96 · Survey Results: Survey Questions and Responses management are unlikely to differ by discipline, the reaction of stakeholders (including collection development librarians and faculty researchers) may indeed vary by subject, so it seemed prudent to create at least some topical variety within the pilot. The American Chemical Society and the Institute of Physics were the other journal families that were part of this program. We believe this is the only repository of its kind to focus on a single discipline. PALMPrint is not strictly an archival project, although we expect actual use of the collection to be low and thus we view it as a gray archive. However, the collection is available for use by participating libraries, and we will have a user interface available in 2014 to enable librarians and researchers to discover and use the materials. Items can be delivered to the requesting library by shipment via common carrier or they can be scanned and delivered electronically where appropriate. An onsite reading room also provides direct access if needed. UC’s Shared Print program includes multiple projects, prospective and retrospective, and for many publication types and formats (journals, monographs, microform, art slides). Some collections are built as shared collections in one of two shared Regional Library Facilities (storage facilities) and some collections are retained in place and actively managed at specific libraries (e.g., Springer monographs and monographic series). Some examples: Shared print for licensed content collections—prospective—one print issue is included in our license agreements for ejournals with some of the major publishers. EEBO—prospective—microform acquisition. Springer monographs—prospective. Shared print monographic series—prospective—held in place. UC JSTOR Shared Print Archive—retrospective. UC’s WEST archives—retrospective. IEEE archive—retrospective.