College and Research Libraries DOROTHY JOENS GLASBY New Periodicals of 1965-Part l ALTHOUGH THE FUTURE may bring the first issues of a periodical published from a space station in orbit around the sun or issued from an earth-manned out- post on the moon or the planet Mars, the present list of some of the new pub- lications which came into being dur- ing .late 1964 or early 1965 does not re- veal anything so exciting or unusual. Scientific periodicals, again, outnumber those on other subjects and there is, understandably, a noticeable increase in the number which deal with the space sciences and closely related areas. There would appear to be, also, an increase in those which index, abstract, translate, or summarize information so that wider use can be made of material which is already available but hard or impossible to find or to understand. A number of journals, as in past list- ings, have not been annotated in any way but are merely included in the al- phabetical section at the end and are there denoted by an asterisk. ABSTRACTS, BIBLIOGRAPHIES, INDEXES. Back in 1947 Excerpta Medica began pub- lication with fourteen separate sections con- taining abstracts of periodical literature in medical fields ranging from anatomy to tuberculosis. At the present time, because of various divisions, combinations and reorgani- zations, the fourteen sections have grown to twenty-three and some of the sections are, themselves, issued in sections. The latest change involves the replacement of Physi- ology, Biochemistry, and Pharmacology, sec- tion 2, with three new publications: Physi- ology, section 2A; Pharmacology and Toxi- cology, section 2B; and Biochemistry, sec- tion 2C. The Excerpta Medica format and scope need no introduction to librarians or users of libraries so it is probably sufficient to say that these new publications follow the pattern and reach, also the high stan- dards, of the old. According to its prelimi- nary issues, America, History and Life will survey selected periodicals, 95 per cent of which are not abstracted elsewhere. As is its predecessor, Historical Abstracts, the new publication is edited by Eric H. Boehm and issued by Clio Press . It will provide a bib- liographic review of articles published throughout the world on the history of the United States and Canada and of articles dealing with current American life and times. It is hoped that it will be possible to cite articles at least within a year of their original publication. The scope of the work is fairly broad in that it includes lit- erature about all territories, mandates, etc., during their political association with the United States or Canada as, for example, the history of the Philippines during 1898- 1946. An "index to the literature of pest control, broadly defined" is the new Pesticides Doc- umentation Bulletin prepared by the Na- tional Agricultural Library. Diseases, pests and parasites of plants and animals, ento- mology in general, and biological states of plants and animals will be among the topics covered. The publication will have a com- puter-produced permuted title index and at first will use only the source materials of the National Agricultural Library its.elf, but eventually will draw on the resources of other research libraries and institutions in this country and abroad. Another United States government publication of interest is Arms Control & Disarmament, a quar- terly bibliography with abstracts and an- notations, compiled by 'the Arms Control and Disarmament Bibliography Section of the Library of Congress. Issued with the support of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, the new work will cover current literature in the English language, including translations of foreign 411 I 412 I College & Research Libraries • September 1965 language materials. Sources will he selected from literature received at the Library of Congress and will include trade books, monographs, selected government publi- cations of the United States and other coun- tries, publications of national and interna- tional organizations, and about one thou- sand periodicals. The quarterly is not in- tended to he exhaustive of its subject and, among other things, will not include news- papers or most news magazine material. With some exceptions (v. 1, no. 1 for in- stance) literature cited in each issue will have been · published in the three months preceding the month in which that issue is sent to press. The editors of Proceedings in Print be- lieve that a gap currently exists in refer- ence services-that of accurate citation and indexing of conference proceedings. There- fore the bimonthly issued by the Aerospace Section, Science-Technology Division, Spe- cial Libraries Association will index all con- ference proceedings pertinent to aerospace technology. The proceedings listed must actually be in print; none that are in press or in preparation will appear. H the editors find that proceedings will never be printed, they have included that information also (for which consideration all librarians will undoubtedly be grateful) . Perceptual Cognitive Development, in a format dictated by computer programs, is a bibliographic index of material on per- ceptual, cognitive, and creative processes. It will list titles of current books, papers published in selected journals, oral reports delivered at scientific and scholarly meet- ings, and "ongoing" research projects. Cita- tions should appear two to five months after publication in the cited journal. Issued monthly with every third issue being a quarterly cumulation, Book Review Index will "provide a prompt and compre- hensive guide to book reviews appearing in all media of general circulation which include a substantial number of reviews on a regular basis." The publishers, Gale Re- search Co. of Detroit, estimate that the in- dex will cover an annual total of fifteen thousand reviews covering seven thousand five hundred books. Issues are to appear about two weeks after the end of the month covered by the issue, but will include all publications receiv.ed regardless of issue date. Citations include author, title of book, reviewing medium and date, reviewer, and page numbers. The subscription price of the Index covers a loose-leaf binder for current issues. ARCHAEOLOGY. Even persons unfamiliar with the French language can get great pleasure and much information from the profusely illustrated pages of Archeologia. The publication, probably intended more for the general reader than for the scholar, ranges throughout the world (Greece, Mexi- co, etc.) and puts great emphasis on the romance of archaeology. Historic connec- tions (tracing the life of Alexander the Great through archaeological remains) as well as modern items (archaeology and television) are included. AREAS, CULTURES. The publishers of Middle Eastern Studies affirm that in the last 175 years the Middle East has become increasingly involved with European and American culture, politics, and economics and that the process has now generated enough material to make a reasonably dis- tinct and homogeneous field of academic study. The quarterly will examine the "Arabic-speaking co~tries of South-West Asia and North Mrica together with Israel, Persia, and Turkey." Its concern will be with political, economic, religious, and legal history since the end of the .eighteenth cen- tury as well as present day literature, sociol- ogy, and social geography. The first issue has articles on "Nazi Germany and the Palestine Partition Plan" and " Rashid Hus- ian: Portrait of an Angry Young Arab." The Center of Mrican Studies of the University of Warsaw, to make its scholar- ship available to others, is issuing, in Eng- lish and French, Africana Bulletin. Poland may seem, to some, a strange place from which to study Africa and indeed, according to the Bulletin, African studies in Poland do not have a long history. Since the end of the eighteenth century, the Polish people have been engaged in a struggle for their own national independence and hav.e never had anything to do with colonization; How- ever their ancient contacts with the Orient have always made them curious about and sympathetic toward the people of Mrica. The first African studies were begun in the independent Poland of the post World War I years but only after World War II ... New Periodicals of 1965 I 413 was there a real stimulus. The center has followed the traditional lines of study of linguistics and ethnography in its approach to Mrica but has become increasingly in- terested in Mrican history, economic and social geography, and the economic sci- ences. The Bulletin will include original papers, a section about current African studies in Poland, and bibliographic notes and summaries of books and papers on Af- rican topics published in Poland, mostly in the Polish language. Although the first issue is rather slight, the Indian Historian is of interest as it is published, directed, and edited entirely by American Indians. The periodical will in- clude information on the problems, history, and language of the Indian, past and pres- ent. Duemila; Revista Italo-Tedesca has, as its purpose, the exchange of Italian and German cultural material. The text is in Italian and German and the first issue, beautifully illustrated, features articles and poetry translated from one language to the other, plus many original works. BusiNESS, EcoNOMICS. Since U.S. Con- sumer is an "adless newspaper" and does not have to depend on advertising revenue for its continued existence, those who are responsible for it hope that it will be free to comment on potentially explosive issues such as misleading selling methods, fraudu- lent products, and health hazards. It will help the "wise buyers" to make the correct choices in the market place. The first issue contains short articles on such topics as trading stamps, manufacturers' claims, and the price of haircuts. Although Ward's Quarterly is "the new prestige magazine of the automotive indus- try designed for management" its lavish il- lustrations (many in color) as well as its subject matter make it a delight to the auto enthusiast and even to the general reader. The publication will treat of many aspects of the automobile industry but issues for the first year will feature the four major auto-makers beginning with "The Chrysler Story" in v. 1, no. 1. Hard cover editions of the Quarterly are available and charter sub- scribers will receive those editions at the regular price. Publications of Moody's In- vestors Service can be assumed to be of high quality and the latest, Moody's Com- puter Industry Survey, needs no particular comment except the explanation that it will be "an informational and interpretive service covering the data processing field." The first issue, which includes an article on "Foreign Computer Developments" and one which reviews and gives background in- formation on various corporations in the field, has "A Computer Glossary" which de- fines (for those of us who badly need such help) some of the terms which seem to fly around everywhere these days (analog com- puter, CPM, input-output, etc.). The Logistics Review and Military Logis- tics ] ournal will be devoted to the field of logistics and associated areas of interest encompassing logistics planning and man- agement and the development of appro- priate statistical and mathematical tech- niques pertinent to the solution of logistical problems. Joining a number of similar jour- nals issued by the same press (Eastern European Economics, Soviet Studies in His- tory, and numerous others) the American Review of Soviet and Eastern European Foreign Trade and Mathematical Studies in Economics and Statistics in the USSR and Eastern Europe will contain unabridged translations of articles from Soviet and satel- lite-country publications. In addition, the Review will publish original contributed articles and information and statistics on current developments. Concerned with political and economic development, the journal of Development Studies has "Tariffs and Economic Develop- ment" and "Political Development and the Intra-Regional Balance of Power" in its first issue. Later issues will give information on the progress of economic growth in Ghana, development of the shipbuilding industry in Japan, political thought in India, and other topics of a similar nature. EDUCATION. The United States Office of Education, believing that education is all in one piece so the publications which re- port on it should be in one piece also, is issuing American Education to replace Higher Education ( 1945-64) and School Life ( 1918-64). The new journal looks like a popular magazine and is, in fact, intended to be such although "like its predecessors- like all government magazines in fact-it ex- ists to explain the work and serve the official purposes of the agency that publishes it." The Office of Education points out that it 414 I College & Research Libraries • September 1965 can no longer afford the "luxury" of pub- lishing for 'a limited number of professional educators since "education is also and fun- damentally the public's business, not the private or exclusive business of educators." The first issue of American Education has articles about school desegregation, head- start projects for slum children, and uni- versity and college architecture. The editors of Theological Education think that there has been too little exchange of ideas among schools and that theological education, as a result, has become a "sort of fruitbasket of disciplines." The new quar- terly, issued by the American Association of Theological Schools, will have as its primary public the one thousand seven hun- dred full-time teachers and administrators of the association's member schools but it is hoped that it will be read also by trustees and found useful by "our brethren engaged in theological education in Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish theological schools in North America." The normal policy of the publication will be to build a forty-eight page issue around one critical topic. The first issue is chiefly papers from the twenty- fourth biennial meetings of AATS but pro- posed subjects for later issues are "Models for Theological Education" and "Field Work for Theological Education." GENERAL. The purpose of Verdict is to "link events by means of ideas." The pub- lishers think that the world of ideas is suf- fering from too many words and it is time for judgment. Verdict will defend the indi- vidual's right to his own life and to all de- cisions which further his own life, the right to private property, a foreign policy which is affirmatively and intelligently anti-Com- munist, objective law as a defender of per- sonal freedom, and quite a lengthy list of other things. The initial issue contains an article by Dr. Lin Yutang on "Seven Hun- dred Million Chinese Can Be Wronged: Why Red China Must Not Be Admitted to the UN" as well as material by other writ- ers of equal stature. American Dialog plans to promote discussion of questions ( segrega- tion, survival, automation) which determine the American future. The periodical accepts no advertising so can be relatively free to explore almost any area. As the editors ex- plain it "there will he no place for racists, ultra-Rightists or crackpots in these pages, but we will not shun new or unpopular ideas or 'unthinkable thoughts,' to borrow Senator Fulbright's phrase." The first issue has "Abstract Art Is Dead," "Arthur Miller and the Fall of Man," and "Black Writing." It well may be that only a cataloger would notice but Charlatan changed its title with the second issue. The first issue was called What Can This Charlatan Be Trying to Say?, admittedly a bit lengthy for easy citation. The title, long or short version, comes from the Biblical (Acts 17) story of Paul's arguments in the synagogue in Athens against all the idols he saw there. Since his ideas were strange to his listeners and he seemed to be a protagonist for foreign deities, some persons asked "What can this charlatan be trying to say?" Charla- tan will be interested in new evaluations of what has passed as well as in contemporary subjects and speculations about the future. Each issue (the first and second were beau- tifully printed on heavy folded papers) will be in portfolio form and contain previously unpublished poetry, short stories, plays, prose .essays, scholarly articles and technical papers, music, and graphic art. Such a variety is combined in a single publication because the editor feels that various frag- ments of the academic community see other fragments as alien and the general public has been allowed, as a result of extreme specialization, to find the intellectual world chaotic and foreign. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS. In English, with Russian and English abstracts, the ar- ticles in ] ournal of Peace Research are to have relevance to the present international situation and should be of interest not only to social scientists and to those who daily make decisions affecting the future of man- kind but to everyone concerned about the vital problems of war and peace (in short, to everyone) . The first issue has "Fear in the Arms Race: a Mathematical Study" and "Summit Meetings and International Rela- tions." LANGUAGE, LITERATURE. Seminar; a Jour- nal of Germanic Studies is issued jointly by the Canadian Association of University Teachers of German and the Germanic Sec- tion of the Australasian Universities Lan- guage and Literature Association. The groups have called their publication Semi- nar because they hope that it will provide New Periodicals of 1965 I 415 a vehicle to carry discussions: the scholar' s· explication of his thesis to his fellows plus their answers and questions back to him. The work, with text in English or German, is presently semiannual but it is hoped that it will be able to become a quarterly. The heavily annotated, scholarly Journal of Lin- guistics is being published for the Linguis- tics Association of Great Britain and will explore all branches of linguistics, including phonetics. The editors of Papers in English Lan- guage and Literature say that their new quarterly "has been initiated because of the increasing evidence that the facilities of learned journals for publication have not been expanding in proportion to the growth of the profession and of interest in literary history ... [andJ ... the majority of the learned journals established since 1945 have tended to concern themselves with increas- ingly specialized fields." Although the peri- odical is a joint undertaking of the depart- ment of English, Carbondale campus and the Faculty of English, Edwardsville cam- pus, Southern Illinois University, it is not intended solely or even primarily as an out- let for SIU scholars. In addition to papers on literary history, analysis, stylistics and evaluation there will also be, from time to time, original material (letters, journals, etc.) related to belles lettres. Dickens Stud- ies, issued by Emerson College of Boston, is concerned with Dickens as a critic, social reformer, philanthropist, actor, and histori- an. The publication has on its advisory board a number of distinguished Dickens scholars (Edgar Johnson, Edward Wagen- knecht) and hopes to satisfy a .. long felt need for an American scholarly periodical dedicated to serving a growing international community of Dickens students." Soviet Studies in Literature is another of the group of publications of similar format covering various subject fields issued by the Interna- tional Arts and Sciences Press. As do the others, it consists of unabridged translations, in this case of material on literary criticism, esthetics, and current literary controversies. In the field of "little" magazines the Mad River Review from Dayton Campus Press will have poetry, fiction, and art by authors from various places and of varied degrees of fame while Berkshire Review will feature similar material prepared by members of the faculty of Williams College. The Busy Bee Review is "new writing from the Neth- erlands" and publishes original literary ma- terial translated from the Dutch. The first issue of the semiannual publication includes work by Ivo Michiels, Huga Claus, Oscar Timmers, and others who have been pub- lished before. Intercollegiate Review is lim- ited to essays or reviews which advance the cause of scholarship, especially that grounded in logic and history. The first is- sue contains, among other items, "The Deputy: an Exercise in Dramatic Impro- priety" and "The Falseface of Science." It is pleasant to find, among all the strange titles and unfamiliar formats of new periodicals, a publication which has the look of an old friend (and so it is) the Southern Review. Under the editorship of Charles Piplin, Cleanth Brooks, and Robert Penn Warren the Review attained an in- ternational reputation as one of the fore- most literary quarterlies. Published from 1935 until its wartime suspension in 1942, it numbered among its distinguished con- tributors Aldous Huxley, Mark Van Doren, Eudora Welty, and Sherwood Anderson. With a Winter 1965 issue (which contains work by Malcolm Cowley, Austin Warren, and Kathleen Raine) Louisiana State Uni- versity has revived the Review. The new series will be international in scope but will devote much attention to the culture of the American South. LIBRARY SciENCE. Each issue of Drexel Library Quarterly will treat a single subject from a variety of viewpoints and will focus authoritative opinion on topics of both general and specific interest to the profes- sion. The initial issue contains lectures pre- sented at Drexel Institute's graduate school of library science in June 1964, at a public relations workshop for practicing librarians. The second issue is to be "Legal Bibliogra- phy Briefed," a librarian's introduction (needed by many of us) to the literature of the law. PoLITICS. American Politics is a biparti- san news magazine specializing in American politics, political parties, and government. It will present the .. what, how, and why" of politics as well as the latest news from Democratic and Republican national and 416 I College & Research Libraries • September 1965 state party headquarters, in-depth coverage of campaigns, grass-roots political activity in counties, cities, and towns, and even reports on things of political interest in the arts (movies, books, television, radio, and the press). PsYCHOLOGY. In order to focus on proc- esses by which individuals and institutions are changed and to improve research done and facilitate its application by influential practitioners, the National Training Labora- tories of the National Education Association is issuing the Journal of Applied Behavioral Science. As the editors say in the first issue "today the staggering complexity of social problems, whether local, national, or inter- national makes it crucial that we know more about human behavior and that we use more fully what is known." Journal of Experimental Research in Personality is in- terested in current developments in the study of personality and in related fields the study of which is basic to the under- standing of personality, while Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences turns the spotlight on the past to dig into the origins of psychology, psychiatry, anthropology, and linguistics. Its initial issue has such varied articles as "The History of Anthro- pology as an Anthropological Problem," "Freud and the Greeks," and "Relativity and Gestalt." THEATER. The first issue of Religious Theatre gives the text of a play, "Candle in the Straw," plus several articles, some concerned with the play (problems of pro- duction, religious significance) and some of a more general nature. Those responsible for the periodical plan that it will be "com- mitted to a point of view-that the theatre can have religious significance-but not to a particular doctrinal persuasion; to an at- titude of criticism but not ,to a particular critical system." SciENCE. Science for the "intelligent lay- man" (quotation from Prime Minister Har- old Wilson's introductory remarks in the first issue) is the field of Science ] ournal. In a format reminiscent of Scientific Ameri- can, the new monthly will range far and wide judging from the articles in its premier issue: "Scientific Treatment of Criminals," "Fuel Cells," "Causes of Aging," and "Rel- ativity Since Einstein." Another "layman oriented" work is the Morton Arboretum Quarterly which replaces the Arboretum's Bulletin of Popular Information. The Arbo- retum, founded in 1922 in Lisle, Ill. by Joy Morton (founder and president of Morton Salt Co.) as an "educational foundation for practical scientific research work in horti- culture and agriculture" will report on its activities in the new Quarterly and include, also, illustrations of unusual specimens at the Arboretum as well as horticultural es- says. In order to provide a rapid means of com- municating new information, the Institu- tion of Electrical Engineers of London is publishing Electronics Letters. The relative brevity of the letters can be judged when one realizes that there are twenty-six sepa- rate communications in the 28-page first is- sue of the periodical. A valuable "extra" in this first issue (and one to be included in later issues) is a section giving synopses of papers to be published in the lEE :Proceed- ings. Although the first issue is entirely in English, Phys.ics will publish articles in English, French, and Russian (with an English translation to appear simultaneous- ly). The new periodical is not to be just another publishing medium for mediocre work but is to be devoted to "quality" ma- terial. Its editors believe that scientists today must wade through too much printed mat- ter and must, therefor.e, select what they ac- tually read almost at random. Material to appear in Physics will be chosen and judged "entirely on whether we feel that it should he read by a large fraction of all physicists." The editors say "is it new, creative, im- portant, controversial, or well-written enough for our readers to want to see it? If it is only sound, we will not publish it; if it is only brilliant, we will." Interestingly enough Physics will offer royalties to au- thors in the manner of literary journals with a similar editorial policy. The format of Nuclear Applications makes for easy read- ing as the paragraphs throughout the pub- lication are done in block form so that each point stands out. The journal, while highly technical, has been designed to give a good deal of information in , a small space and most material is, in some way, condensed or abbreviated. . - New Periodicals of 1965 I 417 The Chemical Society of London is is- suing Chemical Communications to give rapid publication to brief or urgent pre- liminary accounts of scientific research, and is joining with the Royal Institute of Chemistry to issue ChemWtry in Britain. The joint publication is an important land- mark in collaboration between two of the major bodies serving the interests of chem- ists in Great Britain and is particularly notable when one realizes that each body has relinquished a publication of its own (the Society its Proceedings and the Insti- tute its Journal) in order to participate in the cooperative effort. Although ChemWtry in Britain notes with pride that "for once in the history of scientific publishing the ap- pearance of yet another new periodical does not betoken an increase in the total number of such publications," the Scottish ] ournal of Geology shows that geologists, as well as chemists, can work together. The Journal is published for the Geological Societies of Edinburgh and Glasgow and supersedes the Transactions of each. Joint publishing en- deavors such as the two mentioned above seem to be advantageous as the new peri- odicals (because of shared costs) can be larger, be published more frequently, and be given a wider circulation. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences is the latest in the group of journals ( Ca- nadian Journal of BiochemWtry, Canadian Journal of Microbiology, etc.) to be issued by the National Research Council of Cana- da. GeochemWtry International, issued by the Geochemical Society, will publish "se- lected articles from a cover-to-cover trans- lation of Geokhimiya, a journal devoted to geochemistry published by the Academy of Sciences, USSR, together with selected translations of geochemical papers from other languages, but primarily from Rus- sian, German, French, and Japanese." The international publication supersedes Geo- chemWtry, the cover-to-cover translation of Geokhimiya for the years 1956-63. With International. Journal of Electronics (the first issues of which, at this writing, have not been received by the Library of Con- gress) International Journal of Control re- places Journal of Electronics and Control. The new titles cover the same type of ma- terial covered in the old but the division was felt to be necessary because of the in- creasing bulk of material to be published and the increasing specialization of the sub- scribers. Metrologia, published under the auspices of the International Committee of Weights and Measures, will be devoted to "scientific measurement of the highest precision and accuracy on which all experimental science rests." Metrology is based in the. field of physics so information on it, in the past, has been scattered throughout various jour- nals in many countries. SPACE SCIENCES. Designed with a con- tent to fit the needs of aerospace policy- makers, both military and civil, among friends and allies of the United States Air Force j Space Digest International will em- phasize new developments in the United States insofar as those developments have interest for or impact on those abroad. World Aerospace Systems supersedes World Aviation Electronics and Control, issued 1961-64. It will have short items and ar- ticles of new things in the field and the first issue includes a digest of international news, a section of product highlights and many illustrations of new designs. Science et In- dustries Spatiales is a trilingual publication superseding L'Homme et l'Espace. When the earlier periodical began, the idea was that it would educate Europeans on the subject of space and convince them that they, too, could go into space research and did not have to leave that field to the two giant powers alone. Europeans, supposedly, have now been convinced so the new work (with its English, French, and German articles) will merely keep European indus- try as a whole informed about space and the great implications of space science. TECHNOLOGY. Fire Technology, official publication of the Society of Fire Protection Engineers, will spread information on fire protection research and engineering through articles such as "Factors Influencing the Use of High-Temperature Sprinklers" and "Space Separation for the Prevention of Farm Fire Spread." Data Trend is the "first Australian magazine devoted to data proc- essing." Its scope extends from business and industry to science since the publishers feel that there are many common denomi- nators in data processing techniques. The 418 I College & Research Libraries • September 1965 articles included will be written primarily for people already familiar with data proc- essing systems and procedure and will concern Australian interests directly and not "rehash overseas feature articles or news items." A most interesting inclusion in the first issue is "Census: Australian Data Processing Systems" which lists all systems in the country, by type of user, that had been installed or were currently on order as of September 30, 1964. PERIODICALS Africana Bulletin. Studium Afrykanistyczne, U niwersytet Warszawski, Warszawa 64, Poland. 1; 1964. Frequency not given. Price not given. 64-9498. Air Force/Space Digest International. Unit- ed States Air Force Association, Suite 400, 1750 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. $12. 65-9872. America, History and Life. American Bib- liographical Center, 800 East Michel- torena St., Santa Barbara, Calif. 93103. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. 3 no. a year. Sold on the service rate principle. 64-25630. American Dialog. Dialog Publications, 853 Broadway, New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, July j Aug. 1964. Bimonthly. $4.50. 65- 9901. American Education. Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., Wash- ington, D.C. 20402. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. 10 no. a year. $3. 65-9862. American Politics. 1092 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20004. no. 1, Aug. 29, 1964. Weekly. $7.50. 65- 9858. The American Review of Soviet and Eastern European Foreign Trade. International Arts and Sciences Press, 108 Grand St., White Plains, N.Y. 10601. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1965. Bimonthly. $35. 65- 9859. 0 The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. Little, Brown and Co., 34 Beacon St., Boston 02106. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Bimonthly. $12. 65-9851. Archeologia. 49, Avenue d'Elena, Paris (XVI) no. 1, nov. / dec. 1964. Bimonthly. 65 fr. (for 12 issues). 64-9499. Arms Control & Disarmament. Superintend- ent of Documents, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., Washington, D.C. 20402. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964/ 65. Quarterly. $2. 64- 62746. Berkshire Review. Williams College, Wil- liamstown, Mass. v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1965. Frequency not given. Price not given. 65-9892. Biochemistry. Excerpta Medica Foundation, New York Academy of Medicine Bldg., 2 East 103d St., New York 10029. v. 18, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9896. Book Review Index. Gale Research Co., 2200 Book Tower, Detroit. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1956. M-onthly. $24. 65-9908. The Busy Bee Review. P.O. Box 1960, Am- sterdam. no. 1, 1964. Semiannual, $1 per issue. 65-9852. Canadian journal of Earth Sciences. Divi- sion of Administration, National Research Council, Ottawa 2, Canada. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1964. Bimonthly. $3. (for July-Dec. 1964). 65-9875. Charlatan. Charlatan Publications, 320 East College St., Iowa City, Iowa. no. 1, Spring 1964. Semiannual. $6. 64-9497. Chemical Communications. Publications Sales Officer, The Chemical Society, Bur- lington House, London, W.l. Jan. 13, 1965. Semimonthly. £5. 65-9871. Chemistry in Britain. Publications Sales Of. ficer, The Chemical Society, Burlington House, London, W.l. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. £5. 65-9864. °Cryobiology. 4200 Heathfield Road, Rock- ville, Md. 20853. v. 1, no. 1, Sept./Oct. 1964. Bimonthly. $15. 65-9853. Data Trend. Management Enterprises Pty. Limited, 247 Elizabeth St., Sydney, N.S.W. v. 1, no. 1, Sept./Oct. 1964. Bi- monthly. £3/3/-. 64-9496. Dickens Studies. The Editor, Dickens Studies, 19 Garden St., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. 3 no. a year. $3.50. 65-9888. Drexel Library Quarterly. Drexel Press, Philadelphia, Pa. 19104. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $10. 65-9911. Duemila; Revista Italo-Tedesca. Obersee- Verlag, Neue Rabenstrasse 28, Hamburg 36, Germany. anno 1, n. 1, 1965. Quar- terly. DM 15,-. 65-9912. Electronics Letters. Institution of Electrical Engineers, Savoy Place, London W.C.2. J New Periodicals of 1965 I 419 v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1965~ Monthly. $7. 65- 9906. 0 Experimental Gerontology. Pergamon, 122 East 55th St., New York. v. 1, no. 1, July 1964. Quarterly. $30. 65-9870. Fire Technology. The Editor, Fire Tech- nology, Society of Fire Protection Engi- neers, 60 Batterymarch St., Boston 02110. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1965. Quarterly. $10. (nonmembers). 65-9890. Geochemistry International. Subscription Dept., American Geological Institute, 1444 N St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. no. 1, 1964. 6 no. a year. $25. 65-9860. The Indian Historian. American Indian His- torical Society, 206 Miguel St., San Francisco. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1964. Fre- quency not given. $3 per year. 64-9495. The Intercollegiate Review. Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, Inc. 629 Public Ledger Building, Philadelphia 19106. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. 6 no. a year. $4. 65-9854. International Journal of Control. Taylor & Francis Ltd., Red Lion Court, Fleet St., London, E.C.4. 1st ser., v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. $43. 65-9903. 0 International Journal of Neuropsychiatry. 8 S. Michigan Ave., Suite 514, Chicago 60603. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1965. Bi- monthly. $10. 65-9886. 0 International Journal of Solids and Struc- tures. Pergamon, 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1965. Quar- terly. $40. 65-9910. The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science. National Training Laboratories, National Education Association, 1201 16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Mar. 1965. Quarterly. $6.50. 65-9877. The Journal of Development Studies. Frank Cass & Co., 8-10 Woburn Walk, London W.C.l. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1964. Quarterly. £3. 65-9865. 0 Journal of Differential Equations. Aca- demic Press Inc., 111 Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Fre- quency not given. $15. 65-9885. Journal of Experimental Research in :Per- sonality. Academic Press, Inc., Ill Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1965. 4 no. a year. $16. 65-9887. 0 Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. Academic Press, 111 Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. 4 no. a year. $16. 65-9866. Journal of Linguistics. Cambridge Univ. Pr., American Branch, 32 E. 57th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1965. Semiannual. $7.50. 65-9873. Journal of Peace Research. Universitets- forlaget, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 307, Blindern, Oslo 3, Norway. no. 1, 1964. Frequency not given. $4. 65-9857. 0 Journal of Personality and Social Psychol- ogy. American Psychological Association, Inc., 1200 Seventeenth St., N.W., Wash- ington, D.C. 20036. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. $20. 65-9855. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. Psychology Press, Business Office, 4 Conant Square, Brandon, Vt. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $10. 65-9867. The Logistics Review and Military Logis- tics Journal. Technical Economics, 573 The Alameda, Berkeley, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Jan .jFeb. 1965. Bimonthly (except July-Aug.). $9. 65-9893. The Mad River Review. The Editor, The Mad River Review, Dayton Campus, 9053 Col. Glenn Highway, Dayton, Ohio 45431. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964/ 65. 3 no. a year. $2.75. 65-9882. Mathematical Studies in Economics and Statistics in the USSR and Eastern Eu- rope. International Arts and Sciences Press, 108 Grand St., White Plains, N.Y. 10601. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1964. Quarterly. $35. 65-9876. M etrologia. Springer-Verlag, New York, Inc., 175 5th Ave., New York. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. 4 no. a year. $8.50. 65-9907. Middle Eastern Studies. Frank Cass & Co., Ltd., 8-10 Woburn Walk, London, W.C.l. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1964. Quarterly. £3. 65-9869. Moody's Computer Industry Survey. Moody's Investors Service, Inc., 99 Church St., New York 10007. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1965. Quarterly. $95. 65-9909. The Morton Arboretum Quarterly. The Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Ill. 60532. v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1965. Quarterly. $2. 65-9891. Nuclear Applications. American Nuclear So- 420 I College & Research Libraries • September 1965 ciety, 244 East Ogden Ave., Hinsdale, Ill. 60521. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1965. Bi- monthly. $21. 65-9881. 0 Nuclear Structural Engineering. North- Holland Publishing Co., P.O. Box 103, Amsterdam. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Bi- monthly. $25. 65-9898. Papers in English Language and Literature. The Editor, Papers in English Language and Literature, Southern Illinois Univer- sity, Alton, Ill. 62004. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1965. Quarterly. $5. 65-9899. Perceptual Cognitive Development. P.O. Box 35336, Preuss Station, Los Angeles, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, 1965. Quarterly. $5. 65-9895. Pesticides Documentation Bulletin. Super- intendent of Documents, U.S. Govt. Print. Off. , Washington, D.C. 20402. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 19, 1965. Biweekly. $12. A65-150. Pharmacology and Toxicology, Experi- mental and Clinical. Excerpta Medica Foundation, New York Academy of Med- icine Bldg., 2 East 103d St., New York 10029. v. 18, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9897. Physics. Physics Publishing Co., 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, July I Aug. 1964. Bimonthly. $30. 65- 9874. Physiology. Excerpta Medica Foundation, New York Academy of Medicine Bldg., 2 East 103d St., New York 10029. v. 18, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9913. Proceedings in :Print. Maurice Rahilly, Business Manager, Proceedings in Print, Avco Corporation, Research and Ad- vanced Development Division, 201 Low- ell St., Wilmington, Mass. v. 1, no. 112, Oct. 1964. Bimonthly. $20. 65-9856. Religious Theatre. James R. Carlson, Flor- ida Presbyterian College, St. Petersburg, Fla. 33733. no. 1, Fall 1964. Semiannual. $2.50. 65-9883. Science Journal. Associated Iliffe Press Lim- ited, Dorset House, Stamford St., London S.E.l. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1965. Monthly. $12. 65-9905. Sciences et Industries Spatiales. SADESI, 37, rue Peillonnex, 1225 Genevei Chene- Bourg, Switzerland. v. 1, no. 112, 1965. 6 no. a year. $16. 65-9889. Scottish Journal of Geology. Oliver & Boyd Ltd., Tweeddale Court, 14 High St., Edinburgh 1. v. 1, pt. 1, Jan. 1965. Fre- quency not given. $12. 65-9904. Seminar; a Journal of Germanic Studies. Seminar, Victoria College, Toronto 5, Ont., Canada. v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1965. Semiannual. $3. (Canadian). 65-9909. The Southern Review. Business Manager, The Southern Review, Drawer D, Uni- versity Station, Baton Rouge, La. 70803. new ser., v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1965. Quar- terly. $4. 36-25494. Soviet Studies in Literature. International Arts and Sciences Press, 108 Grand St., White Plains, N.Y. 10601. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964165. Quarterly. $35. 65- 9884. Theological Education. American Associa- tion of Theological Schools, 934 Third National Building, Dayton, Ohio 45402. v. 1, no. 1, Autumn 1964. Quarterly. $3. 65-9878. U.S. Consumer . Consumer News Inc., 1029 Vermont Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 22, 1965. Bi- weekly. $5. 65-9879. Verdict. Auric International Corporation, 150 E. 37th St., New York 10016. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1964. Monthly. $6. 65-9861. Ward's Quarterly. Powers and Co., Inc., 550 West Fort St., Detroit, Mich. 48226. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1965. Quarterly. $15. 65-9880. World Aerospace Systems. Hanover Press Ltd., 4 Mill St., Hanover Square, London, W.l. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. $8. 65-9868. • • Book Reviews ( Continued from page 409) graphical and reference functions of the type proposed for Florida Atlantic U ni- versity. Second, it is obvious that much pro- ductive mechanization can be accomplished by the imaginative use of unit record equip- ment without requiring access to a com- puter, and at a cost that is well within the operational budget limitations of many li- braries. Library administrators please note. -Carl R. Cox, University of Maryland. • • -