Tag Archives: Journals

Planes, Rock Stars and Professional Athletes: Visit a Special Library in Charlotte

Did you know that there is a special aviation library located adjacent to the hangar area for private and charter flights in and out of our nearby airport?  Maybe you have seen the bomber plane visible from the Billy Graham Parkway that beckons visitors to the Carolinas Aviation Museum?  The museum has a nearby library with everything to delight those interested in aviation.

The Dolph Overton Aviation Library is an asset of the Carolinas Historic Aviation Commission (“CHAC”), a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation dedicated to preserving the aviation history of the Carolinas.  CHAC also operates the Carolinas Aviation Museum located at a nearby facility on First Flight Drive.   The Aviation Library is located on City-of-Charlotte-owned property adjacent to Charlotte/Douglas International Airport (“CDIA”) and the North Carolina Air National Guard.  The location of the library facility lends itself to providing an immersion experience for the visitor:  vibrations from nearby powerful jet engines and the distinctive sound and feel of helicopters starting warm-up routines all contribute to a special experience, almost as if a visitor was in an interactive library.  The windows of the Aviation Library look out on a CDIA runway and a taxi area for charter flights.  The staff of the Aviation Museum regularly witnesses the arrival and departure of professional athletes and rock stars.

 

Aerial view of Dolph Overton Aviation Library (Bing Maps)

Rows of aviation books are in the front room and clipboards on the end of the rows contain check-out sheets where CHAC members sign their name, phone number and a brief description of the material being checked out.  The process is very informal and there are no rigid rules about loan periods.  At the back of the front room is a wall of models of every imaginable type of airplane.  Models of military aircraft are suspended from the ceiling of the front room.  The uniform room is a fun place to visit.  There is a bomber flight suit!  Most branches of the military are represented as are many different time periods and wars.  The collection contains both commercial and military aviation uniforms dating back as far as World War I.

There is also a film room with 8mm training films and documentaries crowding every inch of shelf space in the room. Another room contains aviation equipment, some on shelves and some in the hundreds of boxes stacked floor to ceiling in the room.  Navigation equipment, cockpit parts and aircraft equipment crowd the limited space.

Adjacent to the equipment room is a work area for a model repairer who comes in once a week to restore models in the Aviation Library’s vast collection.  The library receives many donations of models and is unable to properly display them at this time.  The staff is hoping to receive donated display cases to accommodate the growing collection.

Journals take up the entirety of yet another room.  One journal pulled off the shelf dates back to 1913.  The window from this room looks out onto the private charter jet area mentioned above.  From this room, you can’t miss the start-up of the helicopters and the jet engines.  Other rooms contain photographs and artwork, some framed and some not.  Still more rooms are packed with training manuals and maintenance manuals.  Every room is packed with items, all of which have been cataloged.

For information about visiting or volunteering at the aviation library, check out their website.  Be sure to check out the Miracle on the Hudson at the nearby museum, too!

~Mary Susan Lucas~

2 Comments

Filed under Hidden Treasures, Librarians Can Be Fun Too, Local Happenings

The “WOW” factor – Encore Synergy and the Charlotte School of Law Library Catalog

You’ve seen the posters, the signs and the “WOW” buttons worn by staff and faculty.  Soon you’ll see a change in the CSL Library catalog. Beginning the week of August 15th, you’ll be able to construct and launch your search of library materials from a single search box, much as you would do a Google search.

Click here to discover the power of library search...

Encore Synergy provides a method of federated searching across various resources.  This means that in addition to searching the CSL library catalog for physical holdings at our school, you’ll be able to simultaneously search multiple resources. Not only will you be able to retrieve books, journal titles, e-books, DVDs and cassettes, but you will also be able to retrieve abstracts and full text articles from our specialized electronic resources.  Specifically, you’ll be able to retrieve full text articles from HeinOnline.

For example, if you wanted to search for only articles on the subject of Dred Scott, you would click on the word “articles” in the top left corner and enter the words “Dred Scott” in the search box.  You results would include a list of citations and access to the full text in pdf format when available.

Your results would also be sorted by source and listed along the left side of the screen.  For example, this search indicates that there were 1149  references to Dred Scott in the HeinOnline resource,  30 in the Legal Trac resource, and others available in the Making of Modern Law, etc.

The Charlotte School of Law Library staff will be presenting training opportunities and will be available to answer any questions you have concerning this resource.

~Susan Catterall~

Leave a Comment

Filed under collection, electronic resources, Of Interest to Law Students, Technical Services

Hidden Treasures: No more delay

Did you know that HeinOnline now has publisher links to articles not available yet through Hein?  Here’s the skinny:

Select journals in the Law Journal Library are delayed per the publisher agreements with HeinOnline. Now, when searching in the Law Journal Library, if you click on a result to a delayed issue, they will provide a direct link to the issue on the publisher’s website, provided the issue is available. This new linking has been added to nearly 130 delay volumes in the Law Journal Library.

Searching terms in the Law Journal Library will now include results like this:

And clicking on the article brings you to a link to the article on the publisher’s website.  Notice that HeinOnline is required by contract to delay the release of content by one complete volume.

However, the link to the publisher’s site provided by Hein takes you exactly where you want to be:

So enjoy your increased search capabilities and dig into HeinOnline!

- Ashley Moye -

Leave a Comment

Filed under electronic resources, Hidden Treasures