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March 1962 Vol. 23, No. 2

PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE AND RESEARCH , A DIVISION OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Solve your want list problems this practical U-M way

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Dictionary Catalog of the HISTORY of the AMERICAS

Collection of

THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY

REFERENCE DEPARTMENT

RODUCTION of this important catalog has just been com- Ppleted and several copies are now available for immediate shipment. Dr. Gerald McDonald, Chief, American History and Genealogy Division of The New York Public Library, has given /iatit^ us the following description of the and its catalog: The catalog of The New York Public Library's American History

Room covers both North and South America. It represents a large,

well rounded research collection which reflects the development of

the new world from earliest times to the present. The American His-

tory Room has over 100,000 volumes, but the catalog also lists —

under author and subject — thousands of books which are shelved

elsewhere in the Library. Especially important are the analytics. For

over fifty years the Library has been developing a unique reference

aid through indexing important articles found in scholarly journals.

The catalog (as is the Library) is particularly strong in American PRICE (U. S.) $1280.00 Indian material, in pamphlets relating to political history, and in (Outside U. S.) . .$1408.00 works — old and new — which deal with discovery, exploration and Arrangements may be made to settlement. spread payment over a period of 3 years. The 554,000 cards in this catalog are reproduced by offset with 21 entries per 10" x 14" page. Acid-free paper with- G. K. HALL & CO. out ground wood is used. There are 28 volumes of about 97 OLIVER STREET BOSTON 10, MASSACHUSETTS 1000 pages each, oversewn, with Class A Library Binding, stamped in gold. This is a limited and it is suggested that you place Free catalog of publications on request your order as soon as possible to assure availability. NEW REFERENCE WORKS

Research Catalogue of the AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY This classed catalogue is divided into 2 parts: General and Regional. In addition to books and pamphlets, it contains references to articles and government documents pertaining to geography. The collection of geographical periodicals is exceptionally strong. Available as a complete set of 15 volumes or in 8 individual sections. Prepublication Price, complete set: $690.00. After July SI, 1962: $865.00.

Index to ART PERIODICALS Compiled in Ryerson Library, The Art Institute of Chicago Begun in 1907, this Index constitutes one of the finest reference tools in the field of art. It is strong in foreign periodicals, and contains references to articles which have appeared in 325 magazines of the 19th and 20th centuries. 11 volumes. Prepublication Price: $590.00. After July 31, 1962: $740.00.

Dictionary Catalogue of the YALE FORESTRY LIBRARY This Catalogue makes available a wealth of information on all aspects of the science of Forestry and the history of American Forestry. Both American and foreign materials are well represented. Unique features include analytics of periodical articles which appeared during the years 1900-1940. 12 volumes. Prepublication Price: $610.00. After July 31, 1962: $765.00.

Dictionary and Auction Catalogues of the Library of the AMERICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY The Dictionary Catalogue contains detailed analytics of books, periodical articles and pamphlets covering every facet of numismatics. The Auction Catalogue is arranged by dealer, and has entries for collector or collections when known. Available separately or in a complete set of 7 volumes. Prepublication Price, complete set: $370.00. After July 31, 1962: $465.00.

Dictionary Catalog of the SCHOMBURG COLLECTION OF NEGRO LITERATURE AND HISTORY The New York Public Library This dictionary catalog, covering a variety of special materials devoted to Negro life and history, is an invaluable aid to a comprehensive study of Negroes. Of particular interest are the histories of ancient African Kingdoms and material on Portuguese Africa and Madagascar. 9 volumes. Prepublication Price: $485.00. After July 31, 1962: $605.00.

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Maurice F. Tauber, Editor Mrs. Mary Falvey, ACRL Publications Officer Contents Editorial Staff: RALPH E. ELLS- WORTH, buildings; JENS NYHOLM, COMPACT SHELVING, by Keyes D. Me tealf 103 methods; JOHN C. RATHER, news; LAWRENCE S. THOMPSON, per- sonnel; ROBERT B. DOWNS, re- sources. CARLYLE J. FRAREY, ACRL LEGISLATION IN 1961, by Edmon Low 112 CLARENCE GORCHELS, EUCENE P. SHEEHY, assistants to the editor. ONE THOUSAND 1961 BOOKS FOR THE COLLEGE College and Research Libraries, the official journal of the Asso- LIBRARY, by Robert C. Jones 115 ciation of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, REPORT ON FARMINGTON PLAN PROGRAM, by Robert is published bimonthly—Janu- D. Downs 143 ary, March, May, July, Septem- ber, November—at 1407 Sher- wood Avenue, Richmond 20, NEW PERIODICALS OF 1961—PART II, by Geraldine Virginia. Subscription to CRL is included Kaufman Maurer 146 in membership dues to ACRL of $6 or more. Other subscrip- tions are $5 a year; single cop- NEWS FROM THE FIELD 155 ies, $1.25. Production and Advertising and Circulation office: 50 East Huron PERSONNEL 160 Street, Chicago 11, Illinois. Change of address and orders for APPOINTMENTS 160 subscriptions should be ad- dressed to College and Research Libraries, at the above address, RETIREMENTS 164 at least three weeks before the publication date of the effective NECROLOGY 164 issue. Manuscripts of articles and cop- FOREIGN LIBRARIES 164 ies of books submitted for re- view should be addressed to Richard Harwell, College and ACRL BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING 1962 165 Research Libraries editor, Bow- doin College Library, Brunswick, Maine. NEW EDITOR AND EDITORIAL BOARD OF CRL 169 Inclusion of an article or ad- vertisement in CRL does not NOMINEES FOR ACRL OFFICERS 1962/63 172 constitute official endorsement by ACRL or ALA. Indexed in Library Literature. REVIEW ARTICLES Abstracted in Library Science A bstracts'. "MOSTLY MEARNS," Richard Harwell 174 Second-class postage paid at Richmond, Virginia, and at ad- SCIENCE LITERATURE, J err old Orne 174 ditional mailing offices. CIRCULATION SYSTEMS, Warren B. Kuhn 176 March 1962 23 Number 2 February TRADITION AND ENLIGHTENMENT IN THE TUSCAN ACADEMIES UNIVERSITY OF by Eric W. Cochrane. $6.00s THE WEALTH OF THE GENTRY 1540-1660 by Alan Simpson. $5.00 CHAN KOM A Maya Village by Robert Redfield and Alfonso Villa Rojas. $7.50s STRUCTURE AND SENTIMENT Spring by Rodney Needham. $3.50s A REFERENCE GUIDE TO ENGLISH STUDIES 1962 by Donald F. Bond. $5.00s March NATO The Entangling Alliance by Robert E. Osgood. $7.50 Just published CONGRESS AND THE COURT by Walter F. Murphy. $6.95 THE METAL PLUTONIUM edited by A. S. Coffinberry and W. N. Miner MOVING-FIELD RADIATION THERAPY Illustrated. $9.50 by F. Wachsmann and G. Barth. Adapted by THE PROPER WIT OF POETRY L. H. Lanzl and J. W. J. Carpender. Illus. $10.95 by George Williamson. $4.00 THE MOON PAIN: ITS MODES AND FUNCTIONS A Russian View by F. J. J. Buytendijk $3.95 edited by A. V. Markov. Illustrated. $8.00 AMERICAN LIFE: DREAM AND REALITY by W. Lloyd Warner. Revised Edition. $6.50s April THE PEOPLE OF ARITAMA LIVING WITH THE ATOM by Gerardo and Alicia Reichel-Dolmatoff. Illus. by Ritchie Colder. Illustrated. $5.95 IN PRAISE OF ADAM $8,5°S IRRADIATION OF MICE AND MEN Poems by Reuel Denney $3.50 by John F. Loutit. Illustrated. $5.00

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HE TERM "compact shelving" will be Tconsidered here in its broadest sense Dr. Melcalf is Librarian Emeritus, Harvard as any method of shelving that increases College Library. the number of volumes which can be shelved per square foot of floor space. vary, of course, from library to library, The subject has been discussed compre- and from subject to subject within the hensively by Fremont Rider in his vol- same library; bound volumes of periodi- ume entitled Compact Book Storage, cals, for example, ordinarily take more published by the Hadham Press of New space than monographs. It should be York in 1949, as well as in two articles noted also that seven shelves of quarto by Robert H. Muller, now associate di- or folio volumes cannot be provided in rector of libraries of the University of a section, but six volumes per linear foot Michigan. The first of Muller's articles, is a figure conservative enough to make comprising pages 79-93 of the Proceed- up for the extra space occupied by the ings of the 1954 ACRL Building Plans approximately ten per cent of the ordi- Institute, appeared in ACRL Mono- nary collection that is oversize. The esti- graph No. 11, published in the spring of mate should be adjusted if any consid- 1954; the other was printed in the July erable portion of the collection is made 1954 number of College and Research up of newspapers. Libraries, pages 300-312. These three Experience indicates that 125 volumes items are recommended for any- per standard section is as good an esti- one facing a shortage of storage space. mate as can be made, as a basis for cal- This article attempts to supplement culations of stack capacity, if space for rather than to replace them. reasonable growth is provided. Many It is not easy to define precisely what variables can modify the figure in any a "volume" is or to determine the av- specific instance, and it should be added erage thickness of the volumes in a li- that total volume capacity is a matter of brary. Here, in order to simplify matters, great importance; possible means of in- two formulas will be taken as a base; they serting one additional volume or even are arbitrary and debatable, and are by half-volume per linear foot of shelf no means satisfactory for all institutions, should be studied, and adopted unless but they make it possible to compare disadvantages outweigh benefits. One book capacities of different arrange- extra volume per linear foot beyond the ments. six provided by the formula, will increase The first of these formulas is that six capacity by 16 2/3 per cent, which pro- volumes equals the average capacity of vides space for an additional 167,000 shelving per linear foot if the collection volumes in a one-million-volume stack. is classified and space is provided The construction cost for shelving that throughout for growth. This is a com- many volumes today may amount to monly accepted, conservative formula for $250,000. a college, university, or research library. The second formula that will be used If a standard section is 3 feet wide and here provides that fifteen volumes can 7i/c> feet high, with seven shelves, it can be housed per square foot of stack floor then hold 125 volumes. The figure will space. The author will deal with this further elsewhere; this figure is possible Mr. Metcalf is engaged in preparing and reasonable with ranges placed 4'6" a book on the planning of college, uni- on centers, if there is careful planning, versity, and research library buildings. and if the average capacity per section "Alternatives to a New Library Build- is taken as 125 volumes according to the ing" is the preliminary version of a chap- first formula. ter from that volume which CRL is There are three basic approaches to- pleased to publish here as the third of wards increasing storage capacity per a series of excerpts from it. square foot of floor space. Each has its Mr. Metcalf invites suggestions and advantages and disadvantages. The total comments for consideration for use in cost of housing any given number of vol- the final version of his work. umes may be reduced under some cir- The research for his book and the cumstances, if not all, by any one of the three, and savings in space and costs may zvriting of it is being done by Mr. Met- be even greater if a combination of two calf as the director of a special project methods is used, or even of all three. The sponsored by a grant from the Council on problem, always, is whether or not these Library Resources (CRL, XI (I960), 136). savings make up for the inconveniences that result. foot of shelving to full capacity; once These three basic methods can be char- shelved, a volume need never be shifted. acterized as: (1) methods of shelving The chronological scheme is not an es- more books in the existing sections; (2) sential feature of fixed-location shelving, methods of devoting a larger percentage but it is the obvious procedure. The ar- of the available floor space to regular bitrary figure of six volumes per linear shelving; and (3) methods of increasing foot that has been accepted as a formula the capacity of a given floor space by us- will fill a stack to no more than two- ing special kinds of shelving. thirds or three-quarters of the capacity The first two methods have been in obtainable if each shelf is completely use for many years throughout the world. filled. Under this system, if the first The third, with minor exceptions, has formula's 125 volumes was correct, a been developed during recent years un- standard section will hold 168 volumes der the pressure of high building con- or more. struction costs. Alternatively, though fixed locations are not to be adopted, more than two- METHODS OF SHELVING MORE BOOKS thirds or three-quarters of each shelf may IN THE EXISTING SECTIONS be filled. If seven volumes are shelved There are five subspecies to be consid- per linear foot, the shelves will be only ered under this major heading. The first seven-eighths filled, but capacity will be of these is: increased to 147 volumes per section. Less space may be left for growth. This There will still be room for a fourteen obvious procedure has been used every- per cent increase in the bulk of the total where, from the earliest times. It may collection, before every shelf is completely take either of two quite different forms. filled. Experience has shown, however, In the first of these forms, books are that whenever shelves are filled on the arranged chronologically by date of re- average to eighty per cent capacity or ceipt and shelves are filled to capacity more, a library begins to suffer from one after another as the collection grows. slower service. Constant shifting of books This has been the traditional plan in is required because of unequal growth; many large libraries, and often in small individual shelves and sections overflow, ones; it facilitates the use of each linear and space has to be found for expansion

104 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES of entire subject classifications that are space required for books in chronlogi- growing more rapidly than the collection cal order is at the most only three quar- as a whole. Bindings will be damaged by ters that which a classified plan will need, moving and pulling books from shelves if reasonable provision is made for filled too full. growth. This might well save more than It should be added that institutions all $335,000 in construction costs. Most too rarely provide additional shelf space American scholars and librarians, how- as it is needed; often they delay until ever, are convinced that open access and books have to be piled in the stack aisles subject arrangement are of vital impor- and window ledges, which inevitably tance, and that the cost is not unreason- damages the books and impairs service. able. For this reason it is strongly recom- 2. Books may be shelved by size. If mended that, in estimating stack capac- books are shelved by size, and the system ity, the conservative figure of 125 vol- divides them into six or more groups umes per section be used. It is time to (e.g., books less than 6 inches high, those plan for more space as soon as a library between 6 and 7, 7 and 8, 8 and 9, 9 and stack is two-thirds filled or, at the most, 11, and those over 11), it should be possi- three-fourths, assuming, of course, that ble to place eight or nine shelves per sec- a classified arrangement of books will tion, in a stack of the standard 7'6" be continued. height in the clear. If the average is If a chronological arrangement is eight-and-one-half, compared with seven adopted, the only way to use the stacks shelves on the average for regular shelv- is through consultation of the catalog; ing, the linear footage available has been the advantages of classified collections increased by approximately twenty per must be forgone. While still possible to cent. Rider calculated the figure at ap- permit open access—to allow the reader proximately twenty-five per cent, which to determine the arbitrary location num- would bring the average capacity per sec- bers from the catalog and go to the tion up to at least 155 volumes; if com- shelves to obtain the books he wants— bined with the chronological arrange- the reader would be acting simply as a ment described above, the figure will rise stack attendant, and an untrained one further to 200, a total increase of sixty at that; the disadvantages of open access per cent. would result, without any of the mani- The reference department of the New fold advantages it normally offers. There York Public Library is now shelving new is yet another consideration. Many read- acquisitions in its main stack chronologi- ers ask for several books at once, on the cally as received, and by size. This has same or related subjects. Since these also been the arrangement for many of books would, normally, not have been Harvard's books in the New England De- acquired at the same time, the attendant, posit Library; other libraries following or the reader in a fixed-location stack may this procedure include the Midwest In- have to go to widely separated areas for ter-Library Center, the Hampshire Li- them, taking more time than would be brary Center, and many of the reference required under a subject classification and research libraries of the United system. This is one of the reasons for Kingdom, on the Continent, and else- slow service in many libraries that do not where. It often comes as a shock to an shelve their books by subject. American librarian to discover the preva- To be weighted against these consid- lence abroad of shelving by size; foreign- erations, the great advantage of chrono- ers are often equally surprised to find logical arrangement is saving in space. In that great American libraries shelve a building for one million volumes, the their books by subject.

MARCH 1962 105 3. Fore-edge shelving. A third means shelves. Many libraries, because of lack of increasing the capacity of a given shelf of space have occasionally resorted to the area is to shelve books on their fore edges two-deep plan, temporarily at least. The as well as by size. This plan was adopted inconvenience is extremely serious. When in parts of the Wesleyan University Li- President Eliot proposed cooperative stor- brary by Fremont Rider, and is discussed age for the Boston area, which came into in pages 56-64 of his Compact Book being forty years later as the New Eng- Storage. It has also been adopted to some land Deposit Library, he suggested that extent for infrequently used material at the "dead books" be shelved three-deep, Yale University, and elsewhere. A which is even worse—two or perhaps method of saving still more space was four times as unsatisfactory as two-deep. also proposed by Rider—who not only The procedure will, however, increase placed the books on fore edges but also capacity materially. Two-deep shelving, cut down their margins with a power- where books are on twelve-inch shelving, driven paper knife, and boxed them in with no change in aisle width, could inexpensive cardboard containers for bring the total up to 400 volumes per protection, and to provide a good surface section, or 50 per square foot, assuming on which to inscribe call numbers. that the arrangement is also chronologi- It is estimated that fore-edge shelving, cal and by size. If the three-deep plan if used in conjunction with arrangement were adopted and the distance between by size, will increase by at least fifty per range centers were increased from 4'6" cent the section capacity made possible to 5'6V, as would be desirable, if not by the chronological plan alone. It may necessary, capacity would rise to 600 vol- bring capacity up to 250 volumes per umes per section and, in spite of the re- section, an increase of one hundred per duced number of ranges, more than 60 cent over the standard plan, and provide volumes could be housed per square foot. for 30 volumes per square foot of floor 5. Higher sections. There is one fur- space, instead of 15. The procedure has ther method of increasing capacity per all the disadvantages that have been noted square foot of floor space, without aban- above; in addition, many librarians ob- doning standard shelving; this is to in- serve that books are injured and bindings crease the height of the shelf sections. It weakened when books are shelved on can be done, of course, only if the stack their fore edges. If they are also cut down area has ceilings higher than 7'6" in the to reduce size, the procedure may be clear. (Space "in the clear" is the space likened to cutting off one's toes in order from finished floor to finished ceiling.) to wear smaller shoes. In fairness to Rider If, as in many multitier stacks, there is an it should be reported that his books were 8'6" ceiling (which is lower than ceilings placed on their backs when boxed, so in most areas of modern libraries used there was less danger of weakening the for both book storage and readers), the bindings. To double the capacity per capacity theoretically will be increased square foot by shelving books chronologi- by more than eleven per cent. This does cally, and by size, on their fore edges not call for giving up a classified arrange- may save more than $650,000 in construc- ment with open access, but it places the tion of a million-volume book stack, if top shelf out of reach of all but the tall- construction costs approximate $20 per est readers, unless footstools are used. In square foot. warehouse buildings where shelves are 4. Shelving trvo- or three-deep. Books closed to the public the disadvantage is can be shelved two-deep (one row be- much slighter. The New England De- hind another) on shelves twelve inches posit Library has 8'4" ceilings through- wide, or three-deep on eighteen-inch out.

106 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Five methods have been described by inches of space behind it is large enough which, without changing standard stack for a nine-inch book unless another vol- installations, the capacity of a given area ume exceeding the seven-inch size hap- can be increased. As has been noted, vari- pens to be immediately behind it, or un- ous combinations of these methods are less there is cross-bracing in the two-inch possible, so the total number of plans gap between. More space is used for aisles that might be adopted is considerably than for shelves, and a decrease from greater than five. Any such method will twenty to sixteen inches in range depth make construction considerably cheaper. increases capacity per square foot by 8 Each institution must carefully consider per cent. It is possible also, of course, to its service methods and requirements be- use narrower shelves in conjunction with fore deciding to adopt any of these pro- chronological and size arrangements. cedures, and, in addition, compare them Further, it should be noted that shallow with procedures of a somewhat different shelves cost less than deep ones. nature, described below. On the other hand, it has been esti- mated by Rider that some 6 per cent

METHODS OF DEVOTING A LARGER PER- of the books in a library measure more CENTAGE OF THE AVAILABLE FLOOR than nine inches from spine to fore edge. SPACE TO REGULAR SHELVING Some of the volumes that make up this 6 per cent are too large for any regular 1. Shallower Shelves. If the width of shelving, so special provision will always shelves is decreased without changing have to be made for some portion of the aisle widths, it is possible to install more collection. It is recommended that in de- ranges in a given floor area, thereby in- signing a stack, the planners seriously creasing capacity per square foot. A large consider installing ranges no more than portion of all the shelving now being in- eighteen inches deep, rather than the stalled in college, university, and research wider sizes now so frequently used. libraries has ranges of at least twenty inches from front to back, often with 2. Narrower aisles. The standard width even wider finished end panels. Indeed, of aisles in research libraries varies from in many cases, the shelving is on a base 30 to 36 inches; in housing infrequently twenty-two inches from front to back, used books, particularly in closed-access with end panels of at least that width; stacks, the width may well be reduced sometimes the width runs as high as considerably. When shallower shelving twenty-four inches. The theoretical justi- has also been adopted, ranges have been fication for these wide ranges is to in- installed on 40-inch centers instead of 54- crease stability, and to provide bottom inch, which increases capacity by 35 per shelves from which oversize books will cent. On this basis, without resorting to not project into the aisles. any of the other procedures that have It should be remembered that a large been considered, capacity per square foot proportion of all books in a college and will become approximately twenty vol- research library measure not more than umes instead of fifteen. seven inches from spine to fore edge. If In Dublin, Trinity College uses a col- shelves are made only seven inches deep, onnade under its famous Long Room as with a two-inch space between those on a stack area, with ranges 40 inches on one side and those on the other of each centers; the arrangement is by size there, double-faced section, the total depth of with the result that more than 30 vol- the section will be sixteen inches instead umes per square foot are housed. In the of the twenty or more now prevalent. One New England Deposit Library, with of these seven-inch shelves with two shelving 44 inches on centers, capacity

MARCH 1 962 107 has been increased by 23 per cent over METHODS OF INCREASING THE CAPACITY standard shelving in addition to the gains OF A GIVEN FLOOR SPACE BY USING resulting from arrangement by size; the SPECIAL KINDS OF SHELVING aisles there are 26 inches wide. Much of Several special kinds of shelving can the Newberry has ranges 48 inches on centers. be used with the normal classified ar- is an open-access, heavily-used stack, rangement of books, or with one or more where books are classified by subject, with of the plans considered above. Not all ranges 50 inches on centers. combinations are practicable, however. Books cannot be shelved two- or three- 3. Lengthening ranges and holding deep in any of the three kinds of special down the width of cross-aisles. There shelving described below; in effect, these have been assertions that no range in an special shelving devices are a means of open-access stack should be more than achieving the savings in space that two- five sections, or 15 feet long. This may and three-deep shelving provides, with- be valid for a public library with open out most of the disadvantages entailed access, or even an undergraduate collec- by two- or three-deep crowding on regu- tion (though it could well be disputed), lar shelves. It should also be noted that but it is hard to understand why this special shelving is ordinarily designed for should be accepted as a rule for research almost minimal aisle widths and shelf library stacks open only to faculty mem- depths, hence further economies along bers and advanced students. Indeed, short these lines are impracticable. The height ranges only too often complicate shelv- of ranges cannot safely be increased be- ing arrangements. If the ranges are prop- yond the standard 7'6", because special erly labelled, and if floor plans are pro- shelving does not lend itself to use with vided with class marks clearly indicated footstools. on them, long ranges may be more satis- 1. Hinged shelving. Hinged shelving factory than short ones because they may used at the Midwest Inter-Library Cen- simplify traffic patterns and shelving ter makes possible an increase in capacity plans. Ranges that extend 33 feet pro- per square foot of as much as 75 per cent vide 10 per cent more shelving in the over the standard 125 volumes per sec- same square footage than two 15-foot tion; to this can be added savings that ranges separated by a 3-foot cross aisle. result from shelving by size, if that pro- A range 36 feet long will provide 20 per cedure is also adopted. Hinged shelves, cent more shelving than two 15-foot designed by that great innovator, Angus ranges with a 6-foot cross aisle between. MacDonald, were accepted at the Mid- Can libraries afford short ranges in a west Inter-Library Center before they had bookstack costing $1,250,000, particu- been completely perfected. They are not larly since they make it easier for stack as satisfactory as they might have been users to lose their way? Does anyone in if a rush order could have been avoided. a large stack experience real inconven- These shelves consist of double-faced ience because of long ranges, if the ranges sections hung on each side of standard are well labeled? These are questions to sections; each range therefore has three- be considered and answered on the basis deep shelving on both sides. Since the of local conditions, but, obviously, shal- hinged sections are nearly 3 feet long, lower shelving, narrower aisles, and and deep enough to accommodate books longer ranges can increase square foot on both sides, aisles had to be some 40 capacity materially, without any sacrifice inches wide. This shelving is not now on of the advantages of classification and the market. open access. A second type of hinged shelving,

108 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES made available by the Art Metal Manu- stalled in place of shelving in old multi- facturing Company of Jamestown, New tier stacks, or as free-standing stacks in York, consists of swing units occupying a new construction, if the floors are de- little less than half the length of the reg- signed to support the extra weight. ular sections. These units are hung at Drawer-type shelving makes it desir- both ends of each section; they swing out able or, in many cases, necessary to in- into the stack aisles and expose to view crease the width of stack aisles, which the regular shelves behind them. The reduces to some extent the saving they swing units are offered in single or offer; but, as Muller has shown, they in- double-faced shelving. The latter, like crease capacity per square foot by some the installation at the Midwest Inter-Li- 90 to 110 per cent over standard shelving. brary Center, makes it possible to shelve It should be added that Muller's figures books three-deep on both sides of each referred to capacity increases obtained by range, and provide access to books on special shelving in bays 23 feet square, inside rows without handling the books and might be modified considerably in a on the outer row. Since the Art Metal bay size specially adapted for the par- units are only half as long as those de- ticular type of shelving installed in it. signed by MacDonald, the aisles need not Costs of construction and of steel for be widened disproportionately. shelving vary considerably from time to 2. Drawer-type shelving. Drawer-type time and from place to place. shelving, when first introduced by the 3. "Compactus." The third special type Hamilton Company of Two Rivers, Wis- of shelving has gone under the name of consin, was called "Compo." The W. R. "Compactus." It originated in Switzer- Ames Company of San Francisco now of- land but has been manufactured in Eng- fers "Stor-More" book units, and shelv- land, Norway, the Soviet Union, Sweden, ing of this kind is also produced by Clif- and elsewhere. It has been used on a ford Brown, of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, fairly large scale in Australia, and an who designed the original "Compo" adaptation of it can be found in the Na- stack. The Ames units consist of "double- tional Library at Calcutta, where B. S. headed" drawers, approximately 6 feet in Kesavan has used it in the basement and length, which can be pulled out into the in other portions of the old viceroy's aisle on either side. The drawers are de- mansion, in space that would otherwise signed to bridge alternate aisles in a stack be very hard to use advantageously for li- area, making use of existing stack brary purposes. An adaptation was used columns, but they can also be used in a in the Treasure Room at Harvard dur- free-standing arrangement. ing the 1930's; and was removed because The Hamilton "Compo" units are books occasionally fell and were dam- single-headed drawers in varying lengths aged while ranges were being shifted. from 3 to 4 feet, and in widths varying Regular "Compactus" is made up of from 18 to 26 inches. Like an adjustable more or less standard stack ranges shelf, each drawer can be adjusted ver- mounted on rails with ball-bearing tically on one-inch centers. If used to re- wheels. These ranges can be pushed place the 40-inch sections in the multi- tightly together; rubber baffles are de- tier stack of the Widener Library at Har- sirable to prevent damage from collisions vard, they would be wider than those re- when they are moved. Each bay or sec- placing 36-inch shelves that are to be tion of the stack can be almost filled with found in most libraries; this would re- ranges, leaving only one aisle parallel to duce the capacity per square foot, but each ten or more ranges. The shelving is make it possible to accommodate rela- heavy, so when used in large blocks a tively large volumes. They can be in- motor must be installed to move the

MARCH 1962 109 ranges and open up an aisle through 3. All types of special shelving have which one can reach the desired shelf. moving parts and, unless it is as well The weight is sufficient to require extra- made as the Rolls-Royce engine, any- strong floor construction; motor, rails, thing with moving parts may sooner or and other necessary equipment are ex- later come to grief. Design and quality pensive. Safety devices are required to of construction are vital considerations. prevent a user from being crushed if As noted, the Midwest Inter-Library Cen- someone inadvertently starts the motor. ter has encountered difficulties that can Supporting columns seem to get in the be blamed on too hasty a job of design way even more than in the case of stand- and production. Rollers and other mov- ard shelving, and prevent use of as large ing parts in drawers, if well made, should a part of the total floor space as might be be capable of standing heavy use for expected. many years. Still, it is obvious that this type of 4. Inevitably, in view of moving parts shelving makes possible a greater book and heavier construction, the cost per capacity per square foot than any other linear foot of shelf is much greater for method yet devised. In ordinary shelving, any of these types of special shelving with ranges 55 inches on centers, two- than for standard ranges. Costs of shelving thirds of the space is given over to aisles, will not be discussed here, but it can be and only one-third consists of shelving. noted that Muller found that the addi- With very narrow aisles, as at Trinity tional cost of special shelving cancels out College in Dublin (ranges 40 inches on a large share, but not all, of the advan- centers, with 24-inch aisles), the percent- tages resulting from increasing the capac- age of space devoted to shelving rises ity per square foot. As he points out, the only to 40. With hinged or drawer-type cost per square foot of construction of shelving, it may approximate 66 per cent. the building in which a stack is to be in- "Compactus," however, makes it possible stalled is of prime importance here. to fill 80 per cent of the total space with shelving, leaving only 20 per cent for SUMMARY aisles between ranges and for cross aisles, Two major questions need to be an- which are of particular importance in swered in reaching a decision on whether this instance. or not to use any method of compact Against the advantages of special types shelving. of shelving the following drawbacks must 1. Is the inconvenience that will result be assessed: great enough to outweigh the saving in space that will be achieved? Capacity can 1. Books are not as readily available be increased by leaving less space for to the reader as they would be on stand- growth or, if the classified arrangement is ard shelving. Hinged shelves must be abandoned, filling each shelf completely. swung out into the aisle; drawers must be Shelves or aisles or both may be nar- pulled out. The manufacturers deny that rowed. Capacity also can be increased by this is a problem, pointing to installa- installing moving shelves of one kind tions in reading rooms and open-access or another. If a combination of methods stacks as evidence. is used, both savings and disadvantages 2. In swinging out sections or pulling are compounded. It should not be for- out drawers, there is always some danger gotten that most of the world's great li- of books falling and becoming damaged. braries outside the United States arrange The extent of this danger depends on the their books by size and use narrow shelves design, and is greater with hinged shelv- and aisles; that moving shelves are in use ing than with drawers. at the Midwest Inter-Library Center, the

110 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES University of Wisconsin, and the New that can be adjusted vertically only with York Public Library's warehouse, as well a wrench for the nuts and bolts that hold as in many smaller libraries of all kinds. it together; it is available from many It is suggested that anyone considering manufacturers, and costs perhaps half as the use of such shelving consult libraries much as the bracket shelving now stand- that have had experience with it. ard in libraries.) 2. What is the actual monetary saving Many mistakes have been made. There that can be anticipated from adoption of are libraries that could have used one or any specific plan? Few persons would more of the methods of compact storage consider installation of expensive mov- to advantage, but have failed to do so. ing shelves in a stack built in a Nissen Others have used one or more of these hut, where construction costs come to methods with unfortunate results. perhaps $1.50 per square foot, much less It is not easy to estimate costs accu- than the special stack will cost. In Wall rately; and it is difficult indeed to weigh Street, on the other hand, ground space costs against convenience. What is the alone may be worth hundreds of dollars dollar value of open access and classified per square foot, and it ought to be pos- collections? Also, special circumstances sible to save large sums by compact may complicate a situation. When a li- storage; a book may have to be heavily brary is full and there is no possibility used to earn a place on standard shelves of constructing an addition or a new there. Most college and university librar- building, compact shelving of one kind ies fall somewhere between these two or another may be the only practicable extremes. solution, but it is suggested that mov- It is desirable once more to call atten- able shelving be regarded as a last resort, tion to Muller's figures, which may not and that the library first consider whether now apply to any specific library, but in- portions of its collections might be placed dicate clearly the considerations to be in a stack with narrower shelves and weighed. They demonstrate, in particu- aisles, shelved by size, or perhaps trans- lar, that special shelving costs more per ferred to a cooperative storage building linear foot of storage space than standard like the Midwest Inter-Library Center or library shelving, and much more than the New England Deposit Library. An commercial shelving of the sort used by article of this sort can provide no one the New England Deposit Library. with an answer; it can only indicate the ("Commercial shelving" is metal shelving questions that should be asked. Midwest Academic Librarians Conference The seventh Midwest Academic Li- "Legal Aspects of and brarians Conference will be held on Their Relationship to Academic Libra- Friday and Saturday, May 11 and 12, at rians." Saint Paul, Minnesota. The conference On Saturday, "New Cataloging Rules will be cosponsored by the College of and Their Impact of Readers' Services" Saint Catherine, the College of Saint and "Circulation Controls and Under- Thomas, and Macalester College. Friday graduate Morality in the Use of Li- daytime meetings will start with a panel braries" will be topics for group discus- discussion, "Academic Librarians and sions. Mark Gormley, ACRL executive their Professional Associations," followed secretary; Katharine M. Stokes, MALC; by group discussions. and Frank L. Schick, Library Services At the evening dinner meeting Rev- Branch, U. S. Office of Education, will erend Terrence J. Murphy will discuss speak at luncheon.

MARCH 1962 111 ACRL Legislation in 1961

By EDMON LOW

HE ACRL BOARD of Directors at the TMontreal Conference in 1960 voted Mr. Low is Librarian, Oklahoma State to promote legislation in the forthcom- University, and past president of ACRL. ing session of Congress for federal aid to college and university libraries. There national election had not been held, and were several reasons for this action, so we did not know which party would among which were the declining percent- prevail nor who the chairmen or mem- age, since the end of World War II, of bers of some committees would be. total institutional incomes being devoted As a result of this investigation, it to the libraries; the rapidly rising cost of seemed best to limit the bill to aid only library materials, especially of serials; in acquisition of materials. The Con- the constantly increasing load of avail- gressmen seemed particularly allergic to able printed materials from presses here assistance for increasing salaries or hiring and abroad; the greater demands being additional personnel, but almost every- made on libraries by expanded programs body seemed to be for books. Also it was of graduate offerings and by contract re- thought best to make it an amendment search; and the emergence of many jun- to an existing bill rather than to at- ior colleges, in an effort to meet the de- tempt to run the whole gamut with a mand for expanded facilities in the field separate bill. Consequently the draft of higher education, whose libraries were which is appended was offered as an almost nonexistent or greatly in need of amendment to the National Defense Edu- encouragement which such aid could cation Act, which was up for extension give. and appeared to offer the best possibility As president of ACRL at this time, the for approval. writer, under this directive from the The difficulties at first were consider- board and in cooperation with the Fed- able—the American Council on Educa- eral Relations Committee and the ALA tion refused to endorse it, saying they Washington Office, began to investigate could not "fragmentize" their program the possibility of such legislation—what by supporting legislation for "part" of was needed, whether it should be a bill an institution; the Office of Education by itself or a part of an existing bill, and could take no stand until a new com- above all what, in the light of the exist- missioner was appointed and the wishes ing temper of Congress, would stand a of the Administration were known; and reasonable chance of passage. Various it was not in the program or budget sub- leaders in each House were consulted, as mitted by the outgoing Administration. well as certain members of committee Nevertheless, it came surprisingly close staffs who are often quite conversant to succeeding. It was approved first by with attitudes of key people in Congress. the Senate Subcommittee on Education We were hampered initially by the fact and later by the full Senate Committee that, when we started work on this, the on Labor and Public Welfare, and re-

112 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ported to the Senate for action. It would acquisitions. We wish the program could almost surely have passed the Senate if have been larger but it appeared to be it had come to a vote; such vote was de- the best which could be had under the layed pending House action. The House circumstances. ACRL and the ALA Com- Committee on Education and Labor, mittee on Legislation are now consider- after lengthy hearings on the bill and ing what should be attempted in 1962 various proposed amendments, trans- and it does appear likely, in the light of mitted it to the House Rules Committee the 1961 experience and the generally without recommendation on most of the favorable attitude in Congress toward amendments, including this one, but our program, that some legislation of with the general understanding that in this kind will be enacted within the next the Conference Committee the amend- few years. ments approved by the Senate would be accepted by the House. As is now well LIBRARY AMENDMENT TO NDEA known, the Rules Committee refused to S.2345 (Report No. 652) a bill to ex- report the bill for House action and, in tend and improve the National Defense a compromise in the closing days of the Education Act of 1958 was favorably re- session, the present Act stripped of all ported by the Senate Committee on amendments was renewed for two years. Labor and Public Welfare on July 31, The failure of the Rules Committee to 1961. Included in the bill is a new Title report had nothing to do with our amend- X, which reads, in part, as follows: ment—it simply went down in the fierce battling over other issues. TITLE X—STRENGTHENING SCHOOL LIBRARY RESOURCES NEEDED FOR TEACHING AND The progress made, which almost re- LEARNING sulted in passage, surprised many around Washington and even the ones actively Part C—Library Grants to Institutions of working for it. It usually requires a few Higher Education APPROPRIATIONS AUTHORIZED years to build up sufficient interest and Sec. 1021. There are hereby authorized to backing to achieve success—witness the be appropriated $10,000,000 for the fiscal decade of work on the Library Service year ending June 50, 1962, and for each of Act. The credit for this progress was due the three succeeding fiscal years, to enable primarily to the prestige of the Ameri- the Commissioner to make grants to insti- can Library Association on the "Hill" tutions of higher education to assist and en- and to the tremendous personal popu- courage such institutions in the acquisition larity of Germaine Krettek, director of for library purposes of books (not including the Washington Office, with key mem- ), periodicals, documents, and other bers of both houses of Congress. Without related materials (including necessary bind- this, we could never have gotten off the ing)- ground. Text of the Amendment is appended. GRANT CONDITIONS It will be noted that it provides for Sec. 1022. From the sums appropriated matching grants, that aid is available to pursuant to section 1021 for any fiscal year, the Commissioner may, upon application all libraries regardless of size, and in both therefor, make a grant for the purposes set public and private institutions, that a forth in such section to any institution of floor is provided (Section 1022) for small higher education— libraries so that reasonable grants can be (1) in an amount not exceeding 25 per made regardless of past expenditures, centum of the amount expended by such and that some help is provided in Sec- institution during the fiscal year ending tion 1022-2-iii which may be used for June 30, 1961, for books, periodicals, docu- additional personnel to process added ments, and other related materials (includ-

MARCH 1962 113 ing necessary binding) for library purposes, the fiscal year ending June 30, 1961, and or not less than— (iii) that it will expend for library (A) $1,000 if it provides a two-year purposes during the fiscal year for which educational program which is acceptable the grant is requested, in addition to the for full credit toward a bachelor's de- amount required under clauses (i) and gree; (ii) above, an amount not less than the (B) $2,500 if it provides an educa- amount of such grant, and that at least tional program for which it awards a 50 per centum of such expenditure will bachelor's degree or a more advanced be for library purposes for books, peri- degree; or odicals, documents, and other related (C) $5,000 if it provides an educa- materials (including necessary binding). tional program for which it awards both

bachelors' and advanced degrees; and LIMITATION (2) if such institution furnishes proof Sec. 1023. No grant shall be made under satisfactory to the Commissioner— this part for books, periodicals, documents, (i) that it will expend, during the or other related materials to be used primar- fiscal year for which the grant is re- ily in connection with any part of the pro- quested, for all library purposes an gram of a divinity school, theological semi- amount not less than the amount it ex- nary, or other institution, or a department pended for such purposes during the or branch of an institution, whose program fiscal year ending June 30, 1961, is for the education of students to prepare (ii) that it will expend, during the them to become ministers of religion or to fiscal year for which the grant is re- enter upon some other religious vocation. quested, for library purposes for books, periodicals, documents, and other re- lated materials (including necessary bind- No vote was taken on the bill before ing) an amount not less than the amount adjournment, but action is possible in it expended for such materials during the 2nd Session (1962).

Workshop on Library Binding

The RTSD Committee mercial Binder's Viewpoint—Mrs. has planned a preconference Workshop C. W. Gross, Joseph Ruzicka, Inc.; on Library Binding to be held at Miami From a Librarian's Viewpoint—Jer- on Saturday, June 16. Three sessions are rold Orne, University of North Caro- arranged as follows: lina; From the Viewpoint of a Li- brary Operating its Own Bindery— 9:30 A.M.-11:30 A.M. "Development of Kenneth Allen, University of Wash- Performance Standards for Library ington Binding," speakers—Frazer Poole, ALA Library Technology Project; There will be exhibits by binders and William J. Barrow, W. J. Barrow Re- library suppliers. Advance registration is search Laboratory; Jean Karl, ALA- strongly urged because only 200 partici- Children's Book Council Joint Com- pants can be accommodated. The regis- mittee on Binding. tration fee is $2.00. Send your check to 2:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M. A panel discussion Lilly Carter, University of Florida, on mending, repair and pamphlet Gainesville, Florida. binding, with demonstrations of the A separate publication, containing the latest methods and materials. papers presented at the workshop will be 8:00 P.M.-9:30 P.M. "The Library Bind- edited by Frazer Poole and be sent free ing Situation Today": From a Com- of charge to the registrants.

114 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES One Thousand 1961 Books For the Undergraduate College Library

By ROBERT C. JONES

HIS LIST of books for 1961 follows Dr. Jones is Director of Library Services similar lists compiled for 1958 and T at American River Junior College, Sacra- 1959 by Robert T. Jordan, and the list mento, California. I did for 1960. It does not include re- • vised editions (except extensive revisions), annuals, or volumes within a set; paper- eliminate routines and allow more time backs as such are not included, nor is fic- to get people and books together. tion. A separate list of revisions, series, 000 GENERAL WORKS etc., would be useful, as much to get the PIERCE, JOHN. Symbols, signals, and noise: the old volumes off the shelves as to get the nature and process of communication. New new ones on. The books are general in York, Harper. 006/61-10215/6.50 nature and no particular subject area is TAUBE, MORTIMER. Computers and common stressed; this is the responsibility of each sense. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 006/ college, and depends upon curriculum, 61-17079/3.75 faculty, student and community needs. GERSTENBERGER, DONNA L. The American It is interesting to note that there novel, twentieth-century criticism. Denver, were proportionately more desirable Alan Swallow. 016.813/61-9356/4.75 books in the area of the social sciences, AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. Guide to a welcome change from the undue em- historical literature. New York, Macmillan. 016.9/61-7602/16.50 phasis on science in the past two years. WHITE, CARL M. The origins of the Ameri- 1961 was a year for revisions and addi- can Library School. New York, Scarecrow tional volumes, and, in leaving them out, Pr. 020.711/61-8717/5.00 it was difficult to select 1000 books which RUTGERS UNIV. GRADUATE SCHOOL OF LIBRARY were considered desirable for the under- SERVICE. Studies in library administrative graduate college library; it would be re- problems. New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers grettable if everyone agreed that all Univ. Pr. 025.082/60-7275/5.00 those I have selected are worth while. U.S. NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS Many welcome changes are forthcom- COMMISSION. A guide to archives and man- ing in central book processing, automa- uscripts in the U.S. New Haven, Conn., tion for quicker delivery from publish- Yale Univ. Pr. 025.171/61-6878/12.50 TAUBER, MAURICE F. Classification systems. ers and dealers, books with LC cards New Brunswick, N.J., Graduate School of included, and better reviewing services. Library Service, Rutgers. 025.4/60-16773/ It is hoped that the 'new Shaw' project 8.00 will be underway by next year and that KIRKWOOD, LEILA H. Charging systems. New it will provide more frequent and com- Brunswick, N.J., Graduate School of Li- prehensive listings of both basic and brary Service, Rutgers. 025.6/60-16771/ current books. Librarians should take 8.00 advantage of every service which will MARSHALL, JOHN D. An American library his-

MARCH 1 962 115 tory reader. Hamden, Conn., Shoe String and value. Chapel Hill, N.C., Univ. of Pr. 027.073/61-15684/9.00 North Carolina Pr. 121.8/60-16130/5.00 LYLE, GUY R. The administration of the col- BRINTON, CLARENCE C., ed. The fate of man. lege library. 3d ed. New York, H. W. Wil- New York, Braziller. 128.3/61-8477/7.50 son. 027.7/61-11121/7.00 HOUNTRAS, PETER T., ed. Mental hygiene. BAUER, HARRY C. Seasoned to taste. Seattle, Columbus, Ohio, Merrill. 131.308/61-9211/ Univ. of Washington Pr. 028.081/61-15462/ 8.00 4.75 ROGERS, CARL R. On becoming a person; a CAPES, MARY. Communication or conflict; therapist's view of psychotherapy. Boston, conferences. New York, Association Pr. Houghton Mifflin. 131.322/61-4718/4.75 060/60-12717/4.00 SNYDER, WILLIAM U. The psychotherapy re- CAMPBELL, LAURENCE R. How to report and lationship. New York, Macmillan. 131.322/ write the news. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 61-5231/7.50 Prentice-Hall. 070.43"l/61-6604/10.60 WATTS, ALAN W. Psychotherapy, east and SULLIVAN, HAROLD W. Trial by newspaper. west. New York, Pantheon. 131.322/61- Hyannis, Mass., Patriot Pr. 070.431/61- 10029/4.50 1524/5.00 SCHEIN, EDGAR H. Coercive persuasion. New- SHEDD, FREDERICK R. Political content of York, Norton. 131.333/61-7483/6.75 labor union periodicals. Ann Arbor, Mich., LAIRD, DONALD A. Tired feelings and how to Univ. of Michigan Pr. 070.44/60-64375/ master them. New York, McGraw-Hill. 3.50 131.336/60-16917/4.50 BYERLY, KENNETH R. Community journalism. FREUD, SIGMUND. The ego and the id. New Philadelphia, Chilton. 070.48/61-7188/6.50 York, Norton. 131.341/61-5935/3.75 WEISBERGER, BERNARD A., The American LORAND, SANDOR. Adolescents; psychoanalytic newspaperman. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago approach to problems and therapy. New Pr. 071.3/61-8647/4.50 York, Hoeber. 131.342/61-6722/8.50 HUTT, ALLEN. Newspaper design. New York, STORR, ANTHONY. The integrity of the per- Oxford Univ. Pr. 072/60-52188/8.00 sonality. New York, Atheneum. 131.342/ TAGORE, SIR RABINDRANATH. Towards univer- 61-6376/4.00 sal man. New York, Taplinger (dist.). EYSENCK, HANS J. Handbook of abnormal 081/61-2916/6.00 psychology, an experimental approach. New York, Basic Books. 132/61-7077/18.00 100 PHILOSOPHY & PSYCHOLOGY SZASZ, THOMAS S. The myth of mental ill- MORRIS, HERBERT,, ed. Freedom and respon- ness. New York, Harper, Hoeber (dist.). sibility. Stanford, Calif., Stanford Univ. 132.1/61-9714/7.50 Pr. 108.2/61-8469/11.50 CATTEL, RAYMOND B. The meaning and BOAS, GEORGE. The limits of reason. New measurement of neuroticism and anxiety. York, Harper. 111/61-5255/3.75 New York, Ronald Pr. 132.15/61-6147/ KINGSTON, FREDERICK T. French existential- 12.00 ism; a Christian critique. Toronto, Univ. SHULMAN, IRVING. The roots of fury. Garden of Toronto Pr. 111.1/61-925/3.75 City, N.Y., Doubleday. 132.6/61-5981/4.95 SHERBURNE, DONALD W. A Whiteheadian WAITE, ARTHUR E. The book of ceremonial aesthetic. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. magic. New Hyde Park, N.Y., Univ. Books Pr. 111.85/61-7081/5.00 133/61-9320/10.00 ARMSTRONG, DAVID M. Perception and the TYRRELL, GEORGE. Science and psychical phe- physical world. New York, Humanities Pr. nomena: Apparitions. New York, Univ. 121/61-19955/5.00 Books. 133.07/61-8701/7.50 HOROWITZ, IRVING L. Philosophy, science, and NOTREDAME, MICHEL DE. Nostradamus: life the sociology of knowledge. Springfield, and literature. New York, Exposition Pr. 111., Charles C. Thomas. 121/60-15850/ 133.3/61-15635/10.00 7.75 BOUISSON, MAURICE. Magic. New York, Dut- REID, LOUIS A. Ways of knowledge and ex- ton. 133.409/60-12111/5.00 perience. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. HEYWOOD, ROSALIND, Beyond the reach of 121/61-3330/6.40 sense. New York, Dutton. 133.81/61-9472/ HALL, EVERETT W. Our knowledge of fact 3.95

116 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES BERG, JAN. The changing nature of man. MOORE, ROBERT E. The human side of suc- New York, Norton. 136/61-5623/4.50 cessful communication. Englewood Cliffs, VINCENT, ELIZABETH. Human psychological N.J., Prentice-Hall. 150.13/11-13530/4.95 development. New York, Ronald Pr. 136/ PIGORS, PAUL JOHN. Case method in human 61-8416/6.50 relations. New York, McGraw-Hill. 150.13/ Hsu, FRANCIS L. K., ed. Psychological anthro- 60-15761/8.75 pology. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. 136.45/ FISKE, DONALD W. Functions of varied ex- 61-15062/10.60 perience. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. SYMONDS, PERCIVAL M. From adolescent to 150.82/61-17207/10.60 adult. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. SOVIET PSYCHOLOGY; a symposium. New 136.52/61-5468/8.75 York, Philosophical Library. 150.947/61- MCCANDLESS, BOYD R. Children and adoles- 12625/3.75 cents; behavior and development. New JENKINS, JAMES J., ed. Studies in individual York, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 136.7/ differences. New York, Appleton. 151/61- 61-9360/6.50 9248/8.50 PECK, ROBERT F., The psychology of charac- BRAIN, SIR WALTER. Some reflections on gen- ter development. New York, Wiley. ius, and other essays. Philadelphia, Lippin- 136.73/60-14715/6.50 cott. 151.1/61-1552/6.00 ANDRY, ROBERT G. Delinquency and parental SOLOMON, HERBERT, ed. Studies in item anal- pathology. Springfield, 111., Charles C. ysis and prediction. Stanford, Calif., Stan- Thomas. 136.762/60-52251/5.50 ford Univ. Pr. 151.26/60-15885/8.75 BENNETT, IVY. Delinquent and neurotic chil- HAMLYN, D. W. Sensation and perception. dren. New York, Basic Books. 136.763/60- New York, Humanities Pr. 152/61-3850/ 15815/10.00 5.00 ALLPORT, GORDON W. Pattern and growth in REISS, SAMUEL. The basis of scientific think- personality. New York, Holt, Rinehart and ing. New York, Philosophical Library. 153/ Winston. 137/61-15283/7.50 61-10612/4.75 RABIN, ALBERT I., ed. Projective techniques HARVEY, O. J. Conceptual systems and per- with children. New York, Grune and Strat- sonality organization. New York, Wiley. ton. 137.84/60-7253/11.75 153.1/61-15400/7.50 SHERMAN, MURRAY H. A Rorschach reader. MEREDITH, PATRICK. Learning, remembering New York, International Univ. Pr. 137.842/ and knowing. New York, Association Pr. 60-15823/7.50 154.4/61-14176/3.50 MILMED, BELLA K. Kant and current philo- SMITH, HENRY P. Psychology in teaching sophical issues. New York, New York Univ. reading. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- Pr. 142.3/61-8058/5.00 Hall. 154.4/61-8230/10.00 MOORE, EDWARD C. American pragmatism. FURLONG, E. J. Imagination. New York, Mac- New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 144.3/61- millan. 155/61-6512/3.25 5244/5.00 TAYLOR, JACK WILSON. HOW to create new POPKIN, RICHARD H. The history of scepti- ideas. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- cism from Erasmus to Descartes. New Hall. 155.3/61-12003/5.65 York, Humanities Pr. 149.73/61-4644/6.00 HONKAVAAKA, SYLVI. The psychology of ex- CALVIN, ALLEN D., ed. Psychology. Boston, pression. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. Allyn and Bacon. 150/61-12395/7.95 158.8/61-1493/4.50 RUSSELL, CLAIRE. Human behaviour, a new LURILA, ALEKSANDR R. The role of speech in approach. Boston, Little, Brown. 150/61- the regulation of normal and abnormal 12812/6.50 behaviour. New York, Pergamon Pr. 158.8/ BIDERMAN, ALBERT D. The manipulation of 60-9965/8.50 human behavior. New York, Wiley. 150.1/ COLEMAN, JAMES C. Personality dynamics 61-5669/7.95 and effective behavior. Chicago, Scott, ARBUCKLE, DUGALD S. Counseling. Boston, Foresman. 159/60-5331/5.50 Allyn and Bacon. 150.13/61-12064/6.00 LAZARUS, RICHARD S. Adjustment and per- DUVALL, SYLVANUE M. The art and skill of sonality. New York, McGraw-Hill. 159.3/ getting along with people. New York, 60-14614/6.95 Prentice-Hall. 150.13/61-13946/4.95 BROWN, JUDSON S. The motivation of be-

MARCH 1962 117 havior. New York, McGraw-Hill. 159.4/ vision. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. 60-14612/7.50 192/61-34415/4.50 HALL, JOHN F. Psychology of motivation. RUSSELL, BERTRAND. Basic writings. New York, Philadelphia, Lippincott. 159.4/60-10947/ Simon and Schuster. 192/61-3396/10.00 6.50 CASSIRER, ERNST. The logic of the humani- TOMAN, WALTER. An introduction to psy- ties. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. choanalytic theory of motivation. New 193/61-6311/4.50 York, Pergamon Pr. 159.4/60-14191/9.00 RIGNEY, FRANCIS J. The real Bohemia; a so- YOUNG, PAUL T. Motivation and emotions. ciological and psychological study of the New York, Wiley. 159.4/61-11495/10.75 "Beats." New York, Basic Books. 197.946/ 61-7487/5.00 DOPP, JOSEPH. Formal logic. New York, Jos. F. Wagner. 160/61-3109/5.00 200 RELIGION SIMMONS, EDWARD D. The scientific art of SCHELER, MAX F. On the eternal in man. logic. Milwaukee, Wis., Bruce. 160/61- New York, Harper. 201/61-7349/10.00 12989/4.80 WOLFSON, HARRY A. Religious philosophy. BOCHENSKI, INNOCENTIUS M. A history of Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Pr. of Har- formal logic. Notre Dame, Ind., Univ. of vard Univ. Pr. 201/61-16696/6.00 Notre Dame Pr. 160.9/58-14183/20.00 BURKE, KENNETH. The rhetoric of religion; DAY, JOHN P. Inductive probability. New studies in logology. Boston, Beacon Pr. York, Humanities Pr. 161/61-3851/8.00 201.4/61-7249/6.95 KYBURG, HENRY ELY, JR. Probability and the BENSON, PURNELL H. Religion in contempo- logic of rational belief. Middletown, Conn., rary culture. New York, Harper. 208.1/60- Wesleyan Univ. Pr. 164/61-11615/10.00 7021/8.00 BLANSHARD, BRAND. Reason and goodness. BACH, MARCUS. Strange sects and curious New York, Macmillan. 170/61-3548/7.75 cults. New York, Dodd, Mead. 209/61- MORRIS, BERTRAM. Philosophical aspects of 7167/4.50 culture. Yellow Springs, Ohio, Antioch Pr. COULSON, CHARLES A. Science, technology, 170/60-15086/7.00 and the Christian. Nashville, Tenn., Ab- SINGER, MARCUS G. Generalization in ethics. ingdon Pr. 215/61-826/2.50 New York, Knopf. 170/61-10824/6.00 BIBLE. ENGLISH. The New English Bible. DEWEY, ROBERT E. Problems of ethics; a New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 220.52/61- book of readings. New York, Macmillan. 16025/4.95 170.82/61-5086/6.00 CROWNFIELD, FREDERIC C. A historical ap- CLARKE, JOHN R. The importance of being proach to the New Testament. New York, imperfect. New York, McKay. 171.3/61- Harper. 225.6/60-15344/5.50 6982/3.50 CONNOLLY, JAMES M. The voices of France; KAUFMANN, WALTER A., ed. Philosophic clas- a survey of contemporary theology in sics. 2 v. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- France. New York, Macmillan. 230.2/61- Hall. 180.82/61-6609/18.50 6686/5.50 GOKHALE, BALKRISHNA G. Indian thought WALGRAVE, J. H. Newman the theologian. through the ages. New York, Asia Pub. New York, Sheed and Ward. 230.2/60- 181.4/61-4646/5.50 16895/8.50 PATANJALI. Yoga; union with the ultimate. TURNER, DEAN. Lonely God, lonely man. New York, Ungar. 181.45/60-53365/8.50 New York, Philosophical Library. 248.4/ BETTONI, EFREM. Duns Scotus; the basic 60-13663/3.75 principles of his philosophy. Washington, CURTIS, DONALD. Your thoughts can change D. C., Catholic Univ. of America Pr. 189.4/ your life. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- 61-3767/4.75 Hall. 248.489/61-13994/4.95 CASSIRER, ERNST. Rousseau, Kant, Goethe. ODEGARD, PETER H. Religion and politics. Hamden, Conn., Archon. 190/61-4985/3.00 New York, Oceana. 261.7/60-10209/5.00 KRONER, RICHARD. Speculation and revela- BERGER, PETER L. The precarious vision. tion in modern philosophy. Philadelphia, Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 261.8/61- Westminster Pr. 190/61-5222/6.50 12493/3.95 ARMSTRONG, DAVID M. Berkeley's theory of CAMERON, RICHARD M. Methodism and so-

118 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ciety in historical perspective. Nashville, 300 SOCIAL STUDIES Tenn., Abingdon Pr. 261.8/61-8407/5.00 MORENO, JACOB L. The sociometry reader. LEA, HENRY C. The Inquisition of the Mid- New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 300.18/ dle Ages. New York, Macmillan. 272.6/61- 59-12185/9.50 10024/10.00 ORCUTT, GUY H. Microanalysis of socio- BURLEIGH, JOHN H. S. A church history of economic systems. New York, Harper. Scotland. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 300.18/61-6279/8.00 274.1/60-50629/6.75 BRAMSON, LEON. The political context of BROWN, ROBERT M. The spirit of Protestant- sociology. Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. ism. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 284/61- Pr. 301/61-7407/4.00 8367/4.50 CHINOY, ELY. Society; an introduction to so- DUNN, DAVID. A history of the Evangelical ciology. New York, Random House. 301/ and Reformed Church. Philadelphia, 61-9671/6.50 Christian Education Pr. 285.7/61-6039/ LIPSET, SEYMOUR, ed. Sociology. Englewood 5.95 Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 301.082/61- WILSON, BRYAN R. Sects and society. Berke- 14742/7.50' ley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 289/61- PARSONS, TALCOTT, ed. Theories of society. 65000/5.75 2v. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 301.082 JAMES, EDWIN O. Prehistoric religion; a study /61-9171/25.00 in prehistoric archaeology. New York, HOMANS, GEORGE C. Social behavior; its ele- Barnes and Noble. 290/61-3103/6.50 mentary forms. New York, Harcourt, Brace KRAEMER, HENDRIK. World cultures and & World. 301.15/60-14855/7.50 world religions. Philadelphia, Westminster TANNENBAUM, ROBERT. Leadership and or- Pr. 290/60-12261/6.50 ganization. New York, McGraw-Hill. 301.15 ELIADE, MIRCEA. Myths, dreams, and mys- /60-14804/7.50 teries. New York, Harper. 291.13/60-15616/ LANTIS, MARGARET. Eskimo childhood and 5.00 interpersonal relationship. Seattle, Univ. JAMES, EDWIN O. The cult of the mother- of Washington Pr. 301.150/60-16656/4.75 goddess; an archaeological and documen- MONTGOMERY, BERNARD. The path to leader- tary study. New York, Barnes and Noble. ship. New York, Putnam. 301.155/61-9230/ 291.211/61-3056/6.00 4.50 ELIADE, MIRCAE. Images and symbols; studies MERTON, ROBERT K. Contemporary social in religious symbolism. New York, Sheed problems. New York, Harcourt, Brace & and Ward. 291.37/61-7290/3.50 World. 301.246/61-12038/6.95 MUKERJEE, RADHAKAMAL. The symbolic life WAGNER, PHILIP L. The human use of the of man. New York, W. S. Heinman. 291.37/ earth. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 60-52160/8.00 301.3/60-7092/6.00 FONTENROSE, JOSEPH E. The cult and myth THEODORSON, GEORGE A., ed. Studies in hu- of Pyrros at Delphi. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. man ecology, Evanston, 111., Row, Peter- of California Pr. 292.213/61-62773/2.50 son. 301.3082/61-2934/8.50 BECKER, ERNEST. Zen; a rational critique. PETERSEN, WILLIAM. Population. New York, New York, Norton. 294.32/61-7474/4.00 Macmillan. 301.32/61-6163/7.95 Ross, NANCY W. The world of Zen. New SAUVY, ALFRED. Fertility and survival. New York, Random House. 294.329/60-12155/ York, Criterion. 301.32/61-7192/7.50 10.00 WESTOFF, CHARLES F. Family growth in met- BINDER, LEONARD. Religion and politics in ropolitan America. Princeton, N.J., Prince- Pakistan. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali- ton Univ. Pr. 301.32/61-7403/10.00 fornia Pr. 297.095/61-7537/7.50 ZIMMERMAN, ANTHONY F. Catholic viewpoint FORREST, EARLE R. The snake dance of the on overpopulation. Garden City, N.Y., Hopi Indians. Los Angeles, Westernlore Hanover House. 301.32/61-12609/3.50 Pr. 299.7/61-15835/5.75 CAMP, WESLEY D. Marriage and the family KEELER, CLYDE E. Apples of immortality in France since the Revolution. New York, from the Cuna tree of life. New York, Ex- Bookman Associates. 301.329/61-8606/7.50 position Pr. 299.8/61-16072/3.50 MUMFORD, LEWIS. The city in history. New

MARCH 1962 119 York, Harcourt, Brace 8c World. 301.36/ York, Random House. 309.172/61-6270/ 61-7689/11.50 7.50 BARNES, RUTH. Pleasure was my business. WHETTEN, NATHAN L. Guatemala, the land New York, Lyle Stuart. 301.424/60-6348/ and the people. New Haven, Conn., Yale 4.95 Univ. Pr. 309.172/61-7189/6.00 ELLIS, ALBERT. The encyclopedia of sexual BENTON, WILLIAM. The voice of Latin Amer- behavior. 2v. New York, Hawthorne. ica. New York, Harper. 309.18/61-12227/ 301.424/61-6710/30.00 3.95 INSTITUT FRANCAIS D'OPINION PUBLIQUE. Pat- STEARN, JESS. The sixth man. Garden City, terns of sex and love. New York, Crown. N.Y., Doubleday. 310.424/61-6519/3.95 301.424/61-8947/4.00 ROUCEK, JOSEPH S. Contemporary political CAPRIO, FRANK S. Sexual behavior; psycho- ideologies. New York, Philosophical Li- legal aspects. New York, Citadel Pr. brary. 320.150/60-13657/10.00 301.4243/61-9938/6.00 BAINS, J. S., ed. Studies in political science. FREEMAN, LUCY. Emotional maturity in love New York, Asia Pub. 320.82/61-65556/8.50 and marriage. New York, Harper. 301.426 COWEN, DENIS V. The foundations of free- /61-8611/4.95 dom. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 323.409 /61-4332/7.00 JOHNSON, DEAN. Marriage counseling. Engle- wood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 301.426/ DOUGLAS, WILLIAM O. A living Bill of Rights. 61-11988/6.65 Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 323.409/60- 13518/1.50 KAUFMAN, JOSEPH J. Man and sex. New York, Simon and Schuster. 301.426/61- HANDLIN, OSCAR. The dimensions of liberty. 7012/3.95 Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Pr. of Harvard Univ. Pr. 323.440/61-16694/3.75 COLEMAN, JAMES S. The adolescent society. MARCHAM, FREDERICK G. A constitutional New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. 301.431/ history of modern England. New York, 61-14725/16.95 Harper. 324.420/60-15623/7.00 GINZBERG, ELI. Values and ideals of Ameri- CONSIDINE, ROBERT B. It's the Irish. Garden can youth. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. City, N.Y., Doubleday. 325.241/61-9494/ 301.431/61-13560/6.00 4.95 BARRON, MILTON L. The aging American. GOLDBERG, BEN ZION. The Jewish problem in New York. Thos. Y. Crowell. 301.435/61- the Soviet Union. New York, Crown. 6171/7.50 325.256/61-10311/4.95 BURGESS, ERNEST W. Aging in western so- ROBINSON, RONALD. Africa and the Victo- cieties. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. rians. New York, St. Martin's. 325.340/61- 301.435/60-5465/7.50 18110/9.00 CUMMING, ELAINE. Growing old. New York, ROSENAU, JAMES N., ed. International poli- Basic Books. 301.435/61-14585/6.75 tics and foreign policy. New York, Free Pr. KLEEMEIER, ROBERT W. Aging and leisure. of Glencoe. 327/61-14106/8.50 New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 301.435/61- BISHOP, DONALD G. The administration of 8374/5.75 British foreign relations. Syracuse, N.Y., UNESCO. The race question in modern science. Syracuse Univ. Pr. 327.42/61-8497/7.00 New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 301.451/ DALLIN, DAVID J. Soviet foreign policy after 61-2987/5.00 Stalin. Philadelphia, Lippincott. 327.47/ KRAMER, JUDITH R. Children of the gilded 60/14257/7.95 ghetto. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. FLEMING, DENNA F. The cold war and its 301.452/61-14433/5.50 origins, 1917-1960, 2v. Garden City, N.Y., MAYHEW, LEWIS, ed. Social science in gen- Doubleday. 327.47/61-9193/15.00 eral education. Dubuque, Iowa, Wm. C. GIBNEY, FRANK. The Khrushchev pattern. Brown. 307.117/60-16534/4.50 New York, Duell, Sloan, and Pearce. 327.47 INTERNATIONAL AFRICAN SEMINAR. Social /60-16410/4.95 change in modern Africa. New York, Ox- KENNAN, GEORGE F. Russia and the West un- ford Univ. Pr. 309.167/61-4358/8.25 der Lenin and Stalin. Boston, Little, LEWIS, OSCAR. The children of Sanchez; au- Brown. 327.47/61-9292/5.75 tobiography of a Mexican family. New KHRUSHCHEV, NIKITA S. Conquest without

120 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES war. New York, Simon and Schuster. 327.47 York, Random House. 330.15/61-6562/3.50 /61-12291/7.50 HAZLITT, HENRY, ed. The critics of Keynesian EAYRS, JAMES. The art of the possible: gov- economics. Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. ernment and foreign policy in Canada. 330.156/60-16502/7.00 Toronto, Univ. of Toronto Pr. 327.71/61- NURSKE, RAGNER. Equilibrium and growth in 65086/6.95 the world economy. Cambridge, Mass., DIZARD, WILSON P. The strategy of truth: Harvard Univ. Pr. 330.82/61-11007/7.50 the story of the USIS. Washington, D.C., OKUN, BERNARD, ed. Studies in economic de- Public Affairs Pr. 327.73/61-8441/4.50 velopment. New York, Holt, Rinehart and KERTESZ, STEPHEN D. American diplomacy Winston. 330.82/61/7504/7.00 in a new era. Univ. of Notre Dame Pr. SLICHTER, SUMNER, ed. Potentials of the 327.73/61-8466/10.00 American economy. Cambridge, Mass., LEDERER, WILLIAM J. A nation of sheep. Harvard Univ. Pr. 330.873/61-5577/7.50 New York, Norton. 327.73/61-5688/3.75 DURAND, LOYAL. Economic geography. New LERCHE, CHARLES O. Foreign policy of the York, Thos. Y. Crowell. 330.9/61-9094/7.25 American people. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., LATOUCHE, ROBERT. The birth of western Prentice-Hall. 327.73/61-11093/10.35 economy. New York, Barnes and Noble. STRAUSZ-HUPE, ROBERT. A forward strategy 330.902/61-1722/7.50 for America. New York, Harper. 327.73/ TWENTIETH CENTURY FUND. Europe's needs 61-6199/5.95 and resources. New York, Author. 330.94/ BURT, ALFRED L. The U.S., Great Britain 61-11607/12.00 and British North America, from the revo- STOLPER, WOLFGANG F. The structure of the lution to the establishment of peace after East German economy. Cambridge, Mass., the War of 1812. New York, Russell and Harvard Univ. Pr. 330.943/60-13295/10.00 Russell. 327.730/61-13768/12.50 BOGUE, DONALD J. Economic areas of the COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS. Social U.S. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. change in Latin America today. New York, 330.973/61-9161/27.50 Harper. 327.730/60-13715/5.00 BOLINO, AUGUST C. The development of the LIPPMANN, WALTER. The coming tests with American economy. Columbus, Ohio, Mer- Russia. Boston, Little, Brown. 327.730/61- rill. 330.973/61-9210/10.00 14950/2.50 DAVIS, LANCE E. American economic history. SMITH, ROBERT F. The United States and Homewood, 111., Irwin. 330.973/61-14486/ Cuba: business and diplomacy, 1917-1960. 10.00 New York, Bookman Associates. 327.730/ 60-53477/5.00 HARRIS, SEYMOUR E. American economic his- WHITAKER, ARTHUR P. Spain and defense of tory. New York, McGraw-Hill. 330.973/ the West. New York, Harper. 327.730/61- 60-11957/7.95 6234/6.00 LEVINSON, LEONARD L. Wall Street; a pic- WOOD, BRYCE M. The making of the good torial history. New York, Ziff-Davis. 330.973 neighbor policy. New York, Columbia /61-8465/17.50 Univ. Pr. 327.730/61-15470/7.50 ARNOLD, ROBERT K. The California economy. GRATTAN, CLINTON H. The United States Stanford, Calif., Stanford Research Insti- and the Southwest Pacific. Cambridge, tute. 330.979/61-13478/10.00 Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. 327.7309/61- STARK, HARRY. Social and economic frontiers 5583/5.00 in Latin America. Dubuque, Iowa, Wm. C. PORTER, KIRK H., comp. National party plat- Brown. 330.98/61-13707/7.25 forms, 1840-1960. 2d ed. Urbana, 111., Univ. SLICHTER, SUMNER H. The impact of collec- Illus. Pr. 329/61-65727/10.00 tive bargaining on management. Washing- GLAZER, NATHAN. The social basis of Ameri- ton, D.C., Brooking Institution. 331.1973/ can communism. New York, Harcourt, 60-53058/8.75 Brace 8c World. 329.8/61-11911/5.50 BUREAU OF NATIONAL AFFAIRS. The new wage SPENGLER, JOSEPH J. Essays in economic and hour law. Washington, D.C., Author. thought. Chicago, Rand McNally. 330.108 331.261/61-4451/9.50 /60-8991/8.50 COLE, GORDON H., ed. Labor's story, as re- KELSO, LOUIS O. The new capitalists. New ported by the American Labor Press. Glen

MARCH 1 962 121 Cove, N.Y., Community Pr. 331.880/61- financing. Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. 11835/5.50 Pr. 336.343/60-12237/5.00 CYRIAX, GEORGE. The bargainers; a survey of DENIAU, JEAN F. The common market. New modern British trade unionism. New York, York, Praeger. 337.914/60-7967/4.50 Praeger. 331.880/61-9662/5.00 BOULDING, KENNETH E. Linear programming FINE, NATHAN. Labor and farmer parties in and the theory of the firm. New York, the U.S. New York, Russell and Russell. Macmillan. 338.015/60-7415/6.00 331.880/61-12124/8.00 KENDRICK, JOHN W. Productivity trends in NEWFELD, MAURICE F. Italy: school for awak- the United States. New York, National Bu- ening countries. Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell reau of Economic Research, Princeton Univ. Pr. 331.880/60-63276 Univ. Pr. (dist.). 338.019/61-7405/12.50 PERLMAN, MARK. The machinists. Cambridge, JASNY, NAUM. Soviet industrialization, 1928- Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. 331.881/61-16695 1952. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. /7.50 338.094/61/5605/10.00 GOODMAN, BERNARD. Industrial materials in WALTON, RICHARD E. The impact of the pro- Canadian-American relations. Detroit, fessional engineering union. Cambridge, Wayne State Univ. Pr. 338.097/61-62509/ Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. 331.881/61-9132/ 7.00 5.00 LARMARTINE YATES, PAUL. Food, land and HALM, GEORGE N. Economics of money and manpower in Western Europe. New York, banking. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 332/61- St. Martin's. 338.109/60-3895/7.00 11420/10.60 SHURR, SAM H., and others. Energy in the PORTER, SYLVIA FIELD. HOW to get more for American economy, 1850-1975. Baltimore, your money. Cleveland, World Pub. Md., Johns Hopkins Pr. 338.272/60-14304/ 332.024/61-5812/3.95 12.50' PRENTICE-HALL, INC., Encyclopedic diction- BERRY, DON. A majority of scoundrels; an ary of business finance. Englewood Cliffs, informal history of the Rocky Mountain N.J., Prentice-Hall. 332.03/60-53430/19.50 Fur Company. New York, Harper. 338.372 BADGER, RALPH E. Investment principles and /61-10198/8.95 practices. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- PHILLIPS, PAUL C. The fur trade. 2v. Nor- Hall. 332.6/61-14149/11.95 man, Okla., Univ. of OklaXoma Pr. 338.372 GARDNER, ROBERT L. HOW to make money in /61-6499/16.50 the commodity market. Englewood Cliffs, BUNKINGHAM, WALTER S. Automation; its N.J., Prentice-Hall. 332.64/61-10013/4.95 impact on business and people. New York, NEIFELD, MORRIS R. Neifeld's manual on con- Harper. 338.45/60-15329/4.50 sumer credit. Easton, Pa., Mack Pub. BURN, DUNCAN L. The steel industry, 1939- 332.743/61-11873/11.00 1959. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. BROWN, ROBERT K. Real estate primer. En- 338.476/61-19668/14.50 glewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 333.33/ CHAMBERS, EDWARD J. Economic fluctuations 61-10058/7.50 and forecasting. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., FRIEDMAN, EDITH J. Real estate encyclopedia. Prentice-Hall. 338.54/61-6361/7.50 Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. AUBREY, HENRY G. Coexistence; economic 333.330/60-53429/29.50 challenge and response. Washington, D.C., VOORHIS, HORACE J. American cooperatives. National Planning Assn. 338.9/61-14482/ New York, Harper. 334.0973/61-9834/4.75 5.00 LICHTHEIM, GEORGE. Marxism and historical CONWAY, HOBART M., JR. Area development; and critical study. New York, Praeger. a guide for community leaders. 2v. At- 335.420/61-8694/8.50 lanta, Ga„ Conway Pub. 338.9/61-16945/ NOLLAU, GUNTHER. International communism 25.00 and world revolution. New York, Praeger. MCCLELLAND, DAVID C. The achieving so- 335.44/61-10515/7.50 ciety. Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 338.9 LASSER INSTITUTE. Lasser's encyclopedia of /61-65089/7.95 tax procedures. 2d ed. Englewood Cliffs, JACKSON, BARBARA. India and the West. New N.J., Prentice-Hall. 336.240/60-53529/29.50 York, Norton. 338.954/61-5713/4.50 COPELAND, MORRIS A. Trends in government JANSEN, ALVIN H. Economic issues of the

122 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 1960's. New York, McGraw-Hill. 338.973/ in the United States. Princeton, N.J., Van 60-14449/5.50 Nostrand. 342.73/61-3763/8.00 INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ASSN. Economic TURNER, HENRY A. The government and development for Latin America. New politics of California. New York, McGraw- York, St. Martin's. 338.98/61-2611/10.00 Hill. 342.794/60-12784/2.95 INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION DAVIS, SOLOMON R., ed. The government of AND DEVELOPMENT. The economic devel- the Australian States. New York, Long- opment of Venezuela. Baltimore, Md., mans. 342.940/60-41542/16.00 Johns Hopkins Pr. 338.987/61-11502/8.50 LEACH, WALTER B. Cases and text on future INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ASSN. The theory interests and estate planning. Brooklyn, of capital. New York, St. Martin's. 339.082 N.Y., Foundation Pr. 347.65/61-4287/13.00 /61-65415/12.00 WASSF.RSTROM, RICHARD A. The judicial de FITZSIMMONS, CLEO. Consumer buying for cision. Stanford, Calif., Stanford Univ. Pi. better living. New York, Wiley. 339.4207/ 347.9/61-6535/5.00 RICHARDSON, JAMES R. Modern scientific evi- 61-14808/8.50 dence, civil and criminal. Cincinnati, COHEN, FELIX S. The legal conscience. New Ohio, W. H. Anderson. 347.940/61-3789/ Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 340.1/60- 20.00 14249/12.50 PRITCHETT, CHARLES H. Congress versus the KELSEN, HANS. General theory of law and Supreme Court, 1957-1960. Minneapolis, state. New York, Russell and Russell. 340.1 Univ. of Minnesota Pr. 347.99/61-8401/ /61-12122/10.00 3.75 LEONI, BRUNO. Freedom and the law. Prince- MENDELSON, WALLACE. Justices Black and ton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 340.1/61-19681/ Frankfurter. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago 6.00 Pr. 347.997/61-5781/4.00 NEWMAN, RALPH A. Equity and law. New BANFIELD, EDWARD C., ed. Urban govern- York, Oceana. 340.1/60-16614/7.50 ment. New York, Free Pr. of Glencoe. KAPLAN, MORTON A. The political founda- 352.073/61-9159/7.50 tions of international law. New York, WILLIAMS, OLIVER P., ed. Democracy in ur- Wiley. 341/61-11520/6.95 ban America. Chicago, Rand McNally. LARSON, ARTHUR L. When nations disagree. 352.073/61-10184/5.95 Baton Rouge, La., Louisiana State Univ. AUBRY, ARTHUR S., JR. The officer in the Pr. 341/61-15490/3.95 small department. Springfield, 111., Charles EINSTEIN, ALBERT. Einstein on peace. New C. Thomas. 352.2/60-15844/10.50 York, Praeger. 341.1/60-12583/8.50 KENNEY, JOHN P. Police operations. Spring- CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL field, 111., Charles C. Thomas. 352.202/60- PEACE. Perspectives on peace. New York, 12669/7.50 Praeger. 341.104/60-52312/3.00 LOTT, DAVIS N., ed. The inaugural addresses SHARP, WALTER R. Field administration in of the American Presidents. New York, the United Nations system. New York, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 353.03/61- Praeger. 341.13/61-9020/9.50 5864/8.95 WEISSBERG, GUENTER. The international sta- SMITH, JOHN M. Powers of the President dur- tus of the United Nations. New York, ing crises. Washington, D.C., Public Af- Oceana. 341.13/60-16615/7.50 fairs Pr. 353.032/59-14964/5.00 BRENNAN, DONALD G. Arms control, disarma- TOBIN, RICHARD L. Decisions of destiny. ment and national security. New York, Cleveland, World Pub. 353.032/61-6649/ Braziller. 341.67/61-12952/6.00 5.00 COUSINS, NORMAN. In place of folly. New GRAKBNER, NORMAN A., ed. An uncertain York, Harper. 341.672/60-5290/3.00 tradition; American secretaries of state in LEE, LUKE T. Consular law and practice. the twentieth century. New York, McGraw- New York, Praeger. 341.8/61-5435/17.50 Hill. 353.1/61-8654/6.95 DRAGNICH, ALEX N. Major European govern- HODGETTS, JOHN E. Canadian public admin- ment. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. 342.4/ istration. New York, St. Martin's. 354.71/ 61-11608/9.35 A61-282/6.25 HATHORN, GUY B. Government and politics HAMMOND, PAUL Y., Organizing for defense.

MARCH 1962 123 Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. Pr. BLOCH, HERBERT A. Crime in America. New 355.097/61-7398/8.50 York, Philosophical Library. 364.973/60- HUNTER, MEL. Strategic Air Command. Gar- 13642/6.00 den City, N.Y., Doubleday. 358.4/61-7655/ CREESEY, DONALD R., ed. The prison; studies 4.95 in institutional organization and change. WHITEHOUSE, ARTHUR G. Subs and sub- New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. mariners. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 365.082/61-9860/6.00 359.4/61-8909/4.95 HEARSEY, JOHN E. N. The Tower; eight hun- SOKOL, ANTHONY E. Seapower in the nuclear dred and eighty years of English history. age. Washington, D.C., Public Affairs Pr. New York, International Publications Serv- 359.43/59-15850/6.00 ice. 365.9421/60-52276/6.25 GREENBLATT, MILTON, ed. Mental patients in DANIEL, HAWTHORNE. The Hartford of Hart- transition. Springfield, 111., Charles C. ford. New York, Random House. 368.106/ Thomas. 362.2/61-9030/11.75 60-12116/7.50 GRINKER, ROY R. Psychiatric social work. New York, Basic Books. 362.2/61-6401/ BRAMELD, THEODORE B. Education for the 6.50 emerging age: newer ends and stronger means. New York, Harper. 370.1/60-15207/ LINN, LOUIS, ed. Frontiers in general hos- pital psychiatry. New York, International 5.00 Univ. Pr. 362.2/61-10147/10.00 FISHER, JAMES A. The humanities in general CARROLL, THOMAS J. Blindness. Boston, Lit- education. Dubuque, Iowa, Wm. C. Brown. tle, Brown. 362.41/61-12808/6.50 370.1/60-16535/4.50 SCOTT, SIR HAROLD. The concise encyclopedia GRUBER, FREDERICK C. Foundations for a of crime and criminals. New York, Haw- philosophy of education. New York, Thos. thorn. 364.103/61-11624/15.00 Y. Crowell. 370.1/61-7951/5.75 ROUCEK, JOSEPH S. Sociology of crime. New ULICH, ROBERT. Philosophy of education. York, Philosophical Library. 364.108/60- New York, American Book. 370.1/61-2970/ 15960/10.00 5.00 ALLSOP, KENNETH. The bootleggers and their era. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 364.133 BALLER, WARREN R. The psychology of hu- /61-9475/4.95 man growth and development. New York, STARR, JOHN. The purveyor; the shocking Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 370.15/61- story of today's illicit liquor empire. New 9359/5.50 York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 364.133 GRUBER, FREDERICK C. Anthropology and ed- /61-6416/4.95 ucation. Philadelphia, Univ. of Pennsyl- O'KEEFE, JOSEPH J. The men who robbed vania Pr. 370.193/61-15200/2.75 Brink's. New York, Random House. 364.15 ULICH, ROBERT. The education of nations. /61-10873/3.95 Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. DIECKMANN, EDWARD A., SR. Practical homi- 370.9/61-6354/6.75 cide investigation. Springfield, 111., Charles STAHL, WALTER, ed. Education for democ- C. Thomas. 364.152/60-10373/4.00 racy in West Germany. New York, Praeger. MACDONALD, JOHN M. The murderer and 370.943/61-14811/4.50 his victim. Springfield, 111., Charles C. CREMIN, LAWRENCE A. The transformation Thomas. 364.152/60-52377/10.50 of the school; progressivism in American TOCH, HANS, ed. Legal and criminal psychol- ogy. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Win- education, 1876-1957. New York, Knopf. ston. 364.34/61-12216/6.00 370.973/61-11000/5.50 EATON, JOSEPH W. Measuring delinquency. MAYER, FREDERICK. In defense of American Pittsburgh, Univ. of Pittsburgh Pr. 364.360 education. Washington, D.C., Public Af- /61-9399/7.00 fairs Pr. 370.973/61-8437/3.25 SHULMAN, HARRY M. Juvenile delinquency MAYER, MARTIN P. The schools. New York, in American society. New York, Harper. Harper. 370.973/61-7592/4.95 364.360/61-8555/8.00 SHIPLEY, JOSEPH T. The mentally disturbed NYQUIST, OLA. Juvenile justice. New York, teacher. Philadelphia, Chilton. 371.1/61- St. Martin's. 364.52/61-1231/12.00 13303/5.00

124 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES THOMAS, LAWRENCE G. Perspective on teach- BLACKWELL, THOMAS E. College law; a guide ing. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. for administrators. Washington, D.C., 371.1/61-11560/9.00 American Council on Education. 378.102/ GOLDMAN, LEO. Using tests in counseling. 61-9404/6.00 New York, Appleton. 371.26/61-9406/7.00 MILLETT, FRED B. Professor; problems and NIETZ, JOHN A. Old textbooks. Pittsburgh, rewards in college teaching. New York, Univ. of Pittsburgh Pr. 371.320/60-13851/ Macmillan. 378.12/61-5386/3.50 6.00 HOFSTADTER, RICHARD. Academic freedom in CASSIRER, HENRY R. Television teaching to- the age of the college. New York, Colum- day. New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. bia Univ. Pr. 378.121/61-2329/1.75 371.3358/61-1364/4.00 PETERSEN, RENEE. University adult educa- JOHNSON, WALTER F. Pupil personnel and tion. New York, Harper. 378.13/60-5704/ guidance services. New York, McGraw- 5.50 Hill. 371.422/61-8655/6.50 BERELSON, BERNARD. Graduate education in WHITE, MARY A. The school psychologist. the United States. New York, McGraw- New York, Harper. 371.422/61-12903/6.00 Hill. 378.155/60-12759/6.95 WILLIAMSON, EDMUND G. Student personnel EMERY, WALTER B. Broadcasting and gov- services in colleges and universities. New ernment; responsibilities and regulations. York, McGraw-Hill. 371.422/60-11967/7.50 East Lansing, Mich., Michigan State Univ. TERRY, HARRY. Mechanical-electrical equip- Pr. 384.542/60-16416/7.50 ment handbook for school buildings. New WILLOUGHBY, WILLIAM R. The St. Lawrence York, Wiley. 371.62/60-14718/9.50' Waterway. Madison, Wis., Univ. of Wis- HAVEL, RICHARD C. Administration of health, consin Pr. 386.2097/61-5901/6.00 physical education, and recreation for RICHMOND, SAMUEL B. Regulation and com- schools. New York, Ronald Pr. 371.73/61- petition in air transportation. New York, 8417/5.50 Columbia Univ. Pr. 387.717/61-10981/7.50 WILLGOOSE, CARL E. Evaluation in health NAFT, STEPHEN. International conversion education and physical education. New tables. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce. York, McGraw-Hill. 371.73/60-53358/7.50 389/61-10391/7.50 DAVIS, ELWOOD C. Toward better teaching EDEN, MARY. The philosophy of the bed. in physical education. Englewood Cliffs, New York, Putnam. 392/61-11172/5.95 N.J., Prentice-Hall. 371.730/60-15750/9.00 EPTON, NINA C. Love and the English. Cleve- PALMER, CHARLES E. Speech and hearing land, World Pub. 392.609/61-12016/6.00 problems. Springfield, 111., Charles C. WASHBURNE, CHANDLER. Primitive drinking; Thomas. 371.927/61-10379/5.50 a study of the uses and functions of alcohol FLIEGLER, LOUIS A. Curriculum planning for in preliterate societies. New York, College the gifted. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- and Univ. Pr. 394.1/61-10129/6.00 Hall. 371.95/61-12329/9.00 JOBES, GERTRUDE. Dictionary of mythology, FREEHILL, MAURICE F. Gifted children. New folklore and symbols. 2v. New York, Scare- York, Macmillan. 371.95/61-5090/5.50 crow Pr. 398.03/61-860/40.00 SEXTON, PATRICIA C. Education and income: COURLANDER, HAROLD. The drum and the inequalities of opportunity in our public hoe; life and lore of the Haitian people. school. New York, Viking. 371.96/61-10446 Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. /6.00 398.097/60-8760/10.00 PELTASON, JACK W. Fifty-eight lonely men, EBFRHART, PERRY. Treasure tales of the southern federal judges and school de- Rockies. Denver, Colo., Sage Books. 398.2 segration. New York, Harcourt, Brace 8c /61-14373/5.00 World. 371.974/61-12350/4.95 IDEWU, OLAWALE. Nigerian folk tales. New MCFEE, JUNE K. Preparation for art. San Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers Univ. Pr. 398.2/ Francisco, Wadsworth Pub. 372.5/61-5915/ 61-10268/4.00 6.95 LESSA, WILLIAM A. Tales from Ulithi Atoll; GOULD, JOSEPH E. The Chautauqua move- a comparative study in Oceanic folklore. ment. New York, New York Univ. Pr. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. 374.8/61-8734/4.50 398.2/61-63844/8.50

MARCH 1 962 125 NORBECK, EDWARD. Religion in primitive so- LEEDS, HERBERT D. Computer programming ciety. New York, Harper. 398.3/61-8561/ fundamentals. New York, McGraw-Hill. 5.50 510.783/60-16637/8.50 MEYERFOFF, ALBERT J., ed. Digital applica- 400 LANGUAGES tions of magnetic devices. New York, BROOKS, NELSON H. Language and language Wiley. 510.7834/60-14246/14.00 learning. New York, Harcourt, Brace 8c HOGBEN, LANCELOT T. Mathematics in the World. 407/61-4833/3.75 making. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. HUEBENER, THEODORE. Why Johnny should 510.9/61-5067/9.95 learn foreign languages. Philadelphia, DRESHER, MELVIN. Games of strategy; theory Chilton. 407/61-5362/4.00 and applications. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., MERSAND, JOSEPH E. Attitudes toward Eng- Prentice-Hall. 512.8/61-10789/9.00 lish teaching. Philadelphia, Chilton. 420.7/ HOFFMAN, KENNETH. Linear algebra. Engle- 61-8618/4.00 wood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 512.897/ KURATH, HANS. The pronunciation of Eng- 61-8470/10.00 lish in the Atlantic States. Ann Arbor, HILLMAN, ABRAHAM P. Functional trigo- Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. 427.973/60- nometry. Boston, Allyn and Bacon. 514/ 5671/15.00 61-14512/5.50 ADAMS, LOVINCY J. Analytic geometry and 500 SCIENCE calculus. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. NAGEL, ERNEST. The structure of science. 516/61-5077/9.00 New York, Harcourt, Brace & World. 501/ FISHER, ROBERT C. Calculus and analytic 60-15504/10.00 geometry. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- WHITEHEAD, ALFRED NORTH. Alfred North Hall. 517/61-8696/12.65 Whitehead; his reflections on man and RAINVILLE, EARL D. Unified calculus and nature. New York, Harper. 501/61-9700/ analytic geometry. New York, Macmillan. 3.95 517/61-5159/8.50 PETERSON, MARTIN S. Scientific thinking and NEHARI, ZEEV. Introduction to complex anal- scientific writing. New York, Reinhold. ysis. Boston, Allyn and Bacon. 517.8/61- 501.49/61-11009/6.95 11974/7.50 IVER, DAVID F. Dictionary of business and scientific terms. Houston, Tex., Gulf Pub. LIEBERMAN, GERALD J. Tables of the hyper- 503/61-13963/10.00 geometric probability distribution. Stan- SNOW, SIR CHARLES P. Science and govern- ford, Calif., Stanford Univ. Pr. 517.880/61- ment. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. 6879/15.00 Pr. 506.9/61-7396/2.50 PARRATT, LYMAN G. Probability and experi- HAUN, ROBERT R. Science in general educa- mental errors in science. New York, Wiley. tion. Dubuque, Iowa, Wm. C. Brown. 507/ 519.1/61-15406/7.25 61-8124/4.50 REZA, FAZLOLLAH M. An introduction to in- JONES, EVERETT L. Readings in science and formation theory. New York, McGraw- engineering. New York, Holt, Rinehart, Hill. 519.7/60-12777/13.50 and Winston. 508.2/61-8096/4.50 BROWNLEE, KENNETH A. Statistical theory and DE SANTILLANA, GIORGIO. The origins of sci- methodology in science and engineering. entific thought. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago New York, Wiley. 519.9/60-11719/16.75 Pr. 509.3/61-17073/5.95 WEISS, LIONEL. Statistical decision theory. AMERICAN ASSN. FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF New York, McGraw-Hill. 519.9/61-11132/ SCIENCE. Sciences in Communist China. 7.50 Washington, D.C., Author. 509.51/61-14965 ROUSSEAU, PIERRE. Man's conquest of the /14.00 stars. New York, Norton. 520.9/61-13045/ FIFER, STANLEY. Analogue computation. 4v. 5.00 New York, McGraw-Hill. 510.782/58-11170 KUIPER, GERARD P. Telescopes. Chicago, /39.50 Univ. of Chicago Pr. 522.2/60-14356/8.50 TRUITT, THOMAS D. Basics of analog com- ALLER, LAWRENCE H. The abundance of the puters. New York, Rider. 510.782/60-10469 elements. New York, Interscience. 522.67/ /12.50 61-13870/10.00

126 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES EDGEWORTH, KENNETH E. The earth, the STREETER, VICTOR L. Handbook of fluid dy- planets, and the stars. New York, Mac- namics. New York, McGraw-Hill. 532.082/ millan. 523/61-65937/5.75 60-13774/24.00 MCLAUGHLIN, DEAN B. Introduction to as- BERGERON, LOUIS JEAN. Water hammer in tronomy. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 523/ hydraulics and wave surges in electricity. 61-16200/7.50 New York, Wiley. 532.5/61-11515/15.00 LILLER, WILLIAM. Space astrophysics. New REICHERT, ROBERT J. Binoculars and scopes. York, McGraw-Hill. 523.01/61-8657/10.00 Philadelphia, Chilton. 535.8/61-5626/2.95 FIELDER, GILBERT. Structure of the moon's CLARK, GEORGE L., ed. Encyclopedia of spec- surface. New York, Pergamon Pr. 523.34/ troscopy. New York, Reinhold. 535.840/ 60-53606/7.50 60-53028/25.00 MUNK, WALTER H. The rotation of the earth. HARTNETT, J. P., ed. Recent advances in heat New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. 525.35/ and mass transfer. New York, McGraw- 61-1094/13.50 Hill. 536.2/61-14685/9.75 SMIRNOFF, MICHAEL V. Measurements for en- MENDELSSOHN, KURT. Cryophysics. New York, gineering. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- Interscience. 536.56/60-9660/4.50 Hall. 526.9/61-8169/9.75 LANDSBERG, P. T. Thermodynamics with EISBERG, ROBERT M. Fundamentals of mod- quantum statistical illustrations. New ern physics. New York, Wiley. 530.1/61- York, Interscience. 536.7/61-9062/14.50 6770/10.50 GILLIE, ANGELO C. Electrical principles of SCHLEGEL, RICHARD. Time and the physical electronics. New York, McGraw-Hill. 537/ world. East Lansing, Mich., Michigan State 60-11956/10.00 Univ. Pr. 530.1/61-13702/7.50 ANGUS, ROBERT B. Electrical engineering CAPEK, MILIO. The philosophical impact of fundamentals. Reading, Mass., Addison- contemporary physics. Princeton, N.J., Van Wesley. 537.2/61-6127/8.00 Nostrand. 530.101/61-16145/7.50 CLARK, D. E. Electronic, radio, and micro- INFELD, LEOPOLD. Motion and relativity. New wave physics. New York, Macmillan. 537.5 York, Pergamon Pr. 530.11/60-14864/7.50 /61-16203/25.00 HEINE, VOLKER. Group theory in quantum GREINER, RICHARD A. Semiconductor devices mechanics. New York, Pergamon Pr. and applications. New York, McGraw-Hill. 530.12/59-10523/15.00 537.622/60-16726/12.50 BROXTON, JAMES W. Mechanics. New York, HEIKES, ROBERT R. Thermoelectricity: sci- Appleton. 531/60-6069/8.50 ence and engineering. New York, Inter- LONG, ROBERT R. Mechanics of solids and science. 537.65/61-9650/18.50 fluids. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- BILLINGTON, DOUGLAS S. Radiation damage Hall. 531/61-7297/9.00 in solids. Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. PFEIFFER, PAUL E. Linear systems analysis. Pr. 539/60-16414/12.50 New York, McGraw-Hill. 531.017/60-11959 COPELAND, PAUL L. Elements of modern /12.50 physics. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 539/ 61-5476/8.50 BICKLEY, WILLIAM G. An introduction to the CONDENSED CHEMICAL DICTIONARY. 6th ed. theory of vibrating systems. New York, Ox- (completely rev., enl.) New York, Rein- ford Univ. Pr. 531.383/61-2159/4.80 hold. 540.3/61-14790/17.50 CRAFTON, PAUL A. Shock and vibration in BARROW, GORDON M. Physical chemistry. New linear systems. New York, Harper. 531.383 York, McGraw-Hill. 541/60-53030/8.95 /61-5465/10.00 SHEEHAN, WILLIAM F. Physical chemistry. KENYON, RICHARD A. Principles of fluid Boston, Allyn and Bacon. 541/61-11124/ mechanics. New York, Ronald Pr. 532/60- 9.95 14857/7.00 GRADDON, D. P. An introduction to co-ordi- OLSON, REUBEN M. Essentials of engineering nation chemistry. New York, Pergamon fluid mechanics. Scranton, Pa., Interna- Pr. 541.34/60-16783/4.00 tional Textbook. 532/61-10621/10.50 REILLEY, C. N., ed. Advances in analytical PAO, RICHARD H. Fluid mechanics. New York, chemistry. New York, Interscience. 543.082/ Wiley. 532/61-11499/7.50 60-13119/12.00

MARCH 1 962 127 ARROWHEAD RESEARCH CONFERENCE, Lake Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 553.8/61- Arrowhead, Calif. Rare earth research. 4196/8.95 New York, Macmillan. 546.407/61-13307/ ANDREWS, HENRY N., JR. Studies in paleo- 9.75 botany. New York, Wiley. 561/61-6768/ SYMPOSIUM ON THE RARE EARTHS AND RE- 11.75 LATED ELEMENTS. The rare earths. New WEDEL, WALDO R. Prehistoric man on the York, Wiley. 546.408/61-15413/14.75 Great Plains. Norman, Okla., Univ. of YOUNG, ROLAND S. Cobalt. New York, Rein- Oklahoma Pr. 571/61-9002/5.95 hold. 546.623/60-53328/15.00 BONDI, HANS-GEORG, and others, trans, by FIESER, LOUIS F. Advanced organic chemistry. Ann E. Keep. Art of the stone age: forty New York, Reinhold. 547/61-14594/14.00 thousand years of rock art. New York, GERRARD, WILLIAM. The organic chemistry Crown. 571.7/61-1701/5.95 of boron. New York, Academic Pr. 547/ DIAMOND, STANLEY. Culture in history. New 60-16984/9.00 York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 572.082/59- BEVINGTON, J. C. Radical polymerization. 13776/15.00 New York, Academic Pr. 547.139/61-15057 MEAD, MARGARET. The golden age of Ameri- /6.00 can anthropology. New York, Braziller. BERTIN, LEON. Larousse encyclopedia of the 572.9701/60-11668/10.00 earth. New York, Prometheus Pr. 550.82/ KLUCKHOHN, FLORENCE. Variations in value 61-14331/15.00 orientations. Evanston, 111., Row, Peterson. WILSON, JOHN T. I. G. Y., the year of the 572.979/61-10702/7.75 new moons. New York, Knopf. 551.062/ MONTAGU, ASHLEY. A handbook of anthro- 61-14195/5.95 pometry. Springfield, 111., Charles C. SUTTON, SIR OLIVER G., ed. The world around Thomas. 573.6/60-14752/5.00 us. New York, Macmillan. 551.082/61- FISHER, JAMES M., ed. Nature: earth plants, 2048/3.95 animals. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. BASCOM, WILLARD. A hole in the bottom of 574/61-32/9.95 the sea. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. GRAY, PETER. The encyclopedia of the bio- 551.11/61-7638/4.95 logical sciences. New York, Reinhold. AKADEMIIA NAUK SSSR. Investigation of the 574.03/61-12385/20.00 mechanism of earthquakes. New York, HENDERSON, ISABESSA F. A dictionary of sci- American Geophysical Union. 551.22/60- entific terms. 7th ed. Princeton, N.J., Van 9252/7.50 Nostrand. 574.03/61-383/12.50 TREWARTHA, GLENN THOMAS. Fundamentals SOCIETY FOR EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY. Models of physical geography. New York, Mc- and analogues in biology. New York, Aca- Graw-Hill. 551.4/61-8661/6.95 demic Pr. 574.072/61-19733/9.50 SUSLOV, SERGEI P. Physical geography of LAPAGE, GEOFFREY. Art and the scientist. Asiatic Russia. San Francisco, W. H. Free- Baltimore, Md., Williams 8c Wilkins. man. 551.409/61-5762/15.00 574.084/61-19995/8.75 CARRINGTON, RICHARD. A biography of the LIFE. The wonders of life on earth. New sea. New York, Basic Books. 551.46/60- York, Time, Inc. 574.084/60-15639/12.50 13284/5.00 LONG, CYRIL N. Biochemists' handbook. INTERNATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHIC CONGRESS. Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 574.192/ Oceanography. New York, American Assn. 61-19118/25.00 for the Advancement of Science. 551.460/ WALSH, EDWARD. An introduction to bio- 61-10503/14.75 chemistry. New York, Macmillan. 574.192/ PICCARD, JACQUES. Seven miles down. New 61-65501/7.50 York, Putnam. 551.460/60-16679/5.00 SAGER, RUTH. Cell heredity. New York, CRITCHFIELD, HOWARD J. General climatol- Wiley. 574.87/61-11498/7.50 ogy. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. RAMSAY, JAMES A., ed. The cell and the or- 551.59/60-5131/10.60 ganism. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. KUMMEL, BERNHARD. 1919. History of the 574.870/61-19120/9.50 earth. San Francisco, W. H. Freeman. SANDERSON, IVAN T. The continent we live 551.7/61-6783/8.75 on. New York, Random House. 574.97/61- SINKANKAS, JOHN. Gemstones and minerals. 8958/20.00

128 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES FLORKIN, MARCIS, ed. Aspects of the origin PORTMANN, ADOLF. Animals as social beings. of life. New York, Pergamon Pr. 577/60- New York, Viking. 591.51/61-11425/6.00 13823/5.00 NOBLE, ELMER RAY. Parasitology. Phila- CLARK, GEORGE L., ed. The encyclopedia of delphia, Lea & Febiger. 591.55/61-9370/ microscopy. New York, Reinhold. 578.03/ 11.00 61-9698/25.00 EIBL-EIBESFELDT, IRENAUS. Galapagos. Gar- SALISBURY, SIR EDWARD J. Weeds and aliens. den City, N.Y., Doubleday. 591.986/60- New York, Macmillan. 581.6/61-19299/ 13731/3.95 6.00 WARMKE, GERMAINE. Caribbean seashells. THOMAS, JOHN H. Flora of the Santa Cruz Narbeth, Pa., Livingston. 594.097/61- Mountains of California. Stanford, Calif., 13006/8.95 Stanford Univ. Pr. 581.949/61-6534/8.50 HARRIS, WILLIAM V. Termites. New York, JAEGER, PAUL. The wonderful life of flowers. Longmans. 595.736/61-19756/8.00 New York, Dutton. 582.13/61-65179/15.00 LINDAUER, MARTIN. Communication among NICHOLSON, BARBARA E. The Oxford book social bees. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard of wild flowers. New York, Oxford Univ. Univ. Pr. 595.799/61-5579/4.75 Pr. 582.13/61-551/7.50 CONFERENCE ON VERTEBRATE SPECIATION. LEMMON, ROBERT S. Wildflowers of North Vertebrate speciation. Austin, Tex., Univ. America. New York, Hanover House. of Texas Pr. 596/60-14474/8.50 582.130/61-5862/9.95 HERALD, EARL S. Living fishes of the world. WILLS, MARY M. Roadside flowers of Texas. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 597/61- Austin, Tex., Univ. of Texas Pr. 582.130/ 6384/12.50 59-12861/5.75 JONES, JOHN W. The salmon. New York, HARRISON, SYDNEY G. Garden shrubs and Harper. 597.5/61-12226/4.00 trees. New York, St. Martin's. 582.15/60- COCHRAN, DORIS M. Living amphibians of 16880/4.95 the world. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday. BRAUN, EMMA LUCY. The woody plants of 597.6/61-9491/12.50 Ohio. Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State Univ. BERGER, ANDREW J. Bird study. New York, Pr. 582.150/61-15701/7.50 Wiley. 598.2/61-11513/9.00 VINES, ROBERT A. Trees, shrubs and woody HALL, HENRY M. A gathering of shore birds. vines of the Southwest. Austin, Tex., Univ. New York, Devin-Adair. "598.2/60-10711/ of Texas Pr. 582.150/59-8129/25.00 10.00 PRESTON, RICHARD J. North American trees. BOND, JAMES. Birds of the West Indies. Bos- Ames, Iowa, Iowa State Univ. Pr. 582.160/ ton, Houghton Mifflin. 598.297/60-5224/ 60.16604/3.75 6.00 KUPPER, WALTER. Cacti. New York, Nelson. LIGON, JAMES S. New Mexico birds and where 583.47/61-2425/10.00 to find them. Albuquerque, N.M., Univ. METCALF, CHARLES R. Anatomy of the mono- cotyledons. v.l. New York, Oxford Univ. of New Mexico Pr. 598.297/61-10050/8.50 Pr. 584/60-52155/13.45 LOWERY, GEORGE H., JR. Louisiana birds. SCHULTES, RICHARD E. Native orchids of Baton Rouge, La., Louisiana State Univ. Trinidad and Tobago. New York, Perga- Pr. 598.297/60-11653/7.50 mon Pr. 584.150/59-6850/15.00 TINBERGEN, NIKOLA S. The herring gull's WHERRY, EDGAR T. The fern guide. Garden world. New York, Basic Books. 598.33/61- City, N.Y., Doubleday. 587.310/61-6527/ 5466/5.00 3.95 JACKSON, HARTLEY H. Mammals of Wiscon- KLEIBER, MAX. The Fire of life; an introduc- sin. Madison, Wis., Univ. Wisconsin Pr. tion to animal energetics. New York, 599.097/61-5186/12.00 Wiley. 591.191/61-15416/11.50 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY. Wild ani- ANDREWARTHA, HERBERT G. Introduction to mals of North America. Washington, D.C., the animal populations. Chicago, Univ. of National Geographic Society. 599.097/60- Chicago Pr. 591.5/61-14538/5.00 15019/7.75 KRUTCH, JOSEPH WOOD, comp. The world of WIRTSCHAFTER, ZOLTON T. The genesis of the animals. New York, Simon and Schuster. mouse skeleton. Springfield, 111., Charles C. 591.508/61-12860/10.00 Thomas. 599.323/60-14763/11.75

MARCH 1962 129 LILLY, JOHN C. Man and dolphin. Garden HUDDLESTON, O. LEONARD. Therapeutic exer- City, N.Y., Doubleday. 599.53/61-9528/ cises; kinesiotherapy. Philadelphia, F. A. 4.95 Davis. 615.824/61-11693/9.50 ADAMSON, JOY. Living free. New York, Har- STEWART, CORBET P., ed. Toxicology: mech- court, Brace & World. 599.744/61-15810/ anisms and analytical methods. New York, 5.95 Academic Pr. 615.9/60-8055/22.00 SANDERSON, IVAN T. Abominable snowman. SIMEONS, ALBERT T. W. Man's presumptuous Philadelphia, Chilton. 599.8/61-10907/7.50 brain. New York, Dutton. 616.08/61-6005/ 5.75 600 APPLIED SCIENCE BERGLER, EDMUND. Curable and incurable neurotics. New York, Liveright Pub. MARCSON, SIMON. The scientist in American 616.85/61-10464/6.95 industry. Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. GREGORY, IAN. Psychiatry, biological and so- Pr., Harper (dist.). 606.9/60-53531/3.50 cial. Philadelphia, Saunders. 616.89/61- AMERICAN HERITAGE, eds. Men of science and 14309/10.00 invention. New York, American Heritage. ARMSTRONG, HARRY G. Aerospace medicine. 609/60-13853/3.79 Baltimore, Md., Williams & Wilkins. HUBER, JACK T. Report writing in psychol- 616.98/60-10173/18.00 ogy and psychiatry. New York, Harper. SELLS, SAUL B. Human factors in jet and 610.149/61-10682/3.50 space travel. New York, Ronald Pr. 616.98/ BOLLO, LOUISE E. Introduction to medicine 61-6151/12.00 and medical terminology. Philadelphia, HUDDLESTON, JOHN V. Introduction to en- Saunders. 610.3/61-6727/5.00 gineering mechanics. Reading, Mass., Ad- BECKER, HOWARD S. Boys in white; student dison-Wesley. 620.1/61-10969/9.75 culture in medical school. Chicago, Univ. CAMM, FREDERICK, ed. Newnes engineer's of Chicago Pr. 610.7/61-16622/10.00 reference book (rev.). Hollywood-by-the- MCCORMICK, JAMES B. Atlas and demon- Sea, Fla., Transatlantic Arts. 620.2/61- stration technique of the central nervous 3865/25.00 system. Springfield, 111., Charles C. Thomas. HOLSTEIN, EDWIN J. Liberal education and 611.808/61-11662/11.25 engineering. New York, Teachers College, HAUSMAN, LOUIS. Illustrations of the nervous Columbia Univ. 620.7/60-53195/2.75 system. Springfield, 111., Charles C. Thomas. SCHENCK. HILBERT. Theories of engineering 611.8084/60-16749/9.50 experimentation. New York, McGraw-Hill. SYMPOSIUM OF RADIOACTIVITY IN MAN. Spring- 620.72/60-16732/7.00 field, 111., Charles C. Thomas. 612.014/ RYDER, FREDERICK L. Creative engineering 60-53279/16.50 analysis. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- MACFARLANE, ROBERT G., ed. Functions of Hall. 620.76/61-9723/9.00 the blood. New York, Academic Pr. KALLEN, HOWARD P., ed. Handbook of in- 612.110/60-8051/16.80 strumentation and controls. New York, AMERICAN ASSN. FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF McGraw-Hill. 620.78/60-6886/15.00 SCIENCE. Aging—some social and biological DEL VECCHIO, ALFRED. Dictionary of mechan- aspects. Washington, D.C., Author. 612.67/ ical engineering. New York, Philosophical 60-16754/8.50 Library. 621.03/60-13664/6.00 KORENCHEVSKY, V. Physiological and patho- FOECKE, HAROLD A. Introduction to electri- logical aging. New York, Hafner. 612.67/ cal engineering science. Englewood Cliffs, 61-19295/22.50 N.J., Prentice-Hall. 621.3/61-13435/15.65 HUBERT, CHARLES HARNEY, MALACHI L. The narcotic officer's I. Operational electricity. notebook. Springfield, 111., Charles C. New York, Wiley. 621.3/61-11517/8.50 Thomas. 614.35/61-10375/8.50 LYNCH, WILLIAM A. Introductory system WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION. Air pollution. analysis. New York, McGraw-Hill. 621.3/ New York, Columbia Univ. Pr. 614.710/ 60-16730/7.50 61-2240/10.00 BALABANIAN, NORMAN. Fundamentals of cir- EYSENCK, HANS J. Experiments in person- cuit theory. Boston, Allyn and Bacon. ality. 2v. New York, Humanities Pr. 621.319/61-13555/9.50 615.78/61-2085/16.00 COWAN, JOHN D., JR. Introduction to circuit

130 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES analysis. Columbus, Ohio, Merrill. 621.319/ New York, Coward-McCann. 623.44/61- 61-7512/10.60 10978/12.50 JASIK, H. Antenna engineering handbook. O'CONNOR, JACK. Complete book of rifles and New York, McGraw-Hill. 621.38/59-14455/ shotguns. New York, Harper. 623.442/61- 22.00 6454/6.50 GVOZDOVER, SAMSON D. Theory of microwave LLOYD, CHRISTOPHER. Ships and seamen. valves. New York, Pergamon Pr. 621.38/ Cleveland, World Pub. 623.808/61-65949/ 60-10832/12.50 12.50 MANDL, MATTHEW. Industrial control elec- SAWYER, THOMAS S. Specification and engi- tronics. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- neering writer's manual. Chicago, Nelson- Hall. 621.38/61-11816/10.65 Hall Co. 624.014/61-240/6.95 TILLMAN, JOHN R. An introduction to the KURTZ, MAX. Structural engineering for pro- theory and practice of transistors. New fessional engineers' examinations. New York, Wiley. 621.38/61-4018/8.00 York, McGraw-Hill. 624.076/60-53034/9.00 HANCOCK, JOHN C. An introduction to the CONDIT, CARL W. American building art. principles of communication theory. New New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 624.109/61- York, McGraw-Hill. 621.380/60-16727/9.50 8309/15.00 ANDERSEN, PAUL. Introduction to structural CROWHURST, NORMAN H. High fidelity sound engineering. New York, Pitman. 621.381/ mechanics. New York, Ronald Pr. 624.17/ 60-13150/9.50 61-2762/10.00 BILLIG, KURT. Structural concrete. New York, ELECTRONICS. Design manual for transistor St. Martin's. 624.183/61-1208/17.50 circuits. New York, McGraw-Hill. 621.381/ FABER, OSCAR. Reinforced concrete (new ed.). 61-10714/9.50 Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 624.183/ HURLEY, RICHARD B. Transistor logic circuits. 61-2266/14.75 New York, Wiley. 621.381/61-11518/10.00 LALONDE, WILLIAM S., JR., ed. Concrete en- REICH, HERBERT J. Functional circuits and gineering handbook. New York, McGraw- oscillators. Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. Hill. 624.183/59-13934/25.00 621.381/61-19117/12.50 LIBBY, JAMES R. Prestressed concrete, design SOISSON, HAROLD E. Electronic measuring and construction. New York, Ronald Pr. instruments. New York, McGraw-Hill. 624.183/61-6327/12.50 621.381/60-16639/7.50 ASTM. Symposium on air pollution control. LINVILL, JOHN G. Transistors and active cir- Philadelphia, American Society for Test- cuits. New York, McGraw-Hill. 621.3815/ ing Materials. 628.53/60-15013/1.50 60-15759/14.50 EVEN, ARTHUR D. Engineering data process- BUDDEN, K. G. Radio waves in the iono- ing system design. Princeton, N.J., Nos- sphere. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. trand. 629/60-10287/6.50 621.384/61-16040/18.50 TRUITT, ROBERT W. Fundamentals of aero- KOHL, JEROME. Radioisotope applications dynamic heating. New York, Ronald Pr. engineering. Princeton, N.J., Van Nos- 629.132/60-16539/10.00 trand. 621.483/61-4563/16.50 WOODS, LESLIE C. The theory of subsonic DOSSAT, ROY J. Principles of refrigeration. plane flow. New York, Cambridge Univ. New York, Wiley. 621.56/61-15396/11.50 Pr. 629.132/61-4283/22.50 COLLINS, ALBERT, ed. Engineering measure- BUCKLEY, JOHN R. Cars of the connoisseur, ment and inspection. Hollywood-by-the- New York, Macmillan. 629.20/61-4016/6.00 Sea, Fla., Transatlantic Arts. 621.75/61- CHRISTY, JOHN. Hot rods; how to build and 3594/7.50 race them. Indianapolis, Ind., Bobbs-Mer- LENT, DEANE. Analysis and design of mech- rill. 629.228/60.13595/4.95 anisms. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- HOUGH, RICHARD A. A history of the world's Hall. 621.81/61-7271/9.35 sports cars. New York, Harper. 629.228/61- SHIGLEY, JOSEPH EDWARD. Theory of ma- 14837/12.50 chines. New York, McGraw-Hill. 621.81/ SMITH, PHILIP H. The design and tuning of 61-11153/11.50 competition engines. Cambridge, Mass., Bentley. 629.25/61-19012/8.50 CHAPEL, CHARLES E. Guns of the Old West.

MARCH 1 962 131 N

SEIFERT, HOWARD S., ed. Ballistic missile and NELSON, NINA. Shepheard's Hotel. New York, space vehicle systems. New York, Wiley. Macmillan. 647.946/61-1812/4.50 629.4/61-11496/12.00 EELLS, RICHARD. Conceptual foundations of CLASON, W. E., comp. and arr. Elsevier's dic- business. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 650/61- tionary of automation, computers, control, 12900/9.35 and measuring in six languages. Princeton, BIRN, SERGE A., Measurement and control of N.J., Van Nostrand. 629.803/60-53482/ office costs. New York, McGraw-Hill. 651/ 27.50 61-8650/7.50 ALEXANDER, MARTIN. Introduction to soil CHAPIN, NED. Programming computers for microbiology. New York, Wiley. 631.46/61- business applications. New York, McGraw- 11512/9.50 Hill. 651.26/61-11125/7.50 WAGNER, RAY. American combat planes. New MARTIN, EDLEY W., JR. Electronic data proc- York, Hanover House. 632.746/60-14913/ essing. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 651.26/61- 9.95 8832/10.60 KLINGMAN, GLENN C. Weed control. New NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL CONFERENCE BOARD. York, Wiley. 632.954/61-11521/8.50 Administration of electronic data process- GARDEN CLUB OF AMERICA. Our garden heri- ing. New York, Author. 651.26/61-974/ tage. New York, Dodd, Mead. 635.9082/61- 25^00 11720/12.50 HLAVSA, OLDRICH. A book of type and design. PADILLA, VICTORIA. Southern California gar- New York, Tudor Pub. 655.24/61-890/ dens. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California 12.50 Pr. 635.909/61-7525/10.00 CHENEY, ORION H. Economic survey of the CARR, RACHEL E. Japanese floral art. Prince- book industry. New York, R. R. Bowker. ton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 635.966/61- 655.473/60-16775/9.75 19221/12.50 MALCHMAN, LAWRENCE H. Foundations of SALISBURY, GLENN W. Physiology of reproduc- accounting for managerial control. Phila- tion and artificial insemination of cattle. delphia, Chilton. 657/61-6669/8.00 San Francisco, Freeman. 636.208/60-10519/ SHILLINGLAW, GORDON. Cost accounting. 12.50 Homewood, 111., Irwin. 657.4/61-12896/ ROBOTTI, PETER J. Much depends on dinner. 10.65 New York, Fountainhead Pub. 641.01/61- ALBERS, HENRY H. Organized executive ac- 13472/8.50 tion. New York, Wiley. 658/61-6767/8.50 MONTAGNE, PROSPER. Larousse gastronomique; BRADY, ROBERT A. Organization, automation the encyclopedia of food, wine and cook- and society. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali- ery. New York, Crown. 641.03/61-15788/ fornia Pr. 658/61-7535/8.50 20.00 COOPER, JOSEPH D. The art of decision-mak- GALDSTON, IAGO. Human nutrition. New ing. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 658/ York, International Univ. Pr. 641.1/61- 61-9498/4.95 422/6.00 ELDOT, LEON D. Getting and holding your RODALE, JEROME I. The complete book of executive position. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., food and nutrition. Emmaus, Pa., Rodale Prentice-Hall. 658/60-13045/4.95 Books. 641.1/61-4360/6.95 HAYNES, WILLIAM W. Management. Engle- BOLITHO, HECTOR. The glorious oyster. New wood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 658/61- York, Horizon Press. 641.39/61-4446/4.50 12977/10.60 CHASE, EMILY. The pleasures of cooking with HEPNER, HARRY W. Perceptive management wine. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. and supervision. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 641.638/60-13892/4.95 Prentice-Hall. 658/61-8025/10.00 TIFFANY AND CO. Tiffany table settings. New HOUSTON, GEORGE C. Manager development, York, Thos. Y. Crowell. 642.7/60-15249/ principles and perspectives. Homewood, 15.00 111., Irwin. 658/61-12902/9.35 TATE, MILDRED B. Family clothing. New LEARNED, EDMUND P. Problems of general York, Wiley. 646.3/61-15414/8.75 management. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 658/ HENSLEY, MILLIE B. The art of make-up, 61-14494/13.35 skin and hair care. New York, Hearthside MORRIS, WILLIAM T. Engineering economy. Pr. 646.73/60-14518/2.95 Homewood, 111., Irwin. 658/60-12922/10.65

132 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES NEWMAN, WILLIAM H. The process of man- BAKER, STEPHEN. Visual persuasion. New agement. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- York, McGraw-Hill. 659.101/61-12033/ Hall. 658/61-12001/10.60 13.50 SEIMER, STANLEY J. Cases in industrial man- AMERINE, MAYNARD A. The technology of agement. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 658/61- wine making. Westport, Conn., Avi Pub. 14495/6.60 663.2/60-51946/19.00 THAYER, LEE O. Administrative communi- KINGERY, W. D. Introduction to ceramics. cation. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 658/61- New York, Wiley. 666/60-53448/15.00 6986/8.00 DOYLE, LAWRENCE E. Manufacturing proc- GILMER, BEVERLY. Industrial psychology. New esses and materials for engineers. Engle- York, McGraw-Hill. 658.01/60-12770/7.50 wood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 671/61- LEMKE, BERNHARD C., ed. Administrative 13503/15.00 control and executive action. Columbus, AMERICAN FABRICS MAGAZINE eds. Encyclo- Ohio, Merrill. 658.082/61-8075/10.60 pedia of textiles. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., CHILDS, JOHN F. Long-term financing. Engle- Prentice-Hall. 677.03/59-8054/39.50 wood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 658.14/ BURRIS, JOSEPH W. and others. Plastics as 61-10322/15.00 building construction materials. Belmont, SHAPIRO, LEOPOLD J. Company giving. Chi- Mass., Structural Plastics Associates. 691.92/ cago, Survey Press. 658.17/60-51503/5.75 60-15719/18.50 FLIPPO, EDWIN B. Principles of personnel MILLER, PERRIN C. Continental cans, etc. management. New York, McGraw-Hill. New York, Kanrom. 696.182/60-52183/2.95 658.3/60-16668/7.95 WOLF, WILLIAM B. The management of per- sonnel. San Francisco, Wadsworth Pub. 658.3/61-11642/10.00 700. FINE ARTS FLEISHMAN, EDWIN A., ed. Studies in person- nel and industrial psychology. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Pr. 658.308/61-15060/9.35 CHAIRI, JOSEPH. Realism and imagination. AMERICAN MANAGEMENT ASSN. AMA ency- New York, Macmillan. 701/61-804/6.00 clopedia of supervisory training. New HERBERT, EUGENIA W. The artist and social York, Author. 658.312/61-8594/22.50 reform, France and Belgium, 1885-1898. MCGEHEE, WILLIAM. Training in business New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 701/ and industry. New York, Wiley. 658.312/ 61-6313/5.00 61-15403/7.50 WEISS, PAUL. Nine basic arts. Carbondale, CRONSTEDT, VAL. Engineering management 111., Southern Illinois Univ. Pr. 701/61- and administration. New York, McGraw- 7164/5.00 Hill. 658.5/60-53126/8.50 WEISS, PAUL. The world of art. Carbondale, BUSKIRK, RICHARD H. Principles of market- 111., Southern Illinois Univ. Pr. 701.17/61- ing. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Win- 5168/4.50 ston. 658.8/61-9814/7.75 ROTH, CECIL. Jewish art. New York, Mc- NEWMAN, BILL N. Handbook of successful Graw-Hill. 704.948/61-9776/14.95 sales meetings. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., KEILER, MANFRED L. The art of teaching art. Prentice-Hall. 658.81/60-9274/4.95 Lincoln, Neb., Univ. of Nebraska Pr. 707/ HOLMES, PARKER M. Marketing research. Cincinnati, South-Western Pub. 658.85/60- 61-5497/6.25 8321/7.50 HENNING, EDWARD B. Paths of abstract art. New York, Abrams. 707.4/60-16857/5.00 COLE, ROBERT H. Consumer and commercial SCHMITT, HEINRICH. The art of the faker; credit management. Homewood, 111., Ir- three thousand years of deception. Boston, win. 658.883/60-11309/10.00 Little, Brown. 708.054/61-5317/7.50 GAW, WALTER A. Advertising. San Francisco. SAMUEL H. KRESS FOUNDATION. Art treasures Wadsworth Pub. 659.1/61-5914/10.60 for America. Greenwich, Conn., New York ZACHER, ROBERT V. Advertising techniques and management. Homewood, 111., Irwin. Graphic Soc. 708.13/61-65124/12.50 659.1/61-14487/10.00 OAKESHOTT, WALTER F. Classical inspiration

MARCH 1962 133 in medieval art. New York, Praeger. 709.02 New York, W. S. Heinman. 725.71/61-15/ /60-13899/20.00 27.50 BRION, MARCEL. Romantic art. New York, FITCHEN, JOHN. The construction of Gothic McGraw-Hill. 709.035/60-12761/25.00 cathedrals. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. READ, SIR HERBERT E. Art now (rev. ed.). 726.6/61-1182/10.10 New York, Pitman. 709.04/61-19203/8.50 ALSWANG, BETTY. The personal house. New PARROT, ANDRE. Sumer; the dawn of art. New York, Whitney Library of Design. 728.097 York, Golden Pr. 709.35/61-6746/20.00 /61-16681/13.50 WEGNER, MAX. Greek masterworks of art. SITWELL, SACHEVERELL. Great houses of New York, Braziller. 709.38/61-8475/12.50 Europe. New York, Putnam. 728.809/61- GLOAG, JOHN E. Victorian comfort. New 9708/22.50 York, Macmillan. 709.42/61-3916/10.00 BOECK, URS. Sculpture on buildings. New SULLIVAN, MICHAEL. An introduction to Chi- York, Universe Books. 729.5/61-14471/ nese art. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali- 12.00 fornia Pr. 709.51/61-3831/8.00 GIEDION-WELCKER, CAROLA. Contemporary HUBBARD, ROBERT H., ed. An anthology of sculpture, an evolution in volume and Canadian art. New York, Oxford Univ. space (rev. and enl.). New York, Witten- Pr. 709.71/60-52066/7.50 born. 730.904/60-15444/16.50 MENDELOWITZ, DANIEL M. A history of ELSEN, ALBERT E. Rodin's gates of hell. Min- American art. New York, Holt, Rinehart, neapolis, Univ. of Minnesota Pr. 730.944/ and Winston. 709.73/60-10762/12.50 60-14640/7.50 FUTTERMAN, ROBERT A. The future of our LION, DAISY. Chinese art. New York, Uni- cities. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. verse Books. 730.951/60-12415/35.00 711.409/61-8884/4.95 Masterpieces of Japanese sculpture. Rutland, SIMONDS, JOHN O. Landscape architecture. Vt., Tuttle. 730.952/61-12426/27.50 New York. Dodge. 712/60-53454/12.75 ARCHIPENKO, ALEXANDER. Archipenko: fifty PONTI, GIO. In praise of architecture. New creative years, 1908-1958. New York, York, Dodge. 720/59-11727/6.95 Tekhne Pub. 730.973/60-3406/20.00 JORDAN, ROBERT F. The world of great archi- CALLERY, MARY. Sculpture. New York, Wit- tecture. New York, Viking. 720.94/61-8828 tenborn (dist.). 730.973/60-15443/10.00 /22.50 NEW YORK GRAPHIC SOCIETY. Classical ACKERMAN, JAMES S. The architecture of Greece. Greenwich, Conn., Author. 733.3/ Michelangelo. New York, Viking. 720.945/ 60-10477/6.95 61-7886/12.50 LIEBERS, ARTHUR. The guide to North Amer- SWEENEY, JAMES J. Antoni Gaudi. New York, ican coins. New York, Arco. 737.497/61- Praeger. 720.946/60-15244/15.00 10021/3.00 KULTERMANN, UDO. New Japanese architec- KIM, CHAE-WON. The ceramic art of Korea. ture. New York, Praeger. 720.952/60-15601 New York, Yoseloff. 738.309/61-19038/ /13.75 15.00 CETTO, MAX L. Modern architecture in Mex- KOYAMA, FUJIO. TWO thousand years of ico. New York, Praeger. 720.972/61-7600/ oriental ceramics. New York, Abrams. 12.50 738.309/60-10344/25.00 BURCHARD, JOHN E. The architecture of THAPAR, DAYA RAM. Icons in bronze. New America. Boston, Little, Brown. 720.973/ York, Taplinger (dist.). 739.512/61-3436/ 61-5736/15.00 9.25 BUSCH, HARALD. Renaissance Europe. New WOLCHONOK, LOUIS. The art of pictorial York, Macmillan. 724/61-1974/10.00 composition. New York, Harper. 741.4/60- GATZ, KONRAD. Color in architecture. New 15202/7.50 York, Reinhold. 724.9/61-8451/16.95 STEINBERG, SAUL. The labyrinth. New York, JONES, CRANSTON. Architecture today and to- Harper. 741.5973/61-6186/7.50 morrow. New York, McGraw-Hill. 724.9/ SUTNAR, LADISLAV. Visual design in action. 60-14222/17.50 New York, Hastings House. 741.6/61-9378 KOCH, ALEXANDER. Restaurants, cafes, bars. /17.50

134 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES GIACHINO, JOSEPH W. Engineering-technical FREEDBERG, SYDNEY J. Painting of the high drafting and graphics. Chicago, American Renaissance in Rome and Florence. 2v. Technical Society. 744.4/61-11297/9.75 Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. Pr. BELLIS, HERBERT F. Architectural drafting. 759.5/61-7390/30.00 New York, McGraw-Hill. 744.424/60-15281 PICASSO, PABLO, ed. by David Douglas Dun- /5.50 can. Picasso's Picassos, New York, Harper. HOPSTOCK, CARSTEN H. Norwegian design. 759.6/61-10205/30.00 New York, Taplinger. 745.449/59-20547/ KANDINSKY, WASSILY. Watercolors, drawings, 15.00 writings. New York, Abrams. 759.7/61- SEVENTEEN. The seventeen book of decorat- 13854/17.50 ing. New York, McKay. 747/60-9568/4.95 CHIARELLE, RENZO. European painting in the STEUBEN GLASS, INC. A selection of engraved crystals. New York, Author. 748.291/60- 15th century. New York, Viking. 759.94/ 16963/15.00 61-13162/25.00 HARRIS, JOHN F. Regency furniture designs HOFFMANN, WERNER. The earthly paradise; from contemporary source books, 1803- art in the 19th century. New York, Bra- 1826. Chicago, Quadrangle Books. 749.22/ ziller. 759.94/61-16859/25.00 61-17156/10.00 CAHILL, JAMES. Chinese painting. New York, WATSON, F. J. B., Louis XVI furniture. New Skira, World Pub. (dist.). 759.951/60- York, Philosophical Library. 749.24/61- 15594/27.50 4064/12.00 GRAY, BASIL. Persian painting. New York, LEA, ZILLA R., ed. The ornamented chair. Skira, World Pub. (dist.). 759.955/61- Rutland, Vt., Tuttle. 749.3/60-8158/10.00 10169/22.50 ITTEN, JOHANNES. The art of color. New ETTINGHAUSEN, E. and IPSIROGLU, N. Turkey: York, Reinhold. 752/61-11190/30.00 ancient miniatures. Greenwich, Conn. New BIHALJI-MERIN, OTO. Modern primitives; York Graphic Soc. 759.956/61-19744/18.00 masters of naive painting. New York, LONGSTREET, STEPHEN. A treasury of the Abrams. 759/61-5784/15.00 world's great prints. New York, Simon and MARCUCCI, LUISA. Medieval painting. New York, Viking. 759.02/60-52147/25.00 Schuster. 769/61-12867/15.00 PONENTE, NELLO. Modern painting, con- BUCHHEIM, LOTHAR G. The graphic art of temporary trends. Cleveland, World Pub. German expressionism. New York, Uni- 759.06/60-15614/27.50 verse Books. 769.943/60-8171/25.00 ROSENBLUM, ROBERT. Cubism and twentieth- ROBINSON, BASIL W. Kuniyoshi. New York, century art. New York, Abrams. 759.06/ British Information Serv. 769.952/61-3695 61-7155/25.00 /5.15 ROBERTSON, BRYAN. Jackson Pollock. New KAPPEL, PHILIP. Jamaica gallery; a docu- York, Abrams. 759.13/60-8401/18.50 mentary of the island of Jamaica, West AINSWORTH, EDWARD M. Painters of the des- Indies. Boston, Little, Brown. 769.973/61- ert. Palm Desert, Calif., Desert Magazine. 759.19/61-3322/11.00 5755/7.50 GINDERTAEL, ROGER VAN. Hans Hartung. ELISOFON, ELIOT. Color photography. New New York, Universe Books. 759.3/61-14584 York, Viking. 778.6/61-17410/10.00 /12.00 DE MARE, ERIC SAMUEL. Photography and KOPF, MAXIM. Maxim Kopf. New York, architecture. New York, Praeger. 778.94/ Praeger. 759.371/60-16694/12.00 61-7817/13.50 MATISSE, HENRI. Matisse. Greenwich, Conn., RHODE, ROBERT B. Press photography. New New York Graphic Society. 759.4/61-4063/ York, Macmillan. 778.990/61-5158/4.50 65.00 MENCKEN, HENRY L. H. L. Mencken on RICHARDSON, JOHN P. G. Braque. Greenwich, Conn., New York Graphic Society. 759.4/ music. New York, Knopf. 780.8/61-13949/ 61-8631/12.50 4.50 ROTHLISBERGER, MARCEL. Claude Lorrain; SHAW, GEORGE B. HOW to become a musical the paintings. 2v. New Haven, Conn.. critic. New York, Hill and Wang. 780.942 Yale Univ. Pr. 759.4/61-6319/40.00 /61-8460/5.00

MARCH 1 962 135 SCHICKEL, RICHARD. The world of Carnegie CONRAD, BARNABY. Encyclopedia of bullfight- Hall. New York, Messner. 780.974/60-13802 ing. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 791.820/ /8.50 60-5222/10.00 GILBERT, PIA S. Music for the modern dance. DORCY, JEAN. The mime. New York, R. Spel- Dubuque, Iowa, Wm. C. Brown. 781.55/60- ler. 792/60-9604/3.95 53257/4.50 BOWMAN, WALTER P. Theatre language. New FEATHER, LEONARD. Encyclopedia of jazz. York, Theatre Arts Books. 792.03/60-10495 Rev. ed. New York, Horizon Press. 781.570/ /6.95 55-10774/15.00 GOODMAN, RANDOLPH G. Drama on stage. GREEN, ELIZABETH. The modern conductor. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 792.082/61-8586/4.50 781.63/61-10791/9.00 TYNAN, KENNETH. Curtains. New York, Athe- BLOOMFIELD, ARTHUR J. The San Francisco neum. 792.090/61-6377/7.95 Opera. New York, Appleton. 782.07/61- CHAFETZ, HENRY. Play the devil. New York, 16610/6.00 Clarkson N. Potter. 795/60-14429/7.50 SMITH, HAROLD S. I want to quit winners. MARTIN, GEORGE W. The opera companion. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. New York, Dodd, Mead. 782.08/61-6802/ 795.097/61-14697/4.95 12.50 SALAK, JOHN S., ed. Dictionary of American SULLIVAN, SIR ARTHUR and GILBERT, WILLIAM sports. New York, Philosophical Library. Martyn Green's treasury of Gilbert and 796.03/60-13658/10.00 Sullivan. New York, Simon and Schuster. PINHOLSTER, GARLAND F. Illustrated basket- 782.12/M61-1017/15.00 ball coaching techniques. Englewood Cliffs, GREEN, STANLEY. The world of musical N.J., Prentice-Hall. 796.323/60-12180/4.95 comedy. New York, Ziff-Davis. 782.810/60- SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. Sports Illustrated book 10522/10.00 of tennis. Philadelphia, Lippincott. 796.342 GENTRY, LINNELL. A history and encyclopedia /60-14258/2.95 of country, western, and gospel music. FINSTERWALD, Dow. Fundamentals of golf. Nashville, Tenn., Author. 784.0973/61- New York, Ronald Pr. 796.352/61-11067/ 1461/4.95 5.00

HUGILL, STAN, comp. Shanties from the seven GROGEN, CORINNE A. Golf fundamentals for seas. New York, Dutton. 784.4/M61-208/ students and teachers. Palo Alto, Calif., 12.00 N-P Publications. 796.352/61-681/2.50 MIDDLECOFF, CARY. Master guide to golf. NILES, JOHN JACOB. The ballad book. Bos- Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. ton, Houghton Mifflin. 784.497/M60-1002 796.352/60-13050/10.00 /10.00 MASIN, HERMAN L., ed. Treasury of sports FREESTONE, JOHN, comp. Enrico Caruso. Min- humor. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- neapolis, Denison. 789.913/61-4264/7.50 Hall. 796.408/60-16566/4.95 GOODMAN, EZRA. The fifty-year decline and ECKER, TOM. Championship: track and field. fall of Hollywood. New York, Simon and Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. Schuster. 791.430/61-5833/5.95 796.42/61-11943/5.65 SETTEL, IRVING. A pictorial history of radio. DURANT, JOHN. Highlights of the Olympics. New York, Citadel Pr. 791.440/60-53132/ New York, Hastings House. 796.48/60- 6.95 14616/3.95

ZETTL, HERBERT. Television production hand- MACFARLAN, ALLAN A. Living like Indians. book. San Francisco, Wadsworth Pub. New York, Association Pr. 796.5/61-7105/ 791.450/61-13698/9.00 6.95 Fox, CHARLES P. A pictorial history of per- DAY, DICK. The complete book of karting. forming horses. Seattle, Superior Pub. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall. 791.8/60-13936/10.95 796.7/61-8967/4.95 ROBERTSON, MARY S. Rodeo; standard guide BRABHAM, JACK. Motor racing book. Lon- to the cowboy sport. Berkeley, Calif., don, F. Muller, Sportshelf, New Rochelle, Howell-North. 791.8/61-11998/5.95 N.Y. (dist.). 796.72/60-52294/4.25

136 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES STONE, WILLIAM S. A guide to American imagination in writing. Arlington, Va., sports car racing. New York, Hanover Varsity Pr. 808.3/60-12964/4.50 House. 796.72/60-12029/4.50 BRIGANCE, QUILLIAM N. Speech: its tech- STANLEY, LOUIS T. The grand prix year. niques and disciplines in a free society. New York, A. S. Barnes. 796.72/61-13915/ 2d ed. New York, Appleton. 808.5/61-5128 8.50 /5.50 SKI LIFE. Ski pointers by the experts. New MCFARLAND, KENNETH. Eloquence in public York, Harper. 796.93/61-10233/4.95 speaking. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. Sports illustrated book Hall. 808.5/61-10060/4.95 of diving. Philadelphia, Lippincott. 797.23 ANDERSON, VIRGIL A. Training the speaking /61-14065/2.95 voice. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 808.52 SELLICK, BUD. Skydiving; the art and science /61-6294/5.00 of sport parachuting. Englewood Cliffs, FREELY, AUSTIN J. Argumentation and de- N.J., Prentice-Hall. 797.5/61-14726/5.95 bate; rational decision making. San Fran- SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. Book of horseback rid- cisco, Wadsworth Pub. 808.53/61-9055/6.50 ing. Philadelphia, Lippincott. 798.2/60- GRIMES, WILLIAM H. Interpretation: writer, 7844/2.75 reader, audience. San Francisco, Wads- WOODFORD, MICHAEL. A manual of falconry. worth Pub. 808.54/61-9890/5.00 Newton Centre, Mass., Branford. 799.252/ ESAR, EVAN. Humorous English; a guide to 60-15729/6.50 comic usage, jocular speech and writing and witty grammar. New York, Horizon Pr. 808.7/61-8507/4.95 800 LITERATURE ARBUTHNOT, MAY HILL. The Arbuthnot an- MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD. Poetry and experi- thology of children's literature. Chicago, ence. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 801/60- Scott, Foresman. 808.8/61-5727/8.75 12742/4.00 SCHWARTZ, DAVID. Hanukkah latkes and MCKEAN, KEITH F. The moral measure of lit- Rothschild's millions. New York, Twayne. erature. Denver, Alan Swallow. 801.9/61- 808.87/61-13050/4.00 10920/3.00 JACKSON, WILLIAM. The literature of the ORSINI, GIAN N. G. Benedetto Croce, phi- Middle Ages. New York, Columbia Univ. losopher of art and literary critic. Urbana, Pr. 809.02/60-13153/6.00 111., Univ. of Illinois Pr. 801.9/61-6101/ LOTH, DAVID G. The erotic in literature. 10.00 New York, Messner. 809.93/61-5390/5.95 DEAN, HOWARD H. Effective communication. BROWN, CLARENCE A., ed. American litera- 2d ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- ture; a college survey. New York, McGraw- Hall. 808/61-6612/5.00 Hill. 810.82/60-13760/7.95 TIMES, LONDON. LITERARY SUPPLEMENT. The BODE, CARL JULIUS. The great experiment in writer's dilemma. New York, Oxford Univ. American literature; six lectures. New Pr. 808/61-3421/2.50 York, Praeger. 810.9/61-14096/3.50 MATHIEU, ARON M. The creative writer. Cin- HOLMES, JOHN. The fortune teller. New York, cinnati, Ohio, Writer's Digest. 808.06/61- Harper. 811.52/61-9704/3.50 9387/6.95 LUCY, SEAN. T. S. Eliot and the idea of tradi- SMITH, HARRY A. How to write without tion. New York, Barnes 8c Noble. 811.52/ knowing nothing. Boston, Little, Brown. 61-602/5.00 808.06/61-12813/3.75 MILLER, JORDAN Y., ed. American dramatic LESIKAR, RAYMOND V. Report writing for literature. New York, McGraw-Hill. business. Homewood, 111., Irwin. 808.066/ 812.508/60-8841/6.75 61-14483/9.25 MARTIN, TERENCE. The instructed vision; MENZEL, DONALD H. Writing a technical Scottish common sense philosophy and the paper. New York, McGraw-Hill. 808.066/ origins of American fiction. Bloomington, 61-7581/3.25 Ind., Indiana Univ. Pr. 813.209/61-11552/ ZETLER, ROBERT L. Successful communica- 4.50 tion in science and industry. New York, HOFFMAN, FREDERICK J., ed. William Faulk- McGraw-Hill. 808.066/60-53359/7.95 ner. East Lansing, Mich., Michigan State HIGGINS, FRANK V. The art of using your Univ. Pr. 813.52/60-11481/5.95

MARCH 1 962 137 KILLINGER, JOHN. Hemingway and the dead man and writer. Brattleboro, Vt., Stephen gods. Lexington, Ky., Univ. of Kentucky Greene Pr. 824.91/54-593rev/12.00 Pr. 813.52/60-15379/4.00 HOFMANNSTHAL, HUGO H. Poems and verse LIGHT, JAMES F. Nathanael West. Evanston, plays. New York, Pantheon. 832.8/61-3654/ 111., Northwestern Univ. Pr. 813.52/61- 6.00 8746/4.75 BROMBERT, VICTOR H. The intellectual hero. WRIGHT, AUSTIN M. The American short Philadelphia, Lippincott. 843.910/61-8673 story in the twenties. Chicago, Univ. of /5.00 Chicago Pr. 813.520/61-14536/7.50 COLETTE, SIDONIE. Break of day. New York, CLEMENS, SAMUEL L. The complete humor- Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. 843.912/61- ous sketches and tales of Mark Twain. 17502/3.75 New York, Hanover House. 817.4/61-6503 MAURIAC, FRANCOIS. Second thoughts. Cleve- /4.95 land, World Pub. 844.912/61-5803/3.75 ROGERS, WILL. The Will Rogers book. In- CAMUS, ALBERT. Resistance, rebellion and dianapolis, Ind., Bobbs-Merrill. 817.52/ death. New York, Knopf. 844.914/60-16703 61-13153/3.95 /4.00 PRESCOTT, WILLIAM H. Literary memoranda. MAURIAC, FRANCOIS. Memoires interieurs. 2v. Norman, Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma New York, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. Pr. 818.3/61-9004/12.50 848.912/61-6990/4.75 MILLER, HENRY. Tropic of Cancer. New JAMESON, FREDRIC. Sartre: the origins of a York, Grove Pr. 818.52/61-15597/7.50 style. New Haven, Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. GANN, ERNEST K. Fate is the hunter. New 848.914/61-14999/5.00 York, Simon and Schuster. 818.54/61-5831/ WEINBERG, BERNARD. A history of literary 6.00 criticism in the Italian renaissance. 2v. FAIRCHILD, HOXIE N. The noble savage; a Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 850.903/60- study in romantic naturalism. New York, 5470/20.00 Russell and Russell. 820.93/61-12130/8.50 HERRICK, MARVIN T. Italian comedy in the WALSH, WILLIAM. The use of imagination. Renaissance. Urbana, 111., Univ. of Illinois New York, Barnes and Noble. 820.93/61- Pr. 852.309/60-11659/4.50 1856/5.00 AESOPUS. Aesop without morals. New York, CAMPBELL, LILY BESS, ed. Mirrour for magis- Yoseloff. 888/61-6922/5.95 trates. New York, Barnes and Noble. 821.3/ TAGORE, SIR RABINDRANATH. A Tagore reader. 61-329/12.50 New York, Macmillan. 891.448/61-7056/ 6.50 KROEBER, KARL. Romantic narrative art. Madison, Wis., Univ. of Wisconsin Pr. LEGGE, JAMES, ed. and tr. The Chinese clas- 821.709/61-5190/5.75 sics; with a translation, critical and exegeti- cal notes, prolegomena and copious in- GRAVES, ROBERT. Collected poems. Garden dexes. 5v. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. City, N.Y., Doubleday. 821/61-9194/5.95 895.1082/61-4012/80.00 MELCHIORI, GIORGIO. The whole mystery of CH'EN, SHOU-YI. Chinese literature. New York, art. New York, Macmillan. 821.912/61-1540 Ronald Pr. 895.109/61-9426/8.75 /8.00 HSIA, CHIH-TSING. A history of modern Chi- WILLIAMS, ARNOLD. The drama of medieval nese fiction. New Haven, Conn., Yale England. East Lansing, Mich., Michigan Univ. Pr. 895.130/60-13273/7.50 State Univ. Pr. 822.109/60-16415/5.00 CHAPMAN, GEORGE. The comedies. 2v. New 900 HISTORY

York, Russell and Russell. 822.3/61-13787/ BROSSE, JACQUES. 100,000 years of daily life. 17.50 New York, Golden Pr. 901.9/61-14411/ CHAPMAN, GEORGE. The tragedies. 2v. New 15.00 York, Russell and Russell. 822.3/61-13786/ CALDER, RITCHIE. After the seventh day; the 17.50 world man created. New York, Simon and FIRBANK, RONALD. The complete Ronald Schuster. 901.9/60-12593/6.95 Firbank. New York, New Directions. MAREK, KURT W. Yestermorrow; notes on 823.912/61-16205/7.75 man's progress. New York, Knopf. 901.9/ RIEWALD, JACOBUS G. Sir Max Beerbohm, 61-13218/3.50

138 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES PARMELEE, MAURICE F. The history of mod- SUSINI, EUGENE. Austria. New York, Oxford ern culture. New York, Philosophical Li- Univ. Pr. 914.36/61-65166/12.50 brary. 901.9/60-13655/10.00 TANNENBAUM, EDWARD R. The new France. TABORI, PAUL. The art of folly. Philadelphia, Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 914.4/61- Chilton. 901.9/61-5565/4.50 8076/5.00 LIFE. The epic of man. Englewood Cliffs, FRISON-ROCHE, ROGER. Mont Blanc and the N.J., Prentice-Hall. 901.91/61-17388/13.50 seven valleys. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. PIGGOTT, STUART, ed. The dawn of civiliza- 914.449/61-4042/9.50 tion. New York, McGraw-Hill. 901.91/61- BEMELMANS, LUDWIG. Italian holiday. Bos- 11703/28.50 ton, Houghton Mifflin. 914.5/61-6675/5.00 HELTON, TINSLEY, ed. The Renaissance; a HURLIMANN, MARTIN. Florence. New York, reconsideration of the theories and inter- Viking. 914.551/61-12697/6.95 pretations of the age. Madison, Wis., Univ. LUCAS-DUBRETON, JEAN. Daily life in Flor- of Wisconsin Pr. 901.93/61-5903/4.00 ence in the time of the Medici. New York, DUQUESNE UNIV. ALUMNI ASSN. Modern Macmillan. 914.551/61 -8190/4.50 myths and popular fancies. Pittsburgh, Du- KELLER, HARALD. Umbria, the heart of Italy. quesne Univ. Pr. 901.94/60-53384/2.95 New York, Viking. 914.565/61-10423/12.50 STARR, CHESTER G. and others. History of the world. 2v. Chicago, Rand McNally. 909/ NETTIS, JOSEPH. A Spanish summer. New 60-5001/15.00 York, Ziff-Davis. 914.6/60-10525/12.50 BLINOFF, MARTHE, BLOOM, SOLOMON F. Europe and America. ed. Life and thought in old Russia. Philadelphia, Univ. of Penn- New York, Harper. 909.7/61-8982/10.72 sylvania Pr. 914.7/61-11415/5.95 DEAN, VERA M. Builders of emerging nations. CHERNIAVSKY, MICHAEL. Tsar and people; New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. studies in Russian myths. New Haven, 909.82/61-8086/5.00 Conn., Yale Univ. Pr. 914.7/61-14431/6.00 JASPERS, KARL. The future of mankind. Chi- INKELES, ALEX. Soviet society. Boston, Hough- cago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 909.82/60-7237/ ton Mifflin. 914.7/61-4573/7.50 5.95 MCGRAW-HILL. Encyclopedia of Russia and NEWSWEEK. The five worlds of our lives. the Soviet Union. New York, McGraw- New York, Hammond. 909.82/60-13943/ 12.95 Hill. 914.7/61-18169/23.50 HURLIMANN, MARTIN. Journey through the O'CONOR, JOHN F. Cold war and liberation. New York, Vantage Pr. 909.82/60-53337/ Orient. New York, Viking. 915/60-8515/ 7.50 15.00 LAROUSSE encyclopedia of geography. New ESKELUND, KARL. The red mandarins; travels York, Prometheus Pr. 910/61-14332/17.50 in Red China. New York, Taplinger. VAN ALSTYNE, RICHARD W. The rising Amer- 915.1/60-13010/5.50 ican empire. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. TOYNBEE, ARNOLD J. Between Oxus and 911.73/60-52215/6.00 Jumna. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. 915.4/ LIFE. Pictorial atlas of the world. New York, 61-65118/5.00 Time, Inc. 912/61-7/30.00 CROWDER, MICHAEL. Pagans and politicians. CHARLES-PICARD, GILBERT. Daily life in Car- New York, International Pub. 916.6/59- thage at the time of Hannibal. New York, 3473/6.25 Macmillan. 913.397/61-8264/4.00 EHRENFELS, OMAR. The light continent. New MONGAIT, ALEKSANDRE. Archaeology in the York, Taplinger. 916.76/61-3453/6.95 U.S.S.R. New York, W. S. Heinman. 913.47 REMINGTON, FREDERIC. Frederic Remington's /60-37241/10.00 own West. New York, Dial Pr. 916.8/60- Classics in Western civilization. New York, 13432/7.50 Philosophical Library. 914/61-683/6.00 LIVINGSTONE, DAVID. Private journals, 1851- GRIGSON, GEOFFREY. English excursions. 1853. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Hollywood-by-the-Sea, Fla., Transatlantic Pr. 916.89/61-451/5.00 Arts. 914.2/61-3595/7.50 HUNTER, GEORGE. Canada in colour. New TIMES, LONDON. LITERARY SUPPLEMENT. The York, W. S. Heinman. 917.1/60-1672/4.50 British imagination. New York, Atheneum. JOHNSON, THEODORE E. Mexico. New York, 914.2/61-12783/4.50 Time, Inc. 917.2/61-17802/2.95

MARCH 1962 139 IVRUTCH, JOSEPH WOOD. The forgotten pe- New York, Simon and Schuster. 922.8373/ ninsula. New York, W. Sloane Associates. 61-9599/5.95 917.22/61-8174/5.00 ACHESON, DEAN. Sketches from life of men AMERICAN STUDIES ASSN. American perspec- I have known. New York, Harper. 923.2/ tives. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. 61-9701/4.00 Pr. 917.3/61-8841/4.75 KRUG, MARK M. Aneurin Bevan, cautious AMORY, CLEVELAND. Who killed society? New rebel. New York, Yoseloff. 923.242/61- York, Harper. 917.3/60-15314/6.50 6923/5.00 HANDLIN, OSCAR. American principles and LLOYD GEORGE, RICHARD L. My father, Lloyd issues. New York, Holt, Rinehart and George. New York, Crown. 923.242/61- Winston. 917.3/61-10827/6.00 10305/4.00 HOLIDAY. American panorama, east of the KELLEN, KONRAD. Khrushchev. New York, Mississippi. Garden City, N.Y., Double- Praeger. 923.247/61-10511/5.00 day. 917.3/61-5877/5.00 PHILLIPS, JOHN. Kwame Nkrumah and the MELBO, IRVING R. Our country's national future of Africa. New York, Praeger. parks. 2v. Indianapolis, Ind., Bobbs-Mer- 923.266/61-5235/5.50 rill. 917.3/61-1676/8.00 SEIDLER, MURRAY B. Norman Thomas; re- PEYRE, HENRI M. Observations. Carbondale, spectable rebel. Syracuse, N.Y., Syracuse 111., Southern Illinois Univ. Pr. 917.3/61- Univ. Pr. 923.273/61-13115/5.50 8218/5.00 THOMSON, DALE C. Alexander Mackenzie. Alaska book. Chicago, J. G. Ferguson. New York, Macmillan. 923.271/61-291/8.00 917.98/60-4299/12.95 EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D.C. The new SITWELL, SACHEVERELL. Golden wall and mir- frontiersmen; profiles of the men around ador; travels and observations in Peru. Kennedy. Washington, D.C., Public Af- Cleveland, World Pub. 918.5/61-12015/ fairs Pr. 923.273/61-11685/4.50 7.50 LIEBLING, ABBOTT JOSEPH. The Earl of Lou- BURDICK, EUGENE. The blue of Capricorn. isiana. New York, Simon and Schuster. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 919/61-14728/ 923.273/61-7017/3.95 4.95 REES, GORONWY. The multimillionaires; six Hawaii book. Chicago, J. G. Ferguson. studies in wealth. New York, Macmillan. 919.69/61-1785/9.95 923.3/61-8757/3.50 TODD, ALDEN L. Abandoned: the story of WALL STREET JOURNAL. The new millionaires the Greely Arctic expedition, 1881-1884. and how they made their fortunes. New New York, McGraw-Hill. 919.8/60-15689/ York, Random House. 923.373/61-10742/ 5.95 4.95 NOVECK, SIMON, ed. Great Jewish personali- WELLMAN, PAUL I. A dynasty of western out- ties in modern times. New York, B'nai laws. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. B'rith, Taplinger (dist.). 920.056/60-16480/ 923.417/61-6526/4.95 4.95 MANNHEIM, HERMANN. Pioneers in criminol- SWANBERG, W. A. Citizen Hearst. New York, ogy. Chicago, Quadrangle Books. 923.6/60- Scribners. 920.5/61-7220/7.50 14892/7.50 ASQUITH, LADY CYNTHIA. Married to Tolstoy. VON FRANKENBERG, RICHARD A. Porsche, the Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 920.7/61-7607/ man and his cars. Cambridge, Mass., Bent- 5.00 ley. 926.292/61-16133/7.50 RADIN, EDWARD D. Lizzie Borden; the untold VON HAGEN, VICTOR W. The ancient sun story. New York, Simon and Schuster. kingdoms of the Americas: Aztec, Maya, 920.7/61-9597/4.50 Inca. Cleveland, World Pub. 927.01/60- SCHWEITZER, ALBERT. Pilgrimage to human- 6695/12.50 ity. New York, Philosophic Library. FARR, FINIS. Frank Lloyd Wright, a biogra- 922.443/61-15250/3.75 phy. New York, Scribners. 927.2/61-13363/ GREEN, VIVIAN H. The young Mr. Wesley; a 5.95 study of John Wesley and Oxford. New HARDING, BERTITA. Concerto, the glowing York, St. Martin's. 992.742/61-10197/8.00 story of Clara Schumann. Indianapolis, WALLACE, IRVING. The twenty-seventh wife. Ind., Bobbs-Merrill. 927.8/61-7896/5.00

140 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES JELLINEK, GEORGE. Callas; portrait of a prima Ann Arbor, Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. donna. New York, Ziff-Davis. 927.8/60- 943/60-13891/8.75 10526/5.00 MAURIOS, ANDRE. An illustrated history of SEROFF, VICTOR I. Renata Tebaldi. New France. New York, Viking. 944/60-11172/ York, Appleton. 927.8/61-7590/4.00 20.00 BILLQUIST, FRITIOF. Garbo, a biography. New GODFREY, EDWIN D. The government of York, Putman. 927.92/60-16682/4.50 France. New York, Crowell. 944.082/61- MCCAGE, JOHN. Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy. 15525/2.95 Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 927.92/61- PERNAU, ALEXIS. The French Revolution. 7658/4.50 New York, Putman. 944.04/60-13673/5.00 REISS, FRANCOISE. Nijinsky. New York, Pit- LAPONCE, J. A. The government of the Fifth man. 927.928/61-2326/7.50 Republic. Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of Cali- JONES, ROBERT T. Golf is my game. Garden fornia Pr. 944.082/60-14656/6.50 City, New York, Doubleday. 927.963/60- HORIZON. The Horizon book of the Renais- 13386/4.50 sance. New York, American Heritage, Dou- SHORER, MARK. Sinclair Lewis. New York, bleday (dist.). 945.05/61-11489/17.50 McGraw-Hill. 928.1/61-12961 /10.00 PAYNE, STANLEY G. Falange; a history of WILLIAMS, ETHEL W. Know your ancestors; Spanish fascism. Stanford, Calif., Stanford a guide to geneological research. Rutland, Univ. Pr. 946.081/61-12391/6.00 Vt., Tuttle. 929.107/60-15252/4.50 ARMSTRONG, JOHN A. The politics of totali- QUAIFE, MILO M. The history of the United tarianism. New York, Random House. States flag. New York, Harper. 929.909/61- 947.084/61-6242/7.50 6428/4.95 CONQUEST, ROBERT. Power and policy in the LEON, HARRY J. The Jews of ancient Rome. U.S.S.R. New York, St. Martin's. 947.084/ Philadelphia, Jewish Pub. Society of Amer- 61-15941/7.95 ica. 937/60-9793/5.50 SCHUMAN, FREDERICK L. Government in the VACANO, OTTO W. The Etruscans in the an- Soviet Union. New York, Crowell. 947.084/ cient world. New York, St. Martin's. 937.5/ 61-15528/2.95 60-16881/6.50 SCHWARTZ, HARRY. The red phoenix; Russia HUGHES, HENRY S. Contemporary Europe: a since World War II. New York, Praeger. history. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice- 947.084/61-11062/6.00 Hall. 940.5/61-8227/10.00 LESSNER, ERWIN C. The Danube. Garden FERGUSSON, BERNARD. The watery maze. New City, N.Y., Doubleday. 949.6/61-7657/5.95 York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 940.541/61-5301/7.50 HEPPELL, MURIEL. Yugoslavia. New York, BARNETT, CORRELLI. The desert generals. New Praeger. 949.7/61-6385/5.95 York, Viking. 940.542/61-7279/6.00 LONDON UNIV. Historical writing on the peo- COLLIER, RICHARD H. The sands of Dunkirk. ples of Asia. New York, Oxford Univ. Pr. New York, Popular Library. 940.542/61- 950.072/61-4093/8.00 12472/4.50 LABIN, SUZANNE. The anthill; the human VAUGHAN-THOMAS, WYNFORD. Anzio. New condition in Communist China. New York, York, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Praeger. 951.05/60-15061/6.75 940.5421/61-5210/5.00 FUTRELL, ROBERT F. The United States Air WEBSTER, SIR CHARLES. The strategic air of- Force in Korea, 1950-1953. New York, fensive against Germany, 1939-1945. New Duell, Sloan and Pearce. 951.9042/61- York, British Information Serv. 940.544/ 16831/12.50 61-65443/30.80 GLUBB, SIR JOHN BAGOT. War in the desert. EGGERS, REINHOLD. Colditz; the German side New York, Norton. 953.8/61-123/6.25 of the story. New York, Norton. 940.547/ SPEAR, THOMAS G. India, a modern history. 61-8782/3.95 Ann Arbor, Mich., Univ. of Michigan Pr. KOEBNER, RICHARD. Empire. New York, Cam- 954/61-10988/10.00 bridge Univ. Pr. 942/61-65769/8.50 HITTI, PHILIP K. The Near East in history. OSBORNE, JOHN. Britain. New York, Time, Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. 956/61- Inc. 942.0084/61-11152/2.95 1098/10.00 DILL, MARSHALL. Germany, a modern history. AHMED, JAMAL MOHAMMED. The intellectual

MARCH 1962 141 origins of Egyptian nationalism. New York, America. Greenwich, Conn., New York Oxford Univ. Pr. 962/60-52161/5.00 Graphic Society. 970.67/60-8921/25.00 MOOREHEAD, ALAN. The White Nile. New RICH, EDWIN E. Hudson's Bay Company. 3v. York, Harper. 962/61-6197/5.95 New York, Macmillan. 971.011/61-1394/ KUP, A. P. A history of Sierra Leone, 1400- 35.00 1787. New York, Cambridge Univ. Pr. HUBERMAN, LEO. Cuba; anatomy of a revolu- 966.4/61-1075/3.75 tion. 2d ed. New York, Monthly Review REUSCH, RICHARD. History of East Africa. Pr. 972.910/61-3092/3.50 WILSON, EVERETT B. Vanishing Americana. New York, Ungar. 967.6/61-4028/4.50 New York, A. S. Barnes. 973.084/61-9621/ APTER, DAVID E. The political kingdom in Uganda. Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. 7.50 O'GORMAN, EDMUNDO. The invention of Pr. 967.61/61-6284/10.00 America. Bloomington, Ind., Indiana Univ. SCOTT, SIR ROBERT. Limuria. New York, Ox- Pr. 973.1/61-8084/5.00 ford Univ. Pr. 969/61-4043/5.60 MEADOWS, DENNIE. Five remarkable English- AMERICAN HERITAGE eds. American Heritage men. New York, Devin-Adair. 973.2/61- book of Indians. New York, Simon and 17792/5.00 Schuster. 970.1/61-14871/15.00 CATTON, BRUCE. The centennial history of DRIVER, HAROLD E. Indians of North Amer- the Civil War: v.l The Coming Fury. ica. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 970.1/ Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. 973.7/61- 61-5604/10.95 12502/7.50 GRINNELL, GEORGE B. Pawnee, Blackfoot, and HARWELL, RICHARD B., ed. The war they Cheyenne; history and folklore of the fought. New York, Longmans. 973.78/60- plains. New York, Scribners. 970.1/61- 15883/6.95 7217/4.95 MICHENER, JAMES A. Report of the county INTERUNIVERSITY SUMMER RESEARCH SEMINAR, chairman. New York, Random House. Univ. of New Mexico. Perspectives in 973.921/61-10872/3.95 American Indian culture change. Chicago, WHITE, THEODORE H. The making of the Univ. of Chicago Pr. 970.1/60-14358/10.00 President, 1960. New York, Atheneum. KROEBER, THEODORA. Ishi in two worlds. 973.921/61-9259/6.95 Berkeley, Calif., Univ. of California Pr. TANZER, LESTER, ed. The Kennedy circle. 970.3/61-7530/5.95 Washington, D.C., Luce. 973.922/61-14134/ MATHEWS, JOHN J. The Osages. Norman, 4.95 Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma Pr. 970.3/61- LOVELAND, CYRUS C. California trail herd: 9006/7.95 the 1850 Missouri-to-California journal. WRITERS' PROGRAM, Montana. The Assini- Los Gatos, Calif., Talisman Pr. 978/61- boines. Norman, Okla., Univ. of Oklahoma 10538/6.00 Pr. 970.3/61-6502/5.00 HOLLON, WILLIAM E. The Southwest: old NEWCOMB, WILLIAM W. The Indians of and new. New York, Knopf. 979/61-9232/ Texas. Austin, Tex., Univ. of Texas Pr. 7.50 970.464/60-14312/5.75 BROWNE, JOHN R. Illustrated mining adven- COLTON, HAROLD S. Black sand: prehistory in tures; California and Nevada. Balboa Is- northern Arizona. Albuquerque, N.M., land, Calif., Paisano Pr. 979.404/61-16103/ Univ. of New Mexico Pr. 970.479/60- 5.50 11620/4.00 PORTER, CHARLES O. The struggle for democ- DENIG, EDWIN T. Five Indian tribes of the racy in Latin America. New York, Macmil- upper Missouri. Norman, Okla., Univ. of lan. 980.03/61-5491/4.50 Oklahoma Pr. 970.48/60-9005/4.00 STEIN, WILLIAM W. Hualcan: life in the HAGAN, WILLIAM T. American Indians, Chi- highlands of Peru. Ithaca, New York, Cor- cago, Univ. of Chicago Pr. 970.5/61-1555/ nell Univ. Pr. 980.452/61-11633/6.00 4.50 BAUDIN, LOUIS. A socialist empire; the Incas SPRATLING, WILLIAM. More human than di- of Peru. Princeton, N.J., Van Nostrand. vine. New York, W. S. Heinman. 970.657/ 985.01/61-3532/8.00 61-1361/9.00 CAWKELL, M. B. R. The Falkland Islands. DOCKSTADER, FREDERICK J. Indian art in New York, St. Martin's. 997.11/61-2440/4.50

142 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Report on Farmington Plan Program

Report to Council on Library Resources on grant received by the Association of Research Libraries for its Farmington Plan Program to determine the degree of completeness "IMMEDIATELY PRIOR to receipt, in July with which U.S. libraries are covering J- 1959, of the Council on Library Re- current foreign periodicals in the social sources' second grant for the support of sciences. The assumption was made that certain Farmington Plan studies and ac- the periodical literature of the world in tivities, there was a complete reorganiza- chemistry, physics, biology, and other tion of the FP Committee. As reconsti- major sciences is adequately represented tuted, the general committee has respon- in American libraries, but that holdings sibility for the over-all development and are much less complete in the humani- implementation of the Farmington Plan, ties and social sciences. Based upon but delegates the actual field operations checking the UNESCO World List of for the most part to seven regional sub- Social Science Periodicals, Mr. Barker committees covering the worlds: Western found that more than 95 per cent of the Europe, Middle East, Far East, South titles in this field are now known to be Asia, Slavic and East Europe, Africa, and available in the United States. (Dale Latin America. The reorganized commit- L. Barker, Foreign Social Science Peri- tee was able to make more effective use odicals Received in American Libraries, of the council's grant than would other- [Urbana, 111., Farmington Plan Commit- wise have been possible. tee of Association of Research Libraries, Several specific investigations were in- I960].) It was concluded, therefore, that cluded in the request for the council periodical publications should continue grant, and these were satisfactorily com- to be excluded from Farmington Plan pleted by the terminal date. The studies operations, other than for the limited in at least two instances were preparatory program for new periodicals already to possible extension of the Farmington functioning. Plan into new areas. The first study to be finished (Jerrold A third study came to different con- Orne, Report on the CIA Library Acqui- clusions. This was concerned with the sitions Program, 1959) was a survey of the holdings of American research libraries relationship of the Farmington Plan to in the area of foreign government pub- the Central Intelligence Agency's pro- lications. The survey was done for the curement program. The investigation committee by Donald Wisdom, assistant was made for the committee by Jerrold head of government publication section, Orne, Library of the University of North serial division, , with Carolina. On the basis of Dr. Orne's find- Paul Berry, chief of the serial division, ings, it was the consensus that, though serving as adviser. Optimistically, it was the CIA and FP overlap to a certain ex- hoped that the findings would be such tent, the scope and purposes of the two as to make it unnecessary for the Farm- agencies are entirely different and both ington Plan to become involved with should be continued. government publications, a huge and ex- A second investigation was under- ceedingly complex field. The survey re- taken by Dale Barker, associate director, port, however, concluded that "Current Georgia Institute of Technology Library, holdings of foreign government publica-

MARCH 1962 143 tions in American research libraries are Peru, and Uruguay. Contacts were es- inadequate, and there is a universal de- tablished with a number of well-quali- pendence on the Library of Congress for fied dealers, some of whom are now being the comprehensive collecting of foreign used by Farmington Plan participants. government publications." (Donald F. (Robert B. Downs, Survey of Prospective Wisdom, Foreign Government Publica- Farmington Plan Dealers for South tions in American Research Libraries; a America, 1960.) survey prepared for the Farmington Plan Committee of the Association of Research MEETINGS OF COMMITTEES Libraries, 1961.) One of the most profitable uses of the An important question of policy was council funds was to finance meetings raised by the Wisdom study. Should the of members of the area subcommittees, or research libraries of the country continue to send representatives of the committees to rely primarily upon the Library of to attend meetings of related associations Congress or should an effort be made to and groups interested in the procure- bring into the United States at least two ment of foreign publications. Particu- copies of all foreign government publica- larly active were the Slavic and East Eu- tions? The latter would mean develop- ropean Committee, working with the ment of a national plan of collecting, Joint Committee on Slavic Studies; the dividing responsibility among research African Committee, working with the libraries, as is now being done for Farm- African Studies Association; and the ington Plan materials. Even the Library Latin American Committee, cooperating of Congress holdings in certain areas have with the Seminar on Latin American Ac- serious lacunae. Some of the libraries quisitions. The South Asian Commitee which have accepted national assign- worked closely with the Association for ments under the Farmington Plan are Asian Studies, and the Near Eastern going beyond monographic publications Committee with the Social Science Re- to collect periodicals, newspapers, and search Council. The area committees government publications. This points to- were thereby substantially aided in de- ward a possible solution, since the larg- veloping plans for the selection, acquisi- est gaps in holdings of foreign govern- tion, and distribution of materials for ment publications are for the countries their respective regions. assigned on a national, rather than on a subject basis. The cooperating li- DISSEMINATION OF INFORMATION braries, accordingly, have been asked to adopt as standard procedure the collect- To make the Farmington Plan more ing of government publications for the widely known and understood, the chief areas assigned to them. of the Farmington Plan Office, Edwin E. Williams of the Harvard University Li- VISITS TO DEALERS brary, prepared a descriptive brochure Another item included in the Farm- entitled What Is The Farmington Plan? ington Plan budget submitted to the (Edwin E. Williams, What Is the Farm- council was a series of visits to prospec- ington Plan? rev. by the Farmington Plan tive Farmington Plan dealers in South Committee of the Association of Re- America—an area poorly represented in search Libraries, Cambridge, Mass.: Har- the program to date. These visits were vard Univ. Print. Off., 1959.) An edi- made by the chairman of the commit- tion of 5,000 copies, produced by the Har- tee, Robert B. Downs, in January and vard Printing Office, has been distributed February 1960. The countries included to members of learned societies, univer- were Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, sity faculties, publishers, bookdealers, li-

144 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES brarians, and others who should be in- Farmington Plan should be more widely formed of the program. publicized among foundation officials, in Dealers and librarians frequently have influential government circles, among expressed a need for a revised Farming- scholarly societies, and similar groups, in ton Plan Handbook. The 1953 edition is order to broaden the base of support from out of date in many respects. Edwin Wil- the federal government, the foundations, liams, who edited the first edition, has and the universities. L^o attain maximum prepared a revision incorporating the effectiveness, it was further agreed, the changes of the past eight years. (Edwin Farmington Plan should be administered E. Williams, Farmington Plan Hand- as a division of a national Association of book, rev. to 1961 and abridged, Ithaca, Research Libraries office, with a perma- N.Y.: Association of Research Libraries, nent full-time staff, rather than, as at 1961.) This second edition is now avail- present, carried on by voluntary effort. able. Without question, the Farmington Plan program has made extraordinary progress since the first Council on Library FUTURE OF FARMINGTON PLAN Resources grant was received in 1957, Financed in part from council funds, and the advances can be credited in large the Farmington Plan Committee and the degree to the stimulus of the two grants. ARL Advisory Committee held a joint Without the solid basis of the surveys, meeting on March 24, 1961, at Colum- studies, and analyses of the Plan, over a bia University. The recent progress and period of several years, followed by ex- current activities of the general and area tended discussions, the ARL would not committees of the Farmington Plan were be prepared, as it now is, to move for- reviewed. Growing out of the reports ward on a broad front with this major presented by the committees and the en- experiment in library cooperation.— suing discussion, it was agreed that the Robert B. Downs.

Rare Book Conference at Miami

Plans for the third Rare Book Confer- ments Library), Hellmut Lehmann- ence are well under way. The date is Haupt (H. P. Kraus), Harry Shaw New- June 15th and 16th, 1962, the place is man (Philadelphia), and Lawrence the beautiful modern campus of the Uni- Thompson (University of Kentucky Li- versity of Miami at Coral Gables. Most braries). There will be lectures on Early of the meetings will be held at the new Woodcuts, Baroque Books, Modern Book library, which is not even completely Illustration and Design, American and built as yet, but will be ready for us on Latin American , Au- June 15th according to Archie McNeal thors as Illustrators, The Cartographer's and C. Lewis Morgan, Jr., the Local Ar- Art, and others. rangements Chairman. Fee for the conference, including Topic of the conference will be Book rooms at the recently completed and Illustration. Speakers will be William newly furnished dormitories, as well as Bostick (Detroit Institute of Arts), Her- meals for two days, will be approximately bert Cahoon (Pierpont Morgan Library), $30.00-$35.00. There will be available Budd Gambee (University of Michigan), some rooms for couples. Rooms at nearby Lucien Goldschmidt (New York City), University Motel are available, but their Mrs. Georgia Haugh (William L. Cle- cost is in addition to the fee.

MARCH 1 962 145 New Periodicals of 1961-Part II

By GERALDINE KAUFMAN MAURER

F THE PERIODICALS beginning publication Oin 1961, which have been received at the Alrs. Maurer is Head of the Serials Section, Library of Congress, those listed below were Descriptive Cataloging Division, Library of selected in the hope that they might prove Congress. helpful or of interest to acquisitions librar- ians. The topics can be approached from the ing in at least two major respects: it is limited point of view of reference, instructional aids, as indicated by title; it will give advance in- practical help for patrons, or recreation. formation on projected periodicals (this ABSTRACTS, BIBLIOGRAPHY. The Australian column is limited to receipts in the Library National Bibliography, issued by the Na- of Congress, and is more or less selective). tional Library of Australia, supersedes Books Pakistan Scientific Literature: Current Bib- Published in Australia. The listings will be liography is arranged, in the main, alpha- those acquired by the National Library, by betically by journal title, and under journal, copyright or otherwise; those published in by authors as they appear in contents. The Australia or, if published abroad, those deal- authors are numbered consecutively and ing with an Australian subject or by Aus- these numbers are used in the alphabetically- tralians. The bibliography will contain also arranged author and subject index. The first the official monographs listed in Australian issue covers, chiefly, 1960 publications, the Government Publications. There will be an second issue will list 1961 publications plus annual cumulation under the same title. any 1960 omissions. An answer to the enthu- Fichero Bibliografico Hispanoamericano is a siasm evoked by a national survey, The list chiefly of current books, arranged by the Periodical Monitor and Abstract Service; Dewey scheme; each entry is completely cata- Electronics and Instrumentation Section, will loged, including notes; one additional item enable scientists and engineers quickly to not seen on most catalog cards is the price. determine which articles to read, which to This preliminary issue contains works from eliminate, which merely to scan, in their cur- 12 countries; it includes translations into rent literature. The abstracts are numbered Spanish. The International Guide to Classi- consecutively (an aid in the subject and au- cal Studies and International Guide to thor indexes) under the periodical titles Medieval Studies are in several sections and which are alphabetical. There is a listing of parts: Current Articles and Minor Contribu- new books by subject; of meetings by date; tions; Subject-Index; Review-Index; Index of periodicals monitored (but not necessarily of Authors, Editors, Translators; Index of abstracted). The charm of the illustrations Reviewers. The journals indexed are those should be mentioned—many librarians will published during the current year; annuals, wonder why the second issue omits the "pic- commemorative issues, conference reports, ture of the librarian." The January issue of etc., are not indexed. List of Periodicals in British Medical Abstracts contains abstracts the Field of Nuclear Energy will give infor- from Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, mation on periodicals so that an intelligent British Medical Journal, The Lancet, The selection can be made by those interested; it Practitioner, and Proceedings of the Royal is not intended to be comprehensive. Mem- Society of Medicine. ber states of the International Atomic Energy BUSINESS. The Chart Book, covering over Agency are cooperating in this project. New eight hundred items on the American Stock American Periodicals will cover, substantially, Exchange, contains charts for each stock, what this feature in CRL tries to do, differ- arranged alphabetically. According to the

146 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES chart explanation, a great deal of informa- the U. S. merchant marine dilemma, pro- tion can be extracted from the individual posed changes in transport regulation; signed charts, e.g.: weekly high, low, and closing; book reviews are included. In our modern earnings per share, fiscal year end, type of technological society, economic and politi- business; weekly volume; date of latest re- cal changes have created new problems in port; current assets, liabilities, and funded industrial relations; hoping to make real debt by millions of dollars; number of com- contribution to these critical fields, the In- mon and preferred shares by thousands. The stitute of Industrial Relations, University of Annals of the Hitotsubashi Academy are be- California, has started Industrial Relations. ing published in five specialized journals, the Contributions in the first issue, by econo- Hitotsubashi Journal of Commerce and Man- mists, are directed to the theme "The Em- agement being one of the group. The arti- ployer Challenge and the Union Response." cles in the first issue by faculty members are The next topic will be "Work and Leisure on interest, accounting, budget in decentral- in Modern Society," by sociologists; the third ized management, etc. Because sportswear topic is "Industrial Relations and World has become a booming business demanding Trade," with contributors from labor and its own publication for retailers, McCall industry. With Erik Bergaust as editor-in- Corporation has begun Sportswear Mer- chief, and with eleven other international, chandiser to explain sportswear merchandis- experienced journalists especially interested ing techniques and to give advance market in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, news for the small specialty shop, and up to NATO Journal comes into being. Items of the large department store. The articles in interest to decision makers, management, the first issue of Studi e Ricerche are studies and businessmen will be included: trends on sampling, sampling on population, on in industry, new developments in science banking, on agriculture in Finland, on the and technology, contract announcements, Italian paper market. The latter part of the inter-NATO military news, etc. As an out- issue is devoted to news notes on business in growth of requests, the Bureau of Industrial various countries ("Esperienze Segnalate," Relations, University of Michigan, will pub- "Informazioni sul Settore") and reviews of lish in Management of Personnel Quarterly publications. The Shipper-Motor Carrier original articles prepared by Michigan fac- Executive will tackle problems of motor ulty or by prominent business leaders for carrier transportation. The June issue is de- University of Michigan audiences. The initial voted largely to freight loss, damage, and number has articles on the meaning of lead- liability, with two articles on concealed dam- ership, on discipline, on responses to one's age. It also contains items on new products orders, on arbitration, and book reviews. and highlights of conferences of the National COUNTRIES. Africa Quarterly, from the In- Association of Shipper-Motor Carriers. It dian Council for Africa, is following the will be the business of T ir DM; Transpor- trend of new journals issued to disseminate tation & Distribution Management to nar- information about Africa, and thus to pro- row the costly gap between technology of mote understanding of that continent. The design and manufacture, and technology of first issue includes "The African Synthesis," distribution; it will concern itself with pro- by Dr. U. R. Ehrenfels, "Indians in East curement of raw materials, down to putting Africa," by Dr. Amba Prasad, an article on the finished product in the customer's hand. Nigerian art, a section on the council and a Special features are an annotated book list seminar it held on Africa, on the Monckton and "Transport Legislation in Congress" in Commission's report, and book reviews, some tabular form. The American Society of Traf- signed. The new College of Business Man- fic and Transportation (membership to which agement at Achimota, Ghana, is starting is attained through written examination and The Journal of Management Studies. The submission of research paper) is June issue includes articles on Ghana com- Transportation Journal as an aid in under- pany law and management, on the adminis- standing, and as a stimulus in appraising, trative problems attached to the resettlement transportation problems and practices. of the population of a fishing village, on Among the contributions in the initial issue local government service, training of Ghanai- are articles on freight bills of ca. 150 A.D., ans as administrators and accountants, and

MARCH 1962 147 signed book reviews. Modern Woman is best Pantje, and foreign aid. Most previous pub- explained by adding its subtitle, Africa's lications on Korea in English were done by Leading Illustrated Women's Magazine. It foreigners trying to depict or interpret Korea contains articles on nutrition, African wom- to other foreigners; now, as Korea increas- anhood, women in industry, fashion, etc. ingly plays a part in world politics, it has Through its University College Review, the seemed best for the natives of that country College at Addis Ababa, hopes to improve themselves to portray it. The first issue of the welfare of Ethiopia and the Ethiopian Korea Journal, illustrated, contains articles community and the African continent, as on Korean politics, democracy, and eco- well as to focus international attention on nomics, General Park, art, education, and Ethiopia. Contributors to the first issue are book reviews. international in scope; the contributions CURRENT EVENTS. A new news magazine is are chiefly about Ethiopia: its independence, being launched in Montreal, Canada Month, national libraries, orthopedic surgery in with illustrations, especially portraits of peo- Addis Ababa, early travelers, coffee, the Uni- ple in the news. versity College. Signed book reviews are in- DEFENSE. Civil Defense Magazine intends to cluded. The staff of The Journal of British disseminate information on the vital subject Studies conceives "British" in the widest of nonmilitary defense in nuclear warfare. possible sense, "studies" as relating to all The first issue has articles on practical aspects knowledge pertaining to or drawing upon (shelter, food) and on more technical aspects history; it sets as limits "analysis, synthesis, (cheaper methods of getting material for interpretation and exploratory exegesis." atomic bombs). Contributors will be chiefly from the United ECONOMICS. The Department of Commerce, States, but none will be barred. The first Osmania University in India, is publishing issue contains articles on King John Lack- Applied Economic Papers, the initial issue of land, Thomas More, John Milton, the Treaty which contains articles on phases of Indian of Dover, Sir Lewis Namier, West Africa, economy (land reforms, metallurgical indus- English Conservatism. The journal is spon- tries, profits and wage sharing). Signed book sored by the Conference on British Studies reviews are included. Desarrollo Econdmico at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. A contains technical articles on economics highly illustrated magazine from Britain (e.g., how to analyze economic growth); the (filed with the U.S. Dept. of Justice under relationship between distribution of income required registration) is Viewpoint. The first and the degree of development in underde- two issues are varied in range of contents but veloped countries; land tenure in Argen- all pertain to England. To keep the true tina; agricultural development in Uruguay; Bulgarian culture alive, to make it known, etc. Signed book reviews are included. The and to give to the new generations—captives newly founded Hong Kong Economic Asso- of the Soviets—the true historical back- ciation has begun Hong Kong Economic ground, is the purpose of Bulgarian Review Papers to present problems in economics, published by the "Foyer Bulgare." The first foreign and local. The June issue con- two issues contain articles on Bulgarian his- tains lectures before the association, as well tory and literature, the church, memoirs, as articles on trade between Hong Kong and book reviews. India View has a twofold pur- the Chinese mainland, oil legislation in In- pose: to give a detailed summary "of current donesia, and the First Conference on Income home news to all Indian students and stu- and Wealth in Asia. dents of India's affairs, and to help EDUCATION. The Journal of American In- strengthen bonds of friendship between In- dian Education, under an editorial board dia and the United States." Socialist Con- composed of authorities on that subject, will gressman; a Journal of Congress Socialist present articles from anyone who has infor- Opinion is being issued to explain and in- mation to impart on any facet of the educa- terpret the thinking and policies of the In- tion of Indians, any kind of school, any level dian National Congress in respect to estab- of instruction. The contributors to the first lishing a socialist society in India. The first issue are actively engaged in education or issue contains articles on Kashmir, China's guidance, or in direct work with Indian af- border diplomacy, Jallianwala Bagh Day, fairs. It includes book reviews. Overseas; the

148 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Magazine of Educational Exchange will be linguist (Okyeame) is the recognized channel devoted to educational exchange programs of communication in Ghana between tribe and the importance of education in interna- and chief; Okyeame is to be a channel of tional development, to draw world attention communication for Ghanaian writers, and to these matters, and to report new pro- the first issue contains poetry, prose, drama, grams. The first issue contains articles by and illustrations. It is in English; one article Dean Rusk, Henry Cabot Lodge, Albert G. contains folk songs in Ghanaian languages, Sims, Andre Maurois, James M. Davis, and with a discussion and English translation. others. Signed book reviews are included. There are book reviews. The publication of JOURNALISM. Stirred by a sense of duty, Drama Survey has been made possible the Graduate School of Journalism, Colum- through a grant from the McKnight Foun- bia University, is launching Columbia Jour- dation. The Spring issue contains a wide nalism Review to study and judge journal- variety of articles, from those on Shaw and ism, to strengthen its good features, to bring Shakespeare to an article on dramas which to light its weaknesses. All methods of relay- show revolt against the image of authority; ing news to the public will be under scrutiny. there is also a contribution from Sir Tyrone LAW. Although the Natural Resources Guthrie. Signed book reviews are included. Journal will not be limited to resources Under the direction of Pedro Aurelio Fiori problems, it will nevertheless be largely de- and Daniel R. Sobico comes Cuadernos de voted to this vital area. A general section Poesia, whose initial issue contains poems by contains articles on peaceful purposes of nu- the directors only. Most of the contributors clear explosions, oil and gas leases, water in to the first issue of Elizabeth; a Magazine of California, resources management, etc.; an- Modern Elizabethan and Metaphysical Po- other section contains articles on laws in etry have had poems published elsewhere. New Mexia>—criminal code, annulment of HISTORY, RELIGION. Resulting from the Mos- marriages, real property statutes. Signed cow Document of November 1960, from book reviews will be included. A comple- resolutions of the Sozialistische Einheitspartei ment to the Bulletin of the Copyright Deutschlands, and within the plan of the Society is the new Publishing, Entertain- Government of the DDR, Unsere Zeit comes ment, Advertising, and Allied Fields Law from East Germany to depict the social his- Quarterly. In addition to original articles, tory of postwar Germany, especially the zone it will contain reprints, practical as well as under Russian influence. Included are book technical, thus appealing to the lawyer and reviews and indexes of pertinent periodicals, the businessman. The first issue has articles both German and Russian, arranged by on titles litigations; food, drug, and cosmetic broad subjects. The History of Religions will advertising; the right to shield a "reliable be "devoted to the study of historical reli- source"; protection for "uncopyrightables"; gious phenomena. One of its primary aims tax discrimination against artists. Under the is the integration of the results of the several directorship of Dr. Agricol de Bianchetti in disciplines of the science of religion; its Buenos Aires, Revista de Derecho Deportivo articles will have a synthetical character in is in two sections, "Doctrina" and "Legisla- order to acquaint the reader with the prog- cion." The first part contains articles on foot- ress being made in the general area of the ball, sports in education, sports associations, history of religions (Religionswissenschaft)." sports as a political-criminal problem; the Biographical notes on the contributors are second part has the statutes and bylaws of included. The Society for the Scientific Study the Federation Internationale de Football of Religion intends the Journal for the Association. Scientific Study of Religion to serve as a LITERATURE. The newly founded Assam forum for those who study religious attitudes Academy for Cultural Relations has begun and activities. The October issue has papers The Assam Quarterly in which to publish on a symposium, "Theory and Methodology cultural articles on Assam and its literature, in the Scientific Study of Religion;" several including translations. The authors of the articles from an empirical approach; contri- poems and stories in Chrysalis Review are butions to "Bibliographical Focus: Ernst not limited to any geographic area or field, Troeltsch;" and signed book reviews. although several are teachers of English. The MEDICINE, PSYCHOLOGY. With Elinor Ulman

MARCH 1 962 149 as editor (and founder) the Bulletin of Art arts, and our view of those arts will be Therapy is a pioneer in the new field of broad." Exploration will be devoted to in- using painting and sculpturing in psychiatric quiries into new areas, and new inquiries treatment. The plan is to include at least into old areas; it will attempt to spread one article on theory to arouse discussion knowledge of man to man in an interesting and creative thinking; notices about meet- way. "Great Religions," "Cities of the East," ings, exhibitions, etc.; about articles in other signed book reviews and a profile page are periodicals; and book reviews. The Journal to be regular features. In addition to these, of Humanistic Psychology will publish arti- the first issue has illustrated articles on Maori cles "of theoretical and applied research, carving, Albania, the Dinkas, on Vinoba original contributions, papers, articles and Bhave, geology, Lapland, etc. studies in values, autonomy, being, self, love, SOCIAL SCIENCES. The Bole tin Uruguay o de creativity, identity, growth, psychological Sociologia will air the current sociological health, organism, self-actualization, basic problems of the day, but especially those of need-gratification and related concepts." Latin America and Uruguay. The first issue MUSIC. Bravo, Magazine of the Lively Arts is in sections (Uruguay, Latinoam^rica, In- will be a serious, lighthearted, enthusiastic ternational, Bibliograffa) which are divided magazine about music, about those who (save the last section) into Informaci6n, make it, about those for whom it is made. Doctrina. The Informaci6n has news items The first issue contains articles on the Pierre about meetings, congresses, institutions. The Salingers, new pianists, Virgil Thomson, Doctrina contains articles from scholars on American singers in Europe, caricatures by an international basis: Isaac Gan6n, Aldo Mrs. Koussevitsky, etc. The Hungarian Acad- Solari, Alfredo Povina, Alfonso Trujillo Fer- emy of Sciences (Magyar Tudomanyos Aka- rari, Pitirim A. Sorokin. As a continuation demia) is beginning Studia Musicologica, of Ciencias Sociales, published 1950-56, the which will contain articles on Hungarian Department of Social Affairs of Pan Ameri- musicology, on music history, on Hungarian can Union has begun Revista Interamericana collections of manuscripts of foreign com- de Ciencias Sociales. It will disclose trends in posers, and general notes concerning con- social disciplines, particularly those which gresses and meetings. Articles may be in apply to Latin America. The first issue has, English, French, German or Russian; the among others, an extensive contribution, first issue has no articles in the last-mentioned "Los Lenguajes Indigenas de America Lat- language. This initial issue has articles on ina"; signed book reviews are included. The Mozart, on J. G. Albrechtsberger, Ferenc second issue is devoted to the theme "La Erkel, and on music in Hungary in the Mid- Agricultura y el Desarrollo de la Civilizaci6n dle Ages. en Mesoam^rica." PRINTING. Graphic Technology aims "at SCIENCE. A new journal, The Australian dealing with the developments in all meth- Scientist, from New South Wales brings news ods of printing illustration, the materials of scientific development in Australia; it and apparatus used, the best ways of using hopes to stimulate interest in that field them, and why. Our interest will cover not among Australians. Because enzymology has only photographic and chemical materials, emerged as a fundamental science, and a but also paper and ink in their technical strong interest in biological enzymology has and functional aspects." developed, scientists have felt the need for RECREATION. The newly formed American a journal and Enzymologia Biologica et Boxwood Society is issuing The Boxwood Clinica hopes to fill that need. The articles Bulletin to share problems and exchange in the first issue are: "Anomalie de l'Aldolase experiences of growing buxus. Marina Man- H^patique dans l'lntolerance au Fructose"; agement will devote itself to waterfront "Localization of Dehydrogenases and Glyco- facilities with the accompanying merchandis- gen Metabolizing Enzymes in Muscle Tissue ing problems, believing that the growth of of the Desert Locust"; "Uber Enzyme der marinas will resemble that of motels. It con- Glykolyse in Leukozyten von Kindern"; tains notes on new products—food, drink, "Serum Ornithine Transcarbamylase Activity boat equipment and accessories. "Show will in Normal Individuals." Although originally be the definitive magazine of the performing only of interest to physical scientists, the

150 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES concepts of transmission of information are sian. Thus, Spanish will be promoted as a now appealing to biological scientists in medium of scientific expression, and at the studying how organisms handle information; same time contributions by Spanish scientists and in return, physicists are becoming inter- will be circulated. The first issue is a lengthy ested in the procedures by which organisms article, in Spanish and English, "Pene-Con- cope with communication and control. temporaneous Tectonics along the Mexican Kybernetik will publish both theoretical and Pacific Ocean Coast," by F. Mooser and M. experimental articles in this exchange. The Maldonado-Koerdell. Nordisk Tidskrift for Crop Science Society of America has begun Informationsbehandling will contain articles Crop Science as a vehicle for unpublished on numerical analysis, data-processing, and papers on research in field crops including computer-technical problems in English, genetics, cytology, physiology, ecology, and French, or German, with contributions breeding; articles which formerly might have chiefly from the five Scandinavian countries. appeared in the overburdened Agronomy Articles in a Scandinavian language will have Journal. Articles in the first issue are accom- a summary in English. The editor and pub- panied by and summaries; lisher of The System Analyzer; a Bulletin for some are illustrated. The last page is devoted Those Concerned with Digital Differential to signed book reviews. The articles in the Analyzers and Their Applications, George F. first issue of Radiation Botany are in Eng- Forbes, has also written most of the contribu- lish, prefaced by summaries in English, tions in the first issue. In addition to illus- French, and German, and are the reports of trated technical articles, there are book re- research performed chiefly in the United views and a bibliography. The Applied States and Great Britain. The journal will Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins Univer- report, mainly, effects of ionizing radiation sity, "requires a synthesizing agent to pre- on plants or plant structure. Signed book serve the over-all pattern of its activities, not reviews are included. Important and current only for the benefit of its own staff, but also technical chemical literature from the Soviet for the benefit of scientific and engineering Union, Eastern Europe, and Asia will be colleagues throughout the world." The agent translated in International Chemical Engi- is the APL Technical Digest. The initial issue neering. A list by country of the journals of Beitrage aus der Plasmaphysik contains received is included. Represented also are four original technical articles by work- items dealing with information retrieval, ers in German research institutes: "Zur the- "based on the concept-coordination system oretischen Begriindung des 'Minimumprin- of information storage and retrieval." Phyto- zips' fur die Spannung einer Gasentladung chemistry will publish articles on pure and und einige weitere Folgerungen"; "Beitrag applied research in basic metabolic processes zum Problem der Entscheidbarkeit der of plants. The technical illustrated articles Giiltigkeit eines Prinzips extremalen Energie- are preceded by abstracts; they may be in verbrauchs beim Stromdurchgang durch English, French, or German. Still another einen Leiter"; "Die positive Saule der Argon- chemical journal Zeitschrift filr Chemie, has Niederdruck-Entladung im tjbergangsbereich been undertaken, this one from the Eastern I"; "Die Berechnung von Energieverteilun- Zone of Germany, under the auspices of the gen relativistischer Elektronen aus ihrer Syn- Chemische Gesellschaft in der Deutschen chrotonstrahlung. Anwendungen auf den Demokratischen Republik. This publication Krebsnebel." Physica Status Solidi will pub- contains technical articles, short report arti- lish results of original research conducted in cles, and signed book reviews. Geofisica In- solid-state physics. Articles are chiefly in Ger- ternational will contain original articles on man, a few in English; most are preceded by geophysics in Spanish and in one of the fol- summaries in both the German and English lowing: English, French, German, or Rus- languages.

Periodicals APL Technical Digest. Applied Physics Labora- Africa Quarterly. The Manager, Indian Council tory, The Johns Hopkins University, 8621 for Africa, 1-W5, Curzon Road Barracks, New Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. v. 1, no. 1, Delhi, India, v. 1, no. 1, April/June 1961. September/October 1961. Bimonthly. $2.00. Quarterly. $5.00.

MARCH 1962 151 Applied Economic Papers. Professor V. V. Rama- Aires, Argentina, no. 1, Autumn 1961. Fre- nadham, General Editor, Applied Economic quency not given. pl5.-m/n. Papers, Osmania University, Hyderabad-7, In- Desarrollo Economico. Instituto de Desarrollo dia. v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. Semiannual. $2.25. Econ6mico y Social, Sarmiento 1179, Buenos The Assam Quarterly. Assam Academy, Old Law Aires, Argentina, v. 1, no. 1, April/June 1961. College Building, Dighali Pukhuri, Gauhati, Quarterly? $5.00. Assam, India, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Rs.8. Drama Survey. P.O. Box 4068, University Sta- Australian National Bibliography. Government tion, Minneapolis 14, Minn. v. 1, no. 1, May Printing Office, Canberra, A.C.T., Australia, 1961. 3 numbers a year. $2.50. no. 1, January 1961. Monthly. 60s. for complete Elizabeth; a Magazine of Modern Elizabethan service. and Metaphysical Poetry. The Elizabeth Press, The Australian Scientist. Tasman Productions, 103 Van Etten Blvd., New Rochelle, N.Y. no. 1, 9-23 Upward Street, Leichhardt, N.S.W., Aus- March 1961. Semiannual. 50^ per issue. tralia. v. 1, no. 1, February 1961. Monthly. Enzymologia Biologica et Clinica. S. Karger AG, Overseas rates on request. 25, Arnold Bocklin-Strasse, Basel, Switzerland, Beitrdge aus der Plasmaphysik. Deutscher Buch- v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Frequency not given. $13.50 Export und -Import GmbH, Leipzig CI, Post- each volume. schliessfach 276, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1960/61. Exploration. Circulation Manager, Exploration, Quarterly. DM. 11,- each number. 625 Ulster Chambers, 168 Regent Street, Lon- Boletin Uruguayo de Sociologia. Juncal 1395, Piso don, Wl, England, v. 1, no. 1, May 1961. 2, Escritorio 5, Montevideo, Uruguay, v. 1, no. Quarterly. $2.50. 1, June 1961. Quarterly. 50^ each issue. Fichero Bibliografico Hispanoamericano. R. R. The Boxwood Bulletin. American Boxwood So- Bowker Company, P. O. Box 3269, Grand ciety, Boyce, Va. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Central Station, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 0, Quarterly. $6.00. October 1961. Quarterly. $5.00. Bravo, Magazine of the Lively Arts. Bravo Pub- Geofisica Internacional. Instituto de Geofisica, lishing Company, Inc., 44 East 53d Street, New Universidad Nacional Aut6noma de Mexico, York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, 1961. 4 numbers a Torre de Ciencias, 3er. Piso, Mexico 20, D.F., year. $3.00. Mexico, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Quarterly. British Medical Abstracts. Medical Publications p5.00 (moneda mexicana). Ltd., 58 Parker Street, London, W.C.2, Eng- Graphic Technology. Shand Moran Ltd., 58 Frith land. v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Monthly. 15s. Street, London Wl, England, v. 1, no. 1, May/ Bulgarian Review. Caixa Postal 3968, Rio de June 1961. Bimonthly. £1 15s. Janeiro, Brazil, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Quar- History of Religions. University of Chicago Press, terly. $8.00. Chicago 37,111. v. 1, no. 1, Summer 1961. Bulletin of Art Therapy. 634 A Street S.E., Semiannual. $5.00. Washington 3, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, Fall 1961. Hitotsubashi Journal of Commerce and Man- Quarterly. $3.00. agement. Hitotsubashi University Press, Hito- Canada Month. P. O. Box 202, Montreal 3, Que- tsubashi University, Kunitachi, Tokyo, Japan, bec, Canada, v. 1, no. 1, Forerunner issue, v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. Frequency not given. 1961. $3.25. $1.50 each issue. The Chart Book. Pactolian, 50 Cheshire Road, Hong Kong Economic Papers. Hong Kong Uni- Bethpage, L.I., N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, August 1961. versity Press, Hong Kong (Oxford University Monthly (soon to be weekly) $36.00. Press, Amen House, Warwick Square, Lon- Chrysalis Review. Herrmann-Eatmon Publica- don, E.C.4, agent for all countries except in tions, 95 Campus Circle, San Francisco, Calif, Asia east of Burma) no. 1, June 1961. Semi- v. 1, no. 1, June 1961. Quarterly? $3.00. annual? $1.60 each issue. Civil Defense Magazine. Circulation Dept., Civil India View. Overseas News Reports, Box 7553, Defense Magazine, Post Office Box 1087, Benjamin Franklin Station, Washington 4, Bloomington, Ind. v. 1, no. 1, May-June 1961. D.C. v. 1, no. 1, September 15, 1961. Weekly. Bimonthly. $3.00. $9.00. Columbia Journalism Review. Room 504, Jour- Industrial Relations. Institute of Industrial Re- nalism Building, Columbia University, New lations, 201 California Hall, University of Cali- York 27, N.Y. Pilot issue, Fall 1961. 4 numbers fornia, Berkeley 4, Calif, v. 1, no. 1, October a year. $5.00. 1961. 3 numbers a year. $3.50. Crop Science. Crop Science Society of America, International Chemical Engineering. American 2702 Monroe Street, Madison 5, Wis. v. 1, Institute of Chemical Engineers, 345 East 47th no. 1, January-February 1961. Bimonthly. Street, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, October $12.00. 1961. Quarterly. $15.00. Cuadernos de Poesia. Congreso 4561, Buenos International Guide to Classical Studies. Ameri-

152 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES can Bibliographic Service, Darien, Conn. v. 1, havn Valby, Denmark, v. 1, no. 1, January no. 1, June 1961. Quarterly. Price not given. 1961. Quarterly. $3.00. International Guide to Medieval Studies. Ameri- Okyeame. Ghana Society of Writers, P. O. Box can Bibliographic Service, Darien, Conn. v. 1, M.15, Accra, Ghana, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. no. 1, June 1961. Quarterly. Price not given. Quarterly. Price not given. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Pro- Overseas; the Magazine of Educational Ex- fessor James Dittes, Secretary, The Society for change. Institute of International Education, the Scientific Study of Religion, 409 Prospect Inc., 800 Second Avenue, New York 17, N.Y. Street, New Haven 11, Conn. v. 1, no. 1, Octo- v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly, Septem- ber 1961. Semiannual. $5.00. ber-May. $2.00. Journal of American Indian Education. College Pakistan Scientific Literature: Current Bibliog- of Education, Arizona State University, Tempe, raphy. Pakistan National Scientific and Tech- Ariz. v. 1, no. 1, June 1961. Frequency not nical Documentation Centre, Karachi, Paki- given. Price not given. stan. v. 1, no. 1, 1st quarter 1961. Quarterly. The Journal of British Studies. Managing Edi- Free (first issue). tor, George B. Cooper, Department of History, The Periodical Monitor and Abstract Service; Trinity College, Hartford 6, Conn. no. 1, No- Electronics and Instrumentation Section. 15 vember 1961. Semiannual. $3.00. North Euclid Avenue, Pasadena, Calif, v. 1, Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 2637 Marshall no. 1, July 1961. Monthly. $25.00. Drive, Palo Alto, Calif, v. 1, no. 1, Spring Physica Status Solidi. Deutscher Buch-Export 1961. Semiannual. $5.00. und Import GmbH., Leipzig CI, Postschliess- The Journal of Management Studies. College of fach 276, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Monthly. Business Management, Achimota, Accra, Re- DM. 6,- each issue. public of Ghana, v. 1, no. 1, June 1961. Semi- Phytochemistry. Pergamon Press, Headington annual. 3/6 each issue. Hill Hall, Oxford, England, v. 1, no. 1, Octo- Korea Journal. Korean National Commission for ber 1961. Frequency not given. $20.00. UNESCO, P. O. Box, Central 64, Seoul, Korea, Publishing, Entertainment, Advertising, and v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly. $2.40. Allied Fields Law Quarterly. Callaghan & Kybernetik. Springer-Verlag, Berlin-Wilmersdorf, Company, 165 North Archer Avenue, Munde- Heidelberger Platz 3, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, lein, 111. v. 1, no. 1, June 1961. $20.00. January 1961. Irregular. DM. 12,80 each issue. Radiation Botany. Pergamon Press, Inc., 122 List of Periodicals in the field of Nuclear En- East 55th Street, New York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, ergy. The Director, Division of Scientific and September 1961. Frequency not given. $20.00. Technical Information, International Atomic Revista de Derecho Deportivo. Dr. Agricol de Energy Agency, Kaerntnerring 11, Vienna 1, Bianchetti, Paraguay 1307, piso 4°, ofic. 44, Austria, no. 1, 1961. Irregular. Free? Buenos Aires, Argentina, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Management of Personnel Quarterly. Circula- Quarterly. £400,—m/n. tion Manager, Bureau of Industrial Rela- Revista Interamericana de Ciencias Sociales. Pan tions, 354 Business Administration, The Uni- American Union, Division de Ventas y Pro- versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. v. 1, moci6n, Washington 6, D.C. v. 1, no. 1, 1961. no. 1, Autumn 1961. $4.50. Frequency not given. 50^ each issue. Marina Management. Marina Management As- The Shipper-Motor Carrier Executive. Seitz Pub- sociates, 43 West Front Street, Red Bank, N.J. lishing Co., Inc., Ill West Osborn Road, v. 1, no. 1, November 1961. Monthly. $6.00. Suite 215, Phoenix 13, Ariz. v. 1, no. 1, June Modern Woman; Africa's Leading Illustrated 1961. Monthly. $5.00. Women's Magazine. Presbyterian Press, Accra, Show; the Magazine of the Performing Arts. Ghana, v. 1, no. 1, January 1961. Frequency Hartford Publications, Inc., 140 East 57th not given. Is. each issue. Street, New York 22, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, October NATO Journal. Remsen-Whitney Publishing 1961. Monthly. $10.00. Corporation, Engineers Building, Manhasset, Socialist Congressmen; a Journal of Congress So- N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, September 1961. Monthly. cialist Opinion. H. D. Malaviya, 93, Jor Bag, $12.00. New Delhi-3, India, v. 1, no. 1, April 13, 1961. Natural Resources Journal. University of New Frequency not given. Rs.6. Mexico School of Law, 1915 Roma N.E., Al- Sportswear Merchandiser. McCall Corporation, buquerque, N.M. v. 1, no. 1, March 1961. 230 Park Avenue, New York 17, N.Y. v. 1, Semiannual. $5.00. no. 1, September/October 1961. Bimonthly. New American Periodicals. 160 Fifth Avenue, $4.50. New York 10, N.Y. v. 1, no. 1, November 1961. Studi e Ricerche. Centro Italiano Studi e Ricer- Monthly. $5.00. che, Via Nicolo Paganini, 7, Rome, Italy, v. 1, Nordisk Tidskrift for Informationsbehandling. no. 1, April 1961. Quarterly. Z6000. Regnecentralen, Gl. Carlsbergvej 2, Koben- Studia Musicologica. Kultura, Hungarian Trad-

MARCH 1 962 153 ing Company for Books and Newspapers, University College Review. Review, Mrs. M. E. Budapest 62, P. O. Box 147, Hungary, v. 1, Stanley, Secretary, Box 399, Addis Ababa, no. 1, 1961. Semiannual. 110 forints each vol- Ethiopia, v. 1, no. 1, Spring 1961. Frequency ume. not given. 60$ each issue. The System Analyzer; a Bulletin for Those Con- Unsere Zeit. Deutsches Institut fur Zeitgeschichte, cerned with Digital Differential Analyzers and Hessische Strasse 11/12, Berlin N 4, Germany, Their Applications. George F. Forbes, 13745 v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Quarterly. DM. 8,-. Eldridge Avenue, Sylmar, Calif, v. 1, no. 1, Viewpoint. Hercules House, Hercules Road, Fall 1961. Semiannual. $2.25 each issue. London, S.E.I, England. Distributed by British T ir D M; Transportation ir Distribution Man- Information Services, 45 Rockefeller Plaza, agement. Traffic Service Corporation, 815 New York 20, N.Y. no. 1, 1961. 4 numbers a Washington Building, Washington 5, D.C. year? $5.00. v. 1, no. 1, October 1961. Monthly. $3.00. Transportation Journal. American Society of Zeitschrift fur Chemie. VEB Deutscher Verlag Traffic and Transportation, Inc., 22 West fiir Grundstoffindustrie, Karl-Heine-Strasse 27, Madison Street, Chicago 2, 111. v. 1, no. 1, Leipzig W 31, Germany, v. 1, no. 1, 1961. Fall 1961. Quarterly. $10.00. Monthly. DM. 9,- each quarter.

Book Selection Publication Launched

The establishment of a publication to 3,000 titles will be reported. The publi- provide a book selection service for col- cation is to be directed primarily to un- lege and university libraries was an- dergraduate college libraries with book nounced jointly by the American Library funds of $30,000 or less. Association and the Council on Library The objective of the service is to pro- Resources. The publication will be issued vide a reference and advisory guide to every two weeks and will contain about inform librarians, faculty, students, schol- 16 pages of editorial matter plus adver- ars, and the general public of the more tising. important current publications on any The service, called a "Current College- subject. The publication, supported ini- Level Book-Selection Service," would tially by a $150,000 grant, is expected to up-date the widely used Charles B. Shaw review simultaneously with the publica- publication, A List of Books for College tion date of the books or as soon there- Libraries. Though supported initially by after as feasible. Coverage will include a grant from the Council on Library Re- publications in English, wherever pub- sources, the publication is expected to lished, of potential desirability on all become self supporting. It would be un- college campuses. Representative publi- der the direction of the Association of cations needed for understanding of the College and Research Libraries, a divi- world would be included in addition to sion of the A.L.A. the 'best' publications. Coverage of other The periodical will be produced by languages will be considered later. the recently developed Listomatic se- In addition to using experts for re- quential camera which would compose views, authoritativeness would be sought information concerning book selections through the cooperation of learned directly from typed cards. groups such as the American Council of The periodical's staff will consist of a Learned Societies, Social Science Re- managing editor, associate editor, biblio- search Council, and the National Re- graphic assistant and two clerk-typists in search Council. Religious and other addition to reviewers, all subject experts special interest groups would be allowed involved in undergraduate instruction. to contribute titles and annotations for An estimated 10,000 to 15,000 titles the publications of particular interest to per year will be considered and 2,000 to their group.

154 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES News from the Field

Publications

A COMPREHENSIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY of Mexi- Specialized Science Information Service in can books, published during 1957-60, is avail- the United States: A Directory of Selected able under the title Mexico Bibliografico. It Specialized Information Services in the Physi- lists 4,332 works issued by 212 publishers. cal and Biological Sciences has been issued by Books of all types are covered, including the National Science Foundation (November, translations in science, economics, history, 1961, 528p.). The statements about each political science, children's books, and fiction. service includes the name, scope, user quali- Mexico Bibliografico was compiled by Jose- fications, collection, information services, and fina Berroa with assistance from the Insti- publications. It should be of exceptional help tuto del Libro Mexicano, and financial aid to reference librarians. from the R. R. Bowker Company. Outside THE FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Punch-Card Mexico and Cuba copies may be obtained Methods in Research and Documentation, from R. R. Bowker Company, 62 West 45th with Special Reference to Biology (based on Street, New York 36, N.Y., at $12 each net the second revised German edition by Martin postpaid. Scheele) has been provided by J. E. Holms- British Technology Index, a cumulative in- trom (New York, Interscience Publishers, dex to British technical journals, began pub- 1961, 274p„ $9.50). Punched-card methods lication in January 1962. Initially 400 titles (machine, needle, visual), general rules and will be analyzed. The publication will ap- experience in applying punched card meth- pear monthly and will be cumulated an- ods, and practical examples of applications nually. The publisher is the Library Associ- are discussed in the volume. Illustrations ac- ation, Chaucer House, Malet Place, London, company the text. W.C. 1; price: 15 guineas ($50). THE SECOND EDITION of Reference Service, Christian Periodical Index, volume 1, by S. R. Ranganathan, has been published 1956-1960, is available from the Buffalo Bible by Asia Publishing House (1961, Taplinger Institute Book Store, 910 Union Road, Buf- Publishing Co., 119 West 57th Street, New falo, N.Y.; list price, $12.50; special offer to York 19, N.Y., 433p., $7.75). previous subscribers, $10.95. The 5-year cum- ulation is produced by the Christian Librari- K. A. LODEWYCKS, librarian of the Univer- ans' Fellowship. sity of Melbourne, has issued Essentials in Library Planning (1961, 136p.). This is a The Farmington Plan Handbook, Revised detailed analysis of the plans, layouts, areas, to 1961 and Abridged, by Edwin E. Williams, needs of various groups, ventilation, light- has been released by the Association of Re- ing, and practically all other aspects of the search Libraries (copies sold by Office of the library building. Mr. Lodewycks spent some Executive Secretary, Association of Research time in the United States and has been Libraries, Cornell University Library, Ith- involved with construction of the new library aca, N.Y.). "This volume does not supplant at the University of Melbourne. the original edition of 1953 for historical purposes," writes Mr. Williams. In general THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY PRESS has the procedure has been to tie this edition to published Research Opportunities in Ameri- the 1953 publication by not repeating cer- can Cultural History, edited by John Francis tain information, but carrying it forward. McDermott (Lexington, Ky., 1961, 205p. The new edition contains a section on the $6.00). Among the contributors are Lester Vosper-Talmadge survey. Part VI of the Cappon, Howard H. Peckham, Thomas D. work is a list of "Countries, Agents, and Ad- Clark, Theodore C. Blegen, Richard M. Dor- visers." There is a bibliographical supple- son, John T. Flanagan, David Kaser, David ment on the plan, covering the years 1953- Mead, E. P. Richardson, and Philip D. Jor- 1961. dan.

MARCH 1962 155 The First Century at the University of Michigan. The two are the National Union Washington, 1861-1961, by Charles M. Gates Catalog, 1952 to 1955 Imprints, and the has been issued by the University of Wash- Union List of Microfilms, Cumulation 1949- ington Press (1961, 252p., $7.50). This illus- 1959. trated, attractively printed book contains a The National Union Catalog publication number of references to the library in the de- was sponsored by the ALA Committee on Re- velopment of the educational and research sources of American Libraries, and was com- programs at the University. piled by the Union Catalog Division of the Library of Congress. This catalog is an ex- THE SEVENTEENTH EDITION of the useful A tension of the National Union Catalog, 1952 History of Architecture, by Sir Banister to 1956. It doubles the number of mono- Fletcher (revised by R. A. Cordingley) has graphic titles listed in the Library of Con- been published by Charles Scribner's Sons gress catalogs for this period. The thirty (New York, 1961, 1366p., $16.75). Illustrations volumes have a total of 26,000 pages and are in the volume have been increased from 549 library bound in buckram. The total price to 652, art paper has been used for the for the set is $420.00. whole work, and the chapters on Renais- The Union List of Microfilms, Cumula- sance architecture has been considerably ex- tion 1949 to 1959 is the last such reference panded by fuller treatment of Baroque archi- to be compiled by the Philadelphia Biblio- tecture. Entirely rewritten are chapters on graphical Center and the Union Library Belgian and Dutch, Chinese, Indian, Japa- Catalogue. It lists more than 52,000 micro- nese, and Muslim architecture. films reported by 200 libraries in the United

THE 1962 ISSUE of The Bowker Annual of States and Canada. Long runs of scientific Library ancl Book Trade Information has periodicals, as well as music manuscripts and appeared. Formerly the American Library medical monographs are listed for the first ir Book Trade Annual, this volume, like its time. The two volumes totaling over 1400 predecessors, contains a large amount of in- pages are bound in buckram and priced at formation and statistical data of various types $35.00 for the set. of libraries, publishing and the book trade, Who's Who, 1962 edition, will be published librarians, associations, and committees. and distributed in the United States by There are also available an activities index, St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New the 1961 library buying guide, and a general York City. It was previously published in index. (R. R. Bowker, 62 West 45th St., New this country by The Macmillan Co., also of York 36, $6.95). New York. St Martin's has taken over the standing orders from Macmillan, so those PUBLICATION of two major library refer- libraries which have been receiving Who's ence works was announced December 15 by Who need not reorder. The 1962 edition will J. W. Edwards, Publisher, Inc. of Ann Arbor, be published and distributed on March 21.

Miscellaneous

Two RECENT CRANTS by the Council on Li- transmit interlibrary loans directly from one brary Resources, Inc., were: state academic library to another by special To the Society of American Archivists, courier system. The study will be made by $42,000 for a study of state archival agen- LeMoyne W. Anderson, librarian at Colo- cies and programs, with a view to setting rado State University, Fort Collins. standards and pointing the way to improve- ment. The study, to be completed by June A CONFERENCE, "Information Retrieval in 1963, will be made by Ernest Posner, 1815 Action," sponsored by the Center for Docu- South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. mentation and Communication Research of To the Association of State Institutions of the School of Library Science, Western Re- Higher Education in Colorado, $5,000 to de- serve University, will be held in Cleveland, termine whether it is feasible to establish a Ohio, April 18-20, 1962. The purpose will cooperative technical processing program and be to review research development and op-

156 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES erational activities related to machine litera- erature and Librarianship, July 3 to ture searching systems using the GE 225 gen- Aug. 11. eral-purpose computer. Registration fee for Emory University, School of Library Sci- the conference is $10. Further details, and a ence, Atlanta: Medical Librarianship, conference program when available, may be June 18 to July 27. obtained by writing to the Center at West- University of Southern California, School ern Reserve University, 10831 Magnolia of Library Science, Los Angeles: Bib- Drive, Cleveland 6. liography of the Biomedical and Physical Sciences, June 25 to Aug. 3. THE ARCHIVES OF AMERICAN ART has a new home in New York. The new location of the Archives is in the American Federation of Applications for the scholarships should be Arts Building at 41 East 65th Street, New sent to the dean of the library school in each York 21. case.

Dartmouth College Library Bulletin for NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE'S electronic December 1961 is devoted entirely to critical information storage and retrieval system will and biographical materials relating to Wal- be developed by the General Electric Co. lace Stevens. Copies will be sent gratis to under contract with the Public Health Serv- academic and public libraries that ask for ice. The computer-based system will be them. Address the Dartmouth College Li- known as MEDLARS (Medical Literature brary, Hanover, N.H. Analysis and Retrieval System), and will en-

THE ILLINOIS COMMITTEE ON HUMAN able the library to broaden and accelerate RIGHTS in Higher Education has issued a re- its services to medical education, research and vised "Statement of Policy Relative to Fair practice. Practices in Higher Education" which is available free, in single copies, from its secre- WASHINGTON, D.C., AREA university librari- tary, Mrs. A. B. Counselbaum, 343 South ans took part in an informal half-day confer- Dearborn Street, Chicago 4, Illinois. The ence on reserve book procedures at George- statement deals with such matters as admis- town University Library in mid-January. The sions, scholarships, grants, loans, curriculum, conference was welcomed by the librarian of extra-curricular activities and student or- Georgetown University, Joseph E. Jeffs, ganization, housing, staff and student em- and was chaired by the assistant librarian, ployment and student placement. Sam Waters. Librarians participating in conference included Mrs. C. Manning, from THE 1961 ANNUAL MEETING of the Medical American University, James P. Johnson, Library Association will be held in Chicago from Howard University, Sal Costabile, from June 4-8, 1962. Convention chairman from Georgetown University, and Mrs. is Donald Washburn, 222 E. Superior Ct„ Katherine A. Cima, from the University of Chicago 11. Maryland. THE NATIONAL MICROFILM ASSOCIATION will hold its 11th annual convention April THE LOUISIANA STATE LIBRARY is offering 25-27, 1962 at the Mayflower Hotel, Washing- two $2,000 scholarships for the 1962-63 aca- ton, D.C. More than 75 microfilm equipment demic year, for graduate study leading to a manufacturers, dealers, and service com- master's degree in Library Science. An- panies will exhibit systems and equipment. nouncement of these grants, which are in- cluded in this library's state plan and made THE MEDICAL LIBRARY ASSOCIATION is of- possible through funds available under the fering a scholarship of $150 for each of the Library Services Act, is made by Dr. Essae M. following courses in medical librarianship to Culver, state librarian. Upon completion of be given during the 1962 Summer session. their degrees, recipients will be expected to Students who complete the courses will be work for at least two years in a Louisiana eligible for MLA Grade I certification. public library which serves rural areas in the Columbia University, School of Library State. Application papers must be filed by Service, New York City: Medical Lit- April 15, 1962.

MARCH 1 962 157 Acquisitions, Gifts, Collections

THE MATTHEWS LIBRARY, Arizona State dence relates primarily to the Maryland University at Tempe, has received the law Senatorial campaign of 1950. Also included library collection of William E. Brooks, Ar- are political questionnaires, records of cam- izona legislator and lawyer, from his sister, paign contributions, election returns, radio Mrs. Carolina A. Edwards, Colton, Califor- scripts, scrapbooks of clippings and other nia. materials covering a wide range of political subjects. THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY,

Los Angeles, recently acquired a major col- THE MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY lection of books by and about Captain James LIBRARY at Harvard University has purchased Cook (1728-1779). Included in the collection, the Austin Collection of Japanese ornitho- gathered by Sir Maurice Holmes during the logical literature which includes a few Chi- past 35 years, are materials on Cook's voyages nese and Korean books and some on general and his standing in the history of explora- natural history from these countries. The tion and advancement of geographical knowl- acquisition makes the library's holdings of edge. Japanese bird books the most complete in

JOINT UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES at Nashville, the western world. serving Peabody and Scarritt Colleges and A MAJOR SHIPMENT of rare manuscripts on Vanderbilt University, has received gifts of microfilm has been received by the Library nearly $10,000 to establish a collection of of Judaica and Hebraica at New York Uni- southern literature in memory of Edwin versity's Washington Square Center, from Mims, professor of English at Vanderbilt the Oriental Library of the Hungarian Acad- University for fifty years. emy of Sciences. The new material brings to

THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA will re- more than 15,000 the number of valuable ceive the literary papers of William C. Len- historical documents on microfilm acquired gel, editor and author. Mr. Lengel's initial in Russia and Hungary for the NYU library gift to the university consists of original by Professor Abraham I. Katsh, curator of manuscripts of novels and short stories, first the library. These items have not previously editions of some of his books, unpublished been available to scholars in the western correspondence with Theodore Dreiser, and world. personally inscribed photographs of prom- The microfilm received recently from inent people. Budapest contained the second half of the David Kaufmann collection, of which the BAKER LIBRARY of the Harvard Business first half arrived at NYU last July. The col- School has received a collection relating to lection includes manuscripts pertaining to the beginnings of the scientific management the Bible, codices, commentaries on Hebrew movement. The donor is J. Christian Barth literature; documents relating to Talmudic of Philadelphia, son of Carl G. Barth, who scholarship and religious laws; works on was one of the first to put into effect the liturgy, mathematics, astronomy, medicine, teachings of Frederick W. Taylor. The col- theology, and philosophy; and historical lection includes historical materials, draw- articles. Some date as far back as the year ings, and notebooks of forms and blueprints 1021. drawn up by the Barths (father and son) for the companies for which they served as con- ADDITIONS to the holdings of the Harry S. sultants, glass slides, a unique assemblage of Truman Library, Independence, Missouri, slide rules, and some fifty printed volumes, included papers donated by Dillon S. Myer, many of them inscribed by the authors. Joseph M. Jones, and N. T. Veatch, Kansas City engineer who was associated with former UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND LIBRARIES has President Truman in the county road build- acquired the papers of Millard E. Tydings ing program. Among many photographs ac- (1890-1961). Tydings served in Congress as quired were several hundred relating to the Representative from 1923 to 1927, and as early career of Mr. Truman and his Jackson Senator from 1927 to 1951. His correspon- County background, and current photo-

158 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES graphs of the visits of Vice President John- Atlantic Monthly, and The Family Weekly. son, General Eisenhower, and others. There are thirty-two reviews either by or about Miss Sandoz's works appearing in The EUGENE G. GOTTSCHALK of Bronxville, New Saturday Review, New York Times, Wash- York, has given to the University of Wyo- ington Post, New York Herald Tribune, ming Library an extensive collection of the New York Sun, New York World-Telegram, works of Mari Sandoz. The Gottschalk col- Nebraska History and the Westerners Brand lection includes: first editions, all auto- Book. The collection is completed by several graphed, of Old Jules (1935); Sloqum House letters by Miss Sandoz on historical topics, (1937); Capital City (1939); Crazy Horse three working maps used in Old Jules and (1942); The Tom-Walker (1947); Cheyenne Capital City; and copies of talks, awards re- Autumn (1953); Winter Thunder (1954); ceived and programs given by Miss Sandoz. The Buffalo Hunters (1954); Miss Morissa (1955); The Horsecatcher (1956); The Cat- YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY has recently re- tlemen (1958); Hostiles and Friendlies (1959); ceived from Hans P. Kraus, New York rare Son of the Gamblin' Man (1960); Love Song book dealer, the late Robert Sterling Clark's to the Plains (1961); and These Were the collection of books on horsemanship. The Sioux (1961). In addition to the above vol- gift comprises 800 books and 600 pamphlets umes there are forty-four articles written by dealing with all aspects of equitation, includ- Miss Sandoz which have appeared in such ing riding, breeding, training, and care of publications as: Saturday Evening Post, horses in many countries of the world. It American Heritage, Prairie Schooner, North will enrich Yale's collection of sporting American Review, Ladies Home Journal, books.

Buildings

THE RECENTLY OPENED new science library THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE will begin of Southern Methodist University, Dallas, is construction of a new library in the spring of an almost windowless 3-story and basement 1962. Costing $3,127,000, and having 110,000 structure. The million dollar building, gift square feet of floor space, the building will of three local industrialists, houses collec- provide for storage of 600,000 volumes, and tions in the sciences, engineering, and mathe- study space for 1,000 students. Two-thirds of matics. Services to industry in the region are the seating will be individual study carrels in emphasized and cooperative arrangements the bookstack. The new building will be with nearby special libraries are under con- completed and occupied by September 1963. sideration. Mobile Libraries—a la Camel Harry Norris, a lecturer at the London and he took notes by hand. Valuable in- School of Oriental and African studies, formation in these books, estimated by a has traveled across Mauritania by jeep local scholar to total at least 2,000 books and camel, in a battle against time, to on all subjects, could still be saved if find the camel-borne libraries that the prompt action is taken to photograph nomads carry from one camping site to them. Among these is a twelfth century another. Every year many pages of irre- commentary on the Koran by the noted placeable manuscripts become dilapi- Middle East scholar, Abu Hilal Al-Askari. dated beyond recognition, and records of Mr. Norris believes it to be an original historical events, throwing light on the in the author's own handwriting. Its ancient civilization of the Sahara, are brown pages, partly eaten by termites, are lost forever. now stiff and crumbling, and Mr. Norris Norris reports that after copying hun- fears than in another few years little dreds of pages, his stock of film ran out may be left of it.

MARCH 1962 159 Personnel

T. N. MCMULLAN'S appointment as direc- of the Library Section, Louisiana College tor of libraries at Louisiana State University, Conference. His faculty activities include announced December 16, disproves such old membership in the American Association of adages as "The grass University Professors, in which he is serving is greener," and "A a second year as vice-president, and on the prophet is not with- Policies Committee, Faculty Council. out honor." His three His off-campus and nonlibrary interests degrees are from are centered largely in the Kiwanis Club, for L.S.U. His entire which he has served as Key Club advisor to professional career the Baton Rouge £ligh School, and the Re- has been spent in serve Officers Association of the United the service of the in- States, of which he has been president of the stitution the librar- Louisiana chapter. His military service in- ies of which he now cluded one year overseas in AFPAC, General heads. His ability to McArthur's headquarters. He is now retired discharge the respon- with the rank of lieutenant colonel. T. N. McMullan sibilities of the posi- A warm and friendly person himself, one tion to which he has of Mac's chief assets is a charming family, been appointed has been demonstrated in consisting of a married daughter, two sons, two separate periods in which he has served the older of which is now in college, and as acting director. two grandchildren, plus a librarian wife, who Born in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1909, Mr. teaches the required course in the Use of McMullan received his Bachelor of Science Books and Libraries at L.S.U., and is, there- and Master of Science degrees in engineering fore, in a key position from which to give and his Bachelor of Science in Library Sci- him the benefit of the sage advice and criti- ence degree from L.S.U. in 1931, 1932, and cism of a very large segment of his library 1934, respectively. During his college years, public. As one who can speak for another he worked as a student assistant in the uni- very important, but much smaller, segment versity library. Following completion of his of that public, the Library School faculty work for a library science degree, he was ap- and student body, I am happy to have the pointed to the staff as head of circulation. privilege of introducing to CRL readers the This position, with constantly increasing re- new director of libraries at Louisiana State sponsibilities, he continued to hold—with University, Theodore N. McMullan, or, as time out for Military service, 1941-45—until he is known affectionately to his staff, Mr. he became acting director, 1954-55, associate Mac.—Florrinell F. Morton. director with special responsibility for public

service, 1955-61, and again since September, CARL M. WHITE, former director of the 1961, acting director. It was largely during Columbia University Libraries and professor his first period as acting director that the in the School of Library Service, has accepted programing and planning of L.S.U.'s new a position with the Ford Foundation. His library building were accomplished. This first assignment will be to assist in the de- valuable experience he is now putting to use velopment of the National Library of Ni- as he works with the library building com- geria in Lagos. His many accomplishments mittees for the two new libraries presently as director of libraries (1943-1953) and the in planning period at the Alexandria and growth of the collections and services during the New Orleans campuses of the university. his term are well demonstrated in library Mr. McMullan's professional activities in- literature. clude membership and committee work in With an outstanding record of service as the usual professional organizations. He has director of the Ankara Library School, which served as president of the Louisiana Library was supported by the Ford Foundation, Dr. Association and is currently chairman-elect White now joins the Foundation staff as pro-

160 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES gram specialist in library development. His In addition to his work at the Evansville many friends on the library staff wish him Public Library, Dr. Goldhor was instru- the best of everything in this new and im- mental in organizing the Tri-State Librar- portant venture.—Richard H. Logsdon. ians—a grass-roots organization of librarians and friends of libraries in southwestern In- HERBERT GOLDHOR resigned his position as diana, southeastern Illinois and western Ken- chief librarian of the Evansville Public Li- tucky. In 1961, arrangements were made for brary on January 31 to return to the Uni- handling of book orders for the Tell City, versity of Illinois Li- Indiana, Public Library. This led to the brary School as as- exploration of the possibility of a regional sociate director. Prior processing center to serve all the libraries to coming to Evans- which use Library Service Act funds in the ville in 1952, he had seven counties around Evansville. With all been associate pro- this Dr. Goldhor has found time to write a fessor of the faculty number of articles for publication in pro- of the same library fessional journals, and to work with Joseph school. As associate L. Wheeler in writing a book on public li- director Dr. Goldhor brary administration, scheduled for publica- will have special re- tion in 1962. sponsibility for teach- In his ten years at the Evansville Public ing courses and train- Library Dr. Goldhor established a high ing students in the Herbert Goldhor standard of performance for his successor to field of public library emulate. His decision to leave Evansville administration, in addition to his administra- was made only after an inward struggle, and tive duties. with the conviction that a greater challenge In his ten years as chief librarian at Evans- awaits him at Illinois.—Thomas S. Harding. ville, he has seen the book stock of the library increase from 245,596 volumes to 304,682, while the circulation jumped from HENRY BIRNBAUM has resigned from his 614,000 in 1952 to more than 1,150,000 in position as chief circulation librarian at 1961. While these figures are impressive, they Brooklyn college to accept the position of li- do not reveal the full extent of his accom- brarian at Pace Col- plishments. Believing fervently that the worth lege in the City of of a book is in its use, and that the reader New York. should be the center of all library activities, Swiss by birth, Mr. he sought continuously to streamline library Birnbaum became a policies and procedures to achieve these ends. U.S. citizen in 1941. Building on the solid foundations laid by his After early experi- two predecessors, Ethel McCollough and ence in business, he Arnold Rosaaen, Dr. Goldhor effected a re- entered the army and organization of the central library into two served in Military major divisions—Adult Information Depart- Intelligence from ment and Technical Services Department— 1941 to 1945. For the as well as a Young Adult Room for readers next year he was a of high school and post-high school years. representative in the Henry Birnbaum Since the Evansville Public Library has the Library of Congress responsibility of servicing all of Vanderburgh Mission in Germany. For the next two years County, a modern bookmobile was acquired he was a research analyst for the war crimes to reach outlying areas. Land for a much- trials in Nuremberg. He was graduated needed branch to serve Evansville's rapidly magna cum laude in International Relations growing east side was acquired recently, and from the University of Colorado in August, a branch library building is now in the plan- 1952. He is a member of Pi Gamma Mu ning stage. Meanwhile, this part of the city (Social Science honorary), Delta Phi Alpha is being served by a modern booketeria in (German Language honorary), and Phi Beta one of the shopping centers. Kappa.

MARCH 1962 161 Mr. Birnbaum received his M.S.L.S. de- Division of ALA, and was elected its chair- gree from Columbia University School of Li- man.—H. G. Bousfield. brary Science in 1954. He began his work at Brooklyn College before he had finished his professional training at Columbia. He was PARKER WORLEY on September 1st assumed employed as a Fellow in the acquisition de- the librarianship of the Rutgers Univer- partment in 1953. On completion of his Co- sity Library in Camden, N.J. He came lumbia work, he became an assistant in the to the Rutgers library catalog department; and in 1957 was ap- system from Trenton pointed chief of the circulation department. State College where Special assignments included the he was readers' ad- Brooklyn College staff bibliography. When viser since 1958. Pre- the time came to move from the old library vious to that time to the new, Mr. Birnbaum was in sole charge he was librarian at in planning and organizing the shift. He Thiel College and was deputy chairman of the library depart- assistant librarian at ment during the summer of 1960, and was Ursinus. During 1948 in charge of the performance budget for and 1949 he served Brooklyn College Library. an internship in the In the circulation department he became Library of Congress. interested in developing a refinement in the Mr. Worley grad- department's IBM transaction-card system. uated from the Uni- The system had been adopted some years versity of Oklahoma in 1947. One year later ago, but there had never been a location file. he received his bachelor's degree in Library His effort to discover how a location file Service, and after serving for five years as could be created and maintained by IBM librarian at Thiel College, he came to the machines was successful, and he was com- Graduate School of Library Service in 1958. missioned by IBM to write a manual. This During the time he was in the library school was entitled General Information Manual, at Rutgers, he also worked as an assistant in IBM Circulation Control at Brooklyn Col- the university library in the periodical de- lege Library, 1960. The Manual has received partment. wide distribution, and IBM and the library He has been associated with Trenton State have received hundreds of requests for it, College since 1958, and in 1961 was awarded from librarians throughout the world. a master's degree in History at Rutgers Uni- In 1960 Mr. Birnbaum initiated the estab- versity. lishment of a Circulation Service Discussion He served four years in the Navy and is Group within the Library Administration an active member of the Naval Reserve.

Appointments

CHARLES BEYMER, formerly a staff member trol Library, Washington University Librar- of the Cornell University Library, Ithaca, ies, St. Louis, Mo. N.Y., is now assistant head, acquisitions de- MICHAEL BROOK, formerly reading room partment, University of Notre Dame, Notre superintendent at the Southampton, Eng- Dame, Ind. land, University Library, has joined the DAVID BISHOP, formerly reference librarian, staff of the Minnesota Historical Society Li- Los Angeles County Medical Association, is brary, St. Paul, as assistant reference librar- now librarian II in the Biomedical Library, ian. University of California, Los Angeles. CHARLES A. BROPHY, JR., has been ap- CAREY S. BLISS, formerly assistant curator pointed head librarian at Batelle Memorial of rare books, The Henry E. Huntington Institute, Columbus, Ohio. For the past ten Library and Art Gallery, San Marino, Calif., years, Mr. Brophy has played a key role in has been appointed curator of rare books. developing Batelle's Slavic library, which MRS. OLGA BOROS is catalog librarian, Con- contains one of the nation's largest collec-

162 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES tions of technical and scientific publications Dame, Ind., is now assistant director of the from the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, Poland, humanities division. and other Slavic countries. Mr. Brophy's de- FRANK LUCASH is reference librarian, Cen- gree in library science is from University of tral Library, Washington University Librar- Illinois. He is a member of the American ies, St. Louis. Documentation Institute. PHILIP JAMES MCNIFF has been appointed DAVID W. BRUNTON, formerly head librar- Archibald Cary Coolidge bibliographer, a ian, Elmhurst College, Elmhurst, 111., is now new position in the Harvard University Li- director of the cooperative processing center, braries. He will continue to serve as associate Nevada State Library, Carson City. librarian for resources and acquisitions in MRS. CAROLYN F. BUCKNALL is librarian II the Harvard College Library. in the catalog division, University of Wash- LESTER MATTISON, formerly assistant to the ington, Seattle. director, has been appointed assistant pro- MARY LEE BUNDY is assistant to the direc- fessor and chief circulation librarian, Uni- tor of libraries and library-research consult- versity of Minnesota, Minneapolis. ant at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, WILLIAM A. PARRISH, who is presently cura- Troy, N.Y. tor of prints, The Henry E. Huntington MRS. MAUDE CLAY is a cataloger in the Library and Art Gallery, San Marino, Calif., University of California Agriculture Library, has received the further appointment of ad- Riverside. ministrator of exhibitions. EILEEN A. CONLEY, formerly humanities ANITA M. PROFFITT, formerly the Base li- librarian, University of Notre Dame, Notre brarian at Pease Air Force Base, New Hamp- Dame, Ind., is now engineering librarian shire, was recently appointed to the staff of there. the reference branch of the U.S. Air Force. ROBERT C. ENNEN is assistant director, JOHN CARSON RATHER, formerly specialist technical services division, University of for college and research libraries, Library Notre Dame Library, Notre Dame, Ind. Services Branch of the Office of Education, MELBA FAUCETT, formerly a staff member has been appointed assistant chief of the of the Creighton University Library, Omaha, descriptive cataloging division, Library of Neb., is now head of Business and Economics Congress. Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre JESSIE RICHARDSON; formerly of the refer- Dame, Ind. ence department, is now principal librarian MRS. PATRICIA GEBHARD is a cataloger in of the Bio-Medical Library, University of the University of California Library, Santa Minnesota, Minneapolis. Barbara. MRS. TOMOMI REVOYR is senior library as- ISAAC GOLDBERG, formerly a staff member sistant in the technical information service, of the Library of Congress, is now librarian Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. II in the Engineering and Mathematical EUGENE N. SALMON, head circulation li- Sciences Library, University of California, brarian, University of Oregon, Eugene, has Los Angeles. been granted a leave of absence to accept a F. RIDLEN HARRELL, formerly a staff mem- special assignment as head of Technical In- ber of the University of Michigan Library, formation Services, American Library As- Ann Arbor, is now head of the Social Science sociation's Library Technology Project, Chi- Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre cago. Dame, Ind. WILLIAM J. SCHNEIDER has joined the NOLA ANN IVERSON, formerly adult assist- Minnesota Historical Society Library, St. ant, Kansas City, Mo., Public Library, is now Paul, as an assistant librarian. assistant cataloger, Idaho State College Li- MRS. VIRGINIA SECREST is catalog librarian, brary, Pocatello. Central Library, Washington University Li- MARIA KESZLER is assistant librarian in the braries, St. Louis. Social Science Library, University of Notre GEORGE E. SEREIKO, formerly a staff mem- Dame, Notre Dame, Ind. ber of the Western Reserve Historical So- FRANCIS D. LAZENBY, formerly librarian, ciety Library, Cleveland, is now assistant di- Mediaeval Institute and Graduate-Research rector, social studies division, University of Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Notre Dame Library, Notre Dame, Ind.

MARCH 1962 163 MARILYN L. THOMPSON, formerly with U.S. University of Delaware Libraries as agricul- Army Libraries in Germany, is now senior ture librarian. Mr. Helms was formerly a librarian in the Physics-Mathematics-Statistics reference librarian at Rutgers University Li- Library, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. brary. LEDELLE WETTENGF.L, until recently Base RICHARD L. SNYDER on February 15 be- librarian at Ent Air Force Base, Colorado came associate director of libraries, Massa- Springs, Colorado, has joined the staff of the chusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. U.S. Air Force Academy Library as catalog- Mr. Snyder was formerly science librarian at ing librarian. MIT. RICHMOND D. WILLIAMS has been named JOHN M. STEADMAN, formerly a Recognized director of the Eleutherian Mills Historical Scholar at Oxford University, has been ap- Library. He had been associate director since pointed to the research staff of the Hunting- May 1961 of Longwood Library, later given ton Library, San Marino, Calif. Dr. Steadman the present name. received his B.A. and M.A. at Emory Uni- FRANK Q. HELMS has joined the staff of the versity and his Ph.D. at Princeton.

Retirements

THELMA BRACKETT, librarian of the Uni- organization merged with the library of the versity of New Hampshire, Durham, since Hagley Museum and was renamed the Eleu- 1942, retired on December 31, 1961. She was therian Mills Historical Library. He was state librarian of New Hampshire for ten director of libraries at the University of years before 1942. During her administration Pennsylvania from 1940 until 1955. of the university library, all professional li- MRS. GLADYS NOLLMAN has retired as prin- brarians on the staff were granted faculty cipal librarian of the Bio-Medical Library, status. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, after CHARLES W. DAVID, director of the Eleu- twenty-five years of service. therian Mills Historical Library, Wilming- THEODOOR W. L. SCHELTEMA, cataloger in ton, Del., retired at the end of 1961. Dr. the subject cataloging division, Library of David was director of the Longwood Library, Congress, retired December 8, 1961 after Kennett Square, Pa., from 1955 until that thirty-three years of service.

Necrology

HUGO HESPEN, editor of the National brary at the time of her retirement in 1948, Union Catalog since 1947, and a staff mem- died December 5, 1961 in Panama City, ber in the union catalog division, Library of Florida. Congress, for thirty-four years, died Decem- ROBERT OLIVER SCHAD, curator of rare ber 11, 1961. books and secretary to the Board of Trustees, ELEANOR F. LEWIS, head of the reference The Henry E. Huntington Library and Art department of Northwestern University Li- Gallery, died in Pasadena, December 25, 1961.

Foreign

MARTIN CREMER has retired as director of NASSER SHARIFY, formerly deputy director the Westdeutsche Bibliothek, Marburg. of the Library of Parliament of Iran, is now JOSEF REST, director of the Universitats- director-general of the National Library of bibliothek, Freiburg im Breisgau, W. Ger- Iran. many, died April 9, 1961 at the age of sev- TAKAO SUZUKI has been appointed direc- enty-seven. tor of the National Diet Library, Tokyo.

164 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES ACRL Board of Directors Midwinter Meeting 1962

BRIEF OF MINUTES On a call for discussion many board mem- January 29 bers expressed their opinions on the issues Present: President Ralph E. Ellsworth; raised. The consensus of the group was sum- Vice President and President-elect, Katharine marized by Dr. Ellsworth. It was decided M. Stokes; Past President, Edmon Low; Di- that ACRL should continue to work within rectors-at-large, Jack E. Brown, Neal R. Har- the ALA structure, but that it should present low, Flora B. Ludington, Lucile M. Morsch; its views more forcefully within ALA and Directors on ALA Council, J. Richard develop more aggressive statements of pro- Blanchard, Helen M. Brown, Dorothy M. gram. Drake, James Humphry, III, Ralph H. Hopp, Dr. Ellsworth closed the meeting with a Newton F. McKeon, Jr., Russell Shank, Mrs. recommendation that the president's term Margaret K. Spangler; Chairmen of Sections, of office be longer than a year, preferably Mrs. Frances J. Brewer, Esther M. Hile, two. Further discussion of this point brought Helen Wahoski, James O. Wallace, Irene a suggestion that instead of extending the Zimmerman; Vice Chairmen of Sections, president's term of office, a program com- Virginia Clark, Ervin Eatenson, David Kaser, mittee or planning committee should be Jay K. Lucker; Past Chairmen of Sections, appointed to lay out a long-range program, George S. Bonn, Ralph W. McComb, Fritz with the president-elect serving as chairman Veit; ACRL Executive Secretary, Mark M. and remaining on the committee for a three- Gormley. Committee chairmen present were year term. It was agreed that this would pro- Dale M. Bentz, Lorena A. Garloch, Gus A. vide better continuity of program. Harrer; editors, William V. Jackson, Maurice F. Tauber; guest, Frank A. Lundy. January 30 The first session of the ACRL Board of Present: President, Ralph E. Ellsworth; Directors at ALA's Midwinter Meeting was Vice President and President-elect, Katharine devoted entirely to a full and frank discus- M. Stokes; Past President, Edmon Low; Di- sion of the future role of ACRL in ALA and rectors-at-large, Jack E. Brown, Flora B. with ARL. President Ellsworth made an in- Ludington, Lucile M. Morsch; Directors on troductory statement preparatory to the dis- ALA Council, Newton F. McKeon, Jr., J. cussion outlining his views of the relation- Richard Blanchard, Helen M. Brown, Ralph ship of ACRL to ALA and ARL. He felt H. Hopp, James Humphry, III, Dorothy M. that ACRL's relationship to ALA in the Drake, Russell Shank, Mrs. Margaret K. present organizational structure was not sat- Spangler; Chairmen of Sections, Mrs. Frances isfactory. He described ALA's structure as J. Brewer, Esther M. Hile, Helen Wahoski, undesirable for the reason that it tends to James O. Wallace, Irene Zimmerman; Vice inevitably glorify and exaggerate the role Chairmen of Sections, Charles M. Adams, of the type-of-activity divisions at the ex- Virginia Clark, H. Richard Archer, Jay K. pense of the type-of-library divisions. Lucker, Ervin Eatenson, David Kaser; Past Dr. Ellsworth did not advocate ACRL's Chairmen of Sections, George S. Bonn, Fritz secession from ALA but suggested that if Veit, Ralph W. McComb; ACRL Executive ALA were organized on a federation of li- Secretary, Mark M. Gormley. Committee brary associations basis, ACRL would be in chairmen present were Dale M. Bentz, a better position to support a broader and Lorena A. Garloch, Gustave A. Harrer, Felix more effective program. As for ACRL's rela- E. Hirsch; editor, William V. Jackson; two tionship with the now corporate and enlarged guests from India sat in on the meeting. ARL, he felt there would be no problems or At the second session of the Board of Di- conflicts which could not be resolved through rectors, President Ellsworth called attention cooperation. to a resolution formulated by ARL on the

MARCH 1 962 165 matter of the proposed revised accrediting as our major program, expressing its concern standards of the American Association of about the threat of declining support, and Law Schools. He felt that it would be wise urging that every effort be made to correct for ACRL to take a positive position on this this situation. The motion was seconded and topic and asked for authority to compose a carried. similar resolution in the name of ACRL. A Mr. Gormley presented to the board a motion was moved, seconded, and carried revised statement of ACRL responsibility for permitting the president to draft this state- their approval. The statement as revised ment. (The statement will appear in a later would include responsibility for materials: issue of CRL.) "The identification and evaluation of book Miss Ludington announced that Charles and nonbook materials useful in college, uni- B. Shaw of Swarthmore College died the versity, and research libraries; the identifica- previous day. She was requested by President tion of principles and establishment of Ellsworth to prepare a statement of tribute criteria involved in their selection and use; in the name of ACRL, a copy to be trans- the stimulation of the production of such mitted to Mrs. Shaw as well as to the presi- materials; and the responsibility for activi- dent of Swarthmore. The statement reads ties related to the bibliography, compilation, as follows: publication, study, and review of professional literature in its area of responsibility." In- The Association of College and Research Li- corporation of this additional phraseology braries notes with sadness the passing of in the official statement of responsibility Charles B. Shaw, for many years the distin- would make valid ACRL's administration of guished librarian of Swarthmore College. The the "New Shaw List" project. A motion was List of Books for College Libraries edited by made, seconded, and carried for approval of Mr. Shaw thirty years ago was a substantial the revised statement. contribution to many college libraries. As a teacher and consultant he was an inspiration Since section and committee reports had to many members of our profession. been submitted in writing in advance of the Midwinter sessions and distributed to board A report of the nominations for the 1962 members for information, President Ells- division and section elections was presented worth invited discussion of any special prob- by Mr. Gormley. A complete list of the lems of the sections and committees, nominees appears elsewhere in this issue. Mrs. Brewer, chairman of the Rare Books Mr. Low, ACRL past president and repre- Section, commented that there are some sentative to ALA's PEBCO, gave an informa- members of the section who feel that it is tive but rather pessimistic report on the not necessary or desirable to have a precon- budget for the coming year. He distributed ference institute of the section every year, to the board members an excerpt from but rather every other year. President Ells- PEBCO's report to the ALA Executive Board. worth ruled that it is up to the sections to The report listed eleven programs deserving coordinate their preconference plans with of emphasis, one of which is Publications (in- over-all ALA conference plans. cluding divisional periodicals). Priorities Mr. Wallace, chairman of the Junior Col- were not yet assigned, but will be later in lege Libraries Section stated that the section the light of funds available. Mr. Low com- was in close association with the American mented that he believed that funds for Association of Junior Colleges and requested ACRL's official journal and chief program, that the section be officially authorized to College and Research Libraries, were in dan- represent ACRL in dealings with AAJC. A ger of erosion, and said he would like a motion was seconded and carried. statement from the Board of Directors in- Brief reports from the Publications Com- dicating the priority they would like him to mittee and the Committee on Organization, assign to their journal in comparison to which had not been received in time for other suggested ARCL programs, at the forth- duplication and distribution to the board, coming PEBCO meeting at Miami Beach. were read by Mr. Gormley. President Ells- Mr. McComb moved that the ACRL Board worth commented that the same procedure of Directors pass a resolution on to PEBCO of submitting written reports in advance designating College and Research Libraries would be followed in connection with the

166 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES annual conference. He announced that Dr. the period, 1946-48, and as editor since April Robert A. Miller of Indiana University would 1948. During the fourteen years as editor, be our speaker at the ACRL Membership College and Research Libraries has expanded Meeting at Miami Beach. from a purely subscription publication to a Budgeting procedures were covered by Mr. membership journal, and has grown from a Gormley. All requests from sections and quarterly to a bimonthly. It has a national committees are to be prepared and forwarded and international reputation of some merit, to headquarters by March 26. He reported and this has been a direct result of the ex- also on the problems of providing member- pert and full cooperation that the editor has ship lists to the various sections and sub- had from his editorial board and from the sections, but was hopeful that the eventual several executive secretaries who have served installation of automatic equipment at head- during this period. The journal had an excel- quarters would improve this situation. lent start under the editorship of A. F. Kuhl- Of great interest to the Board of Directors man, and continued to thrive under Carl M. was President Ellsworth's report of progress White (with E. W. McDiarmid and Ernest J. on the project that the Council on Library Reece as successive managing editors). The Resources recently funded to establish a cur- long term that I have spent with the journal rent college-level book selection service. Can- has been related directly to my belief that this didates are being considered to fill the posi- was a useful way to serve ACRL and the li- tions of editor and assistant editor. An brary profession in general. It has been most editorial board and advisory committee will satisfying to know that CRL is used con- be appointed as well. Suggestions of potential stantly by librarians as a source of informa- candidates were invited. tion in their practical work. Dr. Ellsworth announced the appointment During the period from February to Sep- of Jack E. Brown to the chairmanship of the tember 1961, I was away, traveling in several newly created President's Committee on parts of the world, and spending six months ACRL Program. Other members of the com- in Australia working with the Australian li- mittee are Neal Harlow, James Humphrey, brarians in the examination of the present III, and Lucile Morsch. state of resources in the libraries of the coun- President Ellsworth gave mention to a try. Through the joint activities of Richard postal bill passed by the House of Represen- B. Harwell, Ronald V. Glens, and Eugene tatives which would give the Attorney Gen- Sheehy of the editorial staff, as well as my eral permission to define Russian propaganda secretary at Columbia University, Mrs. Dona and keep it out of the mails. ARL is actively Drangel, the work of the journal proceeded engaged with this problem and is taking ap- without serious difficulty. Publication of the propriate action. Dr. Ellsworth said that he several issues appearing during my absence was delegated by ARL to get in touch with had been generally planned prior to my de- the Assistant Attorney General and see if he parture, and the individuals above, as well thinks library associations can do anything as other members of the staff, performed most about it. Dr. Ellsworth thought ACRL ought effectively. to have a standby council to take action for Since I have been back on the job at Co- this board if and when it seems appropriate lumbia University I have found that time and wise to do so. seems to be slipping by so fast that I am not The Chairman-elect of ACRL's Rare Books able to give the hours that are necessary to Section, H. Richard Archer, reported that increased loads in teaching, research, and the Rare Book Manual he is editing will be writing. It was apparent this should be my published sometime this year as ACRL last period of appointment as editor. I am Monograph No. 26. most grateful for this continued confidence in me on the part of the Board of Directors.

DR. TAUBER REPORTS I have never been too much concerned with the economics of publishing CRL, al- I have the honor of submitting my last though I have been affected by the budgetary report as editor of College and Research Li- actions of ALA. In the budget of ALA it is braries. I have been associated with the jour- indicated that CRL receives a "subsidy." If nal since 1944, serving as managing editor for this is the best term to use for the designa- te ARCH 1962 167 tion of supplementary funds to a journal, editors, thanks should go to Constance Win- which, if it had continued as a subscription chell for her feature on reference books, and publication would have more than likely paid to Carolyn Ulrich, Wyllis E. Wright, Edna its own way, this is all right. The point that Mae Brown, and Geraldine Kaufman Maurer, I wish to make here is that the ACRL Board for their contributions on new periodicals. must stay behind CRL as one of its basic N. Orwin Rush, Arthur T. Hamlin, and projects, and support its publication as fully Richard B. Harwell have been most helpful as necessary. It would be a serious omission from their posts as executive secretaries of in this report if I did not pay tribute to Co- ACRL. There have been about fifteen peo- lumbia University, and especially the School ple who have served at ALA headquarters of Library Service, for the many kinds of as liaison personnel, but the several publica- additional support that have been forthcom- tions officers—Cynthia Saidel (Mrs. Irv ing during the long stay of the journal at Spigelman), Samray Smith, Floyd Cammack, Morningside Heights. Peter Demery, Ronald V. Glens—had fuller We have tried to follow a policy of pub- responsibilities with CRL. Individuals who lishing new materials or imaginative rework- have assisted with special work should be ings of old data. Sometimes we have pub- commended for their continuous help. These lished items which have been criticized by include C. Donald Cook, S. G. Gribble, and some of our sharp and wise colleagues. The Richard Schimmelpfeng. To all of these, I many types of readers of CRL make it im- express my thanks for the countless actions portant to cover a variety of fields and to that have been of direct assistance in the treat problems on several levels. We have editing of CRL. Through a long period taken some pride in our ability to introduce Elaine Mitchell has served as secretary to new writers to librarianship, and to encour- the executive secretary at ACRL headquar- age contributions from younger members of ters, and in this capacity has been of con- the profession. We have tried to single out stant assistance to the editor. individuals who have been working on proj- I have high hopes for CRL. The new edi- ects and prod them for articles for CRL. I tor comes to his position not only experi- am sure that these are things that any editor enced in the handling of CRL, but he has a does, but I want to pay tribute to the many long and wide experience in editing and writers here and abroad who have provided publishing generally, as well as a full grasp the copy that makes a journal successful. of the national activities of ACRL and other There is no such thing as a good journal library organizations. Richard Harwell brings without good copy. The editorial staff mem- so many talents to the post of editor of CRL bers have had no small part to play in the that I am sure that he and his practically selection of material, and to the three who new editorial board will make the journal have been with me from the very start of an even more useful and wanted publication my editorship—Robert B. Downs, Ralph E. than it has been. Mark Gormley and Mrs. Ellsworth, and Jens Nyholm—and to the Mary Falvey have to fit into the program of several others who have been on the staff, the journal with both industry and enthusi- including John Berthel, Carlyle J. Frarey, asm. Clarence Gorchels, Byron Hopkins, John C. I offer my best wishes to the new editor Rather, Lawrence S. Thompson, and Walter and his staff, the executive secretary, and W. Wright, I wish to express my deep grati- the Board of Directors of ACRL.—Maurice tude. Although not listed on the masthead as F. Tauber.

Please Add Us to Your Mailing List

College, university, and research libraries, and other publications. These mailings publishers of books on librarianship, and on should be addressed to College and Research college, university, and research libraries and Libraries, American Library Association, 50 librarians, are asked to add CRL to their E. Huron St., Chicago. Such mailings to the mailing lists for news releases, news letters editor of CRL should be discontinued.

168 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES New Editor and Editorial Board of CRL

Richard Harwell, librarian of Bowdoin of ACRL he served also as associate ex- College, will succeed Maurice F. Tauber ecutive director of ALA. He is currently as editor of CRL, beginning with the a member of ACRL's advisory committee May issue of the magazine. At the same on the Burmese projects, its advisory com- time there will be a complete change in mittee on the Metcalf project concerning the editorial board. The new editorial library buildings, and its grants commit- board will consist of Maurice F. Tauber, tee, and is chairman of the nominating Melvil Dewey professor, School of Li- committee of its Rare Books Section. brary Service, Columbia University, New Dr. Tauber joins the editorial board York; Miss Flora B. Ludington, librar- of CRL after fourteen years as editor of ian, Mount Holyoke College, South Had- the magazine. Even prior to his assump- ley, Massachusetts; Peter W. Demery, tion of the editorship he was closely acting acquisitions librarian, University associated with it in various other capac- of Washington Library, Seattle; David ities. He is widely known for his distin- Kaser, director, Joint University Librar- guished work as a professor in Columbia ies, Nashville, Tennessee; W. P. Kellam, University's School of Library Service, director of libraries, The University of and equally well known for his many Georgia, Athens; Eli M. Oboler, librar- contributions to library literature, par- ian, Idaho State College, Pocatello; Ben- ticularly for his coauthorship with Dr. jamin B. Richards, chairman, division of Louis Round Wilson of The University library education and service, Kansas Library and his volume on Technical State Teachers College, Emporia. Services in Libraries. He has been an Mr. Harwell brings to his new duties adviser to major research libraries all more than twenty years of varied edi- over the world in their cataloging and torial experience and a close familiarity other problems in the area of technical with the problems of CRL and of ACRL. services, and is considered a leading au- Prior to undertaking his present duties thority in that area of library work. He at Bowdoin College he had been execu- has participated in many surveys of col- tive secretary of ACRL, from January lege, university, public, and research li- 1957 through the summer of 1961. He braries and spent a major portion of is author of thirty-odd books and pam- 1961 surveying the libraries of Australia. phlets, more than a score of articles in Miss Ludington was president of ALA general magazines and scholarly journals, in 1953 and 1954, and is currently a mem- and of close to six hundred reviews. His ber of its publishing committee. She is most recent major publication is Lee, a a member of the ACRL board of direc- one-volume condensation of Douglas tors, and has been active at various times Southall Freeman's four-volume R. E. on many of its committees and many Lee. In addition to publications in the committees of ALA. She has contributed field of Civil War history, he has pub- widely to library periodicals and other lished several bibliographies and a dozen educational publications. She is the au- items directly related to librarianship. thor of Books and Libraries, Tools of the He is presently a regular reviewer for Academic World, one of the three pam- the Chicago Tribune's Magazine of Books phlets distributed by the National Book and an occasional reviewer for the Sat- Committee and ALA in connection with urday Review. the first observance of National Librarv During his time as executive secretary Week in 1957. She was the recipient of

MARCH 1962 169 ALA's Lippincott Award in 1957. In ad- 1950-54 and in 1957-58. He has served as dition to being prominent in college li- a reviewer for the Library Journal since brary work she has had foreign service in 1953, and has contributed articles to that librarianship in India, Japan, and Tur- magazine, the ALA Bulletin, and Im- key and also has traveled widely in Africa. proving College and University Teach- Previous experience with CRL is the ing. He was editor and co-compiler of the primary asset that Mr. Demery brings to ACRL monograph College and Univer- his work as a member of the editorial sity Library Accreditation Standards— board of the magazine. He worked as 1957. He was a member of ACRL Stand- ACRL publications officer from 1958 to ards Committee from 1954-56 and a co- 1960. He is a past editor of the Washing- compiler of the ACRL annual statistics ton Libraries and for some time served report of college and university libraries as a reviewer of Near Eastern books for in 1958 and 1959. He has conducted a the Library Journal. regular newspaper column since 1952, Dr. Kaser is the author of Messrs. Carey first in the Intermountain, and since & Lea of Philadelphia: A Study in the 1960 in the Idaho State Journal, Poca- History of the Booktrade, Directory of tello. He has conducted a weekly radio the St. Louis Book and Printing Trades broadcast, "Books and You," since 1949. to 1850 and coauthor (with Jane Kaser) He has been widely active in state, re- of Washington University Manuscripts: gional, and national library association A Descriptive Guide. Presently in press work. is his The Cost Book of Carey & Lea, Mr. Richards is a former chairman of 1825-1838. He has contributed nearly a ACRL's College Libraries Section and score of articles to various library and has served on its grants committee. He is bibliographical journals. He is a former the editor of California Gold Rush Mer- editor of Missouri Library Association chant; The Journal of Stephen Chapin Quarterly and is assistant editor of Li- Davis and of several other publications. brary Resources ir Technical Services. From 1952 through 1958 he was editor He is chairman of the Acquisitions Sec- of The Stepladder, a quarterly journal of tion of ALA's Resources and Technical poetry. He has contributed reviews to the Services Division, and chairman-elect of Library Quarterly. ACRL's University Libraries Section. He is a member of the regional advisory BANQUET FOR DR. TAUBER board of the Bibliographical Society of Social highlight of the ACRL Mid- America. winter season was the banquet on Tues- Long experience with library publica- day evening for retiring CRL editor Dr. tions has marked the career of Mr. Kel- Maurice F. Tauber. Thirty people who lam. He was editor of the Southeastern have been associated with Professor Tau- Librarian from 1952 to 1961, and is now ber during the fourteen years of his stew- editor of the Miscellanea series published ardship gathered for good food, remi- by the University of Georgia Library. He niscences, and the presentation of an is a former member of ACRL's Publica- illuminated citation to Dr. Tauber. The tions Committee and has been prominent citation read: in ACRL and ALA activities for many years. To Maurice F. Tauber, the Association of College and Research Libraries presents Wide editorial experience also high- this token as evidence, insufficient but sin- lights the career of Mr. Oboler. He is cere, of its appreciation of his fourteen editor of the PNLA Quarterly and of the years of service as editor of College and LPRT Newsletter. He has twice served Research libraries. His editorship has been as the editor of Idaho Librarian, from marked by constant increase in the stature

170 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES of the magazine just as his career as a li- Downs, Ralph E. Ellsworth, Mary Fal- brarian has been marked by constant vey, Carlyle J. Frarey, Ronald V. Glens, achievement toward his goal of the fullest Mark M. Gormley, Richard Harwell, possible service to academic—nay to all— David Kaser, Richard Logsdon, Milton librarianship. Both he and the magazine Lord, Edmon Low, Flora B. Ludington, truly illustrate his ambition to help li- brarians in their work. Elaine C. Mitchell, Lucile M. Morsch, Florrinell F. Morton, Jens Nyholm, Ben-

Chicago, 30 January 1962 jamin E. Powell, Benjamin B. Richards, Alfreda Rogowski, Robert W. Severance, Members of ACRL and of the ALA Ralph Shaw, Samray Smith, Frances Lan- headquarters staff who were present to der Spain, Grace T. Stevenson, Kathar- honor Dr. and Mrs. Tauber were David ine M. Stokes, Eileen Thornton, Robert H. Clift, C. Donald Cook, Robert B. Vosper, and Wyllis E. Wright.

Training Programs

The Indiana University Libraries an- University of North Carolina. Awards are nounce the continuation of their program made to those who can qualify for li- designed to give intensive instruction to brary assignments and whose credentials prospective rare book librarians. The fa- suggest special professional potential. Ap- cilities and collections of the Lilly Li- plications for either a July 1 or Septem- brary will be used as a training center. ber 15 award must be filed by February Two Fellows will be selected for a study 15. Announcement of appointments will program intended to familiarize them be made April 1. Information and appli- with bibliographical methods, the anti- cation blanks may be secured from Jean quarian book trade, and the organization Freeman, Admissions Officer, School of and management of rare book and spe- Library Science, University of North cial collection departments or libraries. Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The School of Librarianship of the Library work-study scholarships of- University of California announces that fered by The University of Michigan it will have available for students enter- provide an opportunity for well-qualified ing in the fall of 1962 nine part-time re- students to acquire intensive work ex- search assistantships. Research assistants perience in a department of the univer- may be enrolled in either the first year sity library. To be eligible, applicants or the advanced program of the school. must have gained admission to the Ho- Applications for admission may be ob- race H. Rackham School of Graduate tained by addressing the Dean, School Studies as degree candidates in library of Librarianship, University of Cali- science. The appointment is for the pe- fornia, Berkeley 4. riod from June 15, 1962 through June 14, In cooperation with the University of 1963 and may be once renewed. Appli- North Carolina Library, the School of cations should be made not later than Library Science offers several library as- April 1. Announcement of the awards sistantships each year to students ad- will be made about May 1. Inquiries mitted to the M.S. in L.S. degree pro- and requests for application blanks gram. To be eligible, applicants must be should be directed to the Office of the admitted to the School of Library Sci- Director, University Library, The Uni- ence and to the Graduate School of the versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.

MARCH 1 962 171 Nominees for ACRL

PRESIDENT Katharine M. Stokes, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo

VICE PRESIDENT AND PRESIDENT-ELECT Neal R. Harlow, Graduate School of Library Service, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J. Ralph H. Parker, University of Missouri, Columbia

DIRECTORS-AT-LARGE (1962-65) Andrew H. Eaton, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Edward C. Heintz, Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio.

DIRECTORS ON ALA COUNCIL (1962-66) Joe W. Kraus, Kansas State University, Manhattan Robert L. Talmadge, Tulane University, New Orleans, La.

COLLEGE LIBRARIES SECTION

CHAIRMAN: Charles M. Adams, Woman's College, University of North Carolina Greensboro VICE CHAIRMAN AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Eli M. Oboler, Idaho State College, Pocatello Margaret Enid Knox, University of Florida, Gainesville

SECRETARY: Helen Bliss, Eastern Oregon College, La Grande William R. Brandt, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis.

JUNIOR COLLEGE LIBRARIES SECTION

CHAIRMAN: Virginia Clark, Wright Junior College Library, Chicago, 111. VICE CHAIRMAN AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Leon F. Fordham, Daytona Beach Junior College, Daytona Beach, Fla. Norman E. Tanis, Henry Ford Community College, Dearborn, Mich.

SECRETARY: Phyllis L. Brown, Laredo Junior College, Laredo, Tex. Mrs. Ethlyn Greenwood, Bay Path Junior College, Longmeadow, Mass.

172 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES Officers, 1962/63

RARE BOOKS SECTION

CHAIRMAN: H. Richard Archer, Chapin Library, Williams College, Williamstown, Mass

VICE CHAIRMAN AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Ben C. Bowman, University of Vermont, Burlington Edwin Wolf, II, Library Company of Philadelphia

SECRETARY: Thomas M. Simkins, Jr., Duke University Library, Durham, N.C. Howard A. Sullivan, Wayne State University Library, Detroit, Mich.

SUBJECT SPECIALISTS SECTION

CHAIRMAN: Jay K. Lucker, Department of Science 8c Technology, Princeton Univer- sity Library, Princeton, N.J.

VICE CHAIRMAN AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Wrayton E. Gardner, St. Louis University Library, St. Louis, Mo. Gordon Stevenson, Art and Music Department, Kansas City Public Library, Kansas City, Mo.

TEACHER EDUCATION LIBRARIES SECTION

CHAIRMAN: Ervin Eatenson, Science-Technology Library, San Jose State College, San Jose, Calif.

SECRETARY AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Felix E. Hirsch, Trenton State College, Trenton, N.J. Reta E. King, Nebraska State Teachers College, Chadron

UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES SECTION

CHAIRMAN: David Kaser, Joint University Libraries, Nashville, Tenn. VICE CHAIRMAN AND CHAIRMAN-ELECT: Dale M. Bentz, University of Iowa, Iowa City Ralph H. Hopp, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

SECRETARY: (1962-65) Lorena A. Garloch, University of Pittsburgh Natalie N. Nicholson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge

MARCH 1 962 173 Review Articles

worthy of the late James Thurber; and his "Mostly Mearns" account of the seventh annual convocation (1907) of the Boston Authors' Club is as Largely Lincoln. By David Chambers Mearns. rollicking an excursion into a by-way of New York: St Martin's Press, [1961] xi, American literary history as is likely to be 227 p. $6.00. found. Every essay can easily be a favorite—• Largely Lincoln is "Mostly Mearns." That mine or yours—but no bookman, so-called, means it is a combination of good humor, self-styled or real, can afford to miss the one sound scholarship, and a feeling for the tell- called "A Neglected Bookman: Calvin Cool- ing incident or appropriate anecdote that idge." It is a gem. adds up to a delightful book. It is a good This is a happy book and one to recom- representation in book form of the genial mend to all lovers of books. But I do have master of manuscripts at the Library of Con- one cavil with the author: He is such a good gress, a happy reminder of a warmly erudite historian, such a lover of books, such a personality for all who know him and a scholar himself, why does he bang the worn- wonderful introduction to him for those out drum that librarians are enemies of unfortunate librarians who have not yet had books, are neither readers nor scholars? I the pleasure of hearing him tell in person wish he could be as proud as the library pro- such stories as they will here find in print. fession is proud for him, that it is librarian- Dave Mearns is a much more serious ship that led Dave Mearns down the paths scholar than he looks, but it is his sparkling of scholarship to the point that he himself puckishness that is reflected in the warmth disproves his charges against librarians. Let of his face, the warmth of a greeting in his him stand up and be counted as the fine li- office, the warmth with which he helps one brarian he is.—Richard Harwell, Bowdoin scholar after another at the Library of Con- College Library. gress, which is also so well reflected in this volume. Readers can turn to his other works to measure his stature as a historian (of the Library of Congress as well as of President Lincoln); let them turn to this book for his- tory with hilarity and librarianship with laughter. In Largely Lincoln nine of the essays are Science Literature about the wartime president. All of these Collecting Science Literature for General are entertaining, and most of them develop, Reading; Papers presented at an institute gently and amusingly, little known points in conducted by the University of Illinois Lincoln's life that verify the claim of Earl Graduate School of Library Science, No- Schenck Miers' introduction that: "Much vember 6-9, 1960. Champaign, 111.: Illini of what is revealed will come as a delightful Bookstore, 1961. 186p. Paper, $2.00. surprise, rewarding the reader with insight into Lincoln and his age." This collection of papers of the seventh The other six essays are equally delightful Allerton Park Institute is apt to be the most and equally rewarding. His story of D. P. timely and popular topic of the annual Gardner, "the New England Soap Man," is series. At all age levels and in a broad range

174 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES of cultural groups, the varied aspects of sci- dealing with the special problems of creat- ence are today eagerly read about and dis- ing and serving interest in science in chil- cussed. For many a beleaguered librarian dren specifically, young people (broadly de- this volume will provide comfort and guid- fined as from the sixth grade to senility), ance, wise counsel, and useful clues to po- and a very brief report of some effective tentially important new directions. Readers promotion by the use of audio-visual meth- will find different papers of greater interest, ods. The first and second of these chapters depending upon their primary field of serv- are particularly allied to public and school ice; however, certain of the papers are of library practice; the last apparently de- wide application and will have enduring pended largely for its effectiveness upon a usefulness. filmstrip, which, unfortunately, could not The first paper, "Classics in Science," by be demonstrated to the reader with the text. Robert B. Downs, provides in a simple The next two long papers, one by Joseph dozen pages a synthesis of the early record C. Shipman and the other by George S. of scientific theory, ingeniously tying to- Bonn, are alone worth the cost of the whole gether in historical perspective the printed volume. Each will probably remain a classic landmark works described. In his usual thor- in library literature. ough manner, he enumerates the thirty- Joe Shipman, librarian of the Linda Hall three classics in a bibliography following his Library in Kansas City, reviews "Publishing narrative. of Scientific Materials" from the earliest rec- Two short papers follow, the first by a ords to modern times, introducing repre- scientist who works on an international sentative measures of publication in the sev- plane and the second by an early well-known eral fields of science and in various areas of popularizer of science. The paper of Fred- the world. One startling fact reported is eric Seitz seeks to orient us to the place of that, "The Russian totals of scientific books science in our world, in our particular so- represented more than one-third of all the ciety, and in our own time. With a brief nod books printed in the U.S.S.R., while copies to the future, the author suggests no appar- of American scientific and technical books ent goals for libraries in the grim future. represented only about 3 per cent of all the The other paper, by Watson Davis, develops books produced in this country." This is a life-long thesis of its author. Mr. Davis only a fragment of the vivid picture of mod- has for decades been a one-man factory for ern science literature provided by Mr. Ship- the promotion of universal diffusion of pop- man as a setting for the exhaustive treat- ular science. His suggestions here do not ment of "The Aids of Selection" presented fail to demonstrate his indefatigable drive. by Mr. Bonn, the chief of the science and Briefly, he renews his well-known claims for technology division of the New York Public "auxiliary publication" as a device for avoid- Library. He opens his paper with an enu- ing full and costly publication in science, meration of six cardinal criteria for selec- and proposes "an inclusive scientific news- tion and then proceeds to list, in a series of paper potentially capable for circulation to appendices, general and specialized tools, every scientist and engineer ... in the na- book-reviewing journals, and other useful tion". There is little in these two papers to types of aids. The net result of this scrupu- relate them to the tasks of libraries. lously detailed and thoughtfully discussed Another small group of papers follows bibliographical effort is an impression of a

MARCH 1962 175 rare combination of Helen Haines and R. R. George Fry & Associates, management con- Hawkins, with some traces of Besterman. All sultants, were commissioned for this detailed frivolity aside, these papers provide sub- analysis of circulation in the field by the stance for future planning. Council on Library Resources in coopera- The remaining papers touch on special- tion with the Library Technology Project ized types of public and peripheral types of of the American Library Association and the material. In William S. Budington's "Prob- Special Libraries Association. Limited in lems of Selection in Science" one can read- scope to only the operations of borrower ily sense the particular public of a John registration, charging and discharging of Crerar type of library. "The Components of books, handling overdues and reserves, and the Science Collection" reflects accurately in circulation statistics, the study also involved its enumeration of types of materials the sending some 4,585 questionnaires to varied long experience of Irene Strieby in special libraries. Three hundred and thirty-one of libraries and their needs. The brief sketch these went to college and university librar- of "Science Fiction as Literature" is lesser ies. These questionnaire results are tabu- fillip, the frosting on the cake, bringing this lated in the study. During the actual study, collection to its conclusion, succinctly out- seventy-three public libraries were visited, lined by Harold Lancour with his customary along with nineteen college and university Gallic humor. The conclusion, that "Science libraries and twelve special libraries. belongs in every library", and "Librarians Actually, the report, conceived as a "guide will need, in the immediate years ahead, to in hand" for administrators instituting or inform themselves as never before about the revising present circulation systems, is di- world of science," is not itself news or a vided roughly into two halves. The first great contribution. A considerable contri- covers the procedures under which the study bution has been made, however, in adding was conducted, together with a review of to library literature an up-to-date, authori- current circulation control practices and tive handbook to enable those less knowl- recommendations as to modifications and edgeable in the sciences to cope with the improvement. The second (and larger half) needs of our changing public.—Jerrold consists of the three manuals, complete with Orne, University of North Carolina. indented, numbered tabs, provided proce- dural and cost information on the leading circulation control systems and their varia- tions for public, college and university, and special libraries. The practical core of each manual is a number of blank work sheets, with accompanying explanatory samples, in- Circulation Systems tended to be filled out when studying one's Study of Circulation Control Systems. George own needs with a view to estimating costs, Fry 8c Associates, Inc. (Library Technology modification, or consideration of a new sys- Project Publications, number 1) Chicago: tem. The entire report is bound in plastic Library Technology Project of the Ameri- spiral so that these work sheets, one to be can Library Association, 1961. 138p. $2.50. used for studying each charging point in the library, may be easily removed. This attractively designed workbook is Both the Council on Library Resources the end result of a long-awaited and com- and LTP are to be commended for their prehensively carried out study of circulation foresight in initiating this project and in systems by a private management group in providing the wealth of comparative infor- cooperation with an advisory committee of mation brought forth. This reviewer was in- librarians. It is also the first publication to trigued by probable uses of the work sheets, appear under the aegis of the Library Tech- although broad use and reports of resulting nology Project. The final product contains savings and modifications will necessarily three manuals with tear-away worksheets for first have to be evaluated for full practical comparing systems in use, plus a truly im- evidence. Nevertheless, it is reassuring to see pressive amount of statistical data. the potentials of management analysis ap-

176 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES plied to this traditional, and ofttimes neg- time and motion studies. However, despite lected, problem area of libraries. the desirability of a fresh viewpoint, there Specifically, the statistical Exhibit 1V-B is room here to wonder whether such a study will be of immediate interest to circulation done by experienced librarians, paid and on personnel with its provision of a percentile leave, might not have accomplished similar chart on "Elemental Times for College and results without such time lost in preparation University Library Circulation Systems," as and familiarization. will be the other exhibits on equipment and While this study should be of solid as- material costs. Such gatherings of cost data sistance in system revision and improve- have been needed for years. Also, in Chap- ment, and while it reports concisely on ter 5 of the report, "Future Mechanization," twenty-eight charging systems now in use, it the administrator can speculate on an "ideal" is regretted that one or two newer circula- circulation system of the future. tion modifications in the field were also not One disappointing note is found, how- reported on. Reference is made to the Book- ever. Despite the excellence of charts, graphs, amatic modification now in operation at the and data, the findings reported in the nar- Princeton University Library, which signifi- rative portion of the study will be found cantly reduces the high costs of Bookamatic somewhat elementary by the experienced reported in the Fry study, and in the earlier circulation librarian or administrator alert Diebolcl study. This modification eliminates to public service functions. In fairness it both the costly, little-used Bookamatic mul- must be said that the Fry organization had tiple form and plastic book card, and by to begin this study as a complete stranger to means of a plastic campus identification card the field. Their representatives, to become and a redesigned imprinter, permits im- familiar with nomenclature and work meth- printing of any library's regular bookcards. ods, visited fifty libraries, interviewing, film- —Warren B. Kuhn, Princeton University ing operations, and conducting preliminary Library.

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PERIODICALS POSITIONS OPEN PERIODICALS—sets, files, numbers- UNIVERSITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK. bought, sold, exchanged. Microcard reprints Bonar Law-Bennett Library. Applications of rare files. Catalogues 8c buying lists. J. S. are invited from new graduates or experi- Canner Inc. Dept. ACRL., Boston 20, Mass. enced librarians for cataloguing position. Fifth year library science degree required. Initial salary depends on experience; range $4,300-$5,000; $5,000-$5,700. Five day week, MISCELLANEOUS months' holiday, Blue Cross, hospital insur- ance, pension. Apply with photo to Dr. A YORKSHIRE (ENGLAND) LAW Gertrude E. Gunn, Librarian, University of SCHOOL is extending its studies to include New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Bruns- research and teaching in American law. wick. Canada. Gifts of such law books and State or Federal Reports or other similar material as may be required to establish an adequate library would be most welcome. It is hoped that PERIODICALS AND ORDER LIBRAR- friends in the United States may assist in this IAN, Hamilton College. Usual requirements, project with gifts of books or money. Write fringe benefits and salary, starting June 1, to Box 234, c/o Dawsons, 129, Cannon St., 1962. Write: The Librarian, Hamilton Col- London E.C.4, England. lege, Clinton, N.Y. WEST VIRGINIA WESLEYAN College. ASSISTANT COLLEGE LIBRARIAN in Reference Librarian to have charge of all Charge of Reference, Circulation and Serials public services (General Reference, General in new building housing Audio-Visual as a Studies, Special Services). Challenging op- part of library services. Graduate library portunity for a scholar trained in research school degree required. Starting salary $5833. and bibliography capable of working with Apply to Edward C. Werner, Head Librarian, curriculum revision. Position involves teach- New Mexico College, Silver City, N. M. ing of Library Science classes and some cir- culation work. Position open. College and M.L.S. degrees required, experience preferred. Faculty status, 5-day, 37i/2 hour week, one SERIALS CATALOGER. Position open in month vacation, TIAA hospitalization and large scholarly library. Some knowledge of disability insurance, Social Security. Salary one or more foreign languages necessary. $5.800-$6,800, depending on qualifications. Fringe benefits. For further information ap- Write Helen Stockert, Librarian, West Vir- ply: The Johns Hopkins University Library, ginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W. Va. Baltimore 18, Md.

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AMERICANA—Manuscripts, Theses, Pamphlets. Lists on request. Careful Service AFRICANA—Govt. Reports, Journals, Swiss and European Continental Rare Books. Brochure on request. Books and Periodicals • ORIENTALIA—Royal Asiatic Society Publications, India Office News- papers: Catalogue on request. We are prepared to accept not only your current orders but also your And Scientific Theses, Journals, Re- "special cases" on new and second ports, O.P. Books—listed in our Tech- hand publications. nical and Scientific Catalogue. Write to:— •

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24" Physical-Political Reference Globe • This large globe has four times the surface area of the ordinary 12-inch globe. The scale, 333 miles per inch, is nearly that of our large 86x64" flat map of the world. Circumference 75 inches. • Coloring is in accordance with the internationally accepted scheme for showing land elevations and sea depths. Warm and cold ocean currents are shown. • With all its wealth of physical, political and cultural data, the globe remains uncluttered and attractive. National and state boundaries appear in purple. Trust territories are delineated. The international date line is shown. Lettering is clear and distinct. • The globe is made of light-weight, tough, molded wood-fiber plastic. Surface is lacquered to provide durable, washable finish. The map is painstakingly handmounted for hairline register and perfect adherance. Cosmopolite Navigator The distinguished Cosmopolite period-style cradle The Navigator stand is of blond hardwood. A dis- stand of hand-rubbed solid walnut will be a prized tance and time measuring strip is mounted on the acquisition to any library. Overall height with globe horizon ring. The shelf beneath the globe is a con- is 42 inches, width 34 inches. A distance and time venient rest for atlases. Overall height of globe in measuring strip is mounted on the horizon ring. Signs Navigator mounting is 47 inches. The globe rotates of the zodiac also appear on the ring. A flexible plastic freely at a touch and permits any point to be brought scale for measuring degrees and miles, as well as a into view. This stand may be had in mahogany or plastic "dust cover," are included with the globe. The walnut finish which adds 15% to the price. globe rotates at a touch for easy viewing. G24PL15 in blond finished hard wood G24PL61 in solid walnut Cosmopolite mounting $470.00 Navigator mounting $195.00 DENOYER-GEPPERT COMPANY Maps • Globes • Charts • Atlases • Pictures 5235 Ravenswood Avenue Chicago 40, Illinois Books for Advanced Students and Researchers

PRINCIPLES of SELF-ORGANIZATION VISTAS IN ASTRONOMY, (1961 Illinois Symposium) Vols. 4 and 5 International Tracts in Computer Science and Editor: Arthur Beer, The Observatories, Technology and Their Application, Vol. 9 University of Cambridge Editors: Heinz Von Foerster and George W. Zopf, Jr., These volumes offer articles by internationally- University of Illinois famous authors and provide a complete survey of contemporary astronomy and its allied sciences, An invaluable source of data on the problems of with emphasis on active research, new techniques artificial intelligence, mechanization of thought, and methods and interaction with theoretical de- automation of perception, etc., which contributes velopments. to the clarification of issues, definitions, assump- tions and techniques connected with the matter Partial Contents of self-organization. Vol. IV—An eighth-century meridian line, by A. Partial Contents Beer; Artificial satellites, by Sir Harrie S. W. Some self-organizing parameters in three-person Massey; Dynamical effects in the motion of earth groups, by A. Rapoport; Toward the cybernetic sputniks, by L. I. Sedov. Vol. V—The magnetic factory, by S. Beer; Many-valued logics and re- fields in planetary nebulae, by G. A. Gurzadian; liable automata, by J. Cowan; Principles of the On the evolution of close binary stars, by F. B. self-organizing system, by R. W. Ashby; Orderly Wood. function with disorderly structure, by R. W. Sperry. Vol. IV, 208 pp., illustrated $12.00 526 pp. $15.00 Vol. V, 248 pp., illustrated, in press $12.50 ADVENTURES IN RADIOISOTOPE RESEARCH George de Hevesy A collection of the work of George de Hevesy, world-famous Swedish scientist, Nobel laureate and winner of the Atoms for Peace Award. Partial Contents INORGANIC AND PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY—Analytical applications; Activation analysis; Electrochemistry; Interchange studies; Self-diffusion. LIFE SCIENCE—Application of radioactive tracers occurring in nature; Skeleton studies; Phosphatides; Fatty acids; Permeability studies; Botanical studies. 1038 pp. 2-vol. set $30.00

CLAYS AND CLAY MINERALS, Vol. 9 Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference on Clays and Clay Minerals, Purdue University, I960 Editor: Ada Swineford, University of Kansas International Series of Monographs in Earth Sciences Vol. XI Two symposia were featured at the Conference—"Engineering Aspects of Physico-Chemical Properties of Clays" and "Clay-Organic Complexes." The papers included in this volume con- tribute to the solution of problems involving clays, review the status of knowledge on specific topics in these areas and formulate the problems remaining to be solved. Partial Contents The influence of physico-chemical factors upon the mechanical properties of clays, by I. Th. Rosenqvist; Adsorbed water on clay: a review, by R. Torrence Martin; The structural status of clay systems, by L. A. G. Aylmore and J. P. Quirk; Clay minerals in rocks of the lower part of the Oquirrh formation, Utah, by E. W. Tooker. Interlamellar reactions of clays and other sub- stances, by Douglas M. C. Macewan; Adsorbtion by organo-clay complexes, by Rodney Tetten- horst, Carl W. Beck and George Brunton; Viscosimetric constants of suspensions of clay- polymer complexes, by H. v. H. Van Der Watt and G. B. Bodman. approx. 1,000 pp. $15.00

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MICROCARD9 READER microcarm d CORPORATION MANUFACTURERS OF MICROCARD READERS AND COPIERS / WEST SALEM, WISCONSIN HISTORIAE NATURALIS CLASSICA Ediderunt J. Cramer et H. K. Swann

A Series of Facsimile Reprints of Rare and Important Works in the Biological Sciences

NOW READY!

Volume 10: Lamarck, J. B. Philosophic Zoologique. 2 vols, in one. Paris 1809. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $28.70

Volume 11: Diesing, K. M. Systema Helminthum. 2 vols, in one. Wien. 1850-51. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $46.90

Volume 12: Jan, G. and Sordelli, F. Iconographie Generale des Ophidiens. 4to. 300 plates. Milan 1860-81 clothbound. $47.60

Volume 13: Hagen, H. A. Bibliotheca Entomologica. 2 volumes in one. Leipzig. 1962-63 clothbound. $39.20

Volume 14: Engelmann, W. Bibliotheca Historico-Naturalis. (1700-1846). Leipzig 1846 (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $28.70 * Volume 16: Hedwig, J. Species Muscorum. With an Introduction by P. A. Flor- schuetz (Bot. Mus., Utrecht). Leipzig 1801. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $19.60

Volume 17: Hirn, K. E. Monographic und Iconographie der Oedogoniaceen. Folio, 396 pp., 64 plates. 1900 (Later Starting Point Books of Botanical Nomenclature) (Reprint 1960) clothbound. $39.20

Volume 20: Hooke, R. Micrographia. 38 plates. 1665. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $26.60

Volume 21: Arber, A. Monocotyledons. With introduction by Mrs. Arber, Jr. and W. T. Stearn. 1925. (Reprint 1961) clothbound. $11.90

ASK FOR COMPLETE LIST. STECMT-HAFIR SERVICE AGENCY, Inc. 31 East 10th Street, New York 3, N. Y.

Serials Department University of Illinois Library Urbana. m. I* •end copy