When national online bibliographic databases began, some academic
law libraries joined networks as partners with their university
libraries to share or save costs. This meant sharing a holdings
symbol with the university library. My impression is that most
of these law libraries now belong to networks on their own, with
their own holdings symbols. I need specific examples of academic
law libraries: (1) that once shared a membership in a
bibliographic network and now are separate and (2) that continue
to share a membership in a bibliographic network.
Please respond directly to me so as not to clutter the list.
Thanks.
Wes Cochran
Texas Tech University (home of Cheryl Swoopes and the rest of the
1993 NCAA Women's Basketball Champions)
xpjwc@ttacs1.ttu.edu
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