Booked Up
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During the last four years, the number of people using the county library system has increased by nearly 25%. Circulation of library materials has followed suit. Numbers are for fiscal years:
Category 1990 1991 1992 1993 Library visits 5,736,217 6,654,712 6,509,400 7,952,882 Circulation 5,917,431 6,566,009 6,690,446 6,872,953 Reference questions 2,058,838 2,598,035 2,817,291 3,163,631 Program attendance 154,515 157,937 202,395 178,192
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There’s a lot more than books in today’s library. City- and county-run libraries offer books on tape, compact discs, cassettes and videotapes. Circulation within the county’s busiest library systems during fiscal 1993:
Library system Books Cassettes Videotapes Compact discs County-run 6,872,953 21,639 23,044 9,188 City of Huntington Beach 1,113,381 N/A 15,140 19,189 City of Santa Ana 1,093,557 106,448 27,348 6,957
N/A: Information not available
TURNING TURNSTILES
Busiest county-run libraries by attendance, fiscal year 1993: Branch: Attendance 1. Garden Grove Regional: 965,466 2. Westminster: 845,784 3. Heritage Park, Irvine: 607,527 4. San Juan Capistrano: 597,940 5. El Toro: 495,779 6. Mission Viejo: 334,159 7. University Park, Irvine: 309,653 8. Tustin: 303,581 9. La Habra: 289,881 10. Crown Valley: 275,099
RETIRED TITLES
To make room for new titles, old volumes are often sold through the Friends of the Library Foundation, given to schools and the needy, or simply recycled. A glance at which county libraries retired the most books during fiscal 1993: Branch: Number of discards 1. University Park, Irvine: 7,361 2. Garden Grove Regional: 5,022 3. Cypress: 4,920 4. San Juan Capistrano: 4,370 5. Westminster: 4,357 6. Mission Viejo: 4,342 7. El Toro: 3,729 8. San Clemente: 3,190 9. Heritage Park, Irvine: 3,084 10. Chapman, Garden Grove: 2,877 Source: Orange County Library System, individual city libraries
Researched by APRIL JACKSON / Los Angeles Times
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