Remember that RDA stands for Resource description and access. It's not
cataloging, and they aren't rules.
Kathie Coblentz, Rare Materials Cataloger
Collections Strategy/Special Formats Processing
The New York Public Library, Stephen A.
One of the things that I think will be the most difficult for catalogers to get
used to under RDA is going to be the fact that the t.p. is no longer, not
really, the reliable source of information it is under AACR2.
I just came across an RDA record with no S-o-R on the t.p. But there was a 245
Benhamin Abrahamse posted:
I just came across an RDA record with no S-o-R on the t.p. But there was a=
245 $c in the record. No brackets indicating the information was supplied=
, and no note telling me where it was supplied from, either. It looks to m=
e from 2.4.2. that this is perfectly
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