College and Research Libraries


BOOK REVIEWS 

Centralized Book Processing: A Feasi-
bility Study Based on Colorado Aca-
demic Libraries. By Lawrence E. Leon-
ard; Joan M. Maier; and Richard M. 
Dougherty. Metuchen, N.J.: The Scare-
crow Press, 1969. 401p. 

This report summarizes a fourteen-
month study of nine Colorado academic 
libraries. Focused on technical service 
functions, the study examined existing pat-
terns of operation for times and costs by 
using traditional industrial engineering 
techniques. A proposed Book Processing 
Center was then analyzed, with unit pro-
cessing costs calculated for the center using 
minimum processing times obtained from 
the academic libraries. The Book Process-
ing Center study was supported by math-
ematical simulation of proposed operations. 
A variety of processing operations was 
fed into a computer, and the result is a 
generalized model that could be used by 
other libraries. 

Methodology used involved time observa-
tions, diaries of work performed, and sam-
ples for processing time lags and dupli-
cation of titles. Some of the findings are 
most interesting and should be mentioned 
in summary. The study on time lag for 
processing showed a mean of }89 days for 
the period from "order requested" to 
"book cataloged," with a range of 123 to 
37 4 days within eight libraries. This is an 
average of a six-month delay. Thus, a fac-
ulty member who comes on campus June 
15 has no assurance that books required 
for teaching on September 15 will be avail-
able. In fact, it appears that there is only 
a 50 percent chance his books will be 
cataloged and on the shelf by December 
15-just in time for Christmas vacation. 
Colorado libraries of the study are prob-
ably not atypical in this respect, and quan-
titative substantiation of this report should 

Recent Publications 

highlight why there is an increased inter-
est in blanket order plans and machine-
assisted cataloging. 

The per volume cost of processing ranged 
from $2.76 to $7.71, with an average cost 
of $4.50. The disparities in this range are 
considerable, but factors of staffing pat-
terns, efficiencies, and types of materials 
handled are significant. The average cost 
per volume for the processing center was 
computed to be $3.10, with the greatest 
difference from the academic libraries oc-
curring in the category of labor costs. These 
figures are only general guides since most 
of the costs would be sustained by the 
member libraries, yet increased discounts 
due to volume purchasing were considered 
as an additional savings factor. 

This factor of duplication of titles was 
given much attention; the mathematical 
model testing this aspect showed a poten-
tial saving in ordering multiple copies. The 
cost of processing one volume per title is 
$2.96, whereas the cost of processing six 
volumes per title is $2.33. Coordinated or-
dering is shown to be an advantage, but 
this objective of an academic book proc-
essing center may be one of the most dif-
ficult to achieve. 

These summary figures are interesting, 
but of greater significance is the method-
ology used in their derivation; the method-
ology should mark this as a landmark study 
for subsequent investigations. It would 
seem that, with this and the earlier stud:.. 
ies cited in the literature, a handbook of 
standard times and study methods for li-
brmy technical processing functions could 
be compiled. Studies might be expected to 
modify and cause adjustment of the stan-
dards, but at least the method of conduct-
ing such a study would not have to be re-
established ab avo, and a foundation for 
comparison would then exist in one work. 
With the Colorado study perhaps the 
point has been reached at which such a 
synthesis is now feasible, for this research 

I 119 



120 I College & Research Libraries • March 1970 

contains statistically accurate formulas by 
which the results of time or diary observa-
tions can be tested. 

Inclusion in the report of the formulas 
used by the researchers is good, although 
it is likely that librarians using this book 
as a manual will have to seek the assist-
ance of a statistician in application and 
interpretation of symbols. Specialists are 
available, however, and one should not 
feel reluctant to request help; the· point is 
that librarians should do more of this kind 
of analytical inspection of their routines. 

A condition not explored in the study, 
perhaps because it is too subjective, is the 
impact that specialization of activity might 
have in a centralized processing center. 
The study points out how individual spe-
ciality improves production-would not 
group speciality have an efficiency factor? 
A separate processing center, established 
according to the concepts of industrial 
engineering as used in the study itself, 
should be more effective than a regular 
technical service department operating as 
one function of a library. The concentra-
tion and specialization of such a center 
based, perhaps, on assembly line techniques , 
should-in theory-develop an unknown 
factor of greater efficiency. Elimination of 
such negative factors as catalog mainte-
nance, interruptions by faculty seeking in-
formation and/ or books, the coming and 
going of student assistants , all should 
strengthen the "speciality of function" con-
cept and increase production. 

In addition to the main findings of this 
study, several valuable tangential inquir-
ies are also explored: the blanket order 
plan, the user attitude survey, and the 
problem caused by delayed receipt of 
LC copy. 

The "Library User Attitude Survey" 
seemed alien in this report. The survey 
was undertaken to determine the impact 
of various services proposed as part of a 
potential bibliographic network. The re-
sults were of interest and probably of 
great value to the participating libraries, 
but reporting on faculty attitudes toward 
existing library resources and services, on 
"insight as to the level of faculty aware-
ness of library services" (p. 211) might 
have been better had it appeared separate-

ly. The results showed how little faculty 
members know about existing services, but 
were rather vague concerning suggestions 
as to new services conceived as part of the 
proposed bibliographic network. This par-
ticular section was weakly tied to the 
theme of centralized book processing. 

Research conducted on the blanket or-
der plan in this report indicates that a re-
duction in processing time of up to 20 per-
cent can be anticipated by the proper use 
of an approval program. An incisive com-
ment from the study deserves emphasis: 

In spite of all national efforts to accel-
erate the flow of cataloging copy to re-
search libraries, copy is still available 
for only about one-half of the titles at 
the time they arrive. This type of delay 
has already reduced the effectiveness 
of the approval plans now in operation. 
It must be recognized that until the Li-
brary of Congress is able to shorten the 
lag time, the processing of a substantial 
number of books will be delayed. [p. 129] 

During the late 1960s the library profes-
sion has been saturated with optimistic in-
formation about the rapid dissemination of 
cataloging data. The fact remains , how-
ever, that traditional cataloging must be 
done before entry onto tape is possible. 
The h·anslation from the regular to the 
tape format adds another step to tradition-
al cataloging, even though it becomes a 
mechanical process. Patterns of funding the 
Library of Congress by the federal gov-
ernment have not been outstanding, and 
MARC would appear to have been grossly 
oversold to the profession. Any responsible 
speculation upon the usefulness of the 
MARC tapes in a centralized processing 
center can only lead to pessimistic con-
clusions at this time. 

It is always a temptation to fault the 
Scarecrow Press for its typographical er-
rors and its lack of esthetically pleasing 
page design , but, nonetheless, they remain 
one of the few publishers to make such a 
work as this available to the profession. 
The tabular displays in this book are in-
excusably awkward; column headings are 
not uniform, and the figures-perhaps the 
most important content of a work of this 
kind-are extremely difficult to use. 



Beyond this, however, the chief impor-
tance of the book is its timeliness. As li-
brary networks evolve beyond theory, the 
coordination of purchasing and processing 
may be one of the last tasks undertaken, 
but when it is tackled, the Colorado study 
will be invaluable in planning such opera-
tion. It is a welcome relief to have a re-
search report appear while the findings are 
still usefuL-Donald Hendricks, Sam Hous-
ton State University. 

Scientific and Technical Communication: 
A Pressing National Problem and Rec-
ommendations for Its Solution. Nation-
al Academy of Sciences-National Acad-
emy of Engineering. Washington, 1969. 
322p. 

The SATCOM report, as this work has 
now become known, is basically the report 
of a committee made up of representa-
tives from both the government and pri-
vate enterprise. Its charter was to exam-
ine the communication problems of both 
areas, in broad perspective, paying special 
attention to information activities, policies, 
relationships, etc., of private groups and 
organizations, and their interaction with 
federal agencies. Further, it was to make 
recommendations based on the present 
status and future needs of an effective na-
tional and international information sys-
tem. The result acquits itself quite well. 

Using the charter as a base, the report 
is divided into several parts: recommenda-
tions, state-of-the-art background, and the 
extension or explanation of the recommen-
dations. Placing the recommendations in 
the beginning is very effective. The only 
weakness in format is the lack of an index. 

The recommendations are presented in 
groups: those dealing with planning and 
coordination (establishment of a joint com-
mittee, leadership at the national level, 
shared responsibility, copyright legislation, 
standards) ; those concerning services for 
the user; those on classical services ( ab-
stracting, indexing, meetings) ; those on 
personal information communication; and 
finally, those involving research and ex-
periments. In content the recommenda-
tions do not propose anything radically 
new. They are relatively broad and as a 
result lack force. For the first time, how-

Recent Publications I 121 

ever, they do take into serious considera-
tion both governmental and private in-
formation activities and strive for closer 
coordination and in some cases integra-
tion. Unlike some of its predecessors, this 
report also provides detail for each recom-
mendation, resulting in cohesiveness. 

The greatest contributions of the report 
are the state-of-the-art background chap-
ters: "primary communications, the basic 
access services, consolidation and repro-
cessing, and new technologies and their 
impact." These chapters are well-written, 
imaginative compilations of both the ma-
jor concepts and the literature. They are 
well documented and the selection ap-
pears to be excellent. 

The report stresses the role of the pro-
fessional societies, services to special user 
groups, coordination efforts in both gov-
ernment and private areas, and the par-
ticipation of the whole community. The 
recommendations are well stated and firm-
ly based, and the reader can see from 
whence they came through the documen-
tation. The international scene is included, 
but the orientation is definitely national. 
There is a certain weakness in the lack of 
recommendations for implementation. They 
do recommend a Joint Commission on Sci-
entific and Technical Communication, but 
this appears more advisory than imple-
mentative. Anyone working in the infor-
mation communication field will find some-
thing of interest in this report.-Ann F. 
Painter, Indiana University. 

De wetenschappelijke bibliotheken in 
Nederland; programma voor een beleid 
op lange termijn. Netherlands. Rijks-
commissie van advies inzake het biblio-
theekwezen. 's-Gravenhage, Staatsuitge-
verij, 1969. 72p. $1.25. 

The important activities of the National 
Advisory Committee for Libraries in the 
Netherlands have now resulted in the pub-
lication of a long-term plan for coordi-
nation and development of academic and 
research libraries in that country. 

In an attractively produced publication, 
the committee reports in detail on some 
major issues facing academic libraries: 
problems of information retrieval and bib-
liographic access, collection development,