throbber
UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`_______________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`_____________
`
`UNIFIED PATENTS INC.
`Petitioner
`
`v.
`
`PLECTRUM LLC
`Patent Owner
`
`Patent 5,978,951
`___________
`
`DECLARATION OF SCOTT BENNETT, Ph.D.
`May 13, 2017
`
`UNIFIED 1006
`
`

`

`TABLE OF CONTENTS
`
`I.
`
`II.
`III.
`IV.
`
`Page
`INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................... 1
`
`BACKGROUND AND QUALIFICATIONS ............................................. 1
`PRELIMINARIES ...................................................................................... 3
`OPINIONS REGARDING INDIVIDUAL DOCUMENTS ........................ 7
`1. Authentication ................................................................................... 7
`Public Accessibility ........................................................................... 8
`2.
`3. Conclusion ........................................................................................10
`
`V.
`VI.
`
`ATTACHMENTS .....................................................................................10
`CONCLUSION .........................................................................................11
`
`

`

`
`
`I.
`
`I, Scott Bennett, hereby declare under penalty of perjury:
`
`INTRODUCTION
`1.
`I have personal knowledge of the facts and opinions set forth in this
`
`declaration, I believe them to be true, and if called upon to do so, I would testify
`
`competently to them. I have been warned that willful false statements and the like
`
`are punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both.
`
`2.
`
`I am a retired academic librarian working as a Managing Partner of
`
`the firm Prior Art Documentation LLC at 711 South Race Street, Urbana, IL,
`
`61801-4132. Attached as Appendix A is a true and correct copy of my Curriculum
`
`Vitae describing my background and experience. Further information about my
`
`firm, Prior Art Documentation Services LLC, is available at
`
`www.priorartdocumentation.com.
`
`3.
`
`I have been retained by WilmerHale to authenticate and establish the
`
`dates of public accessibility of certain documents in an inter partes review
`
`proceedings for U.S. Patent No. 5,978,961. For this service, I am being paid my
`
`usual hourly fee of $91/hour. My compensation in no way depends on the
`
`substance of my testimony or the outcome of this proceeding.
`
`II. BACKGROUND AND QUALIFICATIONS
`4.
`I was previously employed as follows:
`
`(cid:120)
`
`University Librarian, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 1994-2001;
`
`
`
`1
`
`

`

`
`
`(cid:120)
`
`(cid:120)
`
`(cid:120)
`
`Director, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, The Johns Hopkins
`
`University, Baltimore, MD, 1989-1994;
`
`Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management,
`
`Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 1981-1989;
`
`Instructor, Assistant, and Associate Professor of Library
`
`Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana,
`
`IL, 1974-1981; and
`
`(cid:120)
`
`Assistant Professor of English, University of Illinois at Urbana-
`
`Champaign, 1967-1974.
`
`5. Over the course of my work as a librarian, professor of English,
`
`researcher, and author of nearly fifty scholarly papers and other publications, I
`
`have had extensive experience with cataloging records and online library
`
`management systems built around Machine-Readable Cataloging (MARC)
`
`standards. I also have substantial experience in authenticating printed documents
`
`and establishing the date when they were accessible to researchers.
`
`6.
`
`In the course of more than fifty years of academic life, I have myself
`
`been an active researcher. I have collaborated with many individual researchers
`
`and, as a librarian, worked in the services of thousands of researchers at four
`
`prominent research universities. Members of my family are university researchers.
`
`Over the years, I have read some of the voluminous professional literature on the
`
`
`
`2
`
`

`

`
`
`information seeking behaviors of academic researchers. And as an educator, I
`
`have a broad knowledge of the ways in which students in a variety of disciplines
`
`learn to master the bibliographic resources used in their disciplines. In all of these
`
`ways, I have a general knowledge of how researchers work.
`
`III. PRELIMINARIES
`7.
`Scope of this declaration. I am not a lawyer and I am not rendering an
`
`opinion on the legal question of whether any particular document is, or is not, a
`
`“printed publication” under the law.
`
`8.
`
`I am, however, rendering my expert opinion on the authenticity of the
`
`documents referenced herein and on when and how each of these documents was
`
`disseminated or otherwise made available to the extent that persons interested and
`
`ordinarily skilled in the subject matter or art, exercising reasonable diligence, could
`
`have located the documents before 11 September 1997.
`
`9. Materials considered. In forming the opinions expressed in this
`
`declaration, I have reviewed the documents and attachments referenced herein.
`
`These materials are records created in the ordinary course of business by
`
`publishers, libraries, indexing services, and others. From my years of experience, I
`
`am familiar with the process for creating many of these records, and I know these
`
`records are created by people with knowledge of the information in the record.
`
`Further, these records are created with the expectation that researchers and other
`
`
`
`3
`
`

`

`
`
`members of the public will use them. All materials cited in this declaration and its
`
`attachments are of a type that experts in my field would reasonably rely upon and
`
`refer to in forming their opinions.
`
`10. Persons of ordinary skill in the art. I am told by counsel that the
`
`subject matter of this proceeding relates to network devices.
`
`11.
`
`I have been informed by counsel that a “person of ordinary skill in the
`
`art at the time of the inventions” is a hypothetical person who is presumed to be
`
`familiar with the relevant field and its literature at the time of the inventions. This
`
`hypothetical person is also a person of ordinary creativity, capable of
`
`understanding the scientific principles applicable to the pertinent field.
`
`12.
`
`I am told by counsel that persons of ordinary skill in this subject
`
`matter or art would have had two years of experience in designing network
`
`switching/routing hardware, or equivalent post-graduate education, such as a
`
`master’s degree focused in networking systems.
`
`13. Library catalog records. WorldCat is the world’s largest public
`
`online catalog, maintained by the Online Computer Library Center, Inc., or OCLC,
`
`and built with the records created by the thousands of libraries that are members of
`
`OCLC. WorldCat records appear in many different catalogs, including the
`
`Statewide Illinois Library Catalog.
`
`
`
`4
`
`

`

`
`
`14. When an OCLC participating institution acquires a document for
`
`which it finds no previously created record in OCLC, or when the institution
`
`chooses not to use an existing record, it creates a record for the document using
`
`OCLC’s Connexion, the bibliographic system used by catalogers to create MARC
`
`records. Connexion automatically supplies the date of record creation in the
`
`MARC Field 008.
`
`15. Once the MARC record is created by a cataloger at an OCLC
`
`participating member institution, it becomes available to other OCLC participating
`
`members in Connexion and also in WorldCat, where persons interested and
`
`ordinarily skilled in the subject matter or art, exercising reasonable diligence, can
`
`locate it.
`
`16. Periodical publications. A library typically creates a catalog record
`
`for a periodical publication when the library receives its first issue. When the
`
`institution receives subsequent issues/volumes of the periodical, the issues/volumes
`
`are checked in (often using a date stamp), added to the institution’s holdings
`
`records, and made available very soon thereafter—normally within a few days of
`
`receipt or (at most) within a few weeks of receipt.
`
`17. The initial periodicals record will sometimes not reflect all of the
`
`subsequent changes in publication details (including minor variations in title, etc.).
`
`
`
`5
`
`

`

`
`
`18.
`
`Indexing. A researcher may discover material relevant to his or her
`
`topic in a variety of ways. One common means of discovery is to search for
`
`relevant information in an index of periodical and other publications. Having
`
`found relevant material, the researcher will then normally obtain it online, look for
`
`it in libraries, or purchase it from the publisher, a bookstore, a document delivery
`
`service, or other provider. Sometimes, the date of a document’s public
`
`accessibility will involve both indexing and library date information. Date
`
`information for indexing entries is, however, often unavailable. This is especially
`
`true for online indices.
`
`19.
`
`Indexing services use a wide variety of controlled vocabularies to
`
`provide subject access and other means of discovering the content of documents.
`
`The formats in which these access terms are presented vary from service to service.
`
`20. Online indexing services commonly provide bibliographic
`
`information, abstracts, and full-text copies of the indexed publications, along with
`
`a list of the documents cited in the indexed publication. These services also often
`
`provide lists of publications that cite a given document. A citation of a document
`
`is evidence that the document was publicly available and in use by researchers no
`
`later than the publication date of the citing document.
`
`21. ACM Digital Library. This index is produced by the Association for
`
`Computing Machinery, the world’s largest scientific and educational computing
`
`
`
`6
`
`

`

`
`
`society. AMC Digital Library contains the full text of all AMC publications,
`
`hosted full-text publications from selected publishers, and the ACM Guide to
`
`Computing Literature—a comprehensive bibliography of computing literature
`
`beginning in the 1950s with more than a million entries. All metadata in the
`
`database are freely available on the Web, including abstracts, linked references,
`
`citing work, and usage statistics. Full-text articles are available with subscription.
`
`IV. OPINIONS REGARDING INDIVIDUAL DOCUMENTS
`Document 1. R. E. Kessler et al., “Inexpensive Implementations of Set-
`Associativity,” Computer Architecture News, Proceedings of the 16th
`Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture, 17,3
`(June 1989): 131-139.
`1.
`Authentication
`22. Document 1is a research paper by R. E. Kessler and others presented
`
`at the 16th Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture, in
`
`Jerusalem, Israel on 28 May – 1 June 1989, and published in the June 1989 issue of
`
`Computer Architecture News.
`
`23. Attachment 1a is a true and accurate copy of Document 1 (along with
`
`the issue cover, an proceedings title page with a library date stamp, an issue title
`
`page and title page verso, messages from symposium organizers, and a table of
`
`contents) from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library.
`
`Attachment 1b is a true and accurate copy of the University of Illinois at Urbana-
`
`
`
`7
`
`

`

`
`
`Champaign catalog record for Computer Architecture News, showing holdings for
`
`Volume 17, in which Document 1 was published.
`
`24. Attachment 1a is in a condition that creates no suspicion about its
`
`authenticity. Specifically, Document 1 is not missing any intermediate pages of
`
`the article’s text, the text on each page appears to flow seamlessly from one page
`
`to the next, and there are no visible alterations to the document. Attachment 1a
`
`was found within the custody of a library – a place where, if authentic, it would
`
`likely be found.
`
`25. Document 1 is also readily available online. Attachment 1c is a true
`
`and accurate copy of the ACM Digital Library index record for Document 1.
`
`Attachment 1d is a true and accurate copy of Document 1 from the ACM Digital
`
`Library—a place where, if authentic, Document 1 would likely be found.
`
`26.
`
`I conclude, based on finding Document 1 in a library and online and
`
`on finding library catalog records and online records for Document 1, that
`
`Document 1 is an authentic document and that Attachment 1a is an authentic copy
`
`of Document 1.
`
`2.
`Public Accessibility
`27. Attachment 1e is a true and accurate copy of the Statewide Illinois
`
`Library Catalog record for Computer Architecture News, showing this periodical
`
`was first published in 1972 and is held by 402 libraries world-wide. Attachment 1e
`
`
`
`8
`
`

`

`
`
`also indicates that Science was cataloged or indexed in a meaningful way—
`
`including being cataloged by subject. Thus, in my opinion, Computer Architecture
`
`News was sufficiently accessible to the public interested in the art; and an
`
`ordinarily skilled researcher, exercising reasonable diligence, would have had no
`
`difficulty finding copies of Computer Architecture News.
`
`28. Attachment 1a, a copy of Document 1 from the University of Illinois
`
`at Urbana-Champaign Library, includes a library date stamp indicating that the
`
`June 1989 issue of Computer Architecture News was processed on 20 June 1989.
`
`Based on my experience, I affirm this date stamp has the general appearance of
`
`date stamps that libraries have long affixed to periodicals in processing them. I do
`
`not see any indications or have any reason to believe this date stamp was affixed
`
`by anyone other than library personnel on or about the date indicated by the stamp.
`
`29. Allowing for some time between the date label on the June 1989 issue
`
`of Computer Architecture News and its appearance on library shelves, where it
`
`would be publicly available, it is my opinion that Document 1 was publicly
`
`available at least by early-July 1989.
`
`30. Attachment 1f is a true and accurate copy of an ACM Digital Library
`
`list identifying 40 publications citing Document 1. One citing document is by
`
`Anant Agarwal and Stephen D. Pudar, “Column-associative caches: a technique
`
`for reducing the miss rate of direct-mapped caches,” Computer Architecture News,
`
`
`
`9
`
`

`

`
`
`21,2 (May 1993): 179-190. Attachment 1g is a true and accurate copy of the
`
`ACM Digital Library references record for the Agarwal and Pudar paper, showing
`
`Document 1 as the 7th item in its list of references.
`
`3.
`Conclusion
`31. Based on the evidence presented here—publication in the widely held
`
`periodical, online indexing and publication, library processing, and citation—it is
`
`my opinion that Document 1 is an authentic document that was publicly
`
`available to researchers at least by early-July 1989. The citation evidence
`
`presented here indicates that Document 1 was in actual use by researchers at least
`
`by May 1993.
`
`V. ATTACHMENTS
`32. The attachments attached hereto are true and correct copies of the
`
`materials identified above. Helen Sullivan is a Managing Partner in Prior Art
`
`Documentation Services LLC (see http://www.priorartdocumentation.com/hellen-
`
`sullivan/ ). One of her primary responsibilities in our partnership is to secure the
`
`bibliographic documentation used in attachments to our declarations.
`
`33. Ms. Sullivan and I work in close collaboration on the bibliographic
`
`documentation needed in each declaration. I will sometimes request specific
`
`bibliographic documents or, more rarely, secure them myself. In all cases, I have
`
`carefully reviewed the bibliographic documentation used in my declaration. My
`
`
`
`10
`
`

`

`
`
`signature on the declaration indicates my full confidence in the authenticity,
`
`accuracy, and reliability of the bibliographic documentation used.
`
`34. Each Attachment has been marked with an identifying label on the top
`
`of each page. However, no alterations other than these noted labels appear in these
`
`attachments, unless otherwise noted. All attachments were created on 11-12 May
`
`2017 and all URLs referenced in this declaration were available 12 May 2017.
`
`VI. CONCLUSION
`35.
`I reserve the right to supplement my opinions in the future to respond
`
`to any arguments that Patent Owner or its expert(s) may raise and to take into
`
`account new information as it becomes available to me.
`
`36.
`
`I declare that all statements made herein of my knowledge are true,
`
`and that all statements made on information and belief are believed to be true, and
`
`that these statements were made with the knowledge that willful false statements
`
`and the like so made are punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, under
`
`Section 1001 of Title 18 of the United States Code.
`
` Executed this 13th day of May, 2017 in Urbana, Illinois.
`
`
`
`
`____________________________
`Scott Bennett
`
`
`
`11
`
`
`
`
`
`

`

`SCOTT BENNETT
`Yale University Librarian Emeritus
`
`711 South Race
`Urbana, Illinois 61801-4132
`2scottbb@gmail.com
`217-367-9896
`
`
`
`
`
`Appendix A
`
`EMPLOYMENT
`
`
`Retired, 2001. Retirement activities include:
`(cid:120) Managing Partner in Prior Art Documentation Services, LLC, 2015-. This firm provides
`documentation services to patent attorneys; more information is available at
`http://www.priorartdocumentation.com
`(cid:120) Consultant on library space design, 2004- . This consulting practice is rooted in a research,
`publication, and public speaking program conducted since I retired from Yale University in
`2001. I have served more than 50 colleges and universities in the United States and abroad
`with projects ranging in likely cost from under $50,000 to over $100 million. More
`information is available at http://www.libraryspaceplanning.com/
`(cid:120) Senior Advisor for the library program of the Council of Independent Colleges, 2001-2009
`(cid:120) Member of the Wartburg College Library Advisory Board, 2004-
`(cid:120) Visiting Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of
`Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Fall 2003
`
`
`University Librarian, Yale University, 1994-2001
`
`Director, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland,
`1989-1994
`
`Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management, Northwestern University, Evanston,
`Illinois, 1981-1989
`
`Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor of Library Administration, University of Illinois at
`Urbana-Champaign, 1974-1981
`
`Assistant Professor of English, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1967-1974
`
`Woodrow Wilson Teaching Intern, St. Paul’s College, Lawrenceville, Virginia, 1964-1965
`
`EDUCATION
`
`
`University of Illinois, M.S., 1976 (Library Science)
`Indiana University, M.A., 1966; Ph.D., 1967 (English)
`Oberlin College, A.B. magna cum laude, 1960 (English)
`
`
`
`HONORS AND AWARDS
`
`
`
`12
`
`

`

`
`
`
`
`Morningside College (Sioux City, IA) Doctor of Humane Letters, 2010
`
`American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, 1978-1979; Honorary Visiting Research
`Fellow, Victorian Studies Centre, University of Leicester, 1979; University of Illinois Summer
`Faculty Fellowship, 1969
`
`Indiana University Dissertation Year Fellowship and an Oberlin College Haskell Fellowship, 1966-
`1967; Woodrow Wilson National Fellow, 1960-1961
`
`
`PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
`
`American Association for the Advancement of Science: Project on Intellectual Property and
`Electronic Publishing in Science, 1999-2001
`
`American Association of University Professors: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
`Chapter Secretary and President, 1975-1978; Illinois Conference Vice President and President, 1978-
`1984; national Council, 1982-1985, Committee F, 1982-1986, Assembly of State Conferences
`Executive Committee, 1983-1986, and Committee H, 1997-2001 ; Northwestern University Chapter
`Secretary/Treasurer, 1985-1986
`
`Association of American Universities: Member of the Research Libraries Task Force on
`Intellectual Property Rights in an Electronic Environment, 1993-1994, 1995-1996
`
`Association of Research Libraries: Member of the Preservation Committee, 1990-1993; member of
`the Information Policy Committee, 1993-1995; member of the Working Group on Copyright, 1994-
`2001; member of the Research Library Leadership and Management Committee, 1999-2001; member
`of the Board of Directors, 1998-2000
`
`Carnegie Mellon University: Member of the University Libraries Advisory Board, 1994
`
`Center for Research Libraries: Program Committee, 1998-2000
`
`Johns Hopkins University Press: Ex-officio member of the Editorial Board, 1990-1994; Co-
`director of Project Muse, 1994
`
`Library Administration and Management Association, Public Relations Section, Friends of the
`Library Committee, 1977-1978
`
`Oberlin College: Member of the Library Visiting Committee, 1990, and of the Steering Committee
`for the library’s capital campaign, 1992-1993; President of the Library Friends, 1992-1993, 2004-
`2005; member, Friends of the Library Council, 2003-
`
`Research Society for Victorian Periodicals: Executive Board, 1971-1983; Co-chairperson of the
`Executive Committee on Serials Bibliography, 1976-1982; President, 1977-1982
`
` A
`
` Selected Edition of W.D. Howells (one of several editions sponsored by the MLA Center for
`Editions of American Authors): Associate Textual Editor, 1965-1970; Center for Editions of
`American Authors panel of textual experts, 1968-1970
`
`Victorian Studies: Editorial Assistant and Managing Editor, 1962-1964
`
`
`
`13
`
`

`

`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Wartburg College: member, National Advisory Board for the Vogel Library, 2004-
`
`Some other activities: Member of the Illinois State Library Statewide Library and Archival
`Preservation Advisory Panel; member of the Illinois State Archives Advisory Board; member of a
`committee advising the Illinois Board of Higher Education on the cooperative management of
`research collections; chair of a major collaborative research project conducted by the Research
`Libraries Group with support from Conoco, Inc.; active advisor on behalf of the Illinois
`Conference AAUP to faculty and administrators on academic freedom and tenure matters in northern
`Illinois.
`
`Delegate to Maryland Governor’s Conference on Libraries and Information Service; principal in
`initiating state-wide preservation planning in Maryland; principal in an effort to widen the use of
`mass deacidification for the preservation of library materials through cooperative action by the
`Association of Research Libraries and the Committee on Institutional Cooperation; co-instigator
`of a campus-wide information service for Johns Hopkins University; initiated efforts with the
`Enoch Pratt Free Library to provide information services to Baltimore’s Empowerment Zones;
`speaker or panelist on academic publishing, copyright, scholarly communication, national and
`regional preservation planning, mass deacidification.
`
`Consultant for the University of British Columbia (1995), Princeton University (1996), Modern
`Language Association, (1995, 1996), Library of Congress (1997), Center for Jewish History
`(1998, 2000-), National Research Council (1998); Board of Directors for the Digital Library
`Federation, 1996-2001; accreditation visiting team at Brandeis University (1997); mentor for
`Northern Exposure to Leadership (1997); instructor and mentor for ARL’s Leadership and
`Career Development Program (1999-2000)
`
`At the Northwestern University Library, led in the creation of a preservation department and in the
`renovation of the renovation, for preservation purposes, of the Deering Library book stacks.
`
`At the Milton S. Eisenhower Library, led the refocusing and vitalization of client-centered services;
`strategic planning and organizational restructuring for the library; building renovation planning.
`Successfully completed a $5 million endowment campaign for the humanities collections and
`launched a $27 million capital campaign for the library.
`
`At the Yale University Library, participated widely in campus-space planning, university budget
`planning, information technology development, and the promotion of effective teaching and learning;
`for the library has exercised leadership in space planning and renovation, retrospective conversion of
`the card catalog, preservation, organizational development, recruitment of minority librarians,
`intellectual property and copyright issues, scholarly communication, document delivery services
`among libraries, and instruction in the use of information resources. Oversaw approximately $70
`million of library space renovation and construction. Was co-principal investigator for a grant to plan
`a digital archive for Elsevier Science.
`
`Numerous to invitations speak at regional, national, and other professional meetings and at alumni
`meetings. Lectured and presented a series of seminars on library management at the Yunnan
`University Library, 2002. Participated in the 2005 International Roundtable for Library and
`Information Science sponsored by the Kanazawa Institute of Technology Library Center and the
`Council on Library and Information Resources.
`
`14
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`

`

`PUBLICATIONS
`
`
`
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`
`
`“Putting Learning into Library Planning,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 15, 2 (April 2015),
`215-231.
`
`“How librarians (and others!) love silos: Three stories from the field “ available at the Learning
`Spaces Collaborary Web site, http://www.pkallsc.org/
`
`“Learning Behaviors and Learning Spaces,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 11, 3 (July 2011),
`765-789.
`
`“Libraries and Learning: A History of Paradigm Change,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 9, 2
`(April 2009), 181-197. Judged as the best article published in the 2009 volume of portal.
`
`“The Information or the Learning Commons: Which Will We Have?” Journal of Academic
`Librarianship, 34 (May 2008), 183-185. One of the ten most-cited articles published in JAL, 2007-
`2011.
`
`“Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007), 165–
`179.
`
`“Campus Cultures Fostering Information Literacy,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 7 (2007),
`147-167. Included in Library Instruction Round Table Top Twenty library instruction articles
`published in 2007
`
`“Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007),
`165–179.
`
` “First Questions for Designing Higher Education Learning Spaces,” Journal of Academic
`Librarianship, 33 (2007), 14-26.
`
`“The Choice for Learning,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 32 (2006), 3-13.
`
`With Richard A. O’Connor, “The Power of Place in Learning,” Planning for Higher Education, 33
`(June-August 2005), 28-30
`
`“Righting the Balance,” in Library as Place: Rethinking Roles, Rethinking Space (Washington, DC:
`Council on Library and Information Resources, 2005), pp. 10-24
`
`Libraries Designed for Learning (Washington, DC: Council on Library and Information Resources,
`2003)
`
`“The Golden Age of Libraries,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Academic
`Librarianship in the New Millennium: Roles, Trends, and Global Collaboration, ed. Haipeng Li
`(Kunming: Yunnan University Press, 2002), pp. 13-21. This is a slightly different version of the
`following item.
`
`“The Golden Age of Libraries,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 24 (2001), 256-258
`
`“Second Chances. An address . . . at the annual dinner of the Friends of the Oberlin College Library
`November 13 1999,” Friends of the Oberlin College Library, February 2000
`
`15
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`
`
`“Authors’ Rights,” The Journal of Electronic Publishing (December 1999),
`http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/05-02/bennett.html
`
`“Information-Based Productivity,” in Technology and Scholarly Communication, ed. Richard Ekman
`and Richard E. Quandt (Berkeley, 1999), pp. 73-94
`
`“Just-In-Time Scholarly Monographs: or, Is There a Cavalry Bugle Call for Beleaguered Authors and
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`
`
`16
`
`

`

`
`
`
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`edited with Ronald Gottesman, Art and Error: Modern Textual Editing (Bloomington: Indiana
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