id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_jgaaysdf3vg5dni67rrpiu7xey Rita Czeck Archival MARC Records and Finding Aids in the Context of End-User Subject Access to Archival Collections 1998 15 .pdf application/pdf 7005 696 66 MARC records represent chronological, geographical, personal, and corporate information contained in corresponding finding aids to archival collections. option to search either archival Machine Readable Cataloging (MARC) records or full-text finding aids in the same database. While both finding aids and MARC records incorporate personal, corporate, geographical, chronological, and nonspecific topical information, While the MARC format ideally represents the most relevant subject information in finding aids and provides the advantage of precision, the individual record is only as good as the quality of the cataloging. information retrieval than MARC records, it is not clear to what extent finding aids represent potential subject terms that MARC records do not. Only one subject category, geographical, was omitted from a MARC record when there were terms from that category present in the finding aid; this As mentioned above, all corporate names from the finding aids' collection information were represented in the MARC records. ./cache/work_jgaaysdf3vg5dni67rrpiu7xey.pdf ./txt/work_jgaaysdf3vg5dni67rrpiu7xey.txt