In a message dated 11/2/01 1:52:41 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [log in to unmask] writes: << computer >> Sharon: As they use to say in the Sixties, "Right on!". As you point out preservation is about more than just fixing up stuff, it is about making that stuff accessible to the public. Anyone can save a book, manuscript or, dare I say it, a newspaper. But those individuals cannot make that stuff available to the public at regular hours everyday of the week. That accessibility is the most important aspect of preservation. The fact that Mr. Baker has saved a couple of hundred newspaper volumes or titles in a barn in Maine does not make those papers accessible. A poor graduate student in Montana can read the paper on microfilm because it can be multiplied an infinite number of times. However, that same grad student probably will not be able to afford to visit the newspaper barn to read it. Besides, is the barn equipped with staff to assist that student, does it have reasonable hours of service, does it catalog it's titles on line (not likely with Mr. Baker who believes that only card catalogs are the answer to access), and so forth? I am one who is not crazy about using microfilm to read and much prefer to read the original. However, I am a realist and I know what financial, space and other limitations libraries around the U.S. suffer, so I use microfilm happily because I know I may not be able to see it the material otherwise. Anyone questioning the importance or use of microfilm as a source of primary materials should visit the Genealogical Society of LDS in Salt Lake City where an average of over 1000 people use microfilm everyday, or any of the regional Federal records centers or many other libraries where there are usually lines of people waiting to use the microfilm machines to search for historical information. The other thing that Mr. Baker and those persuaded by his specious pleas ignore is that the NEH, NHPRC and other state and federal agencies have funded much more than just microfilm in their preservation programs. Great amounts of unique and valuable manuscript and printed material has been deacidified, encapsulated, repaired, re-boxed, re-foldered and had other preservation work done using these grant funds. An attack on these agencies funding programs for preservation is a direct threat to these incredibly valuable programs that have saved countless numbers of very important research materials for future generations of researchers. James Corsaro