Title: Dewey Panic?!
1Dewey Panic?!
- There is No Fear That Cannot Be Classified
- A Staff Training Class
- Presented By
- Scarlett C. Fisher-Herreman
- Jeff Imparato
2Dewey Panic?!
And now for a library catalog thats completely
different
Melvil Dewey, age 25
3Dewey Panic?!
- Getting to know Mr. Dewey
- Born December 10, 1851 in Adams Center, NY.
- Died December 26, 1931 at Lake Placid, NY
- Married twice 1st wife Annie, 2nd wife Emily
- One son, Godfrey Dewey, with Annie
- Best remembered for his catalog classification
system, but also involved in the Spelling Reform
movement and promoting the Metric system.
4Dewey Panic?!
- Deweys lifelong passion for spelling reform
motivated him to change the spelling of his own
name. By his mid-twenties, he had officially
changed his name from - Melville Louis Kossuth Dewey
- to
- Melvil Dui
- Oddly, the new spelling of his first name stuck
but not the last name.
5Dewey Panic?!
- By age 25, Dewey had already invented his
classification system, worked as a professional
librarian for 2 years, and served as a founding
member of the American Library Association
A clean-shaven and serious young Dewey. He would
grow a beard later to disguise his rather
prominent chin.
6Dewey Panic?!
- Always one to speak his mind, Dewey often made
enemies with others in the profession. At the
first ALA conference, he publicly chastised
Mr. William Poole, Director of the Chicago
Public Library for leaving a meeting to smoke.
William Poole Maybe he could have
just asked him to shave instead?
7Dewey Panic?!
- Libraries in Deweys time were not systematically
organized. Some were arranged by the order the
books were acquired, others by alphabetical order
or book size. - Dewey studied the methods of other librarians,
including Cutter, Harris, Shurtleff, Jewett
Schwartz, all of whom had developed their own
ideas about classification.
8Dewey Panic?!
Deweys idea was to use decimals to classify all
human knowledge, thus marrying the idea of
arranging books by subject with the decimal
system creating a method that could easily be
revised and/or expanded as needed.
- He thought it up during a boring sermon in
church.
9Dewey Panic?!
- Dewey arrived at Columbia College in New York
City in 1883. The library was in a state of
antiquated disarray. Dewey delighted in the
organizational challenge before him. - In the first year alone he increased book
circulation 500. In five years he doubled the
size of the collection and organized over 100,000
books into one unified catalog.
10Dewey Panic?!
- While at Columbia, Dewey started the first
library science school in the world. - School officials were anything but keen on the
idea of a library school and outraged when Dewey
accepted women into his school. They forbid him
any classrooms. - Dewey cleaned up a dusty attic room in a chapel
across the street from the campus and held his
classes there instead. -
11Dewey Panic?!
- Deweys School of Library Economy boasted 17
women in the first class. - Dewey amassed a small group of faithful female
supporters, who became known as Deweys Girls.
Dewey (seated far right) with four of his girls
and two uncomfortable looking gents
12Dewey Panic?!
- Dewey moved on from Columbia and became the
Secretary Treasurer of the Board of Regents and
Director of the State Library in Albany, New
York. He held the position for 10 years
(1889-1899) and was very active in numerous
educational and professional endeavors.
13Dewey Panic?!
- Deweys obsession with time efficiency defined
his working relationships in every job he ever
held. - He devised elaborate color-coding schemes for all
paperwork in his office provided staff with
specific forms so they would have to speak as
little as possible with him.
Deweys office in the State Capitol. Just
imagine what he would have done with a laptop
email!
14Dewey Panic?!
- Deweys senior years were spent at Lake Placid,
NY. He opened a large resort club, designed to
be a relaxation utopia for the educated upper
class. Deweys exclusionary practices (no Jews or
minorities) at the club eventually got him into
legal trouble. - He died of a massive stroke while eating
breakfast in 1931.
15Where is the Dewey Classification System Used?
- In all parts of the world, there is some variety
of the system Dewey created being used in Public
and Academic Libraries.
16Is Dewey the only Classification system used?
- Because of the very large number range possible
with Dewey, 027.478163 SHA is for Topeka Public
Library its first hundred years), the Library
of Congress developed its own scheme. - It is called the Library of Congress
Classification system (DUH!), the same book at
the Mabee Library, Washburn University, is
Z733.T67.
17- REMEMBERING ELSIE (LIBRARY OF CONGRESS)
CLASSIFICATION - A Almanacs, Encyclopedias, and other
Generalities. - B as you think of the Philosophy and Psychology
of cataloging, the to B or not to B, remember
to pray about it as Religion is also in the B
area (think Bible). - C Civilizations History, Archeology, Heraldry,
Genealogy, and a persons own - history, i.e. Biography.
- D A natural Destination to the History of the
Countries of the Old World, and - modern Eastern Hemisphere Countries.
- E Everything about United States History.
- F Finally, all the rest of the History of the
Western Hemisphere Countries. - G Geography, Anthropology, and Games, i.e.,
Recreation and Sports. - H Human interaction, i.e., Social Sciences, and
those things which affects groups of - people, Economics, Transportation, Commerce,
Finance, the Family, Sociology, and others. - I Not Used, it may be confused with L.
- J Jurisdiction, i.e., Political Science, and
International Law. - K Knowledge of the Law.
- L Learning, i.e., Education.
- M Music.
- N FiNe Arts.
18But enough about LC, Were here for Dewey.
- Ladies and Gentlemen,
- We bring you the World of Dewey!
19(No Transcript)
20How does a Dewey Number Work?
- The Dewey System coordinates materials on the
same subject and on related subjects to make
items easier to find on the shelves by using a
combination of letters and numbers. - The Dewey system is based on units of ten. The
more numbers, the more specific the subject. - Lets check out an example
21BUGS!!!!!
Lets say we want to find the call number for
Butterflies. Bugs will be in the natural
sciences, the 500s. This means the first number
of the call number will be a 5.
22Bugs, continued
- Butterflies, and indeed all bugs, will be
classified in the Zoological Sciences 590. - The second number of the call number will be a 9.
- Lets see the divisions of the 590s to find the
next number
23Bugs, continued
- The 10 Divisions of the Zoological Sciences
- 591 Zoology
- 592 Invertebrates
- 593 Protozoa
- 594 Mollusa
- 595 Other Invertebrates (worms insects)
- 596 Vertebrates
- 597 Fishes
- 598 Reptiles and Birds
- 599 Mammals
24Bugs, continued
- Insects, including butterflies, would be under
595. - So the first three numbers are 595
- The 595s are further divided by use of decimals
to specify different types of invertebrates. We
will now add a .7 to our number. 595.7
25Bugs, continued
- Butterflies are in an insect order known as
Lepidoptera. We will now add an 8 to our number.
595.78 - We will add a 9 to complete our call number.
595.789 is the place will find butterflies.
26In The Beginning (of the Dewey Collection)
- Brief Overview of the Dewey 000s
- Generally speaking, the Dewey 000s consists of
Generalities, such as Encyclopedias (031),
Almanacs including the Guinness Book of Records
(032), and other collections of bunches of topics
that dont fit into one category, such a trivia
books (031.02). It also includes subjects that
deal with knowledge and information such as
Unexplained phenomenon, such as UFOs and Bigfoot
(001.9) Computer programs, a mystery to most
people (004-006) Bibliography (010-019),
especially the Gale Directory of Publications and
Broadcast Media (016.071) Library Science
(020-029) Publishers and Publishing (050-059),
including Writers Market (051), General
Organization and Museology, (060-069) including
Encyclopedia of Association (061.3) and Museum
Directories (069) Journalism (070-079), General
Collections (080-089), including Respectfully
Quoted (081) and Rare Books and Manuscripts
(090-099).
27I Think, Therefore I Am, I Think
- Brief overview of the Dewey 100s
- The main subjects in the Dewey 100s are
Philosophy (100-109), Paranormal Phenomena
(133s), Psychology (150s), Conduct of Life
issues 160s-170s, 180s - World Philosophies.
-
- 103 All dictionaries and encyclopedias of
Philosophy. (HINT any number with a 03 at the
end is either a dictionary or encyclopedia) -
- 158 self-help books on Success.
-
- 160 Logic
- 170 Ethics
- 180 World philosophies, especially ancient
cultures. - 190 Modern western and other non-eastern
philosophy
28A Wing and a Prayer
- Brief overview of the Dewey 200s
- Here youll find mankinds search for a higher
power. - 200.3 or 203 All general dictionaries and
encyclopedias on religions. - 220-229 All matters related to the Bible,
including translations, commentaries, and
interpretations, as well as discussions of the
separate books in the Bible. - 230 Christianity
- 240 Prayers and Meditations
- 250-280 Christian Church
- 250 Local Christian church and Christian
religious orders - 260 Christian social and ecclesiastical theology
- 270 Historical, geographic, persons treatment of
Chrisitianity - 280 Denominations and sects of Christian Church
- 290 Other religions
- 292 Classical Greek and Roman
- 296 Judaism
- 297 Islam
29Social Sciences, or Why cant we just get along?
- Brief overview of the Dewey 300s
- The study of people, and how they interact with
others. - 300.3 Dictionaries and encyclopedias of
sociology. - 310 Statistics
- 320 Political Science
- 330 Economics
- 332 Personal Finance
- 340 Law
- 348 Laws, regulations, cases
- 348.781 Kansas Statutes Annotated
- 350 Public administration and military science
- 360 Social problems and services
- 370 Education
- 380 Commerce, communication, transportation
- 389.1 Measurement Take me to your liter.
- 390 Customs, etiquette, folklore
30Say What?Brief overview of the Dewey 400s.
- Learning the rules, and pronunciation of your
own language, and languages foreign to you. -
- 403 Polyglot dictionaries, and general
encyclopedias of language. - 410 Linguistics, the study of human speech
- 419 Sign languages
- 420 English and Old English
- 423 Dictionaries of standard English
- 425 Grammar of standard English
- 428 Standard English usage
- 428.1 English as a Second Language
- 430 German
- 440 French
- 450 Italian
- 460 Spanish and Portuguese
- 470 Latin
- 480 Classical Greek
- 490 Other languages
- 491.7 Russian
- 495.1 Chinese
31Hey Einstein! Natural sciences and mathematics
- Brief overview of the Dewey 500s
- Natural sciences deal with matter and energy, or
with objects and processes observable in nature. - 503 Dictionaries and encyclopedias of general
science. - 509 History of science.
- 510-519 Mathematics
- 520 Astronomy and allied sciences
- 530 Physics
- 540 Chemistry
- 550 Earth sciences
- 560 Paleontology Paleozoology
- 570 Life sciences Biology
- 574.999 Extraterrestrial Life
- 580 Plants
- 590 Animals
- 599.757 Lions
- 599.756 Tigers
- 599.78 Bears
32Apply Yourself! Technology (Applied Sciences)
- Brief overview of the Dewey 600s
- Heres where you apply what you learned in school
to real life situations. - 603 Dictionaries and encyclopedias on technology.
- 609 History of technology.
- 610-618 Medicine and Health
- 620 Engineering
- 625 Railroads and roads
- 629.28 Automobiles
- 630 Agriculture and related technologies
- 635.9 Gardening
- 640 Home and family management
- 641.5 Cooking
- 641.5942 Cookery England 641.5943 Cookery
Germany - 643.7 Home improvement
- 649.1 Child rearing
- 650 Management and auxillary services
- 650.14 Resumès
- 651 Office management
- 658.022 Small Business
33The Finer Things in Life Fine and decorative
arts
- Brief overview of the Dewey 700s
- Contains material on critical appraisal,
techniques, procedures, apparatus, equipment,
materials of the fine, decorative, literary,
performing and decorative arts. - 703 Dictionaries and encyclopedias of art
- 709 History of Art
- 712 Landscape Architecture
- 728 Residential and related buildings (house
plans) - 738 Ceramic arts
- 741 Drawing and drawings
- 745 Decorative arts
- 745.1 General Collectibles
- 745.5 Handicrafts
- 745.592 Toys, models, miniatures
- 745.5922 Doll Collectibles
- 745.5923 Dollhouses and furniture
- 746 Textile arts
- 746.4 Needlework
- 746.43 Knitting
- 746.44 Embroidery
- 747 Interior Decoration
34The Finer Things in Life Fine and decorative
arts (contd)
- 750 Painting and paintings
- 750.3 Dictionaries and encyclopedias of painting
- 751 Techniques
- 759 History, geographic treatment
- 759.1 Paintings from North America
- 759.2 Paintings from the British Isles, England
- 759.3 Paintings from Germany
- 759.4 Paintings from France
- 759.5 Paintings from Italy
- 759.6 Paintings from Spain
- 759.7 Paintings from Russia
- 759.951 Paintings from China
- 760 Graphic arts
- 770 Photography
- 780 Music
- 782 Vocal music
- 784 Instrumental music
- 790 Recreational and performing arts
- 791.43 Motion Pictures
35The Write Stuff Literature (Belles-lettres) and
rhetoric
- Drama, Poetry, Fiction, Essays, Speeches,
Letters, Miscellaneous writings, Humor and
Satire. - 803 Dictionaries and encyclopedias of Literature.
- 809 Historical treatment of Literature
- 810-818 American treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 811 American Poetry
- 812 American Drama
- 813 American Fiction
- 814 American Essays
- 815 American Speeches
- 816 American Letters
- 817 American Humor and Satire in English
- 818 American miscellaneous writings in English
- 820-829 English treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 830-839 German treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 840-849 French treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 850-858 Italian treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 860-868 Spanish treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 870-879 Latin treatment of all aspects of
Literature. - 880-889 Hellenic (Greek) treatment of all aspects
of Literature.
36Dont Know Much about History
- Brief overview of the Dewey 900s
- 903 Dictionaries and Encyclopedias of history
- 904 Collected accounts of events (Natural
disasters, etc.) - 909 World history
- 909.1-8 Specific historical periods
- 909.1 6th-12th centuries 500-1199
- 909.2 13th century 1200-1299
- 909.3 14th century 1300-1399
- 909.4 15th century 1400-1499
- 909.5 16th century 1500-1599
- 909.6 17th century 1600-1699
- 909.7 18th century 1700-1799
- 909.81 19th century 1800-1899
- 909.82 20th century 1900-1999
- 909.821 1900-1919
- 909.822 1920-1929
- 909.823 1930-1939
- 909.824 1940-1949
- 909.825 1950-1959
37Are we there yet? Geography and travel
- Brief overview of the Dewey 910-919s
- 910.3 Dictionaries, encyclopedias, concordances,
gazetteers of Geography - 910.4 Accounts of travel
- 910.45 Titanic
- 911 Historical atlases
- 912 Graphic representations of surface of earth
of extraterrestrial worlds (World atlases, Road
atlases, Atlases of space) - 913 Geography and travel in ancient world
- 913.32 Traveling through ancient Egyptian ruins
- 913.37 Traveling through ancient Roman ruins
- 913.38 Traveling through ancient Grecian ruins
- 914 Traveling in Europe
- 914.2 Traveling in England
- 914.3 Traveling in Germany
- 914.4 Traveling in France
- 914.5 Traveling in Italy
- 914.6 Traveling in Spain
- 914.7 Traveling in Russia
- 914.8 Traveling in Scandinavia
- 914.9 Traveling in Iceland, Norway
38Whos Who Biography, genealogy, insignia
- 920.003 Dictionaries, encyclopedias, concordances
of biography. i.e. Dictionary of World Biography - 920.1-928 Biography of specific classes of
persons. - 920.2 Librarians and book collectors
- 921 Philosophers and psychologists
- 922 Religious leaders, thinkers, workers
- 923 Persons in social sciences
- 923.1 Heads of state
- 923.142 Lives of the Kings and Queens of
England - 923.173 Facts about the Presidents
- 923.2 Persons in political science and politics
- 923.273 Biographical directory of the U.S.
Congress - 924 Philologists and lexicographers
- 925 Scientists
- 926 Persons in technology
- 927 Persons in arts and recreation
- 927.82 Vocal musicians
- 927.96357 Baseball players
- 928 Persons in literature, history, biography,
genealogy
39Whos Who Biography, genealogy, insignia
(contd)
- 929 Genealogy, names, insignia
- 929.1 Genealogy
- 929.2 Family histories
- 929.3 Genealogical sources
- 929.3781 Genealogical records in Kansas
- 929.4 Personal names (Baby names)
- 929.5 Cemetery records
- 929.5781 Cemetery records of Kansas
- 929.7 Royal houses, peerage, gentry, orders of
knighthood - 929.8 Awards, orders, decorations, autographs
- 929.9 Forms of insignia and identification
40Long, long, time ago, in a land far, far, away
History of the ancient world
- Brief overview of the Dewey 930-939s
- 930 History of the ancient world to ca. 499 AD
- 931 China to 420 AD
- 932 Egypt to 640 AD
- 933 Palestine to 70 AD
- 934 India to 647 AD
- 935 Mesopotamia and Iranian Plateau to 637 AD
- 936 Europe north and west of Italian Peninsula to
ca. 499 AD - 937 Italian Peninsula and adjacent territories to
476 AD - 938 Greece to 323 AD
- 939 Other parts of ancient world to ca. 640 AD
41History of the modern world, and of
extraterrestrial worlds 940s History of
Europe 941 British Isles 941.1-4 Scotland 941.5
Ireland 941.6 Ulster Northern Ireland 941.7
Republic of Ireland 941.8 Leinster 941.9
Munster 942 England Wales 943 Central Europe,
Germany 943.6 Austria and Liechtenstein 943.7
Czech Republic and Slovakia 943.8 Poland 943.9
Hungary 944 France Monaco 944.9 Provence-Côte
dAzur, Monaco, Corsica
42940s History of Europe 945 Italian Peninsula
adjacent islands 945.4 Emilia-Romagna region and
San Marino 945.6 Central Italy and Vatican
City 945.8 Sicily and adjacent islands 946
Iberian Peninsula adjacent islands
Spain 946.7 Eastern Spain and Andorra 946.8
Andalusia autonomous community and
Gibraltar 946.9 Portugal 947 Eastern Europe,
Russia 947.5 Caucasus 947.6 Moldova 947.7
Ukraine 947.8 Belarus 947.9 Lithuania, Latvia,
Estonia
43940s History of Europe 948 Northern Europe,
Scandinavia 948.1-4 Norway 948.5-8 Sweden 948.9
Denmark and Finland 949 Other parts of Europe
949.1 Northwestern Islands Iceland 949.2
Netherlands 949.3 Southern Low Countries
Belgium 949.4 Switzerland 949.5 Greece 949.6
Balkan Peninsula 949.7 Serbia and Montenegro,
Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia, and Herzegovina,
Macedonia 949.8 Romania 949.9 Bulgaria
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45950 History of Asia Orient Far East 951 China
and adjacent areas 951.25 Hong Kong 951.7
Mongolia 951.9 Korea 951.93 North Korea 951.95
South Korea 952 Japan 953 Arabian Peninsula and
adjacent areas 953.1 Sinai Peninsula 953.3
Yemen 953.5 Oman and United Arab Emirates 953.6
Persian Gulf States 953.63 Qatar 953.65
Bahrain 953.67 Kuwait
46950 History of Asia Orient Far East 954 South
Asia India 954.91 Pakistan 954.92
Bangladesh 954.63 Sri Lanka 955 Iran 956 Middle
East (Near East) 956.1 Turkey 956.7 Iraq 956.9
Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan 957 Siberia
(Asiatic Russia)
47950 History of Asia Orient Far East 958
Central Asia 958.1 Afghanistan 958.4
Turkestan 958.5 Turkmenistan 958.6
Tajikistan 958.7 Uzbekistan 959 Southeast
Asia 959.1 Myanmar (Formerly Burma) 959.3
Thailand 959.4 Laos 959.5 Commonwealth of Nations
territories Malaysia 959.6 Cambodia 959.7
Vietnam 959.8 Indonesia and East Timor 959.9
Philippines
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49960 History of Africa 961.1 Tunisia 961.2
Libya 962 Egypt 962.4-9 Sudan 963 Ethiopia 963.5
Eritrea 964 Northwest African coast and offshore
islands Morocco 964.8 Western Sahara 964.9
Canary Islands 965 Algeria 965.5 Northeastern
provinces 965.7 Sahara provinces
50966 West Africa and offshore islands 966.1
Mauritania 966.2 Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger 966.3
Senegal 966.4 Sierra Leone 966.5 Gambia, Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde 966.62 Liberia 966.68
Côte dIvoire (Ivory Coast) 966.7 Ghana 966.81
Togo 966.83 Benin 966.9 Nigeria
51967 Central Africa and offshore islands 967.11
Cameroon 967.15 Sao Tome and Principe 967.18
Equatorial Guinea 967.21 Gabon 967.24 Republic of
the Congo (Brazzaville) 967.3 Angola 967.41
Central African Republic 967.43 Chad 967.51
Democratic Republic of the Congo
(Kinshasa) 967.571 Rwanda 967.572 Burundi 967.61
Uganda 967.62 Kenya 967.71 Djibouti 967.73
Somalia 967.8 Tanzania 967.9 Mozambique
52968 Southern Africa Republic of South
Africa 968.2 Gauteng, North-West, Limpopo,
Mpumalanga, former homelands (national states) of
Republic of South Africa. 968.4
KwaZulu-Natal 968.5 Free State 968.7 Northern
Cape, Western Cape, Eastern Cape 968.81
Namibia 968.83 Botswana 968.85 Lesotho 968.87
Swaziland 968.91 Zimbabwe 968.94 Zambia 968.97
Malawi 969 South Indian Ocean islands 969.1
Madagascar 969.4 Comoro Islands 969.6
Seychelles 969.7 Chagos Islands 969.8 Reunion and
Mauritius 969.9 Isolated islands
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54970 History of North America 970.1 North
American native peoples Indians of North
America 970.3 Specific native peoples 971
Canada 971.1 British Columbia 971.2 Prairie
Provinces 971.3 Ontario 971.4 Quebec 971.5
Atlantic Provinces Maritime Provinces 971.6 Nova
Scotia 971.7 Prince Edward Island 971.8
Newfoundland and Labrador, Saint Pierre and
Miquelon
55972 Middle America Mexico 972.8 Central
America 972.81 Guatemala 972.82 Belize 972.83
Honduras 972.84 El Salvador 972.85
Nicaragua 972.86 Costa Rica 972.87 Panama 972.9
West Indies (Antilles) and Bermuda 972.91
Cuba 972.92 Jamaica and Cayman Islands 972.93
Dominican Republic 972.94 Haiti 972.95 Puerto
Rico 972.96 Bahama Islands 972.97 Leeward
Islands 972.98 Windward and other southern
islands 972.99 Bermuda
56This Land is Your Land(Crossing the Dewey Trail)
57Crossing the Dewey Trail
77.1
58973 United States 973.1 Early History to
1607 973.2 Colonial periodical, 1607-1775 973.3
Periods of Revolution and Confederation,
1775-1789 973.4 Constitutional period,
1789-1809 973.5 1809-1845 973.6 1845-1861 973.7
Administration of Abraham Lincoln,
1861-1865 973.8 Reconstruction period,
1865-1901 973.9 1901-
59974-979 Specific states of United States 974
Northeastern United States 974.1 Maine 974.2 New
Hampshire 974.3 Vermont 974.4 Massachusetts 974.5
Rhode Island 974.6 Connecticut 974.7 New
York 974.8 Pennsylvania 974.9 New Jersey
60975 Southeastern United States (South
Atlantic) 975.1 Delaware 975.2 Maryland 975.3
District of Columbia 975.4 West Virginia 975.5
Virginia 975.6 North Carolina 975.7 South
Carolina 975.8 Georgia 975.9 Florida
61976 South Central United States (Gulf
Coast) 976.1 Alabama 976.2 Mississippi 976.3
Louisiana 976.4 Texas 976.6 Oklahoma 976.7
Arkansas 976.8 Tennessee 976.9 Kentucky
62977 North central United States (Lake
States) 977.1 Ohio 977.2 Indiana 977.3
Illinois 977.4 Michigan 977.5 Wisconsin 977.6
Minnesota 977.7 Iowa 977.8 Missouri
63978 Western United States 978.1 Kansas 978.2
Nebraska 978.3 South Dakota 978.4 North
Dakota 978.6 Montana 978.7 Wyoming 978.8
Colorado 978.9 New Mexico
64Home, Sweet, Home on the Range
65Nebraska (978.2)
Crossing the Dewey Trail in Kansas (978.1)
Entering Kansas
Missouri (977.8)
163
Leaving Kansas, Heading to Nebraska
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68979 Great Basin and Pacific Slope region of the
United States (Pacific Coast) 979.1 Arizona 979.2
Utah 979.3 Nevada 979.4 California 979.5
Oregon 979.6 Idaho 979.7 Washington 979.8 Alaska
69980 History of South America 981 Brazil 982
Argentina 983 Chile 984 Bolivia 985 Peru 986.1
Colombia 986.6 Ecuador 987 Venezuela 988
Guiana 988.1 Guyana 988.2 French Guiana
(Guyane) 988.3 Suriname 989.2 Paraguay 989.5
Uruguay
151
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71990 History of other parts of world, of
extraterrestrial words Pacific Ocean
islands 991-992 (Unassigned) 993 New Zealand 994
Australia 995 Melanesia New Guinea 995.1
Papua 995.3 Papua New Guinea 995.4 Papuan
region 995.6 Highlands region 995.7 Momase
(Northern Coastal) region 995.8 Bismarck
Archipeligo 995.9 Other parts of Melanesia
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73Space, the Final Frontier
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