College and Research Libraries DOROTHY JOENS GLASBY New Periodicals of 1964-Part II NEW PUBLICATIONS continue to appear on a variety of - old subjects (chess, peace, Africa) but this particular listing is distinguished by the fact that it in- cludes also a new periodical on a new subject: industrial archaeology. As might be supposed, scientific works far outnumber (and frequently out- weigh) those from other fields g1vmg, perhaps, an impression that our sociefy regards scientific research to be of greater importance (and worthy of a greater expenditure of money) than re- search in, for example, the humanities. However there are actually many rea- sons for the relatively greater number of periodicals in science. One can, in fact, almost equate the growth of the period- ical form of publication with the rapid progress made by science in our genera- tion as scientific research must be re- ported with great speed while research or study in other disciplines can wait, unchanged, to appear in book form. As has been customary in past lists, some titles have been noted only in the alphabetical section at the end and are marked there by an asterisk. AREAS, CouNTRIES. There are always new publications about Africa but one of the latest, East Africa journal is unusual in that it is written primarily by -Africans, for Africans. The journal, which is published in Nairobi by the East African Institute of Social and Cultural Affairs, will disseminate information on social, economic, and po- litical issues of the region. In addition to articles such as "Two Views of African Socialism" and "Trade Unions and Nation Building" the first issue includes the text of Mrs. Glasby is a Serials Cataloger in the Descriptive Cataloging Division of the Li- brary of Congress. the charter of the Organization of African Unity signed in Addis Ababa on May 25, 1963. Texts of other documents of African significance will be incorporated into future issues. South African Potential, also con- cerned with African problems, promises to "aim neither right nor left [politically, that is 1 but at the facts as they are." The word "potential" in the title plus the contents of the first number make it clear that the magazine will explore conditions in the new Republic of South Africa as they are now with a view to improving them greatly in the future. Although humanities and the social studies are expected to provide the bulk of its material, Luso-Brazilian Review says that "nothing related to the Portuguese- speaking areas of the world will be ex- cluded from consideration." Text of its first issue is English or Portuguese but it will consider material in any of the common Western European languages. Published by the University of Wisconsin Press, the Re- view's first issue is devoted to papers read at the symposium on Luso-Brazilian Studies sponsored jointly by the Luso-Brazilian Center and the department of Spanish and Portuguese of the university. The second issue is to be concerned with Portuguese culture. ART. Design in all fields (architecture, industry, printing, and others) but in only one place (Sheffield, England) is to be the constant concern and study of Design in Sheffield. Its publishers feel that there is more than enough material in the city to provide for an unlimited number of future issues but warn the reader that the publica- tion "is based in the city, not confined by it." Judging from the first issue, no item will be too small (or too large) to come under scrutiny as the illustrations range from hack saws and altar pieces to statues and buildings. BIBLIOGRAPHIES, LIBRARIES. Holders of ·annual subscriptions to Selection of Inter- I 145 146 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1965 national Railway Documentation can obtain (for nominal charges). photographic repro- ductions of a large number of articles re- ferred to in each issue. The listing is a well- annotated bibliography of periodical litera- ture in its special field. It is edited jointly by the International Union of Railways and the International Railway Congress As- sociation and prepared under the direction of the International Railway Documenta- tion Bureau. In addition to the English edition, the publication will appear also in French and German editions. Library Science with a Slant to Docu- mentation has an intriguing but somewhat obscure title. The first issue states clearly, however, that the magazine will publish articles on "library science, including docu- mentation" so one can only suppose that the seeming strangeness of the title results from the use of an English idiom unfamiliar to American eyes or ears. The new quarterly is published in Bangalore under the spon- sorship of the Sarada Ranganathan Endow- ment for Library Science in collaboration with the Documentation Research and Training Centre and the names of several Americans, well known in ALA circles, are listed as members of its editorial board. EDUCATION. As the first issue of Urban Education points out, everyone has ideas about what is wrong with city schools but fewer people are willing or able to say what can be done about them. By the same token, many publications are concerned with what urban schools should do, but there are few, again, to point to possible ways in which these things might be done. Although Urban Education does not intend to promote or inspire direct action, it does desire to provide a basis for making such action (when it comes and from whatever ·source) effective. It will publish articles concerning research relevant to big city education but will not include those primar- ily concerned with social philosophy or social · policy. The National Council on Measurements Used in Education formerly issued a Yearbook (1941-63) but now has changed its name to National Council on Measurement in Education and ·· will · pub- lish Journal of Educational Measurement. Although, as the official publication of the NCME, the Journal will contain news and notices to members; it will also publish re- ports of measurement in an educational con- text, original measurement research, and in- formation on similar matters. The first issue includes "Measurement of Cognitive Proc- esses" (is nothing private?) and "How May Units of Measurement Be Safely Ignored?" Programmed Learning, the journal of the Association for Programmed Learning, su- persedes an earlier publication with the same title. It will print research reports on programs with applications in schools, in- dustries, and other training places and will survey the research literature and evalua- tion data on commercially available pro- grams and teaching machines. An especially interesting article (regrettably brief) in the first issue is "Programmed Learning in Emerging Nations." Another aspect of learning (and teaching) appears in Train- ing in Business and Industry. The magazine is intended for the men and women who have jobs which require them "to change people so they can be more effective and efficient in a business organization." The possible importance of such training is ex- plained in the publication's introductory material where it is stated that "technology alone has erased a past when learning was regarded as a Good Thing, justified on faith alone. It becomes clearer almost daily that it will become a factor in the survival of every significant economic unit." Judg- ing from the first issue, articles in the journal will be based on actual experiences (train- ing of pilots in one of the country's leading airlines and training of employees of a major automobile manufacturer, for example). GENERAL. The publishers of Ebony have formed an international company in order to issue a new magazine, Ebony Africa, de- signed especially for Mrican readers. Ebony, itself, was always popular in Mrica but pro- duction and shipping costs made it impos- sible for the domestic edition to meet the demand overseas. The new edition, printed in Paris, will include more· local stories · for Africans but retain the same format and follow the same pattern of photo-journalism. Many American universities have estab- lished branches or divisions in other coun- tries and so have faculty members of, and 'in, many nations. The "University of Mary- land Abroad in Heidelberg~' · is issuing New Periodicals of 1964-Part II I 147 M arab to provide a nonspecialized format for some of the writings of the scattered, multinational faculty of the institution based in College Park, Maryland. Contributions will be received from various divisions of the University College (Far East, Atlantic, and European) and issues will be a pot- pourri of many subjects. The first issue in- cludes fiction as well as a critical piece on "Shaw's Therapeutic Satire" and an article on "Training for Commitment and Initiative Among the Jesuits." Another university-based publication is the new East-West Center Review. It is published by the East-West Center Grantees Association, a group formed from those holding scholarships at the University of Hawaii's Center for Cultural and Technical Exchange between East and West (the Center's full, but little used, name) . Al- though the subject matter will be wide ranging, the Review will include only "ar- ticles relevant to academic research being pursued at the East-West Center." One of its major areas of concentration will be new translations into English of materials in its particular field. The first issue, for example, includes a translation from Korean, "Chi- nese Musical Customs" translated from the French, and an article on "Indian Elements in Philippine Culture." Perhaps Security World does not fit too well into a classification of "general" peri- odicals · but it has been put here simply be- cause it does not seem to fit into any other category either. It is intended for all those who are "dedicated professional security administrators, security-oriented manage- ment executives, and security-directed serv- ices" and the publisher reserves the right to refuse non-qualified subscriptions (does he have an idea that the periodical may fall into the hands · of the very persons against whom we are trying to be secure?). Each bimonthly issue will include an .ex- change of personal experiences, announce- ments of t~chnical courses, product informa- tion, notices of meetings, and analysis and interpretations of pertinent laws ·as .. well as of proposed and pending legislation. GEOGRAPHY. The Institute of Geography of the Polish Academy of Sciences is iSsuing Geographia l'olonica in the hope that Polish geographical studies, now rarely read out- side the country because of a lack of knowl- edge of the language, will find a wider audience. The journal (presently annual, but with plans for a change to semiannual or quarterly frequency) is in English but will eventually include other languages used at international geographical meetings. Al- though the initial issue concerns itself pri- marily with Poland, the publishers feel that geography has developed too long in na- tional lines and hope that the journal can help it to achieve status as an international science. The publication is well illustrated with many maps and the articles are metic- ulously documented. HISTORY, PoLITICAL SciENCE. In years past much American interest has been shown in Soviet researches and discoveries in the scientifie fields and many periodicals have been issued to translate, abstract, list, or evaluate Russian works in those areas. This interest is broadening now to include subjects other than science and technology. Kritika; a Review of Current Soviet Books on Russian History will report on and evalu- ate "works which seem indicative of sig- nificant stages in · the evolution of Soviet historical schol~rship." Kritika's first issue has six signed , reviews and future issues will have, in addition to reviews, news of Soviet publications of source materials and other reference works. Although most of the articles in the first issue are written by faculty members of American universities, International Review of History and Po- litical Science is published in India. Re- search papers and "rare" articles connected with various problems of national and in- ternational interest will make up its future issues . These broad interests are reflected in the titles of several articles from issue num- ·ber one: "John F. Kennedy and the Revival of Diplomacy," "Cambodia in Global Geo- ·politics," and "The Communist Kulturkampf ih Satellite Poland." As the title implies, Chinese Communist ·Affairs is "aimed at the study of the Pei- ping regime as a government system, its problems, and its prospects, and at present- ing them to the worldwide readership in their proper perspective." Since the- quar- terly is issued by the Institute of Political Research at Taipei, the publishers feel that they are in a good position to obtain a true 148 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1965 picture of the situation on the Chinese mainland by direct observation. They feel, also, that as Orientals they share a "mental orientation" with the Chinese Communists that will enable them to understand or evaluate them more easily and accurately than could per~ons of the West. Those re- sponsible for the magazine say (with per- haps a good deal of truth) that "to measure Chinese Communist affairs with a Western yardstick is not the way to arrive at correct conclusions ." The first issue (on very thin paper, probably because the subscription price includes airmail postage) discusses "A Historical View of the Moscow-Peiping Schism," "Combat Capabilities of the Pei- ping Regime," and "Anti-Communist Ac- tivities on the Chinese Mainland during 1963." Later issues will contain articles by well known Chinese scholars and experts and the publishers say that although they "are not completely immune to subjective interpretation" they will be "extremely care- full so as to avoid it." INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS. Peace is , hope- fully, one of the major interests of all na- tions and all peoples. For that reason much has been and is being written and published on the subject. Peace Research Abstracts I ournal, issued from the Canadian Peace Re- search Institute of Clarkson, Ontario, hopes to list many of the articles on peace and give abstracts, prepared by volunteer ab- stractors, of them . The list of abstractors includes persons from many countries but the abstracts in the first issue are in Eng- lish and seem to abstract only articles in English. The publishers do not explain or clarify the scope of their publication except to say that they will not limit themselves to abstracting the "most important articles" (their critics say there will be "too many rocks and too few gems") but will try to include almost anything on their subject that they can find as they feel that what is unimportant to one person may be vital to another. The publishers also feel that they must try to cull their abstracts from many of the lesser known or less "learned" jour- nals as important information may be found anywhere. The Journal will have cumulative subject indexes in every third issue. LANGUAGE, LITERATURE. Concerned with practical usage rather than philological theory, Idioma will not be restricted to an explanation of idioms or idiomatic expres- sions. Its publishers hope to make it an international review , of great help to all those working with language. As they state "when we deal with the practical use of a language, we are first and foremost con- cerned with its peculiarities-with idiom, not language. It is the peculiarities of Eng- lish, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian that are time and again so discon- certingly troublesome." Tegenstroom is a magazine of criticism written by a group of persons concerned with the course that literature has taken in the Netherlands in recent years and wish, by their criticism, to bring it back to more normal or conventional channels. Oneota Review, published at Luther College, De- corah, Iowa, is planned to provide a show- case for the writing of college students but hopes to publish "a preponderance of work by professionally established writers and scholars." As a journal of fiction and criti- cism, it wishes to involve the students in the work and make it, in part, their publi- cation because it is felt that a journal which reaches beyond the campus will provide more incentive than those student writing magazines which function essentially as house organs for a student body. The first issue includes the text of a lecture given at Emory University by Glenn T .. Seaborg as well as some fiction, poetry, and a one-act play. A "little" magazine of verse, fiction and prose comment, Things takes its name from a line in William Carlos Williams' Paterson " . . . no ideas but in things ." All work in- cluded is to be chosen because it asserts rather than analyzes . The first issue seems to be prepared mostly by writers unpub- lished elsewhere but there are a few famous names , such as that of Babette Deutsch. LAw. Another journal of translation, So- viet S~atutes and Decisions will get its ma- terial from such Soviet sources as the Ga- zette of the USSR Supreme Soviet. Items included are to be those which seem to best reflect developments in Soviet law and to be of the greatest interest to persons pro- fessionall y concerned in the field. In all I New Periodicals of 1964-Part II I 149 cases, the translations are to be unabridged. MEDICINE. A broad coverage of its whole field will be presented by Survey of Pa- thology in Medicine and Surgery. The bi- monthly publication will present abstracts, condensations, digests, and reviews of arti- cles selected from more than fourteen hun- dred medical and scientific periodicals, and will not limit itself strictly to pathology but will include "background" and basic scien- tific information. Many prominent physi.: cians and surgeons are listed as members of the editorial board of Hospital Medicine. The original articles in the publication are to be concerned with diseases and problems unique to hospitals or at least to the man- agement of illnesses in hospitals. Journal of Obesity has embarked "upon a course of helping to dispel faddism and quackery, and of encouraging and ·facilitating com- munication between unheralded scientists studying the nature of the problem and phy- sicians who need to become more success- ful in the treatment of the disease ." It claims · to be the only scientific publication special- izing in the problems of overweight, but its scholarly, documented articles are definitely not intended for the "do-it-yourself" dieter . Music. Articles in a popular style and with many illustrations will be featured in A World of Music. Nothing in music will be outside its province as evidenced by the fact that the first issue brings information on the Beatles, My Fair Lady, and Frederic Chopin. Folk Folio will have words and music of folk songs relevant to the holidays of the season (the first issue has those for the Fourth of July, Labor Day and Thanks- giving) . It will publish original folk songs as well as news in the field of folk art- music, dance, folklore. RECREATIONS. A general periodical de- voted to chess, Chessworld will not be too concerned with the science of the game or the news of the field but will contain ar- ticles on the history of the game, short stories, and biographical information about famous players. In the words of the pub- lishers, the periodical's approach to the game will be that "we neither elevate chess to the status of religion, sex, or politics nor do we relegate it to the game closet along with monopoly, dominoes, or playing cards." The editor of Chess Review and the presi- dent of the United States Chess Federation were among those who helped to launch the new publication. Sportfishing is a most interesting publica- tion but its first issue tells nothing about it or the plans of its publishers. The articles in the magazine are short, written in a popular (as opposed to "scholarly") vein and have such striking titles as "The M ys- terious Secrets of Deep Trolling" and "Swordfish Are My Downfall." The initial issue has a good deal of information about equipment and costs of fishing for sport. A hardbound travel magazine with many illustrations, Venture will contain short ar- ticles by well known people. In the first issue one can find "A New Road to Rio," "A Gambler's Geography of Europe" and "You've Never Been to Ocracoke?" SciENCE. With Journal of Aircraft and Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets (both * mentioned in the last listing of new period- icals) the AIAA Bulletin completes the trio of new publications begun in 1964 by the American Institute of Aeronautics and As- tronautics. The Bulletin will replace the series of fliers and program booklets issued in past years to announce scheduled meet- ings. It will contain, in addition to the meeting announcements, two-hundred-word abstracts of papers to be presented. Journal of Applied Ecology, edited for the British Ecology Society, was started as it was felt that applied ecology is an active and de- veloping subject which needs an organ of its own. The need was underlined by the heavy pressure on the space of the society's older journals, I ournal of Ecology and I our- nal of Animal Ecology. Issued by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research of India in New Delhi, the Indian I ournal of Biochemistry super- sedes the Annals of Biochemistry and Ex- perimental Medicine which had been pub- lished by the Institute for Biochemistry and Experimental Medicine, Calcutta. The first issue of Journal of Cellular !'las- tics carries the date Jan. 1965 but it was physically available in Sept. 1964 coinci- dent with the International Cellular Plastics Conference in New York. The maiden issue contains the full papers of the conference 150 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1965 so is not, perhaps, to be considered char- acteristic of future issues which the pub- lishers say will contain, in addition to tech- nical articles, news of the industry and its people, of new eguipment developed and of new patents issued. A German general science publication, Bild der Wissenschaft has many illustra- tions, some colored. The quarterly (to be changed to a monthly in 1965) seems to be written for the general reader and its first issue features a discussion of Galileo (in honor of his four hundredth birthday on Feb. 15, 1964) and an article on the psy- chology of space Hight. Reports which might formerly have been published in the Pakistan Journal of Scien- tific and Industrial Research will now ap- pear in the new Scientific Researches issued by the East Regional Laboratories of the Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research. Since the laboratories are com- posed of divisions working on a variety of projects it can be expected that papers in the journal will deal with many subjects. A number of articles in the first issue are called part 2, part 4, etc. leaving one to assume that earlier parts were issued in the above-mentioned Pakistan Journal. SociAL SciENCES. British viewpoints and British and European examples of what has . happened and will happen to our rapidly expanding cities can be found in Urban Studies. Its editorial advisory committee includes university professors in the fields of social studies, transport, and social geog- raphy, as well as other persons actively at work (such as the chief planning officer of the Scottish Development Department and the deputy city planning officer of the Cor- poration of Glasgow) so both the theoretical and practical should be well represented. A highly technical statistical publication, De- mography contains large numbers of charts, maps, and tables. Most of the first issue has been prepared by persons who would appear to be authorities in the field (em- ployees of the United States Bureau of the Census, sociologists, and university profes- sors) . Demography is published by the Pop- ulation Association of America and includes Spanish summaries. Although it is published in Varanasi, India, the Indian Psychological Review has consulting editors from the United States, Japan, Austria, and other countries. It will publish research, abstracts, reviews, and "specially prepared papers on the de- velopment of psychology in different fields and countries." The first number includes an item with a provocative title: "A Phy- chological Analysis of Caste Tension." TECHNOLOGY. Data Processing Manage- ment Association's new DPMA Quarterly will be able to give more space to a sub- ject than is now provided in I ournal of Data Management. Each edition will probe in detail both the technical and the philo- sophical aspects of the topics under discus- sion, as evidenced by the fact that the in- itial issue contains only two articles: "Or- ganization and Administration of Electronic Data Processing" and "Exploring the M ys- tery of Magnetic Tape" (what it is; where it came from; its life expectancy) . A series of articles in each successive issue of Polish Technical Review will deal 'with one or two important branches of Polish industry. For example, the introductory issue · covers power engineering and the machine tool in- dustry while the second concerns itself with the shipbuilding industry. The Review, issued by the Central Technical Organiza- tion (Naczelna Organizacja Techniczna w Polsce-a federation of nineteen scientific technical associations of engineers and tech- - nicians) includes many illustrations and diagrams as well as an information column, reviews, and bibliographies. Begun on the occasion of the third United Nations Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, Euronuclear wishes to play a part in coordinating research, de- velopments, and techniques from European countries with the ultimate object of creat- ing a united (and peaceful) nuclear in- dustry throughout all of Europe (including the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union). In addition to short news items of recent developments plus scholarly articles of a technical nature, the first issue includes ar- ticles concerned with progress in specific places or installations (such as the Haldane Boiling Water Reactor). Ceo-Marine Technology, according to its publishers, is designed to be torn apart (in industry, perhaps, but in libraries?). Special sections at the beginning and end of each r I New Periodicals of 1964-Part II I 151 issue are insert ads (data sheets) and can be easily removed for filing. Aside from these sheets, the rest of the publication con- sists of short undocumented articles con- cerning design and engineering of systems to be used in oceanography as well as infor- mation about companies and other organi- zations doing research in that field. In addition to being a new publication, the Journal of Industrial Archaeology deals with a newly christened subject. It seems that engineers, geographers, historians, econ- omists, photographers, and others have be- come interested in the physical remains of the industrial past and wish to locate, re- cord, and preserve buildings and equipment involved in the story of technology. It is hard, say the publishers of the journal, to distinguish between industrial archaeology and economic history but they will use two criteria for accepting articles to be pub- lished: (1) Is it concerned with evidence which has actually survived, and which can be seen, touched, and photographed? (2) Does it report original field work of some ~ind, however modest or, alternatively, does it seem likely to lead to such field work? The first issue of the journal includes a number of reports which have, apparent- ly, been .able to meet these exacting stan- dards. Of particular interest in that issue are "A Survival of the Wiltshire Paper Indus- try" and "The Archaeology of the British Coalfield." PERIODICALS AIAA Bulletin. American Institute of Aero- nautics and Astronautics, Inc., 599 Eleventh Ave., New York 10036. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. $1.00 to mem- bers. 64-9451. I) Angiologica; International Archives of An- giology. Albert J. Phiebig, P .O. Box 352, White Plains, N.Y. v . 1, no. 1/ 2, 1964. Bimonthly. $13.50. 64-9437. Bild der Wissenschaft. Deutsche-Verlags- Anstalt GmbH, 7 Stuttgart 1, Neckar- strasse 12i-125, Postfach 209. Heft 1, Jan./Marz 1964. Quarterly. DM 3.50 per issue. 64-9487. Chessworld. Chessworld Magazine, Inc., 505 Fifth Ave., New York 10017. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1964. Bimonthly. $9.95. 64-9440. Chinese Communist Affairs. Institute of Political Research, P.O. Box 518, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $4.00. 64-9481. DPMA Quarterly. Data Processing Manage- ment Association, 524 Busse Highway, Park Ridge, Ill. 60068. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1964. Quarterly. $5.00. 64-9488. Demography. University of Chicago, 1126 East 59th St., Chicago 60637. v. 1, no. 1, 1964. Frequency not given. $7.00. 64- 9434. Design in Sheffield. 11 Beech Hill Road, Sheffield, 10, England. No. 1, Summer/ Autumn 1964. Semiannual. 6s. 64-9464. East Africa ] ournal. East African Institute of Social and Cultural Affairs, P.O. Box 30492, Nairobi, Kenya. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1964. 10 no. a year. $4 (surface mail); $10.50 (air mail). 64-9494. East-West Center Review. Box 200, East West Center, Honolulu, Hawaii. v. 1, no . 1, June 1964. 3 no. a year. Price not given. 64-9453. Ebony Africa. 1820 South Michigan Ave., Chicago 60616. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Monthly. $3 (plus $1 postage for United States, Canada, and Pan America) . 64- 9466. Euronuclear. Morgan Brothers, 28 Essex St., London, W.C. 2. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1964. Monthly. 45s. 64-9469. Folk Folio. 636 Dogwood Ave., Franklin Square, Long Island, New York 11010. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1964. Semiannual. $1. 64-9435/ MN. Geographia Polonica. Export-Import Enter- prise Ruch, Warszawa; Wilcza 46, Po- land. 1, 1964. Annual. zl 57, - ,. 64-9430. Ceo-Marine Technology. Intel, Inc. , 739 National Press Bldg., Washington, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, Nov. 1964. Monthly. $5. 64- 9489. Hospital Medicine. Wallace Laboratories, Cranbury, N.J. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1964. Monthly. Price not given. 64-9490. Idioma. Max Hueber Verlag, 8 Miinchen 13. 1. Jahr., 1, Jan. 1964. Bimonthly. DM 8 -without Russian; DM 9.80 with Rus- sian. 64-9438. ~)Immunochemistry. Pergamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 22. v. 1, no: 1, Apr. 1964. Quarterly. $40. 64-9461. · 152 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1965 Indian Journal of Biochemistry. Pergamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 22. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $10. SA 65-415. Indian Psychological Review. The Secretary, Indian Psychological Review, B 27 / 88-A Ravindrapuri, Varanasi 5, India. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. Semiannual. $5. SA 65-413. 0 International Journal of Computer Mathe- matics. Gordon and Breach Science Pub- lishers, Inc., 150 Fifth Ave., New York 10011. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Frequency not given. $20 ( 4 issues). 64-9477. International Review of History and Po- litical Science. Review Publications, Ras- togi St. , Subhash Bazar, Meerut, India. v. 1, no. 1, June 1964. Semiannual. Rs. 15/ - . SA 65-414. The Journal of Applied Ecology. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, England. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Semiannual. $20. 64-9478. Journal of Cellular Plastics. Technomic Pub- lishing Co., 202 North St., Stamford, Conn. 06902. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $15. 64-9474. Journal of Educational Measurement. Na- tional Council on Measurement in Educa- tion, Irvin J. Lehmann, Secretary, Office of Evaluation Services, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. v. 1, no. 1, June 1964. Frequency not given. $5 (annual) . 64-9479. The Journal of Industria'l Archaeology. Lam- barde Press, 95 Walton Road, Sidcup, Kent, England. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Quarterly. 42s. 64-9472. 1) Journal of Mathematical Psychology. Aca- demic Press, Inc. , Ill Fifth Ave. , New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1964. Semi- annual. $20. 64-9491. Journal of Obesity. Box A, Madison Square Station, New York 10010. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1964. Bimonthly. $1. 64-9448. • Journal of Oral Therapeut£cs and Phar- macology. Williams & Wilkins Co., 428 East Preston St., Baltimore. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. Bimonthly. $12. 64-9460. Kritika; a Review of Current Soviet Books on Russian History. Box 285, Cambridge 38, Mass. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1964. 3 no. a year. $2. 64-9486. Library Science with a Slant to Documen- tation. Docume:r::ttation Research and Training Centre, 112 Cross Road 11, Mallwswaram, Bangalore 3, India. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. Price not given. 64-9446. Luso-Brazilian Review. University of Wis- consin Press, Journals Dept., P.O. Box 1379, Madison, Wis. 53701. v. 1, no. 1, June 1964. Frequency not given. $3.75. 64-9445. Marab. University of Maryland, APO 403, New York. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1964. Frequency not given. $1 per issue. 64- 9452. 0 Mutation Research. Elsevier Publishing Co., P.O. Box 211, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Bi- monthly. $18 . 64-9436. Oneota Review. Oneota Review, Luther College, Decorah, Iowa 52101. v. 1, no. 1, 1964. Frequency not given. $1 per issue. 64-9484 . Peace Research Abstracts Journal. Dr. Alan & Dr. Hanna Newcombe, 25 Dundana Ave., Dundas, Ontario, Canada. v. 1, no. 1, June 1964. Monthly. Price not given. 64-9454. Polish Technical Review. Import & Export Enterprise Ruch, Warszawa, Poland, Wil- cza 46. 1, June 1964. Bimonthly. $4. 64-9470. Programmed Learning. Sweet & Maxwell Ltd., 11 New Fetter Lane, London, E.C. 4. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. 3 no. a year. 2ls. 64-9447. 0 Psychophysiology. Williams & Wilkins Co., 428 E. Preston St., Baltimore 21202. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. Quarterly. $12. 64- 9473. Scientific Researches. East Regional Labora- tories, Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Dacca, Pakistan. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $2.25. SA 64-6689. Security World. Security World Magazine, Inc., 8060 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles 46. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. Bimonthly. $6. 64-9456. Selection of International Railway Docu- mentation. International Railway Con- gress Association, 19, rue du Beau-Site, Brussels 5. no. 1, Jan. 1964. 10 no. a year. 300 Belgian francs. 64-9442. South African !Potential. South African Po- tential (PTY), Ltd., 303 Duncan House, New Periodicals of 1964-Part II I 153 · 11 De Villiers St., Johannesburg, P.O. Box 107. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1964. Fre- quency not given. $.25 per issue. 64- 9492. Soviet Statutes and Decisions. International Arts and Sciences Press, 108 Grand St., White Plains, N.Y. 10601. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1964. Quarterly. $35. 64-9493. Sport-fishing. Yachting Publishing Corpora- tion, 50 West 44th St., New York. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1964. Frequency not given. Price not given. 64-9450. Survey of Pathology in Medicine and Sur- gery. Williams & Wilkins Co., 428 East Preston St., Baltimore 21202. v. 1, no. 1, July/ Aug. 1964. Bimonthly. $15. 64-9485. Tegenstroom. Bank Pierson, Heldring & Pierson, Postgiro 1142, Amsterdam. Nr. 1, Juli 1964. Monthly. f. 25, -, 64-9457. Things. 308 W. 107th St., New York 10025. no. 1, Fall 1964. Frequency not given. $3 ( 4 issues). 64-9476. Training in Business and Industry. Gellert- Wolfman Publishing Corporation, 33 West 60th St., New York 10023. v. 1, no. 1, Sept./Oct. 1964. Bimonthly. $3. 64- 9463. Urban Education. University of Buffalo Foundation, 3435 Main St., Buffalo 14214. v. 1, Summer 1964. Quarterly. $5. 64-9467. Urban Studies. Oliver & Boyd, Tweeddale Court; Edinburgh. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Semiannual. $5. 64-9449. Venture. 111 Tenth St., Des Moines, Iowa 50304. v. 1, no. 1, June 1964. Bimonthly. $17.50. 64-9444. A World of Music. 14011 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1964. Quarterly. $2. 64-9439/ MN. • • Rare Books Preconference The Preconference of the Rare Books Section, ACRL, will be held on July 1-2 with the following program: July 1-Detroit -The making of a rare book librarian -A look at the Burton Historical Collection July 2-Ann Arbor-Value of rare books in the future -A look at the William L. Clements Library Conference participants will be housed at the Park Shelton Hotel, Detroit. Room arrangements for the Preconference can be made through the following: Rare Books Preconference Convention Reservation Bureau for ALA 626 Book Building Detroit, Michigan 48226 Detailed information about Conference plans will be mailed to memb~rs · of the Rare Books Section about May 1. • •