From b0950fe7758568e68629916f88fdfdd5ac021bdd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Roger Frank Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2025 19:53:59 -0700 Subject: initial commit of ebook 30557 --- 30557-h/30557-h.htm | 1259 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 30557-h/images/image011.png | Bin 0 -> 58114 bytes 30557-h/images/image012.png | Bin 0 -> 78237 bytes 30557-h/images/image013.png | Bin 0 -> 41416 bytes 30557-h/images/image014.png | Bin 0 -> 47077 bytes 30557-h/images/image017.png | Bin 0 -> 28292 bytes 30557-h/images/image018.png | Bin 0 -> 41140 bytes 7 files changed, 1259 insertions(+) create mode 100644 30557-h/30557-h.htm create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image011.png create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image012.png create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image013.png create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image014.png create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image017.png create mode 100644 30557-h/images/image018.png (limited to '30557-h') diff --git a/30557-h/30557-h.htm b/30557-h/30557-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5b90bce --- /dev/null +++ b/30557-h/30557-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1259 @@ + + + + + + + The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Long Island Library Resources Council +(LILRC) Interlibrary Loan Manual: January, 1976, by Anonymous. + + + + + + +
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Long Island Library Resources Council
+(LILRC) Interlibrary Loan Manual: January, 1976, by Anonymous
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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+Title: The Long Island Library Resources Council (LILRC) Interlibrary Loan Manual: January, 1976
+
+Author: Anonymous
+
+Release Date: November 28, 2009 [EBook #30557]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INTERLIBRARY LOAN MANUAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Gerard Arthus, Diane Monico, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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+ + + + + + +

L I L R C
+ +INTERLIBRARY LOAN MANUAL

+ + +January 1976

+ + +

LONG ISLAND
+LIBRARY
+RESOURCES +COUNCIL Inc.

+ +

Box 31
+Bellport, NY 11713

+ + + +
+

CONTENTS

+ + + + + + + + +

[Pg 2]


+

Introduction

+ + +

This manual has been prepared as a guide to the Information Network +Service, the interlibrary loan system of the Long Island Library +Resources Council (LILRC).

+ +

The manual contains a description of how the location and delivery +service works and the policy on which it is based, as well as +standards to which it is expected participating libraries will adhere.

+ +

Please do not hesitate to make suggestions and comments regarding +this manual and the interlibrary loan service to the Council office.

+ +

January 1976

+ + + +

[Pg 3]


+

INTERLIBRARY LOAN POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

+ + +

Our interlibrary loan program is based on the premise that lending among +libraries for the benefit of individuals in Nassau and Suffolk counties is +in the public interest and should be encouraged. It is impossible for any +one library to be self-sufficient, and interlibrary borrowing and lending is +regarded by the libraries participating in this program as essential to +library service.

+ +

It is the policy of the Council that the routines of borrowing and lending +are simplified as much as possible consistent with the protection of material. +Every effort is made to emphasize speed and to base the service on a spirit +of cooperation and trust among participating libraries.

+ +

What follows comprise the procedures and standards that have developed gradually +and voluntarily in our area—this is what works for us. Changes may be introduced +as the need arises.

+ + +

What may be borrowed

+ +

It is recognized that interlibrary borrowing does not relieve any library of the +responsibility for developing its own collection. Each library should provide +the bulk of materials needed by its users for purposes of study, instruction, +information and research.

+ +

The borrowing library should make every effort to exhaust its own resources +before turning to interlibrary loan. It should also screen requests carefully +before transmitting them to the Council, eliminating those which common sense +indicates would not be supplied.

+ +

The borrowing library is responsible for returning loans promptly and in good +condition. The borrowing library should respond quickly to overdue notices +and is responsible for paying fees for lost books as levied by the lending library. +The library should refuse to request books on interlibrary loan on behalf of +borrowers who abuse the privilege.

+ + +

Placing requests

+ +

Our network is part of an hierarchical system. Requests we cannot locate in +the region we send to the New York State Interlibrary Loan Network (NYSILL) +which searches the State Library in Albany and selected referral libraries in +the State. The key to the success of NYSILL is that it is asked only for +materials not available locally. The network would break down if the major +libraries were asked to supply commonly held materials. Medically oriented +requests not found on Long Island are transmitted to the Regional Medical Library +interlibrary loan network in Brooklyn.[Pg 4]

+ +

Public libraries submit their requests through their respective library systems, +which process the requests through LILRC, NYSILL, or other channels.

+ +

All other libraries in the region should submit their requests to LILRC. Most libraries +prefer to have local requests handled centrally, and decline to fill +regional requests unless they have been transmitted by the Council. In special +circumstances, libraries may arrange to deal directly with each other.

+ + +

Form of requests

+ +

Borrowing libraries may find it helpful to develop worksheets (see samples in +Appendix B) to be used by the reader and the librarian in preparing the +interlibrary loan request, indicating all the items we need to know.

+ +

Requests may be submitted on LILRC interlibrary loan forms which we supply, +and sent in by mail or by our driver. They may be placed by teletype, using +a format based on the LILRC request form. Urgent requests may be placed +by telephone.

+ +

We ask that you fill out the form as completely and as accurately as possible, +including author's full first name. Supply all the information you have been +able to elicit from your patron, as well as all you have been able to glean +from bibliographic sources to complete the request. The more information you +give us the more likely we are to locate the material you need—and the +more quickly.

+ +

Try to develop techniques for drawing from your reader as much as he knows +about the item he is seeking and the source of the citation. He must have +some reason for believing the item exists, and we should be able to pass this +information on to the potential lending library.

+ + +

Verification

+ +

Check as far as possible to verify the accuracy of the information the reader +gives you. We trust that you will verify citations as completely and as +accurately as your resources will allow.

+ +

The ALA and NYSILL manuals (see Appendix A) both contain a listing of standard +bibliographic tools and sources of verification. Verification sources not +found in the standard lists should be cited in full. Remember that reference +tools and abbreviations familiar to you may not be known to the librarian trying +to fill the request. Please give full citation of the source of verification, +including date, volume, series, and the page on which verification was found. +That is, not just "NUC," but "NUC, 1968-72, 25:478." In a request for a +periodical article, both the title of the periodical and the location of the +article should be verified, and both sources of verification should be given.

+ +

If you cannot verify the item in a standard bibliographic tool, please supply +a complete citation to the source of reference, including author's full name, +publisher, date, and page of citation.[Pg 5]

+ +

When libraries are unable to verify requests completely because their +bibliographic resources and staff are severely limited, we will try to +verify the information and to locate the item. If a request is hopelessly +inadequate, with vital information missing or with incomprehensible +abbreviations, we will return it for clarification.

+ + +

OCLC verification

+ +

Please use caution when citing OCLC numbers as verification for interlibrary +loan requests. The Council office and most of the libraries in our region +do not have OCLC terminals. Include OCLC #, author and title, place, publisher +and date, and Nassau-Suffolk and NYSILL locations where given. +Be sure all information has been copied correctly.

+ + +

Data base verification

+ +

If an item is requested on the basis of a citation on a computer printout, +supply all information given and be sure to indicate which data base was +used, such as ERIC, Psych Abstracts, Compendex, BIOSIS, etc.

+ + +

Photocopying

+ +

The lending library may choose to supply photocopies of articles in lieu +of lending whole issues or volumes of serials. By mutual agreement, +libraries in our region generally absorb the costs of photocopying articles, +although there may be a charge for longer articles. Libraries have usually +found that by photocopying for each other without charge they come +out reasonably even and avoid the expense and trouble of accounting and +billing procedures.

+ + +

Expenses

+ +

LILRC along among the 3R's Councils in the State has chosen to maintain a +low membership fee which is the same for all libraries. Our income is +supplemented by a system of charges and credits for completed interlibrary +loan transactions, so that libraries pay in proportion to the use they make +of our service. These charges are not related to the cost of the service.

+ +

The borrowing library is charged a fee for each item it obtains through LILRC. +The lending library receives a credit (presently $1.00) equal to one-half +the charge (presently $2.00) for each item it supplies. Libraries with +collections from which we borrow heavily, paying for teletype machines to +receive our requests, may be given additional credit if replies are +transmitted promptly.

+ + + +

[Pg 6]


+

DIRECT ACCESS TO OTHER LIBRARIES

+ + +

Both the Nassau Library System and the Suffolk Cooperative Library System +have policies of direct access, including borrowing privileges, among the +public libraries within their respective counties. A reader may find +another library convenient; remind him to check with his local public library +for details.

+ +

Other alternatives to interlibrary loan include:

+ + +

Location service

+ +

It may be more practical for some readers to use books and periodicals at +the library which holds them rather than request them on interlibrary loan. +For periodicals, you may refer readers on the basis of the Nassau-Suffolk Union +List of Serials. Please check the list of participating libraries in the front +of volume 1 which notes some limitations of public access to materials in +certain libraries.

+ +

For monographs, call LILRC and ask for a check of a few libraries in the microfilms +of card catalogs to get locations for needed items.

+ + +

Research Loan Program

+ +

Through this program, patrons of participating libraries have direct access, +including circulation privileges, to specific subject area collections in other +participating libraries. In lieu of numerous interlibrary loan requests, libraries +may wish to recommend their readers take advantage of this program. +The latest LILRC membership list indicates libraries which have joined this +program. Details are available in all participating libraries and from LILRC.

+ + + +

[Pg 7]


+

INFORMATION NETWORK SERVICE-How it works

+ + +

Requests are received daily from participating libraries by teletype and on +LILRC interlibrary loan forms by mail and delivery service. A limited number +of urgent requests may be received by telephone. All requests are transcribed +onto LILRC request forms if they have not arrived on that form.

+ +

All requests are checked to make sure that all necessary bibliographic information +has been given. If a glaring error or omission can be corrected +easily, the INS clerk will do so and process the request. If the error is +not easily corrected, the request is returned to the requesting library +for clarification.

+ +

When a monograph request is received, the clerk checks the appropriate catalogs +in the data bank of library card catalogs in microfilm in the LILRC office +(or calls libraries for materials not listed in the catalogs). For serials +the clerk checks the Nassau-Suffolk Union List of Serials and other tools. +When an item is located, the clerk calls, teletypes a message, or sends a copy +of the request to the prospective lender to see if the item is actually available.

+ +

The INS staff tries to maintain a balance between locating the needed items +most efficiently and at the same time spreading the load so that the larger +libraries are not overburdened with requests and so that all libraries are +given a chance to build up credits.

+ +

Each time we check with a prospective lender, a notation is made on the +interlibrary loan form indicating the library's name and response. If "yes," +arrangements are made for pickup. If "no," the search goes on. "Maybe" takes +a little longer; although the item is in the catalog, the shelf must be checked +to see if the volume is available for loan or photocopying.

+ +

When a loan is arranged, the clerk prepares the interlibrary loan forms +(still intact) for the driver. Having begun her run in the morning, delivering +books and copies picked up the previous day, the driver returns to the LILRC +office in the early afternoon with that day's deliveries and pickups. The driver +collects the day's batch of slips and prepares her itinerary for the next day.

+ +

Copies of the interlibrary loan form are used as follows:

+ + +
+ + + + + + + + +
Serials Books
whiteSent to lending librarypink
yellowInserted into each book delivered
+to borrowing library or clipped
+to copy of article
yellow
pinkFiled by name of borrowing library
+in LILRC circulation file,
+used for statistics, then filed
white
goldReturned to borrowing library with
+bill unless retained by library
+before submitting request to LILRC
gold
+ +

[Pg 8]

+

If an item is not located at a member library, the request is considered for +transmission to the State Library in Albany and the NYSILL network or to the +Regional Medical Library network. Certain categories of requests may be submitted +to the State Library but are not normally eligible for transmission +to NYSILL, such as: fiction, text books, current publications and those in +popular demand, rare books, genealogy, children's books, multi-volume sets, +reference books, non-research books (self-help, recreation, etc.). +Interlibrary loan librarians should familiarize themselves with the NYSILL +manual (see Appendix A) so they will know what to expect when we send requests +to NYSILL for them.

+ +

Each day, the requests not located on Long Island are teletyped to the State +Library in Albany. If available, the book or copy will be sent from the +State Library or the library to which it has been referred, directly to +the requesting library whose name and address have been coded into the NYSILL +transmission format. Medically-oriented requests are sent to the Regional Medical +Library network via the Medical Research Library in Brooklyn and may be sent to +the requesting library directly or via LILRC.

+ +

If the item is not available from any of these sources, a report is teletyped +to LILRC and we send it on to the requesting library.

+ + +

Billing

+ +

Bills are sent quarterly unless a library asks that it be billed monthly or +semi-annually, or annually as part of the dues. The gold copy (part 4) of +the interlibrary loan form is included with the bill unless a library retains +it when initiating the request or indicates the copy need not be returned.

+ + +

Cancellations

+ +

Occasionally, libraries find it necessary to cancel a request. It is understood +that if the item is in the process of being supplied the requesting library will +be charged for the completed loan.

+ + +

Delivery and pickup

+ +

The Council drivers stop at each library which has a pickup or delivery to be +made (public libraries send materials to LILRC via their respective systems). +While the drivers stop nearly every day at the heaviest users, we do not know +you have something for us unless you let us know. If you are supplying a monograph +or photocopy, or have a book to return, call and tell us.[Pg 9]

+ + +

Microforms

+ +

INS tries to obtain needed items in a form usable in the borrowing library. +If the supplying library cannot produce a hard copy of a microform it is +lending, and if your library does not have an appropriate reader, we will +try to have a copy made (if there is an additional charge you will be notified +in advance) or tell you where your patron can read or copy the material himself.

+ + +

Photocopies of missing pages

+ +

Missing pages from monographs and serials may be requested in the usual manner. +For an additional fee, INS will try to obtain copies suitable for binding, +printed on both sides.

+ + +

Recall

+ +

It is understood that the lending library may recall a book needed for one +of its own readers.

+ + +

Renewals

+ +

Please request a renewal before the date due noted on the request form or +in the volume. For books received from LILRC member libraries, call the +LILRC office and give author, title, date due, library from which borrowed. +Renewals will usually be granted for two weeks from date due unless a lending +library has indicated otherwise.

+ +

Books received from the State Library or through NYSILL or the Regional Medical +Library must be renewed directly with the lending library, not LILRC.

+ + +

Returns

+ +

Books received from LILRC should be returned via our driver. Call and let us +know you have a book to be returned.

+ +

Books received from the State Library or through NYSILL or the Regional Medical +Library should be mailed directly to the lending library. The book usually +arrives with a return label. The package in which it comes will give information +regarding return address and insurance.

+ + +

Status reports

+ +

Requests are processed and reports submitted to the requesting library as rapidly +as possible. It is not always possible to give an immediate report on the status +of an outstanding request in the process of being searched at a member library. +Please hold requests for status reports to a minimum.

+ + + +

[Pg 10]


+

Guide to the use of LILRC Interlibrary Loan Request Forms

+ + +

The number of interlibrary loan requests received by LILRC is steadily +increasing. In order to process the requests efficiently we ask that +requests be submitted either on the LILRC interlibrary loan request +form or via teletype.

+ +

Please do not send requests on lists or in other formats. Telephone +requests can be accepted only for a limited number of urgent requests.

+ +

Use the "book" request form for all monographs, reports, whole volumes +of proceedings, transactions, congresses, etc.

+ +

Use "serials" request form for all articles from periodicals, papers +from transactions, proceedings or congresses, and for chapters or other +sections of books.

+ +

Please use LILRC interlibrary loan request forms only for requests sent +to LILRC.

+ + + +

[Pg 11]


+

INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETING
+SERIAL REQUEST

+ + +

+ +Instructions for Completing Serial Request +

+ +
+ +

PLEASE TYPE ALL INFORMATION

+ +

1. Date of request. Fill in date you are submitting your request to LILRC.

+ +

2. Your request #. Libraries submitting many interlibrary loan requests often +number the requests consecutively each month. Thus, "10-59" would indicate +the fifty-ninth request Library X submitted to LILRC during October. +Libraries making fewer requests may number consecutively through the year +or may choose to omit a number.

+ +

3. Dewey No. Supply 3-digit Dewey number wherever known. This is necessary +for requests submitted to NYSILL so they can be referred to appropriate +subject referral library. Verification will often give Dewey number, usually +supplied with LC cataloging in NUC and NST.

+ +

4. Requesting library. Name of institution submitting request. Since delivery +is through LILRC driver, full mailing address is not needed.

+ +

5. Name of library user for whom request is being made. Some libraries file +pending requests by name of user. Also helpful in identifying request +if there is a question while it is being processed.

+ +

6. Status. Needed for determining eligibility of request for referral to NYSILL. +Indicate student, faculty, professional, industry, or other.[Pg 12]

+ +

7. Serial. Name of periodical in which needed article appears. Give name +of journal as it appears in the Nassau-Suffolk Union list of Serials, +Union List of Serials 3rd ed., New Serials Titles, or other standard +bibliographic source. Do not use abbreviations. If not verified, give +name of journal as fully as you have been able to find it.

+ +

8. Vol./issue. Indicate volume number of periodical, and issue number if +known. If serial has dates but no volume number, leave space blank.

+ +

9. Date of issue in which needed article appears.

+ +

10. Pages on which article appears. If complete pagination is not known, +add "+" or "to end of article" after number of beginning page, so +that the person copying the article will look for a continuation and not +copy only the single page cited.

+ +

11. Author of article required, including first name(s). If more than one +author, give full names of two, and indicate "and others."

+ +

12. Title of article requested.

+ +

13. Verification. Please supply verification of both name of the journal +and of the existence of the article in this issue of the journal cited. +Standard sources for journals include union lists mentioned in #7 above. +Articles can be verified in standard periodical indexes and abstracting +services such as Reader's Guide, Education Index, Psychological Abstracts, +Engineering Index, etc. Give full citation including volume, series, +year/date, page, abstract number of verification. If request could not +be verified, indicate sources checked.

+ +

If not possible to verify, indicate source of reference, such as +bibliography in monograph, review article, etc. Where did the requestor +see this item in print? Include author, title, publisher and +date or journal title and date, and page number on which citation is found. +If it is more convenient, you may supply a photocopy of the cited reference.

+ +

If impossible to verify or supply a source of reference, indicate "zz."

+ +

For LILRC use only

+ +

14. Records information regarding request forwarded to LILRC member or NYSILL +or RML and awaiting response.

+ +

15. Indicates whether item has been found and delivered or request cancelled.

+ +

16. Checked to indicate by NUC symbol libraries believed to have needed item, +on the basis of the Nassau-Suffolk Union List of Serials.

+ +

17. Records date due of book to be returned. Left blank in cases where photocopy +has been supplied; photocopy becomes the property of the user.

+ + + +

[Pg 13]


+

INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETING
+BOOK REQUEST FORM

+ +

+ +Instructions for Completing Book Request Form +

+ +
+ +

PLEASE TYPE ALL INFORMATION

+ +

1. Date of request. Fill in date you are submitting your request to LILRC.

+ +

2. Your request #. Libraries submitting many interlibrary loan requests +often number the requests consecutively each month. Thus, "10-59" would +indicate the fifty-ninth request Library X submitted to LILRC during +October. Libraries making fewer requests may number consecutively through +the year or may choose to omit a number.

+ +

3. Dewey No. Supply three-digit Dewey number wherever known. This is necessary +for requests submitted to NYSILL so they can be referred to appropriate +subject referral libraries. Verification will often give Dewey number, +usually supplied with LC cataloging in NUC and NST.

+ +

4. Requesting library. Name of institution submitting request. Since delivery +is through the LILRC driver, full mailing address is not needed.

+ +

5. User. Name of library user for whom request is being made. Some libraries +file pending requests by name of user. Also helpful in identifying request +if there is a question while it is being processed.[Pg 14]

+ +

6. Status. Needed for determining eligibility of request for referral to +NYSILL. Indicate student, faculty, professional, industry, or other.

+ +

7. Author. Give full name of author of monograph. Give last name, followed +by first name(s). Give full name wherever possible, not initials. If +more than one author, give full names of two authors, and write +"and others" if there are more. If author is a corporate body, give +name as fully and accurately as possible.

+ +

8. Title. Give full title of book. If title is excessively long, it may +be shortened after giving first several words exactly and filling +space allotted with remaining key words.

+ +

+9. Place. City of publication.   }
+are acceptable. }
+  }   Indicate in this space if other
+10. Name of publisher. }    editions are acceptable.
+  }
+11. Date of publication. }
+

+ +

12. Verification. Please supply verification of all information given, +particularly main entry. Preferred source is National Union Catalog, +followed by CBI. Books in Print is not an adequate verification since +information there is often inaccurate or incomplete. Give full reference +to volume, series, date, page of verification. If request could not be +verified, indicate sources checked, as in: NUC 1968-72-0; CBI 1971-0.

+ +

If it is not possible to verify the author and title, indicate sources of +reference such as bibliography in a monograph, review article, etc. +Where did the requestor see this item in print? Supply author, title, +publisher and date or journal title and date, and page number on which +citation is found. If it is more convenient you may supply a photocopy of +the cited reference.

+ +

If impossible to verify or supply a source of reference, indicate "zz."

+ + +

For LILRC use only

+ +

13. Records information regarding request forwarded to LILRC member or NYSILL +or RML and awaiting response.

+ +

14. Indicates whether item has been found and delivered or request cancelled.

+ +

15. Checked to indicate by NUC symbol libraries believed to have needed item, +on the basis of the data bank of library card catalogs in microfilm or +telephone confirmation.

+ +

16. Records date due of book to be returned. Left blank in cases where photocopy +has been supplied; photocopy becomes the property of the user.

+ + + +

[Pg 15]


+

How to be a good borrower:

+ + +

Educate your readers. Explain that some materials may not be available +on interlibrary loan, that requests may take time to fill, that +renewals may not always be granted.

+ +

Encourage your readers to take full notes of bibliographic sources +and references, to supply all necessary data, to fill out a work +sheet for each request.

+ +

Screen requests carefully. Eliminate requests for items that are +too new, too popular, too inexpensive to process, too ephemeral.

+ +

VERIFY all citations.

+ +

Make sure your teletype messages and interlibrary loan forms are free +from typographical errors.

+ +

Return materials promptly. If a renewal is necessary, ask for it +before the date due. If a book is lost, notify the Council and +pay the bill promptly. Your library is responsible for all books +it borrows on interlibrary loan. Books received through NYSILL +should be returned directly to the lending library, not to LILRC.

+ +

Limit the number of items you request on behalf of any reader at +one time. Materials on a given subject should not be monopolized +by one patron in the region, and deadlines and due dates must be honored.

+ +

Notify us when you have a book to be returned.

+ + + +
+

How to be a good lender:

+ + +

Answer promptly and courteously when you receive a teletype message, +telephone call or typed forms by mail or courier. The library you +supply today may supply you tomorrow.

+ +

Reciprocity is the key word.

+ +

Please say "yes" only when you are prepared to supply the photocopy or +volume quickly. If you cannot fill a request, let us know promptly +so that we may try to locate the item elsewhere. It is not fair +to keep any library's patron waiting. A quick "No" is preferable +to a drawn out "Maybe."

+ +

Notify us when you have an item ready for us to pick up.

+ +

Have items ready for pickup at the designated spot when the driver arrives.

+ +

Identify all photocopies with our request number (if given) and the +title and issue of the journal from which they are made.

+ + + +

[Pg 16]


+

APPENDIX A

+ + +Useful tools for interlibrary loan:

+ +
+

New Jersey State Library. Interlibrary loan, photocopy and reference +procedures manual.
+Copies available upon request: New Jersey State Library, Interlibrary +Reference and Loan Service, 185 W. State St., Trenton, NJ 08625.

+ +

New York State Education Department. New York State Interlibrary Loan +Network. NYSILL Manual, 1970.
+Copies available upon request: State Education Department, Division +of Library Development, Albany, NY 12224.

+ +

Thomson, Sarah Katherine. Interlibrary loan procedure manual. +Chicago, ALA, 1970.
+May be ordered from ALA, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, Ill. 69601.

+
+ + + +

[Pg 17]


+

Appendix B

+ + +Sample worksheets for interlibrary loans

+ +

+ +Sample worksheets for interlibrary loans +

+ + + + +
+ +

Transcriber's Notes

+ +

+Page 7: Changed sumitting to submitting
+(before sumitting request to LILRC).
+
+Page 11: Changed conscecutively to consecutively
+(may number conscecutively).
+
+Page 14: Changed alloted to allotted
+(space alloted with remaining key words).
+
+Page 14: Under 9. Place. City of publication, "are acceptable" may be a typo.
+

+ + + + + + + + + + + +
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Long Island Library Resources
+Council (LILRC) Interlibrary Loan Manual: January, 1976, by Anonymous
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INTERLIBRARY LOAN MANUAL ***
+
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