Thanks. I'll submit it. Just curious, what makes this SACO rather than NACO?
Where does it fit in the division of the world?
On Tue, 19 Nov 2002, Lynn M El Hoshy wrote:
> John,
> I hope that you were planning to make a SACO proposal. A heading
> naming a group of cities collectively would be a geographic subject
> heading. An example is Hamptons (N.Y.) (sh85058600). It would need
> geographic qualifiers for both states in which the cities are located.
>
> Lynn M. El-Hoshy
> Senior Cataloging Policy Specialist
> Cataloging Policy and Support Office
> Library of Congress
> 101 Independence Avenue, SE
> Washington, DC 20540-4305
> Telephone: 202-707-5862
> Fax: 202-707-6629
> Email: [log in to unmask]
>
> >>> [log in to unmask] 11/19/02 10:00AM >>>
> Has anyone done a heading for a group of cities? I'm trying to
> establish the
> Quad Cities but I can't find any guidance in the documentation. The
> closest
> example is the Twin Cities, but the Quad Cities is more than 2 cities
> (and more
> than 4 for that matter) so it's not quite the same.
>
> 5 670 Quad Cities white & yellow pages, c2002.
> 6 670 Davenport PL website, Nov. 12, 2002 b (The Quad-Cities is
> the
> name given to our cluster of cities along the Mississippi River.
> Actually,
> there are five main cities - Davenport and Bettendorf in Iowa and Rock
> Island,
> Moline and East Moline in Illinois - but "quad" sticks as the name. If
> you
> count contiguous communities there are many more - LeClaire, Eldridge
> and Blue
> Grass, in Iowa, and Milan, Coal Valley, Port Byron, Carbon Cliff,
> Hampton,
> Hillsdale, Rapids City, Andalusia, Silvis, Colona and Cordova in
> Illinois. And
> more.)
>
>
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
>
> John Lavalie
> IAhCCS
>
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