College and Research Libraries New Periodicals of 1962-Part II BY JAMES R. THRASH AND LUCIA P. JOHNSON REFLECTING the currents and crises of the past twelve months, publications on outer space and Soviet Russia are prominent in the myriad of subjects found in this year's new magazines. Scientific journals abound, including publications on such specialized studies as biorheology, , malacology, and to- pology. Cossacks, candy marketing, character potentials, and the crimes of Stalin also come in for treatment. AMERICANA. For the student of American cul- ture in both its economic and cultural aspects, there are several new journals of interest. Jour- n-al of the West is a comprehensive illustrated magazine with articles in the first issue includ- ing "Scientists in New Spain: the Eighteenth Century Expeditions," and "The Branding Iron: the Cattleman's Coat-of-Arms." Another, but more specialized western journal is the Memoir of the Montana Archeological Society. For those with naval interests, American Steam Vessels Series will present drawings of Samuel Ward Stanton, the first number being devoted to Great Lakes steam vessels. For cultural history in the making, the Rural· Vermonter will include in each issue such features as a calendar of events, Literary Vermont, and a Vermont personality. ART, ARCHITECTURE. A journal with a new angle is Environment. In terms of the fields of architecture, interior design, landscape architec- ture, painting, and sculpture, this magazine will explain the ways in which these professions can improve our home environment and our general environment. More traditional in their approach are Critica de Arte published by the Associa~ao Brasileiro de Criticos de Arte and the Eastern Arts Quarterly which supplants the Art Educa- tion Bulletin as the official publication of the Eastern Arts Association. Art Voices from Around the World is an independent magazine of news, views, and opinions. BIBLIOGRAPHY, LIBRARIES. In the field of bibli- ography, several new publications have appeared to aid the hard-pressed cataloger and researcher. Contemporary Authors will provide a quarterly bio-bibliographical guide to current authors and their works. Although major writers will not be neglected provided they are of current interest, emphasis will be upon new and relatively un - known authors who may be just coming into prominence. The second, third, and fourth vol- umes of each year will include a cumulative in- MARCH 19.6 3 Mr. Thrash became Editor of the Post- 1951 Imprints Section of the National Union Catalog in the fall of 1962. His work on this list, well started when he left the serials sec- tion of the descriptive cataloging division at the Library of Congress, was completed by Miss johnson, Serials Cataloger at LC. dex covering all entries for the year. In future years a separate index will be available which will cumulate entries from all volumes. A series similar to Dissertation Abstracts is the new Mas- ters Abstracts. It will provide brief abstracts of selected masters' theses which are available as positive microfilm or as xerographic enlarge- ments in book form. British- Humanities Index, issued in London by the Library Association, supersedes in part the Subject Index to Periodi- cals. It will provide a current guide to articles in the humanities appearing in over 250 Brit- ish periodicals and serve to complement the British Technolog;y Index. From India comes the only new journal of library science. Herald of Library Science, sponsored by the Sarada Ranganathan Endowment for Library Science, is a quarterly organ for the library profession in India. Articles in the first issue include "Li- brary Science during Renascence," by S. A. Ran- ganathan as well as others on local problems. BusiNEss. In the field of general business and economics, the Montana Business Quarterly su- persedes the Montana Business Review. It is hoped that it will contain more articles and cover a wider range of topics than the earlier magazine. Included in the price of the annual subscription will be a copy of each monograph published during the year by the Montana State University Bureau of Business and Economic Research. An addition to the field of operational research and scientific management will be Metra, published by the Metra Group, a "con- sortium" of scientific consulting companies in France, England, Germany, Italy, and Belgium. Papers will be published in English, French, German, or Italian. Two new publications are available for those interested in high finance. The Stock Market Magazine will offer articles spotlighting new outlets, new products, and new issues and highlighting significant developments in the security, mutual fund, and real estate markets, while Trendline's Current Market Per- spectives will provide current and comparative 137 financial and operating data, as well as a price chart, for each of 960 listed stocks. Those who are successful in the stock market can make use of Taxes Interpreted, issued by the Alexander Hamilton Institute in New York, which contains interpretive and informative material on current and forthcoming developments in the field of taxation. Two magazines designed to provide information on international trade and industry are Rassegna del Commercia Est ero published primarily for the Italian businessman, and In- dustrial Intelligence published for British in- dustry. CoLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES. With the rise of Harvard University's alumni to pre-eminence through their connections with certain echelons of the Democratic party, a magazine of opinion published at this institution takes on new sig- nificance. The Harvard Review, edited and pub- lished by the undergraduates, is in a sense a revival of the old Harvard Guardian. Each issue will be devoted to the exploration of a single topic of current interest, in as many dimensions and from as many perspectives as space permits. Topic for the first issue is the Atlantic Commu- nity. In addition, each number will contain spe- cial reports on study and research activities of the University's departments, graduate schools, and research centers. Rival Yale's students, with the generous support of alumnus Roger Blough , have produced a similar magazine, Yale Politi- cal". Like its Harvard counterpart, it treats only one :subject in each number. In the first issue, devoted to the United Nations, the editors have amassed a formidable array of talent, including articles by such personages as Valerian Zorin, Soviet ambassador to the UN, Chester Bowles, senators Kenneth ;Keating of New York and Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin, and the late Dag Hammarskjold. With the publication of Und er 30, the Gold- waters of the university world have united. This publication presents the best articles from the two dozen conservative student magazines ap- pearing regularly throughout the country and presents the resulting selection to a national audience. CouNTRIES, AREAS. With Africa coming to the fore as one of the important areas of the world , numerous journals are making their appearance in this field. Africana Newsletter. Bulletin d'In- formations Africana is published by the Hoover Institution to provide practical information for scholars and librarians on what reference works are being published on Africa south of the Sa- hara, on what agencies are collecting valuable Africana, and where African-related documents may be found in the United States, Europe, and Africa. The first issue describes the national archives of Nigeria, the German Foreign Minis- try archives, and the confidential prints of the British Foreign and Colonial offices, and Ameri- can missionary archives. For information on Africa, itself, Burundi Chretien, published un- der the authority of the archbishop of Kitega, is a newspaper containing articles on Burundi since its independence, as seen by the Catholic church. Published in Nairobi to serve as the journal of the East African Wild Life Society, Africana features in its first issue articles on the nine thousand-year-old trepanning operations of Kenya 's Kissi, on what Livingstone called "the monstrous vegetable of Africa "-the baobab tree, and on the "yaller-dawg" of Africa, the Rhodesian ridgeback. A more general magazine on the warmer parts of the globe is T ropics which hopes to become a clearinghouse for in- formation on these regions, focusing on such as- pects as homes, living, and travel , as well as the pursuits of the culinary arts. Moving to colder regions, the Cossack Quarterly is published by the Cossack Nationalists in Exile. This publica- tion is designed to promote the cause of na- tional independence and be a source of informa - tion about the Cossack people. ELECTRONICS. Symptomatic of the growing in - terest in data processing are two new journals. ICC Bulletin published by the International Computation Centre in Rome will include regu - lar features on news of computing laboratories, new computers, forthcoming conferences, and training and education courses. Of special in- terest to the librarian will be the Information Processing Journal , an annotated index to the current literature on computers and data proc- essing. Each issue will have detailed author and subject indexes which will be cumulated an- nually. Annotations will be arranged according to a general subject classification system. Bandopname is the official organ of the N e- derlandse Vereniging van Geluidsjagers. Pub- lished for those interested in tape recorders, this magazine deals in a popular way with the op- erational side of this field. A journal, custom- tailored to the interests of CBer's, persons op- erating private two -way radios on the so-called citizens band of frequencies assigned by the FCC for such uses, is S9; the Citizens Band Journal. In addition to articles on the descrip- tion, construction , and use of various types of equipment it will also include articles on fun- damental electronics. Frequency is a technical publication designed specifically for manufac- turers, engineers, and scientists who "operate within a realm whose least common denomina- tor is best defined by the utilization of fre- quency." Superseding Electronic Technology, and covering more on the practical applications of electronics and less on the theory, Industrial Electronics will feature information on new products in the industry. 138 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ,.. I HISTORY. Soviet Studies in History, one of a series of new journals on Soviet Russia issued by International Arts and Sciences Press, will contain published articles selected primarily from nine Russian historical journals in una - bridged English translation. Articles will be se- lected which best reflect developments in Soviet historiography. Slightly more sensational is the Bulletin d'Informations published by the Com- mission pour la Verite sur les Crimes de Staline. The results of the investigations into the cir- cumstances surrounding such events as the as- sassination of Trotski and Imre Nagy will be presented in this publication. The British So- ciety for the History of Science has produced as its official organ, The British journal for the History of Science. This magazine will contain scholarly papers as well as current information of the work of the society. LANGUAGE. With as little specialization as pos- sible, the Language Quarterly , published at the University of South Florida, hopes to have wide appeal for all teachers of linguistics and lan- guages. The journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior will offer articles dealing with laboratory studies ori human learning as well as work in psycholinguistics and related disciplines. The main emphasis will be on experimental and empirical studies but theoretical papers with clear implications for current research will also be included. Published in London under the joint auspices of Michigan State University and the School of Oriental and African Studies of London University, the journal of African Lan- guages is an attempt to meet the growing need for a regular publication in this field. LAw. Presenting recent ideas in the field of criminal law practice, the Criminal Law Quar- terly is published jointly by the University of Southern California Law School and the Sec- tion on Criminal Law of the American Bar As- sociation. The American Society of International Law has prepared an experimental number of a new publication International Legal Materials, which it hopes to develop into a current report- ing service providing easy access to the basic source materials on the legal aspects of public and private international dealings . Following the pattern of the other journals on the Soviet Union published by International Arts and Sci- ences Press, Soviet Law and Governm ent pub- lishes articles selected from eight Russian legal journals in unabridged English translation. Of interest to any researcher on Argen~ina and its political system will be the Argentine Law Bul- letin which will contain, in English, the com- plete texts of the principal laws, decrees, and resolutions as issued by the Argentine govern- ment. Each issue is indexed and a general index will accompany the sixth issue of each volume. MARCH 1963 LITERATURE. Among the usual crop of literary magazines are a few of special interest. Union, published in Havana, is the review of the Uni6n de Escritores y Artistas de Cuba. El Corno Em- plumado. The Plumed Horn, a magazine of po- etry, prose, letters, and art from two hemi- spheres, in Spanish and English, describes itself as "a magazine whose pages conform to the word instead of whose words conform to pages." It seems likely that the contents will be "way out." In an attempt to provide a platform for the new generation of writers which has begun to emerge in Ireland, Oxford University Press is , publishing The Dolmen Miscellan y of Irish Writing. In an effort to preserve the old, The j ewish Mirror is designed to acquaint the Amer- ican Jew with the Yiddish classics, in which are mirrored the life of the · Jewish people. Magyar Mflhely is a literary and artistic review founded by the young Hungarian writers who have been living in Paris since 1956. Other literary jour- nals include Genesis West, Pegasus, and Quar- tet. Nottingham French Studies is the only new journal of criticism. Directed to that section of the public which is interested in modern French literature, language, and general culture, the articles will be scholarly in content, but effort will be made to avoid the jargon and trappings of erudition. Papers will be published in Eng- lish or French. MAN. Soviet Sociology and Soviet Anthropol- ogy and Archeology are two more in the series of journals published by the International Arts and Sciences Press. Each publishes articles se- lected from Russian journals in unabridged English translation. A periodical for the com- prehension of the Jewish problem is Tribune published in West Germany. It deals with the theological and cul tu.ral as well as the historical and political aspects of the problems which the Jewish people face. Of interest to librarians is the Index to Current Periodicals Received in the Library of the Royal Anthropological Insti- tute. This library receives over four hundred current periodicals, covering all branches of the science of man and published in all parts of the world. The first regular issue will cover the first quarter of 1963. MEDICINE. With more and more attention be- ing focused on the new emerging nations, many of which are located in the tropics, the prob- lems of this area have gained increasing im- portance. D ermatologia Tropica, official organ of the International Society of Tropical Derma- tology, is concerned with the problems of tropi- cal diseases which have for so long been a stumbling block to progress in these areas. Closer to the problems at home is Clinical Pe- didtrics which will present articles which apply to clinical problems encountered in office and 139 nursing practice, community health situations, and the simpler hospital emergencies. Clin-ical Notes on Respiratory Diseases, published by the American Thoracic Society, the medical section of the National Tuberculosis Association, is fi- nanced by Christmas Seal contributions. In ad- dition to original contributions, it will summar- ize from the world medical literature the latest developments that may be useful to the general practitioner. Music. The Israel Music Institute, founded in 1961 by the National Arts Council, the Ministry of Education and Culture, and other public bodies, is charged with publishing original Israeli musi- cal works in order to bring the best of Israel's music to the attention of musicians and music lovers all over the world. Its Bulletin lists musi- cal works which have been approved for publi- cation by the institute. It also provides bio- graphical sketches of Israeli composers and in- cludes articles on Israeli music. Folk songs, bal- lads, and tunes, as well as information on sing- ers and new records will be included in the new journal Folk, published by the English Folk Dance and Song Society. Another English pub- lication is Crescendo published specifically for professional jazz musicians and jazz bands. Dis- cobolo is a Spanish journal which apparently takes all music as its field. The first issue in- cludes articles on Paul Anka, Eartha Kitt, the ballet today, the symphony as the masterpiece of Western music, and Spanish recording stars. OccuPATIONS. Many new journals appeared in 1962, devoting themselves to the interests of spe- cialized businesses and industries. Food and Lodging Hospitality is designed to provide a total business reading service for motel, hotel, and resort executives and owners. Serving the volume candy buyers is The Candy Marketer which is concerned with the functions of buy- ing, merchandising, and selling. In the building field, Con-tractor News is aimed at general con- tractors and special trade contractors engaged in contract building construction. It will present information on new product developments, new techniques of installation, new technology, and contractor interrelationships. From labor's point of view, Construction Craftsman, published by the Building and Construction Trades Depart- ment of the AFL-CIO, hopes to provide an over- all view of union construction work and review the work in progress in the building trades. An- other labor publication is the Boilermakers- Blacksmiths Record, magazine of the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers. PHILOSOPHY. Each issue of Pacific Philosophy Forum is unified formally by a common topic and a common structure. There is a thesis arti- cle and two -counterthesis articles which under- take the development of a contrary pos1t10n or develop other grounds for holding the same po- sition as the thesis article. Finally there is an "assessment" article which comments upon both the thesis and counterthesis articles. Soviet Studies in Philosophy, another of the new pub- lications being issued by Arts and Sciences Press, will publish articles selected from five Russian philosophical journals. The first issue of Cues - tiones de Filosofia includes articles on Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Karl Jaspers. PsYCHOLOGY. Soviet Psychology and Psychiatry, continues the pattern of the other Arts and Sci- ences Press publications on Russia, publishing articles taken from six Russian journals in these fields. The Edinburgh Psychological Review published by students in the psychology depart- ment of the University of Edinburgh is, accord- ing to its editors, the first Scottish student maga- zine to attempt a national circulation. The first issue includes articles on conditioning and per- ception, ionization as a factor in human be- havior, and methods and terminology in time estimation studies. Issued by the Union College Character Research Project, Character Potential is meant for those engaged in religious and character education and will report on the major findings, research designs, and the phi- losophy of the project in its explorations of human potential. RECREATION. From California, land of sun- shine, come three new magazines devoted to outdoor living. SI; Surfing Illustrated is pub- lished to promote the sport of surfing and to raise it to the same status now enjoyed by skiing and sailing. Camping Illustrated is a magazine for all campers. Articles in the first issue cover a wide range of subjects and include "Washing- ton: Camping to and from the Fair," "The Wild Boars of Apache Land," "Wisconsin: More Campsites This Year Than Ever," "When Your Youngster Wants a Gun," and "The Know-How of Back Packing." Whether it's to go camping or surfing, Scootourist will help you get there. It covers every aspect of scooters and "scootour- ing." The first issue includes articles on a "scootour" of Marin County, California, a his - tory of the Vespa, descriptions of the Laverda and new Lambretta scooters, as well as informa- tion on summer scootering, travel off the beaten path, and an article on safety. RELIGION. Catholicism has not only provided Time with its Man of the Year but has also provided the majority of the religious publi- cations in this issue. Ramparts is a journal pub- lished and edited by Catholic laymen. It pub- lishes fiction, poetry, art, criticism, and essays reflecting the positive principles of Hellenic- Christian tradition. Published by the Pallotine Fathers, Front Line is the quarterly of the So- 140 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 1 j ciety of the Catholic Apostolate, which has as its goal the bringing of the gospel to every creature. Articles in the first issue include "The General Council ana the Laity" and "The Search for Humanism." In quite another area, The Catholic Market is devoted to the broad sphere of Catholic management and administra- tive interest. It will present coverage of trends and events in Catholic church, institutional, col- legiate, and scholastic administration. The first issue includes a description of the bold archi- tecture of St. John's Abbey Church, Collegeville, Minnesota, an article on church organs by Paul Hume, noted authority on church music, as well as articles on fund-raising, pension plans, -auto- mated vending, and food service facilities plan- ning. Many readers who are not institutional administrators may find the magazine of inter- est. Unitas. Edici6n Espanola is the Spanish organ of the Asociadon Internacional Unitas. English, French, and Italian editions are also issued. It is devoted to the ecumenical move- ment. Methodist History continues in part World Parish and is the first American periodical de- voted entirely to Methodist history in the United States and other lands. Although bas- ically popular in nature it contains some schol- arly articles. The NSSA's journal of Christian Education is the official organ of the National Sunday School Association's Commission on Re- search in Christian Education, superseding the commission's Research Reporter. It represents one of the more evangelical religious groups and the first issue includes articles on "Trends in Today's Sunday Schools," "A Biblical Philoso- phy of Christian Education," and "How is Christian Education Distinctive?" jewish Trib- une, published in London, is an organ of Anglo- Jewish orthodoxy and will, according to its edi- tors, represent the views of the Torah on any given matter. SciENCE. The American Mathematical Society is issuing Chinese Mathematics, a cover-to-cover translation of Acta Mathematica Sinica, pub- lished by the Academia Sinica Peking. The first issue translates v. 10, no. 1 (1960) of the Acta. Pergamon Press has issued a new international journal of mathematics, this one on Topolog;y. Original and expository articles on the math- matical and scientific theory of control and its applications and English translations of impor- tant foreign papers on control will be published in the Society for Industrial and Applied Math- ematics. journal. Series A: On Control. The Faculty of Science of the University of Tokyo in cooperation with the Physical Society of Japan and the Japan Society of Applied Physics is publishing the japanese journal of Applied Physics. It will include papers in English, French, or German covering applied physics MARCH 1963 and rel~ted fields, including those dealing with experimental techniques and instruments. Time- liness, brevity, and current importance of the subject matter will be of primary concern in the publication of Applied ?hysics Letters, new publication of the American Institute of Physics. In a related field, Pergamon Press is issuing a journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radia- tive Transfer. In more restricted areas of sci- ence, the Institute of Malacology at Ann Arbor is publishing Malacologia, which is concerned with malacology, that branch of zoology which deals with mollusks. Ubiquitous Pergamon Press is also publishing the first journal devoted en- tirely to Biorheolog;y, which comprises the study of deformation and flow of biological systems or of materials directly derived from living organ- isms. To help young people keep abreast of developments in all branches of the physical and natural sciences, the Association Canadi- enne-Franr;aise pour l'Avancement des Sciences is publishing Le ]eune Scientifique which su- persedes Le ]eune Naturaliste. SOCIAL, POLITICAL SCIENCE; From Germany and Colombia come new publications dealing with the state. Der Staat, published in the Western sector of Berlin, is a journal in which philoso- phers, theologians, lawyers, or political scien- tists may discuss, each from his own point of view, the state in idea and history, in law and reality. The structure and function of the state in a society in the process of change is the theme of Administraci6n y Desarrollo, published in Bogota by the Escuela Superior de Adminis- traci6n Publica. New publications dealing with the current world situation include Oost- West, published in The Hague, which is concerned with East-West relations and a publication de- voted to Communist Affairs published by the Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda at the University of Southern Cali- fornia. Articles in the latter include "Moscow- Peking Relations in Perspective" and "Khrush- chev and Ulbricht on Berlin." lsmun Review is being published by the International Student Movement for the United Nations. The first issue includes articles on Dag Hammarskjold, the British Commonwealth, and Basutoland. SPACE. The work of the staff of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory of the University of Ari- zona on such subjects as lunar globe photogra- phy and systematic visual lunar observations will be reported in the laboratory's Communi- cations, while the Information Bulletin for the Southern Hemisphere is being published to keep southern hemisphere astronomers abreast of what their colleagues are doing. Sterne und Weltraum, published in West Germany, is de- signed not for astronomers but for those inter- ested in astronomy but lacking in the technical 141 trammg of the professional. Its editors . suggest that it might find a useful place in doctor 's waiting rooms. Definitely not in the same vein is Space Science R eviews which will contain papers on scientific research carried out by means of rockets , rocket-propelled vehicles and also by means of stratospheric balloons and at observatories on the earth or moon. It is prin- cipally concerned with the pure scientific as- pects of the subject, but instrumental and tech- nical aspects will also receive attention. World Space Directory is a reference book of govern- ment agencies , major and component manufac- turers, industrial representatives, colleges and universities, nonprofit research organizations, and publications in the missile / space industry. A special international section covers foreign countries. Finally, Icarus, published by Aca- demic Press, is devoted to the new interdisci- plinary science of the solar system which en- compasses the fields of astronomy, geology, geo- physics, meteorology, geochemistry, plasma phys- ics, and biology as they relate to this area. Ob- servational, experimental, and theoretical con - tributions bearing on the physics of interplane- tary fields and particles, meteorology, geophysics , and cosmochemistry of all planetary bodies of the solar system (except Earth) as well as papers on astrod ynamics and celestial mechanics which represent scientific rather than engineering con- tributions will also be included. TECHNICAL ABSTRACTS. Sovie t Inventions Illus- trated supersedes the USSR Official Bulletin of Patents & Inventions. Issued in three sections, Chemical , Electrical, and Mechanical & General, it is available complete or by individual section. This publication provides detailed summaries in English, in most cases virtually complete translations together with drawings of the com- plete specifications for every new Russian patent within about six weeks of the first publication date in the U .S.S.R. The Nucleic Acids; an Annotated Bibliography of Current Literature indexes and annotates articles from approxi- mately ninety journals. TECHNOLOGY. The Journal of the British Nu- clear Energy Society, which supersedes the Jour - nal of the British Nuclear Energy Conference, contains original papers, information, and com- ment on developments in the nuclear field, and records of the discussions at the society's meet- ings. Materials Research is an international journal of the properties and testing of engi- neering materials. All articles will be published in English, but each paper will be abstracted in English, French , German, Italian, and Russian. Another journal concerned with testing mate- rials is the Revista d el !DIEM published by the Instituto de Investigaciones y Ensayes de Mate- dales of the University of Chile. From November 1890 to December 1892 a Journal of the Sheffield Technical School Metal- lurgical Society was issued and now after a lapse of some six ty- nine years , during which the technical school has become a university, the Metallurgical Society is issuing a new Journ·al. This publication is designed as a more popular magazine published for the large number of peo- ple working in the restricted field of metallurgy who wish to keep in touch with developments elsewhere without having to plough through masses of original research or delve into a highly specialized review. Two new Russian publications are available in the field of tech- nology. Russian M etal'lurgy and Fu el's is a trans- lated version of l zvestiia . 0 tdelenie Tekhnich- eskikh Nauk . M e tallurgiia i Toplivo of the Akademiia Nauk SSSR, and covers the results of recent investigations at Soviet research insti- tutes on the subjects of extraction metallurgy, ferrous and nonferrous metallurgy, and solid and liquid fuels. It contains complete transla- tions of selected articles as well as illustrated digests or abstracts of the remaining text. Pe- troleum: USSR is a translation of the Soviet journal Neftekhimiia. Power transmissions and the field of gears and drives are covered in Die Antrie bstechnik published quarterly in Wies- baden. Each article includes summaries in Eng- lish and French. Coming at the height of the controversy over pesticides aroused by Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, the World Review of Pest Control should be of more than ordinary interest. This magazine will present information on the place of the modern pesticide in the maintenance of public health , in crop and animal husbandry, and in the protection of material; on the re- search, both state- and industry-aided, from which these developments spring; and on the steps taken to safeguard the public from mis- use and the consequent hazards. THEATER, FILMS. There appears to be a "new wave" of periodicals on motion pictures and . the theater in 1962. Two magazines of film criticism are The Seventh Art, published from New York containing reviews of primarily for- eign films; and Movie, published in London containing reviews of primarily Hollywood movies. Another London publication, Prompt, issued by the Dramatic Society of the University College, hopes to fill the gap between the popu- lar theatrical magazines and the intellectually remote journals and to present "total theatre." International Stage & Film Review is an in- dependent world-wide journal for promoters of television, film , and theater. It gives an over-all picture, as the editors state it, of "what is in the can, what is on the stage and screen, what is in projection, what is in the producer's mind." 142 C O LLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Periodicals Administraci6n y Desarrollo. Escuela Superior de Administraci6n Publica, Bogota, Colombia. no. 1, July 1962. Frequency not given. Price not given. Africana. Eastern News Distributors, Inc., 225 Seventh Ave., New York 1. no. 1, Mar. 1962. Frequency not given. Price not given. Africana Newsletter. Bulletin d'Informations Africana. The Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1962. Quarterly. $3.50. American Steam Vessels Series. Meriden Gravure Co., Meriden, Conn. [no.1 1, 1962. Frequency not given . Price not given. Die Antriebstechnik. Peter Phillips, 141-09 Twenty-Eighth Ave., Flushing 54, New York. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1962. Quarterly. DM. 18,-. Applied Physics Letters. Dept. S, American In- stitute of Physics, 335 E. 45th St., New York 17. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1, 1962. Monthly. $4.00. The Argentine Law Bulletin. Argentlaws Pub- lishers, Gral. Enrique Martinez 1360, Buenos Aires. v. 1, no. 1, March 1962. Bimonthly. $20.00. Arizona. University. Lunar and Planetary Labo- ratory. Communications. Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona, Tucson. v. I , no. l-6, 1962. Frequency not given. Free to libraries. Art Voices From Around the World. Art Voices Pub. Co., 200 E. 72nd St., New York 21. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1962. Monthly, except July & Aug. $4.00. Bandopname. Scheldeplein 16, Amsterdam-10, Netherlands. Jan. 1962. Monthly. f 0,95 per issue. The Begg journal of Orthodontic Theory and Treatment. 205 E. Coolspring, Michigan City, Ind. v. I, no. 1, July 1962. Irregular. $5.00. B elgium; a Belgian Quarterly Review for Trade Expansion. 45 , Avenue Legrand, Brussels 5. no. 1, 1962. Quarterly. $2.00. Biorheology. Subscription Dept., Pergamon Press, Ltd., 122 E. 55th St., New York 22. v. 1, no. 1, July 1962. Quarterly. $30.00. Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Record. Publications Office, 592 New Brotherhood Building, Kansas City 1, Kan. v. 1, no. 1, July 1962. Monthly. $2.00. British Humanities Index. The Library Associa- tion, London. no. 1, Jan.-Mar. 1962. Quar- terly? Price not given. The British journal for the History of Science. British Society for the History of Science, Ravensmead, Keston, Kent, England. v. 1, pt. 1, no. 1, June 1962. Semiannual. l5s per issue. British Nuclear Energy Society. journal. British Nuclear Energy Society, 1-7 Great George St., London SWI. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1962. Quar- terly. £3. MARCH 1963 Burundi Chretien. B.P. 232 Usumbura, Burundi. - no. 1, July 1, 1962. Frequency not given. 60 fr. per 6 months. Camping Illustrated. P.O. Box 2748, San Diego I2, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, July 1962. Monthly. $3.50. The Candy Marketer. Magazines for Industry, Inc., 660 Madison Ave., New York 21. v. 1, no 1, July 1962. Monthly. $2.00. The Catholic Market. Catholic Digest Publica- tions, Inc., 44 E. 53d St., New York 22. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1962. Quarterly. $3.00. Character Potential. Union College Character Research Project , 10 Nott Terrace, Schenec- tady 8, N.Y. v. I, no. 1, Nov. 1962. Four num- bers a year. $4.00. Chinese Mathematics. American Mathematical Society, 190 Hope St., Providence 6, R.I. v. 1, no. 1, 1962. Quarterly. $ 17 .50. Clinical Notes on Respiratory Diseases. Ameri- can Thoracic Society, 1790 Broadway, New York 19. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1962. Quarterly. Free. Clinical Pediatrics. 227-231 S. Sixth St., Phila- delphia 5. v. I, no. 1, Oct. 1962. Monthly. $10.00. Commission pour la Verite sur les Crimes de Staline. Bulletin d'lnformations. Mme. Alt- man, 6 rue d'Abbeville, Paris lOe. no. 1, May I962. Quarterly. Price not given. Communist Affairs. 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Quarterly. $3.00. • • SPEAKERS at Bowdoin College's symposium on "The Place of a Research Library in a Liberal Arts College" included Frederick Wagman, director of the University of Michigan library and president-elect of ALA; Eileen Thornton, librarian of Oberlin College; and Verner W. Clapp, president of the Council on Library Resources. The symposium was held on Feb- ruary 21-22, at Brunswick, Me. 146 Other speakers were Edward C . Kirkland, Athern P. Daggett, Richard B. Harwell, and Rex Warner, a ll of the Bowdoin faculty. Dr. Wagman's topic was "A University Librarian Views the Problems of the Liberal Arts College Library." Miss Thornton's subject was "Research in a College Library," and Mr. Clapp spoke on "The Promise of Advanced Techniques of Librarianship." Participants in the symposium included editors, writers, and representa- tives of some fifty institutions of higher learning invited to attend by Bowdoin President James S. 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