College and Research Libraries New Periodicals of 1964-Part I BY LUCIA P. JOHNSON and DOROTHY JOENS GLASBY PERIODICALS appearing for the first time in late 1963 or the early months of 1964 exhibit the same seemingly endless va- riety of subject matter and format evi- denced by their predecessors. The collec- tion of titles presented here, it must be remembered, is highly selective. Publica- tions which would appear to be of special interest to libraries and librarians are chosen but many very worthy magazines must be omitted simply because, obvious- ly, there are limits to the time and space which can be devoted to any sort of list- ing. As in the past, some of the scholarly, scientific, and technical journals whose ti- tles reveal fairly well their contents have not been annotated but are noted in t4e alphabetical list and are designated there by an asterisk. It has been possible for the first time to cite also the numbers of Library of Congress printed cards for all of the publications included. AREAS. The interest in other times and other places is ., always strong and is reflect- ed in the many periodicals devoted to all, or most, aspects of a particular area. Among the new ones to appear is Asia, a publica- tion of the Asia Society (a nonprofit, non- political organization) in New York. Each issue will include five or six papers written by experts in the field and delivered before the society. The articles appear to be au- thoritative but are written simply enough to be of considerable informational value to a person with only a limited knowledge of the subject. The first issue includes "Pop- ulation: Dilemma of Modernization in Southeast Asia," "The Nature of Philippine Economic Nationalism," and "Western Cul- ture and the Thai'Way of Life." From the British Institute of Persian Studies comes their new journal, Iran. It is a handsome, well illustrated publication and includes primarily scholarly material on Persian literature, culture, and archaeology. SEPTEMBER 1964 Miss Johnson has been, and Mrs. Glasby is now, a Serials Cataloger in the Descrip- tive Cataloging Division of the Library of Congress. Libraries with extensive East European collections may be interested in Bulgaria, a propaganda-type magazine published in Sofia and superseding Bulgaria Today and New Bulgaria. Probably no discussion of new periodicals would be complete without mentioning at least one concerned with Africa. Situations in Africa have changed so rapidly in the past few years and interest has been so aroused in things African that even so mod- est a publication as Bulletin of African Studies in Canada, issued by the Committee on Mrican Studies in Canada, should find a ready audience. Intended primarily for Mri- canist scholars and institutions in Canada, and with a text in English and French, its purpose is to disseminate information on progress in research, conferences, and other developments of note. ART. Devoted to photography, Terre d'Images thoroughly covers that subject in at least two aspects: as science and as art. It includes a section on techniques, techni- cal material in regard to equipment, infor- mation on the history of photography, and current events material such as club meeting announcements and lists of publications available. The magazine, as one might ex- pect, is profusely illustrated and its first is- sue gives many pages to photographic essays, groups of pictures on one theme, or single pictures expressing the emotions of either the photographer or the subject. Another heavily illustrated publication, Anno Domini; the Magazine of Religious Arts and Crafts Today, intends to be "in- ternational, theologically oriented, and com- pletely ecumenical" (laudable ambitions, certainly, but somewhat hard to follow com- pletely, one would imagine). Vol. 1, no. 1 411 has articles and criticism on Christian painting, sculpture, and. architecture as well as sections devoted to theater, films, and new books. It includes also, in a section devoted to crafts, the first of a three-part article giving step-by-step directions on "Elemen- tary Enameling." BIBLIOGRAPHY, LIBRARIES. Heading the list of publications of special interest to li- brarians is, of course, ACRL's Choice,· Books for College Libraries. Its appearance, March 1964, marks the culmination of five years of planning by ALA. Designed to meet the book-reviewing needs of college libraries more specifically than either the popular media or the long delayed scholarly reviews, Choice is especially aimed at the 60 per cent of all college and university li- braries that have less than $20,000 a year to spend on books and related materials. Since it was designed to fill a known gap, one can expect that the publication will have a long, and judging from the first issue, useful life. Another possible book selection aid for librarians is Books, a newssheet of events and information in the publishing world aimed, probably, at the book trade. Its first issue announces a posthumous edition of A. J. Liebling's "The Press," discusses three planned biographies of President Johnson, and includes a large number of pictures from dust jackets and portraits of authors. As the serif adds weight to a letter to make it truly visible so Kent State Univer- sity library's The Serif aims to add emphasis to "make books more meaningful and book- ish scholarship a matter of more purpose." The publication will concern itself with things that are of library interest and plans articles on the history of printing, history of publishing, field of book arts, and field of literary and historical bibliography. Ex- amples, illustrations, and much information will be drawn from the collections of Kent State University library and each issue will include, also, an illustration of a book plate from among the thirty-five thousand in the library's M. E. Thurston bookplate collection. A bibliography, Atlantic Studies, Etudes A tlantiques, will list current and proposed studies concerning economic, political, and military problems of the Atlantic countries and problems ansmg from their relations with other countries. As each item achieves publication it will be removed from the list. BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS. In the area of management, two new publications seem worthy of note. From Britain, The Journal of Management Studies puts its emphasis on the systematic investigation of manage- ment and will include articles on organiza- tion structure, · management selection and development, decision-making, and simi- lar matters. An American publication, Man- agement Services, is somewhat more special- ized and, in quite a technical way, studies electronic data processing and its applica- tions and implications for integrated man- agement of office operations from the point of view of the CPA. Industrial and Labor Relations Forum, is- sued from New York State school of indus- -trial and labor relations at Cornell Univer- sity, claims to be the first magazine on in- dustrial and labor relations published en- tirely by students. The first issue is mimeo- graphed and contains only four articles but future plans are to include term papers and articles of original research judged by the editors to be especially worthy and the pub- lication hopes to encourage more indepen- · dent thinking (all too rare today) and cre- ate a willingness to support a controversial view. ·Latin America is the concern of Desar- rollo Econ6mico, a publication intended for "professionals" in the field of development, and supplied without cost to anyone who fits the magazine's definition of such a worker. A few subscriptions are available to out- siders, however, and the first issue would lead one to believe that it and future issues would be of considerable value and interest to both professional and layman. Articles report actual experiences as well as some plans for the future and will cover develop- ment in many fields such as agriculture, in- dustry, construction, health, and education. EDUCATION. The American Educational Research Association, a department of the National Education Association, plans to publish "original reports of experimental and theoretical studies in education" in its American Educational Research Journal. A rather specialized approach to education is reflected in Psychology in the Schools which 412 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES will include articles on subjects ranging from the role of the psychologist" in the school to research on teacher education and the psychology of various types of instruc- tion. GENERAL. The field of the general maga- zine is marked by the return of two familiar names, although the term "revival" cannot be used with similar weight in both cases. The editorial staff and the publisher are dif- ferent, but Coronet has assumed the name and taken on the format of a popular pred- ecessor of that name which began in 19 3 6 and died in October 1961. The March 1964 issue of The North American Review is designated as New Se- ries, Vol. 1, no. 1 so leaves no doubt that it is, indeed, to be regarded as a rebirth of the magazine considered one of the foremost journals of public opinion during much of its 125 years of existence. The earlier pub- lication came to an ignominious end in 1940 when it was discovered that its new owner was an agent of the Japanese government. In a format much like that of Harper's Magazine, the new journal is published with the cooperation of Senator Claiborn Pell of Rhode Island, and its first issue augurs well for the future as it includes articles by Rob- ert Penn Warren, Frank Luther Mott, Sal- vador de Madariaga, and Sir Julian Huxley. As something of a counterpart to Jet and Ebony, the new Bronze America will include articles on integration in Los Angeles, ca- reer opportunities, and religion, and will feature prominent Negroes in the fields of sports and religion. HisTORY. Probably one can never feel that he has heard enough about "how it was" in the early days of the western United States so the magazine of the Western His- tory Association, The American West, can surely find readers and users even though it concerns an era about which so much has been written. Vaguely reminiscent of Amer- ican Heritage, the new publication's first is- sue is lavishly illustrated and contains in- formation concerning Fremont's adventures in Arizona, the history and folklore of the West, and historians of the West. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS. With the begin- ning of Disarmament the World Veterans Federation initiates a new service the pur- pose of which is "to provide authoritative, SEPTEMBER 1964 objective, and easily understandable infor- mation about current negotiations for dis- armament and reduction of the risks of war." The first issue includes: "The Moscow Treaty on the Cessation of Nuclear Tests" and "The Status of the Negotiations on Gen- eral and Complete Disarmament." Included in that issue, also, are texts of recent dis- armament agreements (the Test Ban Treaty and the No Bombs in Orbit resolution of the United Nations General Assembly, for ex- ample). Promised for future issues are ar- ticles concerning France's abstention from the Geneva deliberations, consequences to the world economy of disarmament, and ways and means of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. The United Nations' latest periodical, UN Monthly Chronicle, is available also in French and Spanish editions and super- sedes the earlier United Nations Review. It will report, in what would appear to be somewhat greater detail than did the Re- view, on activities of the UN and related agencies. In addition to summaries of statutes, speeches, and business transacted during the month, the Chronicle will in- corporate more lengthy articles concerning long range plans or trends. U Thant, UN secretary-general, in his introduction to the first issue, perhaps best expresses what is planned for the publication when he writes that it is a "record of what the United Na- tions thinks and says and does, written for the world by the world organization itself." LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. The Journal of West African Languages, a rather special- ized publication, is being issued by Cam- bridge University Press in association with the Institute of African Studies of the Uni- versity of Ibadan (until December 1962, lbadan University College). The editors are interested in word lists, notes on dialectal variations, and, in fact, almost any material concerning these languages of which previ- ously little or nothing (in some cases, not even the existence) was known. It is hoped that the dissemination of such material to lin- guists everywhere will act as a stimulus and starting point for further investigations of this relatively untouched field of study. The first issue contains "A Word-List of Eloyi" and "The Syntax of Emphasis in Kpella." One of the new little magazines, The 413 Smith, has essays, stories, and poetry as well as some rather modern illustrations. The au- thors represented in its first issue do not ap- pear to have published extensively else- where. Art and Literature, on the other hand, is a somewhat more substantial pro- duction and its contributors seem to be in- ternationally well known. In addition to poetry and fiction, - the publication will in- clude art and literary criticism. Satire Newsletter, as its name implies, will concern itself with satire, past and present. The publication plans critical articles as well as original satire. While the first issue is con- cerned with the past and includes articles on Gulliver and on the Roman satirists, a dis- cussion of such contemporary satire as "Be- yond the Fringe" and "The Premise" has been promised for the second. The quarterly, Studies in Short Fiction, is a collection of critical articles from editors of anthologies and teachers of English from all over the country. LAw. The Harvard Student Legislative Research Bureau is an organization whose student members, under faculty supervision, draft legislation at the request of lawmakers throughout the country. The bureau's Har- vard Journal on Legislation will present some of these model drafts, in addition to articles by prominent lawyers and poli- ticians, in the hope that in the future a col- lection of such drafts of legislation will be built up which will constitute a guide to legislative precedents and thought in any area. Law in Transition Quarterly, a publication of the Insti~ute of Modern Legal Thought, devotes itself to the interrelationship be- tween law and the social sciences. Articles will be concerned with some of the contro- versial problems involving the rights and liberties of the individual and of the states as evidenced by the first issue which dis- cusses "Federal Habeas Corpus for State Prisoners" and "Expatriation and the Con- stitution." MEDICINE. Each year seems to mark the. birth of many new journals in the field of medicine. Some of them, of course, are very specialized and deal with a relatively small subject in great depth while others cut across all subject lines in an attempt to spread information that will be of value to more than one discipline. Among some of the latest to appear is Birth Dejects; Ab- stracts of Selected Articles which is a pub- lication of the National Foundation. The journal will provide abstracts of articles from over twenty six hundred publications in seventeen languages. Vascular Diseases, official journal of the American College of Angiology and the International College of Angiology, presents highly technical articles in its special field. Monographs in the Surgical Sciences, in- tended as a counterpart to the same pub- lisher's Medicine (issued since 1922), will provide an opportunity for an author to present his work in greater depth than would be the case in the standard surgical journals. Each issue will include two or three mono- graphs averaging about forty pages which treat all aspects of a subject with particular emphasis on the author's experimental and clinical observations. The monographs in the first issue are extensively illustrated and include lengthy bibliographies. Each issue of Modern Treatment will con- tain one or two symposia concerned with current practices in treatment in certain critical areas. The first issue, for example, discusses renal disease and thyroid disease while later issues are planned to include anemias, epilepsy, and liver disease. Each issue will contain an index which cumulates the indexes of all previous issues (how long can they keep this up?) . Issued as Excerpta Medica, section 23, Nuclear Medicine will abstract world liter- ature in its field. Abstracts, unsigned, will be prepared by the author or Excerpta Med- ica Foundation's editorial staff and each is- sue will include author and subject in- dexes with annual cumulations for each volume. The publication is issued in coop- eration with the European Atomic Energy Community (EURATOM). The Institute for the Study of the USSR, Munich, is issuing Review of Soviet Medical Sciences to supersede Review of Eastern Medical Sciences which was published from 1956 to 1958 as a private undertaking of its editor, Dr. H. Schulz, but had to be aban- doned with issue no. 12 because of finan- cial and technical difficulties. The new pub- lication contains scholarly, well documented articles on all aspects of the theory and 414 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ; practice of medicine in the USSR and will include sections on past and future medical meetings as well as a chronicle of events. Because five years have passed since the earlier work ceased publication, the first issue contains a chronicle of the most im- portant events in the medical life of the USSR which have occurred in the time from the beginning of 1959 to June 1963. Although the USSR is the main concern of the editors, current developments in other countries will be mentioned from time to time "since the main features of the Soviet health services have been adopted by vari- ous countries in East€rn Europe and the Far East." Music. Published in a newspaper format with some pictures, Listen is a comprehen- sive review of criticism with factual ac- counts of all kinds of music from grand opera and chamber music to jazz and folk song. PHILOSOPHY. Through The Philosophical Journal the Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow has resumed publication of its Proceedings (vols. 1-76; 1841/44-1951/52) in the hope of reaching a wider audience. The journal will publish not only papers given before the society but also outside contributions on topics within the society's general aims. RECREATIONS. Moviegoer is a magazine of criticism which reviews old and current art films. The authors of many of the ar- ticles in its first issue have published in other established journals. Published as "a monthly supplement to all Whitman standard coin reference books," Whitman Numismatic Journal is being is- sued primarily to keep up to date A Guide Book of U.S . Coins and A Catalog of Mod- ern World Coins. The monthly will also in- clude articles on all phases of numismatics and incorporates, of course, many illustra- tions. The monthly V ogel-Kosmos is prob- ably intended for the amateur birdwatcher or ornithologist. The magazine will include everything about birds (raising them, ob- serving them, breeding them, studying them). Articles in the first issue are per- sonal experiences or field observations pre- sented in rather a narrative way and are not at all the documented, scientific type. SEPTEMBER 1964 There are many attractive black-and-white illustrations. RELIGION. Because of the fact that much of the instruction in a Catholic educational institution consists of informing the stu- dent in consequence of the Church's com- mitment to certain doctrines, the editors of Stimulus feel that the student may not de- velop the questioning, critical attitudes necessary for true maturity. The periodical, published by the students of the Catholic colleges in the Washington, D.C. area (Trin- ity, Dunbarton, Georgetown, and Catholic University) hopes to raise vital questions and promote discussion and controversy. The first issue treats of the Church and birth control, civil rights, and the profes- sional college athlete. Journal of Ecumenical Studies is edited by a board which includes Catholic, Protes- tant, and Orthodox theologians and church- men. The journal will discuss the problems of scripture versus tradition, liturgy, and the ministry as well as questions on histor- ical, Biblical, and theological matters. SCIENCE. As the title implies, Education in Chemistry devotes itself to methods and theories of instruction for teachers of all levels. The first issue contains in addition to articles, notices of courses and symposia, and reviews of recent books and films. Sur- face Science is a scholarly technical journal "devoted to the physics and chemistry of interfaces." Electroanalytical Abstracts, pub- lished in Basel, supersedes the Abstracts section of the Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry and will abstract about five hun- dred periodicals or approximately two thou- sand papers yearly. Journal of Aircraft and Journal of Space- craft and Rockets are companion publica- tions issued by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The first is composed of technical articles on the ad- vancement of the science and technology of airborne flight while the second is concerned with applied engineering in the field of space flight. The Institute of Electrical and Electron- ics Engineers is issuing, as their primary journal, the IEEE Spectrum. The publica- tion will contain "review and tutorial ar- ticles, and occasionally articles of broaq and fundamental import." In addition, of course, 415 the journal will be a disseminating agency for news of the profession as well as of the IEEE. Russian Physics Quarterly is one of the latest of many periodicals devoted to the at- tempt to keep American scientists informed concerning discoveries and work in the Soviet Union. Each year the new quarterly will publish approximately sixty of the best of the Russian articles on original research in physics. Of perhaps limited interest to Americans, Science Reporter is intended to popularize science among educated Indian laymen so as to provide more communica- tion between the creators of new techniques and the people who will utilize these tech- niques in solving the material problems of the country. Published in New Delhi, the periodical includes popular articles on a variety of subjects from techniques for map- ping cholera to results of recent investiga- tions of the sun. SociAL SciENCE. Contemporary demo- cratic socialism, the Yiddish heritage, and the problems of the Jewish people as a cultural-national minority are the areas of interest of Perspectives published in New York by the Jewish Labor Bund. Vie So- ciale, superseding the Cahiers of the Musee Social, concerns itself with social work and current social legislation as well as informa- tion on the work of its publisher, the Centre d'etudes, de documentation, d'information et d'action sociales in Paris. Jointly sponsored and published by the National Council on Crime and Delin- quency and the Center for Youth and Com- munity Studies of Howard University, The Journal of Research in Crime and Delin- quency publishes research articles from con- tributors without regard for national boun- dary. The journal is not for the layman. The first issue has scholarly articles on "Socio- Economic Status and Delinquency Behav- ior: a Retest" and "Types and Patterns of Delinquency in a Middle-Sized City." In an attempt to give as comprehensive a view as possible of "one of the most tell- ing social problems of our time" the Mis- sionaries of Saint Charles, Province of Saint Charles, Staten Island, N.Y., are publishing The International Migration Digest. Its pur- pose is to "encourage further advancement in the study of social and geographic mo- bility by presenting a multilateral coverage of activities and research in this field." Each issue will have five departments: articles, legislation, news, statistics, and books. TECHNOLOGY. Primarily for "energy ex- ecutives" all over the world, Energy Inter- national describes some of the vast new projects (such as hydro-electric projects and Italy's new power authority) in progress or completed. Building Research includes articles de- voted to the exploration of new ideas and concepts not only in architecture but in the whole field of modern living as it is in- fluenced by the types of dwellings in which America lives today. Although some of the articles are quite technical, judging from the first is~ue, it would seem that at least some of them will be of interest even to those with no special knowledge of the field. Published by the International Institute of Welding in London, Welding in the World includes technical articles with text in both English and French. Periodicals American Educational Research Journal. American Educational Research Associa- tion, 1201 16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. 4 no. a year. $6. 64-9394. The American West. Lane Book Company, Willow Road, Menlo Park, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964. Quarterly. $6. 64-9374. Anno Domini; the Magazine of Religious Arts and Crafts Today. Religious Pub- lishing Company, 122 Old York Road , Jenkintown, Pa. 19046. v. 1, no. 1, May/ June 1964. Bimonthly. $4. 64-9405. Art and Literature. Eastern News Distribu- tors, Inc., 255 Seventh Ave., New York 1. no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $7. 64-9401. --Asia. The Asia Society, Inc., 112 East 64th St., New York 10021. no. 1, Spring 1964. Frequency not given. $1 per copy. 64- 9388. 416 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Atlantic Studies. Etudes Atlantiques. Atlan- tic Institute, 24 Quai du 4-Septembre, Boulogne-sur-Seine, France. v. 1, no. 1, 1964. Frequency not given. Price not giv- en. 64-9403. Birth Defects; Abstracts of Selected Articles. National Foundation, Supply Division, Room 555, 800 Second Ave., New York 10017. v. 1, no. 1; Jan. 1964. Monthly. $5. 64-9385. Books. 598 Madison Ave., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1964. Monthly. $3. 64-9370. . Bronze America. Colorful Publications Inc., 2400 South Western Ave., Los Angeles. v. 1, no. 1, 1963. 6 no. a year. Price not given. 64-9356. Building Research. Building Research Insti- tute, Inc., 1725 De Sales St. N.W., Wash- ington, D.C. 20036. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1964. Bimonthly. $35. 64-9377. Bulgaria. Dolphin Service, P.O. Box 8927, Washington 3, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. $3. 64-9400. Bulletin of African Studies in Canada. Com- mittee on African Studies in Canada, Donald L. Wiedner, c/o Dept. of History, University of Alberta, Edmonton. v. 1, no. 1, Nov. 1963. Semiannual. Free. 64- 9378. *CORS Journal. Subscription Manager, Ca- nadian Operational Research Society, P.O. Box 2225, Station D, Ottawa, On- tario. v. 1, no. 1, Dec. 1963. Frequency not given. $5. 64-9352. CHOICE: Books for College Libraries. Sub- scription Dept., American Library Asso- ciation, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago 60611. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Monthly. $20. 64-9413. *The Cleft Palate Journal. American Cleft Palate Association, c/o Charlotte G. Wells, PhD, 106 Parker Hall, Univer- sity of Missouri, Columbia 65202. v. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $4. 64-9397. Coronet. H. S. Publications, Inc:, 260 Park Ave. South, New York 10010. v. 1, no. 1, Dec. 1963. Monthly. $4. 64-9422. Desarrollo Econ6mico. 25 W. 45th St., New York 10036. v. 1, no. 1, May/June 1964. Frequency not given. $12. 64-9416. Disarmament. World Veterans Federation, 16 rue Hamelin, Paris (16). no. 1, 1964. 4 no. a year. $1.50. 64-9406. SEPTEMBER 1964 Education in C hem is try. Royal Institute of Chemistry, 30 Russell Square, London WC 1. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Frequency not given. $7. 64-9381. Electroanalytical Abstracts. Birkhauser Ver- lag, Basel, Switzerland. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1963. Monthly. 150 Swiss francs. 64- 9380. Energy International. Energy Publications, Inc., 500 Howard St., San Francisco 94105. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Monthly. $5. 64-9402. Harvard Journal on Legislation. Harvard Student Legislative Research Bureau, Langdell Hall, Harvard Law School, Cam- bridge, Mass. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Semiannual. $2. 64-9360. *Health Laboratory Science. American Pub- lic Health Association, 1790 Broadway, New York 19. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $6. 64-6369. IEEE Spectrum. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., Box A, Lenox Hill Station, New York 10021. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. $13.50. 64-9423. *IEEE Transactions on Geoscience Elec- tronics. Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers, Inc., Box A, Lenox Hill Station, New York 10021. v. GE 1, Dec. 1963. Frequency not given. $17. 64-9350. Industrial and Labor Relations Forum. 125 Ives Hall, New York State School of In- dustrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Ithaca 14850. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $5. 64-9376. *International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences. Pergamon Press, Inc., 122 East 55th St., New York 22. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $30. 64- 9408. The International Migration Digest. Saint Charles Seminary, 209 Flagg Place, Staten Island, N.Y. 10304. v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1964. Semiannual. $3.25. 64-9426. Iran. British Institute of Persian Studies, c/o British Academy, Burlington Gardens, London, W 1. v. 1, 1963. Annual. £2. lOs. 64-9404. Journal of Aircraft. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 20th and Northampton Sts., Easton, Pa. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1964. Bimonthly. $10. 64- 9368. 417 Journal of Ecumenical Studies. Duquesne University Press, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964. 3 no. a year. $6. 64-9393. *Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. Academic Press, Inc., 111 Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1964. 4 no. a year. $15. 64-9409. *Journal of Heterocyclic Chemistry. Box 8666, Albuquerque, N.M. 87108. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1964. Frequency not given. $20. 64-9375. The Journal of Management Studies. Basil Blackwell, Broad Street, Oxford, England. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Semiannual. £1. 64-9431. The Journal of Research in Crime and De- linquency. Rudolph Moz, Executive Edi- tor, National Council on Crime and De- linquency, 44 East 23d St., New York 10010. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Semiannual. $4.50. 64-9395. *Journal of Sound and Vibration. Academic Press, Inc., 111 Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $18. 64-9418. Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets. Ameri- can Institute of Aeronautics and Astro- nautics, Inc., 20th and Northampton Sts., Easton, Pa. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1964. Bimonthly. $15. 64-9399. The Journal of West African Languages. Cambridge University Press, American Branch, 32 East 57th St., New York 22. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Semiannual. $5.50. 64-9419. Law in Transition Quarterly. Institute of Modern Legal Thought, Inc., P.O. Box 3332, Beverly Hills, Calif. 90212. v. 1, no. 1, Winter 1964. Quarterly. $5. 64- 9383. Listen. AGR Publishing Corp., 1265 Broad- way, New York 1. v. 1, no. 1, Dec. 1963. 10 no. a year. $3. 64-9433/MN. Management Services. 666 Fifth Ave., New York 10019. v. 1, no. 1, Mar./ Apr. 1964. Bimonthly. $7.50. 64-9387. Modern Treatment. Roeber Medical Divi- sion, 49 East 33d St., New York 10016. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Bimonthly. $16. 64-9392. Monographs in the Surgical Sciences. Wil- liams & Wilkins Co., 428 East Preston St., Baltimore 21202. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $10. 64-9417. Moviegoer. Box 128, Stuyvesant Station, New York 9. no. 1, Winter 1964. Quarter- ly. $1 per issue. 64-9354. The North American Review. Cornell Col- lege, Mount Vernon, Iowa. New series, v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1964. Quarterly. $3. 4-12673. Nuclear Medicine. Excerpta Medica Foun- dation, New York Academy of Medicine Building, 2 East 103d St., New York 29. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. $30. 64- 9390. Perspectives. 25 East 78th Street, New York 10021. v. 1, no. ·1, Winter 1964. Quarter- ly. $1.50. 64-9429. The Philosophical Journal. Oliver & Boyd, Ltd., Tweeddale Court, 14 High St., Edin- burgh 1, Scotland. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Semiannual. $3.50. 64-9414. Psychology in the Schools. Psychology Press, Brandon, Vt. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $10. 64-9353. * Pyrodynamics. Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, Inc., 150 Fifth Ave., New York 10011. v. 1, no. 1/2, Jan./Feb. 1964. Frequency not given. $25. 64-9424. *RES; Journal of the Reticuloendothelial Society. Academic Press, Inc., 111 5th Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. 6 no. a year. $16. 64-9396. Review of Soviet Medical Sciences. Institute for the Study of the USSR, Munich, Mannhardstrasse 6, Germany. v. 1, no. 1, 1964. Quarterly. $6. 64-9420. Russian Physics Quarterly. International Physical Index, Inc., 1909 Park Ave., New York 35. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1963. Quarterly. $100. 64-9359. Satire Newsletter. State University College, Oneonta, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1963. Semiannual. $2. 64-9355. Science Reporter. Sales & Distribution Offi- cer, Council of Scientific & Industrial Re- search, Rafi Marg, New Delhi-1, India. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. Rs. 5. 64-9386 .. The Serif . . Kent State University Library, Kent, Ohio. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1964. Quarterly. $3. 64-9427. The Smith. The Smith, Ltd., 15 Park Row, New York 10038. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 15, 1964. Frequency not given. Price not given. 64-9367. Stimulus. S. R. Bell, 25 North Bedford St., Arlington, Va. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1964. 418 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Frequency not given. $.35 per issue. 64- 9389. Studies in Short Fiction. Newberry College, Newberry, S.C. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1963. Quarterly. $4. 64-9357. Foundation, Inc., 32 Broadway, New York 10004. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Bi- monthly. $10. 64-9372. Surface Science. North Holland Publishing Company, P.O. Box 103, Amsterdam. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1964. Quarterly. $16. 64- 9351. Vie Sociale. Centre d'etudes, de documenta- tion, d'information et d'action sociales, 5 Rue las-Cases, Paris (VII). no. 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. 38.50 n.f. 64-9398. Terre d'Images. Michel Brient et Cie, 64 rue de Saintonge, Paris 3, France. no. 1, Jan./Feb. 1964. Bimonthly. 50 n.f. 64- 9415. Vogel-Kosmos. Franckh'sche Verlagshand- lung, Pfizerstrasse 5-7, 7000 Stuttgart 1, Germany. Heft 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. 5.70 DM per quarter. 64-9428. UN Monthly Chronicle. Sales Section, Pub- lishing Service, United Nations, New York. v. 1, no. 1, May 1964. Monthly. $6. 64-9411. Welding in the World. International Institute of Welding, 54 Princes Gate, Exhibition Road, London SW 7. v. 1, no. 1, 1963. Quarterly. £3. 15s. 64-9382. Vascular Diseases. The Angiology Research Whitman Numismatic Journal. 1220 Mound Ave., Racine, Wis. v. 1, no . . 1, Jan. 1964. Monthly. $3.50. 64-9371. • • Recruiting-New, and Still Interesting ALA's Office for Recruitment now has reprints of an Esquire magazine page (April 1964) devoted to librarianship as a career for young men, and those not so young, with emphasis on academic and research librarianship. Single copies are free; 25 copies, $1; 50 copies, $1.75; 100 copies, $2.50; more than 100, 2¢ each. The Office for Recruitment also has available booklets in the Demeo Series: No. 1, The Librarian-Idea Consultant; No. 2, Future Unlimited: What You Need to be a Librarian; No. 3, The Exciting Career of a School Librarian. Sin- gle copies are free; 25 copies, $1.25; 50 copies, $2.25; 100 copies, $4; 250 copies, $9.25; 500, $15; 1000, $28. The Hospital Librarian is also available free for a single copy, and in bulk orders for the same prices as the Demeo booklets . . Fellowships, Scholarships, Grants-in-Aid, Loan Funds and Other Financial Assistance for Library Educa- tion (Library Education Division of ALA is the publisher) is an extensive list which should be useful to both recruiter and potential recruit. So also should be Scholarships, Fellowships, Loans, Grants-in-Aid for School Librarianship. Sin- gle copies of the first (LED) list are 50¢; 10 copies, $4.50; 25 copies, $11; 100 copies, $40. The list of financial assistance for school librarianship is $1 for a single copy; 10 copies, $9; 25 copies, $20; 100 copies, $75. All items are avail- able from the Office for Recruitment, ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago 60611. • • SEPTEMBER 1964 419