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For the last several years the approval book budget has been overspent. This past year the overspent amount, combined with the reduction in the materials budget, was large enough ($76,000) to move us to search for a solution , under John Saylor's direction, to bring the expenditures back in line with the budget. Additionally, the members of this group feel we need to experiment with new models in delivering books that are both cost effective and meet the high expectations of our patrons in standards and service. Collection development for books in the future (at least in the sciences) appears to be moving in the direction of most of our serials  - to e-only.  We want to be ready to meet this challenge. Our goals include:

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1) Cambridge University Press
2) Chapman/CRC
3) Elsevier/North Holland
4) John Wiley (and all imprints...Blackwell included)
5) MIT
6) Morgan Kaufmans
7) Oxford/Clarendon
8) Princeton University Press
9) Routledge
10) University of Chicago Press
11) Walter de GruyterFor those publishers with dual access available, the fee varies among the selected publishers.  Wiley-Blackwell has a 0% dual access.
Elsevier will charge a 20% dual access fee for the ebooks, this is being negotiated.

Books priced higher than the $350 price ceiling  will not be loaded into our catalog but will appear as slips in WCS for firm ordering. Currently neither Leah nor Jill use slips but order books on request. Boaz indicated there is a way to set WCS to block all books but those ebooks over $350 to make it more manageable.

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