Journal of Library Automation, vol 10, no 3
LITA | jola1003
Journal of Library Automation
ISSN 0022-2240
Volume 10, Number 3, September 1977
Editorial
Suddenly This Summer
SUSAN K. MARTIN
Feature Articles
Vernacular Scripts in the NYPL Automated Bibliographic
Control System
S. MICHAEL MALINCONICO, WALTER R. GRUTCHFIELD, AND ERIK J. STEINER
NUC Reporting and MARC Redistribution: Their
Functional Confluence and Its Implication for a Redefinition of the MARC
Format
DAVID L. WEISBROD
Cost-effectiveness Analysis of the Automation
of a Circulation System
ISOBEL JEAN MOSLEY
Editorial
Suddenly This Summer (p.203-204)
SUSAN K. MARTIN
Feature Articles
Vernacular Scripts in the NYPL Automated
Bibliographic Control System (p.205-225)
S. MICHAEL MALINCONICO, WALTER R. GRUTCHFIELD, AND ERIK J. STEINER
The New York Public Library has developed and implemented facilities
for input and display of data in nonroman vernacular scripts in its Automated
Bibliographic Control System. Hebrew has been the first nonroman script
implemented. The input conventions were derived from an American National
Standards Institute standard for Computer Compatible Transliteration of
Hebrew. Practices regarding the use of nonroman text and character sets
were derived from bibliographic practices employed by the Library of Congress.
This paper attempts to describe how problems of input and display within
the context of a computer-based system were solved. In addition it presents
an innovative approach to filing nonroman entries in a catalog containing
mixed scripts, which offers a solution to the problems posed by romanization.
NUC Reporting and MARC Redistribution:
Their Functional Confluence and Its Implication for a Redefinition of the
MARC Format (p.226-239)
DAVID L. WEISBROD
Two innovative uses of MAchine Readable Cataloging (MARC) data whose
realization is imminent are the reporting of library holdings to the National
Union Catalog (NUC reporting) and the multilateral interchange of bibliographic
information (MARC redistribution). These two uses are found to place very
similar demands on the data required for input. Some of these demands are
novel (or at least newly recognized) and imply a necessity to rework certain
aspects of the definition of the MARC format. A brief outline and discussion
of some of the necessary modifications to the definition are presented.
Cost-effectiveness Analysis of the Automation
of a Circulation System (p.240-254)
ISOBEL JEAN MOSLEY
The methodology of cost-effectiveness analysis described in this report
was developed in order to evaluate the automation of Colorado State University's
library circulation system. The analysis was based on data from a time study
of the circulation department operations. Unit costs for the old manual
system and the new semi-automated system were found to be $0.365 and $0.474
respectively, but the new system was more effective in some respects.
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