College and Research Libraries By EDNA M A E B R O W N New Periodicals of 1959—Part I THE NUMBER of important periodicals launched during the first six months of 1959 and available for examination at the Library of Congress is small. In the list of titles which follows it will be seen that various phases of science have new scholarly journals; that automation, management, astronautics, and atomic energy are of continuing interest; and finally, that the greater number of these journals originate with professional so- cieties, research institutions, and univer- sities. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Drawn from the an- nouncement issues of the Library Jour- nal, Bowker's Advance Reference-Source Reporting Service will provide early in- formation about some 6,000 books a year, with publication date, price, and brief description, all arranged by subject. CHURCH HISTORY. Archief voor de Ges- chiedenis van de Katholieke Kerk in Nederland will be published three times a year in Utrecht. T h e first number con- sists of an article "Over de beoefening van de geschiedenis der katholieke kerk in Nederland sedert omstreeks 1870." STATISTICS. Technometrics is a journal of statistics for the physical, chemical, and engineering sciences published quar- terly by the American Society for Quality Control and the American Statistical As- sociation. "Mathematical Probability in the Natural Sciences," and " T h e Anal- ysis of Life Test Data," are two of the articles in the first issue. POLITICAL AFFAIRS. There is being pub- lished in Washington a bimonthly jour- Miss Brown is Head, Serials Section, Descriptive Cataloging Division, Library of Congress. nal on foreign affairs entitled Free World Forum. T h e editors are persons who have found refuge in the West; the con- tributors are area specialists. Articles by Dr. Elemer Bako, Hungarian specialist, Slavic and Central European Division, the Library of Congress, on "Communist Maneuvering in Hungary Since the Rev- olution," and by Dr. Raymond Moyer, director, Far East regional affairs, In- ternational Cooperation Administration, on "Mutual Security, Korea and Defense Support" are illustrative of the first issue. T h e School of Inter-American Studies, University of Florida, launched Journal of Inter-American Studies as a channel for scholarly communication between the different parts of the Western Hemi- sphere. It will cover humanities and social sciences. Cahiers Pologne-Allemagne pub- lished in Paris and edited by Georges Zdziechowzki has as its theme the peace- ful coexistence of Poland and Germany. T h e contributors to number one are all Polish scholars living in Poland. CONSERVATION. Land ir Water Conser- vation "serves the interests of conserva- tion contractors, Soil Conservation Serv- ice technicians, Soil Conservation and Watershed District chairmen and super- visors, and the materials and equipment suppliers in the land and water conser- vation industry." ECONOMICS. The National Institute Economic Review is published in Lon- don by the National Institute of Eco- nomic and Social Research as a service to businessmen and others who need to be informed of the general economic situa- tion and prospects in Great Britain. LAW. Atomic Energy Law Journal re- ports on legislation, court decisions, and SEPTEMBER 1959 365 government regulations dealing with the production and use of atomic energy. Rivista di Diritto Fiscale e Amministra- tivo will interpret Swiss federation and canton fiscal and administrative law. EDUCATION. T o improve teaching meth- ods is the aim of Educadores, the journal of the Federacion Espanola de Religiosos de Ensenanza. T h e contributors are pro- fessors in pedagogical institutions in Spain. Book reviews and reviews of peri- odical articles are included. Technical Education comes from London. Its pur- pose is to stimulate research and thought on technical education in schools and colleges and on-the-job training in in- dustry. SCIENCE. Developmental Biology will publish articles bearing on problems of development of both plants and ani- mals, serving in this way as a meeting ground for botanical and zoological ap- proaches. Experimental Neurology is to be an international journal publishing re- sults of original research by experimental methods. Illinois Research reports briefly on some of the experiments being con- ducted in agriculture and home econom- ics at the Illinois Agricultural Experi- ment Station. International Journal of Radition Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine will bring together all interests concerned with the biological effects of ionizing radiations. Journal of Applied Polymer Science continues in part the Journal of Polymer Science and as its title indicates contains papers reporting results of studies and experiments which can be practically applied. Journal of Molecular Biology "will publish papers on the na- ture, production, and replication of bio- logical structure at the molecular level, and its relation to function." Neue Phy- sik from Vienna is a bimonthly "Zeits- chrift fur die Gebiete der Atom-und Strahlungsphysik." Science Information News from the National Science Foun- dation will report "national and inter- national developments in scientific and technical information dissemination." Tropical Science is the journal of the Tropical Products Institute in London. It will report the research done at the institute on the agricultural, plant, and animal products of the tropical countries of the British Commonwealth. MEDICINE. Journal of Occupational Medicine is published by the Industrial Medical Association. It consists of arti- cles, book reviews, and abstracts. ENGINEERING. A ir Engineering is a new monthly treating of the science of air pollution control, air moving, and air conditioning, sciences which in the opin- ion of the editors will prolong man's life by protecting him from hostile environ- mental forces—from microbes and smog to debilitating temperatures. Astronauti- cal Sciences Review is published by the American Astronautical Society. News coverage of space flights, research and de- velopment in space systems, human fac- tors research, etc., will be treated in this quarterly. The Civil Engineer in South- ern Africa is also called the transactions of the South African Institution of Civil Engineers. It consists of papers and speeches from society meetings. Environ- mental Engineering is the journal of the Institute of Environmental Engineers. T h e table of contents of the first number of this very technical journal lists such articles as "Response of Structures Under Random Vibration," "Sonic Failure" and others. Imported Auto Trade although intended for people connected with the imported automobile industry would be of interest to owners or prospective owners of foreign cars because of its news on models, distribution, servicing, etc. Industrial Research reports on re- search projects underway, anticipated, and needed in industry. Articles entitled "1959 Forecast: $12 Billion for Re- search," " W h y Isn't the Post Office Auto- 366 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES mated," and "Semiconductors: a Dynam- ic New Industry" are illustrative of vol- ume one, number one. Power Transmis- sion Design will be devoted to news and ideas about machine drives. SI AM Re- view is a publication of the Society for In- dustrial and Applied Mathematics. Here will be published papers referring to in- dustrial or scientific problems. They will describe new mathematical techniques and new applications, survey mathemati- cal methods in advanced fields, and de- scribe areas where there is need for math- ematical development. M A N A G E M E N T . Data Processing in Busi- ness and Industry is being published in London. Data processing, a phrase famil- iar to librarians, is herein described as "the technique whereby information is acquired, transmitted, stored, retrieved, and operated upon for effective indus- trial and commerical use." The Inter- national Executive consists of summaries of books and periodical articles on man- agement of international operations. F I N E ARTS. Dance Perspectives will con- tain interesting, stimulating, and enter- taining articles of considerable length by writers with specialized knowledge on the art of dance. T h e first issue consists of Lincoln Kirstein's "What Ballet Is About: an American Glossary." Journal of Church Music is a magazine for choir directors, organists, leaders of children's choirs, pastors, and members of music committees. Articles and scores are in- cluded. In Records & Music Arthur Fied- ler advises readers how to choose all kinds of music for listening pleasure in "Labels That Libel G o o d Music." T h e first issue includes articles explaining the difference between stereo and conven- tional recording, relating the behind- scenes story of a recording session, and others. LITERATURE. The Critical Quarterly comes from T h e University, Hull, Eng- land, and is largely concerned with twentieth-century British, American, and European literature. T h e editors write: "If we can help to keep alive the belief that literature is for every man . . . and that it is still one of the major pleasures of life, we shall feel we have achieved at least one of our aims." Criticism, a Quarterly for Literature and the Arts is published by Wayne State University Press. "It will examine the arts and liter- atures of all periods and nations, either individually or in their interrelationship, and critical theory regarding them." Hu- manidades is the review of the faculty of humanities of the University of the An- des, Merida, Venezuela. It will publish the works of the faculty as well as of out- siders and will not be limited to Ven- ezuelan matters entirely. Palinurus is published semiannually by Charl Van Horn in Orange, New Jersey. T h e first issue opens with Mark Van Doren's "Un- dersong." Oeuvres et Opinions from Moscow consists of French translations of Russian literary works. Periodicals Air Engineering. Business News Publishing Company, 450 W. Fort Street, Detroit 26. v. 1, no.l, April 1959. Monthly. $3. Archief voor de Geschiedenis van de Katho- lieke Kerk in Nederland. Uitgeverij Het Spectrum N.V., Postbus 2073, Utrecht, v.l, no.l, 1959. 3 nos. a year, £15. Astronautical Sciences Review. American As- tronautical Society, Inc., Box 598, Palo Alto, California, v.l, no.l, January/March 1959. Quarterly. $4. Atomic Energy Law Journal. Warren Publi- cations, 89 Beach Street, Boston 11, Mass- achusetts. v.l, no.l, Winter 1959. Quarter- ly. $20. Bowker's Advance Reference-Source Report- SEPTEMBER 1959 367 ting Service. R . R . Bowker Company, 62 West 45th Street, New York 36. February 1959. 5 nos. a year. $7.50. Cahiers Pologne-Allemagne. Editions Sarma- tia, 9, Place de la Madeleine, Paris 8. v . l , n o . l , A p r i l / J u n e 1959. Quarterly. $5. The Civil Engineer in Southern Africa. South African Institution of Civil Engi- neers, Kelvin House, 75 Marshall Street, J o h a n n e s b u r g , v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Frequency not given. Price not given. The Critical Quarterly. T h e University, H u l l , E n g l a n d , v . l , n o . l , Spring 1959. $2.50. Criticism. W a y n e State University Press, 4841 Cass Avenue, D e t r o i t 2. v . l , n o . l , W i n t e r 1959. Quarterly. $6. Dance Perspectives. 1801 East 26th Street, Brooklyn 29. n o . l , W i n t e r 1959. Quarterly. $5. Data Processing. Iliffe 8c Sons, Ltd., Dorset House, Stamford Street, L o n d o n S E 1. J a n u a r y / M a r c h 1959. Quarterly. $12. Developmental Biology. Academic Press, Inc., I l l F i f t h Avenue, New York 3. v . l , n o . l , April 1959. B i m o n t h l y . $14. Educadores. Claudio Coello 32, Apartado 1267, Madrid, v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y / F e b r u a r y 1959. 5 nos. a year. 200 ptas. Environmental Engineering. Institute of En- vironmental Engineers, P . O . B o x 341, M i n e o l a , New York, v . l , n o . l , February 1959. Quarterly. $4. Experimental Neurology. Academic Press, Inc., I l l F i f t h Avenue, New York 3. v . l , n o . l , April 1959. B i m o n t h l y . $16. Free World Forum. W a s h i n g t o n 5, D.C. v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. B i m o n t h l y . $5. Humanidades. Universidad de los Andes, Merida, Venezuela, v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y / - March 1959. Quarterly. Price not given. Illinois Research. University of Illinois Agricultural E x p e r i m e n t Station, U r b a n a . v . l , n o . l , W i n t e r 1959. Quarterly. Free. Imported Auto Trade. 152 West 4 2 n d Street, New York 36. v . l , n o . l , February 1959. Monthly. $5. Industrial Research. Scientific Research Pub- lishing Company, Inc., 200 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 4. v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Quarterly. $3. The International Executive. F o u n d a t i o n for the Advancement of I n t e r n a t i o n a l Busi- ness Administration, B o x 104, R i v e r d a l e Station, New York 71. v . l , n o . l , W i n t e r 1959. Frequency not given. $15. International Journal of Radiation Biology. T a y l o r & Francis, Ltd., R e d L i o n Court, F l e e t Street, L o n d o n E C 4. v . l , n o . l , J a n u - ary 1959. Quarterly. £ 3 15s. Journal of Applied Polymer Science. Inter- science Publishers, Inc., 20th and North- ampton Streets, Easton, Pennsylvania, v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y / F e b r u a r y 1959. Semi- annual. $17.50. Journal of Church Music. 2900 Queen L a n e , Philadelphia 29. v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Monthly (except July-August). $3.50. Journal of Inter-American Studies. School of Inter-American Studies, University of Florida, Gainesville, v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Frequency not given. $2. Journal of Molecular Biology. Academic Press, 111 F i f t h Avenue, New York 3. v . l , n o . l , April 1959. Bimonthly. $14. Journal of Occupational Medicine. Indus- trial Medical Association, 28 East J a c k s o n Boulevard, Chicago 4. v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Monthly. $10. Land 6- Water Conservation. P . O . B o x 2268, Montgomery, Alabama, v . l , n o . l , April 1959. Monthly. $6. National Institute of Economic and Social Research. Economic Review. National In- stitute of E c o n o m i c and Social Research, 2 Dean T r e n c h Street, Smith Square, Lon- don, S W 1. n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. B i m o n t h - ly. $6. Neue Physik. Mollardgasse 8, W i e n V I . n o . l , 1959. B i m o n t h l y . O.S. 60. Oeuvres et Opinions. U n i o n des ficrivains de l ' U . R . S . S . , 17, R u e Kirov, Moscou. 1, 1959. Monthly. Price not given. Palinurus. Charl V a n H o r n , 119 Central Avenue, Orange, New Jersey, v . l , n o . l , April 1959. Semiannual. $3.75. Power Transmission Design. Industrial Pub- lishing Corporation, 812 H u r o n R o a d , Cleveland 15. v . l , n o . l , J a n u a r y 1959. Monthly. $7. Records & Music. M. 8c N. Harrison, Inc., 274 Madison Avenue, New York 16. v . l , n o . l , March 1959. Monthly. $3.50. Rivista di Diritto Fiscale e Amministrativo. Arti Grafiche A. Salvioni 8c Co., S.A., Bel- (Continued on page 382) ,368 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Research Libraries and Scientific Publishers (Continued, from page 354) Despite the fact that it costs the ACS member only $20 per year, member cir- culation has dropped from 22,675 in 1949 to 17,301 in 1958. Why? Apparently because libraries have made Chemical Abstracts and information from Chem- ical Abstracts so easily available. T h e r e is no urgency felt by the individual sci- entist to subscribe to this publication. T h i s is a rather disheartening observa- tion to make about our members but it does seem to be valid. W i t h the steady decline in number of subscriptions and the increase in mate- rial published it has become necessary to charge more and more for Chemical Abstracts. Prices now are $20 to mem- bers, $80 to colleges and universities, and $350 to all others. F o r 1960—and you are among the first to know—these prices will increase to $32, $150, and $570. T h e two higher categories of prices are those paid by libraries. How could these prices be reduced or held stable? From the results of re- search, for one. T h e ACS already has an extensive program in progess. W e hope thereby to reduce some expenses and add some special services, for a fee. By increasing numbers of subscriptions is a second way; each subscriber then pays less in fixed charges. F i n a l l y — a n d strangely enough—by not photocopying material from this publication for dis- tribution unless you pay for the right to do so. Based on evidence on hand we have calculated that if the material re- produced from Chemical Abstracts were all paid for at the fees we charge for this service, and if libraries took advan- tage of this special service to compile bulletins consisting of pertinent ab- stracts for their own organizations, the price of every nonmember subscriber could be reduced by $50 to $75 and per- haps more. Furthermore we believe that adoption of this plan would save library staffs much of the time now spent in making their own abstracts. T h e ACS charter sets forth as one of the primary objectives of the Society the promoting of scientific interest and in- quiry through its publication program. W e want to make our journals as useful as possible and also to do all in our power to see that they are universally available. T o a large extent you are agents in providing availability. W e ear- nestly desire to work with you. N e w Periodicals of 1959—Part I (Continued from page 368) linzona, Switzerland, v.l, no.l, January/- February 1959. Bimonthly. Fr.18. Science Information News. National Science Foundation, Washington 25. v . l , n o . l , February/March 1959. Bimonthly. $1.25. SIAM Review. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. Box 7541, Philadel- phia. v.l, no.l, January 1959. Semiannual. $5. Technical Education. Evans Brothers, Ltd., Montague House, Russell Square, Lon- don, W C 1. v.l, n o . l , February 1959. Fre- quency not given. Price not given. Technometrics. J . Stuart Hunter, 167 Nas- sau Street, Princeton, N.J. v.l, no.l. Feb- ruary 1959. Quarterly. $8. Tropical Science. H.M. Stationery Office, London, v.l, n o . l , 1959. Quarterly. 26,y. ,382 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES