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Harvard Libraries Will Cut Journal SubscriptionsHarvard University library officials have announced they will cut print subscriptions to almost 200 academic and technical journals by the end of the year as a means of addressing budget shortfalls.Director Sidney Verba told American Libraries that eliminating approximately 193 titlesincluding about 175 from the libraries’ largest supplier, Elsevierwould mean a potential savings of more than $300,000. “Journal costs have been rising faster than healthcare,” Digital Acquisitions Program Librarian Ivy Anderson said in the November 24 Harvard Crimson. Cutting some little-used journals will allow the library to devote more money to new books or other journals. “Ninety percent of the reading is done in 10% of the journals,” Verba told the Crimson, noting that popular journals would be retained. The library’s three-year contract with Elsevier, which currently supplies almost 800 journals, will expire at the end of the year, and officials are trying to negotiate a less restrictive contract. “They make it difficult to cancel and we get locked into buying,” Verba said. “We want to sign a shorter-term contract with more flexibility.” Posted November 26, 2003. |
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