College and Research Libraries 242 I College & Research Libraries • May 1972 ly when they do know something about publishing." As a result of this fleshing-out of basic material the book will undoubted- ly prove very useful to · graduate library school students as well as to library tech- nicians and clerks. There are several tables at appropriate places in the book setting forth detailed listings of staff activities and responsibilities. This should prove helpful to supervisors writing job descriptions or organizing or reorganizing a library. The book also con- tains a detailed discussion and practical evaluation of the primary acquisition tools such as BIP, PW, CBI, NUC, PTLA, etc. This book will be very useful to a be- ginning librarian or library technician as a picture of what actually happens from the time an order is placed until the book is shelved. In addition, there are probably many practicing librarians who would ben- efit from the review this book offers. And finally, it will undoubted~y prove very use- ful to schools with library technician ·courses and to libraries with in-house-train- ing programs. All in all it is an excellent book.-Ashby ]. Fristoe, Unive1·sity of Ha- waii. LIST 1971: Library and Information Sci- ence Today. Paul Wasserman, manag- ing ed. New York: Science Associates/ International, 1971. 397p. $25.00. This publication is the outgrowth of a seminar begun at the University of Mary- land in the summer of 1969. A group of students and faculty met to discuss the problems of developing a formal mecha- nism for gathering information about work in progress in library and information sci- ence. The data gathered by the seminar participants form the basis for LIST 1971. Simply stated, the volume is a directory of research and innovation in library and information science. It is similar to the National Science Foundation's now defunct Current Research and Development in Sci- entific Documentation, but is broader in scope and is not limited to activities cited in the published literature. Listed for each project are the principal investigators, the title of the project, the name and address of the institution at which the work is being performed, the approximate beginning and ending dates, and a short description of about 100 to 200 words. References to published literature are omitted. To facilitate browsing the en- tries are arranged in a classified manner by broad subject. Indexes of principal in- vestigators, organizations, geographic loca- tions, funding sources, titles, and subjects and keywords provide adequate alternate means of access to the text. As a directory of research and innova- tion, LIST 1971 is not successful. Although the volume claims to be international in scope, the emphasis is primarily upon the United States and Western Europe. There is only one enhy for the Soviet Union, one for Australia, and three for all of South America. The coverage is not comprehen- sive, even for projects originating in the United States. Several programs prominent- ly reported in the published literature are omitted from the volume. Undoubtedly many of the omissions result from the de- pendence upon gathering information by questionnaire. The projects listed in the publication are broad and varied. They range from the scientific to the sociological, from computer- aided indexing and abstracting to outreach programs for the disadvantaged. Although the focus is supposedly on research and innovation, it is sometimes difficult to dis- cern from the text what is particularly in- novative or experimental about a program. The production of a KWIC index, for which several projects are cited, is an activity which in 1971 can scarcely be classified as either research or innovation. Browsing through the volume, one is presented with a fascinating mosaic of the current activities and interests of the li- brary profession. The publication will thus be useful in the library school research methods course to instill in the student an appreciation for what constitutes research (or what passes for research) in library and information science. The price, unfor- tunately, places LIST 1971 beyond the means of most library science students.- Howard Pasternack, University of Chicago. Hutchins, W. J., L. J. Pargeter, and W. L. Saunders. The Language Barrier; A Study in Depth of the Place of Foreign Language Materials in the Research Ac- tivity of an Academic Community. She£-