dimen- sion(s) and minimum data elements. 5. Book catalog layout (Physical and minimum data elements), a. Off-line print b. Photocomposed c. Microform 6. Communication formats for inventory control (absorptive of interlibrary loan and local circulation). 7. Data element dictionary content, for- mat, and minimum vocabulary, and in- ventory identification minimum content. 8. Inventory labels or identifiers (punched cards, labels, badges, or . . . ) physical dimensions and minimum data ele- ments. 9. Model/minimum specifications relating to hardware, software, and services procurement for library applications. 10. Communications formats for library ma- terial procurement (absorptive of order, bid, invoice, and related follow-up). INPUT To the Editor: I have reviewed Mr. Joe Rosenthal's in- cisive survey of the MARC types which appear to be eminent. Unfortunately, in his studies he seems to have overlooked the one MARC type which will pose the Technical Communications 239 greatest problem and relates to "UN- MARCED" books: NONMARC-the grand universe of records which yet remain to be placed in this most noble of formats and its international counterpart, originating in Holland, NEDERMARC-which stems from, "I nederMARC, you nederMARC, all them systems nederMARC .... " Hopefully, someone will solve the prob- lem explicit in these forms of MARC. As a result, until someone solves this prob- lem, we are all without MARC. John Kountz Associate for Library Automation California State University and Colleges