College and Research Libraries


By JOHN W. MITCHELL 

A Complete MateriJis Service 

A MONG THE MANY audio-visual units in the United States probably no 
two are identical because each must meet 
the special requirements of the parent 
institution. Thus, the functions of the 
Audio-Visual Center, Air University Li-
brary, are determined by the educa-
tional program of Air University. The 
library has as its mission the support of 
Air University with all types of instruc-
tional materials. Of these, the Audio-
Visual Center provides non-print mate-
rials such as films, maps and charts, 
graphic aids, photographic slides and 
prints, and audio aids. 

Much has been said and written con-
cerning the placement of audio-visual 
services within the organizational struc-
ture . of an educational institution. A 
logical conclusion seems to indicate 
placement for the greatest possible effec-
tiveness. For Air University the library 
is the most logical location. This or-
ganization has established high stand-
ards for rendering specialized service. 
The administration of the library not 
only realizes the values of having all 
instructional materials and services com-
bined, but is prepared to render full 
support to the audio-visual as well as 
the traditional elements. Fully recog-
nized is the principle of having each 
special type of service directed by com-
petent professionals with adequate train-
ing and experience. At the time the 
audio-visual services were placed in the 
library, plans were under way for a 
building to be located in the center of 
a new campus. Adequate space was de-
signed in the new building to meet the 
needs of audio-visual services. Also es-

Dr. Mitchell is chief} Audio-Visual 
Center} Air University Library. 

.NOVEMBER 1957 

tablished in the library is a pattern for 
financing and procurement so essential 
for the operation of audio-visual serv-
ices. It has its own supply unit capable 
of procuring special non-military as well 
as the usual military supplies and equip-
ment. For Air University the library as 
an organization dedicated to giving only 
the best in service and materials pro-
vides a natural environment for the 
Audio-Visual Center. 

The Audio-Visual Center is directed 
by two professional audio-visual educa-
tors who supervise the operation of the 
organization, advise instructors and 
school administrators, maintain liaison 
with other military schools, civilian in-
stitutions, business and industry, and 
conduct a program of evaluation, experi-
mentation, and research. This organiza-
tion serves Air University as its primary 
agency for the evaluation, selection, pro-
curement, production, storage, mainte-
nance, distribution, and utilization of a 
wide variety of audio-visual materials. 

One of the services most commonly 
associated with an audio-visual organi-
zation is a film library. The .Center's 
Branch Film Exchange is one of three 
of that category in the United States. 
The others are at the Air Force Acad-
emy and the Pentagon. The Exchange 
is a unit within the Air Force system 
of film distribution. Because of the na-
ture of the Air University curriculum, 
the Exchange not only receives auto-
matically all Air Force films but ex-
ploits short-term loans from other mili-
tary libraries, civilian rental sources, and 
industrial coLlections. Occasionally it 
locates and procures kinescopes of out-
standing television programs which are 
used for classroom instruction. In addi-
tion to a two thousand-print library of 

485 



films, the Exchange maintains a collec-
tion of slide sets, filmstrips, and still 
pictures. Although the Branch does pro-
vide equipment and projection service, 
its greatest screening activity is in its 
preview rooms. Instructors and students 
frequently view films ;:t.S reference mate-
rials in preparation of lectures or spe-
cial studies. Maintenance of materials 
and equipment is comparable to other 
film libraries. More specialized is its 
professional service in locating and pro-
curing special films, kinescopes, and still 
pictures from a wide variety of sources. 
Many of the desired items are not wide-
ly distributed, and diligent search is 
often needed to meet unusual require-
ments. 

Unique as a part of an audio-visual 
service is the Cartographic Branch, 
which combines professional assistance 
and an extensive collection of some six 
thousand different titles of maps and 
charts totaling approximately 250,000 
sheets. The cartographers work with 
both instructors and students in all types 
of problems involving the use of maps 
and charts. At times, a map or chart 
must be modified to illustrate particular 
physical, political, economic, or other 
facts. In such cases the cartographers 
modify existing material or draw up 
specifications for a new issue. The Air 
Force Physical-Political Global Chart is 

. an example of such a project. 
In addition to the Aeronautical Chart 

and Information Center, the Branch 
draws upon the services of Army Map 
Service, Hydrographic Office, Coast and 
Geodetic Survey, Geological Survey, N a-
tional Geographic Society, and a num-
ber of commercial agencies. Because of 
the need for the most up-to-date infor-
mation, the collection is checked con-
stantly to insure that each item is the 
most recent issue. All charts are ana-
lyzed, indexed, and filed systematically 
for instant recovery when needed. 

The Center has two Graphics Branches 

with one at Maxwell Air Force Base and 
the other at Gunter Air Force Base. Each 
produces a wide variety of instructional 
and briefing materials such as charts, 
graphs, maps, murals, models, heraldic 
emblems, certificates, sketches, book and 
manual illustrations, and masters for 
transparencies of various sizes. Most of 
the production of these Branches is con-
cerned with custom designed and exe-
cuted training aids. The instructor pre-
sents his requirement for analysis and 
visualization by artists who specialize 
in this aspect of the work. Once the 
sketches are approved, a production 
crew completes the graphic representa-
tion. 

Some materials require further proc-
essing after the completion of art work. 
Slide masters may be sent to the Photo-
graphic Laboratory for conversion to 
transparencies in color or in black and 
white and in any of the standard sizes 
of two by two inches, three and a quar-
ter by four inches, or eight by ten 
inches. Many overhead transparencies 
are prepared on tracing paper for repro-
duction by the diazo process. 

Although most charts are prepared on 
board thirty by forty inches or smaller, 
for auditorium use they may be twenty 
to thirty feet long and up to ten feet 
high. Recently a nine by forty foot mu-
ral depicting air evacuation was pro-
duced. Graphics personnel work with all 
types of media, depending only on which 
medium will be most effective. · 

The products of the two Graphics 
Branches differ somewhat because of the 
nature of the colleges and schools served. 
The Gunter Branch is primarily con-
cerned with materials illustrating phases 
of aviation medicine for use in the 
School of Aviation Medicine. The Max-
well Branch produces aids for the better 
illustration of administration, command, 
and air power problems since it serves 
Headquarters Air University, Air War 
College, Air Command and Staff Col-

486 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



lege, and Air Force Reserve Officers 
Training Corps. 

The Photographic Laboratory of the 
Audio-Visual Center provides three 
types of photographic reproduction: mi-
crofilm, photostat, and transparencies. 
The Microfilm Section is fupy equipped 
to produce 35mm. and 16mm. film in 
both negative and positive. It has plane-
tary and rotary cameras, ' printers, con-
tinuous processors, and editing equip-
ment. The principal purpose in micro-
filming is the reduction of the Air Uni-
versity Library's extensive document col-
lection to film. Approximately six thou-
sand feet of microfilm are shot each 
month. The negative file remains in the 
laboratory for ready reproduction. Posi-
tive prints are filed in the reading room 
for use by instructors and students. 

The Photostat Section produces direct 
positive copy up to the size of seventeen 
by twenty-two inches from original copy 
or microfilm. Present production aver-
ages four thousand full sheets each 
month. This laboratory provides propor-
tional enlargement or reduction of copy 
for the Graphic Branches. The direct 
positive photostat also serves as a satis-
factory master for the reproduction of 
copies by the diazo process. 

The third and newest section of the 
laboratory produces transparencies and 
prints for instructional purposes. These 
are made in black and white or color, 
in sizes varying from two by two inches 
to eight by ten inches. Although most 
of the original material is art layout 
produced by the Graphics Branches, 

some slides may be location shots or the 
reproduction of prints or slides as 
needed by the instructor. Photographic 
prints are also produced to illustrate 
training manuals and reports. 

The Reproduction Section is a very 
small unit with a relatively important 
function. It produces by mimeograph or 
multilith a wide variety of visual ma-
terials. A major product is catalog cards, 
of which fifteen thousand are printed 
each month. Another activity of · the 
Section is the offset printing of special 
bibliographies prepared by reference 
personnel of the library for up-to-the-
minute information on current docu-
ments, periodical articles, and books per-
tinent to the special interest areas of 
students and instructors. 

The services of the Audio-Visual Cen-
ter are constantly evaluated in terms of 
the curriculum requirements of Air Uni-
versity. During the past two years con-
siderable time and effort have been de-
voted to the analysis of organization, 
housing, personnel, materials, equip-
ment, and procedures in order to deter-
mine ways and means of improving the 
services. These efforts have led to more 
effective coordination, better working 
conditions, more efficient production, 
higher morale of staff members, and bet-
ter quality instructional aids. The Cen-
ter exists solely for the purpose of assist-
ing the instructors to do a more effec-
tive job of communicating with their 
students. Future modifications of the 
Center will be determined by the re-
quirements of the instructional program 
of Air University. 

"Do you want facts? Want to prove something? Trying to find yourself, or the 
opposite, escape from yourself? We've got books for all purposes, for yes and no, 
for good and bad, black and white, near and far, for and against. ... It's not for 
sale, it's for free-this place with something for every student, hurried or not, this 
intellectual free-for-all called the Library, which finds the books of all times, races, 
colors, and creeds, stacked peacefully together under one roof."-Lawrence Clark 
Powell in Know Your Library (UCLA) 1957). 

NOVEMBER 1957 487