5.Education



(1) 菩諡繩謌鱚鞐鴦顋骼矼鴆褌閻籥竡竏裙,
1920-1930-x 窿. <1> Nauka, Tokyo.35mm microfilm.
 280 titles. 19 reels. [Faculty of Education]
  This material is the first part of a large collection
on Soviet education in the 1920's and 1930's. 
These are reproduced on microfilm and contain 280 monographs
about Soviet
education from 1919 into the early 1930's which were
collected through the joint efforts of Toyosaku Odaka
(founder of the Toko Publishing House and also of the
Tokyo Social Science
Research Institute attached to it) and Hirokichi Ohtake
(of the Nauka Publishing House).

(2) 菩諡繩謌鱚鞐鴦顋骼矼鴆褌閻籥竡竏裙, 1920-1930-x 窿. <2> Nauka, Tokyo.35mm microfilm. 223 titles. 53 reels.[Faculty of Education] This is the second part of the collection relating to Soviet education in the 1920's and 1930's. Material in this part consists of nearly half of the 500 items selected from among Soviet educational monographs of the 1920's and 1930's by Professor M. Takeda and Associate Professor S. Tokoro of the Faculty of Education, Hokkaido University, at the request of Nauka Publishing House. These materials were reproduced on microfilm with the co-operation of libraries and archives throughout the former Soviet Union, and presently consist of 223 items.

6.Religion


(1) Church Slavonic and Russian Hagiographies. Editor, 
Father Boris Danilenko. 57 titles.
Microfiche. 647 sheets. [Slavic Research Center]
  This is a collection of hagiographies written in Old Church
Slavonic and Russian. It consists of 57 items from hagiographies
of the Russian Orthodox Church published between the middle of 
the 19th century and the Russian Revolution, reproduced on microfiches.


(2) Russian Necropolis. Editor, Father Boris Danilenko.
16 titles. Microfiche. 84 sheets.[Slavic Research Center]
  This is a collection of material about cemetaries in Russia. 
These items (17 titles) are so-called Nekropol' (羅褓鈿鉉鑅, 
or Russian cemetary guidebooks mostly published from the late 19th
to the early 20th centuries. Among these can be found the Regional
Cemetaries of Russia of more than 1,000 pages authored by Archbishop
Nikolai Mikhailovich "ミ韜  關鈞蓁琺鸙詹繩韲闔譛"
 (vol.1, published in 1914). [Slavic Research Center]

7.Newspapers from the Russian Revolutionary Era.

Woodbridge, Ct. Research Publications, 1983-1988.51 titles.
35mm microfilm. 458 reels. [Slavic Research Center]

This collection contains newspapers of the Russian revolutionary era which are held in the archives of the Lehman Library at Columbia University, published on microfilm. The project was originally planned to reproduce approximately 100 newspaper titles published in Russia between the early 19th century and the post.Revolutionary 1920's. However, the project came to a halt after the reproduction of only 51 titles was completed. Among these can be found famous newspapers which were continuously published for a long time such as "野驫鈞驫蒹 稙與跫c鱶" (1756-1917), Journal de SL Pelersbourg (1825-1918), '野驫鈞驫蒹" (1868-), and "偕髑裴蒹粢蒡跪髓茴 (1863-1918) and well as newspapers which had to cease publication after only a short time, such as "亭珞鴿矼蝣 (1906) which appeared briefly in 1906. The biggest drawback to using this collection is the relatively large number of issues lacking. The following list of newspaper titles is compiled in alphabetical order. The bibliographic description of each title follows the oldest title in the files of the Slavic Research Center. Most of these newspapers were published either daily or weekly. In cases where many issues of a particular newspaper are lacking, the word 'incomplete' appears instead of the specific issue numbers which are lacking. The following list provides information about each newspaper in this order: 1) Name of newspaper. 2) Place of publication. 3) Dates publication commenced and ceased. 4) Frequency. 5) Holdings. 6)Numbers of reels of microfilm. 7) Numbers of microfilm reels. 8) Notes about any changes in the newspaper's title.