944 resultados para American Library Association
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Each vol. also has distinctive title.
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"Adopted at the [California Bar Association] annual meeting, held at Los Angeles, Dec. 6, 7 and 8, 1910."
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Cover title.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. 1 contains proceedings of the earlier organizations known as the General Time Convention (1872 to 1885) and the Southern Railway Time Convention (1877 to 1885)
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"ASA B15-1927"--Cover.
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On cover: The Springfield art museum.
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Issues for 1935?-1968 include papers read before the Association at the meeting, issued separately 1969- as scientific papers of the meeting of the American Surgical Association.
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Vol. 1 published in Scio, Ohio; v. 2-12, in Chicago; v. 13-19, in Baltimore; v. 20-23 in Washington.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Special collections, because of the issues associated with conservation and use, a feature they share with archives, tend to be the most digitized areas in libraries. The Nineteenth Century Schoolbooks collection is a collection of 9000 rarely held nineteenth-century schoolbooks that were painstakingly collected over a lifetime of work by Prof. John A. Nietz, and donated to the Hillman Library at the University of Pittsburgh in 1958, which has since grown to 15,000. About 140 of these texts are completely digitized and showcased in a publicly accessible website through the University of Pittsburgh’s Library, along with a searchable bibliography of the entire collection, which expanded the awareness of this collection and its user base to beyond the academic community. The URL for the website is http://digital.library.pitt.edu/nietz/. The collection is a rich resource for researchers studying the intellectual, educational, and textbook publishing history of the United States. In this study, we examined several existing records collected by the Digital Research Library at the University of Pittsburgh in order to determine the identity and searching behaviors of the users of this collection. Some of the records examined include: 1) The results of a 3-month long user survey, 2) User access statistics including search queries for a period of one year, a year after the digitized collection became publicly available in 2001, and 3) E-mail input received by the website over 4 years from 2000-2004. The results of the study demonstrate the differences in online retrieval strategies used by academic researchers and historians, archivists, avocationists, and the general public, and the importance of facilitating the discovery of digitized special collections through the use of electronic finding aids and an interactive interface with detailed metadata.