U.S. Government Publications in The Hekman Library are located on the 2nd Floor.
They are arranged according to the Superintendent of Documents (SuDoc)
Classification System, which is based on the name of the issuing
agency. The following is a list of the primary issuing agencies:
| A |
Agriculture Department |
J |
Justice Department |
| C |
Commerce Department |
JU |
Judiciary |
| C3. |
Census Bureau |
L |
Labor Department |
| D |
Defense Department |
LC |
Library of Congress |
| E |
Energy Department |
NAS |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration |
| ED |
Education Department |
S |
State Department |
| GA |
General Accounting Office |
T |
Treasury Department |
| GS |
General Services Administration |
T 22. |
Internal Revenues Service |
| HE |
Heath and Human Services Department |
X,Y |
Congress |
| I |
Interior Department |
Y 4. |
Congressional Committees |
| I19. |
U.S. Geological Survey |
|
|
How is a SuDocs number constructed?
C 61.34:993 is the SuDoc number for the 1993 edition of the U.S. Industrial Outlook in paper format.
|
C
|
61.
|
34:
|
993
|
|
Commerce Department (issuing agency)
|
International Trade Administration
(subordinate bureau within the agency
|
Number used to designate the title
|
Year of publication (1993)
|
The portion of the classification number to the left of, and including, the colon is called the SuDoc stem).
How would you find this document on the shelf?
The government publications in paper format are located on the
compact shelving units in the government documents department on the 2nd Floor.
You would first look for the "C" section using the shelf labels on the
sides of the movable shelving units. If the "C" aisle is closed you
will have to move shelving units to open the aisle. To do this, first
go to the open aisle and be sure no one is in the aisle using that part
of the collection. If the aisle is clear, push in the red pin on the
side of the shelving unit you wish to move. This unlocks the system.
You can move several units at one time if all of the lock pins are
pushed in. Go back to the aisle you wish to open and turn the handle on
the side of the shelving unit until the aisle is open.
Find the beginning of the "C" section, and notice the SuDoc numbers
that are written in the upper lefthand corner of the documents on the
shelf. Keep going until you reach the "C 61" documents. Since this is
an author arrangement, you will have located all the documents put out
by the International Trade Administration. Now here's the tricky part.
The "." following the "61" is NOT a decimal point - it is merely a
character used to separate the two numerical fields (in this case "61"
and "34"). So a document with a SuDoc stem of C 61.7 would actually
precede C 61.34 on the shelf. This is a major difference between the
SuDoc classification and the Library of Congress classification that is
used for books in the main collection. In the SuDoc classification
system, numbers to the right of the "." in the class stem are numbered
consecutively; the "." is NOT treated like a decimal point. In other
words, don't "think of it as money" as is suggested for the Library of
Congress Classification system used for our library's main collection.
Once you have located documents with the SuDoc number C 61.34 on the
shelf you will see that there may be several documents with the same
stem but different years. Search through those years until you come to
993 which represents 1993. Documents for the year 2000 will probably be
represented with the full four-digit number.