tion activities agree to participate in a common service program utilizing their resources. Telecommunication The exchange of information by electrical transmission. Telefacsimile See Facsimile. User Any individual or group with a desire, no matter how casual or how serious, to use libraries and information facilities. Listing of Related Papers 1. Relationship and Involvement of the State Library Agencies with the National Program Proposed by NCLISAlphonse F. Trezza, Director, Illinois State Library 2. Role of the Public Library in the National Program— Allie Beth Martin, Director, Tulsa City/County Library System 3. The Relationship and Involvement of the Special Library with the National Program-Edward G. Strable, Manager, Information Services, J. Walter Thompson CompanyChicago 4. The Independent Research Library-William S. Budington, Executive Director and Librarian, The John Crerar Library 5. The Information Service Environment Relationships and Priorities-Paul G. Zurkowski, President, Information Industry Association 6. Manpower and Educational Programs for Management, Research, and Professional Growth in Library and Information Services-Robert S. Taylor, Dean, School of Information Studies, Syracuse University 7. School Library Media Programs and the National Program for Library and Information Services-Bernard M. Franckowiak, School Library Supervisor, Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction 8. National Program of Library and Information Services of NCLIS: Implication for College and Community College Libraries Beverly P. Lynch, Executive Secretary, Association of College and Research Libraries, American Library Association 9. The National Library Network, Its Economic Rationale and Funding-Robert M. Hayes, Dean, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of California 10. Intellectual Freedom and Privacy: Comments on a National Program for Library and Information ServicesR. Kathleen Molz, Chairman, Intellectual Freedom Committee, American Library Association 11. International Library and Information Service Develop ments as they Relate to the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science-Foster E. Mohrhardt, Former President, Association of Research Libraries and American Library Association 12. An Economic Profile of the U.S. Book Industry-Curtis G. Benjamin, Consultant, McGraw Hill, Inc. 13. The Role of the Information Center in the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science Program for the Improvement of National Information Services-Herman M. Weisman, Manager, Information Services, National Bureau of Standards 14. The Relationship of the Government and the Private Sector in the Proposed National Program-David Carvey, Vice President, Disclosure, Inc. 15. New Federal Authority and Locus of Responsibility— John Bystrom, Professor of Communication, University of Hawaii 16. Relationship and Involvement of the Multi-State Library and Information Community with the National Program for Library and Information Services-Maryann Duggan, Director, Continuing Education and Library Resources Program-WICHE 17. The Future of Federal Categorical Library Programs— Robert Frase, Consulting Economist 18. Availability and Accessibility of Government Publications in the National Program for Library and Information Services Bernard Fry, Dean, Graduate Library School, Indiana University 19. Cost Comparisons of Alternative Bibliographic Access Systems Saul Herner, President, Herner and Company 20. University Libraries and the National Program for Li brary and Information Services-John McDonald, Executive Director, Association of Research Libraries 21. Federal Libraries and Information Centers-James Riley 22. Quantitative Data Required to Support and Implement a National Program for Library and Information ServicesTheodore Samore, School of Library Science, The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 23. Urban Information Centers and their Interface with the National Program for Library and Information ServicesJane E. Stevens, Library Science Department, Queens College 24. The Role of Professional Associations in the National Program for Library and Information Services-Roderick G. Swartz, Formerly Deputy Director, National Commission on Libraries and Information Science 25. The Role of Not-For-Profit Discipline-Oriented Information-Accessing Services in a National Program for Library and Information Services-Fred A. Tate, Assistant Director for Planning and Development, Chemical Abstracts Service 26. The Impact of Machine-Readable Data Bases on Library and Information Services-Martha Williams, Director, Information Retrieval Research Laboratory, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 27. The Role of The United States Book Exchange in the Nationwide Library and Information Services NetworkAlice Dulany Ball, Executive Director, The United States Book Exchange, Inc. |