ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries Christopher Wright Assistant Director ALA Washington Office On the night of August 8, 1974, millions of Americans sat tensely before their television sets as Richard Nixon announced to the nation that he was resigning as the thirty-seventh pres­ ident of the United States. It was a moment of high drama, an instant created by the pale- faced man behind the podium and the viewers riveted to their television screens. Four days later the same millions of Ameri­ cans turned again to their televisions as Gerald Ford addressed the Congress and the world from the Speaker’s dais of the House of Repre­ sentatives. Again, it was an hour of intense drama. Sitting in their living rooms across the country, people reacted with hope and relief to the tone of the new president’s voice and the smile of House Speaker Carl Albert. In both instances, television brought events to the people and allowed them to participate as surely as if they had been there. Researchers say nearly two-thirds of the American people get most or all of their news from television. The images and sounds of events transported into every home by televi­ sion have created a new kind of first-hand ex­ perience. In the tumultuous days of the 1960s, Americans were not only told that their cities were in flames, they saw them burning. During the Vietnam war American families ate dinner to the chatter of machine gun bullets fired in a real war to kill real men. What kind of experience is watching the news? What, in fact, is the news? How has it affected the watchers? Or the watched? These are questions that historians of tomor­ row will be asking. But where will they go to find the answers? Who archives the air waves? Alert librarians have already been asking these questions, and some have begun to seek answers. But television is an odd medium. Un­ like a book, which you can hold in your hand, a television broadcast is here one moment, then gone. Like the book, however, the television film can be reproduced. So the question be­ comes, Who has the right to reproduce it? Since 1968 Vanderbilt University has been taping the nightly news broadcasts of three U.S. television networks, plus their coverage of the national conventions of both political par­ Inside Washington ties and the Watergate hearings. The univer­ sity has developed a subject index to this stream of videotape, and potential users can se­ lect what they want by identifying the times of the desired film footage. Technicians at the university then simply retape the segments and send the reduced version to the requesting in­ stitution. Frank Grisham, Vanderbilt librarian, says the tapes cost borrowers $30 per running hour of edited footage, less for straight replay of the en­ tire master tape. Vanderbilt gets about six en­ quiries a day from interested institutions and individuals and has supplied film to the U.S. Congress and the N.Y. State Crime Commis­ sion. Grisham says the university’s charges barely cover the cost of reproduction. In December 1973, Columbia Broadcasting System filed suit in federal court to stop Van­ derbilt from reproducing and distributing what the network considered its private property. CBS argued that it had the sole right under ex­ isting copyright law to make copies of its “per­ formance” of the evening news. At issue in the case are the most basic questions of private property rights, scholarly fair use, and accessi­ bility to material broadcast over the public air waves. There are no easy, nonpartisan answers to the CBS-Vanderbilt collision. News items for inclusion in C&RL News should be sent to Mary Frances Collins, Assistant Director of Libraries for Technical Services, University Library ULB-35A, State University of New York at Albany, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12222. Adver­ tising (including classified ads) should be sent to Leona Swiech, Advertising Office, American Li­ brary Association, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. Production and circulation matters are han­ dled by ALA Central Production Unit, at the above address. News editor: Mary Frances Collins, Assistant Di­ rector of Libraries for Technical Services, State University of New York at Albany, Albany. As­ sociate News editor: Anne Dowling, Assistant Li­ brarian, Acquisitions Department, Library, State University of New York at Albany. Editor: Rich­ ard D. Johnson, Milne Library, State University College, Oneonta, New York 13820. President, ACRL: H. William Axford. Executive Secretary, ACRL: Beverly P. Lynch. College & Research Libraries is published by the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, 17 times yearly—6 bimonthly journal issues and II monthly (combining July-August) News issues—at 1201-05 Bluff St., Fulton, MO 65251. Subscription, $15.00 a year, or to members of the division, $7.50, included in dues. Second-class postage paid at Fulton, Missouri 65251. © American Library Association 1975. All material in this journal subject to copyright by the Ameri­ can Library Association may be photocopied for the noncommercial purpose of scientific or educa­ tional advancement. 73 "No other publication is as current and authoritative as CHOICE." —John Rowell, Professor of Library Science, Case Western Reserve University - BOOK REVIEWS - CHOICE reviews more serious books than any other reviewing medium in the United States. Its reviews, written by college faculty throughout the U.S. and Canada, are succinct and unbiased, placing each book clearly within the literature of its field and indicating its appropriate readership level. Included are publications from both American and Canadian firms, as well as many titles published abroad but distributed through North American representatives. All bibliographical information is entered, in standard library format for easy reference. — Bibliographical Essays — Each issue of CHOICE contains one or more bibliographical essays which examine important works in specific areas of study. These essays provide title-by-title evaluations as well as detailed bibliographies of the books discussed. Subject areas range over the whole spectrum of academic and public interests. — Readers — Published by the Association of College and Research Libraries, CHOICE is read by librarians, teachers, students, and the informed public. Long recognized by the college world as an essential book selection tool, it is now being "discovered" by high schools and public libraries. Its circulation of approximately 6,200 reaches virtually every university and community college in North America and many of the leading academic institutions and libraries of Europe, Asia, and the Far East. “…o f vital importance for any secondary s c h o o l. . — Mary V. Gaver, Professor Emeritus, Rutgers University 75 Last November, having outraged scholars and librarians by suggesting that the university should destroy its tapes and cease making new ones, CBS concluded a pact with the National Archives calling for a two-year arrangement making videotapes of news broadcasts available to “responsible researchers.” According to the initial agreement, the ar­ chives would receive a master tape of news­ casts and news specials from CBS which could then be copied for use by other institutions. The network then suggested the university hand over its tapes to the archives. Vanderbilt refused. The archives agreement, the university argues, is only a two-year ar­ rangement, involves only one of the three net­ works, and fails to provide any of the sophisti­ cated indexing and condensing aspects of the Vanderbilt operation. Meanwhile, CBS continues to take deposi­ tions and has hired a battalion of lawyers to press its copyright infringement case before the U.S. District Court for Middle Tennessee. Van­ derbilt continues to tape the news each night and the university’s Board of Trustees has lined up staunchly behind the librarian. Neither the existing 1909 copyright law nor the proposed Copyright Revision Bill now in Congress provide a clear answer here. In an at­ tempt to straighten out Vanderbilt’s status, Sen. Howard Baker got the Senate to pass a bill last year freeing the university from liability in this one instance, but the bill didn’t clear the House before Congress adjourned. The Supreme Court ruled in the 1974 Tele- prompter case that a cable television station had a right, under the 1909 law, to retransmit network television programs, saying this relay­ ing of the signal did not constitute a “perform­ ance” of network property. On the other hand the new revision bill would make the cable op­ erators pay royalties for just these broadcasts. On the other hand, is taping and editing a broadcast in a library the same as a CATV re­ transmission? In all this darkness and confusion there has emerged one glimmer of hope, however. Last July the head of the Washington, D.C. Public Library’s department of community services, Larry Molumby, negotiated a simple contract with the local Public Broadcasting Service sta­ tion allowing the library to tape local and na­ tional news produced by station WETA. Of critical importance is the library’s right to tape programs produced by the station’s subsidiary, the National Public Affairs Center for Televi­ sion, which does the bulk of the Public Broad­ casting Service’s national news. While copyright lawyers may see pitfalls for both sides in this document, it is a step in the right direction. The contract said the station was granting D.C. Public: a non-exclusive license to record and duplicate the programs produced by its NPACT Division ( except as may otherwise be specifically exclud­ ed by letter from time to time) for use by the libraries as reference materials subject to the following conditions: 1. It is understood that the right and title in all programs remain at all times the property of GWETA and that this right is being granted to you solely for the purposes of research and private use of individuals, group viewings, com­ munity meetings, and discussion groups related to programs, all at libraries. 2. You agree that the print or copy will not be shown publicly other than as provided above, nor for profit, nor will an admission be charged, nor will it be rebroadcast, duplicated or further distributed by you in any manner whatever without prior consent of GWETA. 3. You agree to indemnify and hold harmless GWETA from and against any liability, loss, or damage caused by you or your use of any of the programs covered by this right. 4. GWETA for its part warrants that it pos­ sesses the right in the contents of these pro­ grams sufficient to grant the rights provided in this letter. 5. This license shall be effective on July 1, 1974 and shall remain in effect continuously for one year from this date and from year to year thereafter unless terminated by either party upon thirty (30) days written notice. Unfortunately, so far Molumby has been un­ able to talk the local commercial stations into a similar agreement because they don’t want to give away any rights that might develop out of the CBS-Vanderbilt litigation. ■ ■ A different kind of library handbook, WOW Library rated a front-page news story in the college newspaper and was called “light-hearted, entertaining and enlightening” by Wilson Library Bulle­ tin. This mimeographed, loose-leaf hand­ book is available for $1.00 to cover post­ age and handling. Send requests to Ms. Jeanne V. Schramm, Reference Dept., West Liberty State College, West Liber­ ty, WV 26074. Serials Catalogers Take Note Could you benefit from a detailed ta­ ble of contents or an index to the new re­ vised chapter 6 of AACR? If so, contact Gregory Koster, Serials Cataloger, Co­ lumbia University Libraries, New York, NY 10027 for a copy of the contents and index he has drawn up.