College and Research Libraries doctorate may be reasonably undertaken are outlined. In the discussion of the curriculum the analysis is not as thorough and detailed as might have been expected, nor does it concern itself fully with some of the questions which library school administrators and faculty mem- bers have had to face in the past few years. T h e question of the degree to be granted after a one-year course is settled in favor of the bachelor's degree and some doubt is expressed concerning the comprehensive examination program. T h e new curriculum which is being inaugurated at Columbia this fall undoubtedly drew some of its elements and its guiding principles from this chapter, particularly as regards the strengthening of the graduate pro- gram. T h e chapter, however, seems to accept the traditional first year program as settled, whereas the new program at Columbia repre- sents significant departures f r o m the first year program of the past twenty years. As informed studies by experienced univer- sity librarians of important problems in one of the major university library systems in the country, these reports are of value not only to the institution for which they were pre- pared, but as contributions to the literature of university librarianship. It is to be hoped that at some date in the not distant future a well-qualified person, perhaps one of the mem- bers of the original survey committee, will be invited back to Columbia to study the progress which has been made in dealing with these problems and to prepare a report showing the experience of the libraries in the ensuing five- year period in attempting to put into effect the recommendations contained in the survey reports. A l l who are interested in or concerned with the administrative problems of large univer- sity libraries will read these reports with attention and possibly use with profit.—Ste- phen A. McCarthy, Cornell University Li- brary. Classification for International Law "Classification for International L a w . " Based on Elsie Basset's Outline of T o p i c Head- ings for Books on International L a w and Relations in Classified Form and expanded by Kurt Schwerin. Charlottesville, Va., University of Virginia L a w Library, C 1 9 4 7 . It may not seem quite fair to appraise from the point of view of its general usefulness a tool which was developed primarily for the use of one particular library, and whose chief merit must be measured by the degree to which it fulfills the needs of that library. As the foreword suggests, however, it is hoped that the present classification scheme will find wider application; the following com- ments are therefore offered on the basis of this statement. T h e classification follows Miss Basset's Outline of T o p i c Headings for Books on International L a w and Relations in Classified Form, published as Appendix 2 of her Cata- loging Manual for Law Libraries ( N e w Y o r k , Wilson, 1942). D r . Schwerin's con- tribution consists of the expansion of the no- tation and, in several instances, the interpola- tion and rearrangement of topics. T h e scheme is divided into three sections: Treatises on International L a w , Treatises on International Relations, and Reports and Documents. A list of examples of call num- bers taken from the catalog of the University of Virginia L a w Library, a list of country symbols, and an outline of classification for private international law (conflict of laws) are appended. T h e section, Treatises on In- ternational Law, is subdivided into an intro- ductory general part which is not limited to treatises but includes various forms of publi- cations, e.g. case books, encyclopedias, bibliog- raphies, etc., and into parts on the state, maritime law, diplomacy, treaties, inter- national disputes, and war. T h e section, In- ternational Relations, has no formal sub- divisions and includes a multitude of topics. It begins with general subjects of world poli- tics, including the history of alliances and wars from the American Revolution down to the present reconstruction period. T h e history of the foreign relations of the United States and of other countries, with which the outline is continued, is followed by topics of peace, peace congresses, questions of disarmament and international congresses, the League of N a - tions, and the United Nations. Special topics 370 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH. LIBRARIES of international agreements such as commerce, copyright, postal service, and labor questions, conclude this section. T h e third section, Re- ports and Documents, provides f o r all the serial publications in the field, on the theory that less frequent shifting of the whole col- lection is necessary if material requiring most frequent shifting comes at the end of the col- lection. This arrangement follows Miss Basset's reasoning in the original outline scheme. T h e basic notation consists of two-figure numbers ranging from 00 to 99. It is ex- panded through interpolation of decimal figures when additional topics require greater detail. It is a peculiar feature of D r . Schwerin's notation that figures with decimal function are appended to the two-figure num- bers without insertion of a decimal point; thus, 465 is preceded by 46 and followed by 48. T h e result of this economy is that the notation cannot be expanded beyond 99 basic numbers, and new concepts which may evolve in the future must be crowded into this straight-jacket. As Miss Basset points out in the introduc- tion to her Outline of T o p i c Headings for Books on American and English Law, which equally applies to the present outline, her scheme was designed mainly as an aid in selecting subject headings. Topics appear therefore in more than one place in the out- line scheme, and for purposes of classification one definite place must be selected for the shelf location of the books. T h e necessary specification of a definitive place for a specific topic has not been carried through in many instances, and identical topics are scattered under various subjects throughout the scheme without indication which of the various pos- sible aspects should attract the material and which should serve as cross-reference only. Thus, provision is made for topics such as '"Reciprocity," " M o s t favored nations clause," and " T r a d e agreements" both under treaties in the section on international law (363) and in the section on foreign relations ( 7 1 ) . Bibliography is scheduled at the beginning of the scheme (008) and, without apparent justi- fication, again at the end ( 9 9 ) . Provision for material on the atomic bomb is made in not less than four places: land warfare including methods and use ( 5 1 3 ) , aerial warfare ( 5 4 ) , prohibited instruments and methods of w a r - fare ( 5 1 4 ) , and history of international rela- tions ( 6 6 1 ) . In come instances, the usefulness of the scheme will be enhanced if apparent conflicts are resolved, or the scope of the captions is explained to the user. E.g., while criminal jurisdiction is classed under the synonymous title of international criminal law ( 3 8 ) the subordinate topic, exterritorial crime, is classed with exterritoriality under the general topic, the state ( 1 4 ) . On the other hand, international delicts {i.e., criminal offenses) are classed under state responsibility ( 1 8 ) , a topic by which is generally understood the liability of governments for civil torts com- mitted by officials of the state. T h e theory of war crimes, an example of the substantive law of international offenses, however, is found writh the procedural problem of criminal juris- diction ( 3 8 ) . Since the problem of criminal jurisdiction and exterritorial crime is one of the conflict of laws rather than of inter- national law, its inclusion here appears ques- tionable. Specific war crime trials are placed with the history of international relations of the postwar period ( 6 1 5 4 ) . Although conventions or agreements on specific phases of private or administrative law create "international" law in the meaning of intermunicipal law, their significance lies not so much in their nature as a phase of the law of nations as in the creation of uniform municipal law in certain fields of private or governmental activity. T h e conventions listed in sections 71-733, and international control of atomic energy in peacetime (661) should probably be listed here, too, therefore, belong with their subjects in general law or other places in the classification rather than with international relations. Despite the above criticisms, the new classi- fication scheme is to be welcomed as a stimu- lating contribution to the thinking on the problem of the control of the overwhelming output of publications in the field of inter- national law and relations on the part of those librarians who are seeking a middle ground between the inadequate schedule of the decimal classification in its present form, and the close classification of the Library of Congress.— W e r n e r B. Ellinger, Library of Congress. OCTOBER, 1948 35 7