ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries 344 News From the Field A C Q U I S I T I O N S • Simon Fraser University libraries has ac­ quired a collection of Ezra Pound letters and other related items spanning the years 1952 through 1957. In addition to forty-six letters from Pound to Denis Goacher, his literary agent in London, the collection includes two letters from Dorothy Pound to Goacher, a manuscript poem, and twenty-seven other items. • Twenty-three letters and manuscripts sent by Carl Sandburg to historian James G. Ran­ dall have been given to the University of Illinois library’s Sandburg Collection by Ran­ dall’s widow. The gift includes copies of 26 letters, covering the years 1931–53, written to Sandburg by Professor Randall. Mrs. Ruth Painter Randall also presented the library with a book entitled “Praise for Carl Sandburg,” issued in 1953 in a limited edition of 15 copies in honor of the late poet’s 75th birthday. The book consists of tributes from Adlai E. Stevenson, Allan Nevins, Robert E. Sherwood, Prof. Randall and others, along with a photograph and autograph of each. Additional items in Mrs. Randall’s gift are three folders of materials relating to Sandburg, a number of miniature books on Lincoln and the Civil War, and several presentation copies of Sandburg’s works. • Washington University libraries has augmented its collections with the addition of a new group of the papers of Alexander Troc- chi, comprising a part of his Sigma project, conceived in 1963 as an international union of artists and writers, and fi l es on similar artistic and political organizations during the early 1960’s. Other additions include correspondence between Ivy Compton-Burnett and Kay Dick; worksheets of Mona Van Duyn’s forthcoming collection of poems; drafts of Donald Finkel’s two most recent books; correspondence between Robert Sword, Robert David Cohen and other young poets, and single and small groups of the papers of Marianne Moore, Louis Zukofsky, Robert Duncan, Charles Olson, A. E. Hotchner and Robert Creeley. • The final working manuscript of James Gould Cozzens’ Morning Noon and Night has been given to the Princeton University li­ brary by the author, together with a copy of the first edition of the new novel. Cozzens has made Princeton a principal depository for his papers and the majority of his manuscripts. The author’s gifts, the first of which he made in 1958, have been designated the James Gould Cozzens Papers with the understanding that the collection is closed to access for an indefinite period. • Heidelberg College library has received a gift of English and American letters and cor­ respondence from Ralph M. Besse. The collec­ tion consists of some 4,000 volumes and a few manuscripts. A special room has been provided for this collection in the new Beeghly library at Heidelberg. • During the past summer York Univer­ sity libraries acquired most of the stock of Starr’s book store in Boston and Ducharme’s in Montreal. Starr’s book store was noted for its collections in American literature, history, political science, economics and sociology. Ducharme’s was outstanding for its stock of out of print French-Canadian material. • The Ellen Clarke Bertrand library of Bucknell University has recently acquired a collection of letters, documents and books of Oliver St. John Gogarty. The collection was donated by the poet’s son, Oliver D. Gogarty of Dublin. • During the past year the Pennsylvania State University library has acquired a sig­ nificant collection of papers documenting the labor movement in the United States. In Sep­ tember, 1967, the United Steelworkers of America named Penn State as “provisional re­ pository” for their papers and records. This valuable research material consists of all rec­ ords which are of sufficient historical impor­ tance to justify permanent retention. The col­ lection, when completed, will include records from the USWA International headquarters in Pittsburgh and from 29 District offices. A comprehensive oral history project has been undertaken to coincide with the acquisi­ tion of the USWA papers. This project entails interviews with individuals, both officials and rank-and-fi l ers, who were active in the devel­ opment of the USWA. To date, 65 interviews have been conducted; tapes and transcripts have been placed in the Labor History Collec­ tion. Among other personal papers added to the collection are those of William B. Dickson, Pennsylvania industrialist of the late nineteenth century; the personal papers of Monsignor Charles Owen Rice, Pittsburgh’s “labor priest”; the Harold J. Ruttenberg papers concerning the 345 trade union organization of basic American in­ dustry from 1934 to 1946 and the Kathryn Poliak Ellickson Papers, 1935–1937. The unionization of the coal industry, a topic of special interest in Pennsylvania, is the subject of two other collections, the Mitch Papers and the Kosik Papers. The Mitch Papers document the struggle to organize American miners from 1908 to 1936. Michael Kosik’s Papers concern industry-union relations in Pennsylvania’s anthracite region. During the past year a total of about 70 collections have been added to the Labor His­ tory Collection. In addition to those already mentioned are collections from the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO, Boot and Shoemakers Union, Cigar- makers Union, Order of Railway Conductors, the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers of America, and the Federated Trades Council of Reading, Pennsylvania, and the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. • The University of Tennessee Library at Knoxville is the recipient of what has been called the finest private Congreve collection in existence, bequeathed to the University by the late John C. Hodges, Congreve scholar, UT professor emeritus, and Coordinator for Li­ brary Development. The collection compares favorably with the collections in the Harvard and Bodleian libraries and in the British Mu­ seum, consisting of about 150 original editions of Congreve’s works and a large collection of books about Congreve, English drama and the theatre of the 16th and 17th centuries, and material by and about other dramatists of this period. A bibliography of the Congreve titles is now in preparation. • Two important collections on Austro- Hungarian history and contemporary literature have been purchased for the Rice University library. The additions are the 3,600-item Ste­ phen K. Swift collection of Austro-Hungarian history, purchased with a gift from the William Stamps Farish Fund, and the 13,000 volume Frederich J. Hoffman collection of 20th cen­ tury American and European literature. The Swift collection includes such outstanding items as the complete British Intelligence Ser­ vice reports on Austria from 1945 to 1955; the original charter from the Austrian Empire to the Hungarian government, circa 1527, with the signature and seal of Charles V, and a 360-volume history of the city of Vienna. In addition to a large number of first editions of novels from 1940 to 1967, the Hoffman collec- Think sm all!. . . . . . . . . CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS on Microfilm • If you would like to pack a lot into a small space CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS on Microfilm will suit your needs All 3.8 million abstracts published since 1907 are filmed on 16 mm microfilm to form a readily accessible file documenting 60 years of chemical progress. • You can find abstracts quickly and easily, using a variety of microfilm reader-printer equipment. Abstracts may be photocopied at the touch of a button, eliminating the need to make handwritten notes. As a consequence users report a substantial time saving and increasing use Of CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS. on Microf i lm 1 Volume (26 1 Volume (26 Issues) of Issues) of , CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS . • To find out how you can use this modern information tool in your program, write or telephone E. G. Johnson, Subscriber Information Department (614 293-5022). CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS SERVICE American Chemical Society Columbus, Ohio 43216 346 tion includes 2,000 copies of the so-called “little” literary magazines. F E L L O W S H IP S • The Indiana University Libraries an­ nounce the continuation of their program de­ signed to give intensive instruction to pros­ pective rare book librarians. The facilities and collections of the Lilly Library will be used as a training center. Two Fellows will be selected for a study program intended to familiarize them with bibliographical methods, the anti­ quarian book trade, and the organization and management of rare books and special collec­ tion departments or libraries. Any graduate of an accredited library school, or person other­ wise qualified by experience in the rare book field, and under 45 years of age, who desires to specialize in rare book librarianship may apply for a fellowship. Fellows are required to remain in residence in Bloomington, Indi­ ana, from July 1, 1969, through June 30, 1970, engaged in study programs assigned by mem­ bers of the Lilly Library staff. Each Fellow will receive a salary of $5,300 for the twelve- month period, subject to withholding tax. At the conclusion of the year, Fellows are expected to find employment in rare book divisions of FOR THE RUSSIAN BOOK SECTION Reference and Source Material • Russian Literature: Classics, Contemporary • Linguistics and Literary Criticism • English-Russian and Russian-English Dictionaries • Russian Language Records, Folk Songs and Dramatic Readings • Children’s Literature • Books on Art • Books on Science • Textbooks on mathematics, geography, natural sciences, history, etc. • Socio-Economic Literature • Russian Atlases and Maps • Soviet Magazines and Newspapers Inquire about our out-of-print books and back issue magazines. W rite fo r Catalogs & Prices Phone 212 CH 2-4500 F O U R C O N T I N E N T B O O K C O R P . D EPT. 770, 156 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. 10010 college, university, and public libraries or in the rare book trade. Fellows will be notified of appointment on or before May 1, 1969. Appli­ cations must be received in Bloomington on or before March 15, 1969. Requests for appli­ cation forms or inquiries may be directed to William R. Cagle, Assistant Librarian, Lilly Library, Indiana University Libraries, Bloom­ ington, Indiana 47401. G R A N T S • The National Science Foundation has pro­ vided a grant of $44,600 to support a one year trial operation of a six-member cooperative book processing center at the University of Colorado. The institutions involved are the University of Colorado, Colorado State Univer­ sity, Adams State College, the Colorado School of Mines and Metropolitan State College. The processing center will order and catalog books for all members, while the members retain the right of individual book selection. • Syracuse University’s School of Library Science has received a grant of $104,480 from the U.S. Office of Education to support a proj­ ect to establish an experimental laboratory in which library science students, aided by com­ puter programs, will be able to search and re­ trieve catalog records for current literature, to process their own cataloging assignments, and to examine the characteristics of Library of Congress cataloging, all of which will help them face some of the problems associated with library automation while they are still in li­ brary school. After experimental operation for one year (through Oct. 1969), the laboratory experiences will be evaluated, and if found successful, the program data bases and user manuals will be made available to other li­ brary schools. An institute for faculty of Amer­ ican and Canadian library schools is planned for some time in 1969 as part of the project. T H E I N T E R N A T I O N A L S C E N E Saad El Hagrassy (PhD Rutgers) is now associate professor of library science, Cairo University, Cairo, U.A.R. André Nitecki, assistant professor in the Syracuse University school of library science, is now senior lecturer at the University of Ghana in Accra. Mahmoud El Sheniti (PhD Chicago) has been named undersecretary for libraries and archives, national library, Cairo, U.A.R. M E E T I N G S Dec. 2–7: (AIBDA) 2d Inter-American Meeting of Agricultural Librarians and Docu- mentalists in Bogotá, Colombia. 347 Dec. 12–13: Institute in Atlanta, Ga., jointly sponsored by the Library of Congress Informa­ tion Systems Office, the Division of Library Automation of ALA, and Georgia Institute of Technology library to explain the organization and use of LC’s MARC magnetic tapes which became available for distribution beginning Oct. 1. The program is directed at catalogers, acquisitions librarians, heads of these depart­ ments, data processing librarians and heads of technical processes. Registration is limited to 100. Send name and address to: ISAD/LC MARC Institutes, American Library Associa­ tion, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, Ill. 60611. Jan. 8–10: International Conference of ad­ ministrators of colleges, universities, junior col­ leges, and independent schools at the Ameri­ cana Hotel in New York City. The theme of this conference is “Challenging a New Future” and its goal is to promote an interchange of ideas and experiences among the leaders of the higher and independent educational sys­ tems of the United States, Canada, and other nations of the world. Jan. 27–June 5: Institute in information science, University of Southern California. Participants will be admitted on a highly se­ lective basis. Each person will be paid $75 per week, with $15 per week for each de­ pendent. Persons who are admissable and who wish credit may earn from nine to twelve units of course credit during the semester. Further information about this institute may be obtained by writing to: The Dean, School of Library Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90007, Telephone: (213) 746-2548. February: Institute in Cleveland jointly spon­ sored by the Library of Congress Information Systems Office, the Division of Library Auto­ mation of ALA, and Case Western Reserve University school of library science to explain the organization and use of LC’s MARC mag­ netic tapes which became available for distribu­ tion beginning Oct. 1. The program is di­ rected at catalogers, acquisitions librarians, heads of these departments, data processing li­ brarians and heads of technical processes. Reg­ istration is limited to 100. Send name and address to: ISAD/LC MARC Institutes, Ameri­ can Library Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chi­ cago, 111. 60611. Mar. 24-25: Institute in Los Angeles jointly sponsored by the Library of Congress Informa­ tion Systems Office, the Division of Library Automation of ALA, and UCLA libraries to explain the organization and use of LC’s MARC magnetic tapes which became available for dis­ tribution beginning Oct. 1. The program is directed at catalogers, acquisitions librarians, heads of these departments, data processing librarians and heads of technical processes. Registration is limited to 100. Send name and address to: ISAD/LC MARC Institutes, American Library Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, Ill. 60611. April 14–15: Institute in Houston jointly sponsored by the Library of Congress Infor­ mation Systems Office, the Division of Library Automation of ALA, and the Rice University libraries, to explain the organization and use of LC’s MARC magnetic tapes which became available for distribution beginning Oct. 1. The program is directed at catalogers, acquisi­ tions librarians, heads of these departments, data processing librarians and heads of tech­ nical processes. Registration is limited to 100. Send name and address to: ISAD/LC MARC Institutes, American Library Association, 50 E. Huron S t, Chicago, Ill. 60611. May 5–9: A general call has been issued for “free communications,” or unsolicited pa­ pers, for the Third International Congress of Medical Librarianship 1969, in Amsterdam. Pa­ pers should be 2,000 to 2,500 words long and may be submitted in one of the five Congress languages—English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish. Each paper should be accompa­ nied by an abstract of not more than fifty words in English. October 15, 1968 is the final date for submission of papers. They should be addressed to the Office of the Secretary-Gen­ eral, Third International Congress of Medical Librarianship, c/o Excerpta Medica Founda­ tion, 119 Herengracht, Amsterdam, The Neth­ erlands. The theme of the Congress is “World Progress in Medical Librarianship.” The sub­ ject areas include the contribution of medical libraries toward an increase of biomedical knowledge; the functions of medical libraries in the transmission of biomedical knowledge; the functions of the organization of medical knowledge: indexing and classification; modern information systems in medicine; technical de­ velopments in the medical library field; and problems of medical information systems and centers in developing countries. There will be invited lecturer’s, as well as contributed, papers. Registration fee is $50 if paid before January 1; $60 thereafter. Registration forms are available from the office of the Secretary-General. In­ formation about special transportation to Am­ sterdam from the United States will be avail­ able from Mrs. Jacqueline W. Felter, The Medical Library Center of New York, 17 East 102 Street, New York 10029, and for Canada from Miss Doreen Fraser, Dalhousie University 348 Medical Dental Library, Carleton and College Streets, Halifax, Nova Scotia. June 17–20, 1969: Puerto Rico will be the site of the Fourteenth Seminar on the Acqui­ sition of Latin American Library Materials, June 17–20, 1969. The acquisition of Latin American scientific and technological materials will be the special topic for discussion. Other ses­ sions will deal with progress made in the past year on matters concerning the booktrade and acquisitions, bibliography, exchange of publica­ tions, official publications, photoduplication of Latin American materials, and archives. Meet­ ings of the Seminar Committees will take place on Wednesday morning, June 18. The first gen­ eral session will be held Wednesday afternoon to initiate committee and progress reports, and the last one on Friday morning, June 20. Meet­ ings of the Executive Board of the newly incor­ porated SALALM will be held on the evening of Tuesday, June 17, and at luncheon on Wednes­ day, June 18. Institutional registration in the Fourteenth Seminar is $15.00, which includes preprint working papers only available through payment of the institutional registration. These papers, including the Progress Report on books in the Americas, will be distributed at the time of the meeting to participants and to those registered but not attending. The registration fee for additional participants from the institu­ tion registering is $7.50, and includes preprint working papers. Additional sets of working pa­ pers can be subscribed to in advance for $5.00 each. The Final Report and Working Papers will be subsequently published by the Pan American Union. Information on the content of the program and working papers can be procured from Mr. James Andrews, Argonne National Laboratory, 9700 South Cass Avenue, Argonne, Illinois 60439. For other information, refer to the Executive Secretary, Mrs. Marietta Daniels Shepard, Pan American Union, Wash­ ington, D.C. 20006. June 20–21: Preconference Building Insti­ tute. Plans are in progress for the college and university library sessions of the preconference institute on library buildings at Atlantic City, June 20–21, 1969. The major part of the pro­ gram will be devoted to presentations and critiques of college, university, and junior col­ lege library buildings still in the planning process. Librarians who are planning new buildings and are interested in participating in this program are asked to notify the Chair­ man of the Building Committee for College and University Libraries, Bernard Kreissman, once you use them you’ll agree: “THE INTERPRETER’S BIBLE has maintained a consistently high level of biblical scholarship, evangelical concern, and homiletic insight and il­ lustration. … It remains and will remain for a long time to come the best literary aid to the conscientious Christian workman available.” Church Management “THE INTERPRETER’S DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE is a worthy companion to its predecessor, The Interpreters Bible. Prepared under the direction of much the same editorial board, and using the best scholars around the world for its writers, the Dictionary is as reliable and valuable as the previous work has proved to be.” Presbyterian Life “Beyond question, it is the most comprehensive and up-to-date reference work of its kind.” Pulpit Digest The Interpreter’s Bible. Each vol., $8.75; the 12- vol. set, $89.50; deluxe leather edition (sets only), $199.50. The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible. The 4-vol. set, $45. A t y o u r lo ca l b o o k sto re ABINGDON PRESS 349 Chief Librarian, The City College, City Uni­ versity of New York, New York, N.Y. 10031. M I S C E L L A N Y • College of Our Lady of Mercy has been reorganized as Russell College, 2500 Adeline Drive, Burlingame, California 94010. • The Nova University library has removed from its former location in downtown Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, to the institution’s new campus in Davie, Florida. • On September 9, the Louisiana State University inaugurated an automated circula­ tion system utilizing an IBM 357 data collec­ tion system in the library and an IBM 360/30 computer in the University data processing center. • Harold Lancour and Allen Kent of the University of Pittsburgh are the joint editors of the first volume of the Encyclopedia of Li­ brary and Information Science. The work is expected to run to eighteen volumes and will combine articles of both theory and practice in the fields of library and information science. Seventy-three contributors, from the United States and abroad, provided the articles for volume I. An international advisory board of 32 members is assisting the editors and the publisher, Marcel Dekker, Inc. of New York, in producing the work. • In honor of the dedication of the addi­ tion to the M. D. Anderson Memorial library, University of Houston, Mrs. Alice Evans Pratt donated a court martial order dated April 6, 1778 at Valley Forge and signed by George Washington. P U B L I C A T I O N S • The Catalog of the Avery Memorial Archi­ tectural Library of Columbia University has been published in a second edition, enlarged, by G. K. Hall & Co., Boston. In addition to materials in the Avery library building, this new edition also lists some 30,000 volumes which are housed in other departments of the Columbia University library system. It is thus a union catalog of all art and architecture books held by Columbia University. The cata­ log is available in nineteen volumes at the price of $1040.00 in the U.S., $1144.00 outside the U.S. Descriptive material on this publica­ tion is available on request. Inquiries and orders may be sent to the G. K. Hall & Co., 70 Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111. • Engineering Index, Inc. is pleased to announce that the 1967 Engineering Index An­ nual is complete and off the press. The Annual appears in two clothbound volumes and con­ tains over 3,100 pages of abstracts of the world’s engineering literature. Arranged alpha­ betically by subject heading, the Annual in­ cludes 56,000 abstracts from 2,000 sources with 78,000 authors and 10,000 headings. An author index appears in back of the second volume and a list of publications covered ap­ pears in front of the first volume. For the first time, Engineering Index, Inc. is offering this two-volume edition on a 30-day trial basis. Price is $150 for industry, business and govern­ ment and $125 for educational institutions and public libraries. To take advantage of the free offer, write to: Leonard Ennis, Manager, Mar­ keting and Business Services Division, Engi­ neering Index, Inc,, 345 East 47th Street, New York, N.Y. 10017. • A List of Doctoral Dissertations by Chi­ nese Students in the United States is a continu­ ation of Tung-li Yuan’s Guide to Doctoral Dis­ sertations by Chinese Students in America. Compiled by Dr. Tze-chung Li, the work lists 843 dissertations by Chinese students accepted by more than 100 colleges and universities in the United States during years 1961–1964. The publication is sold at $3.00. For copies, write to Chinese-American Educational Foundation, 2204 S. Wentworth, Chicago, Illinois 60616. • The New England Library Associa­ tion’s president, Lawrence E. Wikander of the Williams College Library, Williamstown, Massachusetts, has announced plans for pub­ lication of a bimonthly N E LA Newsletter, the first issue to appear in January 1969. The pur­ pose of the Newsletter will be to inform a growing membership about the work of the Association, to provide a forum for reporting and discussion of interstate regional library functions, to report on States’ major library activities, and especially to encourage a re­ gional cohesiveness among New England’s thousands of libraries of all types. Lee Ash, Library Consultant, will add to his other activi­ ties the editing of the Newsletter, and NELA requests that he be put on the mailing lists of libraries, State associations, State Libraries, regional publishers, and others, in order to re­ ceive pertinent information and publications. Address editorial matter to him at 31 Alden Road, New Haven, Connecticut 06515 (tele­ phone: 203-389-1678); exchanges with regional publications only will be considered. The N ELA Newsletter will be sent free to NELA members, and inquiries about subscriptions should be directed to Mrs. Nan Berg, Execu­ tive Secretary, 3 Rita Road, West Peabody, Massachusetts 01960. • The graduate school of library and infor­ mation science at the University of Pitts­ burgh has begun publication of a series of occasional papers to be issued under the title: The Pittsburgh Series in Library and Informa­ 350 tion Science, edited by Jay Daily. The first paper is “A Concept Paper—The Regional Library Center in the Mid 1970’s,” by Thomas Minder, executive director of the Pittsburgh Regional Library Center, Inc. It is available from the University of Pittsburgh Book Center at $2.00 a copy. • Volume II, No. 1, of Program; News of Computers in British Libraries appeared in April. This quarterly journal of short papers and news brief on all aspects of computer use in British libraries is edited by Richard T. Kimber in the school of library studies, Queen’s University at Belfast, 2 College Gardens, Bel­ fast; it is available on subscription for 25s. per year (10s. to students). Some back numbers of Volume I are still available and may be had gratis upon application. • The University of Maryland’s school of library and information services has issued in book form the proceedings of the reclassifi­ cation conference held last spring. Edited by conference chairman Jean M. Perrault and en­ titled Reclassification—Rationale and Problems, the book contains moderator’s comments along with summations of the discussions. The con­ ference covered administrative problems and arrangements, automation and basic problems with classification systems, especially applica­ bility to content and facilitation of retrieval. Copies may be obtained at the University’s student supply store at $5.00 a copy. • The Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System, has published Re­ sources in Texas Libraries by Edward G. Hol­ ley and Donald Hendricks. This survey is no. 3 in the System’s new Study Paper series. • Scarecrow Press, Inc., announces publica­ tion of Sample Cataloging Forms by Robert B. Slocum and Lois Hacker, a second revised edition of Sample Cataloging Cards. For this edition, an index has been provided for quick reference. It is in two parts: (1) an index to the major portion of the volume, and (2) an index to the Comparison of AACR and ALA Cataloging Rules. Price per copy for the 8 ½ X 11, 205-page work is $7.50. • Gale Research Company has made an extra run of the Song of the Library Staff which it first reproduced for this year’s ALA conference. The booklet, illustrated by Merle Johnson, includes five poems about librarians taken from Songs of the Average Man, com­ posed by Sam Foss in 1906. Upon request, copies may be obtained gratis from Gale Re­ search Company, Book Tower, Detroit, Michi­ gan 48226. ■■ ATLANTA’S Special Centennial O ffe r- Good thru 1968 FREE, with an order for blocks of The Atlanta Constitution or The Atlanta Journal on m icrofilm … the Civil War years’ 2 STRONG microfilm of another im portant Atlanta new spaper.… THE SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY, 1861–1865. Send right away for an order blank giving prices of blocks of The Atlanta Constitution and The Atlanta Journal on microfilm , in order to take advantage of the Centen­ VOICES nial Offer. o n m i c r o f i l m fr o m t h e firs t d a y o f p u b lic a tio n * THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION * THE ATLANTA JOURNAL M ICRO PHOTO D IVISIO N 1700 SHAW AVE. CLEVELAND, OHIO 44112 Bell & HoWell BURT FRANKLIN, PUBLISHER 235 East 44th Street, New York, N.Y. 10017 Of special interest to librarians, scholars, and collectors: Our fall catalogs, listing 2000 titles in the arts, humanities, and social sciences, are available by request. Please clip this ad, attach to your letterhead, and mail to the above address. □ 100. Bibliography & Reference Works of □ 1 1 7 .1 968 Summer & Fall Publications English & American Authors □ 118. Crises: Economic, Social & Political □ 101. New England: History & Literature □ 119. American Literature □ 102. Shakespeare & the Elizabethan Age □ 120. The American West □ 103. Bibliography & Reference Works of □ 121. Byzantine History & Literature European Authors □ 122. Medieval History & Literature □ 104. American & English Drama □ 123. Serials & Sets □ 105. The Early Chartered Companies of □ 124. A rt History & Reference Discovery, Exploration & Trade □ 125. Classical Languages & Literature □ 106. English Literature □ 126. Folk Literature: Fables, Traditions, □ 107. Subject Bibliographies & Reference Legends, Superstitions, Ballads, Broadsides, Works & Troubadours □ 108. French Literature □ 127. British History □ 109. New York State □ 128. American Utopian Thought □ 110. Virginia □ 129. Middle & Far East □ 111. Pennsylvania □ 131. Aesthetics □ 112. Books About Books—History & Literature □ 132. Industry & Manufacturing of the Book: Printing, Publishing, Bookselling □ 133. B urt Franklin: Bibliography & Reference □ 113. Judaica Series—A Checklist O 114. The Great American South □ 134. B urt Franklin: Research & Source Works □ 115. Historical, Economic & Cultural Series—A Checklist Development of the American Colonial Era □ 135. Money & Coins □ 116. Spain & Spanish America □ 136. French Social Thought 352 now… A PR IN T E D BI-W EEKLY Current Index of Scientific and Technical Literature The first of Ja n u a ry , 1969, P andex is beg in n in g a new bi-w eekly p rin te d version of its interdisciplinary bibliographic s u b je c t/a u th o r index of scientific an d tech n ical lite ra tu re . S am ple copies a re av ailab le now. E very two weeks, a su b scrib er to P an d ex C u rre n t Index will receive all en tries indexed from pub lish ed m a te ria l from th e period im m ediately preceding. C overage includes over 2,100 m ajo r jo u rn als in all disciplines of p u re an d applied science, new books (over 6,000 a y e a r), a n d US G o v ern m en t re se a rc h re p o rts (over 35,000 a y e a r ) . E ach issue of th e Index is ap p ro x im ately 200 pages. The p rin te d Index is in two sections: (1) S ubject h ead s a re a lp h ab etically listed. U n d er each head, a u th o rs of artic le s on each subject a re listed; (2) A u th o rs a re listed alp h a b e tic ally w ith full title, secondary a u th o rs, a n d com ­ plete reference. Price of Pandex C u rre n t Index of Scientific a n d T echnical L ite ra tu re is $360 for a 12-month bi-weekly subscription. In a special in tro d u c to ry offer, those who subscribe p rio r to J a n u a r y 1, 1969 receive th e first 26 issues fo r $295. Introductory Offer—SAVE $65 PANDEX CCM Information Sciences, Inc., Dept CRL 2 A SUBSIDIARY OF CROWELL COLLIER AND MACMILLAN, INC. 866 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10022 □ Please enter my subscription to Pandex Current Index of Scientific and Technical Literature at the introductory price of $295 □ Please send sample and more information NAME__________________________________________________________________________ TITLE__________________________________________________________________________ LIBRARY_______________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS_______________________________________________________________________ CITY____________________________ STATE_______________________ Z IP______________