Notes on Contributors Michael Chapman is Professor of English at the University of Natal in Durban. Richard Collins is a Senior Research Associate in the Department of Communication, Goldsmiths College, University of London. His research on South African media policy was conducted while an SVLTF Lecturer in the Centre for Cultural and Media Studies, University of Natal, Durban, during 1991. David Kaplan teaches in the Department of Economic History at the University of Cape Town. Terry King is Professor of Fine Art and Art History at the University of Natal in Pietermaritzburg. Eric Louw is a Lecturer in the Centre for Cultural and Media Studies and editor of a forthcoming book, South Africa: Media Policy Debates of the 1990's. (Anthropos, 1993). Sam Paltridge is Head of the Communications Research division of the Centre for International Research on Communication and Information Technologies, Melbourne, Australia. James Zaffiro is Chair of the Department of Politics, Central College, Pella, Iowa. He has published extensively on broadcasting in Botswana and Zimbabwe, and was a Visiting Professor in the Centre for Cultural and Media Studies in 1991. V0I6N0I • 1992 119 I N N O V A TI O N appropriate librarianship and information work in Southern Africa reading for all those Essential interested in library and information work in a liberated South Africa and in the southern Africa region. No.3 (December 1991) contained articles by Cathy-Mae Karelse on resource centres ; Carol Barraclough on popular theatre ; Cathy Stadler on school libraries ; and John Gultig on media education and liberation ; plus short contributions. No.4 (June 1992) will focus on Freedom of Information with Eric Louw on the media debate ; Verne Harris on archives ; Joseph Reilly on Information and the New World Communication Order ; Keyan Tomaselli on communication/ propaganda; and Christopher Merrett on censorship ; plus related and unrelated short contributions. Published twice a year, a subscription to nos.3 and 4 is only RIO (or £5 or $10 from overseas). Advance subscriptions to nos.5 and 6 are R11. Back issues still available (no.1 is free). Write to: P O Box 375, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South Africa. Innovation, University Library, Editorial Collective, S o u th A-f Journed A journal of theatre and performance studies, with a primary emphasis on the history, theory and practice of performance and the performing arts from other disciplines are also placed, as are reviews, reports and commentaries. in Southern Africa. Articles on other regions and Published in May and September each year. Editors and Publishers: Temple Hauptfleisch and Ian Steadman. Address: SATJ, P.O. Box 6054, Uniedal 7612, South Africa Individuals: $20,00 R20.00 Subscription fees: Institutions: $30,00 (overseas) R35.00 (South Africa)