N A £ 8 NEWS LETTER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EDUCATIONAL BROADCASTERS Frank £. Schooley, Editor, Station WILL, Urbana, III. October I, 1944 ANNUAL N A E B MEETING IN CHICAGO, OCTOBER 22 AND 23 The annual meeting of the National Association of Educational Broaocasters WILL BE HELO SUNDAY AND MONOAY, OCTOBER 22 AND 23, IN THE MORRISON HOTEL, Chicago. Sessions will be held Sunoay at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. in Parlor D of the Morrison,, Sessions on Monday call for a luncheon at noon in Parlor D and the business SESSION TO FOLLOW IN THE SAME PLACE. Room reservations should be made by delegates direct with the Morrison Hotel. Luncheon reservations must be made with the NAEB Executive Secretary no later than Sunday evening. There will be no speakers other than NAEB members making reports and remarks TO THE CONVENTION. Final plans for convention topics will be made on October 20. Members WISHING ANY PARTICULAR TOPIC SCHEDULED FOR DISCUSSION SHOULD TRANSMIT THE REQUEST TO THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY IMMEDIATELY. Some of the topics already listed for oiscussion include: Securing of surplus war materials and equipment for educational use. The FCC Hearing on Post-War Use of the Spectrum. Legislation of radio broadcasting. Listener surveys for educational stations. Political broadcasts over educational stations*. NAEB membership and affiliation. Roundtable on member station activities. I *ll see you in Chicago. a N o, ! *m going to have to travel 800 miles that week-end to get there, too, Ripley. KENTUCKY ROUNDTABLE ON WHAS Dr, Henry Noble Sherwood, acting head of the department of political science at the University of Kentucky, ano former president of Georgetown College, will act as moderator for the University’s weekly roundtable series over WHAS, Louisville, with the opening of the fall schedule. The roundtable, which is broadcast on Sundays, ^2:00 to 12:30 p.m”. has been a University of Kentucky feature for a number of years, and concerns ITSELF ABOUT EQUALLY WITH INTERNATIONAL, NATIONAL AND STATE QUESTIONS OF POPULAR INTEREST. NAEB NEWS LETTER ........Page 2..........October I, 1944 RANDOM NOTES - ABAA, Purdue University, became a user of Associated Press copy on September £lsr, joining other NAEB stations now carrying the Pa service, oo,BILLBOARD auuRB says s "Station WHCU, Ithaca, New York, has PROVED (VIA A SPECIAL BRAND OF PUBLIC SERVICE) THAT A STATION IN A FARM AREA THAT HAS BEEN A SUSTAINING EDUCATIONAL OPERATION CAN CHANGE AND DO A TOP COMMERCIAL JOB. H . e ANOTHER BILLBOARD BLURB * "FCC COMMISSIONER Fly worries some more about the press-air link. This time he worried in Ithaca, N.Y e , for the Cornell Profs. h „.«.More complete articles in 8 i LLBOARD,.., V.NYC, New York City, is broadcasting four West Point games THIS SEASON, WITH JOE H A SEL DOING THE PLAY-BY-PLAY....W9XG, PURDUE UNIV¬ ERSITY, HAS BEEN GRANTEO MOD IF!CAT}ON OF ITS EXPERIMENTAL TELEVISION CONSTRUCTION PERM IT« •• .IQWA STATE COLLEGE HAS APPLIED FOR F.V. CONSTRUCTION PERMIT ON 42,900 KILOCYCLES, WITH I KILOWATT POWER . CaRL ^EN?ER WILL MAKE APPEARANCE FOR XAEB BEFORE FCC ON POST-WAR US E OF SPECTRUM .. . 0 NAEB ALSO WILL BE REPRESENTED AT THE HEARING WITH LEGAL ADVICE OF HORACE 1-0 Lohnes, noteo Washington raoio attorney...«WHA reports exodus of production DIRECTOR AND ACTRESS PEGGY BolGER .,..THE J6TH ANNUAL INSTITUTE FOR tOUC- at ion by Radio will be held m A y 4-7 in Columbus, Ohio, according to woro from I. Keith Tyler, Director of the Institute. —SCHOOLEY Scanned from the National Association of Educational Broadcasters Records at the Wisconsin Historical Society as part of "Unlocking the Airwaves: Revitalizing an Early Public and Educational Radio Collection." 'oiTu> c KTwe \\KWAVEs A collaboration among the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Communication Arts, and Wisconsin Historical Society. Supported by a Humanities Collections and Reference Resources grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities I I T I—I MARYLAND INSTITUTE for I TECHNOLOGY in the HUMANITIES UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND WISCONSIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY WISCONSIN NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE Humanities views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication/collection do not necessarily reflect those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.