Materials For The Elementary Stage Achieving Reading Skills. Globe Book Co., 1958, 245 pp. The various reading skills are handled on several levels of read- ability,ranging in difficulty from grade 3 to grade 6. It has been used extensively with adolescents and adults and is acceptable to them. The Deep Sea Adventure Series. Harr Wagner Publishing Co., 1962, 84 pp. This series is designed for adults and adolescents. Format and content are good. The series begins at the third grade level and goes through four. Excellent supplementary materials. Another series also designed for adults is the Morgan Bay Mysteries. Each series consists of four books. New Rochester Occupational Reading Series. Science Research Asso- ciates, 1963, 169 pp. This series, written on three different readability levels (3, 4, and 5) does not use the same story content as the original Rochester Occupational Reading Series. Each book contains the same stories and thus three different groups can be working on the same content though the readability differs. The accompanying workbooks can be used to build both vocabulary and comprehension skills. Turner-Livingston Reading Series. Follett Publishing Co., 1964, 48 pp. each. This well constructed series deals with such topics as citizenship, economics, and the general social studies. It is designed for adults and has proven valuable in adult basic education classes both for developing reading skills and for re-enforcing subject matter learn- ings. Some of the books in the series are: The Person You Are, The Money You Spend, and The Town You Live In. Building Reading Power. Charles E. Merrill, 1963. A laboratory type of material which uses the programmed instruction approach. .It was originally devised for use with the culturally deprived adolescent. As with other laboratory type materials, it should be supplemented. Better Reading. Globe Book Co., 1962, 447 pp. This is one of the better books for use toward the end of the ele- mentary stage. The exercises in vocabulary and comprehension are -52-