collection on social work, social welfare, and community and group dy­namics. LIBRARIES SERVING DEPARTMENTS The Art Library (Art and Museum Building 13) co~tains book on paint­ing, sculpture, graphic and commercial art, art education, and art history. Special index: Art Index. . . . . The Biology Library (Patterson Laboratories Bmldmg 141) m?lud~s general zoology, genetics, entomology, physiology, bo:any, and micr~bi­ology. Special indexes: Biological Abstracts, Index Medicus, and Zoological Record. The Chemistry Library (Chemistry. Building .219) includes a.nalytica~, biological, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry, a~d chemical engi­neering. Special indexes : Chemical Abstracts, N_uclear Scienc~ Abstracts. The Classics Library (Waggener Hall 1) mcludes classical language, literature, art and archaeology; Greek and Roman history; and modern Greek language and literature. . . . . . The Geology Library (Geology Bmldmg 302), m addition to geology, includes geochemistry, geodetics, geophysics, mineralogy, ?ceanography, paleography, paleontology, and petroleum geology. An extensiv~ file of toRo­graphic, physical, and geologic survey maps of the U. S. and foreign countries is maintained. The Mathematics Library (Benedict Hall 214 until approximately February 1972 when it will move to the Physics-Astronomy-Mathematics Building) is the major collection of mathematics materials. Special index: Mathematical Reviews. The Music Library (Pearce Hall 103 until approximately June 1972 when it will move to Old Library Building 6) contains music and music litera­ture as well as a collection of recordings. Special index: Music Index. The Physics-Astronomy Library (Physics Building 401 until approxi­mately June 1972 when it will move to the Physics-Astronomy-Mathe­matics Building and become the Physics-Astronomy-Mathematics Library) includes nuclear physics, mechanics, thermodynamics, heat, acoustics, astr~­physics, and celestial mechanics. Special materials: AEC microfiche deposi­tory. Special indexes: Science Abstracts, Nuclear Science Abstracts. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS The Academic Center Library (Undergraduate Library and Academic Center Building, fourth and ground floors, until approximately February 1972 when it will move to the Humanities Research Building, 21st and Guada­lupe) contains distinguished research collections of books and manuscripts of the late 19th and 20th centuries, primarily of English and American litera­ture, but including a variety of other subjects. The Archives Collection is one of two units housed in the Eugene C. Barker Texas History Center (Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2). Established in 1898-1899 with the acquisition of the Bexar Archives and the Stephen F. and Moses Austin Papers, it now contains more than ten million Texas historical documents and manuscripts. The Asian Collection (Undergraduate Library and Academic Center Building 28) contains East Asian materials in the humanities and social sciences in the vernacular and a core collection of South Asian research materials in English. The Documents Collection (Main Building 316) is a complete U:S. government depository. The major portion of U.S. documents is retai~ed there, although some are sent to the Main Library and branches, accordmg to their subject matter. United Nations and other international documents are also to be found there. The Humanities Research Library (21st and Guadalupe, to open ap­proximately February 1972) will contain most of the collections now in the Academic Center and Stark Libraries, as well as the Hoblitzelle Theater Arts Library, the History of Science Collection, and the Gernsheim Collection of Photography. . . The Latin American Collection (Sid Richardson Hall, Umt 1) mcludes extensive resources in the form of books, manuscripts, microfilms, and maps relating to all the countries in the western hemisphere south of the United States and to the Caribbean Islands. The Middle East Collection (Collections Deposit Library, 19th and Red River) contains Middle East materials in the vernacular (Arabic, Persian, and Hebrew), and chiefly in language and literature, history, and religion. The Newspaper Collection (Main Building 4) contains the latest ten­year file of major Texas daily newspapers (earlier years are in the Te~as Collection) as well as representative papers of other states and countries. The Miriam Lutcher Stark Library (Main Building 401, until approxi­mately February 1972 when it will move to the Humanities Research ~uild­ing, 21st and Guadalupe) is a research collection of books and ~anus?ripts to mid-19th century in English and American literature, art, classi~s, history of science, and a variety of other subjects. It contains the Wrenn Library (17th and 18th century English first editions), the Stark Library (17th to early 19th century first edition), and the Aitken Library (18th century first edi­tions and source materials). The Texas Collection, a unit of the Eugene C. Barker Texas History Center (Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 2), contains printed materials on all phases of the history of Texas and the Southwest. It includes Texas news­papers (except files for the last ten years, .whic~ are .in the ~ew~paper Col­lection), Texas state documents, and official Umversity pubhcatlons. The Joseph Lindsey Henderson Textbook and Curriculum Collection is a unit of the Education and Psychology Library and is included in the de­scription of that library. OTHER LIBRARIES The libraries of the School of Law and the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs are not administratively a part of the University Library. The Law Library (Townes Hall 211) includes law and related fields. It maintains complete statute and case sources for all jurisdictions, ?oth state and federal, and is a selective U.S. government documents depository. The Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs Library (Sid Richardson Hall, Unit 3) contains materials relating to governmental policy, including economics, political science, and sociology, and is a selective U.S. government documents depository. The University of Texas Library, Austin WOMEN'S eo-0.s THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS l/iifJQ KINSOLVING AT AUSTIN ~B THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS LIBRARIES, AUSTIN DIRECTORY OF PUBLIC SERVICE UNITS (The number following the name indicates building location) •Academic Center Library Architecture Library Art Library Asian Collection Barker Texas History Center Archives Collection Texas Collection Biol