Our doctoral dissertations are required to have a vita, but the master's
theses do not. The vita may or may not include a birth date. If the
birth date is in the resource, and the name has not already been
established, we will add the date to the heading, since if you know it,
you add it. If there is a conflict, we have access to the University's
student database and our thesis processing coordinator will look there to
get the date. If we create an authority record for this person we cite
that database in a 670:
670 Univ. of Wash. Student Database, <date searched> $b (info found)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Adam L. Schiff
Principal Cataloger
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA 98195-2900
(206) 543-8409
(206) 685-8782 fax
[log in to unmask]
http://faculty.washington.edu/~aschiff
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On Mon, 4 Oct 2010, Bob Hall wrote:
> Good morning,
>
> Are there any theses catalogers on this list? I ask, as I have a question regarding birthdates. Do you add
> birthdates to name hdgs. for theses?
>
> If so:
> --Where do you get said information (via Registrar's office?, Vita?, CV fact sheet etc.)?
> --Do you routinely add them, or do you just use them to break a conflict?
> --Are there issues you confront from authors if they see this information in FirstSearch, public catalog &/or the
> Web? How do you handle such issues?
>
> Thanking you in advance for your time.
>
> R.
>
> --
> Robert C.W. Hall, Jr.
> Technical Services Associate Librarian
> Concord Free Public Library, Concord, MA 01742
> 978-318-3343 -- FAX: 978-318-3344 -- http://www.concordlibrary.org/
> [log in to unmask]
> --
>
>
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