College and Research Libraries DOROTHY JOENS GLASBY New Periodicals of 1965-Part II IT MUST BE REMEMBERED by anyone who happens to consult this listing that the publications noted are not neces- sarily the best or the only new peri- odicals in a particular field. Those which have been mentioned have been chosen because they would seem to have some special value for libraries or cover ma- terial which is currently of great inter- est. A few, also, have been included be- cause they are somewhat unusual (in format, in subject matter, or in the man- ner of their distribution) and their par- ticular q~alities might be over looked in the rush to keep up with the flood of more ordinary journals. Titles marked with an asterisk in the alphabetical section at the end of this listing are scholarly, scientific, or tech- nical publications which have not been annotated in any way as the nature of their contents would appear to be ob- vious. ABSTRACTS, BIBLIOGRAPHIES, INDEXES. In this day of multitudinous publications al- most any reliable aids which may be of help to librarians in book selection are in- valuable. Sci-Tech Book Profiles and M edi- cal Book Profiles are new monthlies which will reproduce (in reduced size) the title pages, tables of contents, names of con- tributors, prefaces and indexes of graduate or professional level books in their respec- tive fields. The items selected for such treat- ment will be those in current issues of the American Book Publishing Record, and it is suggested that the Profiles, aside from their value as selection aids, may be used to decide whether a book which is not im- mediately available (out, missing, not pur- chased by the library) does indeed contain the information needed. One can predict excellent quality and a useful life for the Profiles when one sees R. R. Bowker Co. in the imprint. Another selection aid, also in the field of science, is Science Books, issued in the Miscellaneous Publications Series of 134/ the American Association for the Advance- ment of Science. Short reviews (three or four lines each) covering about two hun- dred books were included in the first issue. Each review is marked with symbols to show that the book is "not recommended,'~ is "very simple elementary," is "profession- al," etc. Science Books would appear to be intended primarily for the use of the school librarian. The currently available published pro- ceedings of national and international con- ferences, meetings, symposia, and congress- es in all areas of science and technology are listed in Directory of Published Proceed- ings. The meetings are arranged chronologi- cally and indexed by city and by subject. Prices, current or estimated, are included. East European Science Abstracts pub- lishes five to seven line abstracts of East German, Polish, and Czech patents dealing with applied chemistry and technology, and other fields where chemicals are used. Journals from those countries are abstracted selectively and coverage is extended to cer- tain Russian journals which are not known to be translated cover to cover. Although it will include information on other minority groups, The Negro in Print is primarily an annotated listing of current American and foreign publications on the Negro. Adult and juvenile works as well as fiction and nonfiction will be noted and there will be announcements of forthcoming publications as well. In English, but including the original German titles, is Mundus, a "'quarterly re- view of German research contributions on Asia, Mrica, and Latin America-arts and science." The review seems to be carefully done and should be of great value to li- brarians as each issue is divided into two parts (arts and economics; science and ge- ography) each of which includes book notes and abstracts plus a selected bibliography of new books and articles. AREAS, PEOPLES. The Hellenic American National Picture Magazine introduces peo- ple of a common heritage. The first issue has articles on singer George Maharis and • Detroit Lions' lineman Alex Karras as well as sections of news from Greece and from Greek communities in the United States. Another reminder that America is composed of people from many places is African For- urn issued by the American Society of Mri- can Culture. The society is composed of some four hundred Americans of Mrican descent who are teachers, scholars, and ar- tists and its purpose has "been to bring to the American Negro, in particular, an un- derstanding of the continuing value of our gifts and a pride in our origins so that we may join other Americans who feel secure in the traditions of their past and their contribution to America." The new quarter- ly will include articles on contemporary African society and cultural development as well as on the problems and contributions of American Negroes. There will also be a section concerned with national minorities and their problems of adjustment. The first issue of the Forum offers material by , well- known persons such as J omo Kenyatta, Alex Quaison-Sackey, and James Farmer. American libraries concerned with area studies may be interested in American Studies issued by the American Studies As- sociation of the Philippines, a counterpart group to the American Studies Association in the United States. Despite its title the review will operate in an area of Philippine studies, that is, the investigation of prob- lems hearing on the influence of American culture on the Philippines. The first issue has an interesting discussion of "Manuel L. Quezon and the American Presidents" and a Carlos Romulo contribution "American Literature and the Modern Sensibility." Organ of the Center for Latin American Studies of the City College of the City Uni- versity of New York, Centro will include a variety of articles, poems, and stories in English or in Spanish. Somewhat more scholarly, perhaps, is Latin American Re- search Review which is "devoted to syste- matic reviewing of current studies of Latin America." The Review is issued by the Latin American Research Review Board composed of representatives of each insti- tution (ranging alphabetically from the University of Arizona to the University of Wisconsin) which has pledged financial support to the extent of $1,000 annually to subsidize the Review for the .first two years of its publication. The first issue contains New Periodicals of 1965-Part II I 135 topical reviews of "Social Stratification Re- search in Latin America" and "U rbaniza- tion in Latin America" as well as informa- tion on conferences, libraries, and new pub- lications. There is also a special section listing research projects being undertaken in various institutions in this country. Fu- ture issues will also include research by Latin American institutions. THE ARTs. Syn, covering international contributions to the new art, takes its name from the Greek word meaning "together." Its articles, which have the same text in English and German, are designed to "open possibilities of an integral art beyond the hard-and-fast definitions of formalism (con- crete art, optical art, hard-edge painting) or informalism (expressionism, tachism, ac- tion-painting) on the basis of pure painterly principles." As might he expected, there are many illustrations, some in color. The rather slight Film Heritage is "not affiliated with any university" although it is published at the University of Dayton. Its first issue includes short pieces on "David Wark Griffith in Retrospect, 1965" and "Luis Alcoriza and the Films of Luis Bunuel." It has, also, a number of interest- ing black and white pictures. Theatre De- sign & Technology concerns itself with the architectural aspects of dramatic presenta- tions. It is the official publication of the U.S. Institute of Theatre Technology which wants to "bring about greater understand- ing between those who work in theaters and those who build them." The well-illustrated journal has articles about, and listings of, new theaters. It also includes current num- bers of "Recent Publications on Theatre Architecture," a bibliography begun in 1960 and published separately through no. 12. The first issue of Lugano Review dis- cusses Melville and philosophy and pre- sents drawings (five by Thomas Merton) and paintings. The Review, well-printed in black and white with large type and clean, attractive pages, will devote itself to the whole field of the arts. BusiNEss, EcoNOMICS. Superseding the same publisher's Japan Trade Monthly, the new Industrial Japan explores economy and trade, devoting its first issue to advertising and marketing in Japan. The first issue has a most unusual three dimensional cover but, as one might expect, has many advertise- ments throughout. The April issue of each 136 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1966 year is to be a special economic yearbook type of publication. Although the title African Commerce implies coverage of the whole continent, the first issue of the monthly review seems to concentrate on Uganda. The articles are the short sum- mary type and touch on various aspects of Mrican financial, commercial, and indus- trial progress. Articles in Journal of Purchasing "may present concepts from business, statistics, economics, engineering, behavioral science, or any discipline which contributes to the advancement of knowledge in business or governmental purchasing, material manage- ment, or related areas . . . rand 1 may discuss theories, principles or philosophies." Business Economics represents a consolida- tion of some of the former publications of the National Association of Business Econ- omists. Issues will have, in addition to regular articles, a special section devoted to a placement service. Pergamon Press publishes Columbia Jour- nal of World Business for the graduate school of business of Columbia University. The Journal seems to be of high quality and the articles included are written by men of stature in their fields. Even one who knows nothing of business, however, can appreci- ate the last article in the first issue "Pray Don't Call it English" (which has, among other gems: "The typical executive memo or report, generously larded with murky, flabby and pretentious phrases, seems al- most to defy description. Call it cant, call it 'Businessese' but don't call it English"). EDUCATION. Designed to be torn apart for use in teaching safety, School Safety includes pages for bulletin boards, songs, stories, and other such materials. It would appear to be aimed at the elementary school teacher for in addition to teaching aids it has information on matters such as the dangers of contact lenses on the play- ground and ways of protecting the health of teachers. Superseding Southern School News (pub- lished for eleven years) Southern Educa- tion Report will focus on programs to ex- pand educational opportunities for the so- cially and economically handicapped in the southern and border states. It will, how- ever, extend coverage to any promising con- cepts in education anywhere in the nation. As did its predecessor, the Report will present an account of major events and trends in the area of the desegregation of education. The first issue includes discus- sions of current investigations such as the "North Carolina Advancement School" and "Early School Admission Project." GENERAL. Primarily with colored illustra- tions, Voyageur explores wildlife, scenery, and historical events in a particular part of the country. Texts are short but the topics are of great interest. The first issue has "Where Time Stands Still," "Destiny of the Voyageurs," and "The Fascinating North Country Around Lake Superior." Lithopinion is unusual in many ways. It is a quarterly published by Local One of the Amalgamated Lithographers of America and is distributed without cost to the Lo- cal's membership plus editors and other "leaders of opinion" (librarians included) . The publishers say "there is not another magazine quite like this . . . a general mag- azine on as high a level as any in the coun- try, written by professionals, and offered to the community of free minds as a con- tribution by a labor union." The well writ- ten, beautifully illustrated first issue in- cludes provocative articles on "Getting to Know Each Other" (labor and govern- ment) , "Bread is Not Enough" (a writer behind the Iron Curtain), and "Labor's Non-Image on Television" (doctors, law- yers, etc. but few laboring men on TV). The many examples of the finest of the Jithographic art, much of it in color, that are included appear because "this is not discussion that comes out of the woodwork, that has no mother or father or past or future. This is political and economic dis- cussion that comes out of our particular view of the world as artist-craftsmen." INTERNATIONAL AFFAms. Vista, pocket size and with capsule articles and features on people and events in the world of the UN and international affairs, is published by the United Nations Association of America (formerly the American Associa- tion for the United Nations) to replace its earlier UNA News. LANGUAGE, LITERATURE. Although there are many journals in the field, few attempt, say the publishers (St. Andrews University, St. Andrews, Scotland) of Forum for Mod- ern Language Studies, as extensive a cover- New Periodicals of 1965-Part II I 137 age. The Forum's scope will be the prin- cipal languages and literatures of Europe and America during the past millennium in · the hope that a process of cross fertilization between different areas of study in the whole field can be encouraged. The con- tributors are asked to consider whether their work is likely to illumine, however obliquely, more than one small private corner. Other journals provide short re- views so Forum limits its reviews to a few substantial ones in which the authors con- centrate on matters of substance and prin- ciple so the critique will itself contribute . to the subject covered by the book. Half issues will be devoted, at frequent intervals, to papers on a single chosen subject or author. The second issue, for example, will have a number of papers on Dante and the fourth, on Corneille. Northwest Folklore supersedes Oregon Folklore Bulletin and is particularly inter- ested in publishing the "raw materials of folklore, that is, the actual collected super- stitions, tales, songs, etc. of oral tradition." From time to time, as they have in the first issue, the publishers will present short in- vestigative or critical articles on the folk- lore of the Northwest. LAw. California Western Law Review is issued by the school of law of California Western University in San Diego. It is one of the latest in the long and often distin- guished list of similar law school publica- tions. Articles in the Review are not writ- ten by the students of the school but are edited by them under faculty supervision. In contrast, the faculty of the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law of the University of Liberia in Monrovia issues Liberian Law Journal. Articles in Lawyer's Medical]ournal are written by doctors in fairly simple ter- minology. Each includes a short bibliog- raphy and tries to reduce "a complex medi- cal problem to understandable terms, readi- ly grasped by the trial attorney" in order to "provide workable techniques for evalua- tion of traumatic injuries" and to help to "bridge the widening gap between theory and practice in this growing field." PoLITICS, GoVERNMENT. Although the Office of the Federal Register of the Gen- eral Services Administration now publishes similar material in annual volumes called Public Papers of the Presidents it will at- tempt to supply current information through its Weekly Compilation of Presidential Doc- uments. The Weekly will be issued every Monday and include whatever material has been released by the White House up to the previous Friday at 5 P.M. Coverage will include transcripts of the President's news conferences, messages to Congress, public speeches and statements. In addition there will be an index of contents, cumulative index, and list of laws approved by the President and nominations submitted by him to the Senate as well as a checklist of White House releases. Asian Outlook has taken over the sub- scription list of Free China & Asia pub- lished since October 1954 by the Asian Peoples Anti-Communist League of the Re- public of China. The new publication is similar to the old in that much of its infor- mation is rather general in nature and many items are quoted (with appropriate com- ments) from Communist Chinese publica- tions. Articles are very short and, of course, anti-Communist in nature. Two in the first issue are "Medical Training in Mainland China" and "An Indian View of the 'Second Bandung.'" RECREATION. Devoted to the "fun" side of flying, Private Pilot will cover the na- tional and international scene with con- centration on the light plane picture. The publication is popularly written rather than technical in nature and seems, judging by the first issue, to put emphasis on first-hand accounts of experiences such as landing on a freeway in California or hunting coyotes from a plane. RELIGION. Within the scope of Religious Studies will be, also, the psychology and so- ciology of religion as they bear on major religions and major religious questions. The Cambridge University Press publication will have, in addition to articles, extended book discussions, surveys of recent literature, and book notes. SciENCE. In October 1866, George Pea- body gave Yale University a gift of $150,000 for "the foundation and mainte- nance of a museum of natural history.'' Discovery, issued as a journal to inform and interest the Peabody Museum Associates, is one of the recent outgrowths of that original gift. Rather than following the form of a 138 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1966 report, Discovery will discuss the museum's activities by means of articles on its collec- tions and how material for them was gath- ered throughout the world. The first issue has many black and white illustrations and articles such as "Sea Bird Studies on Christ- mas Island," "Yale in Kenya," and "The Arch.ae,?logical Expedition to Egyptian Nubia. Replacing Arid Zone Newsletter (last is- sued December 1964) Nature and Re- sources will cover all the different aspects of UNESCO's Natural Resources Research Division investigations. Fields included are hydrology, geology, soil sciences, ecology, and the conservation of nature. The quar- terly is subtitled "bulletin of the Interna- tional Hydrological Decade" (the decade is 1965-1974). Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry Letters is a supplement to journal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry published by Pergamon Press since l-955. The Letters, in English or German, wlli provide for a rapid exchange of information. Communications included will be, ~f course, short and highly tech- nical in nature. Although Palaeogeography, Palaeoclima- tology, Palaeoecology may eventually divide into separate specialized numbers for each of its three fields, it is presently an "inter- national journal for the geo-sciences." Its scholarly, documented text is in English, French, or German and each article has, also, an English summary. SciENCE, APPLIED. Short news items with information on places to get help or ma- terials are the specialties of Information Retrieval Letter. A larger publication, Sys- tems and Communications, will cover the latest developments in communications and electronic technology. It will have sections on new products plus review articles and technical news notes. View; the Magazine of Closed-Circuit and Community Antenna TV is designed "to reflect the importance of these fields in all facets of our commer- cial, industrial, recreational, and govern- mentallives." View includes some technical articles and much material about new prod- ucts and new uses for old ones. Even one who knows little of the technical aspects of the subject can agree that "although we are most aware of the use of CCTV in its most dramatic aspects, as in the world shaking flight of the Gemini capsule, or in exploring the sea under the polar icecap, the use of closed circuit television cameras as everyday workhorses in banking, retail department stores, steel mills, schools, and the like, have made a far greater impact in today's world." Acta Mechanica, although it will wel- come papers on applied mathematics, is primarily concerned with all fields of the- oretical or applied mechanics. Its articles are in English or German with summaries in both languages. Designed as an aid to engineers, Microwave Engineering will pro- vide news, features, product and equipment reports, book reviews, and abstracts. Japan Chemical Quarterly is published in order to introduce to the world the economic and technical aspects of the chemical industry in Japan. The first issue includes articles on "Japan's Fertilizer Exports" and "Acrylic Fiber of Asahi Chemical." Including in its first issue a number of articles on rice and coffee growing, Experi- mental Agriculture promises to publish "the results of experimental work in animal and crop husbandry, with an emphasis on re- search carried out in the warmer climates of the world." The new quarterly super- sedes the highly regarded Empire ] ournal of Experimental Agriculture. Designed for "physician-to-physician" communication, Medical Opinion & Review will "isolate and explore aspects of the emerging cultural values within which the dual functions of physician and citizen must be discharged." The new monthly will have reviews, by physician reviewers, of new books on medicine and in ancillary subjects as well as information and discussions of postgraduate training programs and evalu- ation of new medical films and service ma- terials. There will also be reports on devel- opments in science, a music column, and a guide to art treasures. SociAL SciENCE. Articles in Voices; the Art and Science of Psychotherapy are not the scholarly, annotated type but seem to be, rather, short, amusing, somewhat ran- dom thoughts, quotes, or reviews. The quar- terly, official publication of the American Academy of Psychotherapy, includes, also, much illustrative matter such as cartoons, portraits, etc. An interesting and rather substantial- seeming publication, Revista Latinoameri- cana de Sociologia, will be issued from Buenos Aires by the Centro de Sociologia Comparada of the Instituto Torcuato di Tella. In a desire to "differentiate the two main functions, that of the publication of scientific and scholarly output and that of serving as an organ of information and dis- cussion for the professional concerns of sociologists as a social collectivity" the American Sociological Association has be- gun publication of The American Sociolo- gist. The new periodical will serve as a channel for the publication of official re- ports and proceedings, news notes, obit- uaries, and other such material. It will in- clude, also, articles on the profession itself. Research studies and other investigative reports will remain in the association's American Sociological Review and its other publications. Urban Affairs Quarterly is issued by Sage Publications but sponsored by the City University of New York because, as the Chancellor of the university says in the first issue, "although many scholars and in- stitutions are making important contribu- tions to urban planning, transportation, housing, education, sociology, etc. the re- sources available have been limited, and the academic community has not made a commitment comparable to its activities in other areas. This is changing; the serious- ness of urban problems commands atten- tion from the scholarly community . . . new legislative programs demonstrate dramati- cally increased governmental interest." The quarterly will provide a vehicle for the pub- lication of results of the increased interest and, hopefully, of the increased activity. The editors, and the writers of articles in the first issue, are persons who are actually working in the field of urban affairs in uni- versities or in the government. PERIODICALS Acta M echanica. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., 175 Fifth Ave., New York 10010. v. 1, no. 1, 1965. Frequency not given. Price not given. 65-9933. African Commerce. P.O. Box 1442, Kam- pala, Uganda. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1965. Monthly. 40s. 65-9940. African F arum. American Society of Mrican Culture, 15 East 40th St., New York 10016. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1965. Quar- terly. $4. 65-9921. The American Sociologist. Executive Office, New Periodicals of 1965-Part II I 139 American Sociological Association, Suite 215, 1755 Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. v. 1, no. 1, Nov. 1965. Quarterly. $3. 65-9976. American Studies. Editor, c/o Dept. of Eng- lish, University of the Philippines, Dili- man, Quezon City, Philippines. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1965. Semiannual. Price not given. SA65-9983. Asian Outlook. Ku Cheng-kang, 1707 Chung-cheng Road, Taipei, Taiwan, Re- public of China. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1965. Frequency not given. $2.50 ( $5 air mail) . 65-9952. 0 Astrofizika. Akademiia nauk Armianskoi SSR, Barekamutian 24, Erevan 19, Ar- menian SSR. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1965. 4 no. a year. 1 ruble. 65-9922. 0 British Corrosion Journal. British Joint Corrosion Group, 14 Belgrave Square, London S.W.l. v. 1, no. 1, July 1965. Bimonthly. £ 7/ 10/ -(9 issues, to end of 1966) . 65-9969. 0 Building Science. Pergamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $30. 65-9941. Business Economics. Ralph E. Burgess, Ex- ecutive Secretary-Treasurer, National As- sociation of Business Economists, P.O. Box 2804, Washington, D.C. 20013. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1965. 3 no. a year. $4. 65-9977. California Western Law Review. Managing Editor, California Western Law Review, 3902 Lomaland Dr., San Diego, Calif. 92106. v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1965. Annual. $3. 65-9948. °Carbohydrate Research; an International Journal. Elsevier Publishing Company, P.O. Box 211, Amsterdam, The Nether- lands. v. 1, no. 1, July/ Aug. 1965. Bi- monthly. $17.50. 65-9978. Centro. Center for Latin American Studies, City College of the City University of New York, New York. no. 1, June 1965. Frequency not given. Price not given. 65-9894. Columbia Journal of World .Business. Per- gamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, inaugural issue, Fall 1965. Quarterly. $10. 65-9951. Directory of Published Proceedings. Inter- Dok, 6 Kenneth Rd., White Plains, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1965. Monthly. $38. 65-9931. Discovery. Peabody Museum of Natural 140 I College & Research Libraries • March, 1966 History, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1965. Semiannual. Free to members of Peabody Museum Associates. 65-9974. East European Science Abstracts. Transla- tion and Technical Information Services, 32 Manaton Road, London S.E.15. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9926. 0 European Polymer Journal, Pergamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Feb. 1965. Quarterly. $50. 65-9925. Experimental Agriculture. Cambridge U ni- versity Press, American Branch, 32 East 57th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $13.50. 65-9962. Film Heritage. Film Heritage, Box 42, Uni- versity of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio 45409. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1965. Quarterly. $2. 65-9973. Forum for Modern Language Studies. Pro- fessor W. E. Rex, Dept. of French, Uni- versity of California, Berkeley, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1965. Quarterly. $5 (for direct order) $6 (order through book- seller or agent). 65-9961. The Hellenic American National Picture Magazine. 1810 Washington Blvd. Bldg., Detroit, Mich. 48024. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1965. Monthly. $6. 65-9950. Industrial Japan. Dentsu Advertising Lim- ited, English Publications Dept., Ginza- Nishi, Chuo-Ku, Tokyo, Japan. no. 1, Oct. 1965. Quarterly. $10 (seamail) $16 (air mail). 65-9963. Information Retrieval Letter. American Data Processing, Inc., 2200 Book Tower, Detroit, Mich. 48226. v. 1, no. 1, May 1965. Monthly. $24. 65-9979. Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry Letters. Pergamon Press, 122 East 55th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1965. Monthly. $50. 65-9959. Japan Chemical Quarterly. Chemical Econ- omy Research Institute, Takakubo Bldg. , 28, 3-chome, Kanda Ogawa-machi, Chi- yoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan. v. 1, no. 1, July 1965. Quarterly. $5.50. 65-9966. 0 I ournal of Labelled Com pounds. Presses Academiques Europeennes, 98, Chaussee de Charleroi, Bruxelles 6, Belgium. v. 1, no. 1, Jan./ Mar. 1965. Quarterly. $25. 65-9984. of Purchasing Agents, Inc., 11 Park Place, New York 10007. v. 1, no. 1, May 1965. Quarterly. $6. 65-9935. 0 The Journal of Strain Analysis. Institution of Mechanical Engineers, 1 Birdcage Walk, Westminster, S.W.1, London. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1965. Quarterly. £3/-/-. 65-9967 . . Latin American Research Review. LARR · Subscriptions, University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas 78712. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1965. 3 no. a year. $8. 65-9960. Lawyers Medical Journal. Baker, Voorhis & Co., Inc., Mount Kisco, New York. v. 1, no. 1, May 1965. Quarterly. $25. 65- 9936. Liberian Law journal. Faculty of the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law, University of Liberia, Monrovia, Liberia, West Mrica. v. 1, no. 1, June 1965. Semian- nual. $2 (per issue). 65-9919. Lithopinion. Lithopinion, 113 University Place, New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1965. Quarterly. Free to qualified persons and institutions. 65-9965. The Lugano Review. James Fitzsimmons, Via Maraini 17 a, Lugano, Switzerland. v. 1, no. 1, 1965. 6 no. a year. $15. 65-9927. Medical Book Profiles. R. R. Bowker Co., 1180 Avenue of the Americas, New York 10036. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9954. Medical Opinion & Review. 1860 Broad- way, New York 10023. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1965. Monthly. $14. 65-9942. Microwave Engineering. Ashbourne Pub- lications Ltd., Ashbourne House, Alberon Gardens, London, N.W.11. v. 1, no. 1, June 1965. Bimonthly. $9. 65-9964. 0 Molecular Pharmacology. Academic Press Inc., 111 Fifth Ave., New York 10003. v. 1, no. 1, July 1965. Bimonthly. $11 (for 3 issues of 1965). 65-9928. Mundus. Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesell- schaft m.b.H., Postfach 40, Stuttgart 1, Germany. v. 1, no. 1, 1965. Quarterly. $20. 65-9980. Nature and Resources. Natural Resources Research Division, Dept. of Advance- ment of Science, UNESCO, Place de Fontenoy Paris 7e, France. v. 1, no. 1/ 2, June 1965. Quarterly. Price not given. 65-9958. journal of Purchasing. National Association The Negro in Print. Negro Bibliographic - ~ .,. ( and Research Center, Inc., 117 R. Street N.E. Washington, D.C. 20002. v. 1, no. 1, May 1965. Bimonthly. $7.25. 65- 9916. 0 Neuroendocrinology. S. Karger AG, Ar- nold-Bocklin-Strasse 25, 4000 Basel, Swit- zerland. v. 1, no. 1, 1965/ 66. Bimonthly. $15.50. 65-9943. - Northwest Folklore. University of Oregon Publications, Friendly Hall, Eugene, Ore. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1965. Semiannual. $2.50. 65-9944. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palae- ocology. Elsevier Publishing Company, P.O. Box 211, Amsterdam, The Nether- lands. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1965. 4 no. a year. $14. 65-9956. Private Pilot. Gallant Publishing Company, 550A S. Citrus Ave., Covina, Calif. v. 1, no. 1, Oct./Nov. 1965. Bimonthly. $3.25. 65-9949. Religious Studies. Cambridge University Press, American Branch, 32 East 57th St., New York 10022. v. 1, no. 1, Oct. 1965. Semiannual. $9.50. 65-9981. Revista Latinoamericana de Sociologia. Ad- ministraci6n, Revista Latinoamericana de Sociologia, Virrey del Fino 3230, Buenos Aires, Argentina. v. 1, no. 1, Mar. 1965. 3 no. a year. $5. 65-9972. School Safety. National Safety Council, Edi- torial and Executive Office, 425 North Michigan Ave., Chicago 60611. v. 1, no. 1, Sept./ Oct. 1965. 4 no. a year. $3.60. 65-9945. Sci-Tech Book Profiles. R. R. Bowker Co., 1180 Avenue of the Americas, New York 10036. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1965. Monthly. Price not given. 65-9955. Science Books; a Quarterly Review. Science Books, American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, 1515 Massachu- setts Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. v. 1, no. 1, Apr. 1965. Quarterly. $4.50. 65-9914. Southern Education Report. Southern Edu- cation Reporting Service, P.O. Box 6156, Nashville, Tenn. 37212. v. 1, no. 1, July/ Aug. 1965. Bimonthly. $2. 65-9938. Syn; International Contributions to the New Art. Agis Verlag, 757 Baden-Baden, Lich- tentaler Allee 84. 1, 1965. 3 no. a year. DM 36-. 65-9971. Systems and Communications. Systems Pub- lications Ltd., Bugle House, 2la Noel St., New Periodicals of 1965-Part II I 141 London W.l. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1965. Monthly. $11 (free to certain categories of subscriber). 65-9946. Theatre Design & Technology. 1117 C.L., 4200 5th Ave. Pittsburgh 15213. no. 1, May 1965. 4 no. a year. $6. 65-9932. Urban Affairs Quarterly. Sage Publications Inc., 150 Fifth Ave., New York 10011. v. 1, no. 1, Sept. 1965. Quarterly. $12. 65-9957. View; the Magazine of Closed-Circuit and Community Antenna TV. RT Publishing Co., 10 Poplar Road, Ridgefield, Conn. 06877. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 1965. Bimonthly. $6. 65-9970. Vista. United Nations Association of the United States of America Inc., 345 East 46th St., New York 10017. v. 1, no. 1, July I Aug. 1965. Bimonthly. Price not given. 65-9924. Voices; the Art and Science of Psychother- apy. Alexander Jasnow, Managing Editor, 14-11 Lucena Drive, Fair Lawn, N.J. 07410. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1965. Quarterly. $8. 65-9947. Voyageur. Box 5226 Powderhorn Station, Minneapolis, Minn. 55407. v. 1, no. 1, 1965. Semiannual. $2 (per issue). 65- 9939. Weekly Compilation of Presidental Docu- ments. Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Wash- ington, D.C. 20402. v. 1, no. 1, Aug. 2, 1965. Weekly. $6. 65-9929. • • DOCTORAL PROGRAMS (Continued from page 1 2 9) grees granted and of library holdings and book expenditures strongly support the view that the two go hand in hand in universities distinguished for their doctoral programs. An institution out- standing for its graduate offerings is al- most invariably equally notable for the strength of its library resources. It is perhaps equally obvious that a sub- stantial number of institutions giving the doctorate lack the library resources to support advanced-level graduate study, and should either discontinue such of- ferings or undertake extensive develop- ment of their libraries. • •