Barcode Titles To Make You Smile



[Prefatory note: from the summer of 1992 through the spring of 1993, the Stanford University Libraries set about the gargantuan task of barcoding their holdings. In the initial phase, barcodes were produced from the Libraries' online catalog, each title record generating a sticker with five lines of information. The first contained the call number and copy number of the piece. The second contained an often truncated title (the cutoff point being 30 characters or the point at which the subtitle began, whichever came first). The third contained the phrase "Stanford University Libraries" as an identify of the organization owning the volume. The fourth contained the actual barcode, and the fifth the barcode in numerical form.

The stickers were printed out in sheets containing multiple stickers in call number order, and turned over to library employees, who, so armed, proceeded to the stacks to seek out and afix them to the matching volumes. The second and third lines of a given sticker, when read together, occasionally produced an amusing pseudo-title, instances of which were avidly recorded by the employee barcoders. Some of these were later published in SUL News Notes, the libraries' electronic newsletter, for the edification of all. To wit:]

The following were discovered in the course of an otherwise unremarkable barcoding binge on 2/17/93:

     Deregulation and the future of Stanford University Libraries

     The only way to fly : Stanford University Libraries

     Report of the inquiry into the Stanford University Libraries

     A sadly mismanaged affair Stanford University Libraries

     Tribute and profit : Stanford University Libraries

--Submitted by Brian Kunde


Originally published in SUL News Notes, Volume 2, Number 10, March 12, 1993. These titles reflect the compiler's notions of the humorous, wry, ironic or unusual, and should not be construed as reflecting any other opinion or judgment, including the editorial opinion of the original publisher.



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