College and Research Libraries BOOK REVIEWS International Conference on African Bib- liography, Nairobi, 1967. The bibliogra- phy of Africa; proceedings and papers. J. D. Pearson and Ruth Jones, eds. New York, Africana Pub. Corp., 1970. 362p. $17.50. Organized by the International African Institute (London), the International Con- ference on African Bibliography brought together a distinguished group of librar- ians, documentalists, and scholars concerned with the problems of coordination and standardization of current African biblio- graphical services. Over twenty-five papers on a variety of topics were presented. The participants, coming from African coun- tries, Europe, Britain, and the United States made a number of recommendations. The development of standardized national bib- liographies is of primary importance for the bibliographical control of African books, periodicals, and government publi- cations. Several countries have, with vary- ing degrees of success, made serious ef- forts in this direction. In separate papers the state of the art is described for Nigeria, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Senegal, Mali, and Madagascar. Closely connected with the subject of standardization are the problems of cataloging and classification. Jean Fontvieille of the Institut Fonda- mental d'Afrique Noire in Dakar illustrates these problems clearly in his outstanding paper, "Le Nom des Ecrivains d'Afrique Noire,'' which, as the conference recom- mended, should be made available in En- glish. Another important dimension of African bibliography is the control of the litera- ture dealing with Africa. Such materials are published all over the world and bib- liographical access remains a serious prob- Recent Publications lem. A number of existing services are de- scribed and special attention should be called to the discussion of available bib- liographical card services in the article of Rene Bureau and the extensive listing of periodicals containing bibliographical data on articles relating to Africa which was pub- lished as an appendix to Julian Witherell's contribution, "Bibliographic Control of Peri- odical Literature on Africa." Other note- worthy papers deal with the problems of procurement of African materials-includ- ing a description of the efforts of the Li- brary of Congress-the need for the orga- nization of African archival collections, and the problems concerning African ephemera, microforms, and nonbook materials. The most significant contribution, however, is the "Survey of Bibliographical Services Covering Current Publications on Africa" by Ruth Jones, librarian at the Internation- al African Institute and coeditor of these proceedings. Although the results and recommenda- tions of the conference were widely pub- licized immediately afterwards, it is un- fortunate that it took three years to pub- lish the proceedings. A few contributions have been slightly updated, but a review of the progress in African bibliography since the conference would have greatly increased the usefulness of this volume. Seven of the contributions are in French; the others are in English. The introduc- tion and the conference recommendations have been printed in both languages. There is no index.-H endrik Edelman, ]oint University Libraries. Problems in University Library Manage- ment. Association of Research Libraries, Washington, D.C., 1970. 63p. This little pamphlet is the first product of an effort mounted by the Joint Commit- tee on University Library Management of I 229