1. The phrase “directors of information policy” refers to university and government agency managers, legislators, and others who influence or control spending on sponsored research and libraries.
2. D. J. Brown, Electronic Publishing and Libraries. Planning for the Impact and Growth to 2003 (London: Bowker-Saur, 1996).
3. M. K. Buckland, Redesigning Library Services: A Manifesto (Chicago, IL: American Library Association, 1992).
4. W. Crawford & M. Gorman, Future Libraries: Madness, Dreams, and Reality (Chicago, IL: American Library Association. 1995).
5. M. Gorman, “The Treason of the Learned,” Library Journal 119(3) (February 15, 1994): 130–131.