432 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
432 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Dial Access to ILLINET Online
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Terminal Settings
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* Up to 9600 Baud (auto-adjusts to caller's modem speed 300-9600 baud
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* Parity EVEN
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* Word length of 7 bits
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* 1 stop bit
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* Full Duplex (Echo On)
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Logon/Logoff Procedures
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* When Communications software indicates a connection, press ENTER or
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RETURN key 1-2 times
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* At IO logo screen, type B and press Enter or RETURN key
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* System responds with a "WELCOME" message and you may begin searching
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* To quit, type LOGOFF and DISCONNECT WITH YOUR COMMUNICATIONS SOFTWARE
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Dial number closest to you
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Chicago Area
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* Chicago 312-996-8844
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* N. Suburban 708-295-0077
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* W. Suburban 708-355-9528
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Northern Illinois
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* DeKalb 815-753-1863
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Central Illinois
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* Champaign-Urbana 217-333-8269
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* Bloomington-Normal 309-452-5623
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* Springfield 217-786-6286
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Western Illinois
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* Macomb 309-836-2050
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* Quad Cities 309-799-7347
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Southern Illinois
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* Metro east 618-692-2903
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* Carbondale 618-453-8091
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ILLINET ONLINE SEARCHING GUIDE
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IO searches will automatically search the collection of one ILCSO library. The
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"default" or "scope" for each dial access number is listed below:
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Bloomington-Normal 309-452-5623 Illinois St. Univ.
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Carbondale 618-453-8091 Southern Ill. Univ.-C.
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Champaign-Urbana 217-333-8269 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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Chicago 312-996-8844 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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DeKalb 815-753-1863 Northern Ill. Univ.
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Macomb 309-836-2050 Western Ill. Univ.
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Metro East 618-692-2903 Southern Ill. Univ.-C.
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N. Suburban 708-295-0077 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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Quad Cities 309-799-7347 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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Springfield 217-786-6286 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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W. Suburban 708-355-9528 Univ. of Ill.-Urbana
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To search for items from other libraries or groups of libraries enter the scope
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codes from the list below in this format.
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F T THERMAL POLLUTION $SC
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(Find Title Thermal Pollution at location (Chicago State Univ., Chicago)
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AR Aurora Univ., Aurora NC North Central College, Naperville
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CT Catholic Theo. Union, Chicago NU Northeastern Ill. Univ., Chicago
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CS Chicago State Univ., Chicago NI Northern Ill. Univ., DeKalb
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CL Columbia College, Chicago OA Oakton Comm. College, DesPlaines
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DP DePaul Univ., Chicago RU Roosevelt University, Chicago
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EA Eastern Ill. Univ., Charleston RO Rosary College, River Forest
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EL Elmhurst College, Elmhurst SX St. Xavier College, Chicago
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GS Governors St. Univ., Univ. Park SS Sangamon State Univ., Springfield
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IB Ill. Benedictine College, Lisle SA School of the Art Inst., Chicago
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IT Ill. Institute of Tech., Chicago SC Southern Ill. Univ., Carbondale
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IM Ill. Math & Science Acad., Aurora SE Southern Ill. Univ., Edwardsville
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IS Ill. State Univ., Normal SM SIU School of Medicine, Springfield
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IW Ill. Wesleyan Univ., Bloomington TC Triton College, River Grove
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JU Judson College, Elgin CC Univ. of Ill., Chicago
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KK Kankakee Community College MC Univ. of Ill., Health Science Libs.
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LF Lake Forest College, Lake Forest UC Univ. of Ill., Urbana-Champaign
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ML Millikin Univ., Decatur WE Western Ill. Univ., Macomb
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ILLINET LIBRARY SYSTEMS
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ILLINET online scoping codes (in parenthese)
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Bur Oak Sys. (BOLS) North Suburban Lib. Sys (NSLS)
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Chicago Library Sys. (CLS) Northern Illinois Lib. Sys. (NILS)
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Corn Belt Library Sys. (CBLS) River Bend library Sys. (RBLS)
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Coumberland Trail Lib. SYS. (CTLS Rolling Priairie Lib. Sys. (RPLS)
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DuPage Library Sys. (DLS) Shawnee Library Sys. (SHLS)
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Great River Library Sys. (GRLS) Starved Rock Library Sys. (SRLS)
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Illinois Valley Library Sys. (IVLS) Suburban Library Sys. (SLS)
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Kaskaskia Library Sys. (KLS) Westem Illinois Lib. Sys. (WILS)
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Lewis & Clark Library Sys. (LCLS)
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Lincoln Trail Lib. Sys. (LTLS)
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Research & Reference Cts.
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Chicago Public Library (CPL)
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Illinois State Labrary (ISL)
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SIU -Carbondale (SC)
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Univ. of Chicago (UOC)
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Univ. of Ill-Urbana (UC)
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As a Group (RRC)
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Ctr. for Research Libraries (CRL)
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ALL ILLINET Library (ALL)
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THERE ARE TWO LIBRARY SYSTEMS FULL BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD (FBR) AND LIBRARY
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COMPUTER SYSTEM (LCS) WHEN YOU CALL ILLINET YOU HAVE ACCESS TO BOTH SYSTEMS.
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YOU CAN USE EITHER CODEING SYSTEM. FBR SYSTEM CODES
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SEARCH COMMANDS KEY IDENTIFIERS
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F FIND A AUTHOR
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T TERM I ISBN
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S SELECT ISS ISSN
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KEY access points KAC CORPORATE AUTHOR KEYWORD
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L LINK R RECORD ID
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H HOLD S SUBJECT
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SET SERIES TITLE
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T TITLE
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OPTIONS BOOLEAN OPERATORS
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$,S SUMMARY DISPLAY .and. .a. * = and
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$,M MINIMUN DISPLAY .or. .o. + = or
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$,F FULL DISPLAY .not. .n. / = not
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$,C COMPLETE MARC
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$,X ACCESS POINTS
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$,,T TITLE SORT
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$,,T AUTHOR SORT
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FIND COMMAND
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The FIND (F) command will provide you with bibliographic information about one
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or more books. Bibliographic information may include authors, title, place of
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publication, number of pages, etc.
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The abbreviation for the FIND command is F. You can search for books by
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specifying a subject, an author's name, a title or the title of the series in
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which they are found. For example:
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F S ROBOTS will get you information on books about robots.
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F A TWAIN, MARKwill get you information on books by Mark Twain.
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F T BELL TOLLS will get you information on books with these words in the
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title, such as "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
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TERM COMMAND
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The TERM (T) search provides a way to verify an author's name, a subject
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heading or a series title. If you are not getting the results you want from a
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FIND search, a TERM search will often help. For example, if you could not
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find any books by the Galloping Gourmet, you would type T A GALLOPING GOURMET,
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and the online catalogue would respond:
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Galloping Gourmet
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SEE Kerr, Graham.
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When you have located the name or subject that you want, you can do a FIND
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search to see information about the relevant books. Suppose you had done a
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search for the subject, androids. (T S ANDROIDS) The online catalogue
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responds:
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1. Androids.
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2.--Fiction.
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3.--Juvenile literature.
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If you wanted stories about androids, you would type F 2. This would get you
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information about books under the subject heading ANDROIDS--FICTION. If you
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wanted to see all books about androids, you could type F 1-3 or F 1,2,3.
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This table gives some options for doing precise TERM searches.
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Subject Author Series
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General (includes all options given below) S A SE
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Personal name SP AP SEP
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Corporate (group) name SC AC SEC
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Corporate (group) name, by keyword KSC KAC KSEC
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Uniform title STU ATU SET
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Topical term ST
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Geographic term FBR command. SG
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BROWSE COMMAND
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The BROWSE command provides better searching of subject headings, authors'
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names and series titles when the TERM search produces more than 10 headings.
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You will also want to use it if you do not know the exact heading to search.
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Browsing allows you to move through the list of headings from a specified
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point, displaying all headings in alphabetical order. The displayed headings
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are options that you can use as you continue your search.
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The BROWSE search is usually used after a TERM search. To display the
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alphabetical list of headings that follow a given heading, type BROWSE
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and the number of the heading from the previous TERM search. BROWSE may be
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abbreviated B. For example, suppose a TERM search gave you these results:
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3. Veterinary medicine.
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4. --Diagnosis.
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16. --Handbooks, manuals, etc.
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5. --Diagnosis, differential.
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TITLE SEARCH
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You can use the title search even when you do not know the exact title of a
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book. The search looks for the titles that include the words you specify.
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You can list the words in any order. You do not have to type the whole title,
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but your search wil be more precise if you do.
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For example, all of these searches get you the book "For Whom the Bell Tolls"
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F T FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
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F T TOLLS BELL WHOM
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F T BELL
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The last search is not a good choice, however, because it will get you
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information on more than 100 books. You probably do not want to see it all.
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SUBJECT SEARCH
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The library assigns subject headings to books from lists prepared by the
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Library of Congress and National Library of Medicine. If you are certain that
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you know the subject that you want (perhaps you found it at the bottom of the
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catalogue information from another book), you can simply type FIND SUBJ (or F
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S) followed by the subject that you want. For example,
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F S RADIOACTIVE WASTE DISPOSAL
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F S TUBA ENSEMBLES
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F S HISTORY--ERRORS, INVENTIONS, ETC.
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SERIES SEARCH, TITLE
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The series title search will get you information on books in a given series.
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If you are reasonably certain that you know the series title, read on.
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Otherwise, you will want to do a TERM search to verify the title.
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The abbreviation for this search is F SET. To do this search, simply type the
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name of the series. Because this is not a keyword search, the title must be
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accurate. Here are two examples:
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F SET STUDIES IN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
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F SET POLLUTION TECHNOLOGY REVIEW
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COMBINATION (BOOLEAN) SEARCH
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Combination searching allows you to include two or more concepts in a single
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search. You can search for books by joint authors, books by an author on a
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given subject, or any other combination that you can think of. Search
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concepts are combined using the following Boolean operators:
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.AND. Both concepts must must be in the books that are retrieved.
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.OR. Either or both concepts must be in the books that are retrieved.
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.NOT. Books with the following concept should not be retrieved.
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See the examples on this page and the next.
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To find books by Alan Purves about reading comprehension:
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F A PURVES, ALAN C. .AND. S READING COMPREHENSION
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Notice that you type the F only once but each concept (A for author, S for
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subject) must be identified.
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COMBINATION SEARCH, EXAMPLES
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To find works by Gilbert and Sullivan:
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F A GILBERT, W. S. .AND. A SULLIVAN, ARTHUR
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To find works by Griffith Quinby with "PCBs" in the title:
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F A QUINBY, GRIFFITH ERNEST .AND. T PCBS
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To find works about disarmament or arms control:
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F S DISARMAMENT .OR. S ARMS CONTROL
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To find works by Frank Lloyd Wright or Ludwig Mies van der Rohe:
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F A WRIGHT, FRANK LLOYD .OR. A MIES VAN DER ROHE, LUDWIG
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To find works about clinical psychology that were not written by E. Hoch:
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F S CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY .NOT. A HOCH, ERASMUS LEONARD
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To find works by Nin or Johnson under the subject of literature:
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F (A NIN, ANAIS .OR. A JOHNSON, BARBARA) .AND. S AUTHORS, AMERICAN
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Notice that you can combine more than two concepts. Parentheses group items
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here just as they do in algebra. Complex searches like this take a bit longer
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to process. Be prepared to wait a few seconds.
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BROADENING A SEARCH (TRUNCATION)
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Sometimes when you are doing a FIND or TERM search, you may not have all the
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information needed to do an exact search. For example, if you are searching
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for an author, you may not know his or her middle name or the exact spelling
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of the surname.If you are searching by title, you may not know how the
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endings of certain key words are spelled. If you are searching for a series
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title, you may be confident about the words at the beginning of the title, but
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not the end. The solution to all these problems is called "truncation."
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To do a truncation search, substitute a pound sign (#) for the parts of the
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search that you do not know. For example, if you are not sure what the "F"
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stands for in "John F. Kennedy", you would type:
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F A KENNEDY, JOHN F#
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This command will get you information on books by any John Kennedy whose
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middle name begins with "F."
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Truncation can be used in a search when you are not sure of the spelling of a
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word in the title. For example, if you want to search a title containing the
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words "online" and "catalogue," but are not sure whether the word is spelled
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"catalogue," "catalogues," "catalog" or "catalogs," you would type:
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F T ONLINE CATALOG#
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Truncation can also be used to search a series title when you know the words
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at the beginning of the title, but are unsure about the words at the end. For
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example:
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F T STUDIES IN AMERICAN HISTORY#
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Truncation is also useful when you are searching for subjects. If you want
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information about the Champaign area, type:
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T S CHAMPAIGN#
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This search retrieves information about the city, the county and the region.
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THE LINK COMMAND
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The two parts of the online catalogue, LCS and FBR, have separate pools of
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data. As you already know, FBR has flexible searching capabilities, but no
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call numbers or locations. However, you can do an FBR FIND search and then
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ask to see the LCS data that corresponds to your results by using the LINK (L) command.
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For example, the title search F T SOCIAL WORK DEVIANT retrieves only one
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record. To see the corresponding LCS record, you would type L. The search, F
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T PLANNING NOW, retrieves 4 titles. In this case, you could ask to see all 4
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LCS records (L 1-4) or specific individual matching LCS records (L 1,3).
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It is important to know that not all FBR records link to LCS records. The FBR
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database contains information about books from several libraries. Because some
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of these libraries do not use LCS, some books are not linked. Nevertheless,
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the title could be in LCS, so you should always try an LCS search using LCS
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commands.
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LCS SYSTEM CODES
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There are three commands which can be used for general searching in LCS: ATS/
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for author-title searches, TLS/ for title searches, and AUT/ for author search-
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es. The following explanations use as an example the book Oliver Twist by
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Charles Dickens.
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ATS/ The search code consists of the first four letters of the author's last
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name and the first five letters of the first word in the title. (Words
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on the stoplist are not used; see HELP,STOPLIST.)
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example: ATS/DICKOLIVE
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TLS/ The search code consists of the first four letters of the first word in
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the title and the first five letters of the second word in the title.
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(Words on the stoplist are not used.)
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example: TLS/OLIVTWIST
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AUT/ The search code consists of the first six letters of the author's last
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name and the first three letters of the author's first name.
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example: AUT/DICKENCHA
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IF THERE IS ONLY ONE MATCH TO A SEARCH CODE, LCS WILL DISPLAY THE DETAILED IN-
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FORMATION FOR THE ITEM. THE DETAILED INFORMATION INCLUDES THE CALL NUMBER,
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AUTHOR, TITLE, PLACE OF PUBLICATION, PUBLICATION DATE, NUMBER OF COPIES, LOCA-
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TION OF EACH COPY, AND WHETHER THE ITEM IS CHARGED.
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IF THERE IS MORE THAN ONE MATCH TO A SEARCH CODE, LCS DISPLAYS A TRUNCATED LIST
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OF ALL THE ITEMS MATCHING THE CODE. THIS LIST IS IN RANDOM ORDER. TO OBTAIN
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COMPLETE INFORMATION ON A DESIRED ITEM, A SEARCH BY LINE (DSL/) MUST BE PER-
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FORMED.
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The shelf position search is used to provide a display of titles in a call num-
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ber area. It is similar to browsing the shelves because classification systems
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are designed to place materials on the same subject together as well as all
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editions of an item. The shelf position search can be used as a rough form of
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subject searching. To do a shelf position search, type the search command SPS/
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followed by part or all of a call number.
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This search displays the 15 titles that are shelved before and the 15 titles
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that are shelved after a call number. The number you typed will be displayed
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on line 16. The first display is page 2. Type PG1 to get the preceding page
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or type PG3 to get the following page. To obtain detailed information on a
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title, a detailed search by line (DLS/) must be performed. To continue an SPS
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beyond PG3, reenter SPS/ and last call number listed on PG3.
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IF YOUR SEARCH HAS PRODUCED MORE THAN ONE TITLE, READ DOWN THE LIST OF TITLES
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TO DETERMINE WHICH LINE SHOWS YOUR ITEM. TO DISPLAY THE COMPLETE INFORMATION
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FOR THIS ITEM ENTER A DETAILED SEARCH BY LINE NUMBER. THE FORMAT FOR THIS IS:
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DSL/N WHERE N IS THE LINE NUMBER OF THE TITLE WANTED. YOU MAY ALSO ASK FOR
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INFORMATION FOR MORE THAN ONE LINE AT A TIME. THE LINE NUMBER IS ON THE LEFT
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OF THE SCREEN. FOR EXAMPLE:
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A TITLE SEARCH FOR "HARD TIMES" MIGHT PRODUCE THIS DISPLAY:
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PAGE 1 2 MATCHES 0 SKIPPED (ALL DISPLAYED IN 1)
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01 DICKENS, CHARLES HARD TIMES 1854
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02 TERKEL, LOUIS HARD TIMES 1970
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THE COMMAND DSL/1 ASKS FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE TITLE ON LINE 1 WHILE
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THE COMMAND DSL/1/2 ASKS FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT BOTH LINES 1 AND 2.
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IF YOUR SEARCH HAS PRODUCED MORE THAN 10 TITLES, YOU MUST ASK FOR ADDITIONAL
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PAGES OF MATCHES TO COMPLETELY SCAN THE LIST (THE COMPUTER DISPLAYS ONLY 10
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MATCHES AT A TIME.) ENTERING THE FOLLOWING:
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PG2 WILL DISPLAY THE 2ND GROUP OF 10 MATCHES
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PG3 WILL DISPLAY THE 3RD GROUP OF 10 MATCHES
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PG+ WILL DISPLAY THE 4TH GROUP OF 10 MATCHES
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REPEAT THIS SEQUENCE, PG2, PG3, PG+ UNTIL YOU HAVE FOUND YOUR ITEM, THEN USE
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THE DETAILED SEARCH BY LINE (DSL/) TO DISPLAY THE DETAILED INFORMATION.
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To search other college libraries' LCS databases add one of the codes
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shown below to your search. You may only search one college at a time.
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EXAMPLES: (Looking for Tom Wolfe's book The Right Stuff from DePaul)
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Using ATS/, AUT/, TLS/, or SPS/ : TLS/RIGHSTUFF/DP
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Using DSC/ or DST/ DSC/629.1W855R,DP
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Do not use these words in LCS author and/or title searches (ATS/ AUT/ and TLS/):
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A Department House Of Un
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Alla Dept. How On U.N.
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Allo Der I Os Und
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American Des Il Po Une
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An Di Illinois Pro United Nations
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And Die Im Proceedings United States
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Annual Do In Report Unter
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At Du International Reports US
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Az El Introduction Senate U.S.
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Bulletin En Iz Sobre V
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By Et Journal Studies Von
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Conference For La Study W
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Congress From Las Sur With
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Da Fuer Le Symposium Y
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Das Fur Les The Year Book
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De Great Britain Los To Yearbook
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Del Gt. Brit. Na Uber Za
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Della Guide National Ueber Zu
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Dem History New Um Zum
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Den O Zur
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